1 11 1 1 1 E 11 PjGjIj ~~*t Carnival on Diag APRIL 6-10 12 Noon-4 P.M. -free * FOOD * CONCESSIONS * LIVE ENTERTAINMENT 12 Noon-5 P.M. * SPECIAL GIVEAWAYS * ASSORTED SPECTACULARS the news today by The Associated Press and College Press Service AN INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE to bring peace to Cam- bodia, Laos and Vietnam, was proposed yesterday by the French government. Paris is ready 'to "offer its active contribution to this enterprise," the government said. The three countries were formerly part of French Indochina. The French offer appeared to be aimed at reconvening the nations that took part in the Geneva conferences on Indochina in 1954 and 1962.; The first conference settled the French colonial war and the second laid the basis for a neutral Laos. * * * A 15 PER. CENT BOOST in Social Security benefits took effect yesterday, adding $4 billion a year to consumer buying power and firming the nation's defenses against a recession. The increase in old age and disability payments to 25.5 million recipients is retroactive to Jan. 1. The three-month back payments will all be mailed this month, adding more than $1 billion to regular benefit checks. White House economists are counting on this infusion of new disposable income, followed at midyear by the end of the 5 per cent income tax surcharge, to shore up the demand for new cars and other consumer goods. MOBS OF CATHOLICS AND PROTESTANTS battled last night in the streets of Belfast. British troops used riot gas to clear the crowds from the streets and hundred of soldiers trucked to the scene as snipers opened fire for the first time since the riots of last fall. Two square miles of the city were sealed off by troops led by specialists trained to penetrate riots and snatch out the ringleaders. RADICAL JAPANESE STUDENTS continue to dispute with government officials over the fate of a hijacked airplane. The Japan Air Lines plane, which has been grounded for over 40 hours, holds 115 weary travellers and about 15 hijackers who are members of the Red Army, a radical Japanese student group. The hijackers want to take the plane to Pyongyang, North Korea, but refuse to leave until they are assured they will not be shot down by South Korean antiaircraft. Until they receive this assurance, the hijackers refuse to release any of the passengers. . AIR TRAFFIC CONTROLLERS declared yesterday they will not return to work soon. They demanded that negotiations be opened with a third party, but the government contended they are returning to their jobs. The controllers' statement, claiming most of their men are strik- ing, appeared to block hopes for a quick end to the dispute that has chocked air traffic across the country for more than a week. The government has said that it will not negotiate until all the men return to work. THE MASSACHUSETTS LEGISLATURE enacted a bill yes- terday which would bar Massachusetts residents from serving in any war not declared by Congress. The bill aims to set up a test of the legality of the Vietnam war by institution of court action by the state to bring the question to the United States Supreme Court. The Massachusets governor, Francis Sargent, has not yet in- dicated whether he will sign the bill, which passed the overwhelmingly Democratic House and Senate easily. * * * A TWO-MONTH STRIKE by 6,064 tugboat men in New York harbor ended yesterday. Although the strike had little effect on the general public, it cost an estimated $35 million in revenues and wages and forced ocean liners to dock themselves. Strike leader Joseph O'Hare called the settlement "one of best if not the best in the country." The strikers settled on a 53.6 per cent wage hike and benefit package increases. The settlment was expected to bring increased charges for tug services but industry spokesmen would not comment until they had had a greater opportunity to analyze the terms. $ Sit 'igan 4 HAVE YOUR LUNCH ON THE DIAG aril YostField Hous50Uc Fri., Apr. 10-7 P.M.-12 Sat., Apr. 11-12 Noon-5:30 P.M.; 7 P.M.-12 Sunday, April 12, 12 Noon --6 P.M. * Amusement Rides Game Booths * Contests-Pizza Eating Yo-Yo, etc. CABARET Way-Off Broadway Show "What Are You Wearing to the Revolution?" Fria rs acres of table grapes. "We welcome the three growers who have so laudably brought to a conclusion the contract," said Archbishop Timothy Manning in a prepared statement. "It is our ardent hope that this day's busi- ness will be but the beginning of a chain of such contracts so that prosperity and peace can o n c e more descend into our fields and homes. The Coachella Valley produces about 10 per cent of California's table grapes. The contract calls for $1.75 an hour, plus a 25-cent bonus f or each box picked. In addition, growers will con- tribute 10 cents an hour to a un- ion health and welfare fund and two cents a box to a union fund for elderly 'farm workers - most- ly Filipinos and Mexican-Ameri- cans - too old to work. Workers will also be paid for jury