Tuesday,-_ THE MICHIGAN DAILY PtIAO' id tit'/ N1 rage seven rt Riegle admits to extra-marital affair (Continued from Page 1) BOTH ESCH and Rockefeller that was referred to in the De- said they thought the disclosure troit News was a foolish mis- could have an .adverse effect take and has been a source of on Riegle's election chances, great regret to me." but neither said they thought' Esch and former GOP Gov. it should be cause for disquali- George Romney have alleged fication as a candidate. Riegle's character is too un- "1 don't think you can sepa- stable for him to hold office. rate personal integrity and pub- Esch, traveling with Vice lic life," Esch said. "What I've President Rockefeller in Michi- tried to do all along is discuss gan yesterday, was asked if the issues of this campaign. I'm he knew beforehand of the News going to continue talking about article. "No, not at all," he the issues." said. Riegle did not challenge the' Rock Eseh validity of the News story. He said he knew "once or twice" that the tapes were being made. But he denied one portion of the story that his wife,a staff member he married in 1972saft- tour er divorcing his first wife, knew of the relationship between him Ford underspending linked to slowdown. WASHINGTON P)-The Ford on whether there is a direct Budget Director James Lynn question that the spending slow- administration contributed to the link between the slowdown in is one of those who doesn't be- down influenced the govern- current slowdown in economic economic activity and the spend- lieve there is a connection be- ment's statistics on economic activity by failing to spend all ing shortfall, but there is no tween the two phenomena. He growth, since the amount of of its burget in 1976, a growing question that both have oc- said a major share of the un- government spending is one number of economists is be- curred simultaneously. In addi- derspending may still be spent component of the nation's Gross ginning to believe. tion, many economists are un-jin the months ahead, especially National Product (GNP). Even within the administra- able to fully explains the slow- by the Defense Department, "A $1 billion shift in a given tion, one highly placed econ- down in any other way. which may have accounted for quarter can mean as much as omist said the lower-than- After spurting to an annual Ihalf of the shortfall. i per cent of the growth rate, anticipated government spend- vrowth rate of 9.2 per cent in BUT HE acknowledged that so in an accounting sense, it ing undoubtedly had a "dam- the first three months of the the administration still doesn't clearly had a role," said David pening influence" on the econ- year, as reflected in the na- know why it didn't spend what Rowe, a budget office econ- omy in the past six months. tion's Gross Political Product, it was budgeted to spend. "The i omist. I DON'T think it was the the economy allowed to a 4.5 frank answer, is we don't know Rowe was referring to the major cause, but I don't know per cent rate in the second as yet," he said. nominal growth rate of GNP be- what was," said this economist, quarter. fore inflation is discounted. Real who did not want to be identi- THE Commerce Department . A Congressional Budget Of- growth is determined after dis- fied. is scheduled to publish the third fice economist said there is no counting for inflation. However, another prominent quarter growth figures today, economist, George Perry of the and economists are looking for Brookings Institution, said the growth of only about 4 per cent, rL shortfall in spending, which has a level insufficient to reduce the C./ .. AYERS Tresent been estimated as high as $30 nation's high unemployment THREE ONE-ACT PLAYS billion at an annual rate, could rate. account for all of the slowdown. The administration under- TlE as the numbers we're getting, which ended June 30, by $10.4 BY ANION CHEKHOV you could attribute this kind of billion. Officials of the Office directed by CHRISTINE CHILD slowdownasscoming from this of Management and Budget sayL //T/ sourcePLAYN6 WILYH 1111k sore" he said. it may have been $7 billion THE government has to find under its spending estimate for BY AUGUSTE SIRINDBERG out what is going on." the three-month period ending directed by [ESlE MCCLEOD Economists are not unanimous in September. TM W IMLTRhb T IG Y TIM PRENTISS ANN AU100V IfLU 0-0 diirected bythe PLAYWRIGHT A*N*** I* «""".C.C......«.......... OCTOBER 21,22,23 8 RM TONIGHT! R.C. AUDITORIUM DUSAN MAKAVEJEW'S 1966 admison $10( L A A wt IC It FT A RDIhD r- October 20-24 Addmhwdmkhk dud ANN ARBOR CIVIC THEATRE S b. Tennesse W'illiams Tickets Available at the Lydia Mendelssohn box office in the Michigan League, 763-1085 HOURS: Mon. Oct. 13 & Tue., Oct. 19, 10a.m. to 6 p.m. Wed.-Sat, Oct. 20-23 10 a.m. to Showtime Sunday, Oct. 24, 3 p.m. to Showtime *II and "Dorothy." RIEGLE termed the story I I i i n the most vicious hatchet job N li han ;1I have ever seen in politics" .and accused thenewspaper of (Continued fromPage 1) conspiring with Esch in a mud- banquet at Cobo Hall that also slinging campaign. featured Senator Robert Grif- "The reason for the mudsling- fin, Governor William Milliken, ing is that Esch does not want former Governor George Rom- to talk to the issues," Riegle ney, as well as Esch and Dam- said. man. After gulping down some "This concerted attempt at chicken, some 500 well-heeled character assassination has Republicans listened to Esch gonebeyond all bounds of assail Riegle and the Demo- decency and fair play," he add- crats. His eyes sweeping the ed. "This is Nixon style politics audience, the bespectacled Re- right out of