'R4~t 4~iI~I~TON IGHT at 7-9 P.M. page t Friday, February 13, 1970 iree im4I Sii an 4bp ad,4 tly NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 A Great Screen Classic Returns VIVIEN LEIGH and MARION BRANDO Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three * U in TENNESSEE WIILLIAMS' "STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE" Screen Play by TENNESSEE WILLIAMS . Based upon theOiginal Play "A SreetuarNamed Dsire"by TENNESSEE WILtIAMS As Pmented an the Stage by Irne Mayarteinick . Directed by ELI A KAZAN Re-released thru United Atists "TWO OF THE YEAR'S 10 BEST" -Neal Gabler, Mich. Daily "TENDER, LOVING, FUNNY-SAD!" -N.Y. Daily News "Besides being one of the truly funny sophisticated comedies, it starred one of the best looking chicks ever." -Neal Gabler iO fl[C 11 I3U SAVERY FUNNY,M BYAPFEAL -inv Caby N. Y.OHLUm .s- "GOODBYE, COLUMBUS' IS BOUND TO BE A GREAT SUCCESS!" "COLUMBUS"-Fri., Sat., 7:15.and 11:15-Sun. 7:15 only "ROMEO"-Fri. 9:00 only-Sat. and Sun., 2:15, 4:45 and 9:00 "DAZZLING! once you see it, you'll never again picture Romeo&Juliet'quitethe way you did before!" -LIFE PARAMOUNT PICFURESpnent. The FRAwco ZEFIRau ROMEO AUJUET Costs may! limit aid to minorities (Continued from Page 1) that by the next Regents meeting, much better figures will be made available," the president said. ' Fleming also met Wednesday c with representatives of Studentsh for Effective Action (SEA), which has proposed partial financing of increased minority admissions by a assessing students $15 annually k and faculty members $25 annually. Both assessments would first have to be approved in separate refer- enda of students and faculty. Beginning in the second year of the SEA plan, the University a would bear a certain percentage of the costs involved in providing t financial aid to the minority stu- dents who are admitted under the 0 plan. The University's proportion t of the cost would start at five per cent and increase to 40 per cent1 by the fourth year of the plan. Fleming expressed reservationst about the feasibility of the plan, noting that the cost would in, crease each succeeding year as the number of minority students increased. "You would obviously buildb some terrible frustrations if youd started the program and then could not continue," Fleming said. Hart talks to lawy ers (Continued from Page 1)r Nixon's plan to end the war inb Vietnam. He said Nixon's plan "does not reserve us the free- dom to withdraw -- it hinges on how the South acts and the North responds." "It would be better to announce a fixed date and have a complete withdrawal that hinged on noth- ing. .Whatever our committment was, its time has run out and w now we are only doing harm to c ourselves and the rest of the world," Hart said. t He expressed fear that Nixonc may be able to cut the casualty rate significantly so that he will t be able to continue American in- volvement in Vietnam while re- o ducing criticism at home. s the news today by The Associated Press and College Press Service CHARGES WERE FILED against an Army officer alleging a second massacre of South Vietnamese civilians occurred near the hamlet of My Lai March 16, 1968, it has been learned. The Pentagon is not releasing details, but military sources told The Associated Press 20 deaths are alleged in unpremediated murder charges lodged against Capt. Thomas K. Willingham, 25, of Allen- hurst, N.J. The alleged incident in which Willingham stands accused occurred about two miles from My Lai where, according to the Army, Calley killed 102 civilians March 16, 1968. * * * MISSISSIPPI VALLEY STATE COLLEGE was ordered closed by school officials for a 12-day cooling off period. The nearly 900 students who were arrested Tuesday for staging a protest march were freed on $25 bond on their own recognizance. The school was closed after the fifth day of a class boycott called o press for administration approval of 30 demands. The students' demand included written rules governing conduct of security officers, more public telephones, employment of a full- ime campus physician, refunds for uneaten cafeteria meals, better' qualified instructors, and ending of rules governing student dress. * * * ISRAELI PLANES bombarded a scrap metal factory north of Cairo with time bombs, napalm, and rockets, killing at least 68 workers and wounding another 98, Egypt's military command said. The possibility of still more damage in the factory was raised by an Israeli announcement that one of its planes might have acci- dentally dropped a time bomb set to explode early today. Defense Minister Moshe Dayan urged the Egyptians to find and disarm the 880-pound bomb, which has a 24-hour fuse. * * * THE DRAFT will probably call lottery numbers no higher than 90 in March, an informed source said. The March ceiling is not official, however, and no orders have gone out yet. In January, draft boards were instructed to summon for military! service only men with lottery numbers up to 30; in February the ceil- ng number was 60.