DIAL 668-6416 HELD OVER ! TWO HIT ENCORES NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0334 C14 P tait# page three Friday, March 17, 1972 Ann Arbor, Michigan NOMINATED FOR 6 I ACADEMY AWARDS "Summer of '42" BEST EDITING BEST SCREENPLAY BEST PHOTOGRAPHY BEST SCORE AND DUETIN HUFFM SHOWS AT Q 1,3,5,7;9:05 "THE GODFATHER" is now a movie COMING MARCH 24th JANE FONDA DONALD SUTHERLAND kiute I!4M JANE FONDA BEST ACTRESS BEST SCREENPLAY neWS briefs by The Associated Press YOUNG CONSERVATIVES will not work or vote for President Nixon s re-election, says Ron Docksai, national chairman of the Young Americans for Freedom. Docksai, speaking in an interview yesterday, added that sup- port for Alabama Gov. George Wallace is equally unlikely. He de- scribed Wallace's views as too "reactionary" for most young con- servatives. "Most YAF people say they will work for local candidates or sit out the election," said Docksai. "Nixon has completely disavowed the 1968 GOP platform and every thing we thought he would do." Of the Democratic presidential contenders, Docksai says Sens. Henry Jackson of Washington and Hubert Humphrey of Minnesota probably would be more acceptable than Nixon to young conservatives. ABOUT 50 YOUNG PEOPLE stood on the steps of Michigan's Capitol Wednesday aftersoon and smoked dope, and State Capitol security police did not disturb or arrest the smokers. The Michigan Supreme court last week ruled the state's present law on marijuana possession and use unconstitutional until a new oney takes effect April 1, and the state attorney general's office has advisedI State Police not to make arrests for marijuana possession or use. Some of those who took part in the public display said they want-; ed to dramatize their belief that even the new, less stringent laws which take effect April 1 should be changed. One participant in the event said that it was for "anybody who! wanted to get high." REPEAL OF THE STATE'S constitutional ban on lotteries will be placed on the May 16 ballot and voters will decide whe- ther to give the legislature power to organize and run lotteries, which might bring an estimated $25 million to $60 million in state coffers. Chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee, Sen. Charles Zollar said, ". . . unless we have additional revenues it would be impossible to balance the budget without painful cuts." 'State institutions and state aid for education" will receive at least 3 per cent of the proceeds from the sale of lottery tickets and shares. Presently New York, Connecticut, Massachusetts, New Jersey andj Pennsylvania operate lotteries. THE PRICE COMMISSION has embarked on a program of more restrictive controls. Commission officials indicated Wednesday that action to tigthen controls was being taken because the commission's anti-inflationary goals may be difficult to reach under the current program. Specifically, the commission reduced from 2.0 to 1.8 per cent the maximum average price increase allowed over a 12-month period to grant "tier one" companies that enter long-term price j agreements with the commission. The commission acted after studying reports on the impact onI the consumer and wholesale price indexes of prices exempted from controls. The staff also assessed the relative impact of price increases by the companies with sales of $50-million a year or more on the total economy. -Associated Press ITT probe continues ITT President Harold Geneen went before the Senate Judiciary Committee yesterday as the senators continued their probe into governmental handling of an anti-trust suit against the con- glomerate. Geneen testified that ITT's $200,000 commitment to the Republican National Convention was "a damn good business investment" for the Sheraton Hotel chain-an ITT subsidiary. PARIS PEACE TALKS: U.sks reform of Pconditions Monday, March 20 thru March 25 FISHER THEATRE Abortion law iberalization re ommended WASHINGTON UP) - The easing of laws restricting abor- tion, sex education and fertility control has been advocated by a presidential commission as a means of controlling Amer- ica's population. The Commission of Population Growth and the Ameri- can Future in a report released yesterday, recommended that. -Public and private health services should pay the full cost of contraceptives, of, prenatal, delivery and first-year pediatric care, and of voluntary sterilization, abortion and medical treatment of infer-< tility; -States adopt laws which would permit minors to receive contra- ceptive and prophylactic informa- tion and services; -All restrictions on access to voluntary contraceptive steriliza- tion be eliminated; and -Present state laws restrict- ing abortion be liberalized to bl- low them to be performed on re- quest by duly licensed physicians under conditions of medical safety. The report's section on abortion was attacked in advance if its is- suance yesterday by the United States Catholic Conference as leading "into an ideological val- ley of death." It also stirred dis- sent among the 24-member com- mission which includes four Ro- man Catholics. Dr. Paul Cornely added