:: - MEET GINGER- Her weapon is hr body... She can cut you, kill you or cure you! starringCOLOR y D ell;.' CHg AFAO- NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-05304 aloe ,4'it4ig CYt out in page three Ann Arbor, Michigan Thursday, September 30, 1971 Thursday, September 30, 1971 " -i I~m'mImm Icnt I Ant We give students a break, with special reduced rates in Hilton Hotels from Boston to Honolulu. (Faculty and graduate school students get a dis- count too.) Let us send you a pamphlet listing the Hilton Hotels and Inns that offer special student rates. Also a Hilton Student Identification Card to use when- ever you register. Mail this, coupon to Hilton Hotels Corporation, Travel Department, National Sales Division, 9880 Wilshire Blvd., Beverly Hills, California 90210. We want to make it easy for you to come visit the Hiltons.J( Name Address ,. City State. Zi p College- _cl ass of 19 [ IHILTO n [ m[ -- - - - news briefs By The Asociated Press THE UNITED STATES is undertaking a new international drug-control program aimed at halting the flow of heroin to the U.S. from Asia before it assumes serious proportions. The plan involves several U.S. agencies under State Department guidance and is based on the assumption that the expected drastic: reduction in the opium-poppy crops of Turkey and other East Medi- terranean areas will force drug dealers to seek alternate sources for their product, particularly in Southeast Asia. A KEY PROSECUTION WITNESS was not prompted before he identified Col. Oran Henderson as the officer to whom he gave an eyewitness account of atrocities at My Lai, a former Army lawyer testified yesterday. Former Sec. 4 Lawwrence Colburn, a helicopter door gunner on the My Lai operation, is the only one of three men to positively iden- tify Henderson as the officer they reported to about My Lai on March 18, 1969, two days after the killings of Vetnamese civilian. The defense is trying to bar Colburn's appearance before the jury on the grounds that his identification of Henderson is tainted because the government improperly showed him photographs of the defendant. CANTON TELEVISION failed" to deliver its promised "im- portant news program" yesterday, disappointing Western ob- servers who hoped to get a clue to recent unusual events in Red China. Peking's announcement a week ago that tomorrow's National Day parade had been canceled stirred speculation that something was happening inside China. Canton television had announced the special news program would deal- with "circumstances of the Oct. 1 National Day program." Instead it reeled off three routine films from Peking, including one showing Premier Chou En-lai watching an Albanian gymnastics ex- hibition. VIOLENT CRIME increased 11 per cent in the nation during the first half of this year, outpacing a 7 per cent rise in all serious crime, the FBI reported yesterday. The over-all seven per cent increase in serious crimes com- pares with an 11 per cent increase recorded during th first six months of 1970, but the jump in violent crimes exceeds the 10 pe cent hike recorded last year. The FBI also noted that 80 law-enforcement officers had been murdered in the first eight months of 1971. One hundred officers were murdered during all of 1970, 70 of whom were killed in the similar eight-month period, the FBI said. WHITE HOUSE PICKETING by some members of the Na- tional League of Families of American Prisoners and Missing in Southeast Asia has apparently embarrassed their national or- ganization, which yesterday disavowed sponsorship of the pro- test. In the final business session of their annual meeting the families adopted resolutions making sure members do not represent their individual political views asthose of the league. Dissident members of the League picketed the White House Tuesday with demands that President Nixon set a date for Viet- nam withdrawal to get back prisoners. PRESIDENT NIXON, decrying what he called "growing and disturbing isolationism in our country," told international finance leaders Wednesday that hisadministration will continue to press for a strong world role. In urging International Monetary Fund governors and foreign finance ministers to seek permanent solutions to world financial problems, Nixon said political differences that divide the nations can be substantially reduced if the monetary crisis is eliminated. HERBIE HANCOLK SEXTET >. ODY46Y1 CONTEMPORARY JAZZT U QUINTET T U S FRI., OCT. 1: 9:30-2 a.m. SAT., OCT. 2: 9:30-2 a.m. 'MN SUN., OCT. 3: M 9-1 a.m. " SUN. MATINEE: $2.75 208 W. 4-6fp.m' . r 208 l. CTD ~rA f~kl2CD8 W - Senate denies fund scut for F14, A~ WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate gave lopsided votes of con- fidence yesterday to two of the Pentagon's most criticized weapons projects by refusing to cut funds for the Navy's F14 fighter and the Safeguard Missile Defense System. The votes on the F14 and Safeguard, latest in a string of vic- tories for the Nixon administration on major weapons proposals, appeared to insure approval without major reduction of the $21- billion military procurement bill. Final action is likely next week. First, by a vote of 61-28, the Senate shot down a move by Sen. William Proxmire (D-Wis.), to cut $801.6 million for procurement of 48 of the carrier based F14 planes. -Associated Pr President Nixon meets at the White House yesterday with Sovi Foreign Affairs Minister Andrei Gromyko. (See story below -CKS-NIXON BA CKS NIXON-: ess et P.) Thieu orders police to shoot demonstrators SAIGON UP) - President Nguyen Van Thieu surprised supporters and foes alike Wednesday by ordering police to "shoot to kill" antigovernment demonstrators who throw fire bombs or endanger lives by other means. Thieu's