I JOIN THE SPORT OF THE SPACE AGE PARACHUTING SERVICE TECUMSEH, MICHIGAN Michigan's Most Active Sport Parachuting Center Saturday, Sunday, Holidays -For Information Call- MON.-FRI.-291-3634 WEEKENDS-423-7720 ENJOY SKYDIVING AT ITS BEST Classes Start 11:00 Sat. & Sun. page i.ree Friday, October 16, 1970 C14 P tr t tn a 41P 19 NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Ann Arbor, Michgan Page Three Page Three J CINEMA II OPEN CITY SCREENPLAY BY FELLI I with ANNA MAGNANI1 A story of underground resistance during the late phases of the German occupation of Rome during WW 11. "The picture is full of kinds of understanding which most films entirely lack or reduce to the- atricality. I have nothing but admiration for it."-JAMES AGEE AUD. A, ANGELL HALL FRIDAY and SATURDAY 7:00 and 9:30 75c. By The Associated Press URUGUAY'S NATIONAL CABINET resigned last night, in a crisis arising from a budget dispute between congress and the government. President Jorge Pacheco Areco's reaction was not known, but informed sources say the cabinet may be reorganized. The collective resignation was announced shortly after the gov- ernment ordered a 48-hour suspension of bank and foreign exchange operations, apparently establishing conditions for a devaluation of the Uruguayan peso.. The conflict between congress and the government followed two years of heavy austerity measures, including a salary freeze, ordered by Pacheco Areco in an effort to halt inflation. * * * NORTH VIETNAM and the Viet Cong yesterday expressed their "categorical" rejection of President Nixon's peace plan, but the United States refused to accept this as their last word. "Let there be no illusions," said Mrs. Nguyen Thi Binh of the Viet Cong at the regular weekly session of the Paris peace talks, "we have categorically rejected Mr. Nixon's pseudo-plan for peace." Nevertheless, U.S. Ambassador David K. E. Bruce told them: "Ladies and gentlemen, we will not take your compents today as your final position" * * * PRESIDENT NIXON signed a $3.1 billion bill yesterday to help cities finance urban mass transportation projects. The bill authorizes the money for projects of the Urban Mass Transportation Administration and expresses the intention of Con- gressto provide a total of $10 billion over the next 12 years for large- scale mass transit projects. Surrounded in the Cabinet room by those who helped promote the measure, including Secretary of Transportation John A. Volpe, Nixon hailed the "very significant financial commitment" he said the bill makes toward improving future life in the cities by alleviating traffic jams and air pollution caused by automobiles. * * * SECRETARY OF STATE WILLIAM P. ROGERS conferred with Egyptian Foreign Minister Mahmoud Riad last night, but Riad said they made no headway on a Middle East peace. U.S. officials agreed that no progress had been made at the conference in Rogers' Waldorf Towers suite but continued to hold out hope that a formula would be reached to get the stalled Arab- Israeli peace talks going. Tonight Rogers has the first of two meetings scheduled with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko during Rogers' 10-day round of conferences with foreign leaders attending the fall session of the United Nations. * * * AN AMERICAN BIOCHEMIST, a British biophysicist and a Swedish physiologist were awarded the Nobel Prize in Medicine- Physiology yesterday. Julius Axelrod of Rockville, Md., Sir Bernard Katz of London and Ulf von Euler of Stockholm are the recipients of the $80,000 prize for independent discoveries leading to greater understanding of transmission between nerve cells. VICE PRESIDENT SPIRO T. Agnew appeared in Jackson- ville, Fla., at a political rally yesterday less than an hour after an anonymous telephone caller said a bomb had been planted in the auditorium where he was to speak. "This is a representative of Revolutionary Force 12. There is a bomb in the Civic Auditorium. I hope you believe me," the caller said. The call was received at 11:21 a.m. Authorities notified the Federal Bureau of Investigation, which relayed the information to the Secret Service and military inteligence. The 3,000 people already in the building by noon were not evac- uated or notified of the warning. Agnew arrived shortly after noon. THURS.-FRI., Oct. 15-16 { The Scarlet Empress dir. JOSEPH VON STERNBERG (1934) Marlene Dietrich as Catherine the Great FRI.