603 E. Liberty St. DIAL 5-6290 DOORS OPEN 12:45 Shows at 1,3,5, 7, 9 p.m. Nominated Academy for 7 Awards INCLUDING BEST PICTURE BEST DIRECTOR BEST ACTRESS BEST ACTOR BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR Ali Maciraw* Ryan O'Neal The Year's Best Seller A HOWARD G.MINSKY-ARTHUR HILLER Production John Marley & Ray Milland ERICH SEGAL ARTHUR HILLER Prodlueod by Eevuive Producr Music Sor by IN COLOR HOWARD G:MINSKY DAVID GOLDEN FRANCIS LAl A PARAMOUNT PICTURE SOUMNDRACK ALBUMAVAILABLE ON PARAMJUINT RECORDS GP"" : . FREE LIST SUSPENDED DURING "LOVE STORY" "Dallesandro embodies with every move that sultry, sulky monumentally inarticulate machismo that Brando tries so hard to convey as Stanley Kowalski in 'Streetcar Named Desire'." -Gorman Beauchamp, Mich. Daily i I news briefs By The Associated Press AN ARMY PHYCHIATRIST described Lt. William Calley Jr. yesterday as free of any mental impairment at My Lai three years ago. But the defense in the trial at Ft. Benning, Ga., tossed a new idea at a court-martial jury - that the defendant's combattraining might have left him involuntarily "conditioned 3to kill." "Did you find anything to indicate any impairment of Lt. Calley's thought processes on 16 March, 1968?" asked the prosecutor, Capt. Aubrey Daniel, referring to the date on which Calley is charged with premeditated murder of 102 unarmed Vietnamese civilians.I "No, I did not," replied the prosecution witness, Maj. Henry Edwards, a government psychiatrist who pronounced Calley "perfect- ly normal." On cross-examination, chief defense lawyer George Latimer said: "I ask you, major, if you believe you can pathologically con- dition the mind along a certain channel - I'll say a channel to kill - and leave generally untouched other areas of thinking?" "I would not say that," replied Edwards, a slender, soft-spoken mental expert. THE GOVERNMENT estimated yesterday that wholesale prices rose sharply again this month for a two-month increase of 1.5 per cent, the biggest in 14 years. The sharp increase puts new pressure on consumer prices, whichj have slackened their rise lately. The Bureau of Labor Statistics blamed the preliminary 0.8 per cent February increase in wholesale prices mainly on bad weather that kept hogs and cattle from getting to market, driving up volatile wholesale farm prices 4.5 per cent. * * * JEWS FROM 38 nations ended a three-day congress in Brus- sels on the plight of Soviet Jewry yesterday with a plea to the world to help their brethren in that nation. In their final appeal, the 760 delegates made three requests: -Recognition of the right of Soviety Jews to emigrate to Israel. -A chance for Soviet Jews to live and raise their children as Jews in Russia. -An end to "the defamation of the Jewish people and Zionism" in the Soviet Union. * * * A METHOD FOR detecting the success of cancer surgery on humans within a month's time is being developed by researchers at the University of Tennessee.f The usual current method of determining the success of cancer surgery is the reappearance or non-reappearance of the diseaseI within five years. The University scientists, headed by microbiologist Dr. Joseph Coggin, perfected an anal cancer test in five years of research and now are trying a test on humans. * * * THE AMERICAN INDEPENDENT PARTY of Michigan holds its state convention tomorrow in the Howell recreation center. The party, formed to spearhead Alabama Gov. George Wallace's 1963 Presidential drive in Michigan, is expected to choose a new chairman since James Hall of Warren says he will not seek re-election. Rollin Smith of Battle Creek is expected to be chosen as Hall's successor. Hall has been a source of controversy ever since the party rolled up 330,000 Michigan votes for Wallace. Some dissidents are threat- ening to boycott Saturday's state convention, claiming the Detroit area controls the party and some party leaders are influenced by the Ku Klux Klan. 'doommomme-a (T4 r SitioFan Friday, February 26, 1971 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three Gov' t questions student aid laws WASHINGTON .P - The Federal restrictions which now bar persons convicted of campus disruption from receiving federal student loans and loan guarantees is currently being questioned in government circles. The administration calls the restriction an administrative nightmare. "It assumes there's a good list and a bad list, and. any student who gets on the bad list, the computer says 'bingo' and he doesn't get anything," said a White House aide. "But there's no list." - 43-tiy "The most revealing and sensitive film ever about our generation. A fantastic flick!" -EVO P4ITH POr"Jm ~P W MNLM Ar usauv 9 D 'OWNTOWN ANN AO INPORMATION 761-0700 -Associated Press AilpOii OppOSillon gr olded Riot policemen, background, drag out radical students who lie on ground yesterday during the fourth day of a land expropriation program at the Tokyo International Airport construction site. Police said 49 students were arrested for obstructing police duties. CONFESSION CASE: j Court ruling rawUs mixed assessments WASHINGTON (A) - Law enforcement officials are divided on ho much easier it will be 'to gain convictions under the Supreme Cour newly loosened confession rule. "Very helpful," said one official. Of limited use, said others. T varying assessments surfaced in an Associated Press spot check reaction to the court's later interpretation of its landmark 1966 Miran v. Arizona ruling. In that case the court said confessions could not be used again a defendant if obtained without telling him in advance he could rema silent and have a lawyer. t The chief congressional advocate of the restriction said, how.