t \I Wednesday, Sept. 30 THE T HIN .MAN dir. WOODY VAN DYKE (1934) William Powell and Myrna Loy as the most urbane of sleuthing teams-Nick and Nora Charles. Fast-paced dialogue and stylized acting made the Thin Man series a classic. With Astra. OCT. 1-2-DOUBLE BILL: MEXICAN BUSRIDE & -TARTUFFE 7 & 9:05 Architecture 662-8871 75c Auditorium 13 GrippIng NOW P loys! Street priest blasts BOSTON (MP)-The Rev. Paul Shanley, Boston's "street priest" for the last four years, has given up walking his beat. "It was, the only thing I could do to keep 'my sanity," Father Shanley said in an interview. "I couldn't hack it any more." Long-haired and sometimes bearded, Father, Paul, as he is called lay those who know him, was a familiar figure wherever runaways gathered in Boston. They were his flock, these "street kids," youngsters who had left their homes and turned, for the most part, to drugs. The controversial 39-year-old priest, assigned to work with runaways by Richard Cardinal Cush- ing, Roman Catholic archbishop of Boston, con- sidered his unorthodox dress and appearance his tools. "I adopted the dress of my people," he said. He has been off the streets pow for almost seven weeks, at his own request. "There wasn't anything more I could do for the kids," he said. "The first year we reconciled a lot of the kids," Father Shanley said, "The second year we were able to keep them on soft drugs, off the killers. Last year . . . we could only keep them alive. This year we couldn't even do that." "I can't watch any more what society's doing to its kids," he added. "I feel like a father whose son is about to be killed by a bus. It's bad enough to know it's going to happen without having to watch it happen." At the moment Father Shanley is still tech- nically assigned to his street mission. But he is doing nothing specific, awaiting a talk with the Most Rev. Humberto S. Medeiros, newly appointed archbishop of Boston, who will replac4 Cardinal Cushing early next month. While working on the streets, Father Shanley would often .talk to as many as 30 youngsters in a night. He would stalk their hangouts during the late evening and early morning hours. "We just wanted to get them off the streets, treatmen t give them a place to crash, to sl9ep for the night," he said. Some of them were brought to drug rehabili- tation centers in the city. Others were taken to private homes, where people interested in Father Shanley's work had volunteered their services. He said one of his major frustrations was lack of a permanent place to bring youngsters "until I could convince them to return home, or at least call their parents." His work with the runaways was not easy. "You don't enjo§ street work," he said. "It was the hardest youth work I ever did. The frustration is overpowering." His street work is being continued, however, by a group of volunteers, including several nuns. He established the group, called Bridge Over. Troubled Waters, Inc. ofyouth ids, they go home. That's not true. The kids then xst get in deeper." Fathee Shanley, lecturer in clinical psychology st year at the Harvard Graduate School, also is )ncerned about young professional people who ay be "on the verge of dropping out." "What I'd like to do," he said, "is get a 100- re farm somewhere where they can go for sym- .thetic rejuvenation-experience the calming, storative qualities of nature so they go back nd do their work." In the meantime, he says if any solutions are Ding to be reached concerning the drug prob- m with youth in this country, changes are going have to be made. "The only solution," Father Shanley said, "is )r the adults to turn around and clear up in Heir own houses-make it a country which kids >n't have to run from-physically or chemically "Kids don't believe in the great American ream, that everything's going to work out even- wally. They want it now." I~ait t Father Shanley said, "I can't change public opinion. One of the faliacies they is that if you don't do anything to help adult have these I news briefs By The Associated Press STANDARD OIL of California was accused of false advertis- ing Thursday by the Federal Trade Commission. The commission charged thie company with falsely claiming that its F-310 additive in its Chevron gasoline significantly reduces air pol- lution. In San Francisco, O. N. Miller, Standard's chairman of the Board, called the commission's