The Actors Guild regrets to announce The Killing of Sister George the controversial play 41--vp NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 al4c £iet~iitan :43 a ftly page three Ann Arbor, Michigan Sunday, October 17, 1971 ~,x that murdered censorship in England The Bereaved May View the Deceased on: FRIDAY, OCT. 15-7 and 10 P.M. SATURDAY, OCT. 16-7 and 10 P.M. SUNDAY, OCT. 17-Matinee 2 P.M. Evening 7:30 P.M. Residential College Auditorium TICKETS $1.25 available only at the door ne ws briefs By The Associated Press KATHLEEN CLEAVER, wife of Black Panther leader Eld- ridge Cleaver, arrived in New York yesterday from Algiers to prepare for a nationwide speaking tour in support of what she called the urban guerilla struggle. Indian, Pakistani forces group as war seems near NEW DELHI (A) - India and Pakistan massed troops yesterday along their tense borders, teetering on the brink of a military confrontation that the major powers have sought I for seven months to avoid. An Indian Defense Ministry spokesman said India was moving its Armed forces up to the borders with both East and West Pakistan as a "precautionary defensive measure" following a similar buildup during the week by Pakistan. Western diplomatic sources said they were aware of the deployment of troops on both sides and expressed con- -J I "INCREDIBLE!" -Michigan Daily 'THE DEVILS' is an allegory for our time. Reed creates a character of tremendous stature and dignity, one of the few convincingly heroic figures in recent movies . .. it is filled with the energy, passion and imagination that make Ken Russell one of the most exciting and im- portant filmmakers day." working to- -Stel/hen Farber-, inl the A'.Terv: Yori. Tivies She reported that Eldridge Cleaver .would follow her "very soon." "My husband and I will speak to revolutionary forces," she said. "There is a need for many new fighters." * * PRESIDENT ANWAR SADAT of Egypt said yesterday he has turned down a formal American request for "a longer period" to discuss U.S. proposals for a Middle East settlement, informed sources reported. Sadat said the request for more time was connected to the six-point plan for a peaceful settlement proposed by Secretary of State William Rogers, the sources reported. They quoted Sadat as saying he does not favor "continuing this long dialogue: with the Americans which will lead us in a vicious circle." * * * AMERICAN B52 BOMBERS mounted the heaviest raids to date along the Cambodian border yesterday in an effort to halt the three-week old North Vietnamese frontier offensive. The U.S. Command reported that five waves of the bombers struck on the South Vietnamese side of the border and an undisclosed1 number pounded the eastern edge of Cambodia. Elsewhere in Indo- china fighting was generally light. SEN. WILLIAM PROXMIRE (D-Wisc) urged Congress yes- terday to grant President Nixon the almost limitless economic powers he is asking but to restrict them to six months rather than a year and a half. Proxmire, chairman of the congressional Joint Economic Com- mittee said private talks with members of the House and Senate have encouraged him that he can wineffective support for this com- promise. PRIME MINISTER EDWARD HEATH of Britain warned yesterday that the United States is on the point of transforming its defense and economic relations with Europe and he called on the nations of Western Europe to unite for their own protec- tion. Heath, winding up the annual convention of the Conservativej Party, foresaw the Nixon Administration "working toward direct arrangements" with Russia and the People's Republic of China and "acting drastically" to defend the eroded U.S. economy. VANESSA REDGRAVE OLIVER REED KEN RUSSELL'S FILM THE DEVILS SUNDAY 3 05 57 0 MON. & TUES. 7 & 9 STARTS WED. "MARAT SADE" & "BELLE DE JOUR" -Associated Press A nt-inflation boards Donald Rumsfeld, presidential adviser and director of the Cost of Living Council, explains to newsmen the Pay Board and Price Commission, a newly created device in the administration's eco- nomic stabilization program. UNDER CONSIDERATION: U.S. ma lift import barriers, selectively HOT SPRINGS, Va. (A")-Secretary of the Treasury John Con- nally raised the possibility yesterday that the United States will con- sider a selective lifting of its 10 per cent import surcharge. This might be done for countries which meet U.S. requests for upward revaluation of their currencies and the removal of trade barriers, he indicated. Connally, addressing 110 top industrialists at the fall meeting of the Business Council, told reporters the United States is willing to wait as long as proves necessary to negotiate a satisfactory worldwide realignment of currency values. 9 FITH FOruM Ij~FIFTH AVENUE AT LIBERTY! DOWNTOWN ANN ARBOR INORMATION 761-9700 UAC-DAYSTAR HOMECOMING 1971 "Let's Work Together" cern that war could break out at any time. They said Pakistan evidently had started the buildup first, send- ing an armored division into the border region. A highly placed diplomatic source said that a senior member of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi's Cabinet had told an ambassa- dor Friday night that "war is in- evitable" and possibly could break out in two weeks.. Gandhi met for the second straight day with her senior Cabi- net colleagues to review the bor- der situation. She was expected to outline India's latest stand at a news conference Tuesday - five days before her scheduled depar- ture on a three-week, six-nation, trip. Foreign Secretary T. N. Kaul told The Associated Press: "We won't fire the first shot, but we will defend our territorial integ- rity if attacked." Most informed observers be- lieved, however, that war could easily start with each side blam- ing the other for firing the initial shot. Indian and Pakistani troops fre- quently have exchanged fire dur- ing the past six months, but these incidents were confined to the border