- The January draft call of 12,500 was met within the No. 30 limit, but it is not yet known whether the February call of 19,000 could be met within the No. 60 limit. The March call is also for 19,000. * * * MORE THAN 200 AMERICANS disembarked in New Bruns- wick after sailing from Cuba where they had spent several months cutting sugar cane. 600 other Americans prepared to take their place. The returning workers told those waiting to leave that they worked seven hours a day and spent most of their free time reading or talking. "We came back understanding better than ever the necessity for otal destruction of United States imperialism," said Patricia Bou- hard, a spokesman for the returning group. The U.S. press "has told vicious lies that we have received mill- ary training in Cuba," she said. "This is not the first time a group of Americans have gone to work to show solidarity with the Cubans," he added. Students rally for workers Students demand free meals for cafeteria and dorm workers during a rally in the Fishbowl yesterday. The demonstration re- ceived little response from passers-by, but speakers said it was just the first action in a drive to forge a campus "worker and student alliance." HILLEL HOUSE: Panel debates case for abortion reform By HESTER PULLING "A physician cannot play god with his patients. He knows that girls he turns away may c o m e back nearly dead," Dr. David Bingham said Wednesday night in a panel discussion on abortions sponsored by the B'nai B'rith Hil- lel Foundation. "I've known girls so disraught they were sticking knitting need- les into themselves to be rid of the fetus," Bingham added. "I appeal for complete repeal of the abor- tion law." The panel also included Rabbi James Gorden, Reverend Erwin Gaede, Father Gerald Hughes, and Barbara Rimer of Women's Lib- eration. Although all the speakers fav- ored some type of abortion law reform, they disagreed on wheth- er or not non-theraputic abortions were "moral." Hughes believed them to be analogous to murder. "How can one judge where be- ing 'human' starts?" Hughes ask- ed. "There is no f i n e breaking point where life starts - human- ity is one long sliding scale. We have to accord to the fertilized egg the rights of a human being." In an attempt to answer Hughes, Gaede quoted from an article which said that a fertilized egg is technically a part of the mother - not an individual in its own right - for at least the ini- tial two weeks. However, Miss Rimer t o o k a' stand apart from both clergymen.' "It's not a question of the rights of the c h 11l d," she maintained, "but those of the mother. A wo-' man must be allowed to ha,, complete control of her body." Athletes' privileges continue Board of Govs. retains special training tables By DEBBIE THAL The Board of Governors yes- terday voted unanimously to continue the existing policy concerning the housing and training table program for athletes. Currently, rooms for athletes are reserved in a block by the ath- letic department before they know the names to put on the room and board contracts. The rooms are reserved in the residence halls prior to placing freshmen. Many of the athletes eat at a special training table in a separate room. Controversy has arisen over the placement of the athletes in cer- tain central campus dorms-West Quad and South Quad-and over what dorm residents call the "spe- cial treatment" they receive. Representatives of the athletic department yesterday defended housing in West and South Quads on two counts. First, they said it was a practical necessity to have the athletes living near the train- ing fields. They also said that in order to remain competitive with other Big Ten schools, the recruit- ers had to be able to designate a more desirable dorm as the "place where you would live" to the ath- letes. Athletic training tables have come under attack for giving the athletes better food tian the rest of the dorm. Housing Director John Feldkamp explained that they pay for the extra food. He added that the idea of a training table as a source of revenue for the residence hall had originated in the Housing Office. The board decided that the training table will continue to exist in South Quad next year. Athletes will be housed in South Quad, East Quad, and West Quad, the three dorms most accesible to the training fields. An attempt will be made to scatter the ath- letes as much as possible within the individual dorms although ath- letes will continue to room with other athletes. The board then considered the question of eliminating breakfast at Mosher-Jordan and week-end meals at West Quad, both with corresponding rate reductions for next year. Optional meal contracts would have been made available in neighboring dorms. Surveys indicate that many stu- dents would be interested in op- tional breakfast contracts. How- ever, members of the board said they felt they had no right to de- prive the students who do eat breakfast of their opportunity to eat in their own dorm. They also pointed out that no complaint had been made to them concerning the optional contracts, and that there were no people present from the halls concerned who advocated the optional con- tracts. The lone dissenter in the vote not to institute the meal options was Inter-House Assembly presi- dent Jack Meyers. "There is clear proof that we could expect up to 40 per cent of dorm residents to desire a con- tract without breakfast," he said. He explained, however, that no dorm with all the prerequisites for such a meal plan now exists. COMING SOON ~P T POPFellini, Vadim, Malle "SPIRITSOF THE DEAD" NOW PLAYING NATIONAL GENERAL CORPORATION FOX EASTEN ThELaTr 375 No. MAPLE PD. '769-1300 TIMES Mon.-Fri. 7:10 & 9:05 K.i I1 DUJSTIN HOFFMAN MIA FARROW W4~OHAND MARY Need Something Invented? Angered by slogan, SAT.-SUN. 1:30-3:20-5:15 7:10-9:05 2c y3 * TON ITE-11:30 ONLY TWO MEANINGFUL DRAMAS A Shook-Up Story Of The Up-Tight Generation 1I .1DTIacFTURY Fox PRESENITS {. I LAWRENCE TURMAN PRODUCTION Jr '.' I I ANTHONY PERKI NS TUESDAY WELD NGUPMARSHAL BACKLARwNOEL BLACK awI NOEL BLACKumtORENZO SEMPLEk Ima a met En STEPNEN atu Emrw,#AIYsia COtOR BY DUJXE SWEMD FN MAMRE AUBICES| WITH THE AWARD WINNING .almost a love story! i A i 7 I COLUMBIA PICTURES; presents WIWu cA"co WYLER'S f120 IID&2 I I* m I