The Michigan Doily-Saturday, October 15, 1977-Page 3 COULD BE HOME IN TWO WEEKS: r M SEE t'EV E CALL75-DJ Last Tango in Stillwater Richard Nixon waltzed into the night years ago, but students at Oklahoma State University are bringing him back for one last dance. The OSU Student Republicans, of all people, are hosting a "First An- nual Nixon Memorial Trick or Treat Dance" Nov. 1 and are giving away a tape deck and 60 minutes of erased tape as a door prize. To promote the event, club member David Rumph, made up to resemble Nixon, will ride in the school homecoming parade today. "We've got a long black car and are going to. have six guys dressed in dark suits walking along side," said Matt Steward, president of the club. Seward said the recent promotional effort has doubled membership in the college Republican club, and local merchants report brisk sales of Nixon masks. But although state Republican Chairman Rick Shelby has said he may attend, the original Trick or Treater has refrained from expressing himself on the subject. Sam on sex r s n~"I think sex is the most impor- tant thing on earth," former Sen. Sam ervin told a Kansas City crowd Wednesday in his earthly manner. But that doesn't mean the Senate Watergate committee chairman favors the EquaL Rights Amendment (ERA). "The ERA is not necessary because the Supreme Court now holds that ,ys r;, every law in the land-federal or state-which makes any distin- ction between the rights of men and women in unconstitutional .,r unless the law is based on reasonable grounds for the y protection of women," Ervin said. The ERA will die unless 38 states ratify it by March 22, 1979. Senator Sam Happenings.. . .. begin today with a writer's drop-in workshop for non-native English speakers, which runs from 9:30 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. at the Inter- national Center, 603 E. Madison ... all you five to nine-year-olds out there will be interested in the Children's Harvest Festival, which in- cludes a puppet show, story telling and crafts and refreshments, from 2 to 4 p.m. at 1923 Geddes ... an evening of music performed by local musicians begins at 9 p.m. at Canterbury House, corner of Catherine and Division ... Project Outreach is now-accepting applications for Winter, '78 at 554 Thompson St: (764-9279) ... and Michigan Student Assembly announces a special meeting tomorrow night in the MSA chambers, third floor of the Union, at 7 p.m. On the outside... Looks like another mundane foorball Saturday. The high will be only 58, and unfortunate post-game boozers will need all the alcohol they can get into their bloodstreams because it may snow tonight. Yes,we keep saying that. But our forecasters, bless their souls, say the over- night low will dip to 310 with a slight chance of rain or snow. Tomorrow will see a high of 570. Viewers of fake trial find Oswald guilty Ehrlichman sentence trimmed WASHINGTON (UPI)-John Ehrlichman yesterday was granted a reduction in his sentence for the Watergate Plumbers break-in and -could leave federal prison in two weeks. Ehrlichman had been serving three concurrent terms of 20 months to five years for perjury and violating the civil rights of Daniel Ellsberg's psychistrist. U.S. District Judge Gerhard Gesell yesterday trimmed that to 42 mon- Two win Nobel prize for economic studies ths-making him eligible for parole Oct.28 after one year in jail. GESELL'S ACTION came after Judge John Sirica on Oct. 4 granted Ehrlichman a reduction to 1-4 years from his original Watergate cover-up sentence of 30 months to eight years. Sirica had specified Ehrlichman's sen- tence run concurrently with his term for the plumber's conviction. Ehrlichman, John Mitchell and H.R. Halderman-President Richard Nixon's most trusted aides-received the sane sentences for, conspiracy, ob- struction of justice and perjury in the cover-up. Sirica reduced that to 1 to 4 years when they apologized and admit- ted guilt via dramatic recordings taped in prison. Halderman and Mitchell will be eligible for parole June 20, 1978. BUT SINCE Ehrlichman voluntarily entered prison Oct. 28, 1976 at Stafford, Ariz., while awaiting the outcome bt various appeals, Gesell's decision means he could