Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, May 28, 1976 Castro to remove troops from Angelo kR -Fri., Sat., & Sun. 004O SALTY DOG 50c DISCOUNT on admission with Student I.D. COMING JUNE 1 S H ERMANS HERMITS Hours, Fri &Sat : 8 p.m.-2 a.m. Weeky Hours: 9 p.m.-2 a.m. 516 E. LIBERTY 994-5350 V) U'I O' WASHINGTON (A', - Cuban Premier Fidel Castro has im- plied that he will complete the withdrawal of all Cuban combat forces from Angola in about a year, a senior American official said yesterday. The official told reporters on Secretary of State Henry Kis- singer's plane flying from Lon- don to Washington that the im- plication was drawn from a let- ter sent by Castro to Swedish Prime Minister Olaf Palme. KISSINGER had been told of the letter when he was in Stock- holm earlier this week, but he did not read the text itself until the Swedish leader cabled it to him in London. The senior American official said a reading of the letter shows that Castro planned to increase the withdrawal from the originally announced 200 a week. However, the official did not say what the new level would be, nor when it would go into effect. Cuba presently has between 13,000 and 15,000 troops in An- gola, where they fought for the Marxist government recently es- tablished.- WHEN THE Castro letter was first disclosed earlier this week, the Cuban leader was quoted as saying the withdrawal had al- ready begun. The official said yesterday there already are some indica- tions that the troop pullout has started. However, he said, the Central Intelligence Agency would need at least a week to establish that fact and several more weeks to- confirm that a meaningful with- drawal is underway. CASTRO SENT the letter to Palme on May 21 in response to an article by the Swedish leader criticizing Cuba for its intervention in the former Afri- can Portuguese colony. Castro, in explaining his deci- sion, said he did not want to carry on a crusade. In addition, he pledged in the letter not to send troops else- where in Africa or in other Latin American nations. According to accounts of offi- cials who have seen the mes- sage, Cuba will reduce its forces to about 5,000 troops by the end of 1976. The rest will be with- drawn over the following six months. - V She was a TIME B ShF every hour-- Set to go OFF\h . .thisis a mOie that wiN delver , S Sing DARBY ILLOYD RAIN FL3 WASHINGTON ST. a HT42-3300 THEATRE DOWNTOWN YPSI LANTI 'French Connection' trio busted NEW YORK (k') - Two men and a woman under indictment as top echelon international narcotics dealers were arrest- ed yesterday at Kennedy Air- port after they were flown here secretly from Argentina, $ q a REST EASY! SELL IT THRU THE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS CALL NOW 764-0557 where they had been hiding. Federal authorities said one of the three, Corsican - born Francois Chiappe, has links to the legendary "French Con- nection" pipeline through which narcotics flow from Europe to the United States via South America. CHIAPPE, 16, is under a death sentence in France for the murders of two drug pro- curers. "These have been for years among the most important and most sought after criminal nar- cotics organizers in the world," said Peter Bensinger, adminis- trator of the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) in Wash- ington. Chiappe. with Miguel Russ, 41, an Italian, and Yolanda "Chola" Sarmiento, 45, a Chi- lean, were turned over to U. S. authorities in Buenos Aaires on Wednesday by the Argentine Hose a flair far artistic writing? If you are interest- ed I reviewici poetry, and music or writtng feature stories attno u t the drama. dance. film arts: Contact Arts Editor, c/o The Michigan Daily. government. They were flown to New York on a non-stop DCI flight chartered for the purpose by the DEA. AT ARRAIGNMENT in Brooklyn, U. S. District Court Judge Jacob Mishler or- dered Chiappe and Russo held in lieu of $2.5-million bail each for a hearing June 4. Sarmiento was to be arraigned later. Officials went to consider- able pains to insure secrecy. Even city police were not in- formed of the trio's arrival. Authorities said Chiappe was a primary financier of a heroin operation in which Russo was said to have supervised the movement of the dope down from Europe to South Atnerica to the United States by using a variety of couriers. SARMIENTO was described as a chief New York distribu- tor in a parallel operation, working from 1968 to 1973 out of a Brooklyn apartment across the street from he federal courthouse where she appear- ed with the others for arraign- ment. She jumped bail of $100,000 in 1971 and fled to Ar- gentina. "The government of Argen- tina is to be commended most highly for its cooperation in helping to make these arrests possible," said Bensinger in a statement. "We ar e deeply grateful." -U ANN ARBOR PREMIERE 1976" UNDERGROUND DIRECTED BY EMILE DE ANTONIO AND WITH CINEMATOGRAPHY BY HASKELL WEXLER, this Color Documentary portrays the activities of the Weather Underground, an offshoot of S.D.S. and the Sixties. The FBI at- tempted to subpoena this film to get informaiton on still at-large members. Ann Arbor was the site of the earliest Weather activity. SAT.: UNDERGROUND CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT AT OLD ARCH. AUD. 7:30, 8:30&iO Admission $1.25 CLASSIC AMERICAN COMEDIANS WEEKEND CHARLIE CHAPLIN-BUSTER KEATON 1952 "LIMELIGHT" by Charlie Chaplin A story about two aging vaudeville comedians who are losing their audiences -and their touch. But all you really need to know is it's Chaplin and Keaton. Together for the one and only time on film. Plus an Academy Award-winning score by Chaplin. TONIGHT at ANGELL HALL, AUD. A 7:00, 8:304& 10 Admission $1.50 the f arbor cooperative TONIGHT MARCEL CARNE'S 1945 CHILDREN OF PARADISE MLB 3-7:30 ony while the Gestapo hunted for some of the filmmakers, Carne made this film about art, life, and the theatre in the Paris of Balzac. It is a monumental film of incredible richness-comic. tragic, philosophic-filled with strong subtle characterizations and at least live kinds of theatrical performances. A kaleido- scope, the fim shilts from the tile o the theatre to the rea- tionship between art and life, to the problems of love. Pauline Kae calis it, "a film-poem on the nature and varieties o love- sacred and profane, serish and possessive." Written by Jacques Prevert. Jean-Louis Barralt, Arletty, Pierre Renoir. French, Eng- iiah subtitles. MLB 4 JACK NICHOLSON RIDE IN THE WHIRLWIND (Monty Hellman. 1965) MLB 4-7:15 only In 1965 Jack Nicholson starred in two very offbeat and very original westerns directed by Monte Hellman. Neither was dis- tributed; only a few lucky cultists have seen them. Tonight you can see both. Nicholson also wrote RIDE IN THE WHIRLWIND, a story o innocence and paranoia, and how paranoia can be- come justitied. Cameron Mitchell, Millie Perkins. THE SHOOTING (MONTE HELLMAN) 1965 MLB 4-9 only One of the most absorbing, bizarre and existential Westerns ever made! Nicholson plays a cowboy who joins a group of cow persona chasing a mysterious rider. Written by Adrien Joyce. who wrote FIVE EASY PIECES. Remember, you'll probably never get an- other chance to see these rare Nicholson films. Jack Nicholson, Warren Oates, Will Hutchins, Millie Perkins. $1.25single show---$200 double feature J1