COLEGITE SOR SI NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 COLLEGIATE SOROSIS BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 The sorority that has something Ann Arbor, Michigan for everyone-from food to fun. O Stop by and see what we have for you. 1501 Washtenaw 161-8695 and 161-2806 W 1 One of the most exciting B C14 r £frig!3n a- at'ly page three Sunday, November 14, 1971 rle fs 3y The Associated Press U.S. ECONOMIC POLICY NEP yields- mixed results I I;J i'! LI films you'll see this year IS- uet. News CLINT EASTWOOD NATALI E ZEMON DAVIS Professor of History, University of Toronto URBAN WOMEN AND THE REFORMATION 8 p.m., WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 17 Undergraduate Library, Multipurpose Room NO. 2 IN LECTURE SERIES, WOMEN IN PERSPECTIVE Presented by the Center for Continuing Education of Women with the Center for Western European Studies FREE PUBLIC INVITED SUNDAYf HAMLET directed by and starring SIR LAURENCE OLIVIER with Jean Simmons as Ophelia THE U.S. ROCKETED its Mariner 9 spacecraft into orbit around Mars yesterday, beginning an unprecedented study of the Red Planet that could write a new chapter in the annals of space exploration. The first spacecraft to orbit another planet in the solar system, Mariner 9 apparently arrived at Mars ahead of two Russian space probes, Mars 2 and 3, which Western scientists speculate will attempt unmanned landings. The spacecraft ended its 5%V -month, quarter-billion-mile journey at 7:17 p.m. EST when a 15-minute burn of the Mariner 9 retro- rocket slowed an 11,000 mile-per-hour plunge so Martian gravity could swing it into orbit. Packed with scientific instruments - two television cameras, an infrared radiometerand an ultraviolet andhinfrared spectrometer- Mariner 9 could give man- the closest look he's ever had at another planet. The spacecraft was designed for a basic 90-day mission but could send back data from its twice-daily orbit around Mars for up to a Iyear. ARAB FOREIGN MINISTERS gathered in Cairo yesterday to chart a common Egyptian-led strategy for the planned U.N. de- hate on their quarrel with Israel. Sources said Egypt was pushing hard to get the Arab states to concert their policies in advance to present the united anti-Israeli front that has so often eluded Arab leaders in the past. . Their discussions began as the French Foreign Ministry an- nounced in Paris that France will buy back 50 Mirage warplanes pur- chased by Israel before 1967 but withheld under the French Middle{ East arms embargo. CUBAN PRIME MINISTER FIDEL CASTRO visited the Ata- cama Desert yesterday, one of the driest places in the world, dur- ing a state visit to Chile at the invitation of his old friend Presi- dent Salvador Allende. The rich nitrate fields in the Atacama, where less than two inches of rain fall each year, made Chile one of the richest coun- tries in the world during the early part of this century. But when chemicals were discovered to take the place of nitrate in fertilizers and explosives, the country was plunged into a depres- sion. Scores of sand-swept ghost towns along Castro's route at- tested to the once-thriving region. AUBRAN "BUDDY" MARTIN was sentenced to death yester- day for the slayings of United Mine Workers rebel Joseph "Jock" Yablonski and his wife and daughter. The verdict was returned in a hushed Washington County court- room by the same jury of seven women and five men that less than 24 hours earlier had convicted Martin on three counts of first degree murder in the killings. . * THE INDEPENDENT UNITED MINE WORKERS and the Bituminous Coal Operators Association agreed yesterday on "a c set of agreed sections and articles" that some called a tentative pact to end a 44-day coal strike., The terms were not immediately divulged, but the agreement was rushed to labor and management groups in New York's Biltmore Hotel for ratification. The strike idled 100,000 miners in 20 states.c The union had sought a wage boost of $13 from a base of $37 a day.t Mineworker slaying Aubran "Buddy Martin is led from the courtroom in Washing- ton, Pa., wherera jury of seven women and five men sentenced him to death for his part in the Yablonski family slayings. (See News Briefs.) NIX ON DENOUNCED:a SVets attack U.S. withdrawal proposal By STERLING GREEN Associated Press Writer As Phase 2 of President Nixon's new economic policy be- gins today, administration officials claim it has been suc- cessful in halting runaway inflation and the rising cost of living. Despite expectations that Phase 2 will continue to work, administration officials concede that the risks of failure are great. In addition, other aspects of the President's plan are stalled. The 90-day wage, price and rent ceiling that President Nixon clamped on the economy Aug 15 had its leaks, viola- tions and disappointments. But is gave the United States its iirst respite in five years from": relentless, inflation that ate into paychecks, eroded pensions and scuttled family budgets. Tefreeze period, endind,.edng at:>". 12:01 a.m. today, slowed the rise in living costs to a rate of 2.4 per cent a year in September- far from perfect, but less than half. the rate of any recent year. And it pushed the wholesale price index into its biggest drop in five years. >.:....