COUZENS FILM CO-OP PRESENTS "The Cheyenne Social Club" NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 C14C -AdfiL Ldhk.. Air 4* 99 tr4tg n ati1 page three JAMES STEWART SHIRLEY JONES FRI., March 31 & SAT. 7,C 11 p.M. COUZENS HALL ARRING HENRY FONDA 75c per person $1 per couple Ann Arbor, Michigan Thursday, March 30, 1972 TONIGHT AT 8:00! Arthur Kopit INDIANS n e wsbriefs by The Associated Press THE NORTH VIETNAMESE AIR FORCE may be planning to enter the fighting in South Vietnam for the first time in the war. U.S. military sources said that airfields were being lengthened1 and another built not far from the South Vietnamese border. One spokesman said, "Information we have convinces us they are think- ing of using Mig 17 and MIG 19s in an air to ground support role." SEN. JAMES EASTLAND (D-Miss.) of the Senate Judiciary Committee bowed yesterday to Republican demands that a vote be taken on ending the renewed hearings on the nomination of Richard Kleindienst to be attorney general. The vote, scheduled for Thursday of next week, could cut off the month-long investigation into Kleindienst's role in the out-of-court settlement of three antitrust suits filed by the Justice Department against International Telephone & Telegraph Corp. A LAWSUIT filed by Ralph Nader challenging a Justice De-1 partment settlement permitting the merger of the International Telephone and Telegraph Corp. and Hartford Fire Insurance Co. was dismissed yesterday in Hartford, Conn. Power Center MARCH 29-APRIL 1st CURTAIN 8 P.M.! Box office open daily at 12:30 TICKETS: Wednesday, Thursday $1.50, $2.50 Friday, Saturday $2.00, $3.00 At State and Liberty THE SUNDANCE EXPRESS IS HERE! ROBERT REDFORD - T GEORGE SEGAL DIAL 662-6264 and ZERO MOSTEL in State Superior Court Judge Walter Sidor ruled that Nader and three other plaintiffs did not have sufficient standing to bring the suit and did not prove that they had been injured by the controversial merger, the largest in U.S. history. ARAB VOTERS in the Israeli occupied west bank region of Jordan have chosen five new leaders more or less opposed to Jordan's King Hussein and committed to an independent Pales- tine state. Despite guerrilla death threats, almost 14,000 voters went, to the polls to elect new municipal councils in the' first elections since their land was seized during the Six Day war of 1967. The election results appeared to be a rejection of Hussein's plans for a semiautonomous state of Palestine under his rule on the west bank. THE U.S. CIVIL RIGHTS COMMISSION said yesterday that President Nixon's proposed antibusing legislation "would mark a major governmental retreat" in school desegregation. In a statement, the commission said that Nixon's moves would have, "the effect of providing solace, comfort, and support to those who opposed all civil rights advances in the past and who may now attempt to roll back the progress made in other areas." * * * HENRY KISSINGER will make an unofficial three-day visit to Tokyo next month to confer with Prime Minister Isaku Sato j and other officials, the White House announced yesterday. Presidential Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler said that Kissinger hopes to confer informally with the Japanese on the whole range of foreign policy items of interest to the two countries. Ziegler said Kissinger's purpose would be to "contribute to mutual understanding between Japan and the United State and strengthen- ing cooperative relations." -Associated Press Reunion A young man who is a resident of East Berlin, lett, greets his mother, a resident of West Berlin, after she had crossed over into the eastern sector yesterday. Taking advantage of special Easter visiting privileges, tens of thousands have made the trek into Communist territory for the first time in six years. OPENING STATEMENT: Davis claims prosecution used 'male chauvinism' in attempt to prove case House OKs new clean water act Reps vote $24 billion to elean U.S. waterways WASHINGTON (R) - The House yesterday passed a $24.6-billion water-pollution- control bill aimed at cleaning up the nation's waterways. The vote was 378-14. The measure, believed to be the largest single nondefense authori- zation ever approved by the House, now goes before a joint conference of the House and Senate Public Works Committees to iron out dif- ferences between the House ver- sion and one passed last November by the Senate. Significant differences between the House and Senate versions are expected to delay for some time agreement between conferees. The House bill calls for $18.3 billion to be spent from fiscal 1973 to 1975 for the federal share of constructing sewage-treatment works and, for the first time, sew- age-collection systems. The total called for by the Senate is only $14 billion. The House bill calls also for the National Academy of Sciences to complete within two years a study on the costs of requiring industries to utilize by 1981 the best avail- able technology to purify wastes discharged into waterways. After Congress received the study, it would decide whether to impose a 1981 deadline for utilizing the best means available. The Senate bill rigidly adopts the 1981 deadline and calls' also