be freed in two weeks-if the Parole Commission agrees. Ehrlichman was convicted July 12, 1975, for violating the civil rights of Dr. Lewis Fielding, Ellsberg's psychiatrist. Ellsberg had leaked the Pentagon Papers to nev('s media.F The leaks so infuriated Nixon- th t Ehrlichman formed ,the, so-called "White House Plumbers." THE PLUMBERS most notorious ac- tivity occurred Sept. 3, 1971,-thre months after Ellsberg, who worked for the Brookings Institution, leaked the top-secret Pentagon Papers on the origins of the Vietnam War. With Ehrlichman's approval, Ber- nard Baker, Eugenio Martinez and Felipe. DeDiego broke into the Fielding's Beverly Hills office, seareh- ing for confidential files they hoped would publicly discredit Ellsberg., STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP)-A retired British professor and a former Swedish cabinet minister, both in their 70s, won the 1977 Nobel economics prize yesterday for their "pathbreaking con- tributions to the theory of international capital." Cambridge professor emeritus James Meade, 70, and Beertil Ohlin, 78, former Swedish liberal party leader and one-time commerce minister, shared the $145,000 prize in the last Nobel award to be made this year. Earlier prizes were given in Stockholm for literature, physics, chemistry and medicine and i Oslo for peace. THE BRITON and Swede were cited for classic works written between thekarly 1930s and 1950s. The Swedish Royal Academy of Sciences said their studies have gained actuality and im- portance with. the increasing in- tegration of the world ecomony in the past two decades. "It has become increasingly clear that problems related to the allocation of resources, business cycles and the distribution of income are very. much international problems," the academy said. Meade in particular was cited as "the leading pioneer in the field on inter- national macrotheory and international ecomonic policy." THE ACADEMY said Ohlin "has developed a theory that demonstrates which factors determine the pattern of foreign trade and the international division of labor on the one hand, and on Frat brothers electrocuted STILLWATER, Okla. (AP)-Three fraternity brothers building a float for the Oklahoma State University homecoming celebration were elec- trocuted yesterday when part of the float's decorations came into contact -with a high voltage line, fire officials said. Authorities said they had reports of other injuries and a fire at the Alpha Gamma Rho fraternity house about a block off campus. Th victims were not immediately identified. the other shows what effect foreign trade has on allocation of resources, price relations and the distribution of income." A leading Swedish ecomonist, Prof. Assar Lindbeck, summed up their work: "Ohlin is the originator of the modern theory of trade. Meade ap- plied the theory to ecomonic policy problems. He is also the originator of stabilization policy." Meade was on his way to the University of Buckingham when the announ- cement was made. "By the time I arrived everyone seemed to know about the prize except myself, "he said. "I was completely overpowered." ONE MOMENT, PLEASE Emma M. Nutt was America'S first female telephone operator. She began work for the Telephone Dispatch Co. of Boston, Mass., September 1, 1878. Tele- phone equipment from that era, includ- ing an 1878 switchboard, are part of the Communications section of Henry Ford Museum, Dearborn, Michigan. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXVIII, No. 33 saturday, October 15, 1977 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage is paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morning during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 September through April (2 semesters); $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Satur- day morning. Subscription rates $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.so by mail outside Ann Arbor TONIGHT: 8 p.m. -Power Center Due to theme of this production, PARENTAL GUIDANCE is Advised. Tt e University of Michigan Professional Theatre Program is Guest Artist Series 1977-78 For info, call: (313) 764-0450 before 5 p.m. (313) 763-3333, 6-8 p.m. coming First University