-SAT.: Blonde Venus 7 & 9:05 ARCHITECTURE 662-8871 7cAUDITORIUM Strike Al impairs a -Associated Press President Nixon signs new crime bill Nixon signs bill stiffeningbomb laws WASHINGTON ) - Pledging Lawrence Speiser, national legis- to win the war against organized lative director of the American crime and anarchist terrorism, Civil Liberties Union, said his President Nixon yesterday signed group feared the bill's provisions legislation giving federal author- would be used not against organ- ities strong tools against mobsters ized crime but "against militant and bombers. The bill makes participation in groups, Black Panthers and others a fatal bombing a capital offense, the administration considers as gives the FBI immediate juris- dissident." diction in campus bombings and allows agents to use electronic B surveillance in bombing investiga- ubomr The major portion of the billp is aimed at cracking down on or- ganized crime syndicates through broadened grand jury powers, use of previously inadmissable evi- (EDITOR'S NOTE: The government dence in trials and greater senl- said it tightened security at federal tencing authority for judges. buildings because of terrorist bomb- Nixon deplored the recent wave ings. But a reporter, sporting a of Nbobin gdspa d sadth e et ware bushy beard and carrying a suspic- of bombings and said those re- lou s looking bfunta se- iou okn box, found thatre sponsible must be brought to jus- curity wasn't so tight.) tice. It seems that every day weso By KEN H ARTNETT pick up the papers and see some Associated Press Writer sporadic incident - without rea- WASHINGTON - I marched son, without cause-that we have into the Pentagon yesterday not been able to cope with be- carrying a shabby yellow shoe fore," the President said. box just to see how far I could "I think at this time to point get before the government's se- out that the actions of the FBI curity against bombers stopped in apprehending Angela Davis- me dead in my tracks. a rather remarkable story again I walked for a mile, all the in the long history of remarkable way to Secretary of Defense stories of apprehensions by the Melvin R. Laird's office, and no- FBI-is an indication that once body stopped me. the federal government through Nobody stopped me either the FBI moves into an area, this five minutes later when I walk- should be warning to those who ed by the offices of the Joint engage in these acts that they Chiefs of Staff. eventually are going to be appre- It was the same almost ev- hended." erywhere I went - the Capitol, U.S. economy. WASHINGTON () - The auto workers' strike against Gen- eral Motors showed its impact on the; economy yesterday, contributing to a sharp drop in industrial production and keeping the nation's total output from rising significantly. The developments gave no clear indication of whether the economy is on the upswing as the Nixon administration has predicted. While the Gross National Product (GNP), the market value of the nation's output of goods and services, climbed at a 6 per cent annual rate during the July-September'period, industrial production dipped by a surprising 1.7 per cent during September. In both cases, the auto workers strike played a key role. With- out it, said a spokesman for the Commerce Department, the na- tion might have seen a small drop in the inflation rate. The Commerce Department said the "real" GNP - the measure of the nation's output with inflation discounted - gained by an annual rate of 1.4 per cent in the July, September period. With inflation figured in, the GNP climbed at an annual rate of- six per cent during the period' to $986.2 billion, up $14.1 billion over the April-June period Paul J. McCracken, chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers, said "It is quite clear that t h e economy is on the threshold and probably in the early stages of substantial and vigorous expan- sion." In talking with newsmen, Mc- Cracken said, "I think the evi- dence is clear that the rate of inflation has decelerated signifi- cantly." ing reporter D.C. guardls the Senate OfficeBuilding, the Justice Department, Internal Revenue Service, the Post Of- fice Department, t h e Interior Department and even the Gen- eral Services Administration. The GSA was the department that ordered the tightened se- curity in the first place. In a directive Monday it s a i d en- trance to government buildings should be denied "to anyone carrying suspicious packages un- less they voluntarily submit the