OPENS WEDNESDAY lonnie elder's CEREMONIES IN DARK OLD MEN Mendelssohn Theatre-January 26-29-8 P.M. Box Office opens Monday at 12:30 P.M. -UNIVERSITY PLAYERS - Special Matinee, Friday, All seats $1.00 NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 T4C Sft i& zrn aatit page three Ann Arbor, Michigan Sunday, January 23, 1972 I Snews bTeifs by The Associated Press BLACKS SHOW DISAPPROVAL Rhodesia plan threatened COMADRCD SHERE COMMANDER CODY'S HERE COMMANDER CODY'S HERE TONIGHT 8 P.M. Hill Auditorium Tickets at the door, $2.50, $2, $1.50, $1 *$1 00,000 RACKHAM STUDENTS $100,000 Included with your ballot in the mailing for the Rackham Student. Government election is a questionnaire about the sources of money you are tapping to support your studies. It is very important that you fill out and return this questionnaire. Currently all Teaching Fellows; most Research Assistants' and all Staff Assistants' salaries include a sum of money expected to be returned to the university as tuition. The difficulty with this "incestuous financing" is that this sum is part of a graduate student employee's TAXABLE income. If this sum were delivered in the form of a tuition scholarship, it would be non-tax- able. This might save Rackham students more than $100,000 in taxes. The U presently does not, however, possess adequate information to assess the costs and benefits of changing from "incestuous financing" to tuition scholarships. The RSG questionnaire is an attempt to provide this informa- tion. IT IS ESPECIALLY IMPORTANT FOR TFs, RAs, and OTHER U EMPLOYEES TO RETURN THE QUESTION- NAIRE. TIe questionnaire may be returned with your, ballot in the envelope provided either by campus mail or U.S. mail. Rackham Student Government Executive Council THE NORTH ATLANTIC ALLIANCE will offer Malta over $18 million in aid to help keep Russian ships from using the island base. The United States, West Germany and Italy are reported ready to supply most of the money. The aid is in addition to the $35 mil- lion being offered as yearly rent for bases. Though officially unconnected with the rental offer, the promise of aid was clearly dependent on Malta's Prime Minister Dom Mint- off's agreement on the use of the bases. CANADIAN STRIKING AIR TRAFFIC CONTROLLERS reached tentative agreement yesterday on a wage settlement. If ratified, grounded commercial airplanes should be back into the sky by Wednesday. Michael Bolger, the government's chief negotiator, said the set- tlement includes a 27-month contract providing a 17 per cent pay roise and a drop in the work week from 36 hours to 34%. Even with the expected return of air traffic controllers, the trouble in Canadian commercial airports is not over. The technicians who operate and maintain radar and radio equipment staged a 24-hour walkout last week and have threatened a full-scale strike of their own next month. * * * ALEXANDER GINSBURG, controversial Russian politicalI writer, has been released from prison and returned to Moscow. Ginsburg was sentenced to five years in prison in January 1968 for writing the "White Book" on the Sinyavsky-Daniel literary trial. His book of documents about the 1966 trial of writers Andrei D. Sinyavsky and Yuli M. Daniel, including a transcript of the closed proceedings against the two writers, was published in the West but not in the Soviet Union. Ginsburg denied at the trial that the book was anti-Soviet. THE YUGOSLAV GOVERNMENT announced yesterday it will recognize Bangladesh. Bulgaria, East Germany, Poland, Barbados, Bhutan, Burma, Nepal, Mongolia, and India also have announced their recognition of the new country.I None of the big powers, however, has recognized the new nation. The United States and the People's Republic of China 'expressed support for Pakistan in the war, while the Soviet Union backed India and the East Pakistani independence movement. * * * A 15 HOUR CURFEW has been called today in Istanbul,I while police search all buildings. Istanbul has been under martial law since last April, as part of a law and order campaign launched by the government of Premier Nigat Erim. Gen. Fak Turun, the martial law commander, ordered the cur- few and search for extremists of the right and the left and "fugitives from the law". Police have orders to search all buildings, breaking in if necessary, shooting wanted criminals who resist them. LONDON L( - The past week of black-white violence with.a death toll of 15 threatens collapse for Britain's con- troversial plan to grant Rhodesia independence. Most authorities in London, including Prime Minister Edward Heath, expect a showdown by the coming weekend. The agreement, negotiated last November by the British Foreign secretary, Sir Alec Douglas Home, and Prime Minis- ter Ian Smith, was supposedly planned to cover Britain's obligation to the former colony's black majority. But the agreement actually provides for very limited political and social advancement for the country's 5 million blacks, who outnumber the 250,000 whites. The controversy.flared when a British commission under the former Judge Lord Pearce =---- - began to test public reaction last week to the agreement,, taking opinions of the Afri- cans."" The main reason, according to I Pearce, is that Smith's all-white government is not permitting thef "normal political activities" it' " promised.:hit roui tes~ Black and white opponents of 