EASTERN MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY PLAYERS SERIES presents YOU CAN'T TAKE IT WITH YOU QUIRK AUDITORIUM TUES. thru Sun., Dec. 7-12 8:00 p.m. $2.00 For reservations dial QUIRK BOX OFFICE 487-1$21between 12:45 and 4:30 p.m. ALL SEATS RESERVED news briefs By The Associated Press THE WHITE HOUSE said yesterday that Nixon's historic B 4m z4tr rt ttn &u Wednesday, December 1, 1971 Page Three Nixon administration accepts China visit will last seven days and will focus on extended, free-wheeling talks with leaders of the Communist nation.to Henry Kissinger, Nixon's top foreign affairs adviser, said that re t oactive a oosoo "each leader will be free to raise whatever topic" he desires. As for the touchy issue of Taiwan, he said it no doubt will be raised. He added, however, that the U.S. feels that relations between WASHINGTON (-The Nixon administration has agreed Taiwan and Mainland China "should be settled by direct negotiations." retroactive pay raises, Sen. "There willbe no deals made by either side at the expense of to a Senate proposal guaranteeingetsme paytra, '" John Sparkman (D.-Ala.) told newsmen yesterday. other countries or concerning other countries," Kissinger added. This insures that there will be no Senate floor fight on * * * _i tne etractve-ay rovsio iiiUL~~ Lll A~eiuii~ IdJMJ1 1 : EASTRN ICHIAN NIVESIT EAST E RN MIC HIGA N U NIVE RS ITY PRESENTS .CANNED HEAT. sunday, december 5 8:30 p.m, pease auditorium, EMU tickets $2.50 on sale at mckenny union a-stucl nt activities board production IN A REVOLUTIONARY MOVE, the American Medical Association voted yesterday to give the nation's medical students voting power and brought the country's thousands of medicalj students within the policy-making realm of the world's largest organization of physicians. The almost unanimous vote of the AMA's House of Delegates was in response to views of some veteran members that the organi- zation's future lies in the hands of its young doctors. POSSESSION OF MARIJUANA may be reduced to the level of a parking ticket in Meridian Township, just eight miles from the state capital and next door to Michigan State University.! Rodney Hagenbuch, a member of the Meridian Township board of trustees, proposed the ordinance which would impose a $5 fine for pot offenses for the township containing about 6,000 students and part of the MSU campus which is made up of several dormitory complexes. THE HOUSE PASSED yesterday an election reform bill call- ing for spending ceilings, retaining the equal time broadcast law and plugging loopholes governing financial reporting. The House refused, as did the Senate, imposition of limits on individual campaign contributions to candidates for president, vice- president, the Senate and the House of Representatives. Both the House and Senate bills would only affect candidates for those fed- eral offices. * * * MICHIGAN 18-YEAR-OLDS will have to wait until New Year's Day for their first legal drink since a bill that would allow them to imbibe earlier is bottled up in a Senate sub- committee. Observers had thought the measure, one of a 52-bill package pertaining to rights of 18-year-olds as adults under the "Age of Majority" Act, would be approved in time for Christmas drinking. the retroactive-pay provision in the ails extending vresiuent Nixon's wage-and-price control authority, Sparkman ex- plained to reporters. Sparkman, Banking Committee chairman and floor man- ager for the bill, said Republican members of his panel had told him George Shultz, Nix-a- - on's budget chief, has okayed' the provision. Over administration opposition, the Banking Committee had writ-. ten into the measure the provi- sion designed to. assure retroac- tively most pay raises negotiated before the Aug. 15 freeze. It states that the retroactive raises shall be paid to the extent they are not unreasonably incon- sistent with the pay guidelines for Phase 2. These guidelines permit increases of 5.5 per cent. The administration greatly pre- fers the Senate language