TON IGHT AT 7and 9 (4 1' DIAL 8-6416 HELD OVER! news briefs By The Associated Press CI E Sictpi~jan Ilailit ,' Tuesday, October 26, 1971 Page Three Death toll'mounts as tensions rise on India-Pakistan border HELLSTROM CHRONICLE! LAST TIMES TONIGHT! "A UNIQUE AND OFTEN STUNNING SPECTACLE!" -Time Magazine i "AN ULTIMATE EXPERI ENCE" S. FISK-Mich. Daily VANESSA REDGRAVE OLIVER REED KEN RUSSELL'S FILM 11E DEVILS TON ITE 7&9 DAYS ON LY! FEA TURE SOVIET LEADER Leonid Brezhnev made an indirect appeal yesterday for a friendship treaty with France as he began a six- day visit in that country. In Paris, heavy security precautions were in force, and helmeted riot police armed with clubs fought running battles with demon- strators who burned Soviet flags and shouted "Brezhnev assassin." * * AN ANTI-WAR Veterans Day march in Kileen, Texas, re- sulted in the arrests of 100 servicemen, their wives, and sup-j porters. The placard-carrying marchers, who had applied for and been denied a parade permit, had paraded about a block when dozens of police moved in and began making arrests, * * * EXPLOSION of a dynamite bomb caused extensive damage to headquarters of the Detroit Police Officers Association yester- day in the mid-city New Center area. While no one was injured, Inspector William Norris said the blast was "obviously an attempt to assassinate police officers"{ and security measures were beefed up at all police precinct stations 1 and bureaus. * ,.~ * A DYNAMITE PACKING building blew up Monday on the property of the Independent Explosive Co. in Dupont, Pa. A ton of dynamite was set off, state police said. The blast levelled the one-story structure and injured 3 em- ployees. State police also report 3 employees missing. ,* * * . ABOUT 90 SOVIET JEWS were detained by security police yesterday when they gathered at Communist Party Central Com- mittee headquarters in Moscow to present petitions demanding permission to emigrate to Israel, Jewish sources reported. Some Baltic Jews among the petitioners were believed to be sent home and were unable to contact their friends in Moscow before' leaving. The friends were unable to say what happened to them or how long they were held. SOUTH VIETNAM'S government ordered $725,000 made available to aid victims of Typhoon Hester as officials reported 103 persons dead or missing in the wake of the storm. Officials described the damage as catastrophic and indicated Sthatseveral hundred thousand of the northern region's three million people were left homeless. O PiPTH POrUM, FIFTH AVENUE AT LBERTY DOWNOTOWN ANN ARBURi INFORMYATION 761-$700 STARTS WEDS. 4 BIG DOUBLE -Associated Press Making plans Soviet party chief Leonid Brezhnev (right foreground) talks with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko witheFrench President Georges Pompidou between them after Brezhnev's arrival yes- terday. (See News Briefs) PONTIAC ABSENTEEISM HIGH: State school boycott begins THE GREEK Public Order Ministry announced yesterday PONTIAC, Mich. (,) - Ab- lence between black and w h i t e the arrest of 36 persons for subversive and terrorist activities. The senteeism was reported to be about students. arrest include 2 top leaders of the outlawed Greek Government two or three times above the norm- The Pontiac Press said a spot Party, Haralambos Drakopoulos and Dimitrios Partsalides. al yesterday in Pontiac area check of schools in its area show- The ministry did not disclose the fate of the 36 arrested, but it schools after an .anti-busing group ed that attendance was down at was understood that investigations were continuing and that more called for a statewide boycott of Northern High School by 678, arrests will follow classrooms. compared with a normal absentee- ae*looThe boycott, called Sunday by ism of 300 for a Monday; down Irene McCabe, head of the Na- at Kennedy Junior High by 379 TWO JAPANESE express passenger trains collided head on tional Action Group (NAG), is in against a normal 132; and down in a tunnel yesterday, killing 23 persons and injuring 188, rail- response to police reports in Pon- at Lincoln Junior High by 272, road officials reported. tiac citing higher incidents of vio- against 100. NEW MARIJUANA PROPOSAL Legislature reconvenes to face major b ls Also-2ND BIG HIT! "Beautifully Filmed Erotic Story' -William Wof, Cue Magazine In nearby Waterford Mott High School, one-half of the normal attendance of about 700 students showed up. Waterford Township High reported about 35 per cent absenteeism and Water- ford Kettering about 45 per cent absenteeism. In other sections of the s t a t e, however, reports from scattered school districts indicated that the boycott was being ignored. School officials in Kalamazoo and Flint reported that classroom attendance was normal for a Mon- day. The Pontiac police report issued last week showed that since bus- ing began in the school system this year, incidents involving black and white students that h a v e caused police to be called in have risen. McCabe called for the boycott for an "indefinite" period of time until children in the s c h o o1s s were guaranteed "that there life Dacca, Pakistan ( - The Pakistan military claimed yesterday that 147 persons were killed in fighting in East Pakistan, where informed unofficial sources said both India and Pakistan were us- ing airplanes to protect bor- der positions. According to official sources, the Pakistani army killed 73 in- truders, some of whom were de- scribed as Indian soldiers, in fighting off two battalion-sized at- tempts to cross the border in the Mymensingh district, north of here.. The Pakistanis gave no in- dication of their own casualties. During the fighting, India's Prime Minister Indira Gandhi de- nounced the leadership, of Paki- stan as "military hoodlums" and said actions will be taken to -pro- tect India's own security and