allegations "erroneous and unfounded." He added that the company "intends to 'take immediate and strong action to defend itself against the commission's accusations." In a proposed order, the commission would require future gaso- line advertisements to prominantly display the FTC charges. The order would not become binding on Standard of California unless agreed to by the company or decreed by the commission and, upheld by the courts. FIRES IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA/ that have raged since Friday appeared to be under coiitrol yesterday. Eight persons; have died in the blazes that charred nearly half a million acres. Fire loss is estimated at $175 million, with 1,500 homes, business and other buildings destroyed or damaged. State officials are now working on plans to ease what they say is the certainty of mudslides and flooding this winter on denuded mountains and foothill slopes. * * * THE SENATE voted yesterday to cut off debate on a con- stitutional amendment for direct election of the president. The 53 to 34,vote came after the failure of a second attempt to break a filibuster and force the proposal to a vote. Majority Leader Mike Mansfield (D-Mont.) moved to put the proposed amendment aside temporarily. The proposed amendment would abolish the Electoral College system of presidential elections and provide that a candidate who got as niuch as 40 per cent of the national popular vote would be elected. i j Sfcri i an Wednesday, September'30, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three Nixon SUBSCRIBE NOW! DISCOUNTS! Tito plan meeting, E BELGRADE (R) - President Tito decided yesterday to go through with President Nix- on's visit to Yugoslavia and delegated his chief adviser to attend the funeral of hI is friend, Gamal Abdel Nasser Edvard Kardelj, Yugoslavia's top communist theoretician and member of the Executive Council, was named to represent Tito in Cairo at the funeral Thursday, the second and main day of Nix- on's scheduled visit. The announcement ended more than half a day of uncertainty over whether Tito would cancel or postpone the fist 'U.S. presi- dential trip to Yugoslavia. Nasser was his close 'personal friend and a fellow leader of the nonaligned nations. An official announcement from Tanjug, the Yugoslaw news agen- cy, said Nixon and. Tito would cover the main world issues in their talks as well as U.S.-Yugo- slav relations. An official proclamation asked the people of Belgrade to turn out in the streets and give the Presi- dent and Mrs. Nixon a cordial greeting when their motorcade enters the capital Wednesday af- ternoon. Thousands were expected to do so. The proclamation, by the' So- cialist Alliance, Yugoslavia's Com- munist-led mass organization, said the visit "will be a significant contribution to further develop- ment of cooperation between the two countries and friendly rela- tions based on independence, non- interference and mutual respect." Yugoslavia and the United States have had "a. long-iasting and fruitful friendship" and de- velopment of cooperation between them "is in the interest of the two e o u n t r i e s," the proclamation added. The United States has extended $2.87 billion in aid to Yugoslavia since World War II. -Associated Press 1-* 'hX*" I LO A- SOCIAL- SECURITY LEGISLATION increasing benefits for iu tui uriun widows and widowers was approved yesterday by the Senate Fi- A low-flying helicopter makes a water drop to help exti nance Committee. since yesterday. The fire is one of many that has beenr Under the law now, a widow receives a payment equal to 82 1/ five days. The huge park is only six miles from downto per cent of the amount her husband would have drawn. The bill - -_-_-- - would raise this to 100 per cent effective ne t January.u h -MITCHELL ANNOUN CEMENT: The committee also eliminated a provision which would have in MLE creased Social Security for disabled persons. inguish the fire raging through Griffith Park ravaging southern California during the last wn Los Angeles. _ _... i DIAL5-6290 DOORS OPEN SHOWS AT: 12:45 1-3-5-7-9 LIZA MINELLI IN OTTO PREMINGER'S "H IGHEST RATING" -N.Y. Daily News The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Mlcigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan, 420 Maynard St.. Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sundaymorning Univer- Aty year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier, $10 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5. by carrier, $5 by mail. Justice 'Dept. to send delegates) to speak with college students W ASHINGTON (A') - Seeking what Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell termed a beneficial exchange of information and views, the Justice bepartment yesterday announced it would' send representatives to 51 campuses in 31 states ,for dis- cussions with students. Included on the list are four predominantly black institutions, and other colleges and universities ranging in size from Indiana Uni- versity, with 56,000 students, to Pomona College in Claremont, Calif., and Reed College in Port- land, Ore., both with 1200 stu- dents. Mitchell, who has not disclosed whether he would be among the representatives visiting the cam- puses, said the visits in October and November are designed to im- prove communications between college students and the Justice Department. When he first announced the plan this summer, Mitchell had expected to take part in the dis- cussions. In letters to the institutions' presidents, Mitchell noted that much of the Justice Department's work-law enforcement, civil rights and environmental quality-is "of deep interest to many younger Americans." Mitchell told the campus ad- ministrators that top officials of the department hoped to meet in- formally with students and answer questions about the department's policies and programs. Thes'department's announce- ment said the 51 institutions were selected "to proyide a broad cross- section of college campuses." The list includes private as well as public institutions, some of them denominational. The predominantly black schools include Howard University in Washington, D.C.; Atlanta Uni- versity in Atlanta, Ga.; Morgan 'State College in Baltimore, Md.; and Texas Southern University in Houston, Texas. Such campuses as the University of California at Berkeley and Co- lumbia University in New York City ar, not' on the list. There are not many Ivy League schools on the list, either. The dates for the visits will be annguncsd later, Mitchell said. U.S.continues policy of disengagement in Vietnam - GET ATTENTION ?i Students and Faculty? COME OUTY to the; r} Gay Liberation Dance A:ALL SINGING!: ALL DANCING! ALL TALKING! SAT., OCT. 3 . UNION 9-12:30 BALLROOM . $1.50 (Donation) .:r?:v:.hv':i : }'4 {4;} ,vE+'"Y"" :t :.i"+4':vN."'iii"^::: 'i Y::v+:: f::i'' __ Hi-Fi Studio SAIGON ()-The United States made three new moves yesterday to disengage its men and machines from the war, including comple- tion of the transfer of a big com- bat base to the South Vietnamese army, It was the 54th American in- stallation to be turned over to the Vietnamese since the U.S. with- drawal started just over a year ago. The other disengagement moves announced by the U.S. Command were the further reduction in U.S. troop strength by 2,565 men and the transfer of 40 jet attack bomb- ers to the South Vietnamese air force, next Thursday. The U.S. Command also an- 121 W. Washington 668-7942 features .nounced that three units of the 1st Marine Division and an Army artillery battalion have been pull- ed out of action and are preparing 'to depart. The combat base that was turn- ed over to the South Vietnamese is at An Hoa, 20 miles southwest of Da Nang. It was set up four years ago by U.S. Marines and was once one of the largest bases' for the Leath- ernecks in the northern sector. The newly announced troops re- duction lowered the current Amer- ican strength. to about 391,000 men and this figure will be cut by another 7,000 during the com- ing weeks. The withdrawals are part of President Nixon's fourth-phase, cutback of 50,000 troops that will lower authorized American man- power in Vietnam to 384,000 by Oct. 15. The 40 bombers that will be turned over to the South Viet- namese on Thursday comprise two. squadrons of A37 jet attack air- craft. The- transfer will be made at a' ceremony at Bien Hoa Air, Base, 18 miles north of Saigon. the most respected name in HIGH FIDELITY COMPONENTS. , 1 -- - - -- - - -- - - I I "IN SHORT,,ONE OF THE BETTER iAMERICAN FILMS OF 1970." -Neal Gabler, MICHIGAN DAILY I EMU THEATRE BAREFOOT IN THF DADK I 11 COMPLETE STOCK OF CLASSICAL MUSIC MINUS ONE U-M Barbers 8:30-5:15 P.M. Monday-Saturday U-M Union _ _ wmm I i DON~h'T TAKE NEAP. GABBEFR'S WORD FOR IT.- 111 1 i I 11