and witness duty. The prev- ious pay' rate in the valley was $1.65 an hour and 15 cents a box. Negotiations were arranged by the Catholic Bishops Committee on Farm Labor. The committee was formed tc aid in the grape dispute-mediated talks with the three growers which began one week ago and ended at 3 a.m. Tuesday. The churchr says, however, that it does not take sides in the dispute. -Associated Press CAESAR CHAVEZ of the United Farm Workers and Lionel Stein- berg, a California grape grower,;announce a contract agreement between the farm workers union and three grape growers. page three Thursday, April12, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three Grape workers win partial gains LOS ANGELES (A) - Contract agreement between the AFL-CIO farm workers union and three growers representing about one-seventh of the table grape production in the Coa- chella Valley was announced yesterday at the headquarters of the Los Angeles Roman Catholic diocese. The United Farm Workers Organization Committee, headed by Cesar Chavez, has sponsored a nationwide boycott of California table grapes as part of a four-year struggle to win recognition from growers. The three growers are the David Freedman Co. of Ther- mal-Indio, Calif.; Wonder Palms Ranch of Indio,, Calif., par- tially owned by Freedman, and Travertine Ranch, of Oasis, Calif., owned by Charles Freedman. The three cultivate 7,800 I4 i n Teamster- strikes spread WASHINGTON 0') - Spread- ing Teamsters Union strikes crip- pled or slowed trucking in at least 22 cities yesterday but industry negotiators went back to national wage talks pledging they would not retaliate with a nationwide lockout. "The industry intends at this moment to take no retaliatory ac- tion," s a i d Trucking Employers Inc., the management group that three years ago closed down vir- tually the entire nation's truck- ing industry in response to scat- tered strikes before a settlement was finally reached. Chief industry negotiator Ray F. Beagle said the current strikes are "massive," compared with the walkouts during the 1967 nego- tiations.* However, it appeared most of the 425,000 truck_ drivers covered by the national wage talks are remaining on the job. Their contract expired Tuesday midnight with a gap of at least 80 cents an hour over three years between Teamsters' wage demands and industry offers. Most drivers now average $4 an hour. The industry's pledge against a lockout somewhat eased the pres- sure on President Nixon in deal- ing with this new major trans- portation crisis along with t h e continuing slowdown of federal airline traffic controllers, a po- tentially explosive nationwide rail- road labor dispute and uncertain- ty over postal negotiations. The Nixon administration asked the Teamsters union and the trucking industry for special ar- rangements to continue handling of defense materials and perish- able commodities. NEW CHARGES Army accuses MedMia in My Lai massacre ATLANTA, Ga. (N) - The Army filed new charges against Capt. Ernest L. Medina yesterday, accusing him of responsi- bility for the death of all civilians allegedly massacred by his company at My Lai in 1968. Medina, 33, of Pico Rivera, Calif., was commander of Company C during the raid on the Vietnamese village. One of his platoon leaders was Lt. William L. Calley Jr., who is charged with murder or assault in the incident. The Army said in an announcement at nearby Ft. Mc- Pherson, where My Lai investigations are being consolidated, that Medina "was responsible for the alleged murder of Viet- namese noncombatant persons allegedly committed by mem- - bers of his company ..." Bishop Joseph F. Donnelly, aux- iliary bishop of Hartford, Conn., and committee chairman, said, "The Committee is.confident that this breakthrough will serve as a pattern for others who wish to help solve this prolonged dispute." Asked how he knew it was a breakthrough, Bishop Donnelly said, "I base it on conversations with other growers.". Chavez said the contract in- cludes "a very good section on pesticides" which forbids the use of several chemicals including DDT. Farm workers have com- plained of illness due to pesti- cides;: Cinema V GREAT D1RECTORS' FESTIVAL DOUBLE FEATURE-ENDS TONIGHT SWho killed Ursula Gray? F~ I THE ~~~~'OEL'MURDER CASE Directed by Michael Truman-The Creator of "The Lavender Hill Mob" A CINEMAV PRESENTATION "Stout thriller . . tough and realistic"-Time Model Murder, 7:15 Accident, 9:00 1 "1 "TWO MASTER CRAFTS- MEN AT WORK! A FILM TO WATCH WITH FASCI- NATION!" - Judith Crist, NBC Today ACCIDENT' WINNER TWO CANNES FILM FESTIVAL AWARDS screenplay HAROLD PINTER-directed by JOSEPH LOSEY DOUBLE FEATURE-FRIDAY & SATURDAY MAGICIANS OF BASKETBALL In Person featuring GINNY TIU REVUE MON., APR. 6--7:30 P.M. U.M. CRISLER ARENA TICKETS: $4.00-3.00-2.00 -discount for kids- Call 662-3238-Tickets on sale U.M. Athletic Dept. 1000 S. State St. Read and Use Daily Classijfeds Fire guts black center at Cornell ITHACA, N.Y. (JP)-Fire