Friday, December 1,,1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Pone Three tridayDeceber_1,_1976THE.MCHIGADAIL -ad I , - c% Russian Nobel prize winner reflects on 1975 struggles ONE CHILD ESCAPES: --r-400--r- -I- - MOSCOW OP) - Andrei Sak- harov, 1975 Nobel Peace Prize laureate, said yesterday there has been some progress in the struggle for individual freedom in the Soviet Union. But he said there has been no letup in government pressure against him and other dissidents in the year since he was awarded the prize. On Dec. 10 last year, Sakha- rov's wife accepted the Nobel prize on his behalf because the Soviet Union refused to let him travel to Oslo. Yesterday, the 55-year-old nuclear physi- cist and political dissident talk- ed with The Associated Press about what has happened since then. He was interviewed in the bedroom of his modest two- room flat, a 10-minute drive from the Kremlin. S A K H A R 0 V cited as progress in the human rights fight what he said , was a change in the "psychological at- mosphere" in the Soviet Un- ion, brought about by scientific and philosophical seminars, art exhibits and concerts held in private apartments without of- ficial approval. "The single most important event was the organization of a group to help fulfill the Hell sinki agreements in the U.S. S.R., headed by Yuri Orlov," Sakharov said. "It is address- ing itself to the problems of court and psychiatric repres- sions, the situations in the camps and prisons, the sup- pression of religious groups, national discrimination against the Crimean Tartars, the viola- tions of national cultures in the republics, the problems of emi- gration and reunification of families." The Helsinki agreement, en- dorsed by the Soviet Union, the United States and many other countries, in effect ratified Europe's post-World War II boundaries as permanent while calling for a freer flow of infor- mation, people and ideas be- tween East and West and for human rights improvements in Warsaw Pact nations. D E S P I T E the improve- ment he cited, Sakharov said he has become increasingly worn down by continued of- ficial condemnation and by his responsibilities as the No. 1 spokesman for dissent in this country. While vowing to con- tinue his campaign, he said he welcomed the influx of younger people into the civil rights movement to help share the burden. Sakharov also said he looks to the future for himself and his family "with great anxie- ties." He did not elaborate. He said he doubted he will be allowed to travel abroad "for, the long-time future." Excerpts from the questions and answers in the interview follow: Q - WHAT EFFECT has the Nobel award had on your life and work in what is called the "democratic movement"? A - It has been contradic- tory and contrasting. The in- fluence of public opinion has been very important and very positive. Yet all this year, the authorities seemed to ignore my changed public status and increased public authority. As before, I was not permitted to attend dissident trials . as before, my overseas tele- phone and mail communica- tions were cut off throughout the year. Q - How has your private life been in the past year? A-For the first 10 months,; I had no residential permit, no' official permission to live here in Moscow. Pressure on our family certainly continues. At- tacks in the press are one form of this pressure. My son-in-law is still without a job in what is, in fact, official pressure on our close and loving family. My friends are constantly being harassed. Besides the effect on them, this is another way of getting at me. kills family UPPER ARLINGTON, Ohio Bolin's dead husband, Ronald. THE FAMILY'S pastor, the (AP) - She stayed at home, He was founder and owner of Rev. Luther Stommer of the raising the children, the moth- a mechanical and machine de- Upper Arlington Lutheran er of an "ideal" suburban fam- sign company. church, said the children were ily who police say bought a A neighbor across the street active, especially in the choir. pistol from a gun shop in Oc- from the Bolin's ranch-style "The children were beautiful, tober and hid it in her sew- house, Mrs. Stephen Young, de- lovely," he said. ing kit. scribed the Bolins as "an ideal Mrs. Bolin, Tamela Jean, and Patricia Bolin, 40, took the family. They were fantastic 9-year-old Todd Matthew died .22-caliber gun from the kit people. Quiet but fun-loving." in the house, police said. The Wednesday night and used it ANOTHER NEIGHBOR said 43-year-old father died hours to kill her executive nusband her 12-year-old daughter had later after being hospitalized and two of her three children been a playmate of Tamela