Wednesday, September 13, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wage Three THE MiCHiGAN DAILY Page Three Dial 662-6264 Corner State & Liberty Sts. Every Wed. is Bargain Day Adults 75c 1 -5 p.m. Wed. Open Daily 12:45 Shows at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 P.M. Mitchell identifies new "A BRASH, BRAWLING JOY OF A MOVIE" -National Observer Going down his own road... "Tel 'emjunior sent you" Directed by SAM PECKINPAH SHOWS AT 1:30-3120-5-10 7:05- 9 P.M.. eb ect LOfl Aft odern Cooling~ DIAL 665-6290 613 E. Liberty securit WASHINGTON UP) - Mar- tha Mitchell has identified the man who allegedly tore the telephone from the wall during her conversation with a reporter last June as the new head of security for the Committee for the Re-elec- tion of the President. In an interview with Clare Craw- ford published in yesterday's Washington Evening Star and News, Martha also accused the new security chief, Steve King, of throwing her to the floor and kicking her when she resisted the efforts of a doctor to give her an injection. King was assigned as a body- guard to Martha at the time, the Star-News reported. He later was elevated to head of security after his boss, James McCord Jr., was arrested with four other persons in the alleged bugging attempt at Democratic National Committee headquarters. boss asz ace THE FUN STARTS HE RE! "A VERY FUNNY FILM!" -N.Y: Times "FULL OF LAUGHS!" --N.Y. Daily News Daily Photo by TERRY McCARTHY HapVing tea with the Dean Frank Rhodes, smiling dean of the literary college (far right), chatted with students and faculty at the weekly coffee hours. Punch "straight from the can" was served as well as the usual fare. CONFERENCE HELD: Policies for aged questioned Paramount Pcure presentis An Arthur P. Jacobs Production in association with Rollins-Joffe Productions A Herbert Ross Film NEXT: "THE CANDIDATE" That incident occurred the week- end before Martha told a reporter she had given her husband, for- mer Atty. Gen. John Mitchell, an ultimatum to either resign as head of President Nixon's re-election campaign or lose her. Martha was in a hotel room in A f Y battle Newport Beach, Calif., at the time. The conversation was cut short Holding his Buddha in his mouth, when the telephone line went dead. helps a wounded buddy into a truck Martha told the Star News she along Route 1 in eastern Carnbodia. had just told the reporter that will protect them from harm. politics was a dirty business when King jerked the telephone cord from the wall. She said he also TUSKEGEE STUDY: pulled the telephone from the wall in her daughter's room. NOW ! ______________________ AP Photo DIAL 8-6416 '.. an inspired blend of fact and fantasy. It leaps backwards and forwards in space and time with utter abandon . . . from the grimness of a German P.O.W. camp in winter to the lush- ness of a geodesic dream house-complete with pneumatic dream girl. FOR THIS TRIP, ONE MUST FASTEN HIS SEAT BELT AND HOLD ON TIGHT!" -Arthur Knight, Saturday Review WINNER 1972 CANNES FILM FESTIVAL JURY PRIZE AWARD Only American Film to be so Honored By JIM KENTCH "No administration has come close to this one in the history of the country for reorganizing this country's priorities concerning the elderly," said John Twiname, an administrator for the Depart- ment of Health, Education, and Welfare (HEW) yesterday at a news conference. Twiname and John Martin, commissioner of HEW's Administration on Aging, addressed the Conference 'on Aging and held the news confer- ence afterwards. Although Twiname, Martin and other speakers at the conference spoke favorably of the Adminis- tration's efforts to provide for the aged, several other speakers spoke of unresponsive government and bureaucratic bungling. As evidence that the government is responsive, Twiname and Martin pointed out that Social Se- curity benefits had risen 51 per cent in the past three years. The most recent increase raised over one million older citizens above the poverty line. Twiname referred to the current activism among the elderly as "quite consistent with what the ad- ministration is doing. The President wants to re- turn power to the local levels and encourages con- sumerism. It's not easy to deal with, but it's the sign of a healthy society," he said. Other speakers and conference members at- tacked the Nixon administration for ineptness in caring for the aging. Leon Keyerling, a consulting economist and at- torney from Washington, D.C., spoke to the con- ference and compared the government to an in- competent gas station attendant who puts air in the cylinders and gasoline in the radiator. Gary Selick, an Oakland University student at- tending the conference, said that "this is an election year, and the people here are frustrated with unresponsive government. The government says, 'Sure, we have the money for you,' but gives it to the wrong agency." "Most people are attacking both parties," Selick continued. "A few people are big for Nixon, but he generally comes off as someone who doesn't aid the aged because the budget is too tight." Current legislation before Congress would pro- vide a minimum annual income of $2400 per cou- ple, while the Bureau of Labor has said an an- nual income of $4500 is necessary for a "modest existence." -n --w- eground a Cambodian army for evacuation from Soldiers believe the SLAUGHTERHOUSE-FIVE "one of t most dan , origrig pictures ever Smade" :. Rex Reed. Michigan Abortion Referendum Committee speakers on "Abortion, Adoption, AND THE Battered (hild" at the O. W. meeting Wed., Sept. 13 8:00 p.m. Unitarian Church 1917 WASHTENAW soldier fighting Buddha UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT Featuring This Week: DETROIT Wed.