y:{y ! :r,:. ""yea!"J.yL-.Q lR"i,}""tiYA d:. ..$ii ' iti {':":1'::"" '":"J': C"tiY.":":;C}:"". af" : 1V. " t1,AV."14;J: 4t J.:: L:: aY :ti :" " ii::: :ti"i :r'J":ti':: ta1":1:::{tiY : "t: " fXitiY"}:..'A{wFi3?'.K{l.1'.'.Vi JLi:"::" O 'ii:4iLS{:{':' :":T::::t .,A. ''". Sf. . l.:LtV::J::':'.".":: d:V:":: ::"::" N.".:1 :: .Y,. / J::i:": ?:'fvi:? yvi:+t.^.:.::.":."y ,fi,"; : : ,..c i ! ti":, ;: ;s M 1 : MORGAN TONIGHT ONLY DIR. KAREL REISZ with VANESSA REDGRAVE DAVID WARNER KING KONG 75c ALICE'S RESTAURANT 7 & 9:30 ALICE LLOYD HALL SAT. & SUN. MATINEE ONLY ALL SEATS-75c OPEN 12:45 P.M. COLUMBA PICTURES i 0 PMESEHIs VI 17 LEWIS "DONT ROESI Tie BiIDGE LOWER THE RIiveR' s 9 TECHNICOLOR" I -i n e -wsbriefs by The Associated Press THE UNITED STATES kept up intensified air attacks yes- terday against enemy positions and staging areas in South Vietnam. The U.S. Command reported that Air Force and Navy fighter- bombers flew 139 strikes and B52 bombers flew another ten missions in South Vietnam Thursday and yesterday. Most of the strikes were concentrated in the northwestern quar- ter of the country, from the Khe Sanh area, south to the A Shau valley. THE WEST COAST DOCK STRIKE was expected to reach an end as rank-and-file longshoremen voted yesterday whether to return to work with a new contract after a record 134-day strike. The new 18-month contract, which has the support of union leaders, calls for a 16 per cent pay boose to $5 hourly, and another 40-cent raise effective July 1. Results of the balloting should be announced today; pending approval, some work could resume by tomorrow. AFL-CIO President George Meany warned that a rejection of the initial 16 per cent increase by the government's Pay Board could result in the strike resuming for another 100 days. * * * BERNADETTE DEVLIN, a leader of Northern Ireland's civil rights movement, was sentenced yesterday to six months in jail for defying a government ban on parades. Devlin and another member of Britain's parliament, Frank Mc- Manus, were among 13 civil rights protestors given maximum sen- tences for staging a parade on Christmas Day. The Northern Ire- land government has outlawed parades by Roman Catholics and Protestants, in an attempt to cool civil strife. All 13 were set free on bail. Civil rights sources say they intend to take the case to the highest appeal court in Britain, the House! of Lords. Meanwhile, a wave of bombings struck busy shopping centers in Londonderry, Northern Ireland, yesterday. * * * Ann Arbor, Michigan Saturday, February 19, 1972 Death penalty ends in Calif.; Sfrig!3n tti1 107 affected -----r FFTH FPUM [{~NjwmAVENUE AT MOETY 10 1 DOWNTOWN ANN ARBOR INFORMATION 781-.9700 Shown 1 & 3 p.m. SAN FRANCISCO (N) - The California Supreme Court declared yesterday that the death penalty is unconstitutional, and reduced the death sentences of 102 men and five women to life imprisonment. The court, in- a 6-i decision, said execution was "incom- patible with the dignity of man and the judicial process." The court held that execution was cruel and unusual punish- ment. Among those removed from the shadow of death sen- tences were Sirhan Bishara Sirhan, convicted slayer of Sen. r Couzens Film Co-op Presents THE PROFESSIONALS Starring Burt Lancaster, Lee Marvin, and Claudia Cardinale FEB. 18 & 19-7,9, & 11 p.m. at COUZENS HALL 75c a person $1.00 per couple Robert Kennedy, and Manson, convicted murders of actress Tate and six others. Charles in the Sharon "oPeople's"' andidat Dr. Benjamin Spock, "People's Party" presiden TONITE Ann Arbor DANCE THEATRE CONCERT KARLETON LEWIS ARMSTRONG, one of four persons speaks at the University of Pitt sought in connection with a fatal bombing at the University of his petition drive to get on the P Wisconsin in summer, 1970, was arrested Thursday by Royal Ca- ---__----__- - nadian Mounted Police in Toronto. NOW IN HAWAII: Armstrong is currently preparing to fight extradition proceedings -_ stemming from the bombing of an Army research center on the; sburgh Thursday. November general FEB. 18, 19-8:30 FEB. 20-2:30 Residential College Auditorium Wisconsin campus which took the life of a graduate student work- ing in the building at the time of the blast. THE TRIAL OF ANGELA DAVIS has been given a starting date of February 28 by California Superior Court Judge Richard E. Arnason, after denying requests to move the trial a second time and have the state pay Davis' defense costs. Arnason, who set the trial date in a closed hearing with pro- secution and defense attorneys Thursday, also