o-I p~age thiree WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY April 1st and 2nd Department of Speech Student Laboratory Theatre PRESENTS SELECTED SCENES FROM FAUST I by Goethe ARENA THEATRE, FRIEZE BUILDING, Promptly at 4:10 P.M. ADMISSION FREE C14I Si ri i!an 41, in atlu NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0534 Tuesday, March 31, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three the ne ws today by The Associated Press and College Press Service SUB-LET SERVICE A U.S. MILITARY COUR' revoked yesterday a premeditated murder conviction that would have sent a young army officer to prison for life. Tho court is scheduled to reconvene today to decide on a sen- tence for James B. Duffy, an officer who had been accused in the death of a Vietnamese prisoner captured by his platoon in the Me- kong Delta last Sept, 5. After deliberatthg seven-and-a-half hours Sunday, the jury found the officer guilty of premeditated murder and conspiracy to commit murder. But thin it discovered that its ruling, under military law, meant mandatory life imprisonment. At the defense attorney's suggestion and over the objection of the prosecution, the court was allowed to reconsider its verdict. TREMORS shook Turkey yesterday following Saturday's earthquake; Turkish goveIrnment officials said 644 bodies had been found and more were being dug out of the ruins every hour. Trucks, scores commandeered from towns for miles around, were hauling in thousands of blankets and tents, field kitchens, and food and medical supplies. The International Red Cross, an American Air Force team, and all area Peace Corps volunteers joined the relief effort. * * * SUDAN claimed yesterday that It crushed a rightwing insur- Air controllers con tinetrike By The Associated Press Air traffic controllers' "sick-out" spread to more airport towers across the country yesterday, causing numerous flight cancellations and delays. Absentee rate continued to run about 25 per cent for the sixth day of the walk-out from the 21 centers that guide jets on high-altitude flights. Meanwhile Federal officials moved to try to head off a labor crisis which could cripple the nation's trucking and railroad industries. In other strike action, government and postal union ne- gotiators renewed efforts to, work out a pay boost package. There was no clear indication from the Postal Union, how- C ' b di. ever, whether it would remove its threats of a renewed walk- out if an early agreement 11 *i' seek Iwere reached. Reacting to the air controllers' strike, the government yesterday U . 'a M moved to punish absentees with suspension and to reward tose who have stayed on the job with By The Associated Press WE RENT YOUR PLACE FOR YOU. COME ON IN AND REGISTER HUNDREDS HAVE ALREADY!!! Student living Quarters 1217 S. University-662-6591 B .r Subscription Office NOW OPEN .Nov.15 (mat. EXCITING F PLAYS 1970-71 PLAZA'SUITE ON-ww a - 1 tpti t V !.:. . UTar . W N '. -N A h.Ma-7 764-0450 HiR Information,: i!Aeia r.oeRc uia J~IU rection.F In a radio broadcast heard ii Minister Col. Farouk Hamadallah inspired by Iman el Mahdi, a re mahdi's partisans attacked a poli inside. Hamadallah claimed that po: control. Cairo radio and 'several7 that the mahdi was entrenched o 000 of his followers in the wake sasinate a strong Sudanese milita The mahdi is the religious le the Sudan and the uncle of Sadi party in Sudan. STATE HOUSE MINORIT Grosse Pointe) announced yeste constitutional amendment to right to vote. Waldron said, "I'm a Johnn3 year-old vote, but I am glad to a of leaders who have already done Legislation has been propose troit), to put the 18-year-old vote general election. LEGISLATION APPROVEI mitteg will help curb use of seer( inals and tax dodgers withoutr committee said yesterday. Its report to the House ref le Treasury as to how far Congres banks to keep records that could actions. ' Daily Official Bulletin (Continued from Page 2) SUMMER PLACEMENT SERVICE. 212 SAB, Lower Level Interviews at Summer Placement: MARCH 31: 'Kelly ServicesuDet. typing, file clerk, computer wk., bus. mach,. oper., switch- board, gen. off. wk. APRIL 1: Classic Crafts Corp. summer college program as company rep., car nec. I APRIL 7: Horn Chocolate Co., Indiana, contact- ing retail grocers in midwest, wk. out of own district, car nec. APRIL 8: f cash and promotions. Cambodian Premier Lon' Nol ,"n . ., .w.sx*.. ..