WEDNESDAY & THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10 & 11 Department of Speech Student Laboratory Theatre presents THE ROPE by EUGENE O'NEILL 3J AND THREE PEOPLE ti y A.R. GURNEY, JR. Arena Theatre, Frieze Building promptly at 4:10 P.M. or earlier if the theatre is filled --ADMISSION FREE- NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 t AIP rl igttn 1a 40 page three Ann Arbor, Michigan briefs By The Associated Press Tuesday, November 9, 1971 U.S. bombs hit :":">;} 1{:;NJ.. ry}:<;;..".:":.:{t::";: -:{iXg'r:4":":ivI;}S:S :";{.::5; North Vietnam 4th WEEK I DIAL 8-6416 Shows At 1-3-5-7-9 IHELLSTROM CHRONICLEI Prof. Eckstein (Econ.), Prof. Munro (Philos.), and Prof. Murhpey (Center for Chinese Studies) DISCUSS (NINA and the WESTERN WORLD at the LSA Student-Faculty Coffee Hour Nov. 10th, Wednesday 3-4:30p.m. 2549 LSA Bldg. 3:00-3:45-informal discussion 3:45-4:30-open forum Profs.-Bring a student! Students-Bring a Prof.! THE ALLEY CINEMA 330 Maynard" TONIGHT ONLY-TUES., NOV. 8 L'ECLISSE dir. MICHELANGELO ANTONIONI 1962 "Antonioni's most striking and personal film yet." JOHN RUSSELL, TAYLOR, Cinema Eye, Cinema Ear "A feeling of purity, of absolute control and dedica- tion is manifest from first to last ...' -STANLEY KAUFMANN, New Republic SHOWS AT 7 & 9:30 special price 75c THE WHITE HOUSE said yesterday it would seek revision' in a strong water pollution control bill written by Senator Edmund Muskie, a front-runner for the Democratic Presidential nomination. Approved by the Senate last week 86-0, the bill shifts respon- sibility for pollution control from state to federal government. It calls for a change in control methods, sets 1985 as a goal for ending all discharges into waterways, and authorizes nearly $20 billion to be spent over the next four years. "We are not satisfied with all aspects of the legislation, said Presidential press secretary Ronald Ziegler. THE SENATE FINANCE COMMITTEE approved yesterday a bill reducing individual and business income taxes about $16 billion over the next three years. The committee's approval of the tax legislation marked a signi- ficant victory for President Nixon who submitted it as part of his new economic policy. Marking only slight changes in the House-passed $15.5 billion bill, the Senate panel added about $500 million of benefits, chiefly to allow working individuals and couples a tax deduction on child; care and domestic help. WITH FIRST RETURNS IN from the Philippine elections, and a record number of political deaths recorded, the minority Liberal party jumped off to a strong lead yesterday that may result in a stunning defeat for the party of President Ferdinand Marcos, The early show of strength by the Liberals was outdone in shock value only by the unprecedented pre-election bloodshed in which nearly 200 persons died. * i* * COL. ORAN HENDERSON won a major victory yesterdays when a military judge dismissed the charge that Henderson knowingly lied last February when he told a Pentagon inquiry headed by Lt. Gen. William Peers he was positive that he had not discussed the My Lai operation with two aviators who had participated in the mission. However, Judge Col. Peter Wondolowski, denied other defense mo- tions seeking dismissal of the remaining three charges against the I combat veteran., -Associated Press Laurtkin 's cracks Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) Chairman James Schlesinger, right, and AEC assistant general manager for military application, Army Maj. Gen. Edward Giller examine cracks on Amchitka Island 2,000 feet from where the five-megaton Cannikin bomb exploded Saturday. LAW TESTED: Prayer amendment meets House defeat WASHINGTON (W) -- A proposed constitutional amendmentt permit official praying in public schools died in the House yesterda when backers fell 28 votes short of the two-thirds majority neede for approval. The intense and often emotional debate ended with 240 co gressmen favoring and 162 opposing a resolution that would hav been the first step toward writing this in the Constitution: "Nothing contained in this Constitution shall abridge the rigl of persons lawfully assembled, in any public building which is sup ported in whole or in part through the expenditure of public