k NOWTME FOH VILLaGE 1:00-3:00-5:0 SHOWING 375NoMAPLE RD."769.300a7 7:20-9:30 page three 94e Sfrii3n &Iill NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 "'M A*S* His what the new freedom of the screen is all about." -Richard Schckel, Life s : .. An Ingo Preminger Production Color by DELUXE0 i @ Panavisions L=R Friday, April 10, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three Florida, o fficials arrested JOIN THE SPORT Of THE SPACE AGE PARACHUTING SERVICE TECUMSEH; MICHIGAN BRADENTON, Fla. 01P)-Deputy U.S. marshals yesterday arrested 10 men-four aides to Gov. Claude Kirk, a sheriff and five deputies -in an attempt to halt Kirk's in- terference with federal court-or- dered integration of Manatee County schools. The marshals were unable to takeany prisoners, however, when the men refused to go jail. Violence marks trucking strike; one pact signed By The Associated Press A major Chicago trucking association and -two unions representing local drivers signed a wage agreement yesterday offering 55 cents more an hour over a three-year period than a national contract announced last week in Washington. Meanwhile, violence broke out in other sections of the nation as truckers .continued to strike against the tentative contract approved last week by Teamster officials and truck- ing industry representatives which calls for raises of $1.10 an hour. Walkouts hit major industrial centers in the Midwest and showed few signs of abating elsewhere. In Washtenaw County, virtually all industrial deliveries Michigan's Most Active Sport Parachuting Center Saturday, Sunday, Holidays --For Information Call- MON.-FRI.-291 -3634 WEEKENDS-423-7720 ENJOY SKYDIVING AT ITS BEST Classes Start 11:00 Sat. & Sun. Last Sunday, Kirk fired Mana- tee County school superintendent Jack Davidson and assumed con- trol of the Manatee schools in de- fiance of Federal desegregation busing orders. A federal judge re- instated Davidson on Tuesday but he was fired again by Kirk on Wednesday. , Kirk said in Tallahassee: "If marshals have arrested my people, I'm going to go down there and! put them (the marshals) in ther county jail." The 10 men were under arrest for obstructing justice by blocking the marshals from executing a federal court order. -Daily-Randy Edmonds f Neighborhood laudromat F STUDENT BOOK SGRVIC Genial Ann Arbor laundromats provide service and pleasure, KILLER SALE CONTINUES EVERYTHING ridiculously Reduced in Price ALL USED BOOKS AT 50% OFF AND MORE ,ALL NEW BOOKS AT 20% OFF AND MORE Open till 9 P.M. Deputy Marshal John Barr of Tampa said he considered the men under arrest although they were not in custody. "There will be more arrests later," he said. U.S. District Judge Benjamin Krentzman issued an order Tues- day for Kirk to stop interfering with the operation of schools in this Gulf Coast county. He has ordered Kirk to appear inecourt today to show why he should not be held in contempt for blocking desegregation. The order for Kirk to get out of the school case included a ban on his education aide, William Meloy. "We intend to remove Meloy from the building as required by the temporary restraining order issued in federal court Tuesday," said Asst. U.S. Atty. Oscar Blas- singgame. The marshals arrested - but failed to physically capture-Me- loy and Kirk aides Robert Hoff- man, Lloyd Haganan and Dick Warner; Manatee County Sheriff Richard W. Weitzenfeld, and five of his deputies. Hagaman and Weitzenfeld took refuge in the office of School Supt. Jack Davidson whom Kirk sus- pended on Sunday and again on Wednesday. By ROSE SUE BERSTEIN Washing clothes can be more than soap suds and hot water if you take your laundry to one of the two laundromats near campus. "Quick Coin" on E. Williams, and The Laundromat on South Forest next to the defunct Whistle Stop, offer 24-hour accessabil- ity, the conventional washers and dryers, a bench or two to sit on and a chance to-"meet lots of dif- ferent people with dirty clothes. Whatever time of day or night, there is always some industrious person, finally run out of under- wear, who is hovering over a wash- er to clean tomorrow's clothes. And many of these laundromat users have developed a special affection for one or the other establishment. One. fan of the S. Forest laundromat says he g o e s there "because the water here is hotter and my clothes get cleaner." However, another patron com- plains that the change machine frequently