to the" retroactive-pay provision adopted by the House Banking Committee. This states that the raises shall be granted unless they are gross- ly disproportionate to the guide-} lines. Separate actions in the two7 branches made it appear almost certain yesterday that Nixon would get his requested extension to April 30, 1973, of his price-and- wage-control authority. The Senate, in a floor vote on the bill, slapped down, 74-14, an. attempt by Sen. Fred Harris (D-, Okla.) to limit the extension to two months - from April 30 to June 30, 1972. ?Harris said it would be madness f or a Democratic Congress to vote such sweeping powers to a Repub- lican President for a period ex- tending beyond the 1972 presiden- tial election. , Soviets land first craft on Red planet MOSCOW (AP) - The Soviet Mars 2 spacecraft fireds the first man- made object to the surface of Mars yesterday and then went into orbit around the planet, the Tass news agency reported yester- day. According to Tass, "the cap- sule delivered to the surface of Mars a pennant showing the U.S.S.R.'s coat of arms," t h e hammer and sickle. Tass said all systems aboard Mars 2 were functioning normally and that Soviet earth-based space centers were continuing to process incoming information. The news agency said the un- manned Mars 2 craft braked at 3:19 p.m. EST'Saturday and went into an oval orbit with a maximum distance of 15,534 miles and a minimum distance of 858 miles. It gave no, indication whether Mars 2 was taking pictures or would try a landing. Mariner 9 of the United States, which swung into Mars orbit three weeks ago, has been sending back pictures from a low point in orbit of 860 miles. . om a.; X ADU LLTS ONLY Applying the teachings of the. Kama sutra of 2000 years ago will provide experiences beyond all proportions. ALSO FLEE IGNTED PA R KING FBI SEARCH CONTINUES Parachuting hijacker beats the system' Cambodian Casualty A wounded Cambodian soldier is carried through rice paddies by a friend after they had been ambushed by North Vietnamese troops ten miles west of Phnom Penh, the capital of Cambodia. WOODLAND, Wash. (') - With the search discontinued by all but a handful of FBI agents, public admiration for the air- line hijackerswho disappeared last week somewhere in the woods of Washington with $200,- 000 appears to be growing. "The sky piracy was an awe- some -victory in the battle of man against machine," says a University of Washington sociol- ogist Dr. Otto Larsen, "a stir- ring example of one man over- coming technology, the corpora- tion, the establishment and the system." Thus, Larsen says; the hi- jacker "comes off as a curious king of Robin Hoods, taking from the rich - or at least the big and complex. It doesn't matter whether he gives it to the poor or not." FBI officials in Portland, Ore., and Seattle say they will con- tinue their pursuit of the man, but local law enforcement agen- cies have turned to other chores. The air pirate seized control of the plane Thanksgiving Eve, passing a note to stewardess Florence Schaffner which said he had a bomb and would blow up the plane unless he got what he wanted. The type of aircraft - a Boe- ing 727 - may have been in- volved more by choice than chance. A Boeing spokesman said the 727 is the only commercial jetliner from which a person could bail out successfully. The passenger stairs lower vertically from the tail, and "it would be a very safe drop . . . away from the flaps and engines," a spokes- man said. "He took leave of us some- where between Reno and Seat- tle,' pilot William Scott said. Although officials said they in- tended to provide everything the man demanded, they learned a day after the incident that one of four parachutes they g a v e him was a nonfunctional train- ing model. New revenue sharing The two chute the plane were FBI said. Clark County T.om McDowell s the end of the search on Frida "We're looking parachute or a ground," he sai -t s remaining in b i le or functional, the Undersheriff WASHINGTON & - Legisla- ummed it up at tion