Don't let the end of the semester get you down. COME TO THE GRAD COFFEE HOUR 4 to 6 p.m. Wed., April 12 4th fI. Rackham lemonade and cake for all news briefs by The Associated Press C14 Q 41P 4F 4 ARAO -,a- UOMMINIMMI IRMMPRM A& -.dL-A- .A tr O-a I t Sunday, April 9, 1972 Page Three I THE UNITED STATES and 60 other nations will sign an agreement tomorrow prohibiting the development, production and Sstockpiling of biological and toxic weapons, the Florida White House said yesterday. H President Nixon will attend the ceremony at the State Depart- ment when Secretary of State William Rogers and James Leonard, assistant director for international relations of the U.S. Arms Con- trol and Disarmament Agency, sign the "biological weapons con- vention" on behalf of the United States. The convention also provides for destruction of existing biological warfare stockpiles. i I i rill t I Similar ceremonies are scheduled tomorrow in London and Moscow. * * THE UNITED STATES and the Soviet Union are expected to announce Tuesday a two-year renewal of the cultural exchange program between the two countries, State Department officials said yesterday. The new program, covering 1972 and 1973, is designed to increase exchanges of performing arts, scientists, scholars and students some- what above the level of the present program, they said. * * * A MASSIVE SEARCH centering around Provo, Utah, wasI scaled down yesterday after a local police chief reported he had a suspect in Friday's air piracy. "There is a suspect in the case," said Jesse Evans, Provo's police T errorists hi hotel BEFAT (I)Teiiitbob ers blasted Belfast's biggest hotel and attacked a soccer stadium yesterday in a fresh upsurge of hostilities in Northern Ireland. Damage was heavy but there were no casualties. Police claimed both bombs were planted by the outlawed Irish R~e- publican Army (IRA) which has vowed to oust Britain and unite Northern Ireland with the Irish Republic to the south. Meanwhile both Catholics and Protestants voiced opposition dur- ing the day to Britain's efforts to settle differences between the ri-: : val communities and end the vio- lence that has killeda298 persons in the last three years. '' A spokesman for the IRA Provi- sional wing said in Dublin that Remains of bom3 5 I -Associated Press b-laden truck in Belfast Caho is communities inor n chief, referring to last week's incident in which a young sky-jacker Ireland back the group's decision parachuted from a low flying jet with $500,00 ransom. to fight on despite Britain's con- DOCTORS OPTIMISTIC: ciliatory gestures { i i I E f Friday's hijacking of a United Airlines 747 jet was the seventh "The British hope to crush the time in just under five months that parachutes and ransom figured guerrillas and then impose upon in air piracy. the cowed populace a settlement which will serve Britain's inter- ests, not those of the Irish people," POLICE SURROUNDED Sinaloa State University yesterday he said after a secret IRA meeting. in the wake of student demonstrations that left two persons dead Protestant leader William Craig said his Ulster Vanguard Move- and 10 wounded in Mexico City. ment will escalate its battle Two students were shot Friday when police turned back students against direct British rule. He assailed Friday's release of 73, 1 who hurled stones and Molotov cocktails at the State Congress guerrilla suspects from intern- bi'ilding. ment, as ordered by British ad- ministrator William Whitelaw. Craig told the British Press As- VICE PRESIDENT Spiro Agnew said yesterday that the sociation in an interview that his f Democratic party "isn't fit to govern" the United States and ac- movement, which paralyzed Ulster with a two-day general strike last' cused the party of relying on "emotional appeals and electronic week, will fight Britain's direct gimmickry" instead of issues. rule of the province. If the will of Agnew also criticized what he called "the elitist liberals" among the Protestant majority is ignored, we will use force of arms - that the press and the Democratic presidential candidates. He did not is the 'ultimate," he said. mention any names. 