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November 19, 1975 - Image 2

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Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1975-11-19

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ege Two

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Wednesday, November 19, 1975

HUMPHREY BOGART in 1950
IN A LONELY PLACE
Bogart can't ad-lib his way out of a murder
rap in this fine Nicholas Ray (Rebel Without I
A.Cause & Johnny Guitar) thriller-mystery. He =
plays a Hollywood scriptwriter who is a murder n
suspect and all he has going for him is a d
strange romance with his female alibi. With V
Gloria Grahame and Frank Lovejoy.b
FRI.: James Caqney, Ruby Keeler, Dick Powell
& Joan Blondell in FOOTLIGHT PARADEC
CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT AT OLD ARCH. AUD.
7:00 & 9:05 Admission $1.25
MUSKET Presents
GODSPELLe
DECEMBER 4, 5, 6-8:00 p.m. C
Saturday Mat. 2:00 p.m.a
MENDELSSOHN THEATRE
Tickets on sale now at UAC
Ticket Central in the Union
For more info call 763-1107

Senate unit shields
CIA employe name
(Continued from Page 1) documents, the former official
committee, said he and Chair- was represented by attorneys
man Frank Church (D-Idaho), who appeared before the com-
decided that rather than take a mittee on behalf of Dr. Sidney
chance of delaying issuance of Gottlieb, f o r m e r director of
the report because of a court technical services for the CIA.
battle they "should go ahead Published reports have named
and do it this way." Gottlieb as a participant in al-
Tower emphasized that the leged CIA plots to poison Cuban
committee was not acting in re- Premier Fidel Castro and Con-
sponse to any of the legal argu- golese leader Patrice Lumumba.
ments raised in the suit. The committee confirmed that
The committee decision was the former offical was one of
disclosed in a brief notice issued two witnesses who had been
by the appeals court clerk which granted immunity. The only two
was headed "Anonymous, Ap- witnesses who received such a
pellate v. Thomas McCormick, grant were Gottlieb and Robert
Public P r i n t e r Government Maheu, a former aide to Howard
Printing Office, et al." Hughes. Maheu was represented
THE NOTICE said: "Counsel by a Las Vegas, Nev., attorney
for appellant has been advised and has publicly admitted his
that the Senate Select Commit- role in a 1961 plot to kill Castro.
tee has voluntarily and unilat- THE SUIT was filed last
eraly reconsidered its action weekend, and on oMnday U.S.
concerning Anonymous. Based District Court Judge Gerhard
upon such representation of the Gesell rejected the request for
committee's chief counsel, the a temporary restraining order.
application on behalf of Anony- Gesell said he agreed with the
mous is now moot. The appeal contention that publication of
is therefore dismissed." the former official's name could
While never named in court place his life in danger, but
I "the public interest greatly out-
CSweighs any private interest of
I CHARING CROSS Ithe individual."

Internal bleeding

PARIS CONFERENCE

Prostitutes demand

Uts I UInt
(Continued from Page 1)
the latest bleeding was being
treated "medically."
Franco underwent his third
major operation in 11 days last
Friday after stitches from the
second came apart. The rem-
nants of his stomach were sewn
together but his body tissue has
w e a k e n e d considerably and
blood is oozing out of the
stitches.
SOURCES close to the doctors
said Franco's blood pressure
had slumped.
Franco's other grave compli-
cations include heart trouble,
bronchial pneumonia and blood
clotting.
The Spanish parliament heard
a report from President Alejan-
dro Rodriguez Valcarcel that the
general's hemorrhaging h a d
been "contained." Premier Car-
los Arias Navarro attended the
session after visiting the hos-
pital.
. FRANCO'S sister, Pilar, who
is in her late 70's, emerged from
the hospital yesterday afternoon
with tears in her eyes.
Pair ro bs1
(Continued from Page 1)
and a $10,000 fine.

Frrano
"Much pain, much sorrow, I
cannot say anything more," she
said quietly as reporters crowd-
ed around her.
The emergency became evi-
dent during the night when
Franco's family hurried to the
ultra-modern hospital in north-
ern Madrid.
HIS CHIEF surgeon, Dr. Ma-i
nuel Hidalgo Huerta, spent all
night at the hospital.
Government sources said a
high funeral Mass was sched-
uled for Franco seven days af-
ter death. Franco is due to lie
in state for 50 hours at the na-
tional palace before being taken
to the giant monument to Span-
ish civil war dead at the Valley
of the Fallen 35 miles from Ma-
drid.
The monument, set in a gran-
ite mountain, was built on
Franco's orders after he won
the three-year civil war in 1939.
Dedicated in 1959, it holds the
bodies of more than 40,000 Span-
iards and is topped by a cross
three times taller than the.
American Statue of Liberty.
local bank
mum penalty of life imprison-
ment and would be easier to

