Image provided by: Texas A&M University
About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 23, 1971)
VLTY nond ing, x ^ Sons ^46-5816 FOR BEST RESULTS TRY ATTALION CLASSIFIED ■cserve Of- “ runtinM 'V through e Research red by the h. Oppor- ifforded b; ‘8t MiliUrj activities sw offiten pectrum of > to Navj s through lining at» u omotion in e Naval re U. itact: 345-3361 or SNR, M5- ite NKRC re Station, ndise iets mPM NOW SHOWING 1:30 - 3:30 - 5:30 - 7:30 - 9:30 MiXsosk: i STEVE McQueen "LE MANS" A CINEMA CENTER FILMS PRESENTATION A NATIONAL GENERAL PICTURES RELEASE PANAVISION’Color by De LUXE ade LNS alue WSMMm NOW SHOWING 1:30 - 3:30 - 5:30 - 7:30 - 9:30 John Wayne - Richard Boone TE ). -Bryan NO' ,oans Big Jake’ A CINEMA CENTER FILMS PRESENTATION TECHNICOLOR® PANAVISION « | QUEEN FIESTA NITE TONITE 7:15 - 9:15 p. m. “LA GENERALS” 5T SCREEN AT 7 :50 P. M. 2 Walt Disney Hits “PINOCCHIO” At 9:25 p. m. “SON OF FLUBBER” EAST SCREEN AT 8:00 P. M. “THE REINCARNATE” At 9:50 p. m. “ROSEMARY’S BABY” With Mia Farrow [DNITE AT 8:00 P. M. ‘GIRL IN MY SOUP” & “CHEYENNE SOCIAL CLUB” THE BATTALION Thursday, September 23, 1971 College Station, Texas Page 5 Officials express concern on Mideast WASHINGTON (^—Adminis tration officials are expressing concern that the growing empha sis on the Mideast at the United Nations might distract from the American effort to achieve an interim settlement between the Arabs and Israelis. The main problem, they say, is the possibilitiy of an early move to put the dispute before the General Assembly while the United States still has a chance to work out a reopening of the Suez Canal as a first step toward a real peace. “It would be a shame for the Mideast to get tied up in the politics of a general debate when we still have a chance to work out something through quiet di plomacy,” one administration source said. American officials spoke also with misgivings of the call U.N. Secretary General U Thant made for the world body to work now for a general Mideast settlement. Although their main hope cen ters on the third-party role the United States is playing between Egypt and Israel, American offi cials see some light coming from bilateral talks Secretary of State William P. Rogers will be hold ing with other foreign ministers at the United Nations and in Washington. Rogers will meet his counter parts from most of the nations directly or indirectly interested in the Mideast during the next two or three weeks, including at least two sessions each with the foreign ministers of Egypt, Is rael and the Soviet Union. Nevertheless, it is the interim settlement move, the so-called Rogers plan, that State Depart ment officials say still holds the best hope for heading off re sumption of the Arab-Israeli war. But whether that hope is realistic is seen as problematic at best by some administration sources and diplomats. The State Department tenaci ously sticks to the position that recent Egyptian criticism of the U. S. mediation effort does not mean Cairo has lost faith in Medina trial Continued from page 1 vise him of the legality of his actions—and the machinery of warfare will surely grind to a halt.” Medina, said Eckhardt, was aware that his men were mur dering civilians in My Lai. The major said that when Medina shot a woman lying in a rice paddy outside My Lai, “he was simply doing what every other member of the company was doing that particular day.” reaching an interim agreement. At the moment, some officials indicate, the next step is up to Israel in response to specific ideas put forth earlier this sum mer by Assistant Secretary of State Joseph Sisco. Because these ideas are still being pursued with Israel and have not yet been put in precise and concrete form they have not been presented to Egypt, Ameri can sources claim. However, Israel does not ac cept the assessment that it has the next move. The Israeli government has said its position is the same as last May when it discussed the interim settlement with Rogers when the American secretary visited Jerusalem. At that time Rogers described the Israeli re sponse as positive. Israel is said to have told the United States it will do nothing further until Egypt makes some response, particularly regarding a guarantee for Israel to use the Suez Canal and agreeing not to occupy the East Bank of the waterway with a large armed force. The Jerusalem government also shares the U. S. skepticism about the U.N. role in the Mideast. x . DAVID SEYMOUR, 7 years old, has been arrested on seven traffic violations, one for each year of his life, in connection with driving his new mini-bike. (AP Wirephoto) Brezhnev of Soviet BELGRADE <A>>—L e o n i d I. Brezhnev, conditionally accepting Wednesday the doctrine of non interference in Yugoslavia’s af fairs, dismissed as “fairy tales” rumors that the Soviet army is preparing to plunge into the Balkans. The Soviet Communist party chief, who arrived for a four- day visit, said the idea that the Soviet Union held to a doctrine of “limited sovereignty” for Com munist states is a slanderous in vention. His disavowal of any invasion plans in the strategic Balkans denies rumors army invasion STEREO CITY Original Artists, Original Releases. $^99 8 Track Next to the Campus Theater came after