PRESENTS PEARLS BEFORE SWINE REPRISE RECORDING ARTISTS come and hear swinehorns blow again!-or maybe a clavinette THE MUSIC OF ROCKET MEN AND SATYRS MARCH 26-29 330 MAYNARD ST. FRI.-MON. 2-0 8 P.M.-Doors Open p.age three SI P Sf11 rign Baitt NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Thursday, March 25, 1971 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three I I i I i i i t tn e wsbrie fs By The Associated Press ISRAELI TROOPS killed four Arab guerrillas and captured four more in a fight on the occupied Golan Heights of Syria, the military announced yesterday. It was the largest guerrilla infiltration from Syria in several months. The incident occurred near Guneitra on Monday, a spokesman said. ARGENTINA'S MILITARY JUNTA yesterday bid for labor support by taking the lid off current nation-wide wage talks. The government of President Roberto Levingston, ousted Monday, had set a 19 per cent ceiling on wage increases for the nation's 9 mil- lion workers, but the junta removed the limit and withdrew from the wage talks altogether.j Still problematic, however, was the cattlemen's boycott, now in its ninth day. The boycott may necessitate a ban on local beef sale and alienate Argentina's powerful cattle ranchers. Panther rnd iets nat'l leadership NEW HAVEN, Conn. G4 - A Black Panther official ar- rived in New Haven with a pistol several days before the death of Alex Rackley "to help straighten things out," a key pros- ecution witness at the trial of Bobby Seale and Ericka Hug- gins testified yesterday. Warren Kimbro, a Black Panther who has pleaded guilty to second degree murder in the slaying of Rackley, said a party officer told him that Rory Hithe "had come down from national to straighten out the East Coast." The party's National headquarters is in Oaklnd, Calif. Kimbro, a gaunt, former anti- poverty worker who testified at an earlier trialthat he shot Rack- ley in the head on May 21, 1969, in a swampy riverbed 20 miles north of here, said he and Mrs. Huggins drove to New York six days before Rackley's death to pik up Hithe. * " HIGHEST"$ DOORS OPEN 12:45RATING SHOWS AT 1, 3, 5, 7,:45P.M. "Wanda Hae. New YorkDayNs M NEXT: "GOING DOWN THE ROAD" University of Michigan Film Society (ARM) presents Marcel Carne's Les enfanis duparadis (Children of Paradise) written by JACQUES PREVERT PRESIDENT NIXON yesterday sent to Congress his plans for * the Action Corps, a new federal agency combining most of the gov- ernment's volunteer service programs. The combination would involve seven programs, including VISTA, the Teachei;'s Corps and the Peace Corps and require a budget of over $176 million. Joseph Blatchford, the Peace Corps Director whom Nixon named to head Action Corps, said Americans would now have a central agency to apply to for volunteer work, instead of having to "chase all over Washington." * 4 * MEYER LANSKY, reputed financial wizard of the underworld, was indicted yesterday by a federal grand jury on a charge of con- tempt. Lansky had refused to testify about the operations of a Las Vegas casino at a hearing in Miami Beach. He is presently living with his wife in Tel Aviv, Israel. E. David Rosen, Lansky's attorney,, said in Miami the subpoena should be quashed because Lansky suffers from ulcers and a bad heart' and cannot travel. * * * ECOLOGIST BARRY COMMONER said yesterday the nation'sj environmental crisis is the result of faulty technologies used to re- build industrial and agricultural production since World War II. He said the introduction of most technological advances, such as the synthetic chemicals or nuclear power took into account "the laws of physics and chemistry without taking into account the laws of ecology." Commoner said that many of the new products of technology were more damaging to the environment than the things that they replaced, such as synthetic fibers for wool and cotton and detergents for soaps. with Arletty, Jean-Louis Barrault, Pierre Brasseur, Pierre Renoir FRI DAY-SATURDAY-SUNDAY March 26, 27, 28 Natural Science Auditorium ON THE DIAG 7:00 and 10:15 p.m. contribution $1.00 761-9751 1 E i I I ~]!I4rm 603 E. Liberty DIAL Shows at 5-6290 7 and 9 P.M. Ali Maclraw -Ryan' ONeal #1 DOORS OPEN 6:45 A I TOMOR ROW NIG HT ONCE ONLY AT 9:05 P.M. A VERY ESPECIAL PREVIEW OF A VERY ,SPECIAL FEATURE IN COLOR PLUS OUR REGULAR FEATURE LATE! AT THE DON'T MISS IT!! ! * Eimmaummmmmma FREE LIST Beselif SUSPENDED Nominated for 7 Academy n MalRa MinE Awards Jh aly a iln GP &Vc~ IN COLOR A PARAMOUNT PICTURE -Associated Press Looting in Opa Locka Flames and smoke billow from a bar and restaurant in suburban Opa Locka, Fla. yesterday where roving bands of young blacks have been looting and burning small businesses. It is the second day of violence in the predominately black area. UNILATERAL GESTURE': Borman asks U.S. to releas 1,600 POW's WASHINGTON () - Former as- Paul Findleyn (R-Ill) a member of tronaut Frank Borman recom- the subcommittee. mended yesterday that the United A unilateral prisoner release States and South Vietnam release would involve some risKs with no hundreds of prisoners of war in an guarantee of returns, Bormian said, effort to prod Hanoi into freeing or "but I do thing it is an acceptable easingrthe lot of American POW'sIrisk at any rate. It would empha- in North Vietnam. size this country's concern and Borman, testifying before a willingness to approach this issue." House Foreign Affairs subcommit- Borman