l Anne of a Thousand Days RICHARD BURTON and GENEV[EVE BUJOLD FRIDAY and SATURDAY STOCKWELL HALL 75c 9:00 p.m. NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0354 CJ4 Q iaiI page three Ann Arbor, Michigan Friday, April 14, 1972 I news Abriefs by The Associated Press - I Markley Council Cinema Weekend presents CASINO ROYAL FRIDAY and SATURDAY April 14-15 !I MARKLEY DINING ROOM NO. 3 ADMISSION 75c THE JUSTICE DEPARTMENT yesterday said it intends to sue the major television networks for alleged anti-trust violations. In a brief announcement in Washington the department said it had advised the Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS), the Na- tional Broadcasting Company, the American Broadcasting Com- pany and Viacom International, Inc. of its intent. Viacom operates cable television systems and the syndicated program business for- merly owned by CBS.' Department spokesmen declined to discuss the suits until they are filed, possibly within'a few days. A spokesman for CBS said that the government seeks to trans- form the networks into conduits for independently produced program- ming. PRESIDENT NIXON arrived in Ottawa, the Canadian capi-' tal, late last night for a three-day visit aimed at improving the atmosphere between the two allies, now divided by serious econ- omic difficulties. Neither U.S. nor Canadian officials expect Nixon's single 2%- hour meeting with Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau to do much more than touch broadly on economic differences. The divisions between the two countries are reflected in threat- ened demonstrations by several groups against so-called U.S. im- perialism and U.S. Vietnam policies. Unprecedented security arrangements have been taken to pro- tect the President. Nixon will travel to political and social appoint- ments in a bullet-proof limousine and his exact schedule and travel routes are being kept as vague as possible. CONSUMERS UNION yesterday said that the nation's air- lines are overcharging passengers by an estimated $15 million a year on 27,000 routes. The announcement came one day after the government issued a new regulation on fares. The routes cited in the latest Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB) ruling and the upcoming issue of Consumers Reports magazine are! those with unpublished fares. As of now the rates are computed by adding up the combined rates for two legs on a flight. Consumers Union charged that most, ticket agents are adding wrong. The new CAB ruling passed Wednesday states that fares must be published for all routes, and sets a standard formula for com- puting fares. * , THE SOVIET AND EAST GERMAN PRESS are the only ones in Europe paying more than scant attention to the Angela Davis trial. Moscow's press sees the San Jose proceeding as a "mockery of justice," and the East German government maintains its formal campaign for acquittal. Western Europe confines itself to brief, factual reports of the; trial, while most Communist satellite countries are silent. -Associated Press *icketing Nixon A group of demonstrators, including many Amer can draft resisters, protested President Nixon's visit to Canada, yesterday at Parliament Hill in Ottawa. (See News Briefs, left.) VIETNAM DEFOLIATION f er iocide study issue IRA bomb Ie wave hits 'NIreland Six cities struck, one woman killed BELFAST () - Terrorists set of f a chain of explosions across Northern Ireland yesterday, leav- ing an elderly woman dead and a trail of destruction in the big- gest upsurge of violence since Bri- tain's takeover. Security forces blamed the eight blasts in six cities and villages on outlaws of the Irish Republican Army. They saw the offensive as an IRA challenge to Britain's impo- sition of direct rule on Northern Ireland and a riposte to pressure by Roman Catholic moderates for a curbing of violence. Security forces in Belfast also were harassed by more than a score of bomb hoaxes at factories and city stores, heightening the tense atmosphere that followed a relative three-week lull in the guerrilla campaign. The woman's death in the Pro- testant town of Ballymoney raised the province's fatality toll to 301 in 32 months of sectarian violence. She died when a bomb ripped through the town's main street, turning her home into a blazing inferno.dHer husband escaped with cuts and bruises. It was the first bombing in the County Antrim town. The former prime minister of Northern Ireland, Brian Faulkner, lashed out at the continued exist- ence of Catholic ghettos in Lon- donderry and Belfast where the army normally does not venture. Faulkner said Britain's new ad- ministrator for the province, Wil- liam Whitelaw, appears to be making the same mistake as the former Labor government in 1969 which "should have asserted the full and impartial rule of law ev- erywhere." Faulkner was ousted last month when Britain suspended the Pro- testant-dominated provincial Par- liament for one year. ThebMichigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Mikwigan. News phone: 764-0562. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan. 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily -Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier;' $11 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus area); $6.50 local mail (in Mich. or Oho); $7.50 non-local mail (other states and foreign). By RICHARD FINEBERG Dispatch News Service WASHINGTON, D.C. - The U.S. military has spread herbi- cides over Vietnam's forests without knowing how much damage the poisonous chemicals might cause. The National Academy of Sci- ences' (NAS) Committee on the Effect of Herbicides in Vietnam released in March its interim report, which indicates it may take as long as five years for a herbicide-treated tree to die. The study, funded by the De- fense Department, asserts that "this lag in killing effect" was not taken into account by pre- vious studies, which were con- ducted by the army only one or two years after defoliation 0op- erations. An earlier report by the Herb- icide Assessment Commission of the American Association for the Advancement of Science es- timated that one-fifth of South Vietnam's fdrest lands were de- foliated between 1962 and 1969. Use of defoliants reached a peak in 1967 and declined some- what in the following three years. The Army claims its use of herbicides is now restricted to the perimeters of military in- stallations. The Defense Depart- ment suspended the use of Agent Orange, the most widely used herbicide in Vietnam, in April 1970 when it was learned that Agent Orange caused fetus- deformation in laboratory ani- mais. The NAS study was authorized by Congress in 1970 as a result of the controversy generated by the use of herbicides in Vietnam. Its conclusions were scheduled for release early this year, but the NAS has asked that the final report be delayed until August of next year. Many U.S. scientists have re- fused to participate in the study because it is financed by the De- fense Department, according to NAS officials. The American Anthropological Association last year adopted a code of ethics condemning all anthropological research financ- ed by the U.S. military. NAS officials say that to date they have been unable to recruit ex- perienced anthropologists to ex- amine the effects of crop poi- soning on Vietnam's Montagn- ard tribespeople. The NAS committee is chaired by Dr. Anton Lang of Michigan State University and consists Of fifteen scientists, including sev-. en from the U.S. and others from Great Britain, South Viet- nam, Canada, the Philippines and Sweden. X ADULTS ONLY E ANCP YPS "ANN °QI ;'_'E l BOX OFFICE OPEN 7:00 SHOW STARTS AT DUSK . CHARLTON HESTON "The Omega Man" (PG) Shown Nightly at 7:25 & 11 :00 RICHARD HARRIS JOHN HOUSTON "Man In The Wilderness" (PG) Nightly at 9:15 Now! Two Great Features at Both Theatres! In Everyone's Life There's A "SUMMER OF '42" (R) Nightly at 7:25 & 11]:20 Academy Award Winner JANE FONDA "KLUTE" 9:20 GENERAL CINEMA CORPORATION SHOP TONIGHT UNTIL 9:00 P.M. SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 5:30 P.M. ;am the little bikini means a big suntan for Miss J. . .a real eye-catcher in brightly print acrylic crepe with a, mock-tie for the bra-top. By Top Drawer. White with purple or orange. 5-13 sizes. $15. 4444 J012 WINNER OF 2 ACADEMY AWARDS "A MASTERPIECE! It is not merely the best American movie of a rather dreary year; it is the most impressive work by a young American director since "Citizen Kane!" -PAUL D. ZIMMERMAN, Newsweek "THE LAST PICTURE SIHOW is the happiest news of the 1971 New York Film Festival!" -S TEFAN KANFER, Time Magazine LAST SHOW IS THE BEST AMERICAN FILM SO FAR THIS YEAR! Bogdanovich is one of our most gifted moviemakers!" -JUDITH CRIST, New York Magazine COLUMBIA PICTURES Presents A BBS PRODUCTION * NOW * PLUS... Academy Award Win- ner. . Best Ani- mated Short "Crunch Bird" "Peter Bogdanovich's fine film, THE LAST PICTURE SHOW tells a series of interlocking stories of love and loss...that illuminate a good deal more of one segment of the American experience than any other American film in recent memory!" -VINCENT CANBY, N. Y. Times "BRILLIANT! A contemporary American cinema classic!" --WILLIAM WOLF, OPEN 12:45 I I I i i I I e I I - - OPEN 12:45 SHOWS AT 1 p.m., 4:30, 8 p.m. Mon.-Sat. $1.50 ujntil 4:30 Mon.-Thurs. eve. $2.00 Fri. and Sat. eve. $2.50 All Day Sunday $2.50 603 E. Liberty DIAL 665-6290 BUIL presents Th ThIeater One night only: Science fiction, h o r r o r, and comedy. Let your imagination run wild. Saturday, April 15 7 and 9 p.m. Modern Languages BIdg. NOW SHOWING! State and Liberty Sts. I I