UNIVERSITY PLAYERS BONUS PRODUCTION gion carlo menotti THE MEDIUM 3 performances onlY Thurs., Jan. 14 at 4:10; Fri. &r Sat, at 8:00 p.m. Box Office Open Mon.-Sat, from 12:30 p.m. ARENA THEATRE--FRIEZE BUILDING page th ree 94C £i!3a &1tit4 NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 " ., i . ..,! Thursday, January 14, 1971 Ann Arbor, Michigan Pge Three 769-130- MON.-FR{. 7:05-9:15 Parbra Pamavision sColo SAT. -SUN. 2:00-3:45-6:30 Tnhe Pmye .'". "No one should miss1 1 "A tender love of two youngsters that surges and explodes. A stunningly beautifuldrama. The picture is fascinating in magnificent natural colors. Tle exceptionally appealingd young players, their nude scene together and O e candid glimpse of a'sauna bath, are entirely within Sthe content of this extraordinary picture, joining beauty and horror in a rich, scalding eyeful and a haunting love story. -N.Y. Times t 1 I ew briefs By The Associated Press W. AVERELL HARRIMAi said after a meeting yesterday with Soviet foreign minister Andrei Gromyko that the Soviets are willing to help arrange an Indochina settlement. "I think they will help'us if they can," said the former chief U.S. delegate to the Paris peace talks. But he contended there has been no role for them to play since President Nixon took office because "there have been no serious talks" since then. * * * BARNADO SIMPSON, a former rifleman who said he killed at least 10 My Lai villagers on orders of his own platoon leader refused yesterday to testify at Lt. William L. Cafley Jr.'s court- martial. He invoked the Fifth Amendment almost as soon as he took the witness stand for the defense. Simpson, 23, of Jackson, Miss., in interviews and statements, has admitted killing Vietnamese, including a woman and a child, as a member of Charlie Company's 2nd Platoon during an assault on My Lai March 16, 1968. He has quoted the company commander, Capt. Ernest L. Medina, as directing in a preassault briefing that his men "kill everything in the village-men, women, children, cats and dogs." YOUNGER HOUSE DEMOCRATS are planning an attack next week on the seniority system which would unseat most pre- sent committee chairmen within two years. They will propose setting a 70-year age limit for chairmen and limiting chairmen of any age to four terms at the head of a committee, with both changes to take effect in 1973. If they succeed-and the odds are against them-there would be a wholesale uprooting of chairmen in the 93rd Congress, with 11 being forced out by the age limit and three more by the time limit. Only three chairmen of major committees would survive. * * * AN AMERICAN TUNA VESSEL has been seized 55 miles off the coast of Ecuador and escorted to the port of Salinas, Rep. Edward Garmatz, D-Md., reported yesterday., Garmatz, chairman of the House Merchant Marine and Fisheries Committee, said the tuna boat Lexington was seized Jan. 11 by Ecuadoran patrol boats, presumably for venturing within the 20 mile territorial limit claimed by Ecuador. GARBAGE PILES U Adlai Stevenson Institute of Public Affairs at the Univer- sity of Chicago, and at $50,000 for four others. Berrigan remains at the Federal Correctional Institute in Dan- Associated Prss bury Conn., where he is serving |Co-defendant Sister Elizabeth McAllister (right) a six-year sentence for destroying draft records in Maryland. Revs. Joseph R. Wenceroth, 35. ANSWERS PROTESTS:; Neil R. McLaughlin, 30. and form- er priest Anthony Scoblick, 30, is- sued their denial of the charges ajd after arraignment in Baltimore. Po la roilpla ns aiSister Elizabeth McAlister, 31, was the only one of the six alleged f conspirators released on bail. to S A f ica fThe alleged plot outlined in the ing up heat tunnels connecting The Polaroid Corporation an- Times. The Boston Globe, The several federal buildings in Wash- nounced yesterday a one-year "ex- Christian Science Monitor, and ington, D.C. and the subsequent periment" to improve the salaries, some 20 black weeklies, kidnapping of Kissinger, the job opportunities and education of The steps to be taken, Polaroid President's chief advisor on na- a group of blacks in South Africa. says, include having its distributor tional security affairs. The maxi- The announcement appeared in and his suppliers in South Africa mum penalty is life imprisonment advertisements in The New York "improve dramatically the sala- on the kidnapping charge, and Times, The Wall Street Journal, ries and other benefits of their five to ten years and $10,000 fines The Washington Post, The Chica- nonwhite employes," and ® "train on the bombing charge. go Tribune, the Los Angeles nbnwhite employes for important Attorney W i 11i a m Kunstler ~ - jobs within their companies." visited the Berrigan brothers in P The Company also says that it prison yesterday and released will commit part of its profits their statement, which charged earned in South Africa to encour- that the governments action was age black education. This would following a. "tragic and outrageous include underwriting the educa- course-to stigmatize millions of tional expenses of 500 black stu- morally dedicated opponents of dents at various educational levels. our military involvement in Indo- china as violent and .eranged up the backlog of garbage. The Since last October, Polaroid's people." city was served an injunction headquarters and some of its ex- The statement continued: Tuesday ordering immediate ecutives have been under attack "Thirty-eight years ago the trash pickups at 12 locations. from a group of demonstrators Nazi party burnt the Reichstag in Mayor Peter Flaherty then who all themselves the Polaroid order to stampede the German recruited a dozen aides, rented Workers Revolutionary Move- people into supporting a policy of six trucks and personally col- ment.