Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, February 15, 19/3, II '1 Dollar value decreases; gold reaches new high TONITE Last Showing NEW WORLD FILM CO-OP -PRESENTS- Will the real "m Christian" pcease stand. FIRES BURN MORE THAN TREES, By Reuters and AP certainty lifted the price of gold LONDON-The value of the dol- to new all-time highs. lar was sent lower yesterday as Banking and other financial world money markets opened, some sources in Europe conceded that for the first time since Tuesday's the continued pressure on the dol- devaluation. A wait-and-see atti- lar was making money markets tude and continued monetary un- nervous. But they cautioned it was too, early to tell whether this meant the dollar devaluation would fail to halt the international monetary crisis of the past two weeks. In New York stock market prices fell sharply yesterday turning around from the initial enthusiasm in the wake of Tuesday's devalua- tion. The Dow Jones average of 301 industrial stocks dropped 16.85 to 979.91. Declines led advances on ih $2.00 $: O FRI.-SAT.-SUN. ELEKTRA Record's P S i r f POWs reach U.S., I greeted b families TRAVIS AIR FORCE BASE, at Travis Air Force Base, 50 mil Calif. (A) - Twenty freed U. S. northeast of San Francisco, prisoners of war flew home toward early yesterday evening. America yesterday, some headed A quiet, low-key welcome w for Valentine's Day reunions with planned for the 17 officers a loved ones they'd not seen for up to three enlisted men upon their 7h years. rival after the 16-hour flight fr The first major group of POWs Clark Air Base in the Philippine freed under the Vietnam cease-fire Nine of the men will be reuni agreement was expected to set foot with relatives at military hos on the soil of mainland American tals in California. __ __ --The others will walk to near C9 Nightingale hospital jets wa X ch d s ing to ferry them the final lap NiXOn chides to eight other military hospitals Maryland, Texas, Virginia a Tennessee. Forty . more POWs will foll today in two planes. This will lea 80 of the men freed Monday s e/ 0 st I at Clark and one in Saigon. Although some bear the ma of their confinement - scars WASHINGTON UP) - President their arms from being bound wi Nixon urged Congress yesterday to wire and poorly healed injuries complete its "unfinished environ- the good physical condition andE mental business" by acting on 19 thusiasm of most of the men bills proposed by the administra- lowed a speedup in Operat tion in the last session and still Homecoming. pending. Meanwhile, U. S. and No In a nationwide radio address Vietnamese officials met in Saig he said this country is heading for to make arrangements fort victory in what he called the war transfer of' 20 more Ameri a g a i n s t environmental de- POWs who Hanoi announced wo gradation. be released within the next I Nixon promised a number of ad- days. A North Vietnamese spok ditional initiatives in a forthcom man in Saigon said the datef ing, and presumably more detailed the release had not been deci special message to Congress later butnthe decision was expec this week. soon. But informed sources did not an-- ticipate any major new departures. The President's proposed budgetw for fiscal 1974 holds a tight rein on environmental and resource spend- ing and offers little encourage-t ment to new programs that would .,.. kA W EE cost substantial amounts of money. I III Among the legislation to be re- introduced, Nixon said, would be H RP MAYOR FEB. 19 bills to: encourage state land-use planning; modernize federal min- Pd. political advertisement ing and mineral leasing laws; im- prove federal land management; and achieve "enlightened regula- tion of surface and underground mining." \ the New York Stock Exchange by a 4-1 margin. In London and Zurich gold shot up to a high of $72.13 an ounce. The rise for the day in .London les was a phenomenal $3.13, and only in slightly less in , Zurich. Dealers said trading was very active. was The former record high for gold,I and $70 an ounce, was set in August ar- 1972. om Congress is expected to give es. quick formal approval to devalua- ted tion of the dollar but a fight is spi- developing over President Nixon's plan to seek powers to raise bar- rby riers against some imports, con- ait- gressional sources said today. tp_ The administration's bill is ex- in pected to be presented in the next and two to four weeks. The President is already trying to offset any dif- low ficulties that might arise by seek- ave ing the support of a variety of conE till gressional, business, agricultural and labor leaders. rks on Everyone Welcome vith MEET INTERESTING - PEOPLE en- AT THE al- ion :BACH CLUB arth gon FEATURING the Clark Suttle tan uld Double Bass few { Suzette Larrivee kes- for Piano