__

I I

legal recognition

PARIS, (Reuter) - Two tutes yes - but tarts never."
thousand French prostitutes, The meeting began cheerful-
some in low-cut black evening: lv with a brief singalong, but
dresses and others in toggle the women 'let out squeals of
coats, crammed into a hall last protest and dived for cover
night for their First National whene-er photographers aimed
Congress. their lenses into the main are-
They came from the four cor- na, taking refuge behind huge
ners of France for the Congress, szinglasses, ornate Chinese fans
a milestone in their protest and scarves.
campaign against police fines. They watched "Accetone," the
ULLA, a blonde from Lyons 'hte Ttalian director Pier Paolo
and a leader in the protests that Pasolini's film about prostitu-
have startled authorities this ti befo bedebat
year, called on "all my fellow Tion, Eore eginning ae.
Little Red Riding Hoods" to THe OUTSPOKEN U11 a,
step up their campaign. wearing a clinging black silk
dress, assailed France's "Mon-
"It's into battle for us," shesie'ir Prostitlition" - the judge
told the crowd at the big Mu-;I
tualite Hall, normally the site Enilointed by President Valery
of staid political rallies. Giscard D'Estaing to examine
The women are seeking sup- the prostitutes' grievances.
port for a national prostitutes He was appointed aftr mui-
union and an agreement under e wasainted aftpemihi-
which they would pay taxes in tant prostitutes occupied chur-
return for police recognition of ches in six French cities last
their status as regular workers. June to dramatize their demand

BOOKSHOP
Used, Fine and Scholarly Books
316 S. STATE-994-4041
Open Mon.-Fri. 11-9,
Sat. 10-6

'iU goof

POWDERED madames and
earnest young prostitutes wav-
ing women's liberation tracts
rubbed shouldersat last night's
rally, held under a giant green
and white sign saying "Prosti-
- - - - - - ~~aryY- - - - --.SSz.v~W~~tdiM t Sd."\.St

for a better deal.
But last night Ulla labelled
him "a smokescreen just set up
to calm "us all down. He has
done absolutely nothing."

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causes

HOUSING DIVISION
RESIDENT STAFF JOB OPENINGS FOR
INFORMATIONAL MEETINGS

1976-77

MONDAY, DEC. 1--THURSDAY, DEC. 4, 1975
BAITS-December 1, Monday, 7:00 PILOT PROGRAM-December 3,
P.M.-Thieme Lounqe Wednesday, 8:00 P.M.-Newcombe
BURSLEY-December 1, Monday, 7:00 Lounqe
P.M.-Resident Advisors-West MARKLEY-December 3, Wednesday,
Dininq Room 10:00 P.M.-Dinina Room No. 3
BURSLEY-December 1, Monday, 8:30 WEST QUAD-December 4, Thursday,
P.M.-Resident Directors-West 7:00 P.M.-Dinina Room No. 1
Dininq Room BARBOUR-December 4, Thursday, 8:00
COUZENS-December 2, Tuesday, 7:00 PM.-Newberrv LivinqRoa
P.M.-Livinq Room NEWBERRY-December 4, Thursday, 8:00
MOSHR-JDA- DmbP.M.-Newberrv Liv nq Room
MOSHER-JORDAN-December 2, Tuesday, RESIDENTIAL COLLEGE-December 4,
8:00 P.M.-Jordan Lounqe Thursday, 8:00 P.M.-South Dininq
STOCKWELL-December 2, Tuesday, 9:00 Room
P.M.-Blue Lounqe SOUTH QUAD-December 4, Thursday,
9:00 P.M.-West Lounqe
OXFORD-December 3, Wednesday, 7:00 FLETCHER-December 4, Thursday,
P.M.-Seeley Lounge 8:00 PJA.-First Floor Lounqe
The above campus-wide informational sessions for prospective staff applicants have been
scheduled to discuss the dimensionsand expectations of the various staffs positions, how to
apply in the buildings and/or houses, who to contact, criteria to be used in the selection
procedure and the number af positions that are likely to be vacant.
DECEMBER 10, 1975: STAFF APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE IN HOUSING.OFFICE,
1500 S.A.B.
JANUARY 19, 1976: DEADLINE FOR APPLICATION FORMS DUE IN
HOUSING OFFICE, 1500 S.A.B..

