FIND OUT YOURSELF WHY EVERYONE'S TALKING ABOUT- 1 NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 ZdI P Sftrt&tn taitl page three Ann Arbor, Michigan Thursday, February 24, 1972 A DIFFERENT KIND OF LOVE STORY NO ONE UNDER 18 ADMITTED um i ENDS TUESDAY O P;FTH Port 0113P"-TH AVENUE AT LIE 1 DOWNTOWN ANN AR 1INFORMATION 761-9l FET THURS. & FRIDAY 7:00-8:30-10:00 I STUDY FILM IN LONDON, ENGLAND No Prerequisites MAY 7-JULY 3, 1972 A UNIQUE AND EXCITING PROGRAM ARRANGED THROUGH THE BRITISH FILM INSTITUTE " Film Performances at the Nat'l Film Theatre " Lectures and Discussions by Directors, Actors, and Authorities on Films * Lectures by Program Director Prof. Marvin Felheim on the Aesthetic and Cultural Significance of the Cinema $790.00 Includes: Round trip air, hotel, meals at London restaurants, membership in BFI, tuition, fees, excursions, insurance. MASS MEETING, TUES., FEB. 29-4 P.M. MODERN LANGUAGE BUILDING-AUDITORIUM 3 Open to students and non-students or Contact: STUDENTS ABROAD 211 Michigan Theatre Bldg. (Above Marilyn Shop) 662-6666 news briefs by The Associated Press A BILL which would increase Social Security benefits by 20 per cent instead of the five per cent provided by pending legisla- tion was presented yesterday by Rep. Wilbur Mills (D-Ark.) The legislation by Mills, who is chairman of the tax-writing Ways and Means Committee, would make the increase effective June 1. The bill would be financed by increasing the taxable base income for Social Security from the present $9,000 to $12,000. * * * THE INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE (IRS) yesterday is- sued guidelines under the new Campaign Financing Act. According to the guidelines, the candidates must file forms if contributions for their campaigns are to be eligible for a tax deduction or credit. In addition, the IRS said, individual taxpayers must get - a written receipt from a candidate or a campaign committee to sub- ,stantiate the tax deductions or credit to be allowed for the first time on 1972 returns. * * THE TOBACCO INDUSTRY is manufacturing fewer ciga- rettes but more small cigars, a report by the Internal Revenue Service shows. In one month alone, last December, production of small cigars more than doubled over the December 1970 while the number of cigarettes manufactured actually declined, the report shows.. Charges have already been made by Sen. Frank Moss (D-Utah)I that the tobacco industry is attempting to circumvent the ban on cigarette advertising by pushing the small cigar. * * * BAYLOR'S UNIVERSITY'S TRUSTEES have asked the school's president to restrict speakers on the campus. The trustees asked President Abnor McCall to maintain "re- striction of speakers on the campus who might advocate atheism, defiance of law or violent rebellion." The president assured the trustees that the Baptist university would provide no platform for such speakers. * * * REP. JOHN V. DOWDY (D-Tex.) was sentenced to 18 months imprisonment and a $25,000 fine yesterday in his bribery conspiracy conviction. The ten-term representative was convicted on two counts of a $25,000 bribery conspiracy scheme by a U.S. District Court jury last Dec. 30 for blocking a Justice Department probe of a Maryland home improvement business. "7/se Ian tr ,tick4 "All Have Applauded and Acclaimed Off-Broad- way's First International Musical Hit!" Eastern Michigan University PEASE AUDITORIUM -MARCH 7, 1972 8:30 p.m. General Admission $3.00 presented by the Office of Student Life Elizabeth Mc lVte -Associated kress Agnew speaks to governors Vice President Spiro Agnew speaks to governors at the National Governor's Conference in Washing- ton yesterday. Gov. William Milliken is at the bottom, right. U. S. - CHINA DEAL? Paris peace talks to resume under shadow of Nixon s visit Inflation rate rises Govt. Offic als say rate less than Dec, controls working WASHINGTON M- Infla- tion shoved the cost of living upward in January for the second month following the price - wage freeze, but the price push was less painful than December's. The Labor Department report- ed that consumer prices increas- ed 0.1 per cent in January, a month when they usually decline. When adjusted for such seasonal trends, the rise was at a rate of 0.3 per cent or 3.6 per cent a year. This encouraged White House economists who, a month ago, had forecast a repeat of December's 0.4 per cent increase, or worse. They long have predicted a Phase 2 bulge lasting several months. The 3.6 per cent annual rate compared with less than 2 per cent during the freeze and 4.1 per cent in the six months before President Nixon's mid-August .or- der clamping a 90-day lid on prices, wages and rents. The 0.3 per cent inflation took 3 cents out of every $10 bill. -It sent the consumer price index up to 123.2 per cent of the 1967 average, meaning that it now costs a city family $12.32 to buy what $10. bought five years ago. Meat and new cars were.among the major offenders agains price stability. The upsurge in meat prices, which has sparked con sumer protests in Washington and elsewhere, amounted to 1.5 r cent.e New, car prices jumped 1.6 per cent as price boosts approved by the Price Commission took ^ef- fect, but used car prices oMllowed the usual downward seasonal pat- tern by declining 1.8 per cent. The food price index as a whole declined 0.2 per cent in January despite the contrary movement of meats and dairy products. This was an important shift in trend for family budgets. Food prices had risen 0.7 per cent in each of the two preceding months. Curiously, the reversal was large- ly attributable to two foods which are exempt from price control, eggs and fresh vegetables. 