U of M INTERNATIONAL LAW SOCIETY PRESENTS "International Control of Illegal Narcotics Traffic" With MR. STEPHEN BOYD Office of the Legal Advisor, Dept. of State LAWYERS CLUB-Faculty Dining Room 6:30 P.M. TONIGHT! .. ...h'.*..* . .. . Keen your eyes on what she cannot see NOW SHOWING! WAYSIDE Theatre 3020 Washtenaw Between Ypsilanti & Ann Arbor SHOWS TODAY AT 7&9 P.M. news brief By The Associated Press THE RAILROAD SIGNALMAN'S UNION yesterday announc- ed tentative agreement on a new 42-month labor contract that could strain the Pay Board's post-freeze wage guidelines. The board met Tuesday for nearly seven hours but adjourned without issuing any new policy directives. * * * PRIME MINISTER INDIRA GANDHI declared Tuesday that the East Pakistan crisis, which has brought India and Pakistan to the brink of war, would be solved within two months, a gov- ernment spokesman reported. The statement raised speculation whether Mrs. Gandhi had been given assurance during her recent six-nation trip that President Agha Mohammed Yahya Khan of Pakistan- would make peace with the Bengalis of his eastern province or whether she had concluded that India must impose its own military solution. THE WHITE HOUSE is considering a proposed revision in the Social Security accounting system which could place the Social Security system on a pay-as-you-go basis and require the trust fund to carry only a one-year reserve. Officials have not specified the size of the benefit increasej which could result from the change. But they say the revised account- ing method would have the effect of "freezing the Social Security tax rate at 5.4 per cent until the year 2010. COL. RUDOLF ABEL, once the Kremlin's top U.S. spy and probably the most important spy ever .caught in the U.S. died yesterday of cancer in Moscow, reliable sources reported. Abel operated as a spy from 1948 until 1957 when he was betray- ed by an assistant and sentenced to 30 years. In 1962 he was exchanged for Francis Gary Powers, the U-21 pilot who was shot down while flying over the Soviet Union in 1960. THE CIVIL RIGHTS COMMISSION claimed in a report re- leased yesterday that the Nixon administration has failed to take a firm and continuing interest in the enforcement of civil rights laws. In addition, only a few federal agencies have made any effort to upgrade the hiring and promotion of minority groups, the Commis- sion said. The Commission used Nixon's stand on busing and activities1 against attempts to integrate suburbs, as examples of the admin- istrators lack of interest. (17 4 Sftr40i!3an Wednesday, November 17, 1971 Page Three Parents to get for 0 THIS FILM CONTAINS MATERIAL GENERALLY TOO INTENSE FOR PRE-TEENAGE CHILDRENG :43afin1 __ i TODAY IS DIAL 8-6416 LADIES DAY! Shows TODAY At 13-5-7-9 "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 Yorty for President? Mayor Sam Yorty of Los Angeles tells a news conference yes- terday that he is in the race for the Democratic presidential nomination and will enter the New Hampshire primary. GRAND RAPIDS RULING: District court dentes suit on property tax college From Wire Service Reports The Senate has passed a tax credit that could run as high as $325 a year per student to those who are paying for education be- yond high school. It also agreed to allow working parents tax deductions for child care. Democrats pushed through Mon- day $2.5 billion worth of changes in President Nixon's tax bill which would cut taxes by $15.5 billion over three years. Despite the approval of these changes, their enactment is by no means certain. It must first clear a House-Senate conference com- mittee dominated by Rep. Wilbur High court to hear plea on Arm y spyng WASHINGTON (P) - The Su- preme Court agreed yesterday to consider whether a group of 13 persons and organizations whose activities were monitored by Army intelligence may challenge the constitutionality of such a domes- tic surveillance system. The suit, which also asks that all Army records on domestic groups be destroyed, was filed in Feb. and dismissed by Federal Judge George Hart. The District of Columbia Court of Appealsreversed Hart's deci- sion and ordered hearings to de- termine if the Army's intelligence gathering "does not go beyond the Army's mission." Specifically the court ordered hearings to determine: -the exact nature of the sur- veillance system and the recipi- ents of its information, -what part, if any, of the sys- tem was necessary to the Army's statutory mission, -whether the system had or might have an inhibiting effect on domestic groups. costs Mills (D-Ark.) chairman of the House Ways and Means