-Sat., Sept. 13-16 9:30-1 :30 Ody~44 eq 208 W. Huron I The Star-News said Martha broke a two-month silence on the incident to refut a magazine ar- ticle that said King was not in- volved and did not give her an injection. Martha said a doctor gave her the injection against her orders and King held her down. "He threw me down and kicked, me with his rubber soled shoes," Martha was quoted as saying of King. She said she hurt her hand and the wound required six stitches. Martha told the Star-News she was kept a prisoner in the hotel room for 24 hours without food. She said she was unable to contact her husband and was not allowed to call room service or a maid. TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY SMILES OF A SUMMER NIGHT Dir. INGMAR BERGMAN (1955) . S w ed ish, sub- titles. "Boudoir f a r c e becomes lyric poetry" -Pauline Kael 0 THURSDAY AMERICAN UNDERGROUND RETROSPECTIVE. PROGRAM Rhythmus 21 and 23, Hans Richter, Le Sang d'un Poete, Jean Cocteau, Entr'acte, Rene Clair Henilmontant. Dimitri Kirsanoff WASHINGTON (RP) - Over the years of a federal syphilis study in Alabama, some of the black men who participated were led to be-' lieve they had joined a popular type of social club. Reports written during the past 40 years by U.S. public health Service (PHS doctors in charge of the experiment, called the Tus- kegee Study, describe clearly the doctors' feeling that the men were so ignorant that they had to be rewarded and punished like chil- dren to get them and keep them in the program which denied the men treatment for spyhilis. Among the rewards in the pro- gram was the opportunity for the men to ride in a big chauffeured car with a government seal on it' for all their friends to see. Among The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of; Michigan. News phone: 7'64-0562. 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 (camps 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). Study says syphilis guinfea pigs' misled .j the punishments was a threat to withdraw a promise of govern- ment-sponsored free burial. Of the first 92 autopsies per- formed on the untreated syphilitics in the experiment, PHS doctors said they found 28 had died as a direct result of the untreated dis- ease. Dozens of others suffered such potentially fatal sideeffects as heart and central nervous sys- tem deterioration. Others had glandular and vision damage. "Morbidity physical degenera- tion in male Negroes w'ith untreat- ed syphilis far exceeds that in a comparable presumably nonsypi- litic group," PHS doctors said in a 1936 report on the Tuskegee Study, the first report on the then- four-year-old experiment. The same report said the study was undertaken to determine the effectiveness of available syphilis treatment which then consisted of injections of metals and arsenic. The doctors said they wanted to find out if the syphilitics given treatment fared better than those- not receiving it. "Among 68 individuals who were adequately treated during the first two years of their infection, not a single one returned with any of the manifestations of late syphi- lis," the report said. LUNCHES DAILY MICHAEL SACKS RON LEIBMAN . VALERIE PERRINE 9movtesm1 gby KURT VONNEGUT.Jr. SUeepl ybyyGorGgeR ayHai -.Produced.byANOMo"R Music by Genn Gould;' A UftmPcnwe ,n ECHNICOWR' OFSR, 0f R Al corsAccmmyt THE BLIND PIG A WINE, CHEESE, and BLUES CAFE Coco Taylor & The Boogey Brothers Tuesday & Wednesday Cover $1.00 769-1849 SOPH SHOW Presents MASS MEETING for CABARET TONIGHT!-September 13th-ONLY!-7 & 9:30 p.m.-$1 ALL HAIL"the Queen" "Funny-and inspired-extraordinary-in their Atlantic City of Genet-in their Forest Hills of drag-these gentlemen in bras,. diaphanous gowns, lipstick, hairfalls and huffs-discussing their husbands in the military in Japan, or describing their own problems with the draft-one grows fond of all of them."-Ra.t.,Ade.r N. s "'The Queen' is a beautiful film; its sensa-' tional and shocking subject matter is treated with such sensibility, taste and compassion."-JudithCst.NewYork Magazine "'The Queen' is a stone gas!"--D. . w o.s t the. "A teeri " j~ < NCOLORS' Si Ltvinoff-Vineyard Films- MDH Enterpises Production Exec. Producers:Lewis M.Allen and John Maxtone-Graham Produced by v i urnoff and Don Herbert .An Evergreen FmIm PresentedbyGrovePres LDrected by FrankSimon An authentic shriek of sociology, hairier than most and strangely sad."---PLAYBOY PLUS FOUR SHORT UNDERGROUND FILMS. Program, with comments by the filmmakers: THE HUNGRY KOOK GOES BAZOOK-by Edd McWatters. "Slapstick take-off on Roadrunner cartoons using people instead of animated characters." TEN YEARS AT MONTEREY-by Sam Smidt. "Candid photographs of jazz greats ... juxtaposed with live footage reflecting the overall festive, mood of the Monterey Jazz Festival." An interesting study in ways of imparting motion to still photographs. IT'S A CAMP-by Barry Pollock. "A documentary short which presents the way and philosophy of life of a homosexual transvestite." Everyone W %IouN Velcome! Sign Up for Crews and Auditions SEPT. 13-7:00 p.m. Mich. League Ballroom GRAD COFFEE HOUR Wednesday, Sept. 13 8-10 p.m. West Conference Room, 4th Floor RACKHAM OUTSIDE ON THE TERRACE STUDENT DISCOUNTS! PTP Ticket Office 0 Mendelssohn Lobby 7 & 9:05 75c A&D AUDITORIUM (on Monroe between Haven and Tappan) Fun, Food, People NEW PEOPLE WELCOME! T. v. _ _ ._. __ .. , mwNm=mmmmmmmwA All-Night Horror Extravaganza 5 Edgar Allan Poe Classics featuring Vincent Price, Peter Lorre, Boris Karloff. .. FRIDAY and SATURDAY, Sept. 15 and 16 Doors open 11:15 p.m.-Shows start 11:30-Box office closed midnight-ALL SEATS $2.00-FREE COFFEE i l 1 . 2. "Tomb of Ligeia"-with Vincent Price "The Raven"--Vincent Price, Peter Lorre, Boris Karloff ยข . ." M