I page three C 3iri 41P I~aitw NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 CINEMA 1II TRUFFAUT "STOLEN KISSES" Fri. & Sat.-7 & 9:30 P.M. Saturday, October 24, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michgan Page Three "400 BLOWS" Sat. & Sun.-1 & 3:00 P.M. "LA VACHE QUI RIT" -ANDREW SARRIS AUD. A-ANGELL HALL 75c Come Toujours a news briefs By The Associated Press THE U.S. EMBASSY renewed its request yesterday to the Soviet government to release two U.S. generals detained since Wednesday when their plane landed near the Soviet border. Embassy officials called the landing in the Armenian town of Leninkan, "clearly accidental," and requested Soviet authorities to expedite departure of the plane and its occupants. An embassy spokesman said no response has been received from the Soviety Foreign Ministry. He declined to speculate on suggestions that the plane and its occupants might be used in pressing for the return of two Soviet air- plane hijackers now being held in Turkey. TWO LEADING BRANDS of birth control pills were discon- tinued yesterday because of a laboratory link to benign breast tumors in Beagles. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) stated however, "because of species differences and dosages used, the findings in Beagles cannot be directly related to human experience." The two brands, which account for an estimated 15-20 per cent of the oral contraceptive market are Eli Lilly and Co.'s C-Queens and Upjohn Co.'s Provest. Dr. William Hubbard, vice president and general manager of Upjohn's pharmaceutical division, said the company was withdraw- ing the product voluntarily in view of "inferred risks, however small and unproven." There is no cause for patient alarm," FDA Commissioner Char- les Edwards advised. "Women taking either C-Queens or Provest should continue until advised by their physicians on a change." * * * GEORGE EDWARDS, one of 14 Black Panthers charged in connection with a slaying last year, was sentenced yesterday to a suspended two-to-five-year prison term after he plead guilty to a reduced charge. Edwards had been charged with five offenses, two punishable by death, in connection with the torture and fatal shooting in May 1969 of Alex Rackley, a Panther from New York City. Testimony in the trial of Lonnie McLucas, 24, the only defendant to come to trial so far, indicated Edwards had been present when Rackley was tortured in the basement of Panther's headquarters. Four Panthers, including the national chairman, Bobby G. Seale, remain to be tried in the case. * * *1 ATTY. GEN. JOHN Mitchell yesterday said the widespread repetition in underground newspapers of the phrase "off the pigs" may be contributing to the increase in fatal attacks on police., But unless a "time and place causal connection" can be estab- lished, the constitutional protection of free speech prevents the gov- ernment from moving against those who publish such exhortations to kill police, he said. Mitchell and Quinn Tamm, executive director of the International Association of Chiefs of Police, said at a joint news conference they are concerned about attacks on law enforcement officers that have left 21 killed and 560 injured in the past three months. - Mitchell and Tamm worked out plans for a meeting of federal, state and local law enforcement officials next week. "Where you have underground papers saying things like 'off the pigs,' where individual groups are encouraging attacks - on the police, the constant repetition of this dialogue may have brought about this type of activity even beyond the scope of the organization," Mitchell said. A PLANNED NEWS conference by exiled Black Panther lead- er Eldridge Cleaver and two other American fugitives was can- celled yesterday without explanation. Informants said the Algerian Socialist regime ordered that it should not take place for fear of "anarchist" propaganda. Cleaver, the Black Panther minister of information who spon- sored the news conference, was scheduled to hold it with LSD advocate Dr. Timothy Leary and Bernardine Dohrn, an extremist student group member - or her sister, Jenifer, - who had joined him here earlier this week. The news conferenc originally was scheduled to take place Thursday but was postponed. "The press conference has been cancelled and I cannot say why," a spokesman for the Black radical movement said by telephone Fri- day. Algerian officials were not available for comment. The sources said the Algerian government felt the news con- ference would have turned into a rostrum to favor the use of drugs and expose "anarchist" ideals in this country. -Associated Press President Nixon addresses the UN Nixon asksSovieOts for joint peace effort UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. tiP - President Nixon went be- fore the United Nations yesterday with an appeal to the So- viet Union "to join in a peaceful competition" with -America to promote world peace and progress. Addressing the 127-nation General Assembly's 25th anni- versary session, Nixon portrayed many of the world's - and, the United Nations' - most grievous troubles" as stemming from the deep U.S.-Soviet differences since World War II. Nixon outlined several incentives for the two great pow- ers to curb their differences. These included: - - -Avoiding a nuclear confronta- onstrations of any kind were banned, and searches and ar- rests without warning' fre- quent. Schneider was reported to be in grave condition last night after two delicate operations to remove three bullets from his chest, neck and arm. "The government will not rest from its obligation to find and punish those responsible for this criminal act," outgoing President Eduardo Frei said in a nation- wide address Thursday night, in which he formally declared the state of emergency. "It has taken all measures that will assure that the electoral process e n d s in a normal manner." Left - wing political organiza- tions, including the Communist party, which back Allendemcharg- ed the assassination attempt was the work of ultraright groups in league with foreign elements who see their interests adversely af- fected by an Allende victory, and so made a last-ditch attempt to block his