Page Six THE MICE' GAN DAILY" frilay, July 31, 19 to Friday, July 31, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY 9 l-t I .1 THE MICHIGAN DAILY R .)k SWem4 p10 1 ii roos cr.t ,# r o to pro" n bi.v~ .* ~ 1 A~49~. FrIIC 4,IIlvv,;K " " DM QL~vX.'M ,w~q f,.A .M+ fr6# .s?? Cr * .A1 I3),he A.ssociatecI Press NCEATRE CORPORATION A NATIONAL GENERAL COMPANY 1 FOH VILLBGE; 375 No. MAPLE RD. -7691300 _MON.-FRI. 8:15 ONLY_ SAT.-SUN 1 00 5 00-8:30 xr.L I I ISRAFLI PLANES felled four Egyptian MIG 21s over the Suez C)nal yesterday while the Israeli Cabinet continued divid- ed on a U.S. peace plan. The Israeli ministers met yesterday for the third time this week on the American plan under the threat of a walkout by the right- wing fctsion, if it accepts the proposal, which includes a call for a 90-day cease-fire. A military spokesman in Tel Aviv said the Egyptian planes were felted by cannon and air-to-air missiles when they tried to inter- ce)t Israeli aircraft on bombing runs over the southern sector of the 193-mile waterway. Before the Cabinet met Thursday, the hard-line Gahal party, which holds 6 of the 24 seats, declared it would end its three-year-old, participation in the coalition government, if the American plan is accepted. THE PENTAGON CLAIMED yesterday that the Soviet Un- ionlaunched and orbited a Nuclear Strike Vehicle and then re- covered the package near the Aral Sea launch area. The vehicle known as FOBS - for Fractional Orbital Bombard- ment -System was described by a Pentagon spokesman as "further evidence of the continuing momentum of the Soviet development and test program for strategic weapons." The statement came against the backdrop of the current strate- gic arms limitation talks between the United States and the Soviets in Vienna. FIVE BATTALIONS of fresh Cambodian troops massed on the slopes of Kiri Rom yesterday, awaiting the signal to attack the plateau. Four other battalions withdrew from the plateau Tuesday under heavy North Vietnamese and Viet Cong fire. They were withdrawn from combat. According to field estimates they had suffered 300 killed or wounded in 20 days of battle. It was regarded as the worst disaster of the four month old war. * s : THE CENSUS BUREAU said yesterday more people are liv- ing in the suburbs than in the cities for the first time in the na- tion's history. The rapid, substantial flight of Americans from the inner cities to outlying areas since 1960 startled even the bureau's experts, Cen- sus Director George Hay Brown said. Preliminary results of the 1970 count show that 30 to 35 per cent of the people live in suburbs compared with a slightly smaller per- centage for the cities, said Conrad Taeuber, the bureau's associate director. 20hI Ce ipJa preurna 4 EMIAGE KARL C. SCOTT/ MALDI4N A;Fj o.~.. .,FS P*'ad., As ~. k O..,,N 8..a~e. THE SORRY MUTHAS is a jug, country, & blues band from Min- neapolis with BILL HINKLEY, picking away among them and within you. Dese muths is good. TONIGHT & TOMORROW at $1.50 for the evenin' The door opens at 8 P.M. Free eats. JULY 31, AUGUST 1--FRIDAY, SATURDAY I MARRIED. A WITCH dir. Rene Clair (1942) FREDRIC MARCH-VERONICA LAKE Charming fantasy of a major director. Short: CHICKENS COME HOME (Laurel & Hardy) 7 & 0:05 _ Architecture 88717cAuditorium 603 E. Liberty St. DIAL 665-6290 N iobModem.h HELD OVER!! BY POPULAR DEMAND,. .-. Hot, biddiil atcorn pUt NEW YORKAT)-The world's puters indicated yesterday that 'wha won't replace paintings and diamon< Parke-Bernet Galleries, which Diamond for $1 million and a Van in only $269,495 in sales from an ai that had cost millions of dollars new "The audience, while very sop very familiar with auctions," observ vice president. Some 250 persons, chiefly corn from as far away as Chicago to bi+ and third generation computerso handling equipment. Rare tapestries and oil paintin for the starkly modern computer un The larger pieces did not me A group interested in one giant c million confessed-Jater that they h to open the bidding. The computer the opening bid of $15,000. Time Brokers, Inc., which orgy UNIVAC 1107 which cost about $2 would sell for several hundred tho an opening bid of $50,000 and was n There was more action on sma of prospective buyers. A group of students from Morn home empty handed, but said they computers until the other offers about $400. Two other prospective comput tunity to bid. The units Steven Ros PeterIaria, 13, of East Brunswick, bidding above their budgets. Spokesmen for Parke-Bernet s disappointed at the sale results bu puters again some time. h "GIT ATTENTION PARAMOUNT PICTURES PRESENTS JACK LEMMON SANDY DENNIS m A NEIL SIMON STORY _ Wr THE OUT-OF-TOWNERSx Written by NEL.