sta- bility. Gandhi warned that her coun- try could no longer cope with the millions of refugees crossing into India, "jeopardizing my country's stability and integrity." She urged the Pakistan govern- ment to let the refugees return, to give meaning to elections in the eastern province. the Pakistan army reported in addition to troops suspected of being members of the Mukhti Ba- hini - the Bangla Desh rebel army - some bodies were found with Indian military identity discs. The Pakistanis also claimed 67 civilians, many of them women and children, were killed in what the military said was shelling on four border locations from India. The Pakistanis claimed 2,200 rounds were fired yesterday. The casualties bring the total reported since fighting erupted last March to about 2,000 - most of them in September and Octo- ber. Informed sources said the Paki- stanis and Indians both were us- ing planes near the border area around Comilla, east of here. A military source said the troop assault'was accompanied by an artillery bombardment. He added that several Indian soldiers and a large quantity of arms and ammunition were cap- tured by Pakistani forces. Another source claimed that Indian attempts to capture Kasba, a small township on the Comilla- Tripura border east of Dacca, were foiled yesterday: Indian ag- ents, border forces and artillery units were said to have suffered 438 dead and at least 10 wound- ed. The source said the captured arms included machineguns, rifles, mortars and hand grenades. In Rawalpindi, President Agha Mohammed Yahya Khan of Paki- stan was reported to have asked United Nations Secretary-General U Thant to visit India and Paki- stan in the hopes of arranging a mutual withdrawal of forces from the frontiers. Yahya Khan, who apparently was replying to a let- ter from Thant, suggested that U.N. observers oversee the with- drawals. "BRILLIANT!" -Saturday Review "STUNNING!" -Glamour LANSING (P) - State legis- lators reconvene at the Capitol today after a bitterly protract- ed summer-long session that ended Sept. 10. Principal chores include final action on the $500 million plus welfare bill to fill the last hole in the year's $2.05 billion total budget, plus consideration of the House-passed drug bill. Marijuana possession, under the new drug bill, would be re- duced from a felony to a mis- demeanor. The present 20-year sentence for use and sale of marijuana would be eliminated and, under the House version, the first offense would call for 90 days in jail and a possible $500 fine. A controversial bill to update and revise the state's entire criminal law code may also get its first floor test when the Leg- islature reconvenes. Little opposition is expected to these provisions weeding out of criminal law some archaic statutes, some of which date back to 1846, on which the pre- sent criminal code was built. But a large amount of debate is expected over a provision that would introduce indetermi- nate sentencing and would take away from judges their present power to set both minimum and maximum terms, except in the possibility of first and second degree murder convictions. Measures contained in the criminal law bill includes: -Retaining the judge's power to fix a minimum and maxi- mum term in first-degree and second-degree murder convic- tions of 20 years to life in the first instance and 10 years to life in the second; -Permit homosexual activity between consenting adults in private; -Delete adultery from the crime list; -Revise statutory treatment of crimes dealing with rape, pornography, and certain types of theft; and -Redefine the power of a police officer to use deadly force in felony arrests. Another bill would allow any woman, pregnant no more than three months, to have an abor- tion in the state if she were a resident of the state at least that long. Other issues include mass transportation, new construc- tion codes, snowmobile ordi- nances, and Detroit stadium funding proposals. American Theatre League of Toledo Presents So that no man, woman or child need miss the most important musical experience of a lifetime, we have been authorized by the Robert Stigwood Organization to add two additional per- formances on Monday, Nov. I and Tuesday, Nov. 2 of w Let us help you: PLAN AHEAD To Become a CPA THE BECKER CPA REVIEW COURSE 313-961-1400 Our Successful Students Represent i MAOR Theater presents The Newcomers A DRAMA OF SURVIVORS OF THE CONCENTRATION CAMP by JON BERSTEIN Saturday and Sunday at Hillel-1429 Hill-8 P.M.-$1 would not be in danger by attend- ing their classes." Pontiac police said that they could not immediately confirm the 358 incidents figure that McCabe gave fellow NAG mem- bers at the Sunday rally. 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, $11 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates; $5 by carrier, $6 by mall. Ann just back JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR, ' Tompkins from 5 years in China speaks on alism in China " , , ; II Lyrics by Tim Rice Music by Andrew Lloyd Webber THURS. OCT. 28 FRI. OCT. 29 SAT. OCT. 30 HOMECOMING 1971 "LET'S WORK TOGETHER" PRESENTS THE PHENOMAL PINK FLOYD PARLIAMENT FUNKADELIC QUICKSILVER A &' 3.50 $1-2-3 2-3 .50 4-4.50 TODAY 1-3 p.m. i THE ALLEY CINEMA PRESENTS TONIGHT ONLY-TUESDAY, OCT. 26 THE CRANES ARE FLYING dir. MIKHAIL KULATOZOV, 1957 One of t-he most acclaimed Soviet films of all time."The. Cranes Are Flying" wan the GRAND PRIZE for BEST PICTURE and the Gold Palm for BEST DIRECTOR and BEST ACTRESS at the 1957 Angell Hall; Aud. B SPONSORED BY DEPT. OF JOURNALISM AND CENTER FOR COINESE STUDIES "Journ TOLEDO MASONIC AUDITORIUM THURSDAY THRU TUESDAY OCTOBER 28-NOVEMBER 2 GOOD SEATS AVAILABLE Saturday and Sunday 2:30; Orch. $5.50, $4.50; Loge $5.50; Bal. $4.00, $3.00 Tickets-Sunday 7:30. Monday and Tuesday 8:30. Orch. $7.00, $5.50; Loge $7.00; Bal. I