Commit- tee. The tax credit would allow parents to subtract $325 from taxes owed for each dependent child they send to college. Col- lege expenses would have to equal $1,500, and the credit would di- minish in value for parents with income of more than $25,000 a year. The bill also provides for an in- come tax deduction of up to $4,800 a year for the wages of maids or baby - sitters hired by working couples whose joint income does not exceed $18,000 yearly. No de- duction would be allowed for cou- ples whose joint income is greater than $27,000. Both forms of tax cuts would take effect with taxes paid on in- come earned in 1972. The college expense tax credit, sponsored by Senator Ernest Hol- lings (D-S.C.), was passed by a vote of 56-27. The amendment to provide credit for payment for baby-sitters was sponsored by Senator John Tunney (D-Calif.) , and was passed by a vote of 59- 24. The bill now has to go to a committee to settle differences be- tween it and the bill passed by the House. The House bill did not include tax relief for parents of college students nor for working parents. In a vote on another amend- ment to the tax bill the Senate rejected, 44-28, an attempt to give all taxpayers a small increase in the tax cut on 1971 income which has already been approved by the House. The cut would have been achieved by raising $700 the 1971 income tax personal exemption for each taxpayer and each of his de- pendents. The vote left the 1971 exemp- tion at $675-the figure approv- ed by the House and a $25 in- crease over last year. tIIELLSTROM CHRONICLEI NATALIE ZEMON DAVIS Professor of History, University of Toronto URBAN WOMEN AND THE REFORMATION 8 p.m., TODAY 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 k C E I i GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (P) - U.S. District Judge Noel Fox refused yesterday to take juris- diction over a suit seeking to outlaw the property tax as the_ basic means of financing public education in the state. Judge Fox ordered the case -returned to Ingham County Cir- cuit Court, where it originally was brought by Gov. William Milliken and Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley. Three affluent school district who were made defendants ap- pealed to Fox to take jurisdic- tion. Fox held the case to be "a do- mestic controversy concerning state public educational policy" and said state courts could re- solve the issue "more quickly and effectively than federal courts." He said action through the federal courts would, in his opinion, prove "protracted, com- plex and highly expensive to the parties and the judicial system." The districts which urged Judge Fox to take over the suit are Grosse Pointe, Dearborn and Bloomfield. Milliken proposes an income tax increase to make up for the property tax income that would be lost. The governor and attorney general argue in their suit that the property tax fails to pro- vide equal educational oppor- tunity and is therefore uncon- stitutional as a base for the state's educational system. Richer districts, they argue, have money to finance a better school system than poorer school districts. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second tClass 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. Ik ~1i I __ _ _ THE ALLEY CINEMA 330 MAYNARD TONIGHT ONLY-WED., NOV. 17 RC Players SHAW: OVERRULED ANOUILH: CECILE film critic * social critic revol utionl ary * Jean-Luc TICKETS ALSO AVAILABLE AT THE DOOR HELD OVER BY DEMAND! "One of the best movies I have ever seen. Certainly it is John Schlesinger's finest work to date as -a director. Glenda Jackson has never been better. Peter Finch gives the performance of his career. Miss Gilliatt's screenplay is so true, so heartbreak- ing, so uncluttered-both pungent and poignant without telling too much or spoiling our illusions about the characters she has introduced us to. It is a towering achievement. Here, at last, is. a truly adult film- by, for, and about adults. I don't think I'll ssee a better movie than 'SUNDAY, BLOODY SUNDAY' this year. Just think. Some spor- adic moviegoers never see a movie this good all their lives." -Rex Reed A Joseph Janni producion oJjohn Schlesinger's Film ttS1 23T/ Bloody Sunday" SM T WTF S dir. Jan Kadar & Elmar Klos, Czech., 1965 A haunting tragicomedy set during the early days of the Nazi occupation of Czechoslovakia ACADEMY AWARD--BEST FOREIGN FILM 0 COMING THURS.-Buster Keaton in "THE GENERAL" sponsored by ann arbor film cooperative I 1 I SHOP TONIGHT UNTIL 5:30 P.M. THURSDAY AND FRIDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M. I starring ~ - v'