dissent- ing statements to the report say- ing, "Abortion in the opinion of this commissioner is destruction of human life since it kills the fetus. Society through its laws has a responsibility to protect all hu- man life." According to John Rockefeller III, head of the commission, "From the beginning, the over- riding goal of the commission has been the enrichment of human life, not its restriction." Research and training in t h e basic science of reproduction alone requires $100 million annually in federal funds, the commission said, and an additional $100 million is needed for developing meth- ods of fertility control. for May 22 Nixon's trip to USSR set PARIS P) -- The U n i t e d States delegation to the Paris peace talks put six demands to the Vietnamese Communists yesterday for liberalizing prison- er of war conditions, but they received no specific response. The North Vietnamese delega- tion said that if the United States "responds seriously" to the Communist peace plan, American prisoners could return home before Easter. U.S. Ambassador William Porter asked the Communists to permit impartial inspection of prisoner of war camps "in re- turn for a firm undertaking by both sides to refrain from ef- forts to liberate prisoners from the locations visited." However, the North Vietnam- ese have said they fear that if even neutral inspectors- are per- mitted into the camps, they will provide the United States with information permitting new commando raids in an ef- fort to free the prisoners. Porter made additional de- mands, all based on the Geneva convention on war prisoners: -Repatriation of the serious- ly sick and wounded prisoners; -Full information "on those of our men whom you hold cap- tive or known to be dead;" -Regular information on seriously sick and wounded pris- oners; -Permission for the prisoners to correspond regularly with their families. By The Associated Press The White House reported yes- terday that President Nixon will begin his week-long visit to Mos-. cow on May 22. This will be the first time that an American president has gone to the Soviet Union on an official visit. However, Nixon was there as vice president in 1959, when he engaged in the famous "kit- chen debate" with the late Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev. Accompanying Nixon May 22 will be a working delegation in- cluding Secretary of State Wil- liam Rogers and National Secur- ity Adviser Henry Kissinger. Rogers will go on from t h e Soviet Union to a NATO foreign ministers meeting in Bonn, on May 30-31, Ziegler said, but there was "no 'plan, at least at this time, for President Nixon to go there." Nixon will meet with Leonid Brezhnev, Nikolai Podgorny and Alexei Kosygin, the three top lead- ers of the Soviet Union, and ac- cording to Press Secretary Ron- ald Ziegler, Nixon "will review all major issues with a, v i e w toward further improving bilat- eral relations and enhancing the prospects for world peace." Ziegler would not comhment on whether there would be any agreement reached on strategic arms limitation. E P G 6 W.C. FIELDS CLASSICS UTAGUIDANCE su"Um &WsU U "tIdes Ets Stockwell Hall Shows 7:00 and 9:00 9 P.M 50c Thurs., Fri., Sat. WABX & U of D Presents 1 I 9 CINEMA II AUD. A, ANGELL HALL, shows at 7:00 & 9:00 P.M., 75c TICKETS ON SALE AT 6:00 P.M. THIS FRIDAY AND SATURDAY-SCIENCE FICTION SPECIAL! The End of August at the Hotel Ozone (1966, dir. SCHMIDT) As strange and lyrical a movie as its title suggests, this Czech new line film won the International Science Fiction Film Festival award in 1968. The story concerns a band of eight women who roam the barren wastelands of Earth after the final world war. "Particularly fascinating . . . grace and beauty and natural ease of expression." - Film Comment Quarterly. I I THE GIRLS AT The Martha Cook Bldg. WANT TO MEET YOU! ALL WOMEN STUDENTS ARE INVITED TO A TEA I riday, March 17 I FRI. & SAT. MARCH 24-25 "SUPERB"-N.Y. Times 0 0000000 0000000 0000000 00000000 0 Juilliard Repertory Company 0 000000000000000000000000000000 "WOMEN BEWARE WOMEN" V "INTERVIEW" by Thoma*s Middleton, by I..7q-Choude van htO ie The celebrated dramatic classic. (Author of"Amrica Hurrah") dbytdahnArhhA ie'o f ! "THE INDIAN WANTS THE BRONX" ONE PERFORMANCE by IsraelHorowtz EACH 2 major contemporary plays' 8:00 P.M. B.B. KING Plus Special Guest Star James Cotton BLUES BAND NEXT WEEK: FRI.-SAT.: Bergman's PASSION OF ANNA (1970) SUN.: Douglas Fairbanks as THIEF OF BAGHDAD (1924) I I 3:30-5:00 p.m. TONIGHT! Showcase 3 Extra Added Attraction MUDDY WATERS Fri., March 24, 8:30 p.m. U of D Memorial Building Tickets $5.50, $4.50, $3.50 Available at the U-D Box Office and all J.L. Hudson ticket outlets. FOR MAIL ORDERS: Send check or money order with self stamped envelope to: B.B. KING, U. OF D. PERFORMING ARTS, 4001 West McNichols, Detroit, Mich., 48221 STEAM- BATH ..J i *4 TheerssEs PRESENTED IN ARENA THEATRE Trueblood Box Office opens at 2:00 P.M. THRU SAT. this $1.50 6*1 ANDY COHEN THE UNPUBLISHABLE NOVEL IS NOW A TWI PTA R MOTfT r r 1 RAGTIME GUITAR and PIANO best t fingerpicker s i n c e3 i I