NEW ON CAMPUS SPEED-A-PRINT 619 E. William St. at State (former Barth Tailor location) XEROX OFFSET PRINTING COPIES " " " WHILE YOU WAIT " EVERYTHING PRINTED " TYPESETTING." Lee Composition & Printing Co.-761-4922 NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 al4c Sii 't4Ufl aat14 page three Ann Arbor, Michigan Friday, January 21, 1972 I briefs by The Associated Press 3 Silled as I over pact v 'I j r"- r r o F Box Offices Open 6:30 Electric Heaters P, r w"- : F'. W- no" METROCOLOR MGMr PLUS- WILLIAM HOLDEN "WILD RYAN O'NEAL in ROVERS" GP I av " 0.9%kw v m on vv - u-fVmiTo! - '' 1!L~ k~k~~ SST OF YPSILJ .; MMMEq FR I DAY-SATU RDAY-SUN DAY RICHARD HARRIS 0 JOHN HOUSTON "MAN IN THE WILDERNESS" GP STELLA STEVENS "BALLAD OF CABLE HOGUE" R 3rd HIT-"SUDDEN TERROR" THE NATIONAL ORGANIZATION FOR WOMEN (NOW) has demanded that Michigan Bell Telephone Co. give its female employes $91 million it says was lost to them because of alleged sex discrimination. A recent report by the federal Equal Employment Opportunities (EEOC) charged that American Telephone and Telegraph Co., Michigan Bell's corporate parent, discriminates against women in employment and promotion. Hearings by the Federal Communications Commission on the EEOC charges are pending.! SPANISH UNIVERSITY STUDENTS collided with police again yesterday, throwing stones, overturning police vehicles, blocking streets, and smashing windows in the worst clash since the disorders began four days ago. With the original issue of the suspension of medical students! faded'in the confusion of student aims and violence, police arrested over 250 Madrid University students. Several students as well as a dean and four professors were clubbed by the police. The confrontation came 24 hours before a Cabinet meeting and' threatened to provide the government of Gen. Francisco Franco into closing the university, Spain's largest, and possibly suspending some civil rights. A HEARING ON Detroit Edison Co.'s application for a $40! million interim electric rate increase in Lansing has been delayed pending a windup of the main case. Alfred Sullivan, chief hearing examiner for the State Public Service Commission, said it was decided to continue with the re- quest for a $70.1 million annual rate hike. If the annual rate increase is approved, the University would be forced to pay an additional $640,000 for its electrical service in the 1972-73 fiscal year, Vice President for Academic Affairs Allan Smith said Wednesday. THE PAY BOARD yesterday officially granted its chairman power to begin working on a backlog of about 800 pending labor I contracts, while still allowing labor or management to appeal de-. cisions to the full board. The board itself has been able to act on only eight labor contracts in the last two months, and Wednesday had to put off a decision on a trainmen's contract after two days of debate failed toI produce a decision. Chairman George Boldt said, "The backlog of cases which was beginning to build up can now be significantly reduced." * * THE BRITISH PARLIAMENT erupted yesterday after an announcement that unemployment had soared to a 25-year peak, causing the session to be suspended for 15 minutes be- fore Prime Minister Edward Heath could regain order. One Laborite from a Derbyshire district where thousands of coal miners are on strike for more pay, stalked across the floor and hurled at the prime minister a London evening newspaper. The last time the House of Commons was suspended was almost a year ago when 40 left-wing Laborites disrupted the proceedings. * *-* CHI PENG-FEI, a relatively obscure foreign minister, has been appointed as Foreign Minister by the People's Republic of China. Unlike his flamboyant predecessor, Chen Yi, who died Jan. 5,I Chi has been described as colorless and unimpressive by visitors who have met him. -Associated Press Veviushenko arrives in U.S. Soviet poet Yevgeny Yevtushenko pauses for a moment after arriving in New York Wednesday night. The world-renown poet will conduct a four-week tour of poetry reading and plans an extra month of sightseeing. CHILEAN UPHEAVAL:1 Allende's ministers quit in govt. shakeup 0 0 Rhodesians riot rith Great Britain T SALISBURY, Rhodesia R) - The Rhodesian government yesterday reported that police killed three blacks and ar- rested 44 persons during rioting by thousands of blacks pro- testing the recent Rhodesian-British political settlement. Two dozen of those arrested suffered gunshot wounds, the government said, as police moved into Harari to restore order Wednesday night. Riot policemen armed with submachineguns patrolled the streets. As one policeman put it, "We are trying to keep them on the run. And when we catch them looting, we'll shoot to kill." By dawn yesterday, they report- ed the all-black township was calm. The government said the three dead blacks had been "shot and killed whilst committing offenses." It did not elaborate. The 4.4 ar- rests were made on charges of public violence, stoning and loot- ing, the government said. The black riots, which began Sunday at Kwelo 200 miles south- west of Salisbury, were touched off by the arrival of a British commission assigned to feel out public opinion on a proposed Rho- desian-British settlement. The accord with Britain, reached last November, provides that it must be demonstrated to be ac- ceptable to most Rhodesians - in- cluding the white-ruled country's black majority - before it can go into effect. It aims at increasing gradually blacks' representation ingParlia- ment, in which they hold 16 of 66 seats. The slowness of the increase has been denounced by blacks as a means whereby the 250,000 whites can rule the nation's five million blacks almost indefinitely. London's political circles ap- peared convinced t1to outbreak of violence spelled doom for the agreement. Police fired tear gas shells dur- ing the riot into the Salisbury mobs to contain their rampage. Thirteen persons were treated at Central Hospital after Ftoning at- tacks which Rhodesian authorities blamed on blacks. The injured included two Ro- man Catholic nuns cut by flying glass when rioters smashed the windshield of them, car. 