NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 ig..4r tr4t CI1 ~ai4b, page three CHECKMATE n WINIER CLEARANCE - CAR COATS aI corduroys $28 $38f SWools $4 Leathers.>< Reg. to $135 Lpgry y(",t ,ly " . V L4 jr , .ySS/ {¢ .. ! V L/t". } V }" v. FLARES} Reg. to $15.00 SHIRTS: LONG SLEEVE PERM. PRESS 7.88 2 for 15.00 Ann Arbor, Michigan Wednesday, February 2, 1972 by The Associated Press IN A VOTE nine short of the required two-thirds majority need- ed, the Senate yesterday turned bask a move to cut off debate on a bill to reinforce a federal ban on racial and other discrimination in employment. The key issue in the dispute is the authority the bill would confer on the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission to issue cease-and- desist orders to enforce its findings of job discrimination. j THE PRICE OF GOLD soared to $48.25 an ounce in London yesterday and hit record highs on free markets across Europe. As soon as gold began climbing yesterday the dollar weakened on foreign exchange markets.I Gold dealers attributed the sharp rise in the price of gold to the near absence of sellers in the market. FEDERAL AND MANHATTAN PROSECUTORS have compiledI a photograph album of present and former aids to Howard Hughes. The authorities will ask Clifford Irving to try to identify one of them as the "George Gordon Holmes" he claims served as a go-be-r tween during the writing of an alleged Hughes autobiograph, it was learned yesterday. In Zurich, Swiss authorities said they have not decided whether to seek extradition of Irving and his wife, Edith, for whom an arrest warrant has also been issued. EASY ABORTION and increased use of contraceptives are pushing birth rates down in Communist East Europe causing gov- ernmental concern, a western study indicated yesterday. The study adds that the downswing in births may have been fur- ther than expected and that attempts are now being made to reverse the trend.- * * * HOUSE REPUBLICAN LEADER Gerald Ford of Michigan ac- cused "key Democrats" in Congress yesterday of "dragging their feet" on legislation to end the West Coast dock strike which has lasted 115 days so far. Although Ford did not give names he said he suspects "certain Democrats in Congress are fearful of offending some of the leaders of organized labor." SCHORR CHARGES HARASSMENT CBS newsman hits FBI WASHINGTON (R) - CBS newsman Daniel Schorr yester- day called the FBI's investigation of him "a form of harass- ment" and added that most Americans would feel more com- fortable if there were legal safeguards against what he termed "an arbitrary intrusion into their lives." White House officials refused to appear before a consti- tutional rights subcommittee of Sen. Sam Ervin (D-N.C.), but repeated in a letter disputed statements that Schorr was being considered for a government job when the FBI investigation began last Aug. 20. Remarking that letters "can conceal more than they re- veal," Ervin said that although the administration has in- voked executive privilege in CBS REPORTER Daniel Schorr appears yesterday before the Senate Judiciary as the subject of an FBI investigation. DISASTROUS DEATH TOLL raids on N. Vietnam declining to testify, he does not believe an appearance would cause the White House to fall in ruins." Schorr said the investigation was ordered after his reporting brought a series of complaints from President Nixon, Sen. Rob- ert Dole, (R-Kansas), the Repub- lican national chairman, and White House staff members. "Job or no job, the launching of such an investigation without con- sent demonstrated an insensitivity to personal rights," Schorr said. He added that reports printed in the Washington Post that he was being considered for an executive position on the Councilon Environ- mental Quality were "news to me," and that no one in the gov-, ernment has ever told him dir, ly he was being considered V Job. Later in the day, at the White House, press secretary Ronald Ziegler said Schorr had been un- der consideration to be assistant to the chairman of the Council on Environmental Quality. Ziegler indicated Schorr w a s considered because the govern- ment wanted to launch a program to educate and inform the public on ways individuals could nelp protect the environment. Schorr said he found himself in a "no-win" situation, because tol publicize his own problems w i t h the administration could only tar- nish his neutrality as a journalist. He commented: "If the admin- istration could push me into the role of its open antagonist, t h a t would serve its purpose as well as, or better, than intimidating me into pulling my punches." i ,+ U'. .