NOW FOR VILLGE SHOWING 375 No. MAPLE RD.-7694300 TIMES 1:00-3:00-5:10 7:20-9:30 page three 94r tr4'to tl1 Iati NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 "'MA'S'H' is what the new freedom of the screen is all about." Richard Schickel, Life An Ingo Preminger Production Color by DE LUXE* PanavisionO Saturday, April 11, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three the news ntoday by The Associated Press and College Press Service Five-week TA strike at U of EM{ i April 11, 12-Sat., Sun. THE PUBLIC ENEMY dir. WILLIAM WELLMAN (1931) See gangster James Cagney stuff a grape- fruit into a girl's face. SHORT: PEOPLES' PARK 7 & 9:05 Architecture 662-8871 75c Auditorium THE SPACE AGENCY gave a go-ahead for today's launching of Apollo 13 to the moon with backup astronaut John Swigert Jr. Earlier this week the Apollo mission had faced the possibility of being canceled when one of the crew members, Thomas Mattingly, came down with the German measles. Less than 24 hours before the scheduled blastoff, NASA admin- istrators decided to continue the mission with Swigert substituting for the sick astronaut. The countdown for the Apollo 13 mission is proceeding towards: a scheduled liftoff today at 2:13 p.m. * * * ' THE SENATE FOREIGN RELATIONS COMMITTEE un- animously approved a resolution that would terminate the 1964 Gulf of Tonkin resolution. The resolution was the basis for the Johnson's administration's dispatch of 500,000 troops to Vietnam. The committee agreed after the Nixon administration advised it would have no objection to repealing the resolution. The legal impact is questionable since the Nixon administration has said it does not regard the Tonkin Gulf resolution as the legal basis for current U.S. activities in southeast Asia. It was passed in August of 1964 at the request of former Presi- dent Lyndon B. Johnson in the wake of alleged North Vietnamese attacks on U.S. ships in the Gulf of Tonkin off the Vietnamese coasts.' i i Wisconsin ends By NADINE COHODAS A five week strike by the 970-member Teaching Assist- ants Association at the University of Wisconsin ended Thurs- day after the union voted 534-348 to approve a contract by the university Wednesday. The teaching assistants had been striking to establish student input in curriculum decisions, better grievance pro- cedures, smaller classes, and four-year appointments. The university's proposal includes a section stating that if the TA's accept the proposed contract, the faculty will establish mechanisms for student input in curriculum decis- ions, and better grievance procedures. The university's board of re- -- -Associated Press Teachers Lgo on strike BURTON GENEVIEVE BUJOLD HAL IN THE H ALWLS PRODUCTION . nne gf je fousartz s A VVERSAL PICTURE t . CHICOLO R PANAVIS0g SHOWS AT 1 :10-3:40,-6:15-9:001 "EPIC BATTLE OF THE SEXES." -Vincent Canby,/N.Y. Times "HAS THAT YOUTHFUL ACCENT WHICH PLACES IT IN A LEAGUE WITH ZEFFIRELLI'S 'ROMEO AND JULIET.'" -John Mahoney, FM and Fine Arts Mag. "AN INSTANT CLASSIC .." -Archer Winsten, N.Y. Post "A PERFECT MOVIE... RICHARD BURTON, CHARMING, ROMANTIC. GENEVIEVE BUJOLD, FLIRTY. THEY'RE GREAT TOGETHER!" -Cosmopolitan Magazine THE JOINT CHIEFS OF STAFF have urgeda two-month delay in further U.S. troop withdrawals from Vietnam. Pentagon sources said the military chiefs, concerned about rising enemy offensive action, made their recommendation within the past few days. They said that the Nixon administration will go ahead with a further trooop cut anyway. i I >, J j Minneapolis teachers picket outside school buildings as students enjoy the unscheduled vacation. About 2,500 teachers are striking for higher wages and more fringe benefits. See News Today. TEAMSTERS STRIKE: Lockout in Chicago, vandalism ino Penn - - -.w- omw1" I A 1 1I II a ...uinu-.Mjinm Ll. I l I ] I I I II. I 00 I h STRIKING SCHOOL TEACHERS closed schools in Minnea- polis, Minn., Muskogee, Okla., and Butte, Mont. yesterday. In separate disputes ranging from wages to failure to desegregate, over 2600 Minneapolis teachers shut down half of the city's 100 public schools. In other labor disputes, the New York Times said it was "rapidly approaching" the point where it would have to halt publication be- cause of slowdown tactics by the printers union, one of 10 unionss negotiating contracts with New York's four largest newspapers. That action, and a threatened strike 'by the American Newspaper Guild against the New York Post on Monday, could lead to a city- wide newspaper blackout. ATTY. GEN. JOHN MITCHELL has hired a press secretary for his wife, Martha. The decision to hire a press secretary came shortly after the Arkansas Gazette in Little Rock reported that Mrs. Mitchell had telephoned the newspaper to criticize Sen. J. W. Fulbright (D-Ark) for his vote against G. Harrold Carswell's nomination to the Supreme Court. "I want you to crucify Fulbright and that's that," Mrs. Mitchell told the newspaper. Mrs. Mitchell, a native of Arkansas, said Fulbright was "notl representing the people" of his state in voting to reject President Nixon's nomination of Carswell. AN ABORTION