(Continued from Page 1)
Although the actual cost of the
goof was not revealed, Pease
admitted that the cost of dig-
ging up the sod would have
been less than that of tearing
up the concrete and repaving it.
"When we started to dig in
the original spot, on the drive-
d way adjacent to the Etxension
Services Building, we encounter-
ed a concrete abuttment, so we
decided to tear up the walk in-
stead," he said yesterday. "We
didn't know about the new side-
walk having been poured there."
HE ADDED that the cost of
a second sidewalk would be
taken from the $24,000 budget
for the power cable operation.
Pease was philosophical about
the mistake. "That's the way
the cookie crumbles," he ob-
served.

Since the federal government
can't charge suspects with kid-
napping unless the victim is tak-
en across a state line, they
were forced to charge Williams
and Wilson under the Hobbs
Act, which prohibits the use of!
extortion to interfere with inter-
state commerce. Thus, to get a
conviction, the government has
to prove that the abduction of
the Stempel boy interfered with
GM's inter-state business.
THE STATE, however, can
charge the two men with kid-
napping. This carries a maxi-
YOUR VOTE I
SC-UH-Michigai
NOVEMBI
4 SGC BALL
A. Voluntary funding of SGC.
B. Michigan student assembly
plan.
7 o -Iarg
11 constitutional co

a

prove, authorities say. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN
Several prominent attorneys ' ~r q, y :,.;v, : . ":*,: : , y,
said that it was unusual for the I m....
FBI to charge the alleged kid- ededay, November 19 En. 4ics: S. Werner, U. of Mis
nappers under the Hobbs Act. Psychiatry: James Mann, Boston souri. Columbia, "Neutron Inter-
They said the act is usually in- U., OPsychoanalytic Time Limited ferometry." P&A Colloq. Rm., 4 pm.
voked to give the FBI a reason Psychotherapy Overview and Tech- Statistics: Bruce M. Hill, "Limit-
toadlcladsaeplc nnique,°" CPH Aud., 9:30 pm. ing Posterior Distributions for Ex-
to aid local and state police in WUOM: Live Nat'l Town Meeting treme Data," 3227 Angell, 4 pm.
making arrests in a local kid- panel discussion, "The U.N. & A U Players Studio Theatre: 3 origi-
naprping. The federal charges New World Economic Order," 10:30 nal one-act plays, Arena Theatre,
are then dropped and the alleg- ' am. Frieze. 4:10 pm.
CREES: Frank Beaver, "Social & Mortar Board: Sarah Power, re-
ed kidnappers are tried under Political Thought in East European gent. "International Women's Year,"
the state law, which carries a Animation," Commons Rm., Lane Martha Cook Bldg., 7 pm.
i Hall, noon. Boccassio Festival: George Szabo.
greater penalty and it easier to Medical Ctr. Commission for Wo- curator. Robert Lehman Collection,
prove, say attorneys. melt: ESIN Library, noon. Metropolitan Museum of Art, "Ar-
_ Afro-American Studies: James istotle and Phyllis: An Aquamanile
Horton, "Black Community Re- and Other Ill-Matched Couples,"
search: A Discussion of Methodolo- And. B. Angell. 8 pm.
/M Pt TA VT gy," CAS 1100 S. U., 2nd fir., 12:15 Mmsic School: Contemporary Fes-
; mTANT , H.ttival ,Hill Aud.. 8 pm: Harp stu-
Public Health Films: Little Man, ;dents recital, Recital Hall, 8 pm.
n Union Eled ons Big City, Mi2 SPH II, 12:10 pm. M u s i c a I Society: "Jelly
jMinority Affairs, Women's Com- Roll's World." Power, 8 pm.
mission, IWY: Luncheon, "Third General Notices
ER 18-20 World Women," Regents' Rm., Ad- CEW: Reports from Returning
min., 1:30 pm. women: Research and Progress ser-
.OT ISSUES Business Students' Assoc./Bets e3 presented every other Tues. -
U SLapha Psir/Organization, Advance-1 Christine Allen, "The Effect of
C. Constitutional convention ment of Women in Management! Transcendental Meditation and
call. C Black Business Students Assoc.: Bill EMG Biofeedback on Relaxation and
D. Release $12,000 of Mair, "Computer Assisted Fraud," St ittering," Nov. 25, 328 Thompson,
S.L.A.P. funds for Hale Aud., 4 pm. noon-I1:30 pm.
use by SGC. d . Industrial, Operations Eng: Frank Student Accounts: Attention to
Noonan, "Integrated Approaches to rules passed by Regents at their
;e seats Power System Planning," 229 W. meeting Feb. 28, 1936: "Students
---et-- shall pay all accounts due the Uni-
in~etindeleatesv -rsity not later than the last day
R IC UC I of classes of each semester or sum-
nvention delegates ROSICRUCIANc1'l'o ahit e'osu
.OT ISSUES ORDER, AMORC mer session. Student loans which
' " e-e not paid or renewed are sub-
2. Vecletorian option Rosicrucian Order, AMORC, a ject to this regulation; however,
3. Vieresrintial snonseertarian fraternal body student loans not yet due are ex-
3. Vice-Presidential succession devoted to" the investigation, empt. Any unpaid accounts at the
study and practical application close of business on the last day
strict Seats of natural and spiritual laws of classes will be reported to the
7-10:30 WEDNESDAY Iwill have an open meeting at Cashier of the University and
the Ann Arbor Public Library "(a) All academic credits will be
(corner of 5th Ave. and Wil- withheld, the grades for the semes-
Diaq/Fishbowl, Kresqe Med. :iam) at 8:00 p.m. on Friday, ter or summer session just com-
i Old A&D Blda. November 21st. A lecture en- pleted will not be released, and no
v, School of Music, & Mich. titled "Roots of Psychic Phe- transcript of credits will be issued.
nomena" and movie "Domain . "(b) All students owing such ac-
of Destiny" will be featured. counts will not be allowed to reg-
IDATE IS NEE DEDThere will be no charge and ister in any subsequent semester or
the public is cordially invited. summer session until payment has
been made."
Summer Placement
3200 SAB, 763-4117
Henry Ford Museum / Greenfield
Village, Dearborn: Pick up detailed
info on summer openings at your
convenience.
ATTENTION! Hercules, Inc. Delaware: Summer
job openings for undergrada as en-
gineers, process, project, chemist,
tech, & mech; details and appls.
an piavailable.
Attention: Booklets on summer
jobs in federal agencies has arriv-
PROFESSIONAL ed; available at your convenience;
deadline for Jan. exam Dec. 12.
Newsday, New York: Sophomores/
H00L AP P LI CANTSJuniors in journalism openings for
reporters, copy editors, photograph-
ying for Admission to Graduate and/or eor editors; details available.
ool . . .
DUR LETTERS YOUR REQUEST MUST BE IN Baskin Antreasian Tobev
ION OUR OFFICE NO LATER THAN: The Lakeside Studio
NOVEMBER 26 fine original prints by old/
12' DECEMBER 4 modern masters and con-
19 temporary artists
*er December 5 may not be sent until January 12 Wed,, November 19
holidays. CP&P will be closed from December 20,1-s p.m.
d no requests will be processed during that time. at the
30 JANUARY16 UNION GALLERY
20 FEBRUARY 6
2 FEBRUARY 27 first floor Mithiqan Union
Durer Matisse WhistlerII