rejected defense mo- tions challenging the jury selection process and seeking information from the prosecution about possible electronic surveillance. Jury selection is expected to take one month and the trial four1 to six months. ADULTS $2 STUDENTS $1 Nixon may coi with Mao in CI HONOLULU () - President Nixon, now in H to his China summit talks, may meet Chairman Ma resort city of Hangchow, according to American s A Hangchow meeting would further undersco political eclipse of Mao, in as much as Nixon and P lai are expected to dispose of serious negotiations the American visitor sees Hangchow. The President and Ms. Nixon, who arrived in H afternoon following a 10-hour nonstop flight from remain in Hawaii until this afternoon. Then they i for an overnight stay before proceeding to Shang In Sacramento, Gov. Ronald Reagan said the Supreme Court had put itself above the will of the people and made "a mockery of the constitutional process." -Associated Press The governor said his adminis- e tration will seek an immediate re- hearing. ntial candidate, Citing the steady nationwide Spock launched decrease in the number of execu-, election ballot. tions from a high of 199 in 1935 to -- -- - two in 1967, the court said this I "demonstrates that capital pun- ishment is unacceptable to society today." One-seventh of those con- de mned to death in the U. S. are /fe + in California. Ci /T There has been a moratorium on executions in California for al- most five years, pending decisions - by the California and U.S. Su- preme Courts. Several states have outlawed onolulu en route the death penalty through legis- o Tse-tung in the lative action, and last month the ources; New Jersey Supreme Court over- re the apparent turned the state's death penalty. Premier Chou En- The New Jersey court said the in Peking before law was unconstitutional because persons convicted after pleading lonolulu Thursday innocent were subjected to the Wasingtonrsday death penalty while those who washington, will pleaded no defense were subject will fly to Guam to a maximum of life imprison- ghai and Peking. ment. Tickets available at: Stangers,. Jacobsons, and at the door British union agrees to LONDON () - Union leaders agreed early today to recommend that Britain's 280,000 striking coal miners accept a government-back- ed pay offer and end their crip- pling six-week-old walkout. Miners throughout the country were asked to vote in a secret ballot whether to accept the pay deal, with the union executive of- ficially recommending acceptance. Leaders of the National Union of Mineworkers announced their decision after 13 hours of nego- tiations on the recommendations of an independent court of inqury. The recommendations, presented earlier yesterday, came close to meeting the strikers' demands. The talks ended at 1 a.m. at No. 10 Downing Street, Prime Minister Edward Heath's 'London residence. Heath intervened in the negotiations between the unio'n and the state-run National Coal Board to try and force a settlement after the miners began balking at the new pay offer. At stake in the talks was a union demand for another pound-$2.60 -on minimum weekly pay rates over and above a 20 per cent in- crease recommended by the in- quiry tribunal headed by Lord Wilberforce. The union leaders also demand- ed certain further fringe benefits. Indications were that they failed to get the extra pound but won important concessions on the fringe benefits in negotiations with Coal Board chiefs after Heath withdrew from the meeting. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University. of Michigan.sNews phone: 764-0552. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tres- 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. the ann arbor film cooperative I j HELD OVER! Special additional engagement of KEN RUSSELL'S WOMEN IN LOVE with GLENDA JACKSON (Academy Award: Best Actress), OLIVER REED, ALAN BATES MONDAY !-February 21st-2 SHOWINGS ONLY ! Auditorium A--Angell Hall--7 & 9:30 p.m.--35mm COLOR-still only 75c Tickets for both shows on sale outside the auditorium at 6 p.m. COMING TUESDAY-"Cult"film double-bill: THE ABOMINABLE DR. PHIBES with Vincent Price, Joseph Cot- ton, and Terry Thomas-Ann Arbor First Run (7 & 10 p.m.) & Richard Rush's PSYCH-OUT-"Best film of the counter-culture"-Mary Barkey (8:30 p.m.) COMING THURSDAY-Eric Rohmer's lyrical and lovely CLAIRE'S KNEE. "A masterpiece."-S.R. TUESDAY, FEB. 29-Luchino Visconti's THE DAMNED. By the director of DEATH IN VENICE. Communist China denounced Nixon's foreign policy today as it prepared for his visit. 