A i , ' E ' 3020 Washtenaw, Ph 434-1782 Between Ypsilanti & Ann Arbor Box Office Open .6:30 NOW SHOWING SHOW TIMES TODAY' 7-9 SAT. &SUN. 1-3-5-7-9 page three frkt i!3n 43ttiz NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Friday, October 2, 1970 An Arbor, Michigan Page Three CLINT EASTWOOD 'SHII EMACWiNE A MARTIN RACKIN PROOUcnoN TWO MULES FOR SISTER SARA. Screenplay by ALBERT MALTZ" Story by BUDD BOETTICHER " Directed by DON SIEGEL Produced by MARTIN RACKIN an CARROLL CASE A UNIVERSAL PICTURE " TECHNICOLOR, * PAE.NAVISIO?? 1R 1.D AuL AGES ADMITTED Parenta Gidace Suggested ANN ARBOR CIVIC THEATRE proudliy presents Its 41st season "CACTUS FLOWER" Oct. 14-17 "MAN OF LA MANCHA" Dec. 16-20 "SUBJECT WAS ROSES" Mar. 3-6 "BLITHE SPIRIT" Mar. 31-Apr. 3 "IN WHITE AMERICA" Apr. 21-24 Colleges for blacks to get aid WASHINGTON MP-The Nixonj administration responded to com- plaints that it is insensitive to black education by announcing a 30 per cent increase in federal aid for predominantly black col- leges yesterday.- HEW Secretary Elliot L. Rich-! ardson said in a statement the $30 million increase was ordered by President Nixon following ap- peals from black educators. The National Association for Equal Opportunity in Higher Ed- ucation complained recently that the administration was ignoring! the needs of black Americans andj their colleges. The association is composed of presidents of pre- dominantly black colleges and uni-I versities. "The present finacial plight of many of our small and the over- whelming majority of our pre- dominantly black colleges clearly demonstrates to me that the fed- eral government must strengthen! its role in support of equal op- portunity," Nixon said in a letter of reply to Dr. Herman B. Brae-E son. Branson is former president of{ Central sState University at Wil- berforce, Ohio and vice president of the black college association.' Branson said in a telephone inter- view that the additional $30'mil- lion is not nearly enough to meet the needs of financially pressed black colleges, "although we are: deeply appreciative." The bulk of the additional aid is money borrowed from othert federal programs or carried ever from previous years and does not represent a significant net in- crease in government- education spending. "THE BRASS AND GRASS FOREVER" (an original musical) -Associated Press No place like home President Nixon and Yugoslavian President Tito chat with a woman during a visit to Tito's birth- place yesterday on the second day of Nixon's official visit to Yugoslavia. 25 PER CENT INCREASE? '11he , Teramiiation of sick corn: Hamburger prices- may- soar news briefs By The Associated Press PLANNERS FOR THE upcoming Victory Rally expect a crowd of 500,000 despite the absence of their principal speaker- South Vietnamese Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky. The rally is to be held on the Mall in Washington D.C. this weekend. The Rev. Carl McIntire, whose International Council of Christian Churches is the chief sponsor of the rally, told newsmen: "People who were not planning to come are cancelling their plans and are coming in righteous indignation against the Nixon administration." McIntire, a New Jersey fundamentalist radio preacher, charged the Nixon administration with putting pressure on Ky that eventually forced him to cancel his appearance at the rally. A $19.9 BILLION MILITARY procurement bill, authorizing expansion of the Safeguard antimissile system, was approved by the Senate yesterday. On a voice vote, it passed the compromise bill hammered out by a House-Senate conference, and sent it to the White House. The final version sets defense policy in a number ofareas, in- cluding open-ended arms sales to Israel, and puts spending limits on the Pentagon's shopping list fornew weapons. The bill permits the spendinglof $1.3 billion to expand the Safe- guard system to new sites at Warren Air Force Base, Wy., and White- man Air Force Base, Mo. * * * A MAJOR INCREASE in Social Security benefits was ap- proved by the Senate Finance Committee yesterday. The provision, written into a House-passed Social Security meas- ure, woulld provide the 26 million Americans now on the rolls with a 10 per cent increase in benefits and a $100 minimum monthly pay- ment. The proposed increase'would add $3.7 billion to the cost of the House measure, which currently provides for, a five per cent general raise. The Senate Committee's decisions were reached almost wholly on party lines with Democrats supporting the increases and Repub- licans opposing them. President Nixon has asked for the five per cent general increase. The increase approved by the committee would take effect Jan. 1; 1971, the same effective date as the House bill. * * * , JAZZMAN MILES DAVIS, the Beatles, Buddy' Miles and others from the world of music paid tribute yesterday to the late pop singer Jimi Hendrix at his funeral in Seattle. Hendrix, named the world's top pop singer in a 1967 poll of British fans, died in London Sept. 18 at the age of 27. Other entertainers, including Johnny Walker and John Ham- mond Jr., joined the Hendrix family in the plain brick church, where a silvery gray metal casket stood. Among Me flowers massed around it stood a seven-foot-high guitar. THE NATIONAL TRANSPORTATION safety board said yes- terday that engines of 747 jumbo jets are operating at "'near critical turbine temperature conditions." The board recommended quick steps to avoid "potentially