< Damascus, Syria, Sudan's Interior -Associated Press John A. Shaffer, FAA adminis- said yesterday that his govern- said the insurrection - allegedly trtrrandintlgast n-netmyakfo rsfo h ,rigious leader -started when the Town in ruls dividual absent controllers a s t United States, France and In- ligius eadr -stared hentheweek that the government would donesia if Viet Conxg attacks im- ce station killing all the policemen Soldiers and relief workers search for bodies of victims in the ke prompt action against peril the nation's neutrality. ruins of Gedis, Turkey, which suffered an earthquake recently. who continued in the "illegal Nol claimed Viet Cong attacks lice brought the insurrection under About 1300 persons are thought to be dead. strike." Federal employees are were con$inuing inside Cambodia Egyptian papers reported however, -------- - .. ._-forbidden by law to strike. and that agents of a South Viet- n- the Nile island of Abba with 30,- namese g u e'r r i l l organization of an unsuccessful attempt to as- virE~ilVGTo make up for the shortage of nms 1aognzto of an unsuccessful attempt to as- SPECIA L MEE TING. r'#ccd i' 'h te a were trying to persuade the peas- SPECIAL ~~~~~~~air traffic controllers, the Federalweetyntoprudthpas ry leader last week. Aviation Administration (FAA) antry to demonstrate against the ader of the .largest Moslem sect in; 1 continued to restrict traffic to government. k el Mahdi, ,head of the opposition SI-U1A 11101"t half the usual flights .in and out Nol said, "If the Viet Oong at- of New York's three airports and tacks become more flagrant and out of Chicago's O'Hare Airport. if judged to be grave by the Unit- Y' LEADER Robert Waldron, (R-" Flights were delayed for up to ed Nations with respect to our day that he supports a proposed on SU t in j-1R four hours across the country yes- neutrality, it is not excluded that give Michigan I-year-olds the .aan effort to stave off threat- us." By TAMMY JACOBS allot to the new LSA Student As- ened trucking a n d'. railroad But Lon Nol told a news con- dd my name to the broad-based list Student Governnment Council at sembly office space in the Student strikes, a high-level federal me- ference in the Cambodian capital, a special meeting yesterday, set Activities Bldg, for an indefinite diator stepped into the deadlock- Phnom Penh, that he had, how- so.limit of $800 for additional fund- time period, as well as $100 and ed nationwide contract talks yes- ever, no intentions of asking the d by Rep. Jing of the Black Action Movement two boxes of paper. Assembly's terday of the Teamsters union and United States or other countries question on the ballot at this fall's (BAM) classroom strike. budget, according to its President, the trucking industry while Secre- for troops. "Though SGC continues to l- David Brand, is $13. tary of Labor George P. Shultz "If we have enough troops we ly support the strike and the BAM Yesterday's meeting was the called i negotiators in the long can defend our territories our- D by the House Banking Com- demands, SGC's financial situ- first full meeting of the newly- railroad shopcraft dispute. selves" he explained. et foreign bank accounts by crim- ation is precarious," Council's mo- elected SGC members who were Trucking contracts c o v e r i n g T unduly burdening U.S. banks the tion stated. Several members seated last Thursday. . 425,000 drivers across the nation The new premier held the news maintained that SGC is already SGC has additional ties with the expire at midnightton has not an- to be moving toward civil war. cts an unresolved dispute with the involved in deficit spending, and coalition besides money. Te strion as nt an- The Cambodian population is be- therefore, they said, it had to set' nounced a strike 'call, but the ie-ThCabdnpoutinsbe s should go in requiring domestic thlreitenthiyancdlisupdort sf Council member Joan Martin gotiations three years ago result- ginning to choose sides over leada 1 be used in tracing foreign trans-1 BAM serves on the coalition coordinat- ed in scattered strikes and a na- ershp spliting between the new ing committee which heads up the tionwide industry lockout before government and t he forces ao BAM and the coalition suppor't-coltnadgerlyesed- ousted Prince Nordomn Sihanouk. i thavealready used an es coalition and generally does need- settlement. Goo HuorCoe Deregoo msey n es- ed organizational work. In addi- The 45,000 members of f o u r In Washington, a State Depart- men and women, Det. & suburbs. n aee$2,200 wgth of supplies tion, Miss Martin is a member of AFL-CIO rail shopcraft unions ment spokesman said there had APRIL 9: nnthe coalition's liaison