the dirty tricks publican singled out a remark period."' Riegle made in an earlier de- To dramatize his claim of bate' jcollaboration between the News "He said, and I quote verba- abrEtchn bele dsayed tim, 'You really didn't give me 'anEsch capieg flyeta much wiggle-room on that .one Esch campaign flyerbthat he (qesio)," ai,,c i said was copied verbatim by (question)'," said Each in a the News in an editoral He measured tone. "Well, I've got 'theNeshoedanter oria. .e something to tell Don Riegle - then showed another Esch flyer we're not going to givehim any that reprinted the editorial. wiggle-room' on the *issues." Riegle added, however, that F O L L O W I N G Esch, he had no proof of direct Griffin and Milliken made brief cooperation between his oppo- remarks before giving way to nent- and the nation's largest Rockefeller and the main ad- circulation evening newspaper. dress. In a wide-ranging speech, the grey-haired vice president adop- * TN E* ted an almost informal manner, +E tossing about anecdotes and * ,, asides liberally as he workedT SHIRT his way through a prepared text I that covered the economy, fed- ACHINE eral revenue sharing, and crime, MACrHvetiEn The vice president also had IS AT TH.Ef kind words for his possible successor, Kansas Senator Rob- E ert Dole., Said Rockefeller: "I OSS know from personal knowledge that Bob Dole has the strength, *o Se intelligence and character nec- * essary "to assume the presi- *# 613 E. Liberty dency" in the case of tragedy, God forbid."',*#******** TONIGHT at 8:00 only Open 7:45 The Stanley Kubrick Film Festival ENDS THURSDAY 2001: A Space Odyssey G FRI.--"T HE FRONT" TONIGHT at 8:00 only HURRY! Must End Thursday : U D 4vID 0SELZ'".iK . a ;,ratf c yr;ilS f IVIEN LEIGh cNLESLIE M RDIOA STEREOPHONIC SOUND METROCOL6R- An MGM Re-reteas.. FRI.-"THE FRONT" i i i i MAN lb.NV T A BIRD AUD. A, 7 ONLY 7 ONLY This first film by Eastern Europe's most important director follows a love affair between a middle-aged factory engineer and a beau- tiful woman who seduces him. A hilarious satire on Tito's Yugo- slavia. "The setting is a bleak Yugoslav industrial town that, though beautifully and realistically photographed, seems as mad and fantastical as something in a dream. MAN IS NOT A BIRD is the most sophisticated and complex film from a Communist Coun- try that I've ever seen. It is so poetic and true and multi-leveled that it reminds me of the best prose."-Vincent Canby, New York Times. Makavejev was later arrested and exiled for his political satire. Serbo-Croatian with subtitles. ANN ARBOR PREMIERE. KUROSAWA'S 1954 THE SEVEN SAMURAI AUD.A -8:15 ONLY The biggest, and some think, the best film Kurosawa ever made A leaderless samurai band protects a village from marauding robbers. Kurosawa used super-powered telephoto lenses, causing images to "pile up" on the screen, and editing is used with a vigor comparable to that of the Soviet silent films. Uncut, three- and-a-half hour version. "Rurosawa achieves what modern Ameri- can and European epic makers vainly attempt: the excitement of the senses "--Pauline Kael, AUD. A, ANGELL HALL PHILIPPE DE BROCA 1967 THE KING OF HEARTS in MLB 7 & 9 Our most popular film. A Scottish soldier during W.W. I is sent to a French town, evacuated except for an asylum. Meanwhile, the fleeing Germans have left a time bomb. The asylum inmates escape. taking up various costumes and roles. A very funny comedy and a powerful anti-war film-the-'sanity of insanity and vice-versa. Alan Bates, Genevieve Bujold. "Delightfully subtle satire-penetrating comedy encased in a most beautiful film." -$-Judith.Erist. $1.25, DOUBLE FEATURE $2.00 31 ORSON WELLES 1958 HURRY! ENE TOUCH OF EVIL A narcotics officer (Chariton Heston) and his newlywed wife (Janet Leigh) wander into a Mexican-American border town where they fall under the spell of a corrupt but fascinat- ing sheriff (Wells). Welles won the Cannes grand prize for the film which also stars Mar- RereleasedbyBUENAVISTAOISTRIBUT1ONC lene Dietrich. -P WED.: Bergman's THE DEVIL EYE Mickey CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT AT OLD ARCH. AUD. 1TW O -GnU f SECOND HIT WEEK! SHOWS TONIGHT AT 7:00 AND 9:05 OPEN 6:45 DS THURSDAY C0. INC. ® Walt Disey ProductiOms Mouse In N MICKEY" y 4 r- i SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT 4) DBX KMAL RABCO LUXMAN THORENS THAEDRA AMPZILLA MAGNEPAN DAHLQUIST LINN SONDER DUNLAP CLARKE DAYTON WRIGHT MARK LEZINSON HARMON KARDON SOUNDCRAFTSMAN FROM FR MK SME SAE GALE POLK STAX GRACE DENON REVOX ONKYO SPENDOR ORTOFON TECHNICS KOSS ESL Martial Arts of Kabuki NOW IN ANN ARBOR 312 S. STATE ST. SPEAKER SEMINAR with SPECIAL GUEST THURSDAY, OCT. 21 at 8:10, POWER CENTER (formerly scheduled in Rackhar Aud. ) The opening event of the Sixth Annual Asian Series will be presented in Power Center to give maximum space and lighting for this unusual'and fascinating production. The sixteen dancer-actors of the National Theatre Institute of Japan perform the staged battle scenes from plays in the Grand Kabuki, under the leadership of Bando Yaenosuke, the most famous of Kabuki fight-scene teachers and choreographers. A free lecture-demonstration by the troupe will be held at 4 p.m. the same day, also in Power Center. TICKETS ARE AVAILABLE AT $3.50, $5, AND $6.50 Series tickets for the four Asian programs still remain at $10, $15, and $20; Other programs in the Series are Chinese Acrobats, Nov. 6; Krishnamurti, South Indian Dancer, Feb. 28; and Korean Masked Dance-Drama, March 16. SANDY GROSS President and Chief Engineer of Polk Audio Monitor Speakers THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21-2:00 P.M. I s'I