fund to participate in voluntary prayer or meditation." SAIGON (P) - U.S. fighte horrible attack on the dwindling bombers attacked anti-aircraft U.S. forces in Vietnam." sites over North Vietnam yester- Military planners in Saigon ex- day in the heaviest raid on the pectto maintain air and naval North in almost two months. pressure in Asia after American The raids came as official ground troops leave Vietnam and sources in Washington reported Vietnamization has been com- that President Nixon will an- pleted. nounce next week reduction of U. Meanwhile, a study at Cornell S. troops in Vietnam to about enhlasuya onl 40,000 men.University shows that while the Administration has roughly cut in There were two raids involving half the intensity of the air war eight U.S. warplanes that were in Indochina from the peak years escorting two unarmed reconnais- of 1968 and 1969, the average ton- sance planes photographing air- nage being dropped is at almost fields, all reported to have re- the same level as. in 1967. turned safely. The U.S. Command said in all c cases, the fighter bombers bin- tacked only after enemy ground gunners fired on unarmed planes* - first. iteriTUP rt Following the attacks, North Vietnamese officials in Hanoi said they shot down two of the U.S. Phantom jets denouncing the at-* o ew York tcks as "intrusions into our ai space." NEW YORK (Al) - A six-man U.S. planners at the Pentagon advance party from Peking flew said they were told that the U.S. into New York yesterday to set up ground combat role in Vietnam is a base for the delegation from the ending and to withdraw the People's Republic of China to the 101st Airborne Division, the last United Nations. to remaining American division in; Leader of the group Kao Liang, ay Vietnam, from the war zone by former official of the Hsinhua d 1973. news agency, said his advance n- ve ht p- is, FULBRIGHT OBJECTS Maneuvering expected on foreign aid WASHINGTON (A') - Congress began a week of maneuvering on the revival of foreign aid yes- terday with House approval of interim extension expected today and Senate approval of a trim- med aid bill possible byFriday. Sen. J. William Fulbright (D-Arki, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said there should be no resolution for continued for- eign aid spending until Congress has settled the current dispute over the program, rejected by the Senate 10 days ago. Fulbright asked the Senate Appropriations Committee to deny the program any new funds until Congress has passed a bill authorizing con- tinued foreign aid. Efforts to organize a House vote for sharp curbs on even interim foreign-aid extension in a continuing resolution today were gaining almost no momentum. But no one was sure the House would not impose such curbs even without an organized effort., Meanwhile, the State Department restated the administration view that the present program should be continued on a temporary basis until a permanent settlement can be worked out. Recommending rejection of the resolution, House Speaker C a r 1 Albert (D-Okla), shouted to his colleagues that he is "not prepar- ed to let the meddling hand of government, at any level, to any degree, be placed on any man's altar." But Rep. Chalmers Wylie (R- Ohio), chief sponsor of the pro- posed constitutional amendment. said a vast majority of the Amer- ican people "want this kind of amendment . . . and the people of thistHouse should allow the people to speak." But opponents, with n a j o r church organizations on their side, called it an attack on the religious freedom guarantee in the Bill of Rights. - However, while Nixon plans to{ scale down the U.S. presence in- side Vietnam, thousands of 7th Airborne and 7th Fleet officers and men continue to support the Vietnam war effort, sources said yesterday. The 7th Fleet has 13,000 men aboard ships operating off Viet- nam to support the war effort, and an amphibious force of 25,- 000 Marines ready for what an officer described as "supplying a crunch if there is some kind of Senate unit tests .Powell WASHINGTON (P) --- The Sen- ate Committee reacted favorably yesterday to Lewis Powell Jr. with all signs indicating he will be con- firmed easily for the Supreme Court. The lawyer from Richmond, Va., pledged