- a a a a a a a a a a S~~~ a a f l * - - -w w w w w w w w w w - ' i " Sat. - Sun., Oct. 17 - 18 BLONDE VENUS dir. JOSEPH VON STERNBERG (1932) Marlene Dietrich becomes a nightclub singer to support herself and her child. See her sing "Hot Vodos" in on ape suit. With Cary Grant. 4 WEDNESDAY: Polonsky's Force of Evil 7 & 9:05 ARCHITECTURE 662-8871 75C AUDITORIUM 7 page three Cl4r, ,41 I'l" 'trl ig xn ttit NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Saturday, October 17, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michgan Page Three Women seek more representation in Congress WASHINGTON (P)-A group of candidates ranging from old-line conservative to New Left liberal is trying to increase the number of con- gressional seats held by America's majority, women. Although women outnumbered men by two million in voting booths during the last national election, they are outnumbered 50 to 1 in Con- gress, which has fewer female members today than it's had in 18 years. The gap is almost certain to be narrowed, if only slightly in the Nov. 3 election. All 10 women incumbents are expected to win re-election, and so are several female challengers to male candidates. However, Lenore Romney, whose election in Michigan would double femine representation in the Senate, is accorded little chance of joining Sen. Margaret Chase Smith (R-Maine). Among House hopefuls, Bella Abzug, New Left lawyer active in peace and the Women's Libera- tion movements, appears headed for victory on the Demorcatic ticket in New York City's 9th district. . "Both men and women have reacted with good gusto to my slogan, 'This woman's place is in the House,'" says Mrs. Abzug, 49, a founder of the New Democratic Coalition and Women Strike for Peace. Two black women running for Congress are Mrs. Evers is given little chance of unseating Republican Rep. John Rousselot, a John Birch Society officer, in suburban Los Angeles where she campaigns on a "moderation-versus-extrem- ism" theme. Mrs. Jennings is expected to run poorly on Chicago's South Side against her Democratic opponent, Ralph Metcalfe, also black, who has the powerful support of Mayor Richard J. Daley. Mrs. Jennings says she's received no help from the Republican Party, financial -or otherwise, despite her strong support of theNixon administration. At the opposite extreme of the political spec- trum is Republican Phyllis Schlafly, 46, who is giving six-term Democratic incumbent George Shipley the toughest challenge of his career in Illinois' downstate 23rd district. Mrs. Schlafly, whose book, "A Choice Not an Echo,' is credited with helping Barry Goldwater win the 1964 GOP presidential nomination, has had the help of Goldwater and conservatives across the country in her third try for Congress. ' "You know where I stand," states the cam- paing slogan of Louise Day Hicks, Boston city councilwomen who won wide publicity but narrow- ly lost a mayoral election in 1967 with her stand against school busing. Standing on her slogan, Mrs. Hicks passed out "position papers" emphasizing "crime in the streets." Endorsed by retiring House Speaker John W. McCormack, whose seat she hopes to capture, Mrs. Hicks looks like an easy winner in Massachu- setts' 9th district, a Democratic stronghold. Mrs. Medgar rights leader,; secretary to1 71 1I THE ACADEMY AWARD WINNER! !"BEST "BEST DIRECTOR"-Tony Richardson PICTURE ST SCREENPLAY John Osborne "ETMUSIC SCORE".JohnAdio COMEDYwrdloe EYERa1i t 'I MADE.. AN' ABSOLUTE RIUMPH" > -Newsweek ALBERT FINN EY USANNAH YORK/HUGH GRITIH/EDITH [VANS/JOAN GREEN WOOD/. M JONES- DIANE CILENTO/GEORGE DEVNE / AVID ~TOMLINSONfAiOf/JOHN OSBORNE/TONfY RICHAROSON ~' :. ua1 EAS1UANCOLOR/fA UNITED ARTISTS.LGPERT RELEASE SATURDAY, SUNDAY TON ITE at 7:00 and 9:3,0 P.M. NEWMAN CNTE Admission only 90c Presented by Orson WelIles Film Club ATTENDANCE LIMITED U-M community: faculty, students, staff dI nBeywsAbriefs By The Associated Press Evers, widow of the murdered civil and Janet Robert Jennings, onetime the late Sen. Everett Dirksen. Hijackers may stay in Turkey NTUDENTS FOR A DEMOCRATIC SOCIETY (SDS) has publicly ANKARA, Turkey VP)-A Turk- disclaimed any connection with the recent wave of bombings ish government spokesman said across the country. yesterday that his government In its first statement since the bombings began early this year may deny a Kremlin request to an SDS spokesmen in Detroit Thursday said "We wish to make it extradite two Russians who hi- clear that we are not the Weathermen, nor are they part