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 Arbr, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- ;ity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier, $11 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subsoti- tion rates: $5 by carrier, $6 by mail. PARIS (A) - The Vietnam peace talks, suspended for a week by the United States, re- sume today under the shadow of the U.S. - Chinese summit meeting in Peking. Despite disclaimers by both U. S. and Chinese officials that the Vietnam war can be moved toward settlement in Peking, observers here assumed that the subject would come up in some form and the discussions be- tween President Nixon and Pre- mier Chou En-lai might have a. major influence on the con- flict. Asked if they are concerned that the war might be settled behind their backs in Peking, one of their principal, allies, North Vietnamese and Viet Cong delegates to the. Paris talks point to official Chinese statements of support and as- sertions that Paris is the place .QIPRF1?F r"TfIP7T He was also found guilty on five counts of lying to the grand jury in Baltimore and on one count of interstate transportation of Indiana ree( a bribe. Dowdy, the first sitting congressman coiivicted in 15 years, said he would appeal within 10 days. WASHINGTON (A) - The S - preme Court yesterday cleared the * *way for a recount of Sen. Vance ERICH HONECKER,. East Germany's party chief, moved Hartke's (D-Ind.) narrow victory last week to socialize all remnants of capitalism by making pri- over former Rep. Richard Roude- bush in 1970. vate concerns surrender their enterprises to the state. The 5-2 decision held a second According to the latest East German statistics, private enter- counting of contested ballots in 11 Indiana counties would not prises still accounts for 5.7 per cent of the gross national product, usurp the Senate's authority to be Most nonsocialized business includes craftsmen and small consumer- the final judge of the qualifica- od tions of its members. goo s concerns. JusticePotter Stewart rested majorityopinion on the con- )unt ordered "A recount does not prevent the Senate from independently evalu- ating the election any more than the initial count does." he said. A Democrat, Hartke retained his seat over Republican Roude- bush by a plurality of 4,383 votes out of more than 1,730,000 cast- a margin of about one vote a precinct. Two weeks later Roudebush asked for a recount in 464 pre- cincts scattered through 11 coun- ties, one of which includes- the states largest city, Indianapolis. However, a federal district court granted Hartke an injunction. 1 to settle the war. China has repeatedly voiced support for North Vietnam's peace plan: It calls for total U. S. withdrawal from South Vietnam by a fixed time limit, repatriation of prisoners and the ouster of President Nguyen Van Thieu of South Vietnam. The United States and South Vietnam, in their pekce plan, promise U.S. withdrawal within six months of an agreement. It also calls for new presidential elections with Thieu resigning a month before. Today's 145th session of the talks normally would have been held Feb. 17. But U. S. Ambas- sador William Porter balked at holding a meeting then because of an- international anti-war conference in nearby Versailles Feb. 11-13. Porter calledhthe Versailles gathering " a horde of Com- munist - controlled agitators" and refused to attend a meeting of the peace talks in the at- mosphere he, said the coiafer- ence created. A University stu- dent, Student Government Council member Arlene Grif- fin, was among those attending the conference. ' The United States protested to France against the Versailles meeting, saying it ruined the neutral surroundings for the peace talks. France rejected the protest. "IT ISA New Yorkn Mogozine They met at the funeral of a perfect stranger. From then on, things got perfectly stranger and stranger. Paramount Pictures Presentss HAROLD and MPAUDE RUTH GORDON BUD CORT Co-starring Vivian Pickles, Cyril Cusack, Charles Tyner, Ellen Geer Produced by Colin Higgins and Charles B.Mulvehil Executive Producer Mildred Lewis, Written by Colin Higgins Directed by Hal Ashby Color by technoloe With Songs by Cat Stevens A Paro-unt Pidur. GP".Al " I stitutional provision that the states prescribe the times, places and manner of holding elections. UPPERCLASSMEN, GRADS and Other Old People Get out and meet somebody interesting tonight Music by SALMAGUNDI FREE BEER, Drinks $1.00 Huron 3 Room, CAMPUS INN Cover Charge: Girls $2.00; Guys $2.50 SISTER Elizabeth McAlister, A Catholic nun and art history teacher who has acted in opposi- tion to the war and the draft is now on federal trial for "con- spiracy," charged by J. Edgar Hoover. She will be in Ann Arbor for a conversation Feb. SATURDAY 26 I 4:00, 8:00, 10:00 P.M. at the Cons piracy 330 MAYNARD coffeehouse theater UM Film Soc. I $1.50 advance, $2 at door; benefit for legal defense-761-7849 , is a Catholic nun and art history professor who acted against the war in Vietnam. J. Edgar Hoover charged her, Fr. Phillip Ber- rigan, and six others with "conspiracy" and they are now on trio[ in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. SISTER McALISTER WILL BE IN ANN ARBOR THIS SATURDAY SHOP TONIGHT AND FRIDAY UNTIL 9:00 P.M. Miss J opens summer with Brazil '72 sandals..' it takes bare, breezy leather strappers like these imported from Brazil to show her just how sun-loving sandals can be. A. C ross-hatChed wh ite crinkle pate nt. $9. B. Triple-strap flat in brown or white. $6. C. Thong-plus-two in brown or white. $6. coffeehouse conspiracy 330 Maynard theater advance tickets $1.50; $2 at door; 761-7849 UM Film Society STARTS TODAY .CAMPUS TONIGHT AT 7-9 P.M. I I the ann arbor film cooperative WINNER, BEST PICTURE AWARD (1971) National Society of Film Critics * Eric Rohmer's / 4 F -- LYNICAL and LOVELY CLAIRE'S KNEE COLOR English-Subtitles The fifth in the dertcor's series of "Moral Tales" following his MY NIGHT AT MAUD'S "'CLAIRE'S KNEE' is superlative . . . almost any .ordinary way to describe it must in some way diminish it." --Vincent Canbv. THE NEW YORK TIMES I I