i ' NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 C14 r ir4ig tn aa40,1y page three 1 Ann Arbor, Michigan Sunday, September 26, 1971 hews briefs By The Associated Press U.S. planes continue strikes on N. Vietnam bases for fifth day rtieM 482 -3300 ! u FREE LIGHTED PARKING REMARKABLE ! A STUNNING VISUAL RECREATION ! -New York "A MASTERWORK OF POWER AND BEAUTY!A remarkable achievement!" -Cue Magazine "Stunning, "A MASTERPIECE!" Richly Romantic!" -McCall's -Playboy "EXTRAORDINARILY BEAUTIFUL!" -Rex Reed THE CELEBRATED STORY OF A MAN OBSESSED BY IDEAL BEAUTY. VICE PRESIDENT Nguyen Cao Ky and top opposition lead- ers met yesterday night apparently to map new election protest strategy following a day of ineffectual anti-government demon- strations in South Vietnam's capital. Ky said the meeting was "just a gathering of friends . .. discuss- ing the problems of the country," but the presence of major oppo- sition groups indicated that anti-Thieu strategy was the main sub- ject of discussion. COMMUNIST PARTY CHAIRMAN Mao Tse-Tung of theI People's Republic of China "is in good health and the situation in Peking is normal", according to a Japanese newsman in China, reported a Tokyo newspaper today. In Hong Kong, a newspaper quoted a traveler arriving there from China as saying a purge of political opponents of Premier Chou{ En-lai was under way. The Japanese report on Mao's health and the situation in Peking was published by Yomiuri Shimbun, a nationally. circulated news-J paper, following numerous reports that something important was; happening there. Mao's health and a possible purge have been frequent subjects of the speculation. * * * THE NEW YORK State Corrections Department said yesterday that another Attica Correctional Facility inmate died at a Buffalo hospital, bringing the death toll from the convict upris- ing to 42. The department identified the latest victim as Edward Menefi, 20, adjudged a youthful offender and sentenced in 1969. The exact cause of his death was not given, pending an autopsy. However, a spokes- man said he assumed that Menefi died of gunshot wounds. PRESIDENT NIXON flew to the Northwest yesterday to pro- mote a maritime strike settlement and abolish authority for World War-type detention camps in a gesture he linked with an historic meeting in Anchorage, Alaska today with Emperor Hirohito of Japan. -Associated Press Justice Hugo Black IBlack's burial set for Tuesday in capital with simple honors Nixon of a 1950 thousands, announced that he had signed a bill abolishing provisions law that authorized detention camps of the type used for, of Japanese-Americans in World War IL WINNER GRAND PRIX CANNES 25th ANNIVERSARY AWARD WARNER BROS PRESE-l - S A FIL Y BY rI C ' DrA OGRE .LT- , ! E u N/I ANDRESEN Sr~ILVANA MANGMO H/icoCJ~ / MYiSCONTt BADMLUCCO MUS 1BY GUST ~4ER "/l DRECTED BY UCNu 0VISCONTIlSOIAT GOROON D EXECUTIVE PRODUCER - *AMOGkW / FROM WARNER BROS. A RNNEY LEISURE $ERY" GP] ALI NO VSCN1 In a statement, Nixon said that the mere existence of legal authority for detention centers had stirred concern among rpany Americans that someday it might be used to apprehend and detain1 citizens holding unpopular views. "I have supported and signed this repeal," Nixon said, "in order toI put an end to such suspicions . . . There is no place in American life for the kind of anxiety-however unwarranted-which the Emergency Detention Act has evidently engendered." Later; after meeting with representatives of the striking Inter- national Longshoremen's and Warehousemen's Union and the Pacific Maritime Association, the employer group, Nixon announced that they had agreed to try to reach settlement by the end of next week. The strike began July 1, shutting down 24 ports on the West: Coast from San Diego, Calif., to Seattle, Wash., idling more than 150 ships and causing cargo losses estimated in the millions. * * SEN. ROBERT P. GRIFFIN has asked the Justice Depart- ment to intervene in the Pontiac controversy, convinced that school integration by busing is "counterproductive." "Instead of helping in the effort to promote better race rela- tions", Griffin said in a statement Friday, school busing "is re- sulting in more bitterness and more polarization." WASHINGTON (RP) - Fcrm- er Supreme Court Justice Hugo L. Black, whose belief that the Constitution meant what it said* led him to landmark defense of individual freedom, will be buried here Tuesday with simple hon- ors. Black died early Saturday, lit- tle more than a week after he retired following 34 yeas on the high court. His retirement prompted a national outpouring of praise for a legal carear that found its bedrock in the Bill of Rights. A spokesman at Bethesda. Naval Hospital said the 85-year- old jurist died at 1 a.m. of the effects of a stroke and inflama- tion of the arteries. He will be buried at 3 p.m. at Arlington National Cemetery, an hour after