( S. increases air Okla. judge demands fall integrationl OKLAHOMA CITY (P) - In the wake of recent crackdowns on de facto school segregation an Okla- homa federal judge yesterday or- dered an integration plan into ef- fcct next fall in Oklahoma ity, saying his court "cannot and will not tolerate further delay." The plan, fought by the school board, was proposed by the local NAACP. The Oklahoma City de- segregation case began 10 years ago. The new plan, drawn up by Dr. John Finger Jr. of Providence, R. I., would racially mix city schools by new attendance zones for sen- ior and junior highs and a net- work of fifth-grade centers for elementary schools. Each high school attendance zone would be drawn so that each school enrolls both blacks and whites. The plan for junior highs calls for black pupils to be transported to outlying junior high schools. For elementary schools, tle court would group schools so that pupils from presently black schools would attend predomi- nantly white schools for grades 1-4, and all fifth graders, both white and black, would attend the fifth grade at formerly black "center" schools. All pupils would begin junior high in the sixth grade under the plan. SAIGON (- P - U.S. jets DETROIT INSTITUTE OF ARTS Date With Greatness DIALOGUE: MERCE CUNNINGHAM-JOHN CAGE ART INSTITUTE NORTH COURT THURSDAY, FEB. 24 9 8:30 P.M. In-person Conversation-Prelude to Full-Company Production on Feb. 25 Tickets: Art Institute (832-2730) and U of D (341-1438) $3 (students $1.50) launched strikes in North a n d South Vietnam yesterday to ush- er in February, the month in which allied officials say they expect a major Communist of- fensive. On \the ground two U.S. sold- iers were killed and four were wounded when troops of the 1st Air Cavalry Division encounter- ed Communist forces in t h r e e clashes 38 to 45 miles east of Saigon between Monday noon and yesterday noon. Meanwhile, yesterday the South Vietnamese command ack- nowledged for the first time that its Dragonfly jet bombers have been participating in the cam- paign against Communist supply and troop movements on the Ho Chi Minh trail. It reported eight strikes Mon- day and said the Vietnamese air force has been flying five to 10 sorties a day over the trail without losing a plane. The U.S. Command does not announce numbers of strikes in Laos, but sources have reported 200 to 250 strikes daily against the trail network. In Cambodia yesterday motor- cycle - borne terrorists hurled grenades into a Phnom Penh temple used as a barracks by Cambodian 'soldiers after i t s Vietnamese owners fled the city. Military sources said a Cambod- ian major was killed and 26 soldiers -wounded. Fighting in Cambodia w a s concentrated in northeastern provinces where the Cambod- ians and Communist side clashed for the second straight day close to the former tourist center of Siem Reap. TherCambodian high command also reported a battle in the northwestern rice-bowl province of Battambang. I I -T, Box Offices Open at 6:30 Show Starts at 7:00 . ... W mm" Schorr expressed fear that "once it is no longer an honor- SHE MADE PLOWBOYS INTO PLAYBOYS ... "SWEET GEORGIA" x NIGHTLY AT 7:05 & 10:45 -PLUS- "The Man From Nowhere" AT 8:50 able thing to be a newsman" be- cause "once you can discredit the The!c currentlysertn press, it doesn't matter anymoreu what they say or write." . . .. t act , vfl5$ l . . VV. '.SV"ir" , V.V.%V. .fl .P 4~ § ":S}0.y.