4 4 *1 -*7 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, July 8, 1970 Wednesday, July 8, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY .. # AIRPORT LIMOUSINES for information call 971-3700 Tickets are available at Travel Bureaus or the Michigan Union 32 Trips/Day U-M BARBER SHOP 8:30-5:15 P.M. Monday-Saturday Michigan Union Join The Daily BIG STING: Berkeley police adopt I pellets BERKELEY, Calif. UP-Police in this University of California city with a history of campus- related disorders are now using anti-riot weapons firing wooden pellets "which sting like the dickens but don't penetrate the skin." "The rioters have started get- ting cute on us," Lt. Michael Healy told a newsman Monday. 'They don't get close to you. They hold back to the distance they can throw rocks from. But this pellet-thrower, which we found in Hong Kong, gives us access to them." The blunt-wooden pellets have caused no serious injuries thus thus far, Healy said. "What they do is administer the amount of punishment a bil- ly club would," he explained. "But of course these people, with their planned 'events," never get close enough any more for an officer to quell them personally." Healy said the weapon-de- scribed as new to the United States-helped stop a disturb- ance last Saturday when some 500 demonstrators rampaged through streets after an "Anti- Honor America" rally, breaking windows and throwing rocks at police. The pellets, like slices of a one-inch-diameter broomstick, are stacked five deep in a metal cartridge like a shotgun shell. Thepellets "are circular, insur- ing against skin penetration," Healy said. The shells are loaded into a gun similar to a tear gas launch- er with a 1'/-inch-diameter barrel and fired with compressed gas, not gunpowder. for riot control. LOWEST RECORD PRICES 'I list s.I. 4.98 3.29 5.98 399 6,498 4.99 plus Specials at- $299 now in stock Dylan 9.99 Woodstock 9.50 New Traffic 3.99 McCartney 3.9 Let It Be 4.29 FOR Rock Blues Folk & Jazz COME TO Students International Store 330 Maynard 769-5436 WASHINGTON (-P) - The Democratic party broadcast filmed excerpts from President Nixon's speeches and news conferences last night in a new political campaign technique to accuse him of "ringing calls for action" but obtaining few results. Democratic National Chairman Lawrence F. O'Brien said there are results only when the Democratic-controlled Congress "takes the ini- tiative and calls the shots." The 25-minute broadcast, on radio and color TV, was carried by CBS as free time demanded by the Democrats to answer President Nixon's statements during his 18 months in office. The program, labeled "The Loyal Opposition; Part One," included the following excerpts: Nixon-in his inaugural address: "We cannot learn from one another until we stop shouting at one another-until we speak quietly enough so that our words can be heard as well as our voices." O'Brien--"But today the divisions within our society are far greater than they were 18 months ago." Nixon-in his inaugural: "In pursuing our goals of full employment, better housing, excel- lent education; in rebuilding our cities and im- proving our rural areas; in protecting our environ- ment and enhancing the quality of life-in all these and more, we will and must press urgently forward." O'Brien-"Unfortunately, in most areas we see little or no progress; we share the concern of all Americans with the decline in our economy. Nixon--Jan. 30, 1970, news conference: "I would simply say that I jo not expect a recession to occur." O'Brien- "Regrettably, the President's expec- tations have not materialized, and, as so many of you are painfully aware, we have inflation and recession at the same time." O'Brien also said Nixon "must use his great personal influence to roll back inflationary wage and price decisions, just as President Kennedy and President Johnson did on many occasions. "Right now-tonight-Mr. Nixon could direct the lowering of interest rates on home mortgages, car loans and the clothes you buy on credit from a department store," O'Brien said. Five hours before the taped show was broad- cast the deputy Republican national chairman, James N. Allison Jr., called a news conference to accuse the Democrats of "attempting one of the greatest 'con' jobs in the history of American politics." Democrats score President for complete lack of results G.S. Fri( app tior 764- L~ee of A plo wh pul Set 7 :01 tli Iprl of pri Idie sit set 72 Asociated Press The police pellet ti- r.r~ NY EXPLOSIONS: Consulates bombed NEW YORK (A)-Homemade bombs were planted near three foreign nation offices yesterday, and one of them blew up and slightly injured three persons. Another device exploded at the old World's Fair grounds. The foreign offices were the Haitian and South African con- sulates and the Portuguese tour- ist agency. The injured were in the Hai- tian consulate in a building at 42nd Street east of Madison Avenue. A pipe bomb exploded in a 13th-floor hallway outside the consulate. There was no immediate estimate of damage. Another pipe bomb was found by an employe outside the 14th- floor offices of the South Afri- can consulate at Madison Av- enue and 60th Street. A police bomb squad later dismantled it. An unidentified youth posing as a deliveryman was seen de- positing a package on a stair- well of a building at Fifth Av- enue and 46th Street, where the Portuguese tourist agency has a fourth-floor office. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- a'ed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- -gan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mictilan 48104. Published daily Tues- day Through Sunday morning Univer- sity year.Subscription rates: $10 by carrier. $10 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5. by carrier, $5 by mail, WE DON'T NEED TO ADVERTISE ABOUT THE MICHIGAN SAILING CLUB OPEN MEETING EVERY THURSDAY at 7:45 p.m.--231 ANGELL HALL (No sailing experience required DIAL 8-6416 ENDS WEDNESDAY "EXCEPTIONALLY POWERFUL IN BOTH CONCEPT AND EXECUTION! 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Times, Thursday, May 28, 1970) 1 Screen: 'Grasshopper' a Rare Truth queline Bisset> descends from Work by Jerry Paris Canada upon a Los Angeles boy- Jacqueline Bisset Stars friend, splits when the future . Girl's Life Sto at Local Theaters (a bank job and many sound in- inGory vestments) seem too dull, and heads for Las Vegas. She dances By ROGER GREENSPUN in a club and, after a few ad- I don't think the film intends ventures; marries a black form- any program of maturation If I were to construct a vehi- er football star (Jim Brown, through hard tines, but Chris- cle for the romantic sensibility surely the most type-cast actor tine at the end suggests a lovely in the movies, I should avoid all in the movies), demeans herself and reckless intensity that Chris- the lush presences of, say, "A advancing his career, and learns tine at the beginning could Man and a Woman," or the mis-' she doesn't like domesticity. s ave "Tied. ty dstaces f, ay, Elvra M- .As a movie, "The Grasshopper" ty distances of, say, "Elvira Ma- When her husband dies (mur- lives in its visual rhythms, and drigan," and choose instead the dered in a hood's revenge for a I am not sure that the photo- tsof r ass"h well-deserved beating) her de- grapher Sam Leavitt) and the ishopper," ar film of rs i ordinary am- cline begins in earnest. She goes film editor (Aaron Stell) should- bitions and of limited but some- from call-girl to kept woman n't share major credit with the times stunning success. (for Joseph Cotten), to $50 director. Nothing else really whore, to ultimate despair in equals the handsome montage of "The Grasshopper," which op- which, with the help of a flying Las Vegas shows that appears ened yesterday at neighborhood fool, she sky-writes an appropri- early on, but the film repeatedly theatres, does not simply invoke, ate mesage (which I cannot re- transcends its own vulgarity, al- but actively seeks to earn its peat) while on the ground, young ways survives its actors (there moods. And although it strikes America applauds and the silent are no performances to speak of little new ground and discovers majority faints dead in its exceptfor Miss Bisset's), and few new combinations, it achiev- tracks. improves upon the conventions es a fairly rare kind of intelli- that keep it moving. gence and truth in the clarity As usual among us, failure is and fluidity of its style. more instructive, more compli- Jacqueline Bisset looks rather cated, and more attractive than like a more voluptuous Julie success. Committed to the mor- Christie, and her role in "The ality of each moment, Christine Grasshopper" probably owes a is never wise bus also she is ne- little to the heroines of "Darl- The ad copy says it is "the ver wrong, and her very aim- ing" and "Petulia." But she story of a beautiful girl's life- lessness (like the many non sedms more durable and forth- time between the ages of 19 and sequiturs of the plot) has a kind right, less secretive and sensi- 22," and though I wouldn't have of shapeliness to it that justi- tive than Julie Christie, and bet- put it quite that way, the ad fies imprudence and even in- ter adapted to suggest, without copy does not lie. Christine (Jac- decision on esthetic grounds. pathos, tough luck that Is more ( 1970 by The New York Times Company 0 Reprinte d by Permission. than misfortune and less than tragedy. When her movie is over, she wmow Starring: has gotten somewhere; she really CENERAL "has won the knowledge for MITUAEJACQUELINE BISSET which she has lost innocence. 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