for all discharges into waterways to end by 1985. The House, in contrast, considers 1985 to be a national goal, not a governmental policy. The House bill would prohibit persons from filing citizen suits to halt pollution unless they could prove that their interests were affected. The Senate version leaves to the courts to decide the issue of parties of interest. SAN JOSE, Calif. (A") - An- gela Davis told the jury in her murder - kidnap - conspiracy trial yesterday that the prose- cution is practicing male chau- vinism in trying to prove that she plotted violence because of consuming passion. "The prosecutor would like to take advantage of the fact that I am a woman," Davis appear-. ing as her own coattorney said in the defense's opening state- ment. "For in our society, wom- en are supposed to act on the dictates of emotion. "This is clearly a symptom of the male chauvinism in our so- ciety," she declared. Davis, 28, a former UCLA philosophy teacher, is charged in connection with the Aug. 7. 1970 shootout at the Marin Count C Ontr whih efWt. judge and three blacks dead. Davis denied the prosecution claim that she plotted for the escape of convict George Jack- son who they said was her lover. She said- she fought legally for the freedom of three convicts known as the Soledad Brothers. "The evidence will show that as the movement progressed, I developed a deep affection for George Jackson," Davis said. "And I also felt a deep com- passion and love for Fleeta Drumgo and John Clutchette," she added, referring to the other Soledad Brothers. Jackson was killed in what authorities have called an es- cape attempt at San Quentin prison last August. Clutchette and Drumgo were acquitted Monday of murder charges in the 147(l Onin nf a. l d d a State Prison guard. "The evidence will show that I am totally innocent of all the charges against me. The prose- cutor's evidence will prove that his case is no case at all." Davis, also told jurors at her trial that she owned many guns but never knowingly supplied them for violence. Davis said she had been un- der constant threat of death from extremists for several years and bought guns because "I needed some kind of protec- tion if I was to live out my years." The prosecution has said the young black militant bought guns as part of a plot to take hostages from the Marin Coun- ty Civic Center in return for the rlanen of n nintc 1 T1z1"A MASTERPIECE!" --PAUL. ZIMMERMAN, Newswe* W U COMING - SHOW SOON! CBOL.UMBIA PDCPCTUES PI~rt j 8BPOUTON ® 4if o More Than Your Eyes HaveEver Seen on the Scren! _ - t ---# _, n 4 .-7 The Marantz Model 1060 wuuuy xllby e e 1rLcuul wvi a vil c '..lyi as ngof a ooLU bile relea se a kjljZC1&Oe& aC e1 r s- v's. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of THE SCHOOL OF MUSIC presents Michigan. News phone: 764-0562. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- Verdi's Opera igan. 420 Maynard St.. Ann Arbor, P Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier, $11 by mail. (IN ENGLISH) Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- Two Performances Only: April 6 & 7- P.M. tion rates: $5 by carrier, $ by mal. Power Center for the Performing Arts $3.50 and $2.50 ($1.00 tickets for U-M students with ID cards, sold at the Box Office only, no mail orders) For the Student Body: Conductor JOSEF BLATT Stage Director: RALPH HERBERT TICKET INFORMATION: 764-6118 MAIL ORDERS: Falstaff, School of Music, University of Mich- gan, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48105. Please. enclose self-addressed, stamped envelope. Box Office Opens April 3rd at 12:30 P.M. Stereo Console Amplifier With total reliability, the impressive Model 1060 delivers 60 Watts continuous RMS into 8 ohm speakers, from 20Hz to 20kHz, with total harmonic and intermodulation distortion less than 0.5%. Frequency response is plus/minus 0.5dB. Professional features include: two front panel mic inputs; stepped, three- zone tone controls; separate preamp outputs and power amp inputs; built-in automatic protection for output circuitry and associated speakers; and gold-anodized front panel. Completely enclosed metal chasis is finished in simulated walnut. le music center, inC. 308 South State Street starring CHIAR[TON YtJ! ANNE [EDWARD G. YVONNE DEBRA JOHN HJESTON " BRYNNER " BAXTER ROBINSON - DE CAR[O "rAGE[ " DEREK SI I NI A MART[A 1111 [YiT N NT0 HARDWICKEC FOH C 800I1- ANDERSON -"PRICE -TOMORROW- T:00 & 9:30 Anne of the Thousand Days "epic battle of sexes." -N.Y. Times "An instant classic. It has a hammerlock on history, performance, and rooting in terest." -N.Y. Post $1 cont.-free cider, coffee conspiracy 330 Maynard I " Belis " Flares $5 00 reg. to $24.00 CHECKMATE State Street at Liberty I -TONIGHT- 7:30 9:30 Phone 665-8607 or 8 ANN ARBOR, MICH. VISIT OUR NEW STORE SOON!, GENEVIEVE BUJOLD RICHARD BURTON --- - - - . I YOU CAN GET ANYTHING YOU WANT AT ALICE's ANTr Vanessa Redgrave Cannes Festival BEST ACTRESS Loves of Isadora directed by ARTHUR PENN (Mickey One, Little Big Man) with ARLO GUTHRIE TONIGHT!-March 30th-ONLY! "wonderful . . . brilliant ... a superb story, superbly realized." -LIFE , s.... .......... / ' <.. I S ff A 2 W " A Ift W A" 9% A IL R rm