of SDS." hacked a Soviet airliner to Turkey Thursday if they could establish "We oppose the recent wave of terror bombings because they a valid political motive for seek- are going to bring repression, not revolution" said Allan Spector, 24, ing asylum. SDS national education secretary. Soviet Ambassador Vassily Gru- "Good violence," he said, "is like the Chicano riot in East Los byakov has officially requested Angeles, black ghetto rebellions and student disruption against giant that the hijackers be returned to corporate recruiters." Russia, but there is no extradition The Weathermen split with SDS after a contention-wracked treaty between the two countries. national meeting in Chicago a year ago last June. The government spokesman add- ed, however, that if granted asyl- * * * CINEMA II WOMEN HAVE RECEIVED 250 of a possible 3,000 White House appointments, says the National Federation of Business and Professional Women's Clubs (BPW). BPW is attempting to get more women into policy-making gov- ernment positions. The Federation runs a 1,000 member Talent Bank, "ranging from architects to zoologists," drawn from 15 member organizations. The Federation submits names of qualified women from the "bank" to the White House when top civil service and commission jobs open up. So far BPW has had only one success, an appointment to a federal school finance committee, but feels it has made some impact-the White House now calls for suggestions, a Federation spokesman says. TEACHERS STRUCK PHILADELPHIA'S public school sys- tem despite a no-strike injunction yesterday, but school officials reported they managed to keep education going at 238 of the sys- tem's 275 schools. Twenty-six schools were unable to open or closed shortly after the regular starting time, 11 ran half-day schedules and the others! continued uninterrupted, according to a spokesman for the school system.j Attendance was down, however, with some schools reporting only about one fourth of their pupils showing up. U.S. B-52 BOMBERE smothered the Ho Chi Minh trail with bombs again yesterday, beginning a second week of saturation raids against the North Vietnamese supply line. About 30 of the Thailand-based bombers - virtually all the op- erational B-52 fleet in the war zone - pounded jungle-covered trails and transfer points in the Laos panhandle for the eighth. straight. day. There was fresh evidence that the North Vietnamese and Viet Cong were reinfiltrating their former sanctuaries in eastern and southeastern Cambodia, military sources reported. The sustained bombing in Laos is aimed at smashing the "dry; season" push by North Vietnam to move war materials to its troops in Cambodia and South Vietnam. OPEN CITY um here, the hijackers probably would be tried in Turkey for felonies, including murder. No charges have been filed against them yet, officials said, in connec- tion with the death of plane's stewardess. The Russians who, engineered the first successful hijack of a Soviet airliner to a foreign land were identified as Brazinskas Ko- royero, 46, and his son Algedas, 18. Turkish newspapers identified them'Thursday as of Jewish orig- in but a Foreign Ministry spokes- man said Friday they were not. Meanwhile, passengers and two wounded crewmen from the hi- jacked plane flew home yesterday, along with the body of a hostess slain in the episode. Chief pilot Valery Adejov, who underwent surgery for a critical gunshot wound in the chest, re- mained in Turkey. The Antonov-24 jetliner of Aero- flot, which was diverted from its scheduled domestic flight in the Soviet Union to the Turkish town of Trabzon, also remained in Tur- key. Authorities have pledged to return it to Russia but have not said when they will do so. Forty-five passengers, the co- pilot and the radioman from the hijacked plane left on another Antonov-24 sent from Russia to Trabzon to get them. The plane also carried the body of Nadezhda Kurchenko, 18, the hostess killed by bullets as she blocked the door! to the pilot's compartment. Also wounded in the airborne shooting were the copilot and the radioman. ARMED CHURCH at Fletcher -Associated Press Asad Son ger A Jackson County Grand Jury investigator leads Richard B. Songer, center with hat on, into the Jackson County Bldg. after he was indicted by a Grand Jury in connection with the sale of nar- cotic drugs at the Goose Lake Park rock music festival held Aug. 7-9.. Songer is the owner of the park. POLITICAL PRESSURE FEARED: G;ay li~b class causes concern in Kentucky