doesn't work and t he detergent dispenser offers o n 1y "Bold with enzymes." "Quick Coin" is generally con- sidered to be the quieter laundro- mat whose customers have b u t es. Even essentials like eating don't get in the way-as one woman says she often brings her dinner in while she folds the last nightshirt and blouse. Most "Quick Coin" customers are generally pleased with t h e laundromat although one fiftyish lady says, "I wish they w o u 1 d have baskets to put your clothes in when you take them from the washer to the dryer." Her husband likes the place, though, especially the new panel- ing put in after a February fire when one of the driers blew up. Another patron, a one-time maintenance man, says he and his est help" and "the quick servic- tng." At one laundromat, he claims, "the customers throw rotten food into the machines and the man- agers never clean it up. But t h e worst things that can happen here are pens falling into machines and leaking on clothes, and coins oc- casionally jamming the w a s h- ers." "You can tell a lot about a place from looking at the machines," the maintenance man adds. "I f anything goes wrong here they fix' it within a few days so the ma- chines always look nice and work well. one purpose in mind-clean cloth- Iwife like the clean machines, "hon- . tW! ALL WEEK .m. i s ,_a I rF I pO I' LI ---, 1, i. I , V ' \, 1 i ".l-w U". P! FACES directed by JOHN-CASSAVETES A dramatic cinema Vertie style look at middle class America. Hi-Fi Buys Feature Album DELANEY & BONNIE and FRIENDS ON TOUR with ERIC CLAPTON $2.64 each the news today by The Associated Press and College Press Service PRESIDENT NIXON will deliver his fourth nationwide broad- cast message on Vietnam next Thursday. The President is expected to announce new troop pullbacks and possibly the new chief negotiator at the Paris peace talks. The broadcast will be over television and radio at 9 p.m. EST April 16, and the President will'talk for about 15 minutes. FORMER SOLDIERS who participated in the alleged My Lai massacre may face prosecution in federal courts. Pentagon lawyers are considering asking congress to grant per- mission for this action. Other possibilities for prosecution of soldiers would involve untested sections of military laws. Prosecution of soldiers who are still in th service is no problem, but for five months government lawyers have been wrestling with the problem of how to prosecute soldiers who have returned to civilian life. THE TRANSCRIPT AND JUDGE'S REPORT on the inquest into the death of Mary Jo Kopechne are expected to be released next week.1 The Massachusetts Supreme Court yesterday denied a motion by a court stenographer who claimed he alone had the right to make and sell copies of the inquest records. The way is thus paved for release of the records by the Suffolk Superior Court. were halted due to wildcats Teamster pickets at the major trucking firms. In spite of efforts by union offi- cials to prevent the walkouts, op- erations of the major county trucking associations-- Associated Truck Lines, Inc., Central Trans- port, Inc., Interstate System, Inc., and Yellow Freight System, Inc.- came to a standstill. The pickets are members of Teamsters Local 299. The walkout is not expected to affect food and milk deliveries which are made by members of a separate Teamsters local. In Chicago, eight Teamster Un- ion locals and the independent Chicago Truck D r i v e r s Union signed the contract with the Illi- nois Motor Truck Operators Asso- ciation. It provides for wage in- creases of $1.65 an.hour over three years, five cents short of the un- ions' demand. Some 8,000 drivers are affected by the agreement. In Washington, a spokesman for Trucking Employers Inc., which negotiated the $1.10 per hour na- tional agreement with the Team- sters, said of the higher contract agreement in Chicago "the com- mon carriers will never go for this and they can stay out until snow falls." The industry spokesman said trucking representatives met with Teamsters acting president Frank E. Fitzsimmons and that "both major parties are standing by the agreement." A trucker was found shot to death beside his rig in Youngs- town, Ohio, but police said they could not immediately determine whether his death was linked to the strikes. The dead man was identified as Albert Meadows, 37, of Washing- ton Court House, Ohio. Police said he apparently was shot while unloading