A SUBSCRIPTIONS NOW ON SALE * INDIVIDUAL SHOWS ON SALE MONDAY page three al rP Mitir43an Ba4li NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 TUES.-WED., FEB. 24-25 GREAT PL AYS M 1 i U I Friday, January 9, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three 5 the news today by The Associated Press and College Press Service JAN.15 OBSERVANCES Dr. King to be honored 2 Performances Each fRI.-SAT.. JAN. 23-24 "A REM TWIMPH" BETPLAY dAuleNtd WED..THURS., FEB. 4S "A STUNNING MUSICAL BRILLANTLY CONCEIVED" -KERR kY TIMES S, %% 4x.el .> ' < WED.-THURS., MARCH 18-19 BEST MUS1CAL NEW YORK CIRCLE AWARD 1968o "A CHEERFUL, JOYFUL & BLISSFULLY IRREVERENT MUSICAL... AS MODERN AS TODAY THE ROCK mus . . THE UNITED MINE WORKERS offered a $50,000 reward yesterday in the slaying of union official Joseph A. Yablonski. An immediate investigation into last year's United Mine Workers presidential election involving Yablonski has been announced by Secretary of Labor George P. Shultz. The union had asked the gov- ernment to conduct-an investigation. There have been allegations-and denials-that the gunshot slaying of Yablonski last week grew out of the election campaign. During the campaign Boyle and Yablonski exchanged bitter charges of financial wrong-doing and election violations. In Clarksville, Pa., State Police and FBI agents went from house to house interviewing the 300 residents for possible leads. Police are also trying to identify persons who have made threatening telephone calls to two close allies of Yablonski. * * THE FRENCH GOVERNMENT is giving assurances that it will sell no more than 15 Mirage fighter-bombers to Libya, al- though the new revolutionary regime there reportedly wants 50. The U.S. government has expressed official concern over the political and economic implications of French penetration in the country. However, the British said the sales are acceptable-if they are for defensive purposes and do not upset the balance of power in the Middle East. French Foreign Minister Maurice Schumann says any eventual sales will conform to France's general policy. France has placed an embargo on arms deliveries to countries it considers belligerents in the Middle East conflict. GEORGE ROMNEY, secretary of Housing and Urban De- velopment, reported record success last year in government-sub- sidized housing starts. Though "we've got the greatest housing shortage since World War II," Romney said government-subsidized housing starts totaled 165,000 last year, up 13 per cent from last year. Depressed private production left the nation short over two and a half million housing units. Romney announced plans to increase the assisted starts in 1970 by another 220 per cent and to place more units in suburbs. "It is vital to easing economic, social, and racial tensions that this housing be dispersed more broadly than it has ben in the past," he said. THE INQUEST into the death of Mary Jo Kopechne has ended, three and one-half days after it began. Miss Kopechne was a passenger in a car, driven by Sen. Edward Kennedy, which toppled off a bridge on Chappaquiddick Island last year. Judge James A. Boyle, who presided over the proceedings, will now consider whether to recommend criminal prosecution in the case. Boyle, a District Court Judge, will foreward his recommendation to Superior Court, the next highest bench in Massachusetts, where his findings will be acted upon. Prosecution could develop from Boyle's report or from grand jury action. District Attorney Edmund S. Dinis has the option of taking the case before a grand jury no matter what Boyle recommends. * * * A POLICE SERGEANT testified that he called for a cease- fire. three times during a police raid in which two Black Panther party leaders were fatally shot. Sgt. Daniel Groth, testifying at an inquest into the Dec. 4 deaths of Fred Hampton and Mark Clark, said the shooting continued each time. Groth testified that when he and other police officers tried to serve a warrant to search for illegal weapons in Hampton's West Side Chicago apartment, they were met by gunfire. ' Rev. Dr. King Jr. Rev. R. Abernathy FUND SHORTAGE: City may be unable to buy new buses By The Associated Press Cities, public schools and business concerns across the nation are planning to com- memorate the birth of the late Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. on Jan. 15. The Rev. Ralph David Aber- nathy, who succeeded Dr. King as president of the Southern Christian Leadership Con- ference (SCLC), asked that the day become a "national people's holiday." SCLC of- ficials are planning a memor- ial service at Atlanta's Ebe- nezer Baptist Church, where King was pastor. King, who was assassinated in Memphis, Tenn., on April 4, 1968, would have been 41 next Thursday. Public schools will be closed in New York, Philadelphia, and Berkeley. Washington, D.C. schools will close for the after- noon. In-school observances are plan- ned in Los Angeles, Oakland, >Calif., Buffalo and Cincinnati. San Francisco and Detroit school officials left the question of ob- servances up to individual schools. Local observances in New Jersey schools were urged by the State Federation of District Boards of Education. All 16 campuses of the City Uni- versity of New York will be closed for the day, dubbed "human rights day" by_ university officials. Rep. John Conyers (D-Mich), who is sponsoring a resolution to make the date a national holiday, said a group of 24 Congressmen are urging mayors of 65 cities to issue proclamations in observance of the day. Mayor Frank Sedita of Buffalo, N.Y. .said he plans such a procla- mation. Also in New York a 30,000-mem- ber union of office workers and sales