OPENS TOMORROW NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 a$ 4 r *i~tt3n ttil page three ionesco VICTIMS OF DUTY genet THE MAIDS MENDELSSOHN THEATRE, Feb. 16-19, 8 P.M. -UNIVERSITY PLAYERS- BOX OFFICE OPEN DAILY AT 12:30 P.M. Ann Arbor, Michigan ne ws,,,briefs by The Associated Press THE NATIONAL COMMISSION on Marijuana and Drug Abuse is expected to report that an end to criminal penalties for the possession of marijuana could reduce heroin addiction. According to the New York Times, the commission will advocate the decriminalization of the use of marijuana. The full commission. report and recommendations will be sent to Congress and Presitdent Nixon on March 22. The report also found that five million Americans smoke marijuanaf at least once a week and at least 500,000 use it at least every day. * * * I Tuesday, February 15, 1972 Nxon wil1 take -: acton to offset }i using decissionsW WASHINGTON (R) - President Nixon was quoted yesterday as telling congressional sponsors of an anti-busing constitutional amend- ment that he would take steps in the near future to offset recent federal court decisions requiring extensive busing for school inte- gration. This was reported by Sen. Robert Griffin (R-Mich.) after he and seven other members of Congress met with Nixon for nearly two hours to explain their move to write a busing ban into the U.S. Constitution: Griffin said Nixon, long a critic of forced busing, told the meeting he had named a Cabinet committee to study the busing question and Convivality, Intrigue, Laughter, Drama You'll find them all AT THE GRAD COFFEE HOUR ON H o- Wednesday, A B SEN. ROBERT GRIFFIN (R-Mich) talks to reporters after meet- ing with President Nixon to discuss the busing issue. IOMBING CONTINUES: s f Britain investigaes killings in Ire land COLERAINE, Northern Ireland W - Great Britain's Lord Chief Justice, Sir John Widgery, yes- terday opened a formal inquiry into the Jan. 30 killing of 13 men in Londonderry, Northern Ireland's second largest city. Roman Catholic l e a d e r s, among them priests and politic- ians, have charged that the 13 men were killed in indiscrimin- ate shooting by British troops on a civil rights parade. T h e British say the soldiers shot in reply to sniping or nail bomb attacks. Lord Widgery told the opening hearing he will be concerned only to discover the facts of what went on. His inquiry, he added. 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 Univepi- 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. will be limited in space, to the Roman Catholic Bogside area of Londonderry where the 13 died and in time from the be- ginning of a riot which brought troops into the area. Meanwhile in Belfast, guerrilla bombers blasted more buildings causing damage but no casual- ties. Bombs wrecked a Belfast bank, two downtown stores, a timber yard and' Northern Ireland head- quaiters of Rank-Xerox, a Brit- ish subsidiary of American Xer- ox. In Newry, close to the border with Ireland, gunmen broke into a Burmah Oil Co. depot and blew up tanks containing m o r e than 100,000 gallons of oil and gasoline. Firemen prevented the blaze from spreading to other tanks. Authorities blamed the raids on the outlawed Irish Republi- can Army, which is fighting to break Northern Ireland's links with Britain and merge t h e province with Ireland. deliver a report upon his return from People's Republic of China late this month. "It was very clear, from the meeting today that the President is going to do something about it in the near future," Griffin told newsmen who encircled him on the White House driveway. "The President made it clear he's not going to be satisfied with the status quo," Griffin added. But he said Nixon did not indicate a preference for the three ap- proaches. discussed during the meeting - intervention by the at- torney general in more court cas- es, legislative action, or a con- stitutional amendment. "All three could go forward at the same time," Griffin said. And, he added, "the President does not feel he is limited to those three." Griffin said the three members of the Cabinet level committee - Atty. Gen. John Mitchell, Secretary Elliot Richardson of Health, Edu- cation and Welfare Director George Shultz of the Office of Manage- ment and Budget - sat in on to- day's meeting in the Cabinet room. The drive for the constitutional amendment has been spearheaded by National Action Group which has its headquarters in Pontiac. Irene McCabe, the group's lead- er, has announced plans for a march on Washington in support of an anti-busing amendment. Earlier in the day, Vice-Presi- dent Spiro Agnew said that he is opposed to busing to achieve rac- ial balance in schools but is also opposed to a constitutional amend- ment to prohibit busing. Agnew said he was expressing his own views on the amendment and not necessarily those of Pres- ident Nixon. Trade policy.: With China to be liberalized WASHINGTON P) - President Nixon announced yesterday further steps to relax trade barriers with the People's Republic of China, placing it on an equal trade foot- ing with the Soviet Union. The announcement by White House spokesmen came three days beforehNixon departs for a his- toric China visit. "We hope the People's Republic of China will be receptive to this step to open up communications with them," press secretary Ron- aId Ziegler said. Ziegler said the series of actions will allow the export to the Peo- ple's Republic of China of such items as locomotives, construction equipment, a variety of industrial chemicals, internal combustion en- gines and rolling mills. The presidential decisions, which follow by seven months a signifi- cant loosening of trade restrictions last June, are part of Nixon's "ef- fort to establish a broader rela- tionship" with the country of 800 Million people which ie will visit Feb. 21-28, Ziegler said. Nixon's actions basically invol- ved shifting the People's Republic of China from a list of countries to which virtually all U.S. ex- ports are banned to another trade list which includes the Soviet Un- ion and other countries in Eastern Europe such as Albania and East Germany. 'afl1 GUILD HOUSE 802 MONROE Wednesday, Feb. 16, SPECIAL NOON LUNCHEON 35c MUKI. TSUR, Israeli Educator: "SOCIOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF KIBBUTZ LIFE" U I I I l THE KIBBUTZ Film: "To Choose Another Path" (Completed only a few weeks ago, this is the most recent film about life on a kibbutz.) with: DISCUSSION: "Education and Integration on the Kibbutz: Implications for America" PROF. RAYMOND ELLIOTT, Special Education PROF. JOHN P. FRENCH, Psychology, ISR MR. MUKI TSUR, Israeli Author and Kibbutz Member DR. SIMON WITTES, Social Work, Educational Change Team SCHORLING AUDITORIUM SCHOOL OF EDUCATION WED., FEB. 16, 3-5 P.M. 1® INDIVIDUAL TICKETS TODAY IN THE FISHBOWL-10-4 Tickets are going fast. Get yours NOW! the ann arbor film cooperative . ..a great, important film."-Time Magazine. John Cassavete's III I .. 1 *1 ... - 9 . . I