-ver, that he'll fight to keep it in new appropriation bills. Rep. Neal Smith (D-Iowa), also said he plans to quiz officials from the Department of Health. Educa- tion and Welfare at appropriations hearings next month on how well1 they're enforcing the restriction, which first went into effect three years ago. In his higher education message Monday. President Nixon proposed expansion of federal aid to an ad- ditional one million low income college students. The administration attempt to eliminate the campus disruption provision was not trumpeted as part of that message, however. It shows up only in the form of telltale brackets around the exist- ing language as spelled out in the telephone-book-sized appendix to the federal budget released by the White House Jan. 29. The existing language: "No part of the funds appropriated under this act shall be used to provide a loan, guarantee of a loan or a grant w to any applicant who has been con- L's victed by any court of general jurisdiction of any crime which in- he volves the use of or the assistance of to others in the use of force, tres- da pass or the seizure of property un- der control of an institution of higher education to prevent offic- ast ials or students at such an institu- tin tion from engaging in their= duties or pursuing their studies." Congress hiears spy testhon WASHINGTON (YP) - Congress was told yesterday that the mili- tary's domestic surveillance often is a case of spy vs. spy, like the time 53 agents watched one another among 66 civilian demonstrators. Even the Navy was said to have sent two intelligence experts from "somewhere on the West Coast" to infiltrate the peaceful, mid-Sep- tember 1969 antiwar gathering out- side Ft. Carson, Colo., an Army installation. That account and other such ex- amples were advanced to the Sen- ate subcommittee on constitutional rights by Lawrence Lane, former intelligence coordinator at the post and now an aide to Rep. Robert Giaimo, (D-Conn.). Under questioning by Chairman Sam Ervin Jr., (D-N.C.), Lane de- clared, "Rivalry between various military intelligence groups was so great the agents were watching each other to determine what the others were watching so we could see what was important." Lane, who was assigned to the 5th Military Intelligence Detach- ment at Ft. Carson, said he once found himself named on another's report as a "dissident soldier" be- cause he was spotted attending a civilian antiwar meeting. Lane said he was there on surveillance duty himself. Lane, like several other former agents, testified that he and his colleagues maintained extensive files on civilian groups and mdi- viduals. In one case, he said, his unit was to monitor a "symposium on vio- lence" at Colorado College, and ordered dossiers on the scheduled speakers from Ft. Holabird, Md. He said the intelligence back- ground received from Ft. Holabird on civil rights activist Dick Greg- ory "was so tainted that is was un- usable." It was completely subjec- tive, based on unsubstantiated in- formation and unreliable sources," he said. Lane said that, typically, at- tempts were made to link indi- viduals to Communist organiza- tions through a process of guilt by association." Andy; Warhol fri., so presents sat. before Joe all oche Dallesandro in Introducing Jane Forth and Holly Woodlawn directed by P aulio , t. eve.-$2.50 6:00 p.m.-$1.75 r times-$2.00 No one under 18 mttted FR I. 3, 5, 7 9, 1 Wednesday the court, with Presi- dent Nixon's two appointees tip- ping the balance, ruled 5-4 that such illegally obtained confessions could be used to discredit a de- fendant's testimony if he takes the stand. Calofirnia Asst. Atty. Gen. Al- bert Harris said the ruling would not help in proving a case directly. "but it certainly would help in .. HEW sets women's advocacy branch office trial to keep the defendant from coming up with a fabricated story." Michigan Supreme Court Justice Thomas Brennan agreed. "You're only checking his veracity." he said. WASHINGTON (P) - T h e Women's Liberation movement gained a new foothold in the fed- eral government yesterday when the Department of Health, Educa- tion and Welfare set in motion an advocacy branch for its female employes. HEW Secretary Elliot Richard- son announced he will establish a Women's Action Program t h at will insure equal hiring and pro- motion for the department's 62,000 female employes. The program will also promote F day care centers, flexible hours partment, we have tended to apply a double standard in judging their performance and have sometimes required that they be superior to their male counterparts in order to be elevated to positions of author- ity," Richardson said in a recent memorandum. The Secretary said the program will insure that the department's agencies consider women for all job vacancies and will help re- solve "day-to-day problems t h a t make recognition and advance- ment difficult for women." Government officials said t h e ' rogram is the first advocacy of- SPECIAL KLH SALE! Indianapolis police legal adviser Roy Jones said the new ruling will have limited effect for police. "It's now routine to give the v. arning and we would get an unusable con- fession only when somebody, not being interrogated as a suspect, blurted out something incrinhimt-' ing. Then, if he took the stand tAter other police work had made a case, what he said could be useful." and liberal maternity leaves for employes, according to the new fice established and financed by directress. Xandra Kayden. any Cabinet-level department in "Dcspite the enormous contri- response to demands by Womens butions made by women to this de- Liberation. E.M.U. PLAYERS SERIES EMU'S QUIRK AUDITORIUMR$2.00 WED.-SUN., FEB. 24-28 Reservatons 487-1221 (weekdays 12:45-4:30? 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