~ty:xu; ;,": G'ii }r' ~i' r {~ti.r FRIDAY-SATURDAY-SUNDAY "THE GANG THAT COULDN'T SHOOT STRAIGHT" Plus-William Holden "WILD ROVERS" BONUS-Rock Hudson Angie Dickinson "PRETTY MAIDS ALL IN A ROW" R MUCK by KURT CARPENTER and $1.00 HELLO OUT THERE by WILLIAM SAROYAN Friday, Saturday-Feb. 4, 5 RESIDENTIAL COLLEGE AUDITORIUM 8 P.M. . ,". . ,. °r',yr r: f{ iii i'o ". ; .,.v, :":f *: {r . ; .; . i f f s Factions continue strife in war-torn Bangladesh Scarves & Gloves YOUR CHOICE 12,OFF M41:1 p DACCA W) - Fighting in Bangladesh ended officially two months ago with the surrender of the Pakistan army, but civil strife continues between the ma- jority Bengalis and the minority Biharis in two Dacca suburbs. The Biharis are hated because of their general support of the Pakistan army during the nine- month campaign to quell the movement for Bangladesh inde- pendence. Bihari youths made up the ranks of the Razakars, the Pakistani - recruited home guards who the Bengalis say were responsible for atrocities. Of the estimated 1.5 million Biharis in Bangladesh about 500.000 have taken refuge .,In Mirpur a n d Mohammedpur. Both suburbs are under curfew, imposed after clashes. The Bengalis are indigenous to this area. The Biharis mi- grated to what was then East Pakistan from the nearby In- dian state of Bihar after the subcontinent was partitioned in 1947. Both groups are Moslem. - The newsmen who toured Mirpur, which has perhaps' 250,000 Biharis, were angirly ejected by the Bangladesh ar- my. They were told conflicting stories of what was happening, but there was no doubt that kill- ing had taken place. Twenty- two battered Biharis were be- ing buried by fellow Biharis in a mass grave. Biharis said 23 oth- ers were killed during com- munal strife and clashes with the army over the past three days. No Bengali or army casualties have been announced, but un- official reports put the number of soldiers killed and wounded as high asf20. segregation in which high school pupils have their home and basic subjects in a "base" school and are bused to other high schools for specialized courses. The Oklahoma case parallels the de facto segregation ruling made in Detroit last September. At that time District Judge Ste- phen Roth said that the Detroit school system constitutes actual desegregation because it is based on black/white residential dis- tricts. Roth advocates an interpendent city-suburb integration plan rath- er than the city-confined plan passed in Oklahoma City. ' r'r' rE~ti f v '%%''. ~i:j?{:a{!%J '%y::%'%::';:i ;.ir": v~ .'i.:-}. . >.. -i% ::y {: .i.i: -C.,. SW I EATERS YOUR -CHOICE 2 F .r,~.S.............. American Society for Ecological Education The American Society for Ecological Education, a new national organization seeks to introduce ecological knowledge and concern into the curricula of the nation's public schools. Through the education of our youth and making them aware of the immense problems facing our world environment, it is hoped therein lies the answer to our planet's survival. The Society plans to distribute to the nation's schools, model lesson plans and units designed to instill an awareness to our youth for ecology and its meaning for our nation and the World. In carrying on a national ecological education program the Society will also seek to create interest and concern on the part of the general public for ecological problems facing our nation and the World. Charter Membership is presently open in the Society for a limited time. Member- ship is available to both interested educators and the general public. Persons joining as charter members will always be recognized as founding, charter members by the Society (see coupon). Members will receive a quarterly ecology Newsletter. we had better take care of spaceship Earth since it is the only one we have and many years will lapse before we are able to rendezvous with anything comparable." Letter from -Col. Scott to Dr. Mayo, November 29, 1971 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 Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- .day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier. $11 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5 by carrier, $6 by mail. Memknikp Appli.tion r------------------------------ TO: Dr. William L. Mayo, President I American Society for Ecological Education I P.O. Box 1 I Ann Arbor, Mich. HONORARY PRESIDENT Col. David R. Scott NASA Astronaut Houston, Texas HONORARY VICE-PRESIDENT Mrs. Norman Vincent Peale New York City, N.Y. HONORARY SECRETARY Dr. Wilbur J. Cohen Dean, School of Education Unive.rsity of Michigan Ann Arbor, Michigan I ".*5 " ::...r.;:; .;;,"?{f r. ro.x v{} {{i ::v."py :,:""",.;:;:{ SI"" .;.;:?;: " .v.""Y }:'i$15v 'i ::"."7r"':"::;i"::?"fr4";i":- :$ :Y:'. {;}7W:l:; m :-v -- -:".\n:-.,:f"'~.: '..},i$?:i II I i