for gunshot wounds of the head, before shooting herself to death, Jean, 12, one of the victims. neck and chest. The children officers said., "She the mother was very were shot several times in the POLICE SAID they were call- reserved, aloof almost," she head, the county coroner said. ed to a home in this wealthy said. The Bolin children's teachers Columbus suburb Wednesday "She was the kind of person remembered Mrs. Bolin as be- evening when Mrs. Bolin's 15- you would wave to in the gro- ing helpful with school projects year-old daughter fled from the cery parking lot, but I never and with driving children on house. The daughter said she knew her. Nobody really did." outings. returned from a friend's house and Mrs. Bolin tried to shoot her, pulling the trigger three L. times on the then-empty gun, officers said. SPECIAL MIDNIGHT SHOW After the daughter fled, police TONIGHT AND SATURDAY' said, Mrs. Bolin apparently re- loaded the gun, for which she'd SAMOA WEED, GUNS«- paid $51.50, and then shot her- AND RAGGAE MUSIC self. "The place looked like a THE SHERIF! slaughter house," said police Capt. Kenneth Borror. "We have -.. to think she had this planned." ; i i I v .A. ... ..: "... . if. . ........ . .r....A.....A.. . "..1. .:y.,,,~,?i:i :k ."" : ..'"n v",,:o.:"::r:::...:..::: i's{-.v;.%.... . . . .. S V Vn...-?: v..:.. ... . . ,;,?:". .. e?:: ...5%......................... .. . ............. . ~ . ....* .***.......... DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN ..5:.'t.55. ': '* vgb;J"N H. SSr".9V..SSSV.l:" ; Iv "::Ai"r S t:"'4:r:,{ t¢ '5'n ta;.s2 :}"-. Friday December 10 DAY CALENDAR WUOM: "Scientific Advancement," 2nd in series of 3 documentaries, "Oceans," 10 a.m. Int'l. Ctr.: "Quality of Life Index Discussion, Part II: A Program for Foreign Students," 603 E. Madison, 2:30 p.m. Social Personality Developmental Psychology/Michigan Women in Sci- ence: Judith Rodin, Yale, "The Pro- cess of Aging: How Inevitable are the effects?" Large Conf. Rm., 6th fir., ISR, 3:30 p.m. Astronomy: A. Cowley, "Low Mass X-ray Binaries," P&A Colloq. Rm., 4 p.m. Biological Sciences: Taki ig Our Bodies Back: The Women's Health Movement, 2042 Nat. Sci., 4 p.m. Ski Team: "Ski Swap," Sports Coliseum, 4-10 p.m. UAC Soph Show: "How to Suc- ceed in Business Without Really Trying," Mendelssohn, 8 p.m. PTP: Etherege's The Man of Mode, Arena Theatre, Frieze, 8 p.m. Music School: Wind Ensemble, Symphony Band, Hill Aud., 8 p.m. Dance Company: The Planets: La Creation du Monde, Power, 8 p.m. Ark: Paul Siebel, country, blues, 1420 Hill, doors open, 8:30 p.m. GENERAL NOTICES U-M Band's "Michigan Youth Band and Wind Ensemble" will present their first concert of the 1976 sea- son at St. Thomas High School Sat., Dec. 11, at 7:30 p.m. The band, un- der the direction of Prof. Thomas L. Dvorak, will perform works by Hu- sa, Milhaud, Grainger, and others. Admission is $1.00 for adults and 25 cents for students, available at the door. For more info, contact Prof. Dvorak, 763-3017. STUDENT ACCOUNTS: Your at- tention is called to the following rules passed by the Regents at their meeting on February 28, 1936: "Stu- dents shall pay all accounts due the University not later than the last day of classes of each semester or summer session. Student loans which are not paid or renewed are subject to this regulation; however, student loans' not yet due are exempt. Any unpaid accounts at the close of business on the last day of classes will be reported to the Cashier of the University and "(a) All academic, credits will be withheld, the grades for the se- mester or summer session just com- pleted will not be released, and no transcript of credits will be issued. "(b) All students owing such ac- counts will not be allowed to reg- ister in any subsequent semester or summer session until payment has been made." CAREER PLANNING & PLACEMENT 3200 SAB - 764-7460 Residency in. Clinical Pharmacy at Rhode Island Hospital beginning 6/22/77. Write Louis P. Jeffrey, Dir. of Pharmacy Services, Rhode Island Hospital, 593 Eddy St., Providence, RI 02902. Lyndon B. Johnson Sch. of Pub- lic Affairs offers Grad Fellowships for 1977-78 leading to the degree of M.S. of Public Affairs. Write L.B.J. School of Pub. Affairs, the U. of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas 78712. Andover Teaching . Fellowships- available at Phillips Academy, And- over, Mass. for graduates interested in a teaching career - usually teach two courses, provide guidance & counseling in Dorm & Coach or di- rect an extra-curricular activity. Stipend: $4,500 + rm. & brd. Ap- plications available at CP&P or write: Peter Q. McKee, Assoc. Head- master, Phillips Academy, Andover, Mass. 01810. Deadline: Jan. 15, 1977. Bar-Liau University in Tel Aviv area offers religious Kibbutz pro- gram: Earn college credits while participating in Kibbutz life & so- ciety. 