Ni RC Players SHAW: OVERRULED ANOUILH: CECILE 75c East Quad Aud. Thurs.-Sat. 8:00 P.M. Nov. 18-20 page three 'a 4-P Sfr "i!3an IaitM NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 -., ...- Ann Arbor, Michigan Thursday, November 18, 1971 MILITARY PROCUREMENT BILL Nixon rejects Viet withdrawal date . 4-m= "One of the most exciting films you'll see this year." Detroit News CLINT EASTWOOD Shows at lop 1,3,5, "PLAY MISTY FOR ME" 7, 9:05 P.M. ...an Invitailon to terror... A UNVEASAL-MAtPASO COMPANY PICTURE.TECHNICOLOR X c briefs I~ v By The Associated Press IN REPLY to a student protest Monday at Wayne State, The Internal Revenue Service directed George Gullen Jr., acting school president, to remove the 20 per cent tuition increase be- cause it violated Phase 2 of the federal price-control regulations. Gullen said the university would revert to its old tuition rates immediately but expressed concern that the decision had been made before the university presented its case. Gullen later requested that the. State of Michigan give Wayne State another $3.5 million to compensate for the loss of tuition in- creases. He also asked that the school be exempt from the three per cent cutback which would bring about $1.5 million for the school. RIOT POLICE IN SANTIAGO, CHILE, used tear gas yes- terday to disperse 100 students who had assembled to protest a takeover of the University of Chile's main building by leftist stu- dents. The conflict is the result of nationwide efforts by Communists and Socialists, the bulwarks of Chile's leftist government, to gain control of labor, the legislature, basic industries and education. FIGHTING ERUPTED 10 miles from downtown Pnom Penh yesterday as Cambodian troops rammed into the first line of ene- my defenses. An offensive by Cambodian troops began in the northeast yes- terday with air strikes, shelling, and infantry probes, a Cambodian high command spokesman reported. U. S. Cobra helicopter gunships also went into action on the front yesterday for the second day in a row, bombing North Vietna- mese and Viet Cong positions on a treeline north of Highway 4, the road to the sea. TWO PRISON INMATES crashed through heavy wire gates in a homemade tank and escaped, Superintendent Lawrence Dug- ger said yesterday. He said Roy Gyger, 26, and Wallace McDonald, 43, manufac- tured the tank in the Raiford State Prison furniture factory where both were employed. Gyger and McDonald were pursued by guards and dogs but away and remain at large. C SECRETARY OF DEFENSE MELVIN LAIRD yesterday de- nied the existence of discriminatory quotas in assigning black troops to overseas American bases. WASHINGTON 0 - Accusing Congress of hindering his search for a negotiated settlement, President Nixon signed yesterday a $21.3-billion military-procurement bill but brushed aside a provision calling for a deadline for U.S. withdrawal from Indochina. The procurement bill authorizes $871.4 million less than sought by the Pentagon. Actual appropriations must be voted later. Even as Nixon declared he would not be bound by the procurement bill's withdrawal clause, the House headed for a vote on a move by Rep. Edward Boland (D-Mass.) to cut 3ff all U.S. war money next' June 1. Nixon strongly opposes the Bo- land amendment, just as he fought the amendment sponsor- ed by Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield of Montana which agencies no Wklb Lnl nn01 th lA rement SPEAKING AT A NEWS CONFERENCE yesterday, the Rev. Jesse Jackson, national director of the Southern Christian Lead- ership Conference, opposed President Nixon's program to halt inflation. Jackson hopes to address the AFL-CIO labor conven- tion which opens tomorrow appealing for help for the poor. s " Commission passes price 'hike for autos was tac ed on to ie prucuiein bill. The Mansfield amendment "is without binding force or effect," Nixon said, "and it does not re- flect my judgment about the way, in which the war should be brought to a conclusion." The amendment Nixon said he' would ignore was a weakened version of one passed earlier by the Senate calling for total with- drawal within six months. After the House rejected that language,; a compromise was passed which "urges and requests" Nixon to; withdraw all troops "at a date' certain" subject to release of U.S. war prisoners and an accounting for the missing in action. Nixon said that he will not change "the policies I have pur- sued and shall continue to pursue" in Indochina. Nixon reiterated that until a full settlement occurs the rate of withdrawal of U.S. forces will be determined by "the level of enemy activity, the progress of Vietna- mization, and by the progress to- wards obtaining the release of all American prisoners and a cease- fire for all of Southwest Asia,." 