said the communists tee, suggested also that if negotia- consider the prisoners as hostages tions in Paris remain deadlocked, and "trump cards" and that the contacts elsewhere be pursued. United States should not yield to A number of North Vietnamese demands made by North Vietnam captured in the South equal to the on this basis. number of Americans missing or "We cannot modify our foreign captured in the North, about 1,600, policy with a gun at our head, so should be released with "no strings to speak," he said. attached," Borman said. Borman also said visits abroad The retired Air Force colonel, by American officials and private who traveled around the world as citizens on the prisoner issue President Nixon's emissary on should be pursued, observing that POW matters last fall, urged quick they have had some impact on the action on such a release proposal treatment of POWs in North Viet- introduced in Congress by Rep.' nam. U of M Romance Languages Dept. presents :w"La Celestina" by Fernando de Rojas Trueblood Auditorium-Frieze Building March 25 2:30 p.mn.-$l.5O $1.00<.r 8:30 p.m.-$2.00 $1.50 BOX OFFICE OPEN FROM 1 P.M.-8:30 P.M. \ . CINEMA II "La Grande Illusion" FRENCH, 1937 with ERIC VON STROHEIM directed by JEAN RENOIR "I made 'La Grande Illusion' because I am a pacifist." -Renoir, 1938 Friday and Saturday 7:00, 9:00 p.m -PLUS- "A View From the Bridge" with Carol Lawrence, Raf Vallone, Maureen Stapleton screenplay by ARTHUR MILLER directed by SIDNEY LUMET FRIDAY and SATURDAY 11:00 p.m. SUNDAY 7:00, 9:00 p.m. MARCH 26, 27, 28 AUD. A., ANGELL HALL 75c (separate admission for ea'ch show) NEXT WEEK MARLON BRANDO'S "ONE-EYED JACKS" Desadopt peace plank "Rory had just come in from the Coast and he had brought his piece with him," the witness said. He added that the "'piece"~ was "a .45." Hithe, who also is charged in the Rackley slaying, is fighting extradition in Colorado. Seale, 34 - year - old national chairman of the Black Panthers, and Mrs. Huggins, 23-year-o 1 d former official of the party's lo- cal chapter, face capital charges of kidnaping resulting in death and aiding and abetting murder in Rackley's slaying. They are also accused of con- spiring to murder and kidnap the victim. Kimbro's testimony was inter- rupted by frequent defense ob- jections that incidents and con- versations he was describing did not pertain to either Seale or Mrs. Huggins. Judge Harold M. Mul- vey of Superior Court admitted most of the testimony subject to a showing that it supported t h e conspiracy charges. Late in the morning, the jury was dismissed until Tuesday to al- low the defense to argue against admission of evidence seized at an apartment serving as t h e local party headquarters. WASHINGTON (iP) - T he Democratic party's top policy- making group .yesterday voted unanimously to call' for total U.S.- withdrawal from Indochina by the end of 1971. The Democratic Policy Council's action goes beyond that taken by Senate Democrats recently in call- ing for total withdrawal by a fix- ed date before the current Con- gress ends in January 1973. In addition, it sharpens political lines b dI between Democrats and the Nixon administration. The resolution calls on the ad- ministration to announce that all American forces will be withdrawn by the end of 1971 and urges Con- gress to enact legislation barring U.S. funds for the war after Dec. 31. It thus puts the council on re- cord in favor of the proposal re- jected 55 to 39 by the Senate last August, whose chief sponsors are Sens. Mark O. Hatfield (R-Ore.) and Georg e S. McGovern (D- S.D.). McGovern, a council member, is the only announced candidate so far for the 1972 Democratic Pres- idential nomination. Some 68 of t h e 100 Council members attended the all d ay' meeting. They adopted a women's rights amendment introduced by author Gloria Steinem but defer- red action on the economy and other issues. program WASHINGTON (P) - Fr ank Carlucci, the new director of the Office of Economic Opportunity (OEO) said yesterday he person- ally favors giving poverty lawyers unlimited freedom in defending clients, even if they bring class action suits. Carlucci, whose nomination to the OEO post was approved by the Senate yesterday, defended the frequently criticized Legal Services program as "one of OEO's bright- est achievements," before a Sen- ate subcommittee. "There are certain limits in the statute such as not taking any criminal cases and staying with- in certain income guidelines," Car- lucci said, testifying at a Senate subcommittee hearing. Beyond that, he said, he be- lieves Legal Service attorneys should be as free to help their clients as any other lawyer might be. Carlucci said he endorsed class action cases, referring to suits brought by one person on behalf of many others who feel they may have been similarly wronged. WELCOME TO U-M BARBERS next to South U. Dank MEET STYLISTS: BOB DASCOLA JERRY ERICKSON (formerly of Maple Village-Arborland) Open Mon.-Sat. BACH CLUB CONTEMPORARY REACTIONS CONCERT A 1-hour program of works by Bach Club composers writing in the styles of Bach, Mo- zart, and Brahms -featuring- Concert Overture .........Joseph Marcus for piano, 4 hands Concert Movement .......Randolph Smith I F for piano and string orchestra Variations and Fugue on "Jingle Bells" ....... . for string quartet AAFC Presents 75c -TONIGHT-U BOGART and HEPBURN =r:;:;::;s. ", " ', : ' fit " }:: 1 . t. Michael Pilojian I I aind1 more!