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(Next to Armory) cA LL 761-0001 Friday, September 25, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three FREE DELIVERY-7 Days a Week-FREE DELIVERY " MASI'IS THE BEST AMERICAN WAR COMEDY SIN E SOUND CAME d -PauineKaei. * EU S New Yorker 20th Centuy fo presents. jLIj Sj 1 1 An ingo Preminger Production DONALD SUTHERLAND ELLIOTT GOULD TOM SKERRITT CoStmng SArKitLRMAN -ROBERTtI -VAt0-JO ANN Pr UG- mEAURONOIS Produced by Directed by Screenplay by bINGO PREMINGER ROBERT ALTMAN RING LARONER,k r From a noel by fMWD H00 R Muic by jOHINY MANDt . = A' Color by DE LUXE@ PANAVISION9 .^ GNOWSHOWING SHOW TITMES TODAY 3020 Washtenaw, Ph. 434-1782.7:00-:10 Between Ypsilanti & Ann Arbor SATURDAY and SUNDAY Box office open 6:30 1:00-3:05-5:10-7:15-9:30 3 Gripping NOW Plo! ys! news briefs By The Associated Press THE FORMAL U.S..;REPLY to the recent "new peace initi- ative" offered by the Viet Cong a week ago was given yesterday by David K. E. Bruce. Bruce, the U.S. ambassador to the Vietnam peace talks in Paris, said Washington will not impose any government on Saigon and left the door open for further talks on military questions. A Viet Cong representative' labeled Bruce's reply "entirely negative., * * CAMBODIA'S LATEST OFFENSIVE, its largest of the six- month war, was stopped yesterday by Communist troops. Up to 6,000 Cambodian troops were isolated from their supply base when saboteurs blew up three bridges behind them. The fighting took place about 50 miles north of Phnom Penh, Cambodia's capital. Cambodian officials said they did not know when the offensive would resume. * a, * FBI AGENTS FAILED once again yesterday in their efforts to capture the four young men accused of bombing the Army Mathematics Research Center at the University of Wisconsin at Madison. The latest false alarm was the detention of three men in Hills- boro, Texas by the Texas Department of Public Safety, acting on the request of the FBI. . The four men have been on the FBI's most wanted list since the Aug. 24 bombing which killed a graduate student, injured three others and caused extensive property damage. * * * MOON SOIL arrived yesterday in the Soviet Union, carried by the-unmanned Luna 16. Soviet scientists hailed the all-mechanical feat as equal to the U.S. Apollo moon landings. The 11-day mission of the complex cosmic craft ended as re- covery teams tracked the capsule through the earth's atmosphere and picked it up in Soviet Kazakhstan. AVAILABLE EVIDENCE "strongly indicates" that insiders of the money-troubled Penn Central Railroad may have violated federal securities laws, said a House member yesterday. ' Acting chairman of the House Commerce investigations sub- committee, Rep. Torbert Macdonald (D-Mass.), emphasized however, that he was not taking the position that violations had actually occurred. AN ALLEGED AIRLINE HIJACKER was being returned from Cuba to the United States yesterday, reported the State Depart- ment. This is the first time that Cuba has directly sent such a person back to the country. The man being returned was identified as Robert J. Labadie, a former U.S. army private who was indicted in South Bend, Ind., on Sept. 10 on charges of aircraft piracy and kidnapping. Official charges U.S. bias WASHINGTON (IP) - The gov- ernment's top job rights officer accused U.S. labor Thursday of "playing all those cards" of its in- fluence in Congress to avoid open- ing its unions fully to nonwhites. "They feel they have a lot of- friends on the Hill; they put a lot of money into congressional cam- paigns," Assistant Secretary of Labor Arthur A. Fletcher told a House subcommittee. As a result, there is a wide- spread feeling in government, he said, that even though equal op- portunity programs are backed by President Nixon, labor will be able to maintain white-favoring mem- bership practices through friends on keycongressional committees. "Labor is playing all those cards," he said. "It's playing all those cards, to be blunt with you. "I've found that labor unions have been jawboning on civil rights and lining up with Congress on civil rights bills for so long that they feel they're above and! beyond having to comply them- selves." he said. "Now the moment of truth has come . .. They aren't being very cooperative." Fletcher testified before a House Armd r mdServicessubcommittee studying the effects of federal equal opportunity programs on defense contracts. Fletcher also told the subcom- mittee he had just learned that a nationwide industry which he- would not publicly name is op- erating under a union contract1 that excludes nonwhites. He said the Office of Contract Compliance under his jurisdiction will investigate. "This keeps minorities out of this industry across the country," he said. "It's just about impossible for them (the industry) to be in compliance." Chairman Charles H. Wilson (D-Calif.) said his subcommittee has found no evidence that the quality of defense work is being reduced by federal requirements, that contractorshirerand