providing for grants up to second day of $5.3 billion a year for five years y- to state and local governments g either for a was introduced yesterday by Rep hole in t h e Wilbur Mills (D-Ark.), as a sub- d. stitute for President Nixon's reve- nue sharing proposal. J e ongress I __ I k the ann arbor film cooperative presents THE THOMAS CROWN AFFAIR STEVE McQUEEN and FAYE DUNAWAY in Norman Jewiston's Urban millionaire gets his kicks by robbing banks. Brilliant color photography with use of multi- screen. Academy Award: Best Song. THURSDAY-DEC EMBER 2nd-ONLY ! I Oakland Congress Concert-Lecture Series Presents: THE ROCK OPERA 'SUPERSTAR' SATURDAY 4 Dec. 1971-8:00 p.m. O.U. Sports & Recreation Bldg. Mills, chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, said his bill avoids the features he ob- jected to in the administration plan to earmark part of the fed- eral income tax .yield for the local' governments. His bill, he said, would provide specific amounts, would be lim- ited in time to allow Congress to review the system, would take need into account in distributing the funds to localities and would pro- videincentives for states to rely on their own income taxes. Additionally, the use of the funds would be specified within broad categories, rather than left to the local governments as in the administration plan. The committee is not expected to act on the plan earlier than next year. Mills said he is intro- ducing it now "in order to afford those interested . . . an opportun- ity to study the measure to see whether it represents a desirable approach." There had been heavy pressure from governors and other officials for action on revenue sharing, which was held up in the Ways and Means Committee, and Mills had promised to work out an al- ternative plan. 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 mall. auditorium a angell hall 7 & 9:30 p.m. still only 75c I I .- -. I m COMING TUESDAY-Dec. 7th-Catherine De Neuve in Luis Bunuel's BELLE DE JOUR ANN ARBOR AUDIENCES RAVED ABOUT "JOE HILL" AT THE SNEAK PREVIEW! 1 I f Advanced Ticket Sale 29 Nov.-3 Dec. Available Student Organization Office only 4 Dec. Tickets at Door $3.50 O.U. Student $4.00 General Opens TODAY! Shakespeare's Antony and Cleopatra POWER CENTER, December1-4,8 P.M. Box office opens at 12:30 P.M. Tickets from 1.50.3.00 -UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN PLAYERS- 4 Joe Hill, the movie: "A BEAUTIFUL WORK, PART HISTORY, PART SOCIOLOGY AND IN LARGEST PART, A FILM BALLAD ABOUT A FOLK HERO! Thommy Berggren makes Joe Hill a young man of such charm, such warmth of heart and essential grace that he does indeed become a folk hero. DIRECTOR BO WIDERBERG HAS TAKEN A PART OF HISTORY AND GIVEN IT THE GLOW OF LEGEND!" -Judith Crist New York Magazine "BO WIDERBERG'S 'JOE HILL' IS SPLENDID BEYOND REALITY! As embodied magnificently by Thommy Berggren, Hill is mythically handsome, Joe Lill, the man: No group was more radical or more maligned than the IWW, the Industrial Workers of the World, better known as the ",Wobblies" Joe Hill was a "Wobbly". He travelled across the country as a banjo-playing drifter. When he reached the west coast, he joined the "Wobblies" and with his union songs, he became one of their best organizers. As a result, he was constantly harrassed. Finally, in 1915, he was indicted for murder in Salt Lake City and executed by a state-appointed firing squad. Many felt he was framed. As a minstrel/organizer/drifter, he began the tradition that was later followed by Woodie Guthrie $3.00 O.U. Student $4.00 General I I I I sI1 _ * U WEDNESDAY : FRIDAY-SATURDAY Dec. 1 Dec. 3-4 ARM; Michigan Film Society ; Orson Welles Jean-Luc Godard * double-bill latest film I presen ts Lady From Vladimir THIS Shanghai and Rosa THIS WEEK-:| Welles, R i t a Hayworth, , ; , &Abbe . Everett Sloane in a roco- i co murder plot & erry 7:30 & 10:30 p.m. i'"free French translation 0 ...... DIAL 5-6290 "One of the most excit- ing films you'll see this year. -Det. News CLSTO EAISTWOOD i :: :::: I SZry :; _:..