DIAL 8-6416 DOUBLE BILL Ending Wednesday The funniest movie I've seen this year! Just go, run to see it!" -New York Post lOVRS AND OWlR STRANGIRS ,1OB r'AN D.BTC.. TODAY AT SHOWN AT 1-5-9:05 _-7p.m._ T.o LnW. GRAD COFFEE HOUR WED., FEB. 23 4-6 P.M. 4th Floor RACKHAM Come for Hot Chocolate and Cake NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 (17 4 Sfr$!latn eIatl page three Ann Arbor, Michigan Tuesday, February 22, 1972 news briefs by The Associated Press PRESIDENT NIXON is considering a constitutional amend- ment to slow court-ordered busing as a. "live" alternative in his search to check widespread opposition to recent court decisions. A senior White House official reported yesterday that Nixon is - "very strongly interested" in such an amendment. Last week Vice President Agnew and HEW Secretary Richardson both expressed concern over using a constitutional amendment to counter the courts. * * * THE FIRST OF OVER 6 MILLION RECALL LETTERS went out yesterday to owners of Chevrolets, Camaros and Chevy II's made during the 1965 through 1969 model years. The Chevrolet Motor Division of General Motors Corporation will replace the engine mounts in an operation the company claims will cost more than $30 million. These models, when supplied with V-8 engines, are built with faulty engine mounts which may allow the block to twist loose, caus- ing loss of power steering and power brakes and a jammed accelerat- or. General Motors announced the recall last December after the' National Highway Trafic Safety Administration considered ordering the recalls itself. U. S. ra10 stations to lose, funds.. From Wire Service Reports WASHINGTON - R a d io Free Europe and Radio Liber- ty, funded for the past 20 years by the Central Intelli- gence Agency (CIA), lose their government support today. Speaking to the Senate- Thurs- day, Sen. J. William Fulbright chairman of the Foreign Rela- tions Committee, called the radio stations "cold war relics". Since their founding the CIA has provided the two American-run stations with about a half million dollars. Radio Free Europe, founded in 1950, broadcasts to Bu1g a r i a, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Poland and Rumania. Radio Liberty was founded in 1951 and broadcasts only to the Soviet Union. CIA funding for the stations, amounting to about $36 million an- nually, came to an end last year. At that time the Nixon Adminis- tration favored keeping the. sta- tions alive by direct congressional funding. However, Fulbright man- aged to restrict financing to.one year. Even if the stations should re- ceive a proposed-extension of sup- port until June 30, prospects for their future survival look very dim. Sen. Hugh Scott (R-Pa.), a sup- porter of the stations, said the Ad- ministration was "most concerned" that they receive appropriations for continuation. NORTH IRISH POLICE and Br in the Protestant area of Belfa: attempt to carry a bomb into Be] a Tr I 7 Box office open 10 a.m. until curtain. Ann Arbor Civic Theatre Presents 1 NEVER SANG FOR MY FATHER By ROBERT ANDERSON March 1-5, Mendelssohn Theatre Sat. sold out. Sun performance 7 p.m. Other shows at 8 p.m. Tickets $2-2.75. TICKETS available at Stanger's. PRESIDENT NIXON, while in Peking, signed legislation to end the already-ended West Coast dock strike yesterday, coupling his largely symbolic act with a renewed call for congressional action on broader legislation to prevent future transportation tie-ups. The bill gave the President the power to end the strike and to 7 Bo d y resolve it through compulsory arbitration. The 13,000 striking International Longshoremen's and Warehouse- men's Union members ratified their new contract with the Pacific BELFAST (A) - Bombings and gun battles wracked Northern Ire- Maritime Association Saturday. land yesterday as a British judge -Associated Press ritish troops examine the remains of an automobile $hat exploded st yesterday. Four suspected guerillas were killed in an apparent fast. ence i n Ire land; Sunday' trial, starts lence in the city since "Bloody Sunday" Jan. 30, when 13 per- sons died as British paratroopers J "1 TUESDAY IS OLD HEIDELBERG NIGH TRY IT-, YOU'LL LIKE IT 211 N. Main. 663-7758 Serving dinner until 2 am Meanwhile, top AFL-CIO leaders approved a no-strike pledge yesterday by six maritime unions aimed at bringing long-term labor, peace to longshore and shipping industries on the East and Gulf and the Great Lakes. * *. * TWO BLACK MEN went on trial again yesterday in Marianna, Fla., nearly nine years after they were sentenced to death for the slaying of two white service station attendants. Freddie Pitts and Wilbert Lee were sentenced to die after they' confessed and pleaded guilty to the murder. The sentence was im- posed during a trial held behind locked doors. Pitts and Lee later repudiated a confession of the slayings, con-' tendinj they were held incommunicado and were brutalized by police.' The Florida Supreme Court overturned the convictions last April after a "confession of error" by state Atty. Gen. Robert Shevin. Last month the defense attorneys were given a transcript in which key witness Willie Mae Lee said she identified Pitts and Lee: as the killers because she was afraild of the police. A GROUP OF INDIANS with teepees have moved back onto federal land which they claim as their own by ancestral right. U.S. Forest Service Ranger George Roether said about 40 PitI River Indians reoccupied the Four Corners site five miles fromIn Burney, Calif. Saturday. The Indians were forced off this land on Oct. 27, 1970, by about 100 federal officers. The tribe says 3.5 million acres of northeastern California, in-I cluding the national forest, were illegally taken from them