and Harpsicord ded Leo Najar ited Viola Commonwealth United Presents a Grand Film Starring TECHNICOLOR* .w.i Released by COMMONWEALTH UNITED. --PLUS--- A film short "End of a Revolution?" Che Guevara in Bolivia 7:15 and 9:30- Modern Languages Auditorium III (E. Washington at Thayer) ADMISSION $1.25 Join The Daily. ACADEMY AWARD NOMINEES CICELY TYSON BEST ACTRESS BPAUL WINFIELD BEST ACTOR in I singer-songwriter 1421 Hill STOET 76 IJIS1 "IT IS A MISSING CHAPTER FROM 'THE GRAPES OF WRATH' AND.OF EQUAL STATURE." Judith Crist, NBC-TV SHOWS AT 1-3-5-7-9:05 I .,dadnitz /MATTEL Productions A Robert B. Radnitz/Martin Ritt Film . ......... . Read Daily . I Classifieds GUILD HOUSE-802 Monroe FRIDAY, FEB. 16-NOON LUNCHEON-35c Professor Rhodes Murphey Dept. of Geography "China ine May of '72" FRIDAY EVEN I NG 6 P.M. CHINESE DINNER-$1.50 for reservations call: 662-5189 or 663-2362 The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged. by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0562. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan. 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year.' Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (campus area); $11 local mail (in Mich. or Ohio); $13 non-local mail (other states and foreign). Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus' area); $6.50 local mail (in Mich. or Ohio); $7.50 non-local mail (other states and foreign). NOL"NO SOSBrAL OfMUSIC $ t SANTANA*A TEWART JCeEFFL"ON ARPA __ . L .pi fO ®"Metrocoior not continuous with "The Valachi Papers" IPROGRAM: Bach, Bottesinm, Ditte rsdorf REFRESHMENTS E. Quad, Greene Lounge Thursday, Feb. 15, 8 p.m. No Musical Knowledge Needed ABSOLUTELY EVERYONE INVITED MIDNIGHT SHOW Friday and Saturday plus Chapter 3 of our continuing serial "FLASH GORDON" with Ming the Merciless and Dr. Zarkov starring Buster Crabbe Doors Open 11 45 Admission $2.00 Next Weekend Feb. 23 and 24 "ZACH A RIA H" plus "FLASH GORDON" cha pter four *70'-970 I Produced by ROSS HUNTER' SHOWING AT 01 SOUTH QUAD F Feb. 15 k 7£r 9:45 p. 00Dining Rm. 2 Admission 75c ,...(Non S.Q. Resident)' Info No. 40149 COMING: TAKE THE MONEY & RUN, 2001, BONNIE & CLYDE: (thursdays)___ STARR ING: H EL E N HAY ES, BURT LANCASTERJC L JACQ UELIN E BISSET, DEAN MARTIN IL I I HAIRSTYLING As You Like It-! NEW TRENDS FOR 1972 TRIMS - SHAGS AND RAZOR CUTS 2 SHOPS 611 E. UNIVERSITY 615 E. LIBERTY Dascola Barbers I I UAC-DAYSTAR presents S" HERBIE HANCOCK, se ptet and FREDDIE HUBBARD 3s and his band SAT., FEB. 24 HILL AUD. $4.50, 4.00, 3.50, 2.50 reserved seats Available: Mich. Union 11:00-5:30 Mon.-Sat. 763-4553 - l Choose Keepsake with complete confidence, because the famous Keepsake Guarantee assures a perfect engagement diamond of precise cut and superb color. There is no finer diamond ring. REGISTERED DIAMOND RINGS "They do not love that do not show their love.' William Shakespeare THURSDAY and s. um~ersity FRIDAY at 6:40-9:08 Et1I SATURDAY and SUNDAY at 1:00-3:30- Theare Pone668-466 :05-8 :45 Academy Award Nomination BEST PICTURE and BEST ACTRESS (Liv Ullman) "A Pag "M I.. - I "t _ _ Historical Stunni gent" Masterpiec -Vincent Canby, - --Dick Richards, Wt New York Times "Enormous Beau asterful" and Pow -Archer Winsten, -William W New York Post mss:} Cue Maga Max von Sydow-Liv Ullmann 'The Emigrants Technicolor*-From Warner Bros, A Warner Communications Company ing cel VHBI uty er"o Nolf, zine Ingrid Bergman & Gregory Peck in ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S S OELL Bu N Academy Award to Miklos Rosza for Best Musical Score (First film use of the elecronic instrument, the Theremin) Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor, Michael Chekhov ROMANCE-WITH-MENACE SUSPENSE DRAMA with stunning directorial trickery. Dream Sequence by SALVATORE DALI TONIGHT!-Feb. 15th-ONLY! -7 & 9 p.m. - Only $1.00 special duplex showing with "Bananas" a campus premiere Pier Paolo Pasolini's screenplay by Pasolini from Broccaccio's DECAMERON "Uninhibited and joyful . taking 10 tales out of the 100 in Boccaccio's DECAMERON, Pasolini has created one of the most beautiful, turbulent and uproarious panoramas of early Renaissance life ever put on film . . . the cast is composed of amateurs, for Pasolini is fascinated by the truth of un- prepared faces. They are all either extraordinarily beauti- ful or extraordinarily ugly . .. there is however, something about their awkwardness that gives a special dimension of truth to the film itself." -Vincent Canby, NY TIMES Rings from c100 .10,000 T-M Reg. A. H. Pond Co. k 4 r c HOW TO PLAN YOUR ENGAGEMENT AND WEDDING Send new 20 pg. booklet, "Planning Your Engagement and Wedding" plus full color folder and 44 pg. Bride's Book gift offer all for only 2S¢. 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