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 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 by carrier, $6 by mail. Court its rFla. prison lock o0'ut GAINESVILLE, Fla. (P) - Cir- cuit Court Judge John Crews said yesterday that Florida Corrections Director Louis Wainwright might find himself in contempt if he keeps his vow to lock new arriv- als out of the state's overcrowded prisons. Wainwright refused Tuesday, in an unprecedented and probably illegal move, to admit any new convicts into the state prisons be- cause of overcrowding. "If I'm sued, I'll lose, but I'd rather go to jail than invite an- other riot by further jamming our prisons," he said. State Attorney General Robert Shevin saidthat he supported the order to turn away any new in- mates at the gates "until further notice," but that it was probably illegal. Elsewhere, Wainwright's action elicited the praise of Ellis Mac- Dougall, Georgia's corrections di- rector. "He's the first man in the his- tory of American prisons who has had the guts to stand up on his two feet and tell the courts and everyone else that prisons are their problem as much as his," MacDougall said. When Wainwright closed the doors of the prison system, he said the population of a system built to house 8,323 convicted felons .stands at 9,568. The Lake .Butler Reception Center, where convicts are pro- cessed into the prison system was built for 710 but its head count has reached 1,320, Wain- wright said, adding no new pri- soners would be accepted there. Judge Crews yesterday said, "If our local jails are full, we have no choice but to send a convicted defendant to Lake Butler." Wainwright said he expected to avoid a confrontation with the courts. By next Tuesday, after 115 of the Lake Butler inmates have been moved out, he said, he pro- bably would accept new prisoners in priority from the most crowded county jails. SANTIAGO, Chile (A)-Presi- ident Salvador Allende's Cabi- net resigned yesterday to let him restructure the government in the wake of defeats in two special congressional elections. A two - paragraph resigna- tion statement signed by all 15 ministers climaxed a week of meetings among Allende, his Cabinet and political leaders in the leftist coalition government. Allende promised last week he would make readjustments in the Cabinet. Overwhelming defeats for government candi- dates by anti-Marxist opposition in the elections last Sunday ap- COMMANDER CODY and his Lost Planet Airmen will make their only Detroit area appearance on this tour this Sunday, Jan. 23 at Hill Auditorium. Tickets on sale now thru Sat. at Mich. Union noon-6 p.m. and both Salvation Record Stores. $1-$1.50-$2-$2.50. Also appearing will be Buddies In The Saddle and The Boogie Brothers (Steve and John) -advertisement peared to hasten the reshuffle. A spokesman at the Interior Ministry said Allende will name a new Cabinet over the week end or at the beginning of next week. The present Cabinet will remain in office on a temporary basis, he said. The ministers represent all seven parties and political movements in Allende's Popular Unity coalition, including four Socialists and three commu- nists. The president is expected to rename most of the present ministers to the new Cabinet. In the 14 months that the Popular Unity government has been in power, its programs to transform Chile into a Social- ist state have strained the na- tional economy. There has been increasing government control over the means of production and in- come has been redistributed in favor of the worker. Unfortunately, heavy govern- ment spending and disappoint- ing production at nationalized copper, mines have drained the country's foreign exchange re- serves.. i MAOR Theater Presents The Reading of the Play "Cain" by John Nemerov Followed by a discussion by Mr. Yaacov Orland, Israeli playwright, producer, and director, on "Israeli Theater." Sat., Jan. 22, 8 p.m. at HILLEL, 1429 Hill -Admission Free- r_ 4Q SHOP TONIGHT UNTIL 9:00 P.M. SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 5:30 P.M. p> Kaleidoscope Presents DRAMA FROM SAN QUENTIN THE CAGE The play, The Cage, is written, produced and performed by San Quentin parolees. The Cage is a frank, direct, biting drama of four men locked in a cell. It is a message play, but does not preach. It informs and communicates with its audiences. Friday, Jan. 21, 1972 8:00 P.M.-Pease Aud., EMU $2.00 General Admission 0 Levi brushed denim jeans.. the softest, best looking flares around. But, then, cotton jeans by Leviu have always been top choice. Metal button closure, western front pockets, bock patch pockets. Navy, brown, grope. 28-36 sizes. $8. Friday & Saturday STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE with Marion Brando, Vivien Leigh, Kim Hunter, & Karl Maiden directed by Elia Kazan screenplay by Tennessee Williams *'-