during ! the California gold rush. RINGAY SLE!SAVE $4.50O - $&10 .OUDEN 4M 4I' ' ih': $$ivi:::' 'L% ;:.:::ii:%iiii ':* ::ii v: :i%:i ::i:'%i~::S :.:-'* :"::.:: opened his inquiry into the deaths broke up a banned civil rights of 13 civilians on "Bloody Sun- march. day." Sir John Widgery, lord c h i e f Two bombs shook a busy cen- justice and Britain's top judge, tral Belfast street during t h e opened a fullscale inquiry .today morning rush hour, wrecking a gasI into the shootings in the town station and injuring Iwo persons. of Coleraine about 25 miles north- Two masked gunmen who planted east of Londonderry. Widgery the bombs escaped. chose not to hold hearing in Lon- Meanhil, for sspeced uerdonderry itself, apparently for se- Meanwhile, four suspected guer- curity reasons. rillas accidently blew themselves Local residents claim the troops up yesterdayduring an apparent fired indiscriminately at unarmed attempt to sneak a bomb into bat- civilians. The army maintains its men came under fire first and They died in a deafening blast fired back only at persons they be- when their car explodedinto fine lieved were gunmen or bombers. about two miles southeast of the. The Catholic families of the 13 provincial capital. In the wreck- slain civilians refused to testify age were four two revolvers of a to the court, accusing it of pro- type favored by the illegal Irish British bias. They were represent- Republican Army, police said. ed at the hearing by a counsel. The nights of riots and shoot- British t r o o p s and guerrilla ing was the worst outbreak of viO- snipers exchanged gunfire yester- day throughout the night and early IThe Michigan Daily, edited and man- morning in Londonderry. aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second in cne battle troops sprayed class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich-' gunfire at the bell tower of St. igan, 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, Eugene's Catholic cathedral dur- Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues-j ing Sunday evening Mass. day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by They said they were returning carrier. $11 by mail, sniper fire but priests at the ca- Summer Session published Tuesday thedral said there was no gunman through Saturday morning. Subscrip- in- the belfry. tion rates: $5 by carrier, $6 by mail, usands oftroops and police FIND OUT YOURSELF WHY EVERYONE'S TALKING ABOUT- Parents plan action to fight Child SAN DIEGO, Calif. (P) - A group of worried parents has launched a campaign to bring home their sons and daughters who have joined the fundamen- talist Children of God. "We're convinced they're vic- tims of some form of mind manipulation, or why else their sudden change of behavior, wanting to destroy our institu- tions, not knowing or wanting us?" says retired Navy Lt. Cmdr. William Rambur, one of 100 parents who have organized. During its first . convention here last w'eekend, the Parents Committee to Free Our So n s and Daughters made plans to circulate petitions to b r i n g public pressure on the Bible sect. Most members of the radical religious group are in their late teens and early 20s and forsake all worldly possesion to follow Jesus. It has been reported that a sizeable number of the Children of, God were recruited -in Ann Arbor and Detroit. Officials of the Children of God were not available for Iren of God comment on the parents commit- tee. However, in the past sect' leaders have denied charges that they hold members against their wills. Some members of the sect.' were sent home last Thanksgiv ing in what Children of. G od leaders described as an effort to counter parents' charges against Ce group. Six former Children of Gd related their experiences to par- ents at the San Diego meeting and one- of them, Linda Train, said that about 4W0 of the young people who returned to their homes last Thanksgiving did not go back to Children of God colonies. Prior to that time, the sect's membership was estimat- ed at 2,000. Train, a New York City book- keeper, said those , still w i t h the group may not be able- to think for themselves. 'When I was a member of the Children of God, I would feel one way but when I opened my mouth to speak, the opposite -meaning would come out," Train said. went on immediate alert in Bel- fast in case the bombings should herald a return to the IRA's of- fensive against the capital. The deaths of the four in the car brought Northern Ireland's 2% -year toll of religious-poliitcal violence to 251 dead, 45 of them this year alone. A DIFFERENT KIND OF LOVE STORY NO ONE UNDER 18 ADMITTED MON. THRU FRI. uM 7 s 8:300 10' yAH° SAT. & SUN. 5:30 .7. 8:30 1 10 0 o PTH Fort PIFTH AVENUE AT W1 DOWNTOWN ANN ARI INFORMATION 761-97 ___________________________________________________________________I i II 1 v I E astern Michigan University Major Events Committee PRESENTS SEA TRAIN and James Cotton Blues Band March 5th Bowen Field House TICKETS: $2, $3, $4-McKenny Union, Ann Arbor Music Mart, 802 Pittman I r Plenty of parking 2 1S I I the ann arbor film cooperative I "Cult" film double-bill: FIRST-RUN IN ANN ARBOR, Robert Fuest's THE ABOMINABLE MR PHIBES (1971) Vincent Price, Joseph Cotton, Terry Thomas-7 & 10 p.m. "LOVE MEANS NEVER HAVING TO SAY YOU'RE UGLY" PLUS: Susan Strasberg, Dean Stockwell, Jack Nicholson, Bruce Dern in "%..o- I LSA EXECUTIVE COUNCIL ELECTIONS NOW TAKING APPLICATIONS FOR CANDIDATES FOR LSA EXECUTIVE COUNCIL PRESIDENT-VICE PRESIDENTIAL SLATE Richard Rush's (Director of the Savage Seven) PSYCH-OUT (1968) 8:3 0 p.m. ~1 "Best film of the Counter-culture."-Mary Barkey. "A good film"-Peter Wilde S. TI. CA. m _ - C,.v, . oeAr hs Ae . I '5 i~.............