. - M BOOK SALE EVERYTHING IN STORE REDUCED 20% OFF LIST ON NEW 50% OFF LIST ON USED Come in and browse. Get required books for the rest of the term Sale lasts until October 23 STUDGNT 700K SGRVICG 1215 S. UNIVERSITY Wednesday, Oct. 21 FORCE OF EVIL dir. ABRAHAM POLONSKY (1948) Polonsky, blacklisted ,during the Hollywood witch hunts, returned to the screen only last year with the highly acclaimed Tell Them Willie Boy is Here. Sarris considers Force of Evil "one of the great films of the modern American cinema." Short: ANYTHING ONCE, with Mabel Normand 7 & 9:05 ARCHITECTURE 662-8871 75C AUDITORIUM I DOUBLE FEATURE-THRU SATURDAY Hidden WASHINGTON WP) -- Sugar, shipping and cable TV groups are special support to their favorit gressmen this year with campaign tions to hidden fund-raising comm A sugar lobbyist helped orga special campaign fund in the n capital for Democratic House Hale Boggs (D-La), a top can to become House majority leade - January. Two seamen's groups cha $5,000 into a hidden campaign mittee for Rep. Edward A. Garma Md), chairman of the House Me Marine Committee, who is uno for re-election. A milk producers' political fun $3,500 to another hidden commit Rep. Graham Purcell (D-Tex), news THE GOVERNMENT abrupt terday against S. Sgt. David Mit pation in the alleged My Lai mass The case was dismissed after t ed at his court-martial and none w dant shot a civilian at My Lai. The defense was tentatively s today providing it could collect w Attorney Ossie Brown told newsme by surprise." Mitchell, 30, is the first My L court-martial. He is charged with unarmed Vietnamese civilians dur through the sub hamlet March 16, STRIKING STEWARDESSE Trans World Airlines to cancel curtail overseas service to Franc Africa. Federal mediators continued e wage dispute between the AFL-CI TWA, the nation's second largest ai * * THE PHILADELPHIA FED) Philadelphia school board have million, two-year package endi the nation's fifth largest school sy Leonard M. Sagot, attorney f the teachers will return to work tod date on whether to accept or reject t Agreement was reached at a school board negotiators and three The panel of judges also rul no pay for the time they were out o * * THE SPACE AGENCY said y of the moon, brought back by the were missing in the mail system s The national Aeronautics and asked the Post Office department of two shipments mailed from Nas September 28. The samples, totaling 13 gram were sent by registered mail to the oratory of Columbia University an in New York City for the American] - c 2 STOP Tt* F# milk, giving e con- dona- nittees. nize a ation's Whip ndidate r next nneled com- atz (D- rchant pposed d gave tee for chair- man of the House agriculture subcom- mittee on livestock. These key congressmen head a list of at least 28 House candidates with so- called "D. C. committees" set up in the District of Columbia which, in contrast to many states, has no law requiring public disclosure of campaign receipts and spending. Milton G. Nottingham Jr., a shipping businessman who was local treasurer for the Garmatz committee, added, "A con- gressman or senator has only two sour- ces of raising money. One is his con- stituents and the other is the people who have interests in his activities on the Hill." "It's a legal and convenient way to raise money from people around town. A 'D. C. committee' has gotten to be a standard performance," said lobbyist Irvin Hoff. Hoff, who represents the U.S. Cane Sugar Refiners' Association helped set up the "D. C. Friends of Hale Boggs." Thirty men gathered at a private home one night in July to chip in contribu- tions to the House leader. The "D. C. Friends of Graham Pur- cell" got $3,500 from one found, the Trust for Agricultural Political Educa- tion, which is linked with a milk pro- ducers group in San Antonio, Tex. "We don't really dig in and question why they contribute. We're just happy to get it," said Don Taylor, treasurer for the Purcell committee. The political arm of the Seafarers un- ion reported it gave $3,000 to the "D.C. Committee for Garmatz." But the Ma- funds aid congressional campaigns brie fs By The Associated Press ly cut short its assault case yes- chell, who is accused of partici- acre. hree prosecution witnesses appear- was able to say whether the defen- cheduled to open its presentation witnesses on short notice. Defense en: "I think everybody was caught ai veteran to be brought before a assault with intent to murder 30 ring an American infantry sweep 1966. * * ES and pursers yesterday forced all its U.S. flights and sharply e, Greece, Switzerland, Asia and efforts to settle the 14-month old O Transport Workers Union and T carrier. * ERATION of teachers and the reached agreement on a $57.3' ng the three-day strike against stem. or the 11,000 member union, said day, but will vote at an unspecified the agreement. conference between union and judges. ed that the teachers will receive n strike. * (17 4 iirl t gttn Wednesday, October 21, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michgan Page Three Poverty areas struck byri'sing unemployment- WASHINGTON () - The Labor Department reported yes- terday that unemployment in the poorest neighborhoods of the nation's 100 largest cities has climbed by more than 30 per cent in the past year. The report, by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, said the overall jobless rate climbed from 5.7 to 8.3 per cent of the to- tal work force in the poverty neighborhoods over the year, compared with a rise from 3.3 to 4.8 per cent for other big city neighborhoods. The 8.3 per cent jobless rate in the poor neighborhoods compares with the nation's overall unemployment rate of 5.5 per cent at last report in September, the highest in nearly seven years. The national jobless rate was 3.8 per cent a year ago. The report said the climb in unemployment in the poor " neighborhoods was about in Guerrillas line with the national rise. rine Engineers Beneficial Association was less candid. Its group listed a $2,- 000 donation only as going to: "Milton Nottingham, treasurer." The money showed up in a search of the reports to Congress that national political-groups, such as those for labor unions and industry lobbies, must file, itemizing