* repression at home and militarism lected refuse at 10 schools, hos- The group has demanded that abroad. Yesterday, the govern- pitals and housing projects. Polaroid end its business ties in ment of the United States, for The strike began when five South Africa and turn over the much the same purposes, created city plumbers w e r e docked a profits it l;as earned there to a grotesque conspiracy to kidnap day's pay for refusing to double groups fighting South Africa's a presidential assistant and blow as truck drivers, jobs formerly policies of racial separation., up the heating systems of federal held by Teamsters who were Regarding the activities of the buildings in Washington." furloughed as part of the may- group, the Polaroid spokesman Kunstler . said the Berrigan or's austerity program. said, "We respect the issues they brothers views the charges as "a At times, as many as 2,500 of have raised, but we don't respect colossal blunder" which the gov-; the, 3,400 workers have stayed their methods." Asked to explain ernment has been stampeded into" off the job. Uniformed person- this, the spokesman said, "the vile by accusations of a similar plot nel such as policemen and fire- and foul language that has been made Nov. 27 by FBI Director J. men were not involved. . directed at the corporation.". Edgar Hoover.1 .10 1 . Pr ests bomb. deny charges WASHINGTON (iA-Four Catholic priests, a former priest, and a nun yesterday denied federal charges that they had -plotted to kidnap presidential advisor Henry Kessinger and bomb heating tunnels in Washington, D.C. yesterday. The Rev. Philip Berrigan, and the four others declared that charges were a government attempt to discredit oppo- sition to the Vietnam war. Berrigan, 47, the alleged mastermind of the plot, and five others were indicted Tuesday by a federal grand jury in Har- risburg, Pa. Bond was set at $60,000 for Equbal Ahmad, 40, a Pakis- taniwho s a fellow at th - British bomb attempt spurs heavy ard LONDON (A-TIhe British gov- ernment ordered tightened securi- ty at the homes of all Cabinet ministers yesterday following an attempt at thq first political mur- der of a British government min- ister in more than 150 years. Two time bombs-regarded' by police as an assassination attempt --exploded late Tuesday night at the home of Employment Minis- ter Robert Carr. The minister and his family escaped injury. But the attempt alone was enough to produce an outraged reaction across this nation that prides itself on traditions of free and reasoned debate and an ab- horrence of political violence. No political leader has been murdered in England since Spen- cer Perceval was shot dead in Prime Minister Edward Heath, attending a Commonwealth prime ministtrs' meeting in Singapore, was among the'first to express re- lief that the Carrs had escaped injury. Heath cabled a personal message to Carr. Last month on a visit to the White House, Heath told Ameri- can officials London was so peace- ful that he could leave his Down- ing Street residence for evening walks through nearby St. James Park without any worries about his safety. Officials here Would give no details, but such strolls are likely to be guarded now under the se- curity precautions announced in the House of Commons by Home Secretary Reginald Maudling. Squads of police questioned known extremists and political militants during the night. Police said the bombs, made of gelignite, were set off by acid fuses timed to go off 30 to 60 minutes after the bombs were left. Pitt. Pr ntouls Films presents HAGRAR PITTSBURGH W) - Cou authorities, after declaring health emergency, lost a bi court yesterday to break a we long strike by Pittsburghr nicipal workers that has 1 tons of garbage piled on. streets. Allegheny County Judge ran L. Lewis declined to rule the county's bid for an inju tion directing the city to or refuse workers back to work mediately, as an initial step ending the walkout: Lewis, however, agreed to h today a petition seeking to the walkout from attorneys the Neighborhood Legal Ser es, who said they represent" poor people of Pittsburgh." strike cot inty The c i t y 's nonuniformed g a workers walked off their jobs d in Jan. 4 in sympathy with a eek- handful of workers protesting mu- job policies of the mayor. e f t Dr. Frank Clack, county city health director, in declaring the health emergency, said dogs Lo- were scattering rubbish into the on streets and rodents were infest- mc- ing garbage piles at homes and der businesses. im- "Storage capacity at m a n y in residences is exhausted," Clack said. "The situation has chang- fear ed from a hazardous buildup of end garbage at specific locations to of a general state of emergency." vic- Even if collections were begun the immediately, Clack said, it would take at least 10 days to clean "THE RED MANTLE" - IN EASTMAN COLOt 4611 j IDIAL 8-6416 TONIGHT AT 7-9 P.M. 7 - bombs were left. . THE F 14f Ii Has Been POSTPONED and Re-routed to a NEW DATE Fr aY an. 2' Same Time ...Same Place... 8:30 P.M. HILL AUDITORIUM All tickets sold will be honored at that concert, or can be returned to Canterbury House for refund. II i I