train minority workers-although com- panies say the training programs will increase contract costs. -Associated Press Feminine frisk A San Francisco woman allows a female customs inspector to,. search her for weapons before she is permitted to board an air- plane flight at Kennedy Airport. Searches before and after flights have become de rigeur for the international traveler. THOUSANDS LAID OFF- Tals on railroad resume WASHINGTON RI-Railroad negotiators resumed talks in the longstanding dispute over firemen's jobs yesterday with the threat of a nationwideyail strike put off for two weeks. Secretary of Labor J. D. Hodg- son announced that the AFL-CIO United Transportation Union and rail industry officials had agreed to the two-week reprieves in the early morning hours after'a 12:01 a.m. strike threat deadline had expired, President Nixon's power to delay a strike under existing law al- ready had run out. There was no striking on the nation's rait system in the inter- val of some 90' minutes between the expiration of the deadline and the agreement for a two-week postponement. "Naturally I am disappointed that no settlement was reached but I am appreciative of, the fact that further opportunity for nego- tiations now exists without an im- mediate threat of a strike," Hodg- son said. Only Congress could compel a return to work if the dispute re- sults in a walkout after the new deadline expires at 12:01 a.m. Oct. 8. Talks have centered on a possi- ble compronmise solution under which the fireman's job would be combined with that of the brake- man. The railroad industry won from. Congress' several years' ago the right to eliminate some 20,000 firemen's jobs, leaving a b o ut 18,000. Many of the men whose jobs were eliminated were given other railroad jobs, or severance pay. The union has contended it has the right to demand all the jobs be restored since the 1963 special act, of Congress underwhich they were' slashed has expired. The union argues the fireman is needed in the locomotive cab as a safety lookout, but the in- dustry says the men haven't been needed since the advent of the diesel engine many years ago. "The firemen's union now wants to turn the clock back. to the steam engine era," said the in- dustry's National Railway Labor COnfererice. The dispute has involved the federal courts,, the White House and Congress,'including the 1963 law, since the railroad industry first began pressing for elimina- tion of firemen in 1959. Auto suppliers .it by continuing GM strike it # , . . { ?" SUBSCRIBE NOW! DISCOUNTS Friday, Sept. 251 Masculin-Feminin Dir. JEAN-LUC GODARD (1961) A film about the children of Marx and Coca-Cola, 7 & 9:05 Architecture 662-8871 75C Auditorium __1 U' Indians organize group for advancement of opportunities By CHRIS PARKS Seeking to strengthen the po- sition of the red man in Ameri- ca, members of the American Indians Unlimited have, ac- cording to their declaration, "organized to remove the myth of the 'vanishing American'." Formed last spring, and pres- ently the only Indian organiza- tion on campus, the group has dedicated itself to the goals of "cultural, economic, and social advancement" for Indians. One of the major programs of the group is increasing educa- tional opportunities for Indians at the college level. Paul John- son, a leader of the organiza- tion, says t h a t although the University awards f i v e Indian scholarships per year, these are hard to obtain due to the diffi- culty of proving legally that one is, in fact, an Indian. A program to recruit Indians has been initiated by Eastern Michigan University, according to Aster Simpson, a student at Eastern. However, S i m p s o n stresses that the program is, in his opinion, inadequately fund- ed. He went on to say that if scholarship funds were n o t forthcoming, research would be done to determine if EMU got its land originally as a grant from Indians. If so, he men- tioned the possibility of court action against the University to obtain these funds. Johnson says the group's cul- tural program is also a vital part of its operation. "People right now are stressing educa- tion," he said, "yet we're trying to educate our own people to the ways we have, our own re- ligion, our own feeling to unify us, to know what our true heri- tage is." The third major program of the group is increased employ- ment opportunities for Indians. Construction worker Stan Mor- seau characterized Indians as "Willing workers if t h e y are given work." The group, Mor- seau says, is working on - pro- grams to keep young Indians in school, to increase their chand- es of gaining adequate, mean- ingful employment.' The American Indians Unlim- ited plans two events for the near future. The first is an au- tograph session with Vine De- laria, author of the book, Cus- tard Died for Your Sins, which will be co-sponsored by the - Centicore bookstore on October\ 4th. The other event is an open house on Indian culture at the Ann Arbor Public Library on October 30th. This open house will include poetry, dancing, and