Wednesday & Thursday-October 6 & 7 Department of Speech Student Laboratory Theatre presents Motherlove by August Strindberg AND The Man in the Bowler Hat by A.A. MILNE ARENA THEATRE, Frieze Building Promptly at 4:10 P.M. or earlier if theatre is filled ADMISSION FREE Senate votes ceiling to limit U.S. spending in Laos WASHINGTON (') - The Senate yesterday voted to set the first congres- sional limit on U.S. spending in Laos, approving a ceiling at the budgeted level of $350 million.. Approval came after war critics dropped efforts for a sharp cut. Sen. John Stennis, (D.-Miss.), chair- man of the Armed Services Committee, agreed to support the limit after Sen. Stuart Symington, (D-Mo.), its sponsor narrowed its application. The 67-11 vote sets the ceiling for economic and military aid as well as Central Intelligence Agency support of 'NEWS PHONE:764-0i 4? BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Laotian and Thai irregular forces in the Southeast Asian country. It excludes all U.S. bombing activi- ties - attacks in and around the Communists' Ho Chi Minh supply trail and those in support of Laotian forces in the Plain of Jars and in Northern Laos. Approval was by a roll-call vote with opposition coming from a handful of war opponents who considered it could be interpreted as an authorization for U.S. action in Laos and from adminis- tration backers opposing any restrictions. The Senate acted in the face of -- - - -- - - strong opposition by the Nixon admin- istration to any limit. Senate sources said Dr. Henry Kis- sin7;er. President Nixon's national se- curity adviser, phoned Stennis sever- al times during the day to register his objections. Symington proposed originally a spending limit of $200 million exclud- ing only the bombing around the Ho Chi Minh trail. After a series of conferences, Sy- mngton agreed to raise the limit to X350 million and omit any ban on the $143 million budgeted for bombing in I.4ti43at Northern Laos. In addition, the amendment includes provisions requiring the Nixon admin- istration to keep Congress informed of actual expenditures in Laos on a quarterly basis and provide explana- tions of future requests for funds. Sen. J. W. Fulbright, (D-Ark.), said he fears the amendment, though de- signed to limit spending in Laos, would be interpreted as an authorization for U.S. involvement there. But Symington said "for the first time we would have direct controls over future operations." Sen. Symington page three yr, 4" 077 UF HI d isdjst gelioh 'Ctazy jack' #o lutes-up the gtaway cu.- - Maybo , C&hge ti mW to $otry Volks? Ann Arbor, Michigan Tuesday, October 5, 1971 WEPAS b 62-2576 y *- NW'-- :ilk, Al . l LAST TIME TONIGHT! ' "REMARKABLE! A STUNNING VISUAL RECREATION!" -New York LUCHINO VISCONTI'S i.r4 PANAVISION®TECHNICOLOR* GP' from Warner Bros. pl o AKnneyLeiswe Srvic. FIFTH AVENUE AT lIBERTY TON1IT E VOWNTOWN ANN AROR SINFORMATION1- 6:45 * 9 P.M. STARTS WEDNESDAY! "A UNIQUE AND OFTEN STUNNING SPECTACLE! . . . AS A GLIMPSE OF HELL, IT IS SUPERBLY, FRIGHTENING-, LY EFFECTIVE!" VANESSA REDGRAVE OLIVER REED KEN RUSSELL'S CONTROVERSIAL MASTERPIECE THE DEVILS :;;,r..:. Warner Bros. AKinney Leisure Sfrice .I news briefs By The Associated Press THE SENATE VOTED yesterday to grant members of the armed forces a $381 million annual pay raise in addition to the $2.4 billion approved last month by a Senate-House conference. The move was approved indirectly by President Nixon and op- posed on the Senate floor by Sen. Margaret Chase Smith, (R-Maine), who called it "inflationary." The action is subject to a second Senate-House conference which is likely to take a dim view of the increase. NATIONAL ACTION GROUP (NAG) leader Irene McCabe yesterday led a sleep-in outside the School Administration Build- ing in Pontiac. She then threatened to renew a school boycott if police are not stationed inside the city's schools by next week. Pontiac police said some 200 of McCabe's followers who oppose court-ordered busing to achieve racial integration, showed up at the Administration Building at 4:30 a.m. McCabe and NAG attorney Brooks Patterson plan to go to Washington today to confer with Michigan congressional leaders about the court order requiring the busing of some 9,000 of Pontiac's1 24,000 public school pupils. A TANK-LED SOUTH VIETNAMESE force yesterday launch- ed a third attempt to reach a besieged artillery base inside Cambodia. The South Vietnamese ran into North Vietnamese resistance as they neared the outpost, Fire Base Alpha. The outpost has been under North Vietnamese siege for the nine days since Viet Cong-led troops opened an offensive on both sides of the Cambodian-Vietnam border, 60-90 miles northwest of Saigon. * * * SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR Rogers Morton created a special advocacy office yesterday to protect Indian water rights. In an hour-long news conference, Morton reaffirmed the Nixon administration's intention to encourage self-determination for all Indian tribes who want it. Morton said the new Indian Water Rights Office will be givenj $2 million in its first year. This will avoid conflict of interest in the Interior Department's solicitors office which is obligated to defend, Indians as well as other department agencies. Dock talks collapse; Nixon to invoke Taft-Hartly Act By The Associated Press Concern over longshoremen's strikes affecting the West, East and Gulf coasts yesterday focused on San Francisco where a federal mediator announced negotiations in the nation's longest dock walkout had reached an impasse. Nego- tiations also broke down yesterday in the East and Gulf Coast longshoremen's strikes. President Nixon yesterday moved to invoke provisions of the Taft-Hartley Act against the striking longshoremen, and a spokesman said an injunction ordering at least West Coast dockers back to work would be sought within the next few days. Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler- - explained that under the national labor law Nixon's first step would, be the appointment of a five- OU Se1 member board to look into all longshore negotiations. hsIt is not certain, Ziegler said. df de a wxhether Nixon will seek a nation- eraI 3 UJ. 1 -associated Press Pajama party? About 85 women, members of the National Action Group (NAG) held a "sleep-in" on the lawn of the Pontiac Board of Education yesterday at 4 a.m. Led by Irene McCabe, the group was protest- ing the city's busing plan to achieve school integration. (See News Briefs.), ASK NA T. ELECTION: Labor resists entry to Common Marlket wide injunction or act on a selec- tive basis involving only the long- er West Coast strike which has had a more serious economic im- pact. President Nixon could invoke the labor relations act by declaring the strikes of most of the nation's ports a national emergency. The 15,000 West Coast mem- bers 'of the independent Interna- tional Longshoremen's and Ware- housemen's Union struck July 1 over a dispute about off docks container handling and a demand for a guaranteed annual wage. About 45,000 members of the International Longshoremen's As- sociation, (ILA) at East and Gulf ports struck last Friday when management tried to remove from a new contract a guaranteed an- nual wage for 2,080 hours a year. Workers in Houston, Galveston, Corpus Christi, and Brownsville, Tex., and in Lake Charles, L a ., continued to work, as did hands on the Great Lakes where a dif- ferent union contract is in force raise delay WASHINGTON (A) - President Nixon's order for a $1.3 billion six month delay in a federal pay raise was upheld by the House yester- day 207-174. The Senate has yet to act. It was the first congressional vote on any of the . President's emergency economic proposals, and he said a veto of his action postponing the pay raise would torpedo the whole package. A host of Southern Democrats joined Republicans in turning back a House move to make the pay raise effective Jan. 1 instead of next July 1, as Nixon ordered. In the House, leadership-backed Democrats pressing for a veto of Nixon's six month pay raise de- lay accused the President of sac- rificing federal employes' pay for his economic program before wage guidelines for everyone else have been announced. But Republicans with strong help from Southern Democrats supported Nixon's argument that federal employes must share sac- rifices and that rejection of the $1.3 billion saving would break up his anti-inflation package. Sen. Frank Moss, (D-Utah), plans to press for a vote in the Senate tomorrow or Thursday. Either the Senate or the House can override the President's pay- raise deferral action, without con- currence by the other chamber. r OPENS TUESDAY! MICHIGAN UNION Billiards $1 /hr. Table Tennis 50c 10 a.m.-noon Mon.-Sat. 1 p.m.-6 p.m. Sunday i ] 1 4( 1 I t BRIGHTON, England (P)-Bri- the right to buy food outside the P1esident Nixon 7ndicae e tain's opposition Laborites yes- Common Market area without in- President Nixon indicated he terday voted overwhelmingly to curring penalties, the financial wouldinokEasthendTaftHat resist the country's entry into the contribution Britain has agreed ct iboth East and Wes coas European Common Mai'ket on ex- to make and plans for developing offrlatwe oev b tier, as pro- isting terms and demanded that Britain's depressed regions. off last week, however, as pro- the issue be tested in an early gress in the West Coast negotia- nte issuelectestThe Heath government has tions was reported. national election. long maintained that a national The party took its anti-Com- election is not needed to endorse The Michigan Daily, edited and man- mon Market stand after hearing British entry into an enlarged aged by students at the University of one of its leaders, James Callag- Common Market. Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- han, serve notice that a future L- Heath argues it is now up to igan, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, bor government will seek to rene- the House of Commons to judge Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- gotiate terms accepted by Prime whether the terms are acceptable. day through Sunday morning Univer- Minister Edward Heath's Conser- That process of judgment begins sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier, $11 by mail. vative government in four key Oct. 22 when lawmakers debate Summer Session published Tuesday sectors. the issues for six days before through Saturday morning. Subscrip- t choe. tion rates: $5 by carrier, $6 by mail. IThese relate to high food prices, making their coice. §4eoes~iond/9 ea~xe Mfa i OMWAM" |L THE GALA INAUGURAL RODUTION I -tAr VIO I Daysta r THE ALLEY CINEMA PRESENTS TONIGHT-TUES., OCT. 5 THE CONNECTION dir. SHIRLEY CLARKE, 1962. Screenplay by JACK GELBER. Set in a Manhattan apartment, eight addicts, also jazz musi- cians, await their "connection". "..a film with more creative flair than any that has come out of Ame.rica for years." - Penelope Gilliatt, SIGHT and SOUND I POWER CENTER Aoye de w9e"Ariny q d'a presents As Great a Blues Show as There Could Be a 2 I |L WORLD ElIERE B B G SHOWS AT 7 and 9:30 $1.00 BARBARA COOK RUTH FORD WESLEY ADDY CELESTE HOLM , CAROL BRICE MAX SHOWALTER RUSS THACKER AND HOWLIN' WOLF FRIDAY, OCT. 8 HILL AUDITORIUM 9 P.M. $2.50, $3.50, $4.50 330 Maynard COMING WEDNESDAY - Len? Riefenstahl's "Triumph of the Will" sponsored by ann arbor film cooperative in "THE GRASS HARP" a e hi llcew a udica ARM/ Michigan Film Society Issho yi Gong and Ecumenical Campus Center g'apan, Je a/ TONIGHT I O Book & Lyrics by KENWARD ELMSLIE Akira Kurosawa's classic IKIRU "Kurosawa's most notable achievement in a long I