cata- strophic results ... The board did not call for grounding of the huge airliners but urged the Federal Aviation Administration to "initiate further ex- peditious actions in order to preclude recurrence of similar failures" as that experienced when fire damaged two of the jets recently. There is evidence, the board said, that failures of 747 engines occurred as a result of operation iat higher than desirable temperatures. May 5-9 DON'T DELAY-ORDER YOUR SEASON TICKETS TODAY (Use This Coupon) NAMF PHON E rv V7"lMC 1 ADDRESS. CITY i .ZIP Please reserve sets of season tickets, as indicated below. I have enclosed $ I understand the tickets will be mailed to me in the fall. I have enclosed ed envelope. a self-addressed, stamp- *Wed. balcony "Wed. orchestra *Thurs. balcony. *Thurs. orchestra Fri. balcony Fri. orchestra Sat. balcony Sat. orchestra 6 SHOWS $ 8.50 10.50 8.50 10.50 11.50 13.50 Sold Out 11.50 13.50' Sold Out 5 SHOWS $ 7.00 9.00 7.00 9.00 10.00 12.00 Sold Out 10.00 12.00 Sold Out shows, please indicate NEW YORK''A) - Because of the corn blight, you may be pay- ing 90/ cents next year for a hamburger that now costs 75 cents, a leading brokerage spec- ialist in farm commodities says. Donald Cook, executive v i c e president of Andco, Inc., a Chi- cago-based Commodity broker- age house, says that as a result of the corn leaf blight that has infested the crop throughout the corn belt, beef prices could jump 20 per cent by next spring while pork prices could soar 25, to 40 per cent. The reason is that corn ac- counts for 70 per cent of feed grains used to nourish cattle and hogs. Cook said in an inter- view at the Intarnational -Com- modities Conference, w h i c h ended Wednesday. Cut the corn supply, accord- ing to Cook, and the result could be corn prices so high that farmers would be compelled to send their ,livestock to slaugh- ter sooner when they were not full grown. And, he says, a cut in the meat supply at a time when demand is very strong could trigger sharp increases in beef and pork prices at the retail level. The executive says that the disease, whose cause is unknown, could shrink this year's c o r n crop 13 per cent or more. That, according to Cook, would mean a harvest of 4.2 million bushels, a four-year low. "The situation could be even worse," says Cook. "We cannot tell yet how this blighted crop will store or feed, or even how it will harvest if the disease- weakened stalks should . face high winds." He says the size of the corn crop usually is known by this time of year. But the blight, he says, has left the quantity of the harvest in doubt. A special report by the Agriculture De- partment to be released Friday should shed more light on the crop size, Cook says. He says that the nation is headed on a "collision course" in corn. "Supplies of corn are off sharply while we're on a sharply rising usage path." Many corn experts believe that some of the 1971 crop also may be infested with the blight. OPTION: If you prefer tickets for only 5 which show you wish to omit: *Best seat selection available for these performances. MAIL TO P.O. BOX 1993, ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN 48106 La Sociedad Hispanica PRESENTS THE MOVIE "THIS STRANGE PASSION" SUNDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1970 Auditorium A, Angell Hall I $1.50 KATE and (English subtitles) Showings 7 and 9 75c Admission I v ROMA -7 . .. ...... ------- "Made the Philly Folk Fes- tival come alive." N.Y. TIMES TUES. R.F.p. Boys 75c The OdV4eV I NEXT WEEK- U. Utah Phillips $1.50 411 21111 TREET N~i~l -presents-- FULL FAITH AND CREDIT one of Ann Arbor's great bands Friday 9:30-1:30 CIEA IEINIM LOLA MONTES Directed by MAX OPHULS "Makes 'Loves of Isadora' look like 'Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm' " -S. A. SOLOMON FRIDAY & SATURDAY Aud A. - Angell Hall 75c Everyday Discount Price The Michigan Daily, edited and man- agec. by students at the University of Michigan. 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 Sunday morning Univer- sity 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. National General Theatres FOX VIRLLr6E 375 No. MAPLE RD.-769130 NOW SHOWING MON.-FRL-7:00-9:00 SAT.-SUN.-2:00 4:30-7:00-9:30 ParamountPictures A Howard W. Koch -Alan Jay Lerner Production Starring Barbra Streisand YVes Montand 0On A Clear Oa' YOU Can See i Based upon the Musical Play nA "ear"ay You C* ' See Forever Panavisior Technico A Paramours Pictur- "G-Al Ages Admitted General Audiences' Saturday 5-7 after game 9:30-1 :30 happy hour tI Concerned About the Environment? INVESTIGATE CAREER OPPORTUNITIES IN PERSONAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH! The University of Michigan Program in Health Planning will be interviewing prospective master degree candidates TUESDAY, OCT. 6, ALL DAY at the Placement Office (SAB) . B.A.s in social sciences preferred Full financial assistance available SIGN UP FOR INTERVIEW AT 3200 SAB-Placement Office-764-7460 Daily Classifieds Get Results finlerncatonal 'l/f/cq st A P I cantqe mood youtr to b I .I I Jut outr NperionaItv1 A BIKE FOR EVERY PURPOSE UNDER HEAVEN Carlton, Raleigh, Robin Hood, Mercier, Falcon, Witcomb, Bob Jackson, Pogliaghi. Touring and Racing parts and accessories. Complete repair facilities for all Racing and Touring bicycles. TUR INJ TONIGHT! AVAILABLE STYLES LIAR " The Dutch Boy " The Greek Boy * Human Hair * Falls & Wiglettes 1 1 1k I A T/' Jesus III I: I I11 1 AI H 11 I