bead and leather work pro- vided principally by local resi- dents. DETROIT ( P) - Employers in the tire, metals and transporta- tion industries laid off more work- ers yesterday as the effects of a 10-day-old United Auto Workers' strike against General Motors Corp. spread. One of the anticipated effects of the labor dispute surfaced yes- terday in Detroit as GM of- ficials announced an average price increase for its 1971 cars of $136 per car over current prices. The corporaiton held the door open forhstillahigher1971.prices, saying that at the conclusion of the strike car prices "will be re-, viewed in the light of prevailing economic factors and competitive conditions in the marketplace." Many supplier firms and o t h e r businesses dependent upon GM business admitted the loss of busi- ness was hurting, but said they were holding off on layoffs in hopes of a settlement. The economic impact of the strike - estimated by GM to be $100 million, a day in loss to the U.S. and Canadian economies - has slowed production of the U.S. Gross National Product (GNP) by 11/2 per cent, a Nixon administra- tion adviser estimated. General Motors has estimated that its suppliers are losing $40 million a day in sales because of the strike. Herbert Stein, one of three members of the President's Coun- cil of Economic Advisers, said, however, that the strike will pro- bably not have much effect on the Nixon administration's efforts to control inflation and revive econ- omic growth. The union did not strike 27 GM facilities which make parts. for Ford and Chrysler Corp. One of those exempted plants - Delco Electronics at Kokomo, Ind.-was added to the strike list Thursday. GM has laid off 30,162 of the 73,500 employes at the exempted facili- ties. ------ . Signs of an early settlement were not apparent, said officials of the United Auto Workers union which called the strike at mid- night,,Sept. 14. Negotiators met briefly Thurs- day but did not discuss any of the major issues separating the two sides. Another session was scheduled for Thursday, but only noneconomic issues were on the agenda. UAW pickets have forced cur- tailment of work by outside con- tractors, in some instances. Robert Sallen, vice president of Acorn. Iron Works Inc., Detroit, said two steel fabrication jobs under way at GM facilities have been halted because his union steel- workers have refused to cross the UAW pidket lines. A few men at Acorn have already been laid off because of the work interruption. Baits food problem allayed a't Commons By PAUL RUSKIN Some 200 Baits residents who have been without meal con- tracts since the semester began can now purchase contracts from the North Campus Com- mons dining room, University Housing Director John Feld- kamp has announced. This action was taken to pro- vide food service for the Baits residents who are unable to pur- chase meal contracts from Burs- ley. Bursley and Baits are both lo- cated in the North Campus housing complex, but Baits has no cafeteria service. According to Feldkamp, the meal problem arose when 800 Baits residents applied for meal contracts at Bursley - 200 above the limit for which Burs- ley can supply food. Baits residents complained that the official University Housing booklet states that stu- dents from Baits would be al- lowed to purchase meal con- tracts at Bursley. The residents rejected earlier. this term an offer f r o m the Housing Office to buy m e a 1- contracts at dorms on central campus. The announcement that food contracts will be available at the Commons came as a surprise since the Commons' restaurant is privately owned and has nev- er before agreed to provide food service at the lower prices that students pay in the dorms. Af- ter the meeting, representatives of Baits residents agreed to "give Commons a chance for the 'first few days of next week." Conspire to, Come! PLOT WITH CHICAGO 7'S OWN Win. KUNSTLER I --mm Hear Kunstler Sept. 27 CHAEKHOV'S THE GRASSHOPPER A SOVIET FILM VERSION OF THE STORY AWARDED AT VENICE FILM FESTIVAL "Apart from creating impeccable period background, beau- tifully observed and felt, Samsonov handles the narrative with a nicely judged subtlety and irony. He has caught the difficult Chekhovian balance to perfection; the film is both sophisticated and touching. The casting is almost faultless." -Sight and Sound Sunday Evening-8:O--Hill Aud. Tickets: $1.25 - DIAG-Main Desk, Union-At Door OPEN 12:45 P.M. SHOWS at 1-3-5-7-9 P.M. Program Info: 662-6264 THE LANDLORD'S GETTING JUST ABOUT EVERYTHING BUT THE RENT. Watch, the landlo get his. . -S...S State & Liberty Sts. HELD I OVER! Now lowm@Mmmwmommqmqk )rd I RHIGHES RAING! LIZA RATES OSCAR IN TOP DRAMA" -DAILY NEWS amoe i I U of M Students for HART need your help for a REGISTRATION DRIVE This is the political work that gets votes! COME TO THE SAB LOBBY Either FRIDAY, SEPT. 25 at 7:00 P.M. orSATURDAY, SEPT. 26 at 11:00 A.M. Call 761-8825 for more iAfo PRESENTS -PAT anl \/ICTORIA THE MIRISCH PRODUCTION COMPANY presents A NORMAN JEWISON-HAL ASHBY - -l 10T]OKI I I . i ----