gutted the black studies center at Cornell University yesterday and school officials said the possibility of arson would be "fully investi- gated." The university also promised al- ternate facilities to house the center and said the new site would be guarded. The blaze at the African Studies and Research Center came about six weeks after a fire bomb attack on a black women's dormitory. A cross burning at the dormi- tory, Wari House, less than a year ago escalated into a building seiz- ure by militant blacks. University officials did not im- mediately connect the destruction of the center with the fire bomb- ings andscross burning, saying there was no .indication yet whether arson was involved in the early morning fire. University President Dale R. Corson said, however : "The pos- sibility of, arson will be fully in- vestigated. An act of arson would represent an assault not only on the center, the black students, but on Cornell University, on each of us and on everything we stand for:." A spokesman said that under Article 118 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice, Medina was charged with murder as a prin- cipal and did not have to be pres- ent during the slayings to be held responsible. Medina has denied knowledge of any mass killings in the ham- let which was raided by troops of the Americal Division March 16, 1968. The announcement of the lat- est charges gave no figures on the number of deaths Medina is held responsible for, but the company commander told CBS News in an interview that the figure is 175. On March 10th he was charged with killing four persons. These charges accuse him of the "mur- der of two persons on or about 16 March 1968, maiming and murder of one suspected enemy person, and murder of another, during their interrogation,,late in the day of about 16 March 1968 and assault with a deadly weapon on a third individual while inter- rogating him on or a b o u t 17 March 1968," The latest charge was substit- uted for one filed March 17, ac- cusing Medina of concealing knowledge of a felony. Eleven other officers, including two gen- erals, have been charged w i t h dereliction of duty by the Army alleging they suppressed informa- tion on the My Lai incident. An Army spokesman said spe- cifically that t h e latest charge against Medina would if proved make the captain responsible for the 102 persons Calley is accused of killing. Ann Arbor City Council passed a resolution Tuesday calling for a softening of parking restrictions in residential areas. The move, intended to m a k e parking more convenient for res- idents, appears to counter t h e council's previous trend of moving the city toward the goal of no ov- ernight parking on any street in the city. The resolution was supported by the seven Democratic councilmen and opposed by the three Repub- licans on the council. The resolution states that the current switch parking regula- tions "cause unnecessary and costly inconvenience for m a n y residents of Ann Arbor" and says that they can be modified "with- out impairment of the sweeping of streets.". . The resolution was presented by Third Ward Councilman Nicholas Kazarinoff and First Ward Coun- cilman John Kirscht and calls for the action that: - These regulations (traffic control orders) be altered togeth- er with street signs to conform to the following principle: in res- idential areas where there is cur- rently no parking from 2 a.m. to 5 a.m. three mornings a w e e k there shall be no parking from 2 a.m. to 5 a.m. only one morning a week beginning Sept. 1, 1970, or earlier; - On those residential streets where parking is switched from one side of the street to the other every twelve hours, the signs shall be altered to minimize, beginning Sept. 1, 1970 or earlier, the in- convenience to residents and yet permit the necessary flow of traf- fic; and, - The Department of Traffic Engineering and Transportation working together with t h e De- partment of Public Works bring to this council on June 1 specific plans for accomplishing the first two objectives, it being understood that this program will be includ- ed in the 1970-71 budget. City Administrator G uy Lar- com, Jr. said the intent of the switch parking from 2 a.m. to 5 a.m. was - in addition to street cleaning - to promote the turn- over of parking places. "The streets are not made for the stor- age of vehicles," he said. RESTRICTIONS END: City Council votes to ease overnight parking bans "May w e I I be the m o s t beautiful film ever made." -NEWSWEEK "Beyond verbal description" -N.Y. TIMES _ f 1 MORGAN! Is "HOWLINGLY FUNNY" -Bo* y cowha.Nworrimm "HILARIOUS" "BRILLIANT" detroit studei. summer theatre actors---directors---technicians THE BUSKIN COMPANY is holding AUDITIONS PRESENTS SINGIN' IN' THE RAIN, rsan, . aii n. n .nmlrl nnn nhhin Daunnlde in1a1.. ~m l ,k I 1 'i d I I ,i Il I1 ---I I F, i 2I I. I 10 1 010 h I "Il-I' M11 W mFiira Malban PETULA Starring JULIE CHRISTIE, GEORGE C. SCOTT ~ ~ L. nILrr I ITo ii I I I B