President Tito bluntly reaffirmed Yugoslavia’s inde pendence from Moscow and indi rectly warned Moscow to keep hands off. Brezhnev yielded to Yugoslav pressure in affirming the prin ciples of the famous 1955 Bel grade Declaration that recog nized Yugoslavia’s right to sov ereignity, equality and noninter ference in internal affairs. But Brezhnev hedged by say ing: “One should work in order that these principles are realized in contemporary conditions as widely and as fully as possible.” He did not say what the “con temporary conditions” were, but called for Soviet-Yugoslav “po litical cooperation,” apparently to discourage Belgrade from drift ing too close to the United States or to Communist China. Brezhnev’s remarks and those by Tito were in toasts offered at a formal dinner after the So viet leader arrived to a polite but less-than-enthusiastic reception. Apparently alluding to Wash ington which Tito is visiting this autumn — and to Peking, Brezh nev denounced what he termed “different sources which want to hinder” Soviet - Yugoslav rela tions. The “limited sovereignty” doc trine, also called the “Brezhnev doctrine” in the West, was said to have been exemplified in the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia in 1968 after that country’s Com munist leaders charted a liberal course. That invasion plunged Bel- grade-Moscow relations to their lowest point since Tito split with Moscow in 1948. Tito, in his toast, uttered the most authoritative and explicit Yugoslav assertion yet that Bel grade intended to remain inde pendent from Moscow. m Ip THE OFFICIAL Dallas Cowboy “Insiders” NEWSLETTER Read it evefy Friday in The Daily Eagle This is the official authorized Dallas Cowboy publication that sells by subscription for $6.00 a year, brought free to you each Friday only in the Daily Eagle. iji; THE NEWSLETTER CONTAINS INFORMATION f AND SCOUTING REPORTS ABOUT THE DALLAS ► COWBOYS AND THEIR UPCOMING OPPONENT FOR THE WEEK. IT FEATURES STORIES AND COMMENTS BY THE MOST RESPECTED SPORTS WRITERS AND PERSONALITIES, SUCH AS: FRANK GIFFORD SPORTS announcer ABC TV FRANK LUKSA SPORTS editor ft. worth star telegram ANDY ANDERSON KYLE ROTE BLAGKIE SHERROD SPORTS EDITOR FOOTBALL ANALYST FT. WORTH PRESS NBC-TV SPORTS EDITOR DALLAS TIMES HERALD pn mm Texas prison rodeo Every Sunday In October GUEST STARS IN PERSON » - MQct. 3—Dottie West & The Heartaches ,, Oct. 10—Connie Smith & Nat Stuckey , i Oct. 17—Charlie Walker , Oct. 24—Waylon Jennings Show • Oct. 31—Porter Wagoner-Sljow - .. vTT! -xJ- —-ORDE^/TICKETS NOW! " 1 , ' ’ £ Texas Prison Rodeo ! ^ rrr ' earfiox rsgfSNMh ^. V V • v.-’ '■ ' Huntsville, Texas 773404^— \ ft : TICKETS $3, $4, $5, and S5.50 \ All Seats Reserved—No Reduction For Children ' / 5 NAME ADDRESS —— 1 ■ : CITY STATE ZIP CODE JPlease Send Tickets At $ Each For Tlie October Performance. Enclosed Is My Check □ Money Order CD For- FREE! You Can Get A FREE ORDER of FRENCH FRIES With A Whopper Or A Whaler And A Large Drink. Note: You Must Show Your I.D. Call In For Orders 846-8007 Tftf PUS “FOR AN ATMOSPHERE YOU WILL ENJOY” Featuring: FRIDAY & SATURDAY — “The Resurrections’ SUNDAY NIGHT — Folk Singers- ‘Tom and Steve” North Gate 329 University Drive 846-9973 Open 7 Nights A Week From 1-12 Contemporary Arts Committee FILM SERIES FREAKS-U.S. SEPT. 24 Tod Browning, Director of some Hollywood’s best known horror films, gath ered real freaks from various countries for his cast. The 1932 classic concerns circus life & demonstrates the cruelty & irrationality of which “normal” people are capable & the relative normality with which the freaks have adapted to their handicaps. VIRIDIANA - SPAIN OCT. 8 This film, a devastating, outrageous attack on religion and society, was promptly banned by Franco after its release although it won the grand prize at Cannes in 1961. “Everything which society holds sacred is de molished” in this work by Luis Bunuel. WILD HORSES OF FIRE-U.S.S.R. OCT. 15 The story of a small sect of Ukrainians, shut off from the world by natural boundaries. With its unreal colors, improbable camera angles & precarious balance between ritual & orgy, wild horses of fire succeeds in establishing its own vital stylistic basis. SHADOWS - U.S. OCT. 22 John Cassevete’s first film, became an early classic of experimental film- making. The whole film was improvised as the actors became the charact ers they were playing. The story deals with a young writer who fall in love with a woman who is passing as white. THE GOLD RUSH-U.S. NOV. 12 The outstanding gem of Chaplin’s pictures. The film by which Chaplin wants to be remembered. Made in 1925, the comedian plays the lone pros pector who travels to Alaska in search of gold. He finds hard times. He symbolizes the good, kind & pitiful core of humanity. THE RED & THE WHITE - HUNGARY DEC. 3 A hunting film about the absurdity & evil of war. Revolutionary camera use accompanied with the inevitable humiliations & mech. slaughter, give the film the quality of a surreal nightmare in which people lose their identi ties & become pawns in a game of chance. ALL FILMS 8:00 P.M. IN THE MSC BALLROOM Individual Film Adm. Season Tickets Students $1.00 Students $3.50 Others $1.50 Others $5.50 May Be Purchased At Student Programs Office Or At The Door.