at afrelaxed nomina- tion hearing to sell promptly, aft- stock in his $1 million-plus port- folio and would not sit in any case involving a company in which he had any interest. Powell already had the un- qualified support of the chairman, Sen. James Eastland (D-Miss.), Sen. Sam Ervin Jr. (D-N.C.), Sen. John McClellan (D-Ark.), Sen. Strom Thurmond (R-S.C.), and other conservatives. He emerged from the day's tes- timony with praise from three liberals, Sen. Philip Hart (D- Mich.), Sen. Edward Kennedy, (D-Mass.), and Sen. John Tun- ney, (D-Calif.). party would "provide necessary arrangements for the 10 member U.N. delegation arriving tomorrow to take over the seat formerly held by Nationalist China. The delegation head is Deputy Foreign Minister Chiao Kuan- hua. His chief deputy, Security Council representative and head of the permanent delegation is Huang Hua, Peoples Republic of China ambassador to Canada since July. More than 100 police were on hand when the jetliner carrying the Chinese advance party landed at Kennedy Airport. The six wore topcoats over Mao jackets. There Iwere no demonstrations. Besides Chiao, the advance par- ty included Lin Chia-sen, Chia Tzu-cheng, Tien Jung-tsien, Hsu Hsin li and Liu Chen-piao, As they left the plane, the Chi- nese smiled uneasily and declined to talk with the press contingent. More than a dozen representatives of Romania, Albania and Maure- tania greeted the Chinese group. The Chinese were driven in two limousines with an accompanying police car to the Roosevelt Hotel in mid-Manhattan. There a 14th floor suite of rooms had been re- served for the six. There was no uniformed pro- tective force. But about 20 plains- clothes detectives looked out for the security of the group in the hotel area. 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 ratn: $10 by carrier, $11 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5 by carrier, $6 by mail. JANE FONDA as BARBARELLA Does Her Thing! ENDS TONITE! 2 BIG HITS! "Intimate Story of Young Love!" -Wanda Hale, New York Daily News PARAMOUNT // I/ PICTURES PRESENTS fiends FITECHNICOLOR* A PARAMOUNT PICTURE 2ND GREAT FEATURE! with * MARCEL MARCEAU @ DAVID HEMMINGS 9 JOHN PHILLIP LAW directed by ROGER VADIN. in TECHNICOLOR and PANAVISION Screenplay by TERRY SOUTHERN from the French comix by JEAN CLAUDE FOREST See PYGAR the blind Angel, the dread MATMUS, the deadly sex machine, the evil city of SOGO TONIGHT !-TUESDAY--November 9th-ONLY! auditorium a--angell hall 75c 7:00 & 9:30 p.m. only TICKETS ON SALE FOR BOTH SHOWS OUTSIDE THE THEATRE AT 6 P.M. presented by the ann arbor film cooperative "Superb! Great! Ex- citing filmmaking!" -Rex Reed "A SUPERIOR FILM. A RICH, POETIC, AND BAROQUE CINEMATIC STYLE." Vincent Canby, New York Times Paramount Pictures presents the conformist Directed by BERNARDO BERTOLUCCI Technicolor ini I COMING THURSDAY: Aud. A-FELLINI'S JULIET OF THE SPIRITS; Aud. B-THE BATTLE OF ALGIERS I ' NOVEMBER ART F II Ul I .AIR k 4. LAST TWO DAYS Laurence Olivier in Strindberg's corrosive classic PARAMOUNT PICTURES PRESENTS A SHE FILM IN ASSOCIATION WITH t NATIONAL THEATRE OF GREAT BRITAIN LAURENCE . OLIVIER THE DANCE OF DEATH S E: GERALDINE McEWAN ANROBERT LANG PRODUCED BY OHN BRABOURN DEH ICO(RECTED BFDAVID ILE.S TCHNICOLOR' A PARAMOUT 4 SHOWS daily at 1:15, 3:45, 6:15, 8:45 O P';PTH For'um FIR'TH AVENUE AT LINKPITV DOWNTOWN ANN ARB90N tNF'ORMATION 701-9700 "CONFORMIST" "FRIENDS" 9 7 WHEN! Sunday, November 14, 12-6 P.M WHERE: Michigan Union Ballroom I WHAT: Artists Displaying and Selling Their Crafts AND Free Entertainment iii ;I I '. I ' , i STARTS WEDNESDAY! "There is something for more exciting tbout 'SUN- DAY, BLOODY SUNDAY', something almost inex- pressible in a brief review. 'SUNDAY, BLOODY SUNDAY' is noteworthy in a way that can't be com- municated by a handful of slippery words such as ambiance, atmosphere, nuance, mood, texture, sen- sibility. But these oblique, treacherous concepts do point the way to the truth about the film, to what makes it important and powerful." -Joseph Gelmis, NEWSDAY """"'"'" I I I ... I The ALLEY presents THURS.-FRI.-SAT-NOV. 11-12-13 BUDDY GUY AND JUNIOR WELLS WHO: Open to Everyone; No Admission Charge ,S 'M T W T F S. ! ill Jill 11 111 I