Showcase THE FIRST BREEZE OF SUMMER Oct. 26-29 in Trueblood Theatre ELIA KAZAN'S 1976 THE LAST TYCOON ROBERT DE NIRO, JEANNE MOREAtJ AND JACk NiCHOLSON star in F. Scott,' Nitzgerald's memorable portrait of a rising movie mogul. Based on MGM's "Boy Genius" of the 30's, Irving M. Thalberg, it is the kind of drama Kazan excells in-and especially with young actors (as with brando in On the Waterfront and James Dean in East of Eden). Sunday: CUKOR'S HOLIDAY CINEMA GUILD at 7:00 & 9:05 Old Arch. Aud. $1 .50 VG oQ 4 ! presents... Sun, Oct. 16 and Mon., Oct. 17 2 SHOWS NIGH TLY A. $7.50 per person 2 drink minimum C r c e i t t z f ., 9:30 p. m. &.12 midnight ($2.50 per drink) 23914 Ford Rd. (at Telegraph) L DEARBORN HEIGHTS for further info call 565-0110 Also coming Nov. 20, 21,22-RAMSEY LEWIS Tickets can also be bought at all J.L. Hudson's. Tickets must be b advance. _, , :, ' 'k :. rt i a S ought in 3 WON MA W. CINEMA1II ANGELL HALL Aud. A Saturday, October 15, 1977 NEW YORK (AP)-Viewers of a television program that staged an_ imaginary trial of Lee Harvey Oswald for the murder of President John F. Kennedy returned an overwhelming verdict of guilty, ABC-TV announced yesterday. A majority of those mail ballots also believed Oswald acted not alone, but as part of a conspiracy, ABC said. OF 52,000 viewers who responded in the write-in poll, 17 per cent voted Oswald innocent and 83 per cent called him guilty. Of those voting for guilty, 21 per cent said they thought Oswald was a lone assassin and 79 per cent thought he was part of a conspiracy, the newwork said. The program was shown in two episodes, on Sept. 30 and Oct. 2. Daily Official Bulletin FANTASTIC PLANET Director: RENE LALOUX (1973) Once upon a time there was a planet, Ygam. On that planet evolved two races of man, the Ohms (human-like pets) and the Draags (their masters) who entered into a threatening revolt. A skillfully animated science fiction epic in the tradi- tion of STAR WARS. Cannes Film Festival Winner. 7, 8:15 & 9:30 $1.50 **** ************** *** * Mediatrics *ATHE .OMEN * A scary, thrilling experience starring GREGORY PECK. Rated R. Friday and Saturday Oct. 14-15 * * Natural Science Auditorium 7:30 and 9:30 $1.50 The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the University of Michigan. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN FORM to 409 E. Jefferson, be- fore 2 p.m. of the day preceeding publication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday, Sunday, and Monday. Items appear once only. Student organization notices are not accepted for publication. For more informa- tion, phone 764-9270. Saturday, October 15, 1977 SUMMER PLACEMENT 3200 SAB- Phone 763-4117 Washington Center for Learning Alternatives, Washington, D.C.: Offers December graduates a Winterim '78 in journalism/broadcasting. Also, col- loquium for Political Science majors under Dr. Stephen Wayne, George Washington University. Ap- plication deadline November 15. Further details available. Mackinac Island State Park Commission, Michi- gan. Openings for guides, cashiers, hosts and host- esses. No state civil service exam required. Applica- tions available with further details. Applications ac- cepted between Oct. 15 and Jan. Cincinnati Bell, Cincinnati, Ohio: Summer work program for students from the Cincinnati area. Openings available in the following depts., telephone operations, clerical, motor messenger and supply, servike, technical, customer service, etc. Further details available. Swini. Just for the health of it. Get moving, America! March 1-7. 1977 is National Physical Education and Sport Week Physical Education Public information American Alliance for Health. Physical Education and Recreation 1201 16th St, N W. Washington. D C 20036 the ann arbor film cooperative TONIGHTI Saturday, October 15 DR. STRANGELOVE, OR HOW I LEARNED TO STOP WORRYING ANG LOVE THE BOMB (Stanley Kubrick, 1964) 71i 10:15-MLB 4 Dr.-Strangelove (Peter Sellers), an ex-Nazi (now American) high-level advisor, advises the President, one Merton Muffley, on the impending destruction of the world in this wonderful Cold War black comedv on sexual insecurity, nuclear deterrence, and hnlncust.Win.no6 Wi. srn..-. .._s-