fruit. Police in Painesville, Ohio, ar- rested six employes of a Cleveland trucking firm after a bullet struck a rented truck driven by manage- ment trainees of a rubber firm transporting tires. In Huron Coun- ty, four rear tires on a moving truck were shot out, and police investigated reportsk of tire punc-, tures on rigs parked at a truck stop.: A night watchman was beaten at a freight terminal in Gary, Ind., where Teamsters continued, to picket the city's three big steel mills. But union and company of- ficials said they were baffled be- cause the terminal was not buck- ing the picket line. Crew for' Apollo 13 CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (M)--The exposure of Astronaut Thomas K. Mattingly II to German measles was confirmed yesterday, and the launch of the Apollo 13 moon voyage hung on the ability of backup astronaut John L. Swigert. Swigert, thrust into the prime crew with just two days to catch up, began a crash. training pro- gram with James A. Lovell Jr. and Fred W. Haise Jr. - Medical experts at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Md., tested the blood samples of another backup astronaut, Charles Duke, and reaffirmed an early diagnosis that he has German measles. Duke, suffering from a rash, fever, and arthritic-like inflam- mation of his fingers and wrists, exposed both the prime and back- up crewmen last week. Lovell, Haise and Swigert are immune to the disease, but Mattingly is 'not. Basedon these findings, doctors recommended that Mattingly not fly Saturday. The final decision on Mattingly will be made by NASA Administrator, Thomas O. Paine. The 38-year-old Swigert went through critical rehearsals with Lovell and Haise of lunar orbit activities and abort situations for the launch pad and near the moon: All require perfect, split-second teamwork. The ultimate decision on wheth- er to blast off as scheduled Satur- day at 2:13 p.m. EST or postpone until the next favorable date, May 9, hinges on flight commander Lovell's judgment whether the last-minute replacement would affect the team's coordination. 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 daly Tues- day thrcugh 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. $3.00 by mail. AUD. A, ANGELL HALL APRIL 10, 11, 12-Fri., 514,Sun. 7 & 9:30 P.M. 75c 14 j i When in Southera Ca/idorna isit Unred ra l dios . . HAS THAT YOUTHFUL ACCENT WHICH PLACES IT IN A LEAGUE WITH ZEFFIRELLI'S 'ROMEO-AND JULIET.'"-John Mahoney, FM and Fine Arts Magazines "AN INSTANT CLASSIC. IT HAS A HAMMER-LOCK ON HISTORY, PERFORMANCE, PATHOS AND ROOTING INTEREST!"-Archer Winsten, N.Y. Post ,"EPIC BATTLE OF THE SEXES.'-Vincent Canby, i.Y.Times rS .S . RICHARD BURTON as HENRY VI GENEVIEVE BUJOLD$ as ANNE BOLEYN IN THE HALWALLIS PRODUCTION osENEAPAD IRENE PAPAS 618 S. Main I "o II it Once again we invite All Markley Residents TO WELCOME THE SABBATH WITH' RABBI GERALD GOLDMAN & FAMILY FRIDAY APRIL 10 6:00 P.M Meet in Lounge 3 Dinner in Dining Room 3 Bring Meal Card For Reservations, call 663-4129 by Fri. the 1Oth, 1 p.m. i, A} The 77th Annual Ann Arbor rf a I . THE PHILADELPHIA ORCHESTRA IN ALL CONCERTS THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 8:30 EUGENE ORMANDY, Conductor. Preludes: "O Mensch, bewein' dein' Sunde" and "Wachet auf" (Bach-Ormandy); and Mahler Symphony No. 2 in C minor ("Resur- rection") with EVELYN MANDAC, Sporano, BIRGEIT FINNILA, Contralto; and the UNIVERSITY CHORAL UNION. FRIDAY, APRIL 24, 8:30 THOR JOHNSON, Conductor. EVELYN MANDAC, Sporano, and THE UNIVER- SITY CHORAL UNION in Stabat Mater (Poulenc) and "Prologue' (Alan Stout)- both for Sporano, Chorus and Orchestra. ALICIA DE LARROCHA, Pianist, in Mozart Concerto, No. 19, in F major, K. 459. SATURDAY, APRIL 25, 8:30 EUGENE ORMANDY, Conductor. Tone Poem, "Don Juan" (Strauss), VAN CLI- BURN, Pianist, in Concerto No. 1 in B-flat minor, Op. 23 (Tchaikovsky); "To the Victims of Hiroshima"-Threnody (Penderecki); and Suite No. 2 from "Daphnis and Chloe" (Ravel). SUNDAY, APRIL 26, 2:30 THOR JOHSON, Conductor. Bach "Magnificat" with BENITA VALENTE, Soprano; MARY BURGESS, Contralto; JON HUMPHREY, Tenor; LESLIE GUINN, Baritone; and THE UNIVERSITY CHORAL UNION-SMALL CHORUS. Debussy's "La Da- moiselle elue" with BENITA VALENTE, Soprano, and BIRGIT FINNILA, Contralto; and WOMEN'S CHORUS OF THE UNIVERSITY CHORAL UNION. ITZHAK PERLMAN, Violinist, in Concerto No. 2 in G minor, Op. 63 (Prokofieff). 2 I II I fl I