2 semesters completed in col- lege required. Fall year program $1,400 or (1) semester $1,150. Bro- chures available at CP&P. "JWB Personnel Reporter:" A Fall 1976 brochure of middle Manage- ment Opportunities is available in this office. It lists current job open- ings in Jewish community centers. BORROR SAID the only ques- tion, aside from why she did it, was what happened to seven bullets. He said 17 cartridge cases were found, but only 10 bullets were located. He said he expects some of the missing bullets to be found during au- topsies. "When we heard about it, it blew our minds," said Beverly Kearney, the first wife of Mrs. UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN DANCE CAMPANY Presents Elizabeth Weil Bergmann's THE PLANETS by Gustave Hoist Gay Delanghe's LA CREATION DU MONDE by Darius Milhaud POWER CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS DECEMBER 10, 11, 12 Performances December 10, 1 1, at 8:00 P.M. December 12 at 3:00 i t Lina Wertmullers Sele i Dec 10/11 Friday& Saturday 7&9 $1:50 I ANGELL HALL AUD. A CINEMAII _ I ,ANN AI**CI FILM CC-CU TONIGHT IN MLB-Friday, Dec. 10 BLAZING SADDLES (Mel Brooks, 1974) MLB 3, 8:45 & 10:30 Mel Brooks, convulsingly hilarious burlesque of the Old West is perhaps the last word in Western parodies. The lewd, vulgar and wacky plot revolves around a black sheriff in an all-white town. Marvelously comic performances by Clevon Little, Gene Wilder, Alex Karras, Madeline Kahn. "Blazing Saddles is an awesomely funny movie."-New York Times. -0 LA RUPTURE (Claude Chabrol, 1970) MLB 4, 7 only THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXVII, No 76 Friday, December 10, 1976 is edited and managed by studentsI at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Published d a i l y Tuesday through Sunday morning during the Univer- sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 Sept. thru April (2 semes- ters); $12 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tues- day through Saturday morning. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.50 by mail outside Ann Arbcr. i NADA (Claude. Chabrol, 1974) MLB 4, 9 only Claude Chabrol is the forgotten' director of the French New Wave. Although never as popular as Truffaut or as controversial as Godard, he has amassed a body of work unequaled in techniques and personal touch by any French director of his generation. His films are seldom shown outside of New York, where they are met with near unanimous critical acclaim. LA RUPTURE is, of all Chabrol's films, the one in which lie walks the tightrope between brutality and love, pain and pleasure. Stephane Audran is superb as the young wife whose husband has gone beserk on LSD and whose father-in-law is searching for evidence of moral depravity. "An eerie, frightening, crazy movie." -Chicago Daily News. "The best film of the year."-Andrew Sarris. With Stephane Audran, Jean-Paul Cassel and Michel Bouquet. NADA is a brutally direct thriller which lets its very eloquent political message speak for itself. A gioup of terrorists kidnap the American ambassador to France and hold him for ransom. The French authorities purposely assign a savage and over-zealous officer to track the gang to its hideout. The explosive climax proves, in Chabrol's words, "Terrorism and the police are just two jaws of the same trap." "An exciting movie! A picture you'll attend breathlessly every inch of the way!"-Archer Winsten, N.Y. Post. With Mariangela Melato and Fabio Testi. French with subtitles. $1.25-SINGLE FEATURE " Tomorrow: NASHVILLE/ALICE IN WONDERLAND Af BASS 100's Unique, flexible rubber bottom with molded in arch support, quality mellowed full grain leather uppers for j walking comfort. ARf a, -4-- ' fi Sr.f. 't -' * Y 603 east liberty r 0 a. mm, "r is I COLUMBIA PICTURES PRESENT A MARTIN RITT JACK ROLLINS *CHARLESH JOFFE PRODUCTION WOODY ALLEN AS"THE FRONT" WITH ZERO MOSTEL HERSCHEL BERNARDI MICHAEL MURPHY ANDREA MARCOVICCI " WRITTEN BY WAt.TFR BERNSTF'N EXECUIVE PRODUCER CHARLES H JO F FE PRODUCED& DIRECTEU BYMARTIN H14 A PERSK -BRIGHT DEVON, EATURE PGPARETAIAGUIDANCE SUGGESTEDOC cumtbia L dM1 MATIR ALMY ;4 ILdIiA W R 4.AG e 4 * , E 8th Tremendous Week SHOWS TONIGHT AT 7:00 AND9:00 OPEN 6:45 FRANK CAPRA'S 1946 IT'S A WONDERFUL LIFE James Stewart stars as a conscientious son who takes over the family busi- ness when his father dies despite his longings to travel and go to school. On 11U Iil RL'iI, enic3bvCNNUGTPRMC US-