- '
-e A
1010 P M STLOCATED IU THE
thidest
:e ~Desoaied erv ie reunsot shop ownqes
-hn o
4e
aAAdsrie eun.Mstso-wes
ersoal adeyu ed.

It

i

TONIGHT

THE COURAGE OF THE PEOPLE
DRAMATIZED RECONSTRUCTION of
Miners' Rebellion and Government Repression in Latin America
Directed by JORGES SANJINES (Blood of the Condor)

WEDNESDAY
November 1!c

..excellent . . . an
important new work . .
The (opening) sequence is
stunning in its simplicity
and completness . . . a
lucid example of revolu-
tionary cinema. "-Michael
Shedlin, FILM QUARTER-
S LY.
. a powerful recon-
struction . . . Sanjines
pulls no punches: army
officers a n d government
officials are coolly identi-

Produced by the Ukamau
Group (which also pro-
duced BLOOD OF THE
CONDOR), THE COUR-
AGE OF THE PEOPLE,
has b e e n critically ac-
claimed as one of the
best examples of the new
collective and participa-
tory methods of film pro-
duction now being used
by film-makers through-
out the world. In depict-
ing the human side of
this story, however, THE
nn nr. W s t t r n's. n-~

" . ..a vibrant glorifica-
tion of miners' resistance
and a scathing judgment
on the internal and ex-
ternal establishment forces
responsible . . . Sanjines
works with a mighty lens,
a sense of social drama
and a feeling for the
downtrodden of his coun-
try. Whether his thesis is
acceptable in whole, in
part, or not at all, the
film itself can certainly
not be ignored." - Hank
W1r7. VARIE £TY!T

Natural Science
Auditorium
and,9 pm.

r

I

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