><}:< Now there are two dangers: :;;.:"- :t:{><>. First, that compliance will sag if many people take the new 2.5 per cent price guideline of Phase 2 as a sign that the anti-inflation fg t i ,bi g rl xd e o d fi ghtiss being relaxed.Second that the AFL-CIO, angry over wage guidelines that deny the Secretary Connally retroactive payment of frozen wage increases, will decide at Miami Beach this week whether to boycott the program. So the freeze ends, at its death the only segment of the Presi- dent's new economic program that was on target. "Prosperity without war requires action on three fronts," Nixon told the nation as he announced the freeze by television on that Sunday night in mid-August. "We must create more and better jobs; we must stop the rise in the cost of living; we must protect the dollar from the attacks of international money speculators.' What of his hopes for more jobs and stronger dollars? The 90- day record shows that: I PARIS (W) - The North Viet- namese, responding to President Nixon's latest announcements on troop withdrawals, declared yesterday the war will continue "as long as a single American soldier remains in Vietnam." The North Vietnamese peace talkhdelegation's spokesman de- nounced Nixon's statement Fri- day that 45,000 men would be withdrawn from Vietnam in De- cember and January but that air power would still be used until a settlement is negotiated 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 mail. or South Vietnam can take over the air role. The Vietnamese, Cambodians and Laotians are "resolved to continue the fight until final victory." Nguyen Thanh Le said. The North Vietnamese "are determined to punish every act against the sovereigntyeand the security of North Vietnam," he added. He repeated Communist de- mands that "the United States should cease supporting the group of warx-like puppets in power directed by the dictator Nguyen Van Thieu, to clear the way for the formation in Saigon of a new administration favor- able to peace, independence, neutrality and democracy, and willing to engage in serious con- versations with the provisional government of South Vietnam in the formation of a large govern- ment of national harmony in South Vietnam.'' 7 & 9:30 Aud. A, Angell Hall I'. I BLACK STUDENT UNION presents ROD RODGERS DANCE COMPANY performing "Dance Poems . . . Black, Brown, Negro" Tuesday, Nov. 23, 191 8 p.m. POWER CENTER TICKETS--$2.50, $3.50 Available at-Michigan Union, Fishbowl, Salvation Records (South University and Maynard), BSU Office (Union-Room 3-K) "A powerful theatrical per- formance depicting d a n c e characters and images which have grown out of the Afro- American experience." 0 The economy did not respond with the hoped-for zest to the promise of price stabilization. September statistics ranged from gloomy to dismal. October brought moderately better news, with re- tail sales up and unemployment edging down to 5.8 per cent. But that was not good enough to halt the steady sinking of the stock market. " Congress was still arguing over Nixon's business-stimulating tax-relief plans. It seemed ready to vote at least $1.3 billion more tax relief for low-income families than he asked for but delayed the pro- posed job development investment credit. O Therefore many corporations postpone? their job-creating capital outlays waiting for the credit to go on the law books. It amounts to a 7 per cent federal subsidy on their purchases of new machinery and equipment. 0 The Nixon foreign economic game plan seemed to be at a stalemate. His actions had unhitched the dollar from gold and left all the Western currencies "floating" without fixed par values; and he had slapped a 10 per cent U.S. tariff surcharge on all dutiable imports. Then he invited other countries to raise the value of their cur- rencies an average of perhaps 12 per cent, to make U.S. goods cheaper See PHASE 2, Page 8 Free $3.00ReconditioningTreatment or Dandruff Treatment s -with any hairstyle or Moisturizer SUMMER SUN AND WIND DAMAGE THE HAIR LET US HELP RESTORE IT TO ITS NATURAL BEAUTY V cDURING OUR TWO WEEK THANKSGIVING SPECIAL TUESDAY, NOV. 16 THRU SAT., NOV. 27th BOUFFANT HAIR FASHION and HAIR WEAVE CENTER 1 668-9356. 307 S. FIFTH AVE. Eves. 662-8401 Closed Mon. and Wed. """ =o """>o "="">o<"""">o<"""">0<"">0<"">o<"""""ooa=:o=> PRESENTS FESTIVAL WEEK: The Films of Jean-Luc Godard MONDAY: BREATHLESS, 1959 with Jean-Paul Belmondo and Jean Seberg. French gangsters a la Godard. Photography by Raoul Coutard. Short: THE BOILED EGG TUESDAY: A WOMAN IS A WOMAN 1961. With Jean-Paul Belmonda, Jean- Claude Brialy, Anna Karina. Caught be- tween two men, stripper Anna Karina dances her way through consumer pop culture. Short: CHARLOTTE ET SON JULES WEDNESDAY: VIVRE SA VIE, 1962 THURSDAY: ALPHAVILLE, 1965 FRIDAY: PIERROT LE FOU, 1965 SATURDAY: MASCULINE-FEMININE, 1966 American Revolutionary Media presents The Broom Street Theater Acting Company For the first time, a new kind of theatre experience is coming to Ann Arbor. The show is presented by the Broom Street Theatre of Madison, Wis., the only under- ground, experimental live theater of its kind in the Midwest. 1, I SHIRLEY VERRETT, MEZZO SOPRANO WITH THE METROPOLITAN OPERA "People who go to song recitals hoping to be moved and exhilarated by the sheer sound of a superior voice and found thesnselves just this side of paradise.", --THE NEW YORK TIMES This Thursday evening, November 18, in Hill Auditorium, Shirley Verrett will present a rich and varied program including songs by Bach, Purcell, Marcello, Brahms, Porem, Dvorak, and a group of three spirituals. PROGRAM BEGINS AT 8:30. TICKETS FROM $2.50 TO $7 ATCTM T T _ flCTpl*'Pv Hot Wankel I four one-act plays with a purpose based on an obscure book published in 1930, PLAYS WITH A PURPOSE, written by home economics teachers and students and intended to instruct high school children in proper nutrition, personal hygiene and family relation- ships. As rendered by the Broom Street Theater, they become o "How It All Began" I .U - .I