RADICAL FILM SERIES PRESENTS BENJAMIN CHRISTENSEN'S WITCHFRAT THROUGH THE AGES page three im4c tri i g n 40 Batty NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Tuesday, November 3, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Tuesday, Nov. 3 ALICE'S RESTAURANT ALICE LLOYD HALL- Wednesday, Nov. 4 CANTERBURY HOUSE 330 Maynard admission 75c 7, 9, 11 p.m. news briefs By The Associated Press Conference on I THE PROJECT COMMUNITY presents Frederick Wiseman's documentary "HIGH SCHOOL" "When you are being addressed by someone older than you or in a seat of authority, it's your job to respect and listen. We are out to establish that you can be a man and that you can take orders." HIGH SCHOOL MONDAY, NOVEMBER 9th ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM 7:00 P.M. and 9:05 P.M. Contribution $1.00 11 arms resumes I TERRY TATE TONIGHT at the 'ARK 75c 1421 Hill 8:30 761-1451 RICHARD CARDINAL CUSHING, 75, Roman Catholic arch- bishop of the Boston archdiocese since 1944 and a close friend of the Kennedy family, died of cancer yesterday. He said the inaugural prayer for President John F. Kennedy in 1961 and, three years later, performed the funeral Mass for the as- sissinated president. Cushing had retired in early October due to ill health. * * * A SELF-STYLED "chicano revolutionary" hijacked a United Airlines jet with 75 persons aboard to Cuba yesterday, taking two children along with him for the 2,500 mile flight from California to Havana. The jet's scheduled flight to Los Angeles and Portland, Ore., was interrupted moments after take-off from San Diego late Sunday. Capt. Joe Kolons stopped in Tijuana, Mexico for fuel and then flew on to Havana with the middle-aged gunman sitting in the cockpit. * K* 7R U.S. B52 BOMBERS struck in South Vietnam yesterday for the first time in over three weeks. The giant planes bombed enemy positions in northermost Quang Tri Province near Khe Sanh. Quang Tri is one of five South Vietnamese provinces swept by floods that have already killed nearly 200 persons. Other planes continued to attack the Ho Chi Minh trail, just across the border in Laos, in the most intensive B52 campaign of the war. * * * 144 PERSONS PERISHED Sunday in a dance hall fire in Saint Laurent Du Pont, France. The dance hall never received of- ficial fire department permission to open for business, a depart- ment inspector said yesterday. The emergency exits had been locked to discourage gatecrashers." The victims, mostly youths, were stacked in charred heaps by useless exits. Witnesses said the fire, possibly caused by a discarded cigarette, consumed the interior within minutes. THE UNITED STATES and the Soviet Union launched the U.N. General Assembly's disarmament debate yesterday by urgingI quick approval of a proposed treaty banning nuclear weapons from the ocean floor. There seemed little doubt that the 127-nation assembly would endorse the treaty overwhelmingly.1 ABOUT 20 INMATES at Cummins State Prison Farm in Pine Bluf, Ark. seized four persons at the prison yesterday and j threatened to kill them unless their demands for freedom were E met. All of the hostages were released 13 hours later after Gov.1 Winthrop Rockefeller said authorities would not yield to the inmates' demands.t U.S. Dist. Judge J. Smith Henley ruled Feb. 18 that conditions at Cummins constituted cruel and inhuman punishment in violation of the U.S. Constitution. * * * ALMOST 20 YEARS AGO, Richard M. Nixon, then Cali- fornia's junior Republican senator, unsuccessfully sponsored a bill to make it a crime to fire or discipline a federal employe for testifying before a congressional committee. Later this month, Sen. William Proxmire, (D-Wis.,) will reintro- duce that bill in his fight to force the administration to reinstate Ernest Fitzgerald, a Pentagon cost expert who was fired after he} testified before Proxmire's Joint Economic Committee. In his testimony, Fitzgerald disclosed the Air Force's giant C5A transport plane would cost at least $2 billion more than original estimates. * * * A HOUSE SUBCOMMITTEE says GI blackmarketing of drug shipments and truckloads of PX goods in Thailand has been con- firmeduby Armv ' in. L ti.5atnrs.. Th s ize