'We firmly supportthe peoples of the world in their struggle against U.S. imperialist aggres- sion," said the official New China News Agency in a long commen- tary on Nixon's State of the Worldj report and Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird's report to Con- gres this week.- The commentary stated that Nixon declared his intention to maintain U.S. diplomatic ties with and defense commitments to the Nationalist Chinese government! and said this shows Nixon's gov- ernment "has not yet relinquished its idea of 'one China, two gov- ernments'."' .Nixon, it said, tled of a gen- N eration of peace while Laird out- lined "an enormous program for arms expansion and war prepara- tions." Rejected juror charges Berrigan jury prejudiced HARRISBURG, Pa. (MP - A rejected juror repeated under oath yesterday his charge that he heard prejudicial opinions ex- pressed by members of the pre- sent jury trying the Rev. Philip Berrigan and six codefendants on federal conspiracy charges. Former jury prospect Robert Baltimore met with U.S. Dis- trict Court Judge R. Dixon Her- man yesterday,rbut no action seems to be forthcoming. Baltimore, assistant director of human services for the Penn- sylvania Department of Welfare, said he overheard snatches of a conversation between a number of prospective jurors, at least one of whom now sits on the jury. The conversation, he said, included prejudicial remarks about the six Roman Catholic defendants and also about t h e seventh defendant, Eqbal Ah- mad, a ,Pakistani Moslem. There is no indication t h a t Herman plans to pursue the matter any further. Even the de- fense attorneys do not plan to push for a review of the jurors. There is a motion under con- sideration by Herman, however, for a separate, trial for Ahmad in another federal district. WORSHIP FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 1833 Washtenaw Ave. SUNDAY 10:30 a.m.-Worship Services. Sunday School (2-20 years). Infants room available Sunday and Wednesday. Public Reading Room, 306 E. Liberty St. - Mon., 10-9; Tues.-Sat., 10-5. Closed Sun- days and Holidays. For transportation call 668-6427. ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH 306 N. Division 8:00 a.m. Holy Eucharist 10:00 a.m. Holy Eucharist & Sermon 7:00 p.m. Evening Prayer (chapel) FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1432 Washtenaw Ave. Ministers: Robert E. Sanders, John R. Waser, Brewster H. Gere Worship at 9:00 and 10:30 a.m. Preaching: Mr. Sanders. FIRST UNITED CHURCH AND FOUNDATION METHODIST WESLEY State at Huron and Washington 9:30 and 11:00 a.m.-Celebration of Holy Communion. Sermon by Dr. Hoover Rupert: "In Search of a Radiant Faith." Broadcast WNRS 1290 am, WNRZ 103 fm, 11:00-noon. WESLEY FOUNDATION ITEMS: Sunday, Feb. 20: 5:30 p.m.-Celebration. 6:15 p.m.-Dinner, Pine Room. 7:00 p.m.-Program, Wesley Lounge. "How Do You Feel About Your Education?" Dis- cussion and debate. Monday. Feb. 21: Noon-Luncheon Discussion Class, Pine Room. "The Christian Faith and the Inner Life." Lunch 25c. Thursday,. Feb. 24: Noon-Luncheon Discussion Class, Pine Room. "Dolitical.Consciousness as a Christian." Lunch 25c. 6:00 p.m. - Grad Community Dinner, Pine Room. Discussion: "Discovery of Personal Growth Through Storytelling" with Dr. Sam Keen. Reservations 668-6881 by Wednes- day noon. Friday, Feb. 25: Noon-Luncheon Discussion Class, Pine Room. "The Life of Jesus in Human Encounter." Lunch 25c. UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL (LCMS) 1511 Washtenaw Ave. Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor Sunday services at 9:15 and 10:30 Wednesday service at 10:00 p.m. LUTHERAN STUDENT CHAPEL AND CENTER 801 South Forest at Hill Donald G. Zill, Pastor SUNDAY i ; E i i I II , M t i t I 9:15 a.m.-Eucharist. 11:00 a.m.-Matins. 6:00 p.m.-Supper. 7:00 pm.-Program: "Automated Warfare," Slide Presentation and Discussion. Wednesday, 5:15 p.m.-Eucharist. } I I I 1 CANTERBURY HOUSE at 330 Maynard St. (The Alley/The Conspiracy) Canterbury House, meeting at 330 Maynard St. 11:00 a.m. (The Conspiracy). A Fem- inist Liturgy, presented by members of the Conference on Women and Religion, Cant- erbury acts as hostess. "Behold I Make All Things New (or Would You Believe Different.)" BETHLEHEM UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST 423 S. Fourth Ave. Telephone 665-6149 Ministers: T. L. Trost, Jr., R. E. Simonson CAMPUS CHAPEL 1236 Washtenaw FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH 1 ,I I