election by Congress to- day. When the curfew began early Friday, heavily armed military patrols were deployed throughout the capital at checkpoints. Only Chilean security tigtens on eve of Allende vote SANTIAGO, Chile (R - Soldiers and police enforced the toughest security measures Chile has seen in more than a decade yesterday on the eve of the expected election today of Marxist Salvador Allende as the country's next president. The armed forces were placed on maximum alert, road- blocks ringed Santiago and a nightly curfew was ordered for the capital following Thursday's attempted assassination of the army's commander in chief, Maj. Gen. Rene Schneider. A national state of emergency was declared, as 10,000 soldiers and police searched Santiago for the terrorists. Dem- Pioneer high readmits black youths Trustees of the Ann Arbor Board of Education Wednesday night voted to readmit three black youths who had been under ex- tended suspension for involvement in vandalism at Pioneer H i g h School Sept. 30. Two of the students were re- instated pending the outcome of disciplinary hearings, and attend- ed classes Thursday. They have been charged with malicious de- struction of property and creating a disturbance during the Pioneer High incident. The third stuent has been in Washtenaw County Jail since Oct 14 on two counts of breaking and entering. He remains in jail upon failure to post $1,000 bond on each count. The trustees' decision was a re- versal of a vote taken earlier in the evening which refused to re- admit the students. A general up- roar ensued among some 50 black students and 25 black parents in the audience, and the trustees vot- ed again. tion; Reducing the arms burden; Increasing U.S.-Soviet t r a d e; and Helping with economic and so- cial development throughout the world. On the Mideast, Nixon put prime responsibility for peace on the Arabs and Israelis themselves but said, "It is imperative that the two major powers conduct them- t selves so as to strengthen t h e forces of peace rather t h a n strengthen the forces of war." t He urged, as Washington has before, the continuation of t h e Mideast cease-fire and of the ef- forts for peace negotiations. Nixon spoke only briefly of the f Vietnam fighting. "In Southeast - Asia let us agree to a cease-fire and negotiate a peace," he said. Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko listened attentively r and impassively as Nixon issued his public bid to Kremlin leaders. Routine applause greeted Nixon . as he finished lis 25-minute tele- i vised address. "I invited the leaders of the Soviet Union to join us in taking - that new road," he said, "to join in a peaceful competition, - not in the building of missiles but in waging a winning war against hunger and disease and human - misery in our own countries and around the globe. Report on radjeals WASHINGTON (P) - A federal judge yesterday called a House committee report condemning radical campus speakers a "black- list" and scheduled a final decis- ion for next week on whether to forbid its public distribution. The report says a survey of 95 U.S. colleges and universities siows that 65 speakers it identi- fies as members of 11 revolution- ary, militant"or Communist-orien- ted organizations or supporters of 'such organizations were paid $108,968 for 155 campus speeches over the past two years. Government lawyers said the House Internal Security Commit- tee report was ordered by Chair- man Richard Ichord, (D-Mo.), to determine the extent to which re- volutionary, and Communist-orien- ted organizations are financed by campus speech fees. U.S. District Judge Gerhard Gessel said the report did not ac- complish its purpose, but has been used as a "blacklist" to be sent to "college presidents, alumni members and their families." Kevin T. Maroney, a Justice De- partment lawyer repre. ,nting the committee, said the report's con- clusion that "the campus speaking circuit is certainly the source of Ksignificant financing for the pro- moters of disorderly and revolu- tionary activity among students" is indisputable. He said the balance of powers, between Congress and the courts gives Gessel no authority to stop publication of the report, which the lawyer called a normal part of the legislative process. Gessel scheduled a final hearing and decision for next Wednesday night on whether to sign a per- manent court order against pub- lc d istribution of the report. He extended until then the tem+ porary restraining order he signed last week against publication of the report. Ichord has had the report dis- tributed to any newsmen who ask- ed for it, and has had the govern- ment lawyers challenge the court's authority to issue such an order. The order was asked by the American Civil Liberties Union on behalf of three people named in the report. Salvador Allende armed forces and police vehicles, fire trucks, ambulances and oth- er designated essential traffic were allowed on the streets. The curfew - from midnight to 6 a.m. - was to continue in- definitely, security officials said. Long lines of people waited out- side the Defense Ministry yester- day to apply for s a f e conduct passes that would allow them to be out during curfew hours. Patricio Rojas, Chile's interior minister, said demonstrations were banned in the country. "The country must be absolute- ly quiet for the crucial election tomorrow," he said. Bandorama '70 YOU don't have to be Jewish to love ZORBA the GREEK Quinn's finest and funniest role! MOURBW UNDER MILK WOOD (a play for voices) By DYLAN THOMAS BENEFIT FOR OZONE HOUSE Fri. i& Sat. Oct. 23 - 24 8:30 $1:OO Featuring The Michigan Bands and The Friars I THIS SUN., OCT. 25 FILM SHOWINGS 7 P.M. 9:30 P.M. (merely 75c) 1429 Hill St. AT SHALOM HOUSE U OPENS TUESDAY ! "Fantastically Funny!" Saturday, November 14 HILL AUDITORIUM 8:00 p.m. -N.Y. TIMES Tickets $2,00, $2.50, $3.00 MA Arl4arc. Bandorama '70 Ii i ii :: w::.v ::::::::::.::n".v, ...... ..:?...."...... ii: vii: viiii:: .i: :::: is +i: .. :: i::F ::::ni}}:"::ti3:4:ip:::^::!":ii :": i?: i:...:..... ...:.......:...v...".......:r :::. ::;G:: ;i": i?>:: i:?i:^}::"::"::". nv :":::"; :" ..... .................... :..... i..,i .; ..." ::....... ::.::'