unexpected crackdown came as new disturbances flared in Da Nang, the nation's second largest city. One student was wounded in the head. The incident occurred when about 300 Buddhist students and monks clashed with police in the city's third straight day of protests against Thieu's decision to run unopposed in Sunday's presidential election. I - - ------ The demonstrators hurled rocks and fire bombg at combat police surrounding the Tinh Hoi Pagoda, the largest in the northern port city. Police responded by firing tear gas to disperse the partici- pants. newsappeal Thieu issued his "shoot to kill" order in a closed meeting in Sai- gon with 400 police officials from oe ce them at the same time to con- tinue using as little force as ne- cessary to control antigovern- ment demonstrations. "Acts of burning and inciting people to riot are acts aimed at preventing people from going to vote," Thieu said. "If p e o p 1 ej want to oppose me, they must do it in legal ways. Job program A special three-phaseeprogram to aid University engineeringj graduates prepare for the increas- ingly competitive job market is being planned jointly by the En- gineering Council and the col- lege's technical and honorary so- cieties. The "Job - Hunting Workshop," to be conducted by the College's placement service office, will be broken into three consecutive Wednesday evening sessions be- ginning Sept. 29. BELFAST, Northern Ireland (P) - A bomb ripped through a crowded Belfast bar yesterday night, killing two persons and wounding 14, as terrorists spurn- ed appeals for peace. Fearing the blast might set off further rioting, police and Brit- ish troops sealed off the area j around the Four Step Inn in the Protestant Shankill road district. The bomb went off when the bar was packed with soccer fans on their way home from a game. Terrorists also exchanged fire with troops in sporadic clashes, bombed a bus depot, and fired a three-footbantitank rocket at an army post, but missed the target. There were no casualties in any of these predawn outbursts. The renewed violence flared within hours after Prime Minis- ters Edward Heath of Britain, Jack Lynch of the Irish Republic and Brian Faulkner of Northern Ireland issued a join appeal for peace in Ulster, the official name of the six Northern Irish counties under British rule. at State and Liberty Program information 662-6264 Warren ates "EASY RIDIN' ENTERTAINMENT -N.Y. Daily Mirror "AN AMBITIOUS MOVIE RISING TO THE MYSTICAL" --Roger Greenspun, N.Y. Times I OPEN 12:45 Shows at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 p.m. l F mm..mnm lerna Bloom Fatlr rona"a "The Hireland" Then, by a 64-21 margin, it re- jected an amendment by Sen. Harold Hughes (D-Iowa) to cut $639 million from the bill and bari funds for deployment, construc- tion and procurement of the anti- ballistic missile (ABM). Several longtime arms control advocates abandoned their oppo- sition to the Safeguard and sup- ported the Nixon administration's position that it is needed as a bar- gaining chip in Strategic Arms Limitation Talks with the Soviet Union. In arguing for his amendment, Proxmire said that with some slight modification the present F4 would outperform the F14. In other actions, the Senate also agreed to vote today on theI latest effort to force a deadline for total U.S. withdrawal from In- dochina. -- - --- ----- - ---- ---- 3DYA56(e Y* tc FRI. SAT. HuronZ ing 11 a.m.-2 a.m. R-NO PRICE INCREASE 'SEY. W Y S+Y" DISCUSS ARMS Nixon, Gromyko confer WASHINGTON () - Amid talk of new East-West negotia- tions, President Nixon met yes- terday with Soviet Foreign Min- ister Andrei Gromyko on dis- armament and other major is- sues concerning the two super powers. Gromyko has sounded a let's- ease-tensions theme with a pol- icy speech to the United Na- tions Tuesday, portraying the time ripe for a world disarma- ment talks and for a European security conference. The Washington meeting was Nixon's first with a high So- viet envoy since Gromyko was at the United Nations a year ago - and Washington is par- ticularly interested in what practical terms the Kremlin may have in mind on disarma- ment negotiations. Nixon wants more progress at the U.S.-Soviet Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT). SALT negotiators recessed at Helsinki last week still some distance apart on proposals to curb antiballistic missiles (AB- Ms) and offensive missiles. The three-way summit, the first of its kind in 46 years, made no headway toward a political settle- ment beyond an agreement to keep talking. The outlawed Irish Republican Army - the IRA - which claims responsibility for much of the terror in Ulster, im- mediately served notice that what it called "inconclusive talks were not good enough. The IRA waits to force the British out of Ulster and reunite the largely Protestant province with the predominantly Roman Catholic Irish Republic to the south, by force if necessary. IRA spokesmenhvowedyesterdayhto continue the fighting that has taken 110 lives 'in the past two years, 24 of them British troops. REGISTER TO VOTE Sept. 27-Oct. 1 Michigan Union Lobby, 3-8 P.M. North Campus Commons, 3-7 P.M. 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, $11b y mail. I Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip tion rates: $5 by carrier, $6 by mail. STRATA CoNCERwTK GALLERY '2554 MICHIGAN AVENUE NEAR 17th in DETROIT tei. 825-9565 NO AGE LIMIT Food-Drink-Serv THURSDAY-NO COYER *AY. o tY) 7 I Subscribe to The Michigan Daily i)AEWtLTS ONLYI .Y WR r 71 PIONEEIT I " a G. I Save now on these Iwo Pioneer outperformers! Reg. $299.95 Now $269.95 AND THE the AE0 Reg. $249.95 w __._ &InIfll E /,DIRECTOR HOBBSa IT IS OUTIS A BLEND OF OF SIGHT GOYA & FELLINI COLOR" 'V INITIATION'