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- tgan, 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. lacking funds WASHINGTON (A) - America's defense, foreign aid and antipov- erty programs remained without funds legally yesterday after en- countering a new snag in Con- gress, but leaders worked to get the programs back in business by nightfall. House leaders set in motion rare machinery to send the cham- ber's original $3.4-billion foreign aid bill straight to a House-Senate conference today. The Senate voted interim spend- ing authority yesterday to keep the nearly $80 billion worth of programs alive until Dec. 1. Two House members, however, forced the continuing resolution into a House-Senate compromise confer- ence, delaying final action. Although their legal spending authority expired Monday night, the Pentagon, foreign aid and antipoverty agencies continued business as usual with the confi- dence Congress would renew at last interim funds. "There's a problem of pas- sage," said Speaker Carl Albert. House leaders tried to win unani- mous consent approval of the Sen- ate's Dec. 1 interim funding ex- tension last night to immediately take the' agencies out of legal limbo. Reps. Durward Hall, (R-Mo.), and Wayne Hays (D-Ohio), ob- jected and forced a voice vote on sending it to a House-Senate con- ference, which the House over- whelmingly approvi.!d. TICKETS ALSO AVAILABLE AT THE DOOR "JOHN SCHLESINGER'S 'SUNDAY, BLOODY SUN- DAY' is a film of such sublety, such perception and such maturity that it makes all other films-even the best of them--that pretend to deal with the way we live in 'adult' terms seem adolescent and super- . ficial. It is not only a furthering of the creative skills of the director of 'Darling' and 'Midnight Cowboy' and therefore a fascinatingly beautiful film in technique and performance, it is also a multi- leveled consideration of the love we live by, the set- tlements we make to continue that living, the inno- cent destroyers the generations bring upon us. Con- ceived by Schlesinger, with a screenplay by Penelope Gilliat, the film critic whose writings are marked by delicacy of feeling, its very contemporary story of triangular love is ultimately brought to searingly compassionate universal terms. It is that rare film that illuminates the deeper corners of the heart, that probes beyond the obvious concepts, that ex- pands our undersanding." -Judith Crist, NEW YORK MAGAZINE A Joseph Janni Pwto,.Rnt John Schlesinger's Film Bloody Sunday" Mtarring Glenda Jackson RterFinch MurrayHead 0 FIFTH Forum]THURS. 7 & 9 VWTH JUIUFRAT.LI7BRTY9 DOWNTOWN ANN ARROR F RI f 9 "1 UIINFORMATION 761-970RI7* WASHINGTON (A) -The Price Commission approved yes- terday a request by American Motors Corps. to raise prices by 2.5 per cent on 1972 model au- tomobiles. The commission held that American Motors meets the gen- eral price guidelines it laid down last week. Manufacturers may boost pri- ces to offset increased costs, as long as the company's profit margin is not enlarged over two of the last three years in which day halted construction work- ers scheduled pay increases un- til further notice. This means that while other workers have already begun collecting pay raises held up by the wage freeze, the construction indus- try continues under a mini- freeze of its own. Meanwhile, yesterday t o p AFL-CIO leaders meeting in Mi- ami decided privately to stay on President Nixon's Pay Board despite what they called efforts by industry and public members to harrass them into quitting and blame them for any failure of new wage controls, it was learned. Rep. Ronald Dellums (D-Calif.) has charged that an agree- the firm enjoyed its best profit ment between the United States and Iceland dating back to the margin. Kennedy administration restricted the number of black troops as- The Construction Industry signed to the North Atlantic island country. Stabilization Committee yester- EASTERN MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY PRESENTS DONOVAN in concert FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 8:30 p.m. Bowen Field House TICKETS-$3.50, $4.50, $5.50 Available at " McKenny Union Ticket Of fice " Ann Arbor Music Mart, Liberty St. " Michigan Union I SHOP TONIGHT AND FRIDAY UNTIL 9:00 P.M. B CINEMCA II presents BOB DYLAN in DON'T LOOK BACK (1965) American Revolutionary Media presents a jaunty jacket for Miss J suits her style just fine. Our double-breasted pea jacket by Karen is wool/camel hair/nylon, bonded for lightweight warmth. Camel or navy. 7-15 sizes. $55. experimental, live theater The Brown Street Theater Acting Co. from Madison, Wisconsin in I I Hot Wankel 0 m four one-act plays with a purpose a lively and unique presentation of play written for home economics students in the 1930's. THE IMPORTANCE OF PERSONAL APPEARANCE, MOTHER HUBBARD'S BIRTHDAY PARTY, THE AWAKENING OF AMY BRANDT and FOOD FAIRIES PARTY, plays upon the lessons of proper conduct taught to high school students. It combines old-fashioned scripts and a new theatrical style to provide an involving live theater experience. "a blasphemous presentation which plays upon .s _ . ____ - - I - J . i* M // I I E m