all contributions. A cable TV group reported a $1,000 contribution to an organization called the "Committee for Effective Govern- ment." It was traced as a fund-raising body for Rep. Torbert H. Macdonald, (D- Mass). MacDonald is chairman of the House, communications subcommittee which has held hearings on cable TV. These reports listed such names as "D.C. Friends of karth," "D.C. Broy- hill Boosters Committee, "D.C. O'Neill Committee," and "Sparky's friends in the District of Columbia." Other contributions to various D.C. committees came from such industry groups as the highway lobby, savings associations, real estate, automobile dealers, restaurants, motels and coal mining. Labor unions' political groups were high on the list, also. Incumbent congressmen aren't th e only politicians with D.C. committees. Two others cropped up bearing the names of two non-incumbents-House candidates Bruce Shine in Tennessee and Virgil Musser in Ohio. Still another D.C. committee bore the name of a candidate for governor in the Virgin Islands. esterday that two tiny fragments Apollo 12 mission last November, omewhere. Space Administration said it has to look into the delay in delivery sau Bay near Houston, Texas last s - less than half an ounce - Lamont-Doherty Geological Lab- d to the Army post office number Embassy in Saudi Arabia. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- agen by students at the Universit of Mic~higan. Newpw hone: 764-0552. Secnd i i i 1 3 -Associated Press Eskimo marcher An Eskimo woman and her child, bundled against the 30-degree weather, participate in yesterday's march which officially opened the 27th annual convention of the National Congress of American Indians in Anchorage, Alaska. SEEKS PANEL Agnewlv, asks views of TV F'IFTH For'um PIPYM AV6UUUAT LISE4Y D11 OWNTOWN ANN ARBOR ALSO Richard Boone, Bibi Andersson in ."THE- KREMLIN LETTER" The Newest Thriller from John Huston, Master Director of "The Maltese Falcon" KREMLI N LETTER-7:00 DOWNHILL RACER-9:00 1YLi1 [1.Av . 1V1. IY , . C U 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. I- CHICAGO VP)--Vice President Spiro T. Agnew suggested yes- terday that a panel of govern- ment officials "examine" news commentators so that any pre- judices the newsmen may have could be brought before the public. "The people who are watching that tube have a right to know what your opinions are if you happen to be a man who is tell- ing the news every night," Ag- new told two television inter- viewers in Chicago. The vice president said news- men can select parts of the news they wish to emphasize and by their language "can convey a point of view that is not 'an editorial yet is colored by their own viewpoint." "It would be very interesting," Agnew said, "to have a show- ,tews me n a panel type show where sen- ators from either party, repre- sentatives, I suppose maybe a couple of governors-could sit down with someone who has a national reputation as a com- mentator .. . and just examine him in depth on where he stands personally on the issues he talks about every day." Agnew particularly mentioned Frank Reynolds and Howard K Smith, anchormen on ABC eve- ning news, and Eric Sevareid of CBS and did not directly in- clude print newsmen. But a spokesman said later "you can safely assume" Agnew meant the print media too. Agnew brought up the subject during the taping of an inter- view with Chicago newspaper- man Irv Kupcinet and Charles Roberts of Newsweek Magazine. The situation was worst among black teenagers, whose jobless rate rose to nearly 35 per cent, the report said. "The number of unemployed persons in poverty neighborhoods averaged 510,000 in the t h i r d quarter of 1970, up about 150,000 from the third quarter of 1969," it said. "Jobless rates for both -whites and blacks from poverty neigh- borhoods were up sharply o v e r the year. T h e jobless rate for whites moved from 4.4 to 6.6 per cent and that for blacks from 7.5 to 10.8 per cent," it said. T h e national unemployment rate among white workers is 5.1 per cent and the rate for blacks is 9 per cent. "Most of the increased jobless- ness in poverty neighborhoods ov- er the year t a o k place among adult men, both white and black. The jobless rate for black men rose from 3.9 to 7.9 per cent while the rate for white men rose from 2.8 to 5.1 per cent," the report said. The national jobless rate for all men is 4 per cent. The jobless rate for white teen- agers in poverty neighborhoods moved up from 17.2 to 17.7 per cent and for black teenagers from 29.3 to 34.9 per cent, compared with 16.8 per cent nationally for all teenagers, the report said. Unemployment climbed slightly faster for whites in the p o or neighborhoods, but blacks had a continuing higher jobless rate. battlearmy in north Jordan By The Associated Press New fighting broke out yester- day in'northern Jordan between government troops and Palestinian guerrillas. In Cairo, moderate Mahmoud Fawzi was -named prime minister and hard-liner Mohsen Abul Nur secretary-general of Egypt's only political party. An Arab peace commission in the Jordanian capital of Amman issued an urgent call for a cease- fire in new fighting at Ramtha, near the Syrian border. Guerrilla leader Yasir Arafat said govern- ment forces also attacked at Al Turrah village, close to the border. In Cairo, the Central Commit- tee of the ruling Arab Socialist Union approved unanimously Sa- dat's selection of Fawzi as the new prime minister. Fawzi was one of the late President Gamal Abdel Nasser's chief foreign affairs ad- visers for 18 years. Sadat and the Central Commit tee balanced appointment of the moderate, 70-year-old Fawzi by naming the hard-lining Abul Nur to the powerful post of secretary- general of the Socialist Union, Egypt's only political party. AbulNur, 49, whose influence in the government could exceed Fawzi's, is known to have strong sympathies for -the Soviet Union. if TONIGHT AT 8:00 ! "Beautiful ... Speaks to All Generations!" -N.Y. TIMES A i braid-edged rawhide. . Tough, man. ..especially when worn with flare bottoms and the wide belt. Great colors, too! Navy, brown or off-white. Now National General Theatres MON.-FRI. 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