'rhe Michigan Daily, edited and man- "When the evidence becomes clear, as it did in the Florida pri- aged by students at the university o Michigan. News phone: 764-0562. Secondr mary several weeks ago, that the people are not behaving in ac- Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich-f cordance with their textbook theories, these liberal elitists display; ica 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mihian 48104. Published daily Tues- their underlying contempt for the Democratic process," Agnew said. day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by Agnew spoke to 700 delegates of the California Republican Assem- carrier, $11 bysmail. Summer Session published Tuesday bly, the state's largest volunteer GOP organization.! through Saturday morning. Subscrip- __.__.______..- tion rates: $5 by carrier. $6 by mail. 4 I 2 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS Including 'Best Foreign Film' WINNER 3 INTERNATIONAL FILM AWARDS " BEST FOREIGN FILM " BEST DIRECTOR " BEST ACTRESS Winner Golden Bear Award, First Prize Berlin Film Festival Winner David Donatello Awards;, Best Italian Picture 1971 "Reaches artistic and human heights of 'Bicycle Thief'." -N.Y. Post May well be the loveliest film of the year. Johnson given good chance o recoverie from attack CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. (A) - Hurst said he could not tell how About Johnson's heart condi- Former President Lyndon Johnson, long Johnson would remain in the tion, she said, "We just have to felled by a serious heart attack, University of Virginia Hospital face it and live with it..That's the was given a "very good" chance here, but said it would be "more wonderful word - live." for survival yesterday and his wife than a few days," and hopefully Hurst said the former chief ex- Lady Bird vowed to make him live less than several weeks.co "more quietly" in the future. Johnson recently resumed smok- tion of a disease known as cor- Dr. John Hurst, the Emory Uni- ing after a lapse of 16 years, but onary arteriosclerosis, particularly versity heart specialist who treat- Mrs. Johnson said she did not known as myocardial infarction." ed Johnson for two previous heart know if he would quit. "I just He described the disease as a seizures, said the 63-year-old for- know he enjoys it." narrowing of an artery which de- mer President's chances of living Hurst said he had not given prives the heart of its b:lood sup- were about 80 per cent. Johnson any orders to stop smok- Hurst said Johnson had suf- ing but noted, "He isn't smoking ply. He did not give the specifics. fered a myocardial infarction Fri- now." Secret Service agents were on day morning when he was awak- Mrs. Johnson said she wanted to guard in the hospital and hospi- ened by chest pains while visit- get the former President home to tal employes had instructionsnot ing the home of his son-in-law Texas "as soon as we can get and daughter, Charles and Lyn- there . . . where we can live a to furnish any information con- da Bird Robb. little more quietly." cerning Johnson. The doctor said Johnson's heart attack was about the same inten-A f sity as the nearly fatalillness that l a U.S. Senator from Texas. The former President's blood reported assassinated pressure response at that time was "more worrisome," Hurst add- ed, however. The Tanzanian government Karume rose to power in Jan- The heart specialist said John- reported yesterday that Sheik uary 1964 as the laeder of an son is "for the most part com- Abeid Karume, the 66-year-old African-majority revolt against fortable, but with some occasional leftist who ruled the island of an Arab-dominated r e g i m e chest pains. Zanzibar has been assassinated, headed by Sultan Segyid Jams- "His pulse is good, there is some Located about 20 miles off the hid bin Abdullah bin Khalifa. congestion of his lungs, but not eastern African mainland, the Zanzibar had become inde- C enough to bother him. We feel spice island is part of Tanzania. pendent from Britain only a reasonably good about him, and However, Karume's radical re- month earlier. I think thing will go well," he gime ran the government with He guided the island into un- went on. broad local autonomy. ion with Tanganyika in the