committee have been forbidden by Congress been no requests or hints of re- ICamp Tamarack, Fresh Air Soc., Det. about $1,200 in mimeo paper, and caip Tcouns., e nly noc. Dt., about $1,000 in oter uppies dwhich acts as an inter-mediary to strike before April 11, but un- quests from Cambodia for U.S. cab couns, men onlynurec a m bouht at he stude su between BAM and thecoalition. ion leaders h a v e warned that arms aid. wtrfrnt., arts & catntr-be-buh tte tdn icu tween BAM a'chitheocoalitio craft, tripping,'dance, men and women; store and charged to SGC. wildcat strikes could come at any Cambodia's acting chief of mis- unit supv., caseworkers, truck-bus driv- The Michigan l)aily, edited and man- time by members a n g r y at 15 sion, Or Kosalak, told a n e w s er, kitcher porter; univ. credit avail. SGC had previously moved to aged by students at the University of months of talks without a pay conference in New York yester- .I . , .M give BAM all "necessary support" ichig News phoe 64 2. Second m o ta swithotaptay tha he plans to a U.N. Se- in supplies, but the new $800 limit Clas~s postage paid at Ann Arbor. Mich- irie OR A I A I N tkspeeec vrta o i gan. 420 Maynard St.. Annl Arbor. Negotiations with the= postal retary-General' U Thant and the unRGcAN ZA ONT alsoi mved tea y to chigan 48104. Published daily Tues- union continued yesterday as 15-nation Security Council to Council also moved yesterday to day through Sunday morning Univer- Postmaster General Winton M. N TIC1 '~ have Executive Vice President sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by 'bring pressure for the withdraw- 1 NOTICES Jerry DeGrieck, draft a letter from t carrier, $10 by mail. Blount held a fourth closed-door al of the Viet Cong and North .:.r, :;::-:; " ::": .::" ::"x":":::::,: SGC to The Daily urging con- Summer Session pubitshed Tuesday session with union leaders yester- Vietnamese forces from Camnbo- Uniersty uthranChael l5 'tinued support for both the strike through Saturday morning. Subscrip- day. Both parties o h eoi-da oaa de ehadn University Lutheran Chapel ,151t nud sthera BAM de d s. tio tes: $3.00 by carrier. $3.00 by tions maintained their policy of plans now for asking for a meet- Washtenaw, April 1, Mid-week devo- and the BAM demands vmail. official silence on the talks. ing of the Security Council. tion, 10:00, Student-led. In other action, SGC voted to DGCTHoEATgRECORPORTION ____IACADEMY AWARD Including FI ______will be available n J 375No. MAPLE R.76f94300~ Cinema V GREAT DI RECTORS' FESTIVAL DOUBLE FEATURE-ENDS TONIGHT Directed by SHIRLEY CLARKE Music DIZZY GILLESPIE "STAGGERING" -N.Y. Time "A shucker!U' -Time Magazine "ONE OF THE GREAT AMERICAN, MOVIES! TOWERING! YOU CANNOT AFFORD TO MISS IT!" .-Judith Crist, Herald Tribune J . ' "One of the best" Lie "NOTHING -"Cool World"-7 :1 5 B T " "Nothing Bu"-9:00BUT A MAN DOUBLE FEATURE-WED. & THURS. Who killed Ursula Gray? - I{THE 1 7 MODEL MURDER CASE Directed by Michael Truman-The Creator of "The Lavender Hill Mob" --/1 A CINEMA V PRESENTATION "Stout thriller . , tough and realistic"--Time "Model Murder Case," 7:15 only-"Accident," 9:00 only "STRIKING SUCCESS. A classic exampljs of how to tell a story in visual terms. The prime achieve- ment of Losey's direction is that he has fused his gifts into a stun- ning cinematic narrative. Pinter is master of sparse dialogue ideally ' suited to Losey's style. How these ------------------------------------ +-It AUTO 0NSURANCE FOR EVERYONE CANCELLED REJECTED 0 DECLINED INSURANCE CERTIFICATES IMMEDIATELY FOR 1970 LICENSE PLATES SPECIALIZING IN FINANCIAL RESPONSIBILITY LowMonthly Payments "'Z' damn neao knocks you out of your seat!" --The New Yorker BEST PICTURE Winchell 311 Weds. 9-1 Fri. 9-1 For discussion of Stampp and Stowe DIAL 5-6290 NOMINATED FOR 10 ACADEMY AWARDS "FOUR STARS ** * *HIGHEST RATING .. . A GRATIFYING" ACHIEVEMENT." -Wanda Hale, N.Y. Daily News "EPIC BATTLE OF THE SEXES." -Vincent Canby, N.Y. Times i "The Last Word in Thrillers. Terrific!" N -GENE SHALIT-LOOK MAGAZINE Now at the CAMPUS THEATRE Dial 8-6416 ATTENTION FRESHMEN and SOPHOMORES j Interested in U of M's Dearborn Campus opportunities? You may now get information in Room MON.-FR7.-7:00-9:30 SAT-SUN-i 45- 4 15-650-925 "DAZZLING!" -L A TIMES 3020 Washtenaw, Ph. 434-1782 Between Ypsilanti and Ann Arbor HURRY, HURRY ENDS TUESDAY MARCH 31 44th CENTURY.FOX PRESENTS THE SUNDANCE KID I 482-9533 214 E. MICHIGAN, YPSILANTI ARLAN'S DEPT. STORES 665-3789 2456 STAOIUM BLVD. - RCHARD) BURTON P. it xr T r r x Tv~ I I I I