I NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 C14 r Stci4itin Datit page three BUSINESS PHONE: 764.0554 Ann Arbor, Michigan Tuesday, November 16, 1971 6th EEK EI~1~f!~i DIAL 8-6416 DIShows~l 6th WEEK Sos At 7-9 P.M. "WILL GLUE YOU TO YOUR CHAIR AND FILL YOU WITH AWE. THE PHOTOGRAPHY IS A MIRACLE OF ARTISTRY. THE SOUND TRACK IS SUPER." -Liz Smith. Cosmopolitan Maaazine news briefs By The Associated Press CAPT. ERNEST MEDINA testified yesterday that he lied to Col. Oran Henderson about the nature and extent of civilian deaths during the My Lai attack. Medina said he reported to Henderson that there were 20 to 28 accidental deaths from artillery and helicopter fire, although sub- ordinates had said that 106 civilians were killed by ground shooting. Henderson is currently charged with intentionally failing to con- duct a proper investigation of atrocity reports, of not reporting actual ' or suspected war crimes and of lying to the Pentagon inquiry. * * * 100,000 COAL MINERS returned to work yesterday and United Mine workers officials expected most of the nation's miners to resume work today after receiving from local leaders the report P of their new 3-year contract. PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF Although the new contract violates Phase 2 economic policies, Chiao Kuan-hua, smiles fo with an estimated 30 to 39 per cent wage increase instead of the his seat as a delegate at th Pay Board's 5.5 per cent recommendation, Gov. Arch Moore Jr. believes the Pay Board will approve the package. IMPORTS HIT: Both sides credited the Pennsylvania governor for helping nego- China hits . . foreign policy in U-N debut speech UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (1) - The People's Republic of China made its UN debut yesterday with a bitter attack on the United States. The top Chinese delegate demanded the im- mediate withdrawal"of U.S. forces from Indochina and of U.S. military support of Taiwan. Chiao Kuan-hua, Peking's deputy foreign minister, took the floor in the UN General Assembly and accused the United of aggression by sending U.S. naval forces into the Taiwan Strait and by its military intervention in Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos. The attack came at the end ofu" U.S. -Associated Press CHINA'S Deputy Foreign Minister, r photographers yesterday as he takes he United Nations. THE ALLEY CINEMA 330 MAYNARD' TONIGHT ONLY-TUES., NOV. 16 GATE OF HELL dir. TEINOSKE KINUGASA Japanese, in color " A BREAKTHROUGH IN COLOR PHOTOGRAPHY " GRAND PRIZE-Cannes Film Festival " Academy Award-Best Foreign Film " Academy Award-Best Color Photography " Best Foreign Film-NY Film Critics Award " Golden Laurel Award-Edenburgh Film Fest. tiate the contract wnieh ncludes a pay Doostf rom $37 to $50 a day and increased benefits. PRIME MINISTER INDIRA GANDHI appealed yesterday for calm in India's crisis with Pakistan while border clashes continued to test the fragile peace between the two nations. "We have refused to be excited by threat or provocation from across our borders," she told India's parliament. Later, a Defense Ministry spokesman charged Pakistani forces} with a score of military provocations over the weekend along India's eastern and western borders. 80 DEMONSTRATORS turned out at Wayne State University yesterday, in an attempt to dissuade students from registering for the winter quarter in protest of a 20 per cent tuition increase. Demonstrators reportedly were having little success in getting students to pass up registration or at least pleading poverty when they register and paying only a $20 fee. NO PAY ASSURANCI Agency seeks voluni force for aid pro gra SHOWS AT 7 & 9:30 $1.00 COMING WED.--"SHOP ON MAIN STREET" (MEN WELCOME) JEAN CAMPBELL (Director, Center for Continuing Education of Women) MARION JACKSON (Assistant Chairman-Freshman-Sophomore Counseling) DOROTHYs McGUIGAN (Center for Continuing Education of Women) ON Women and the University at the .SA Student-Faculty Hour Wednesday, Nov 17th 2549 LSA Bldg. 3-3:30-Informal Discussion 3:30-4:30-Open Forum WASHINGTON (P) -- The Agency for Inter- national Development (AID) has asked its em- ployes to work on a voluntary basis after con- gressional authority for the U.S. foreign-aid pro- gram ended at midnight yesterday. State Department spokesman Charles Bray said yesterday the request was made even though no assfirances could be given whether or when the employes would be paid. Bray repeated the administration view that the foreign-aid program and the AID administration of it comes to a legal end at midnight and there will be no way to guarantee the payroll for work done afterward. He said the situation is unfair to the employes and that the real solution would be for Congress to pass a resolu at last year's spe However, the highly unlikely a passed before the The House has Senate has not s Senate has pas but the House h According to B there are enoug AID" to keep the He acknowledg paycheck Nov. 23 last Friday. S. Viet governmentf to devalue currency SAIGON (R) -w South Vietnam's government announced yesterday that it will drastically devalue its currency in an attempt to smash the black market and limit profits of some Vietnamese importers. The devaluation of its monetary unit, the piasters is also aimedr at encouraging exports and attracting foreign investors.- Economics Minister Pham Kim Ngoc said the devaluation billT will be sent to the National Assembly as the first step in implement-f ing President Nguyen Van Thieu's sweeping program of economic re-1 forms. Current rates vary from 118 per dollar for U.S. - funded imports to 275 per dollar under the "accommodation rate" and nearly 400t _ -- - - per dollar on the black market. } ES In a separate proclamation,t Thieu announced that the govern-i ment would enact "a new and pro- gressive investment law to pro-4 vide generous privileges and guar-t antees to all investors, both do- t mestic and foreign" in an attempt ill U.L TOF Ngoc said three new rates of foreign exchange will be estab- lished :r tion continuing the aid program nding level. -275 piasters per dollar for U.t S.