Unit- -_The island's Revolutionary ed Republic of Tanzania and Council announced over Radio brought in hundreds of Chinesea f Zanzibar yesterday that it will techhicians to develop factories STUDY/TRAVEL-ISRAEL-SUMMER '72 JULY 8-AUG. 27-HEBREW UNIVERSITY OF JERUSALEM U-M Professor of Hebrew EDNA COFFIN, Program Director " EARN 6-12 HOURS CREDIT HEBREW, YIDDISH,EARABIC LANGUAGE CLASSES ON ALL LEVELS Beginning to Advanced Course.s Taught in English Include: " Archaeology of the Holy Land 0 Israel Political Institutions " Philosophy of Judaism and Foreign Affairs " Jewish History 0 Israel Society " Educational Innovations " Judaism and Christianity in Israel $1050 INCLUDES: Round trip air; Inter-continental connections; Tuition; Fees; Rooms at Mount Scopus Residences; Insurance. SPECIAL PLANNED EXCURSIONS Historical Sites, Museums, Kibbutzim EVENINGS OF ISRAELI FOLK-SINGING/DANCING TALKS ON ISRAELI LIFE, POLITICS, CULTURE, ART For Info and Forms ALSO PROGRAMS IN SPAIN, CONTACT 662-6666 PARIS, ITALY, VIENNA, 211 Mich. Th. Bldg. LONDON (above Marilyn Shop) $790 STUDENTS ABROAD wal GET' ATTENTION 3i --Hollis Alpert, San aurday Review I 0 VITTORIO DE SICA'S 0 the Garden of the Finzi-Continis Starring Dominique Sanda, Lino Capohicchio, Helmut Berger, Produced by Arthur Cohn and Gianni Hecht Lucari, in color, 0 r Women in Politics Week APRIL 10-16 MONDAY, April 10: POT LUCK ANN ARBOR COMMUNITY CENTER 6:00-8:00 p.m.-625 N. Main MONDAY, April 10: SHIRLEY CHISHOLM and JANE HART at HILL AUDITORIUM 8:30 p.m.-tickets $1.50 206 Nickels Arcade or at door TUESDAY, April 11: BRUNCH with JANE HART 11:30-1 :30-$10.00 for reservations call Ethel Lee, 662-1324 WEDNESDAY, April 12: Discussions with WOMEN IN POLITICS Rm. 126 Residential College-7:30 p.m. SUNDAY, April 16: FINE ARTS " FUNK 0 FANCY JUNK " and FLOWER FESTIVAL (behind the Farmers' Market) Braun Court-1 :00-6:00 p.m. SHIRLEY CHISHOLM for President 206 Nickels Arcade, Ann Arbor 769-5965 769-5961 Spring Fling Movie, "THE RIEVERS" HAS BEEN MOVED k!I I'j aI' I I r' i I continue Karume's leftist poli- cies. The council, containing about 30 persons, remained in control and Tanzanian sources said the assassination was not followed by an attempt to over- throw the government. There was no word on who was behind the killing. K. V i 4 t ' l ,. a -_- and farms. Karume's authoritarian and abrupt policies contrasted sharp- ly with the milder Socialist ten- dencies of Tanzania President Julius Nyerere. Relations be- tween the two parts of Tanzania were said to be strained' as a result. TO THE I League Ballroom 8 P.M. TONIGHT ADMISSION FREE! 7:00 and 9:00 not continuous with matinee or Cormon Festival T 7.-0 MATINEE SPECIAL LAST DAY-SUNDAY "WILLY WONKA AND THE CHOCOLATE FACTORY" plus '3 Stooges'-1 :00 and 3 :30-All Seats 75c "Out-Disney's Disney"-Cleveland Press BENEFIT MONDAY NIGHT 7 PIECE BAND ORENDA, Featuring two former Brats!A NAT and LEON -and-: U . . - ::> -I CINEMA II Aud. A, Angell Hall; Shows at 7 & 9 p.m.; 75c; tickets at 6 p.m. SUNDAY NIGHT ONLYI MINGUS (1966, Reichman dir.) One day in the explosive life of jazz bassist-composer-philoso- pher-author Charles Aingus. Jazz doesn't pay well in America and in this film Mingus returns from a Greenwich Village set to find the New York City Police evicting his family from their apartment. True cinema-verite. Mance Lipscomb: A Life Well Spent (1971, Blank & Greerson, dir.) The famous rural Texan bluesman who so graced the Ann Arbor Blues Festival is the subject of this film, which was itself a hinhlinht of the Ann Arbor Film Festival Linscomb's music. fam- TONIGHT ONLY Zabriskie Point Dir. Michoelangelo ANTONIONI 1969. Antonioni's second film in English and his third in exquisite color. Saga of -modern decad- ence and v i o I e n c e in Arnerica. Extraordinary exploding America scene climaxes film. Plus a short: BALLET kAEC14AINiJIflI I I At Stat. and Liberty Program Informcition 662-6264 "The best comedy of the year and the best love story' -NEWWEMGAZFI ANE OPEN 12:45 SHOWS AT 1 p.m., 4:30, 8 p.m. Mon.-Sat. $1.50 until 4:30 Mon.-Thurs. eve. $2.00 Fri. and Sat. eve. $2.50 All Day Sunday $2.50 603 E. Liberty DIAL 665-6290 I I I I ._ ::: - ~ I E KWJ I U I wi -