SUPPOSE you were walking across People's Plaza and a giant 40-foot caterpillar was about to devour you and then, out of the clouds came the foot of the Jolly Green Giant and squished it into icky yellow garp . . . suppose it all happened. Would- n't you want to go somewhere to clean up, settle down, and tell your nephews the horror of it all? Now in these last days such a place exists . . . the New CANTERBURY HOUSE, where future moths, butterflies, and metamorphized and jaded beings gather. 603 E. William - 665-0606 page three P itx t ttn 3atly Friday, September 10, 1971 Ann Arbor, Michigan News Phone: 764-0552 ~0 I news ytoday by The Associated Press s . os with U.S. air support I i La -I. THE STATE SENATE yesterday approved a $503.4 million welfare bill, cutting some $31.5 million from the House version and forcing a conference to iron out differences. The measure passed by a vote of 21-10, getting only one vote more than the number needed for passage. In other state legislative action yesterday, the House passed a $1.5 billion school aid bill. REV. PHILIP BERRIGAN has ceased his hunger strike inj protest of federal parole policies but further protests are sched- uled for October 2, a spokesman reports. Sister Mary Elizabeth McAlister, a co-defendant with the priest in an alleged plot to kidnap Presidential advisor Henry Kissinger, said the protest would be conducted at federal prison facillities in Springfield, Mo.; Danbury, Conn., and in California. Sister Elizabeth did not say what the nature of the protestsy would be nor would she name any groups participating in them EAST AND WEST GERMAN NEGOTIATORS went into a second round of talks today on ways to implement the Big Four agreement on Berlin but the session ended abruptly. Forty minutes after the start of the meeting, Egon Bahr, head} of the Western delegation. returned alone to West Berlin. Informants} said he consulted by phone with West German Chancellor Willy -- Brandt, and returned to East Berlin an hour later. He declined to comment on the results of the meeting. k * * * THE UNITED STATES was reported yesterday to be consid- ering a proposal to exclude the important Security Council seat from its two-Chinas plan for the United Nations and to give the seat to the People's Republic of China. U.S. sources said Washington was being urged by friendly coun- tries, including Japan, to revise its China resolution by adding such a provision arxd that this is one of thV possibilities under consider- ation. THE U.S. ARMY rested its case against My Lai defendant n f Capt. Ernest Medina yesterday after reserving the right to call later a key witness who refused to testify earlier in the trial. Col. Kenneth Howard, the military judge, then directed the de- s fense to begin its case Monday. Howard said he would hold a hear-; Y ing, in the absence of the jury, to handle technical matters, * * * WELCOME BACK! From the Management and Staff at Thano's Lampighter 421 E. Liberty St. Now at the Lamplighter we have real ItalIa and Sicilian Pizza. Also our new hours, 10 a.m.-2 a.m. 7 day a week give our friends more time to enjoy the same fine food and friendly servicE that our friends enjoy over and over again CALL 665-7003 for fast carry out service "AT THE LAMPLIGHTER GOOD FOOD 5 AND PEOPLE-PLEASING IS OUR AIM" -Associated Press A HELICOPTER unloads a stream of South Vietnamese troops at Mai Loc. The area was used as a staging ground for the soldiers prior to setting out for Khe Sahn. FIRST A PPEARANCE: 'New U.S. negotiator in aris. refuses talks with Viet Cong SAIGON (g) - Behind a blanket of bombs from U. S. B52's, South Vietnamese in- fantrymen pushed to within two miles of the Laotian bor- der yesterday without resist- ance. By ,nightfall of the fourth day of their new drive below the de- militarized zone, the Saigon troops *had yet to report major contact with the retreating North Vietnamese. The drive marks the closest that South Vietnamese troops have come to the Laotian border since the invasion of. last Feb- ruary. Hanoi's forces, estimated at up to 18,000 in the northwestern sector of South Vietnam two weeks ago, were now believed to number between 6,000 and 10,000 men. Allied intelligence reports in- dicated the North Vietnamese were still pulling back into Laos and North Vietnam in the face of incessant U.S. aerial pounding and allied artillery bombard- ments. In the latest advance of the South Vietnamese sweep, Ameri- can helicopters ferried 1,000 fresh troops Thursday to jungle- cleared landing zones two miles from the Laos frontier. Before the helicopter assault, U.S. B52 bombers mounted their heaviest raids in three weeks in the much-bombed northern sec- tor immediately below the DMZ and inside of it. About 25 of the eight jet- bombs on North Vietnamese positions from the southern half of the DMZ to points 20 miles south of it below Khe Sanh. In all, about 1,000 U.S. artil- lerymen and 24 guns were spread out on the five bases. The guns were mostly 8-inch Howitzers plus a few long - range 175mm artillery pieces. e . .--. - i THE SENATE passed yesterday by a vote of 49-12 a $6 bil- lion antipoverty bill after rejecting all Republican efforts to revise it more in line with President Nixon's views. The measure extends all of the Office of Economic Opportunity programs for an additional two years and sets up a far-reaching new child development program of enriched day care for children of working parents in poor families. Another major provision would turn control of the controversial Legal Services for the Poor program over to a national corporation and end any threat of state governor vetoes. A DEMOCRATIC PARTY REFORM COMMISSION issued a packet of proposals yesterday aimed at streamlining toe presi- dential nominating conveonti nin 1972. The committee proposed revising pre-convention committee ac- tivities, the elimination of strictly alphabetical roll calls at the con- vention, and the barring of "favorite son" presidential nominations. These will go directly to the convention's Rules Committee next year. - I y00 MAYNARK) ANN ARBOR MICHIGAN 7698511 imported leather and cloth coats and jackets, woven and knit suits, sport coats, knit and velvet slacks, imported shoes and boots, argyle socks, leather bags KIWANIS Summer Sale Today 12:30-8 p.m. Saturday 9 a.m.