package for examination." Everywhere, the guards were courteous and cooperative when I stopped to ask them for direc- tions. B u t they apparently weren't aware of the directive to check suspicious packages. All I had in the box was an old pair of black shoes. But for all the government guards knew, the box could have held a bomb. Soviet plane, hij acked,/ to Turkey TRABZON, Turkey (R) - A Russian father and his son car- rying shotguns, pistols and gren- ades hijacked a Soviet airliner yesterday and forced it to fly across the border into Turkey. The plane landed at this coastal town with the stewardess shot to death and three other crewmen wounded. It was the first known success- ful hijacking of a Soviet passenger plane although there have been at least four other attempts. Mos- cow promptly asked Turkey to ex- tradite the hijackers and return the plane. Officials identified the hijackers as Brazinskas Koroyero, 46, and his son Algedas, 18. They surrend- ered to police and asked fo.r poli- tical asylum. Turkish newspapers said the Koroyeros were Jewish and t h e father was a native of Lithuania. No motive was given immediate- iately for the hijacking, but the Soviet Union has refused to per- mit thousands of Jews to leave Russia and many Lithuanians still object to the Soviet absorption of their country in 1940. Police surrounded the Aeroflot, twin-enginer airliner when it touched down at this Black Sea port about 100 miles south of where it was seized while on a domestic flight inside the Soviet Union. The two hijackers were the first to emerge and handed over two shotguns, five pistols and t h r e e hand grenades. Many of the remaining 43 pas- sengers appeared to be panicky. The chief pilot was taken to a hospital where he was reported to be in critical condition with a chest wound. The plane had a crew of five. A Turkish Foreign Ministry spokesman said it would be Turk- ey's duty to return the plane and personnel but the extradition question "is a more complicated matter." OPEN 12:45 P.M. SHOWS AT 1-3-5-7-9 P.M. Program Info: 662-6264 2nd SHOCKING WEEK! U At State & Liberty Sts. A movie as American as Mom's apple pie, Daddys Scotch- on-the- rocks and little Maxie's hang-ups. The Overland Stage " The Love Pickle 11 3 i i E # Joseph E Levine presents An Avco Embassy finz "The people next door" starringI Eli Wallach Jute Harrs 1k Hal Hobrook.-DeborahWnters Screenplay by JP Miller, based upon his original story - Produced by Herbert Brodkin Directed by David Greene-A Herbert Brodkin-JPMiller Production- Color by Deluxe AN A"CO m mm I L 1Er 1 *umCT" STARTS THURSDAY-"SOLDIER BLUE" The N.Y. Times calls it "A staggeringly powerful magnificent film. Must be numbered among the most significant brutal, liberating and honest American films ever made." Starring Candice Bergen and Peter Strauss. -premiere "A Slight Ache ---P inter Friday, Oct. 16 Sat., Oct. i17 East Quad Aud. 8:00 P.M. $1.00 The Calehap Every MONDAY: Football Night, color TV happy hour prices Every TUESDAY: Apple Wine Night-reduced prices THURSDAY, OCT. 15 LOVE'S ALCHEMY 9:30-1 :30-Women half prices FRIDAY, OCT. 16 LOVE'S ALCHEMY 9:30-1 :30 j National General Theatres Ful VILLAGE 375NO. MAPLE RD-7694300 ENDS TUESDAY Mon.-Fri.-7:00-9:15 Sat.-Sun.-2:00 4:30-7:00-9:15 Barbra Yves Streisand I Montand 0n A C ear Do something different for dinner this Sunday It's Spaghetti Dinner Time A great deal for only $1.25 OCT. 18 5-8 P.M. 1405 HILL, near Washtenaw 11 i I I - --____r__ _------ --- -------- i "1RUSH"1 TICKETS:* 200 at $100 each (two tickets per person--no choice of location) ON SALE 11:30 to 12:00 A.M. AT THE Hill Andiforium PRESENTS The Pennsylvania Ballet OPENING THE DANCE SERIES IN HILL AUDITORIUM Sat., Oct. 1'7,8:30 PROGRAM: Ballade (Gabriel Faure) ; Interlude (Jacques Ibert) ; Figitive Visions (Rokofie f f) ; and Pas de dix (Glazounov). OTHER ATTRACTIONS IN THE DANCE SERIES: SATURDAY & SUNDAY MATINEES ONLY 1:00 P.M. (over at 2:45) 3:00 P.M. (over at 4:45) theatre cleared between shows ALL SEATS 75c THE STARS OF BORNFREE' SHINE EVEN BRIGHTER PS PAL OMAR PI( TURE5 INTERNATIONAL SATURDAY, OCT. 17 __ MERLIN 9:30-1 :30 I 1 OPENS TUES.! ONE WEEK ONLY! "Beautiful ... Speaks to All Generations!" -N.Y. TIMES I I MARTHA GRAHAM AND DANCE COMPANY .... . BAYANIHAN PHILIPPINE DANCE COMPANY. .Monday, October 26 SaurdayNnvmher -.71 i H I k I i X ::5 F .v. :: iA > .....::: :. ..'} .: ':k::1 ..i~' ':: :: :.. ':::i:::> '..£ : Si:A ' .: ~ :i':" \~v