of the o erations is 3 -Associated Press Cans squashed A workman driving a forklift prepares to dump a load of beer and soft drink cans into a bin at a Reynolds Metal Company facility in Los Angeles. The company has opened several redemption centers that pay 10 cents a pound for cans which will be recycled. CAMPAIGN LOOPHOLE: Brokerage firms make contributions HELSINKI, Finland (N) - The United States and the Soviet Union moved yesterday into the third round of strategic arms limitation talks (SALT) with prepared state- ments voicing hope for progress in vital and delicate negotia- tions. Their envoys had their first unofficial get-together Sunday night at the Russians' hotel. They agreed then to hold the first serious business talks today at the Soviet Embassy. After that, twice-weekly meetings will alternate between the Soviet and the U.S. embassies. The talks, marking the two superpowers' biggest effort to date to try for a curb on increasingly costly and deadly nuclear arms competition, began here with a five-week preliminary sounding late last ---- year and continued w i t h a second business round seeking common ground on a "positive" at- mosphere in Vienna. Thirty-odd meetings were held there over four months before re- cess Aug. 17. The Americans, according to in- formed sources, now are awaiting a response from the Russians to an outline presented in Vienna that was reported to include pro- posals for a package deal on limit- ing big offensive missiles and long range bombers as well as antibal- listic defense systems. Washington will be watching the third round of SALT closely for indications that the Russians still mean busines, in the nuclear arms curb effort, after develop- ments in the Mideast, Cuba, Ber- lin and elsewhere that have in- creasingly chilled U.S.-Soviet re- lations over the past few months. Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Vladimir S. Semenov's opening re- marks yesterday seemed to indi- cate a will on the Russians' part to continue the previous work- manlike attitude in the talks, de- spite a brief polemic reference. Stating that the Soviet Union attaches great importance to the talks, he asserted : "The Soviet Union has consistently come out in favor of the relaxation of ,the arms race fanned by certain im- perialist circles, and the strength- ening of international security. It is from these positions that we conduct these negotiations.' a Creativ'e lpt4 9eootioaI WASHINGTON (W) - S t o c k' brokerage firms across the coun- try, using a hole in the Corrupt Practices Act, have been making political contributions for con- gressional races. At least eight brokerage houses have tossed in $5,000 each to a national campaign fund passing out donations to Senate and{ House candidates, including in- cumbents linked to financial leg- islation. The contributions include two sums for Texas congressmen un- opposed in today's election. The Securities Industry Cam- paign Committee has reported $62,000 raised so far, with more than half of the money still be- ing sent out in the closing mo- ments of the campaign. The Corrupt Practices Act out- laws political contributions by national banks, corporations and labor unions. But most of the top brokerage f i r m s are set up as partnerships, n o t corporations, and therefore are not covered by the ban. nations went to Republican con- gressmen running for Senate this year. It reported $2,000 for George Bush in Texas, $1,500 for Lowell E. Weicker Jr. in Connecticut, and $1,000 for Lawrence J. Burton in Utah. Another $1,000 went to Conser- vative candidate James Buckley in ' New York. Republican National Chairman Rogers C. B. Morton was also given $1,000 for his con- gressional race in Maryland. Q uenon in race with Nielsen By AARON HOSTYK Ernest Quenon, Dem., is chal- lenging the incumbent Republican Bent Nielsen for his seat on the Washtenaw County Board of Com- missioners for the seventh district which includes the University of Michigan. Both candidates emphasize their desire to increase social services in the county. Quenon would like to increase the county welfare ap- propriations. He says that "we don't administer our social welfare system with a heck