Hundreds feared injured in Meany says labor
northern Italian earthquake may support Carter
(Cntinuedfrom Piaget1)
the Yugoslav border, near Buia,
said hundreds of persons
were feared buried under de-
bris. An officer said S0 famti-
lies swere buried when two
blocks of houses collapsed and
60 persons were buried tunder
the debris of a restaurant
where they swere hasing a ban-
quet.
THE INTERIOR Ministry in
Rome said there were six
known dead in San Daniete del
Friuli, a town of about 7,000
persons in the foothills north of
Udine. All doctors at the main
hospital in the town were re-
called lt dtly ta treat a large
nmber of injtred.
Other serious casuatty and
darage r it p o r t s came friim
Buia, a tosvn of abotit,0t00.
The news agency Itatia said it
reached thse Buia police station
by telext,!ne tind a peicentan
said there 'tlee"manyvdead,
ermay It is natlime lto
t its inn nnw. Send aid.''
'AYRUI. ?ON!S wiere c-
~~~~~~ ire ctaisd n t,nay
iii A dim. -i t airs i-inie-
''limit"V.tiithere
1C itti s i1' Ie i tin. S_'11
of Iltlt 55 sfleit inli tile fir
MSIC-D)ANCE-THSATRE
Performacsat 8:0 pm.
FRIDAY,_May 7
SATURDAY, May 8
aSCHORLING AUD.
(Schoal nf Ed)
$2.00 at donr
DANCE WORKSHOP
S.. MavsS,10sesm-12:00
BarbtGate -$200atidoat
DANCE DEPT.-764-6273
tipen contaly, especially in and
near Venice. Police reported
chaotic traffic ott the rotads lead-
ing trim cities in the area.
THE EARTHQUAKE was felt
ioust strongly in the area friim
13 itn:ano is thienotrthern Alps
rn11it the no(-rthern edge of
Rame, atadfoa Trieste on the
%'utttstav borcder to Turin near
the French border. The intro-
.<it\- decreased from north and
east li the west atnd sooth.
The earthquake was mseassured
a1 between 6.0 and 6.9 tin the
Richter scale, ti -etrdling., to the
Swredisha Meteoralctiica Intaiit-
The Richter scalte measures
a.(:nd matiton. In popolated
teia quake ofi 4 on the sctile
,_ catta ue taoderate damage, 6
eatsi be setveretind a retiding iii
7 taeinsa mtajor etarthquiake,
olltb f widespratd, eatvy
tatter ii te qakeis the (tnc-
k1o ~j si~ttlb iitunich. The
ociior tCsttio nlttl c te it
Agricuturactl Attaiche' w h o' s
been in platces lice Greece, Ice-
tindl, a n d Madaugtascar. Vio
katiw whatt the sell he does. I-I
dloesn'twworry attit cetips. lBut
I wouldn't print CIA agents
natnet, bitt mostlty because of
tae flack I'd gel the nest day
tin the phitne, not becauzse I Inltl
it wsould endanger lives."
center in northern Italy, near
the botrder with Austria.
II o w e v e r, an earthquatke
taeassiilg center in Viennti said
the etpicenter swats near Udine.
Electricity went oist in Udine
ais tremntrs shotok the city, a
radio reporiter satt, The first
tremori lasted abotut 311 seconds
1Md ati ttt )litwed by the sltting-
et tine, which critcked otpen
s-ills.
PROFESSOR liccits ttt,
lit the Swvedish atgency ittUls-
as-to, described the cquatke its
"ui siialta sltting'' tutucom-
ti-ct it with the 1963 eairths-
clittikc in Ytgttsttiviathabst kiltedl
urced is os t he-,ichter'it,?cti,,.
lugenltict, cttttit tt if the
Z' ther Austliain tprtovitne hut-
deittg VYtgotslavia,it e p onrit Ieitd
Sl tring qitke shocks.
tew's cotiference in Eas;t lBruns-
wick, N. J., yesterday he
thought C'alifornia Goy. Ed-
munad Jerry Brotwn is leadting
him nt the M~itvlanud priiariy
('ARlEE :Sail lie hb e\eved
IBcoswn ''Iticl;iilot tof ittattct'' in
Mairyltiiud, where he visited the
State lost week. Cacter stud
Itiatsehile he is committed t
cunning ini till the ,rlhnaries,
Browssn is aible to ctinceuurite
stilely ott Maryland's M 1y8I
trimsary.