services at Wash- ington Cathedral. Black's death came while a longtime colleague, and fre- qumt opponent, on the h i g h bench lay in grave condition at another Washington hospital. Justice John M. Harlan, a lead- er of the court's conservatives, retired a few days after Black, and it was disclosed that he is suffering from cancer. The Clay County, Ala., shop- keeper's son had been a country lawyer, a member of ,tne Ku Klux Klan, a county prosecutor, New Deal senator and a shaper of American Law. He carried with him a thumb- worn copy of the Constitution and an unshakable belief that the Founding Fathers under- stood the English language, that they meant what they said. "No law means no law." Black said with simplicity in describ- ing his position that the First Amendment guarantees of free- dom of the press, religion and speech were absolute. Perhaps Black's most famous decision involved banning gov- ernment-sponsored prayer in the schools. "It is no part of the business of government to com- pose official prayers for a n y group of the American people to recite," he said. Most recently he made clear his position in concurring with the -majority to allow publica- tion of the Pentagon Papers. He found some of his col- leagues, ready to hold that the general provisions of the ori- ginal Constitution somehow overshadowed the later, speci- fic language of the Sill of Rights. "I can imagine no greater perversion of history," B 1 a c k declared. President Nixon found that Black brought to the court "a mind that was brilliant and a characterthat was earnest and strong." Chief Justice Warren E. Burger said Black's death "re- moves from the scene one of the authentic legal philosophers of our time." The man Nixon called "this noble American" was born Feb. 27, 1886, the youngest of a family of eight. He earned his law de- gree in 1906 and began to im- press those with influence. After World War I service, he return- ed to prosper in private practice in Birmingham. He joined the Klan in 1923 and quit it in 1925 to make his successful campaign for the Sen- ate where he supported much of the New Deal legislation pro- posed by President Franklin D. Roosevelt. SAIGON D - American fighter-bombers struck for a fifth straight day in N o r t h Vietnam yesterday w h i le Communist forces stepped up shelling attacks in S o u t h Vetnam. The allied commands. report- ed 13 rocket and mortar barrages against U.S. and South Vietnam-, ese units and bases, including shellings of two air bases and a South Vietnamese task force headquarters at Da Nang. The air strike in North Viet- nam hit two anti-aircraft sites near the Mu Gia Pass, a mountain gateway 75 miles north of t h e Demilitarized Zone, the U.S. Com- mand said. North Vietnam fun- nels men and war supplies through the pass into the Ho Chi Minh trail in eastern Laos for South Vietnam and Cambodia. The U.S. "protective reaction" strike capped five cosecutive days of American raids in North Vietnam that began Tuesday with a massive 200 bombing sorties Int the southern panhandle, many oft them aimed at fuel depots. It was the 64th "protective re, action" raid so far this year over North Vietnam. These strikes are made when U.S. planes are alleg- edly fired upon or threatened with hostile action. In the North, the mounting air action stemmed from increased U.S. air strikes aginst the Ho Chi Minh trail, resulting in greater anti-aircraft fire. The U.S. effort is aimed at wrecking the trail and mountain passes leading into it be- fore the dry season arrives in about two weeks. That is when Hanoi begins its annual push of supplies and men southward. In South Vietnam, the U.S. Command reported an American helicopter was shot down 27 miles southeast of the Khe Sanh near the Laos border. Ground fight- ing once more added up to iso- lated skirmishes around the coun- try. The helicopter downing raised to 7,958 the announced total of U.S. aircraft of all types lost to all causes, combat and mechani- cal, in the Indochina war since the start of 1961. In another development, the U.S. Navy turned over to t h e South Vietnamese navy 15 more vessels. The Navy said the turn- over raised to nearly 900 the num- her of vessels given to the South Vietnamese since November 1968, the start of the Vietnamization program. -ICE- a future-fantasy of revo- lutionary struggle within the U.S. made by revolu- nary filmmakers. sex and violence .U..and vision TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY Sept. 28 & 29 ARM/Michigan Film Society DIAL 8-6416 SHOED~ REVIEWERS HAD THIS TO SAY! aO F i*FTH Forum A TMN JEUE A LIBERTY DOWNTOWN ANN ARBOR MNFORMAT/ON 7618700 SUNDAY 2:15 e 4:30 6:45 * 9:00 Griffin also suggested that the U.S. Supreme come another chance "to clarify the law". Court would wel- E I a I >!". ;.: "THE FUNNIEST MOVIE I'VE SEEN THIS YEAR! I SEATS NOW! 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