of a lot of concern for welfare recipients." Nielsen says, however, that since the state is running "90 per cent of the show" in the welfare area and contributing most of the funds that the whole program should be administered by the state. Nielsen points to his twelve years of experience on the Board and says that in the last two years educational services for the county have increased substan- tially. For example an information program has been set up to in- form indigent people about the federally sponsored Food Stamp Program, he adds. Quenon hopes to institute a narcotics control center and re- place the present county hospital, which he calls a "fire trap," with a new facility. One of Quenon's main campaign issues is his claim that the Board is dominated by rural interests and unresponsive to urban needs. He also says that the county is not getting as much tax money as it should because of "systematic under-assessment of land outside of cities." Nielsen denies the charge of un- due rural influence on the Board and says that township assess- ments outside of the cities have gone up dramatically In the last few years. Quenon, who was defeated in his campaign for re-election to City Council last year, has been vocal in his opposition to the Vietnam war. 100 marchers demonstrate in support of Angela Davis By DEBRA THAL More than a hundred people marched around the campus ar- ea Sunday night in a demon- stration supporting Angela Da- vis. Davis, a black Communist, has been charged with murder and kidnaping in connection with a shootout outside a court- room in San Rafael, Califor- nia in August, which resulted in four deaths. Guns used in the incident were allegedly purchased in Davis' name. Led by a vanguard of women armed with noisemakers, the demonstrators marched f r o m the Diag around the Hill area, down Geddes and Forest to Oakland, to Pizza Bob's a n d then to the Newman Center. As the marchers followed their police escort they chanted and sang. "Male chauvinists you better start shakin', today's pig is to- morrow's bacon," was a popular refrain. The group varied in size from over 150 people during much of the march to approximately 60 when the weary protesters final- ly trudged into t h e Newman Center at the end of the march. MASS MEETING irme ny army ives g~t~b .ne sz i6eupea1i51 undetermined. The securities fund had made The most popular black market items are amphetamines, barbit- only scattered small contributions urates, and veneral-disease drugs, according to an Army enlisted going into the last few days. But two of them went for Rep. Bob man who participated in the illegal activities. Eckhardt, D-Tex., and Rep. Hen- ry Gonzales, D-Tex., both unop- J in Thealy posed for re-election. The securities fund's largest do- r.a As. ask r rrrwwrr rr f /ilrwr 4 r Mr Mr !sA EMU UNIVERSITY ACTIVITIE5USOARD presents TRAFFIC and TEAGARDEN & VAN WINKLE NOVEMBER 8-8:30 P.M. at Bowen Fieldhouse-Ypsilanti, Mich. TICKETS: $3.00, $3.50, $4.00, $4.50 AVAILABLE NOW at: Little Things, Ann Arbor EMU McKenny Union, Ypsilanti Ned's Bookstore, Ypsilanti J.L. Hudson, Detroit T hursday, Friday, and Saturday (Nov. 5, 6, 7) WHEN PURCHASED WITH A STYLING SET at $5.00 Total $7.5 0 (e"xtra for 'very long hair) 607 south forest avenue ~~ by appointment only 66M6301 Wednesday & Thursday November 4th & 5th DEPARTMENT OF SPEECH STUDENT LABORATORY THEATRE PRESENTS THE LOVE OF DON PERLIMPTON AND BELISA IN THE GARDEN by Frederico Garcia Lorca AND SAND by Murray Mednick ARENA THEATRE, Frieze Building Promptly at 4:10 p.m. or earlier if theatre is filled ADMISSION FREE SINGLE SALES BEGIN TOMORROW ! UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN PRFESIOALTHETR POGRAM ENDS WEDNESDAY-STATE THEATER (At State Joe Namath & Ann-Margret in "C.C. & COMPANY" (R) & Liberty) DIAL 662-6264 OPEN 12:45 Shows at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 P.M. I U I _.. _ +WR lhe Sidelong Glances Kof a Pigeon Kicker M D W E S T p P AAlANCHE1970-A1 1770 PLAYSUq 'AON hROAANWAY CI "-- fM. a t.,...RwJ -UTT.RLY WINNING N.T.iino :1. / h_ y.r.. Meet Jonathan. The very day he graduated Princeton he became a New York taxi driver. (Then, he met Jennifer.) is f I I i