-funded imports. situation in Congress made it pr.. nyitutininCng ressnmaude it -400 piasters per dollar for im- any continuing resolution could be ports funded by government oft midnight deadline. Vietnam foreign exchange re- passed such a resolution but the serves. ^ cheduled any similar action. The -410 piasters per dollar for ex- sed two new foreign aid bills, ports, foreign investment and pro-. as not acted on them. fits on foreign investment, and theF "accommodation rate" u n d e r 3ray, the State Department feels which GI's and foreign civilians h "service-minded employes in purchase piasters for their per- program going. sonal use. ged the AID workers are due a Reliable sources said all three to cover the work period ending rates will be subject to review and change by the government on a "weekly, perhaps even daily" ba- sis, making them in effect modi-C Ed itorial Staff fied floating rates of foreign ex-i -AY- ---- change. .s DAY ovemer 1 18In Vietnam, U.S. troops now number little more than a thirde T OF SPEECH of peak American strength in the ATORY THEATRE war, as the pace of withdrawal ets nearlymatches that of the buildupk E LIES six years ago. SHAFFER The U.S. Command announced ND ; Monday a cut of 2,800 men, F ANGELS bringing authorized U.S. troop PERYALIS strength in Vietnam to 188,300 asf Frieze Building of last Thursday-lowest sincet 4:10 P.M. December 1965. The peak U. S.A theatre. is filled presence was 543,000 men in April, on FREE 1969.1 a day-long ceremony of welcome, including a speech by U.S. Ambas- sador George Bush who expressed the hope that Peking's entry into the United Nations would help ef- forts toward peace. The Chinese delegate further at- tacked imperialism, colonialism and the "superpowers," which he did not identify by name but re- ferred to several times as "one or two" - apparently meaning t h e United States and the S o v i e t Union. Chiao also threw his support be- hind the Arab countries in t h e Middle. East conflict, charging Israel with aggression and d e - manding the withdrawal of Israeli forces from occupied Arab terri- tory. The United States, which took a severe jolt in the expulsion of Na- tionalist China on Oct. 25, still had not made up its mind Sunday night whether it would send Am- bassador Bush to the speech-mak- ing ceremonies. In addressing the 131-nation assembly as the representative of the host country, Bush referred to the issues of principle that divided the assembly during last month's debate, but said: "Those differences should not obscure the proposition on which nearly all of us, including t h e United States, agreed: that t h e moment in history has arrived for the People's Republic of China to be in the United Nations." The five-man Chinese delega- tion was headed by Deputy Fore- ign Minister Chiao Kuan-hua. It included Ambassador Huang Hua, Fu Hao, Hsiung Hsiang-hui and Chen Yu. Unit warns of campus unrest A report on the campus tur- moil resulting from the Cambod- ian incident of May, 1970, warned yesterday that similar widespread student protests and disruption of education could easily reoccur. The report, entitlesd "May 1970: The Campus Aftermath of Cam- bodia and Kent. State," was pre- pared as part of the Carnegie Commission's five-year study of American higher education. It warns that "a calculated gov- ernmental action, or more tragi- cally an unintended consequence of such an action" as the K e n t State deaths could ignite t h e "tinder of discontent on the cam- pus." Limits sought for military funding bill WASHINGTON (-) -Anti-war congressmen are urging their col- leagues that a vote for military appropriations without restrictions attached amounts to a declaration of war. Rep. Michael Harrington (D- Mass.) sent a letter to House members yesterday saying that in view of recent court decisions it no longer is possible to separate appropriations from the question of authorization for the Vietnam war, Harrington asked support of the Boland - Mansfield amendment, to be offered by Rep. Edward Bo- land, (D-Mass.) when a military appropriations bill reaches the House floor today. The Boland - Mansfield amend- ment would prohibit the use of appropriated funds for military operations in Indochina after next June 1, provided U.S. prisoners of war are released by their captors. Recent court decisions have held that by consistently appropriating funds for the war and providing a draft to man it Congress has given the constitutional equivalent of a declaration of war. Anti-war lawyers have asked the courts to declare the war uncon- stitutional because it has not been ormally declared by Congress. While losing that argument in the key court cases decided thus far, the lawyers argue now that the court interpretations place pressure on legislators who have said they oppose the war but don't consider their votes for military appropriations as support for President Nixon's war policies. 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. Cider and Doughnuts I " Join the Daily WEDNESDAY & THURSI DEPARTMENI STUDENT LABOR] pres WHITI by PETER Al MASKS 01 by NOTIS Arena Theatre, promptly at or earlier if the Admissic SHOP TONIGHT UNTIL 5:30 WEDNESDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 5:30 P.M. A - _ - T 0 l ~l~l '1y/11 p f m 0 GRAD COFFEE HOUR WED., NOV. 11 4-6 P.M. COME FOR CIDER and DOUGHNUTS hand-warming gloves t of knit with leather The comfort of acrylic/nylon knit combine with the fashion and durability of soft leather on the backs and palms of these snug gloves. A. Cross-stitch suede; wine/navy or grey/red. $5. B. Buckled pigskin cork/brown, .; :; ;, > .,. ' ,?. . q. 2 i S >. fj( > t iJ L i..d'' iii : > 2 f _t. ! : y ;..., .r,. RACKHAM 4th Floor fv I... r7 - Compliments of a friend F / -,44 JilI I