-rn I CELEBRATE! In celebration of the end of classes, UAC and WCBN present ALL CAMPUS SOCK HOP SATURDAY, APRIL 22, 8 P.M. I NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Q AP 4bP tr4t n tt, tt page three Ann Arbor, Michigan Thursday, April 20, 1972 Thursday1 April 20, 1972 FREE Admission! FREE Prizes! 231 S. State Street DIAL 662-6264 OPEN 12:45 FEATURE 1, 3, 5, 7, and 9 p.m. ADDED ATTRACTION-"CRUNCH BIRD" Oscar Winning Cartoon ACADEMY AWARD WINNER is "One Of TheYear's VINCENT CANBY1 New York Times --CHARLES CHAMPLIN Los Angeles Times I -LWANDA HALE New York Daily News -STEWART KLEIN WNEW-TV -BILL COLLINS Philadelphia Inquirer WL Sews briefs by The Associated Press WHITE HOUSE AIDE Peter Flanigan agreed yesterday to testify on specific matters before the Senate Judiciary Committee in its investigation of acting Atty. Gen. Richard Kleindienst. In a letter to the committee, Flanigan said he would disclose to -the committee his knowledge about the selection of San Diego as the site of the Republican National Convention as well as what occurred during a meeting in the office of former Atty. Gen. John Mitchell last April 29. APOLLO 16 ASTRONAUTS John Young, Charles Duke, Jr., and Thomas Mattingly rocketed into lunar orbit yesterday to begint a six-day scientific exploration of the moon. Both the spacecraft, lunar lander Orion and commandship Casper, and the astronauts themselves were in good shape and ready for the challenge, despite a series of problems that began almost from the hour of launch last Sunday. Today, after orbiting the moon once in the- lunar lander, Young and Duke will ignite the powerful rocket engine on Orion and begin a long-arching drop toward a, crater-scarred plateau high in the moon's southern mountains. THE FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION yesterday accused the nation's top three manufacturers or painkillers of unfair and misleading advertising. The complaint challenges claims made by American Home Products Corp., Bristol Myers, and Sterling Drug Inc., that its products are superior to others. Proposed orders by the commission would require the companies to disclose the presence of aspirin or caffein in their products and call on the manufacturers to run corrective advertisements for two years to counter the alleged misrepresentations. S* * x BRITAIN'S INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS COAJRT yesterday or- dered a 14-day cooling-off period in the nationwide railroad 'go- slow' strike, which has reduced rail traffic to a crawl and enraged thousands of commuters. 1 The decision of the court was mate on a request from the government for a 21-day cooling-off period. The three unions involved in the wage dispute boycotted the hearing, and whether they or individual railmen will comply was not known. * * * THE NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER released 14 feminine names for this season's storms, and a feminist has lodged a protest. Roxcy Bolton, a former national vice-president of the National Organization of Women, says she has asked the National Weather Service to change its policy and find some other method of naming hurricanes, but has been ignored. "They just won't change. They are too conditioned to this sort of thing and don't realize they're casting a slur on waven," said Bolton. I Irish riot probe hits' both sides LONDON (T - In a report made public yesterday, Brit- ain's senior judge rapped Ro- man Catholic marchers and British troops alike for the Bloody Sunday shooting that killed 13 civilians in London- derry in January. Appointed by Prime Minister Edward Heath's government to in- Inflation lowers gains .a in first quarterGNP Prices rise over Nixon's projection WASHINGTON ('--The na- tion's economy scored a strong production gain during the first three months of 1972, but inflation soared to the high- est rate in more than a year the government said yester- I 1 I vestigate the charges that British paratroopers fired indiscriminately into a crowd of unarmed civilians, LordhChief Justice Widgery report- ed that the troops were fired on first, but added that none of the Catholics killed or wounded "is proved to have been shot whilst handling a firearm or bomb." { However, Widgery said that he had a "strong suspicion that some Ass others had been firing weapons "or handling bombs in the coursehof Rep. Cornelius Gallagher (D-N.J.), tal the afternoon and that yet others Capitol yesterday after a speech ont had been closely supporting them." in which he accused the FBI of plotting The justice said the first shot Galagher was indicted last week on came from a lone sniper using a Gasinherurandconspiacy. high velocty weapon. He said some evasion, perjury and conspiracy. of the soldiers "showed a high de- gree of responsibility" but the fir- HURDLES REMAIN: ing by others "bordered on the '__________________ reckless." Widgery an ex-soldier, said.E R breakdown in army discipline. For A the'most part the soldiers acted asi they did because they thought their orders required it." But no order can insure a soldier will al-I ways act wisely, he