1I PO'kJ the settlement have been jailed. Meetings of commissioners and SAIGON (A) - Laotian troops black leaders have been canceled gained control yesterday of an by Rhodesian police. African ral- important hill near Long Cheng lies have been banned, nationalist and advanced along a nearby organizers have been prevented ridge in the continuing two-week from visiting remote tribal ter- conflict over that army base. ritories. Reports from Vientiane, the ad- Riots flared in Shabani, in ministrative capital of Laos, indi- Gwelo, in Harari, near Salisbury, cate that the hill was previously and in Umtali. With equal speed, used by North Vietnamese antiair- Smith's police went into action, craft military gunners to fire on leaving a toll of 15 blacks dead U.S. and Laotian planes. and dozens wounded. While there were no new cas- The controversy surprised the ualty reports from Long Cheng, 78 British. They had been confident miles north of Vientiane, the bat- the Pearce commission would tling has already cost both sides come back with a report saying over 500 reported dead. most blacks were in favor of the In the fighting along the ridge, settlement. But initial reports sug- the Laotian forces recaptured a gested the opposite was true, ac- helicopter landing pad lost Fri- cording to most reports filtering day to the North Vietnamese. back to London. dyt h ot itaee Meanwhile in other action to possible to function, even if Smiththenortw ,rthetiLamesroops, restores "normal political activi- backed by North Vietnamese artil- ties," the commission's ultimate lery and tanks, cut Highway 13 at judgment could turn out to be the junction of that Highway and that most Rhodesians reject the Highway 7. terms of the London-Salisbury Though the junction had been deal: threatened before during Com- Most of Pearce's commissioners munist offensives, this was the are due to 'report to Pearce by first time the Communists have. Thursday for a reassessment of seized control. theirDposition. Desnite this westward advanc _Associated Press. Prime Minister Heath signs treaty Common Market treaty. signed despite pro testis BRUSSELS (P) - Britain, Denmark, Ireland and Norway signed treaties yesterday to make them full members of the European Common Market by January, 1973, after their parliaments vote their approv- al. The ceremonies were marred by a demonstration of 50 per- sons opposing Britain's entry into the market. British Prime Minister Ed- ward Heath signed along with Premier Otto Krag of Denmark. Prime Minister Jack Lynch of Ireland andrPremier Trygve Bratteli of Norway. The four nations join the world's most powerful trading ports. Estimates predicting that the British action will mean nearly a $100 billion a year loss in foreign trade by 'the United States have been revised. Through negotiations on ex- panding the Market began when the U.S. balance of trade was favorable, now the United States is buying much more abroad than it sells, so the big loss will hurt much more. Heads of the 10 member gov'. ernments meet later this year to plot their new course. They ap- pear agreed that it should lead at first to a kind of loose fed- eration in which the member countries would try to coordi- I &l f 11 I FRATERNITY OPEN HOUSE bloc, entitled to buy each mem- nate their foreign pnlicies as ber nation's goods duty free and well as their international eco- charge the same tariffs on im- nomic policies. s r t r t / I Get the town's Deliciously Different Roast Beef Sandwich!, Buy an Arby's today! The proof is in the eatingI DINNER-PAC Roast Beef Sandwich ~ULWWPoHatoCROWD - - uno-rDssr / I COWAM ORWAC N LY $1.15'. * I 3021 WASH TENAW AVE. ; r ~Near Platt Rd., ANN ARBOR PRESENT THIS COUPON--NO.LIM T I ~ ~ ~1~ ~ ~ ~ "THE MOVIE IS A GREAT BIG RICH AMERICANA EXPERIENCE...GO!" - ~-COSMOPOLIT AN MAGAZINE .is better than he has been in years!" -TIME MAGAZINE the best work of a lifetime!" -TIME MAGAZINE is simply fantastic!" -CoSMOPOLITAN MAGAZINE TflIr/I5L 6 RRJZII) r sensitive" ."'fineP" CORONET MAGAZINE -CBS-TV 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- gan, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carier,, $11 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5 by carrier, $6 by mail. Premier Souvanna Phouma said he does not expect the North Viet- namese to drive on south to Vien- tiane. Souvanna partially attributed the early and unusually violent North Vietnamese offensive to President Nixon's upcoming trip to Peking. CHI PHI, 1530 Washlenaw-1 61-5020 DELTA UPSILON, 1331 HiII-161-5227 I LAMBDA CHI ALPHA, 1601 Washtenaw-761-2313 SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON, 1408 Washtenaw-161-2920 THETA CHI, 1351 Washtenaw-161-5654 PHI GAMMA DELTA, 101 Oxford Road-161-5950 I RICHARD JAECKEL- LINDA LAWSON CLIFF P1 ! S Screenplay by JOHN GAY Based on the Novel by KEN KESEY Music by HENRY MANCiNI birected by PAUL NEWMAN- Produced by JOHN FOREMAN: , AUniversal/Newman-Foreman Picture TECHNMCOLOR *-PANAVtSIONe Program Information 665-6290 Today at 1-3-5-7-9 the ann aibor ilm co-operative PRESENTING 25 FINE FILMS THIS TERM TUESDAY-JANUARY 25th ONLY: I "" I PSI UPSiLON, 1000 Hill-761-1055 THE NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD DIRECTED BY GEORGE A. ROMERO. A cult low-budget "sleeper." Absolutely the scariest movie ever. Beyond horror! Racial conflict and the meaning of "human." 1 I 1!