=40N Produced by PAUL NATHAN Directd by AITHUR HILLER Mic-QUINCY JONES Produced by JALEMP1OOUCT ONNC. COLOR BY MOVIELAB A PARAMOUNT PICTURE " "' tULYSSES'A SUPERB FILM!" ------- - A.. ,-Lgfe Magazine I i MICHIGAN REPERTORY '70 ---university players--- A TONIGHT garson kanin's BORN YESTERDAY "PAGES OF A CLASSIC GLOW ON THE SCREEN. JAMES JOYCE'S 'ULYSSES' COMES TO THE SCREEN NOT ONLY AS A BRIL- LIANT AND ABSORBING FILM BUT ALSO AS A SUPERB TRANS- LATION OF THE CLASSIC IT- SELF. STRICK'S FILM HAS A CLASSIC SCOPE, A GRANDEUR AND A THROBBING HUMAN- ISM, AN INTENSE DRAMATIC POWER AND A WILD AND UN- RESTRAINED WIT, A L Y R I C BEAUTY AND A WILD, ROBUST HUMOR . . . DEPICTED WITH STUNNING CLARITY. WE TIN- GLE TO THE PROSE AND SOAR WITH THE POETRY AND REVEL IN ALL THE DELICIOUS WORD- PLAYS AND THE COARSE AND STRANGELY UNSHOCKING GUT- TER COMEDY .. IS STUNNING IN ITS FRANKNESSES YET LYRIC IN ITS VISUALIZATIONS . NOTHING S H O R T OF BRIL- LIANT. FLAWLESS CAST." -Judith Crist \N .M "LIKE _A VOLT JOLT FROM THE THIRD RAIL! It Hits Even Harder on the Screen Than It Did on the Stage!" -Time Magazine BOX OFFICE OPENS 12:45 P.M. 3020 Washtenaw Ph. 434-1782 Between Ypsilanti and Ann Arbor Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre Air Conditioned + Use Daily Classifieds + L A 8:00 p.n. Ph: 668-6300 SHOWS AT 1-3-5-7-9 P.M.-FEATURE 20 MINUTES LATER Corner of State and Liberty Streets DIAL 662-6264 I BOX OFFICE OPEN TODAY AT 6:30 SHOW TIMES Today, Monday, Tuesday 7-9 Saturday and Sunday 1-3-5-7-9 This-time... A Russ Meyer Production "Planet Of The was just theI WHAT LIES BENEATH MAY BE THE ENDI --- - - - ___ R - - 1214 S. University DIAL 8-6416 Feature Promptly At 7 P.M. & 9 P.M, "BRILLIANTLY BITCHY" -TIME "NOTHING SHORT OF BRILLIANT" -JUDITH CRIST "SCREAMINGLY FUNNY" --JOYCE HABER Spend a marvelous evening with eight of the boys. t- "TOLD WITH BRUTAL ELOQUENCE! Shirley Knight is close to perfect - startling! Al Freeman, Jr. is excellent!" -Brendan Gill, The New Yorker "A STRIKING EXPERIENCE AND ONE WITH AN IMPACT THAT IS ALL BUT UNFORGETTABLE! Creates a shattering impact. A vision of undiluted harsh- ness and language of untempered fury!" - Hollis Alpert, Saturday Review. "THERE HAS NEVER BEEN ANYTHING LIKE THIS ON THE AMERICAN SCREEN!" -William Wolf, Cue Magazine OPEN 12:45 SHOWS AT 1-3-5-7-9 P.M. Feature 20 Min Later I LEROI JONES' The Waiter Reade Organization Presents SHIRLEY KNIGHT AL FREEMAN, JR. 30WtONE UNR IS YEARS Of AS( wiItSEAOMITIED. Preducw GENE PERSSON. As* . Producer HY SILVERMAN "Music by JOHN BARRY Owrector ANTHONY HARVEY A PRSSOX.£Xt(Reuigis 1..tiSEftAItON. " H*1*,MQ"'tA !E O PF'TH POrUM { R1IFTH Avg"UEAT lIuen Ty OOWNTOWN ANN ARBORIFRAIN~tUO FRIDAY Dutchman-6 :30, 9:45 Ulysses-7:30, 10:45 SATURDAY: Dutchman-3:15, 6:30, 9:45 Ulysses-4:15, 7:30, 10:45 Stafing k1y. oz JAMES FRANCISCUS KIM HU LINDA HARRISON Co Ctaunq JEFL RI2 Produced by APJAC PRODUCTIONS Associate Produce ScreenpIay by PAUL DEHN- Story by PAUL DEHN and h PIERRE 0tBIIE "Mus ic byLEONARD ROSENMAN. PANAViSII COMING SOON- Don Rickles in "K Mdrt Crowley's From 20th Century-Fox starring DOLLY READ / CYNTHIA MYERS / MARCIA MC BROOM / JOHN LA ZAR / MICHAEL BLODGET /DAVID GURIAN Co-starring EDY WILAMS / Produced and Directed by RUSS MEYER / screenplay by ROGER EBERT / story by ROGER EBERT and RUSS MEYER PANAVISION' Color by DELE.* Hear THE SANDPIPERS and THE STRAWBERRY ALARM CLOCK on the original soundtrack album from 20th Century-Fox records No One _ Under 18 Yrs. Admitted amp"