After a aptlittial 1l ineetiig
wiith the C'tilifitiniti goivernor,
tivo teaditig Denmocrats sadl
pcttise fur Prawmn's effotrts in
Maiitlzmttl. ''I think Brittn will
dot very %weltand tsttlikely
win,"said Sitn. Iltibert Hum-t
'hrtey I-Misstt. . ''It'ssvhattI
sense aid l itiI ftel ntditcwhat
Iltse Spetuk1er Carl Albert
si:"I like him very much.
lHe's the o1tt%' tine whit has a
I ]Ititlshitey s:ililhoutr in Sad-
dle River. N. .J., lie sos tu rned
duown a cettitest fitoic ('titter for
a tiseel)ig b -ttse 'ITi wouIl
,out ht. ie )It1i.t v ia t 11this um.
II iirlc'-"sid1tio will not en,-
(trse f-rlrw oticany, "ot
))ittc1 it-titi c ctttsthitte until the
"11 fI' Mi-cl-,t: iii ('it. sa sh
S 1 1 11 1I'.It ' ,"s Ite tieferectit' % tottk %wilt
ciio n t a ittmtte ltn Il00,000
tiitc's tlit' ns itid nun-
TONIGHT-
THE KING OF HEARTS
MLB 3-7 & 9 P.M.
PHILLIPPE DE BROCA 1967
Oat' most poular fim. A Scottish6solcdter cdutrina W.W. I is
sent in a French town. evacuoted except far an asylum.
Meonwhile. the fleienq Germans haelilt a time bomb.
The asylum inmates escope, takino up various costumes and
roles. A vore funny comedy and a powerful antt-wor fim
the sanity of nsanity and vice-versa. Alan Bates, Gene-
ieve Buiold.
DOROTHY ARZNER NIGHT
One of Hollywond's rare women directors, Dorothy Atoner
was a World War I nurse and subsequently a journalist
before staring work tn Hollywood as on editor (BLOOD
AND SAND. THE COVERED WAGON) . She directed her
first ftlm in 1927. and although her films senerally were
strictly commercial assinments, she dirented one of Clara
Bonw's best sound features, THE WILD PARTY We ate
showino ems of her fitlms tonioht.
DOROTHY ARZNER'S 1933
CHRISTOPHER STRONG
rt MLB 4-7:15 only
Katharine Hepburn plays a prototye of the modern amosn
-hereoanasiatrix in love wth a married man by wom she
becomes pregnant. Despite the film's statement of a wo-
man's problem as choosinq between love and career.
"Christopher Strong loaves us with a blazingly electric
mane of Katharine Hepburn unlike that of any other film:
a woman in a silver lame body-stockinqt which cnvers every-
titn but her face-and suaaests the chrysalts of the super-
woman of the future."Molly Haskell.
1940
DANCE, GIRL, DANCE
MLB 4-9 only
Arzner compares the sufferinq and indignities of a serinus
ballerina (Maureen O'Hara) with the lecherous success of
a burlesaue aueen, portrayed by Lucille Ball. a symbol of
Hollywood vulgarity. The two eventually end up un court
on a charace of disturbing the peace.
$1.25 single ar $2300 dauble featare!
Glenda ano He"wkdda
"Al the center thern s Glenda
Jackson's marvelously impartial
performance."'--vEt attn
Should give Iwo-time Academy
Award winner, Glenda Jacksoun,
yet another try at Oscar'
"..a startlingly fresh and perceptive
version written and directed by
Trevor Nunn and ingenuously
interpreted by Jackson.
Seldom has a classic keen
so well served."
"HEODA' an fim s all
Glenda Jackson.
:motrufttatuaaeci sactatti
Glenda Jacksan is the definitive
Hedda. Her reading al tke
mysterious depths o1 Hedda's
exasperating character is
brilliant and conclusive."
"Based on see performance,
there s no doubt Ms. Jackson
will he up tor an Oscar.'
GLENDA JACKSON in "HNEDDA'
TIMOTHY WEST PETER EYRE
PATRICK STEWART JENNIE LINDEN
tltiffI RS1 NR11501 fufh
T, hA 1011 , B515
Sat. & Sun. 5:00-7:00-9:00
Mon.-Fri. 7:OU & 9:Oh.