people, District 65, National Distributive Workers, asked its members to take the day off and attend a rally at which Abernathy, Mayor John V. Lindsay and Rep. Shirley Chisholm are invited to speak. The city and many business concerns plan to allow employes to take -time off without pay or charge to leave or holiday time. SUBSCRIPTIONS STILL ON SALE! THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN ____ PROFESSIONAL THEATRE PROGRAM JANUARY 26 --31 U.S. Prefessinal Premiere! FEBRUARY 2 -14 JOSE TRIANA'S , I a a I I E i I pU -I ... . EHELEN JAMES dAYES STEWART Directed by STEPHEN PORTER PRIOR TO BIPi11AE IW Although the Ann Arbor Trans- portation Authority was awarded a $429,275 grant by the Depart- ment of Transportation Monday to purchase badly needed equip- ment, they may be unable to do so. Two obstacles facing the. au- thority are disagreement on the type of bus nedded and, more im- portant, the city council's appa- rent lack of available funds. A resolution to purchase 33 and 45-passenger buses was passed af- ter a long debate Wednesday af- ternoon. Authority members Rich- ard Koester and Joseph Crafton voted against the motion. They said Ann Arbor does not need the larger buses. A dispute concerning air conditioning units on buses was left unresolved. Further ac- tion was postponed until Monday night when the authority will meet again. Ann-Arbor will have to pay half the cost of the buses. However the city council has been advised the city is facing a financial shortage and no funds are available. If the authority does not decide to purchase the buses, or if the city council cannot produce the matching dollars, the city would probably have to follow a stand- ard bidding procedure and then place an order for new equipment. Parking and Traffic Engineer- ing Director John E. Robbins' mentioned the possibility of ob- taining a loan to pay for the city's share of the buses if the author- ity decided it wished to buy the buses presently available from GMC. Some authority members ex- pressed the belief they should make a decision independent of city council and then leave it to the council to determine how the funds would be obtained. John Zelinski, bus system man- ager, told the authority the bus system is now in a perilous posi- tion. Additional equipment will have to be purchased if the au- thority plans to meet the request of southwest area residents who have asked for a bus to take their children to school. Parents were told that if 5Q children are signed up, a bus would be provided. Latest local murder called unrelated to coed slayings 6L - -, I Directed by JOHN HOUSEMAN 1966 Royal Shakespeare Company success in London! Prize-Winning Playof the American University iheatreFestival! "FascinaUng-bld-innovative!" -Boston Herad "Uniue-marvelous sense of mood-rewr" NATIONAL GENERAL CORPORATION FOX EASTERN THEATRES FOX VILLaGIr 375 No. MAPLE RD. -7694300 MON.-FRI.-7:15-9:15 SAT. & SUN.-1:30-3:20- 5:15-7:15-9:15 "THE YEAR'S BEST COMEDYr!" - SATURDAY REVJEW BobCard Ted Vice A FRANKOVICH PRODUCTION' FOR COLUMBIA RELEASE The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 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: $3.00 by carrier. $3.00 by mail. U TEXTBOOKS UP TO 1/3 OFF UILIICH'S No connection has been found between the Dec. 9 slaying of Mrs. Gloria Murphy and eight recent co-ed murders in the Ann Arbor area, says Ann Arbor Police Chief Walter Krasny. James Murphy, the victim's hus- band, was arrested the day after the slaying and charged with first degree murder. Police officials allege Murphy stabbed his wife of two months after a series of quarrels. Murphy told police he found his wife's body at. their University Towers Apartment at about 1:20 on the afternoon of Dec. 9. He said he left the apartment about noon to attend a class and returned home to find his wife bleeding on the floor. An am- bulance crew called by Murphy found the young woman dead when they arrived at the apart- ment. Police arriving at the scene, I Daily Classi feds Bring Results The Student's Bookstore Um wommummommo CANTERBURY HOUSE presents THE A . 17 The Byrds left most of the people there with a memory of the kind of Hill Auditorium thing an audience sees all too rare- ly. . . . The Byrds were renewing their energy, spirit and music. In a sense they were being reborn.... 52.5 . 3.0. .130> : I WEEKEND SKIERS Coffeemaker... The First and Only Real Car Coffeemaker Available. . Can also be used for Heating Soup, Tea, Chocolate, Broth, etc. 4 For People on the Go! Actually BREWS Four Cups of Real Coffee in Approximately 9 4 Minutes * Plugs into Cigarette Lighter (12 Volt Systems)4 . Thermostatically Controlled, Keeps Coffee Piping Hot, Makes the Most Delicious Coffee Ever * Self Adjusting Metal Bar for Use as Handle and Hanging Device C i .. . . .. , ..A: placed guards at the building en- trances and began a room-to-room search of every apartment. Police failed to find the knife allegedly used by Murphy in the slaying. A search at a landfill in PittsfieldrTownship, was aband- oned after a week. Murphy's pretrial examination in Ann Arbor District Court began Dec. 22 with testimony from four state witnesses, including Dr. Ro- bert C. Hendrix of University Hos- pital, who performed the autopsy on Mrs. Murphy. He testified that she died from a loss of blood re- sulting from multiple stab wounds. The continuation of Murphy's examination has been postponed indefinitely. Murphy, a student in the lit- erary college of the University, was due to graduate on Saturday, Dec. 13. ThiSr Folk Legacy Recording Artists ED TRICKET and the GOLDEN RING with Ruth Meyer, George and Gerry Armstrong, Harry Tuft, Sara Grey i