along East Pakistan, where President Yahya Kahn's army has been trying to crush a provincial independence move- ment. Yahya has warned that he would go to war with India, which he has accused of supporting the E a s t Pakistani independence fighters, if there was any dan- ger of Pakistan losing territory in its eastern province. The threat of a military con- frontation has increased in the past week as chances of a political settlement have receded. India's position has hardened as it has had to care for millions of East Pakistani refugees, whom the government says now number more than 9 million. Gandhi insists that they all must return to East Pakistan. AID FOR CAMBODIA Mansfield blasts foreign advisors Thursday, Oct. 28 PINK FLOYD GUARDIAN ANGEL' $1 .50-$2.50-$3.50 Friday, Oct. 29 Parliament-Funkadelic BLACK ENSEMBLE $1 -$2-$3 WASHINGTON 0P) - Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mans- field said yesterday that a plan by U.S. officials in Cambodia to hire foreigners as military advisers appears to be "an end run around the intent of Con- gress and the wishes of the American people." He said the American officials in Phnom Penh who outlined the plans for hiring the advisers stressed "they are people who can do under contract what we are forbidden to do." Mansfield, talking to report- ers, noted that last year Con- gress barred U.S. military ad- visers, training personnel and combat ground forces from Cambodia. He said he will reopen the Cambodian aid matter this week before the Senate Foreign Rela- tions Committee completes ac- tion on a foreign aid bill that includes $250 million in U.S. as- sistance for Cambodia. The committee voted last week to .limit U.S. involvement in Cambodia to $250 million and 200 personnel, including 50 of the foreigners called "third- country nationals." Sens. Stuart Symington (D- Mo.) and Clifford Case (R-N.J.) argued for the need to put some rein on the expanding American presence in Cambodia before it gets out of hand. The committee chairman, Sen. J. William Fulbright (D- Ark.) contended that placing limits would have the counter- effect of authorizing actions previously taken illegally. The committee is scheduled to meet again Tuesday or Wednes- day after the House vote on the Senate-passed amendment call- ing for total U.S. withdrawal from Indochina in six months if American prisoners are freed. However, the secretary promised -in apparent response to foreign complaints that the United States has been vague in its demands and shows no urgency about re- moving the surcharge - that American negotiators will be ready to present some specifics at the meeting in Paris Monday of the deputy finance ministers of the so-called Group of Ten rich- est industrial nations. Earlier some officials had ex- pressed hope that the deputies could work out recommendations acceptable to the Group of Ten powers, whose finance ministers will meet in mid-November. Connally said he expects pro- gress at the Paris session but does not now expect a settlement by mid-November of the American push for an upward revaluation of other currencies to restore the competitiveness of U.S. goods in world markets. Violene flares in SIreland BELFAST, Northern Ireland (R) - A British soldier was shot dead and another seriously wounded yesterday in guerrilla attacks in Northern Ireland's two biggest ci- ties. The soldier who died was cut downby a bullet during a skirmish between security forces and stone- throwing rioters on the fringe of Londonderry's Bogside, a hub of Roman Catholic unrest. He was the 123rd fatality in the civil strife that has gripped this British province for the past two years. In Belfast, Northern Ireland's capital, guerrillas shot another British soldier and a local police inspector in separate ambushes. A small boy was injured by a bomb blast in still another inci- dent. The violence in Londonderry erupted as rioters began stoning police and troops in the city cen- ter. British soldiers fired rubber bullets and used nausea gas to drive the mob back into Bogside. Then snipers opened up on the troops in William Street, on the edge of the Catholic district, and one soldier fell dead. Earlier, an army patrol in Belfast's Old Park Road, another Catholic quarter, came under similar sniper fire. One soldier was badly wounded A gunman fired three shots point-blank at Detective Inspector Leo McBrien as he sat in his car waiting for a traffic light to change. McBrien staggered to a nearby hospital where he under- went an operation for the removal of a bullet from his head. The hospital said he would survive. Police blamed all the attacks on outlaws of the Irish Republi- can Army, waging guerrilla war- fare to unite Protestant-dominat- ed Northern Ireland with the in- dependent republic in the south. All bus services in the capital were closed down at 6 p.m. after gunmen hijacked and burned four buses during the day. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second Class pastage 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, $11 by mail. Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5 by carrier, $6 by mail. Saturday, Oct. 30 QUICKSILVER CATFISH $2-$3.50-$4-$4.50 __ I 1 F, BORN FREE with VIRGINIA McKENNA and BILL TRAVERS IN COLOR TON IGHT HILL AUDITORIUM ALL SHOWS START 9 P.M. -TICKETS GO ON SALE MONDAY, OCT. 18- MICHIGAN UNION 10 A.M.-6 P.M. TIMES: 7-9-11 P.M. contribution $I.0J BENEFIT FOR POLIS KLEIN LOUNGE-Alice Lloyd Hall 0 i ANN ARBOR CIVIC THEATER and UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN PLAYERS present A SHAW I MINIM FESTIVAL OCTOBER 20--23 SATURDAY AND SUNDAY CHANGE OF SCHEDULE: DUCK SOUP DIR. LEO McCAREY, 1932 WITH The MARX BROTHERS Groucho as the Prime Minister of FREDONIA holds up a document and says to his assembled council, "Why, it's so sim- ple a child of 10 could - . --- + a :. I .L.4 I U CIVIC: MISALLIANCE. opens Civic's PLAYERS: CAESAR AND CLEOPATRA i I (I