-2 p.m. Furniture, Appliances, Hardware, Housewares, Books, etc. Kiwanis Activity Center West Waashington and First St. I I i I I I i i E , I 3 I , ' i i i 1 1 7 i 1 I PARIS (A) -- The Viet Cong welcomed President Nixon's new peace negotiator, William Por- ter, to the Vietnam talks yester- day with an offer to meet with him privately to explain the Com- munist seven - point peace plan. The United States and South Vietnam immediately branded the offer as a propaganda gesture and completely unacceptablle. North Vietnam and the Viet Cong in turn rejected Porter's proposal to place the entire con- ference under a wrap of secrecy in the hope of making progress toward a settlement away from the glare of publicity. The fruitless exchange marked Porter's first appearance at the talks. He arrived in Paris on Aug. 30. Following rejection of each side's proposal by the other, the delegations agreed to meet again next Thursday as usual. Opening the 128th session of talks, Porter urged Hanoi and the Viet Cong to consider his arrival as "an opportunity to make some progress toward a peaceful set- tlement." He revived a proposal made by his predecessor, David i K. E. Bruce, for secret sessions where all four delegations could 'present their views, respond to adverzary views and find areas of compromnise." Hanoi's chief negotiator, Xuan Thuy, shook hands with Porter to welcome him to the talks, but flatly rejected his proposal for secret sessions. "We had previously rejected this proposal and thought it had left the conference table at the! same time as its author, Mr. Bruce," Thuy said. Thuy's spokes- man, Nguyen Thanh Le, said Porter's suggestion was a maneu- ver designed to avoid replying to the seven - point plan. The plan, submitted July 1, called for a to- ;al and unconditional American withdrawal and a simultaneous release of prisoners held by both, sides. PENTAGON PAPERS Sen. Gravel may face charges Since the plan was presented, the United States has repeatedly asked the Communist delegations for clarificatio,n but has never received a reply. "We have given all the expla- nationsethat are necessary," act- ing Viet Cong delegate Dinh Ba Thi told the meeting. "But if the United States real- ly needs further explanation, we are disposed to meet with the WASHINGTON (P)-The Jus- tice Department, raising the possibility of a sharp constitu- tional clash, says Sen. Mike Gravel could be open to prose- cution because of his disclosure of the ePntagon papers last June. Terming a midnight hearing convened by the Alaska Demo- crat "special, unauthorized and untimely," the department said: "Not being engaged in offi- cial subcommittee business, his actions cannot be above scru- tiny by those charged to en- force the criminal statutes." The department commented in a brief filed Wednesday in U.S. District Court in Boston to sup- port arguments that a federal grand jury has the right to question a Gravel aide, Dr. Leo- nard Rodberg. The brief did not indicate the department would seek to sub- poena Gravel, too, in what is believed to be an investigation of how the secret study of the Vietnam war was leaked to newspapers and to the senator. But it argued the federal grand jury has the right to call the senator and added that if it does, Gravel could refuse to incriminate himself by taking the 5th Amendment. A Gravel aide told newsmen an attempt to subpoena a sen- ator, constitutionally immune from legal action while perform- ing legitimate legislative busi- ness, probably would require Senate approval and almost cer- tainly touch off a major clash with the executive branch. The aide argued the same right of immunity exists to congression- al aides. Gravel, meanwhile, in prepar- ation fo ra third hearing on the Rodberg subpoena schedul- ed in Boston Friday, wrote his colleagues that "what is at stake is the independence of the Senate and our entire sys- tem of constitutional govern- ment. "If the executive branch may with the cooperation of the fed- eral courts order our staff as- sistants to testify before feder- al grand juries about our sources of information," he wrote, "we would obviously be open to harassment and subject to new constraints." Rodberg, a former physics pro- fessor who has done work for several Senate war critics, join- ed Gravel's staff the night the Senator read the Pentagon pa- pers at an emotional four-hour meeting of his subcommittee on the Capitol grounds. Gravel has never said where he obtained his copy of the study. Rodberg is associated with the Institute for Political Studies in Washington, a think- tank which has worked closely with war critics. Some of its members had access to the Pen- tagon papers at one time. 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, $10 by mail, Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5 by carrier, $5 by mail. American delegate in private and give him the clarifications he de- sires." Since the talks first began three years ago, Hanoi has sought to bring the United States into direct negotiations with. the Viet Cong - excluding any represent- ative of the Saigon government. ogar told newsmen Thi's latest proposal was "a maneuver for purposes of propaganda and to block progress here in Paris." I Finze M~en's Inkborted Sfiortswueczr III NOW ! BIG DOUBLE FEATURE!! "PURE ENTERTAINMENT!" "A C United Press International 2 HITS! 'OCKEYED MASTERPIECE- -SEE IT TWICE!" i N EWSPAPERS Friend of the CONSUMERS 1214. University DIAL 8-6416 Twin Features WINNER OF 4 ACADEMY AWARDS!, INCLUDING BEST SONG -Joseph Morgenstern-Newsweek "'MAsm' IS THE BEST AMERICAN WAR COMEDVY ... SINCE CAME IN" -Pauline Kael. N'ew Yorkerr. "A Masterpiece! Put on your Must See List!" i HELD OVER! 603 E. 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