LOUISVILLE, Ky. (W) - A "The University of Louisville noncredit course on homosexu- should be praised to the heav- ality at the University of Louis- ens for allowing this course to ville has a lot of people uneasy, be held," Segal said. There is a including the school's president. general fear, however, that a "I 1 knew we were taking a lot of people will feel otherwise. chance when we allowed t h e "I don't think there's a n y course. I just have my fingers question about it, I could get crossed," said university Presi- some trouble from the politi- dent Dr. Woodrow Strickler. cians" because of the course, The course, sponsored by the Strickler said. Gay Liberation Front, is part The university is part of the of the school's "Free Univer- state university system and re- sity," a series of informal "class- lies in part on legislators to get es" whose only connection with needed state aid. the university is that they are The University is still involv- on school property. ed in a controversy over the use "There hasn't been any har- of University facilities f o r a rassment yet, but I expect Midwest conference of the Gay some," said Dr. Edwin Segal, an Liberation Front. Fearing ad- anthropology professor. verse publicity, President Rob- ben Fleming originally opposed the conference but has since agreed to allow the conference to be held under certain con- Pi Beta Phi _________ Sadat ets 90% vote,* In Egypt Foreign minister blames U.S. aid for extended war CAIRON(A) - Anwar Sadat, chosen to lead Egypt as successor to the late President Gamal Abdel Nasser, received 90.04 per cent ap- proval in Thursday's voting, In- terior Minister Shaarawy Gomaa announced yesterday. Sadat, 52, acting president since Nasser died Sept. 28, was the sole candidate. Voters had a chance to say yes or no. Gomaa said 7.1 million persons cast valid ballots out of 8.4 million registered voters. A total of 6.4 million voted yes, the others no. In Egypt's last previous presi- dential vote, in 1965, Nasser won 99.9 per cent of the votes. The election, said Gomaa; prov- ed "the immortal Nasser did not leave us in a vacuum but left in- stead a firm will." Egypt is "facing the gravest challenges following in the path of Nasser. May God bless our na- tion as a bastion of Arabism," he concluded. Sadat will be sworn in at a spe- cial meeting of Egypt's National Assembly Saturday night. Meanwhile, at the United Na- tions in New 'York Foreign Min- ister Mahmoud Riad of Egypt de- clared yesterday: "The United States bears squarely the respon- sibility for the continuation of the state of war in the Middle East." In a policy speech before the 25th anniversay session of the UN General Assembly, the Egyptian minister said the United States had removed itself as a possible peacemaker by its military aid to Israel. Riad, in his first speech here since the death of President Gamal Abdel Nasser, lashed out at Israel as an aggressor but much of his speech was directed at the United States. "The United States has serious- ly jeopardized a path capable of achieving peace in the Middle East, he declared, adding that the United States lacked seriousness with regard to Middle East peace. I SCREENPLAY BY FELLIN] with ANNA MAGNANI A story of underground resistance during the late phases of the German occupation of Rome during WW1 I. "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 I Do something different for dinner this Sunday It's S paghetti Dinner Time A great deal for only $1.25 OCT. 18 5-8 P.M. 1405 HILL, near Washtenaw UNIVERSITY REFI East Huront OPEN HOUSE 4 I I i( I 'r after the game to 7G:00 836 Tappan featuring the Leaves of Grass! ditions. U IN CONCERT DOCTOR ROSS Hit of the Ann Arbor Blues Festival TONIGHT Union Ballroom 8-12 P.M. Read and Use Daily Classifieds I TICKETS $2 AT DOOR BENEFIT FOR STUDENTS TO SUPPORT THE AUTO WORKERS ;Vjy HOMECOMNG '70 I "REPARATIONS, REVOLUTION, REFORM," Calvin Malefyt speaking 10:30A.M. SUNDAY 6:30 P.M. DISCUSSION SERIES "Competition and the Profit Motive" Thomas Gies, Professor of Finance, U-M James Morgan, Professor of Economics, U-M THURS., OCT. 22 STEVE MILLER RANfl SAT., OCT. 24 TEN WHEEL DRIVE- XAith U The Cale tdap Every MONDAY: Football Night, color TV happy hour prices Every TUESDAY: Apple Wine Night-reduced prices OPENS TUES.! ONE WEEK ONLY! "Beautiful . . Speaks to All Generations!" -N.Y TIMFS THURSDAY, OCT. 15 LOVE'S ALCHEMY g:E~:!~:~E-*!i! -- -I ........;.t.- ............ - aiU...r..-.... Y-iirl . .>a1 ;:I;- # -i :::i 7:ii:" : : f 1 : :: ___ _: aU