added. WASHINGTON () - Con- How Widgery suggested that the IRA gress took 49 years to approve tures h; which is fighting to unite, North- the Equal Rights Amendment, ing the ern Ireland with the Irish Repub- but supporters predict the states has de Iic to the south, may have spirit- will need only two years to put In] ed away some victims of the the legislation into the Constitempt shooting to hide evidence of itstution. amend involvement. Less than one month after tive vi His report drew immediate com- Congress passed the ban against fromR ment from activists amongcthe discrimination on the basis of the H( province's Catho and Protestantsex, 13 states have ratified the ployes1 communities, amendment and a number of guson, others seem on the verge of do- and Bernadette Devlin declared Wid- ing so. Commi gery was the latest in "an ever- Within two hours of Senate "I n ment liars sent to slander and li-passage of the amendment, Ha- liberat etliahentorelandera"dli-waii ratified it. New Hampshire dared bel the people of Ireland." and Nebraska, both anxious to put m Frazer Agnew, head of the Prot- be second, rushed through ap- the Ga estaht-based Young Unionist As- proval the next day, women sociation, asserted the report vin- Then, in steady succession, dicated the paratroopers and came Iowa, Idaho, Delaware, The "proved by implication the subver- Kansas, Texas, Maryland, Ten- congres sive nature of the so-called civil nessee, Alaska, Rhode Island after h rights movement." and, on Tuesday, New Jersey. every C tWi ever, t have vot e meas veloped Michiga at qui lient ews on Myra otel an Union, a Detrc the M ission. ever sa ed," R in a f an over arden 1." amen ssional having Congre< BI ks to the flo his po charge The Gross National Product, (GNP), the output of the nation's goods and services, increased by 11.8 per cent or $30.3 billion in the January-March quarter. How- ever, more than half of the in- crease, 6.2 per cent, resulted from higher prices. Associated Press GNP is the broadest measure of the economy. The Nixon adminis- tration has projected that it will newsmen at the rise by 9.4 per cent for all of 1972. oor of the House The increase was about in line with litical destruction. administration projections al- s of income tax though the rate of inflation was sharply above the forecast. .-According to administraton pro- jections, about two-thirds of the expected 9.4 per cent growth is supposed to be a noninflationary * gain. The figures for the first r ei ct quarter showed that the gain in that period, with inflation dis- counted, was 5.3 per cent. 0 yeaPr s4 This was slower than the 5.8 per cent recorded in the last three months of 1971, when the economy hree state legisla- quickened after a mid-year slow- ted against approv- down. At that time, GNP increased ure and opposition $19.5 billion but the rate of infla- d in several others. tion was only 1.7 per cent. an, where an at- Democratic National Committee ck approval of the Chairman Lawrence O'Brien said was blocked, nega- the report that inflation consumed the measure came more than half the reported econ- Wolfgang, head of ; omic growth for the first quarter d Restaurant Em- "dramatizes the need for much Rep. Rosetta Fer- stronger controls on profits and oit black Democrat, interest rates." ichigan Women's OBrien said the economic sta- bilization program "will remain a id I wanted to be sham until Mr. Nixon takes firm ep. Ferguson de- and decisive steps to control rec- loor speech. "God ord-breaking profits being report- all the animals of ed every day by corporations and big business." clay. 1 i KM i . 1 S tC S r of Eden, including dment won final approval March 22 been introduced in ss since 1922_ N ss. .In presents TONIGHT and FRIDAY LES DIABOLIQUES Dir. Henry-Georges Clou- zot, 1955. The Greatest Chiller of- Them All. (Scarier than Hitchcock.) The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. 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 Oh'o); $7.50 non-local mail (other states and foreign). Program Information 8-6416 1214 S. UNIVERSITY BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR! --National Board of Review STOP THE SALE OF POLITICAL POWER Lobbies and corporate special interest groups have deprived the public of decent medical care, adequate housing, mass transpor- tation, and a clean environment. Perry Bullard is not for sale. PERRY BULLARD FOR STATE REPRESENTATIVE Vote for Perry Bullard in the Democratic primary, Aug. 8 1 No one can beat the N French when it comes murder! PLUS A SHORT: THE TELLTALE HEART ARCH ITECTURE AUDITORIUM to I Cakar aPktumesntsa PlaoivPmdud Doman Polanskfs film of MACBETH if you will be out of town, fill out absentee ballot applications at 210 Nickels Arcade or the Fishbowl. To volunteer to help or for information, call 769-2406 or 764-4742. i I I I .nee, j I i __ I ((j d 9 p.m. 75c Wed.-Sot.-Sun. 1:15-3:45 6:15-8:45 Mon.-Tues. Thurs.-Fri. 6:45 and 9:05 U PRESENTS-THE JAY WARD CARTOON FESTIVAL! A 90 MINUTE FEATURE LENGTH COMPILATION OF ROCKY and BULLWINKLE A If you count on your car for lots of It's a fact-more drivers in the Mid- and