REFORM LAW passed the New York State Assembly last Thursday and was approved by the Senate yester- day. The bill would allow an abortion for any reason up to the 24th week of pregnancy and after that only to save the woman's life. Immediately after the voting in the Senate was taken a spokes- man for Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller said he would sign it. * * * PREMIER GEORGE PAPADOPOULOS announced yesterday the partial restoration of civil liberties in Greece. - At the same time, Papadopoulos told Greece's "friends" and "enemies" to leave his regime alone. Papadopoulos announced an end to arbitrary arrests and the return of habeas corpus; restriction of military courts solely to cases involving security offenses; restoration of freedom of speech and assembly; and the release of more than 350 political detainees. L 1 gents met yesterday and confirm- ed the new 17-month contract by an 8-2 vote. At the regents meet- ing a spokesman for the state at- torney general said the university was going ahead with contempt citations against 19 TA's for violat- ing the injunction enjoining them from striking. In addition, he said, orders are being readied for an additional 10 TA's to appear in court Tues- day to show cause why they should not be held in contempt of court for violating the injunction. Court proceedings originally had been scheduled for today but were postponed. Also at the regents meeting uni- versity Chancellor Edwin Young said "The strike gained nothing. Those who gained are those who want confrontation politics for its own sake. Contempt citations will be very sobering indeed." At a rally Thursday announc- ing the end of the strike, TAA President Robert Muehlenkamp said, "We have a few protections and mechanisms, and we're going to run every goddamn complaint through the grievance committee. "What the faculty did to intimi- date students was the most they could have done," Muehlenkamp added. The faculty did not support the striking TA's and reportedly open- ly supported the university's posi- tion. Later in the strike, the uni- versity was reported to be ready to hire outside teachers to re- place the striking TA's. The strike, which had kept as much as 80 per cent of the Liter- ature and Science School out of class, began March 7 after nego- tiations with the university over a new contract broke down. I ! l-I U'- wl I FACES directed by JOHN CASSAVETES A dramatic cinema Vertie style look at middle class America. AUD. A, ANGELL HALL APRIL 10 11,1--Fri., Sal., Sun. By The Associated Press Fighting and vandalism devel- oped yesterday in Pennsylvania as a widespread Teamsters strike continued, while employers in Chi- cago called for a lockout in re-, taliation against union strategy. Five major Chicago groups or- dered the lockout against 32,000 drivers after a sixth carriers' group signed a contract calling for pay hikes substantially higher than a tentative national agree-: ment. Union and industry spokesmen differed on the effect of the lock- out order. In western Pennsylvania, police reported roving bands of steel haulers picketing terminals and attempting to stop truck traffic. Authorities said they received re- ports of fighting, vandalism, at least one shooting and a hit-and- run accident in which a man was injured seriously. State police pa- trols 6n the Pennsylvania Turn- pike were doubled. The contract signed Thursday in Chicago by the Illinois Motor Truck Operators Association pro- vides wage increases of $1.65 an hour over three years. It covers 8,000 drivers. A tentative national contract agreed on in negotiations last week in Washington calls for pay raises of $1.10 an hour. A trucking industry spokesman said in Washington carrier repre- sentatives met with Frank E. Fitz- simmons, acting president of the Teamsters, late Thursday and "both major parties are standing by the agreement." The new Chicago contract pro- vides wage increases five cents short of what the unions demand- ed in independent negotiations and is 95 cents more than the other Chicago area trucking asso- ciations offered for the three-year span. Violence also broke out in other parts of the nation. Police in Painesville, Ohio, ar- rested six employes of a Cleveland trucking firm after a bullet struck a rental 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 in- vestigated reports of tire punc- tures on rigs parked at a truck' stop. A walkout of drivers in Kansas City shut down operations of 12 freight yards and affected opera- tions of more than a dozen west- ern Missouri truck lines. Some 2,000 Ford Motor Co. em- ployes in Cleveland were laid off because of a parts shortage. They joined nearly 30,000 other auto workers idle in3DetroithandSt. Louis. A meeting was planned in Los Angeles, where Teamsters officials hoped to convince some 18,000 striking driversdto return to work by the weekend. In Dallas, although there were no strikes by drivers, hundreds of workers had been laid off their jobs with more expected to join them today after being paid. Kirk takes integration di~spute to high court Senators deny bas accusation WASHINGTON () - President Richard Nixon's accusation of Senate prejudice against Su- preme Court nominees from the South prompted two resolutions in the Senate challenging the charge of regional bias. In making the accusation Nix- on said he would nominate a ju- dicial conservative from outside the South Sen. Albert Gore (D-Tenn.), who seeks re-election, and who with three other Southerners voted against the Supreme Court nomination of G. Harrold Cars- well, proposed that t h e Senate reject by resolution the Nixon ac- cusation of bias. His resolution terms the Nixon statement "an assault on the in- tegrity of the Senate." "As long as the Senate is con- stituted the way it is today, ,I will not nominate another Southerner and let him be subjected to the kind of malicious character as- sassination accorded both Judge Haynsworth and Judge Carswell," Nixon said. The Gore resolution would de- clare "the characterization of the Senate as contained in said state- ment is hereby rejected." Deputy White House press sec- retary Gerald Warren said Nixon did not intend to "impugn the in- tegrity of the Senate or any mem- bers of the Senate. "I am confident the Senate will reject the resolution drafted in the heat of the Senate's reaction," Warren said. Sen. Alan Cranston (D-Calif.), introduced a resolution pronounc- ing it "the sense of the Senate that it ishprepared to advise and consent to nominees for the Su- preme Court from any section of the United States," which Sens. Birch Bayh (D-Ind.) and Edward W. Brooke (R-Mass.) joined him in sponsoring. Both resolutions were referred to the Senate Judiciary Commit- tee headed by Sen. James East- land (D-Miss.) w h o strongly backed both Haynsworth a n d Carswell. Twenty senators who voted against Carswell, Haynsworth or both signed a letter to Nixon de- nying that regional discrimination had anything to do with their op- position. "We are prepared to support the nomination of a Southerner who is a strict constructionist pro- vided he meets the high legal, ju- dicial and ethical standards which we believe are required for the Supreme Court," they said. Sen. Robert P. Griffin of Michi- gan, the Republican whip, said geography was indeed a factor in the Carswell defeat. 7 & 9:30 P.M. 75c --- I I ACADEMY AWARD WINNER BEST FOREIGN FILM _ __ _ 14, WASHINGTON (W) - G o v. Claude Kirk of Florida took his fight over integration of Manatee County public schools to the Su- preme Court yesterday and prom- ised to obey any order the justices might issue. Kirk's attorneys told the court. "there is grave danger of loss of life" among federal and state of- ficials pitted against each other in the integration dispute.". The attorneys said that all dangers of breakdown of lawful procedures can be avoided if the court gives Kirk and the state the "dignity" of a hearing. Twice this week Kirk suspended the county school board as it pre- pared to implement a desegrega- tion plan ordered by U.S. District Judge Ben Krentzman. The governor had been ordered to appear in Krentzman's court in Tampa yesterday afternoon to show cause why he should not be held in contempt. Kirk repeatedly told a news conference Thursday night that the dispute was not between him and the federal district court, but between the State of Florida and the United States. The question can be settled only by the Supreme Court, he said. Kirk asked the Supreme Court to transfer the dispute away from Judge Krentzman's court on the' theory that the Supreme Court, under the Constitution, must as- sume original Jurisdiction:. The governor's lawyers said he "stands willing to obey any order which this court shall issue after hearing and will immediately re- instate the board of public instruc- tion and superintendent of public instruction of Manatee County, should this court issue, after hear- ing, an order so requiring." The motion was violating the constitutional rights of the child- ren who would be bused away from their neighborhood schools because the busing was based on their race, Krentzman said. The motion said Kirk's lawyers "will be in constant contact with the clerk's office." "7Z' damn near knocks you out of your seat." -Pauline Kael, The New Yorker "The last word in thrillers. Terrific." -Gene Shaoit, LOOK MAGAZINE "Enough intrigue and excitement to eclipse James Bond." -PLAYBOY &30 NORMAN KENNEDY Scotland's finest traditional singer U 1411 RIll STREET "II'S ia sings a song of Revolution unlike any that's ever been sung . .. a movie about things comngtogether. Sheer genius! Godard uses a Rolling Stones recording session as a grand metaphor for growth; he devotes half the movie' s running time to this. An auda- cious work of art; brilliant! -Joseph Morgen Newsweek; March 30 It haunts the memory so effectively and grows, in retrospect, into a movie experience of major importance. A Rock fugue . . . so beautifully and carefully composed. -Vincent Canby New York Times; March 29, 1970 SyMPAT7' for iE IEvi( wi4h 1 RolIkn, Srow's , a new feature film by Jean-Luc Godard, Starring Mick Jagger, Brian Jones. Keith Richatd, Charlie Watts, Bill Wymnun, -1 I I-- - I I