hii TONIGHT 75c Pam (lark -a local singer with an exqusite voice and style- Fri., Sat., Sun. Nite MICHAEL COONEY Sun. 2 p.m. CHILDREN'S CONCERT 1421 Kill TREET 161A'SI - ..! Litter doesn't throw itself away; litter doesn't just happen. People cause it-and only people can prevent,' It. "People" means you. Keep America Beautiful. advertising contributed for the public good We're in debt to wars, * floods, health services, e saving and' blood banks* help usT The Aerican Red Gss. aertisingcontributed for the public go p~age Ido ree T4C £irbtitan an"*lwlwt ly NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Thursday, January 21, 1971 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three ne ws,,.briefs By The Associated Press KAMA THE MOTION PICTURE KAMA SUTRA SEEN BY MILLIONS OF MEN AND WOMEN IN EUROPE AND ASIA IS NOW FREE TO BE SHOWN IN THE [UNITED STATES... ANSWERS QUESTIONS EVEN A MAN AND WIFE DON'T DARE ASK EACH OTHER! COME TO TErE KAMmA SUTRA I WANT TO SHOW YOU SOMETHENGI..In col@Pw s'.rn'BRUNO DIETRCH - PERSIS KHAMBATTA - RICHARD ABBOTT. PREM MATh FARYAL KARIM.* MAREN KAEHLER - BARBARA SCHONE . FRANZISKA SRONNEN -*MW IRS" A CONTI-FILM-Produced and Directed by KOBI JAEGER and RICHARD R. RIMME. Music by IRMIN SCHMIDT . WORLD SALES: Exportfilm Bischoff & Co. THE GOVERNMENT'S PROBE of an alleged bombing and kidnap conspiracy apparently stems from testimony of a federal convict paroled last month. The Los Angeles Times yesterday identified the convict as Boyd F. Douglas, 32, and said that he provided the justice department with information about communications between the Rev. Daniel F. Berrigan and Sister Elizabeth McAlister, two of the five indicted in the case. Justice Department officials, including Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchel have refused to discuss Douglas' connection to the case. ' Mitchell, the Times reported, has ordered closed information usually available to the news media, such as Douglas' federal prisont records. * * * - POLISH WORKERS continued slowdowns at the giant Lenin Shipyards yesterday, demanding economic and political changes. Reliable sources at the Lenin yards in Gdansk said that men worked at half pace but that the atmosphere was calmer than on Tuesday when crews continuously stopped work. City transport also halted Tuesday when workers struck for four hours. The yards are a key industry which Poland's new leader, Edward' Gierek, cannot afford to let stagnate in his already ailing economy. Secretary of De THE NORTH CAROLINA SUPREME COURT yesterday ruled that using state funds to bus urban children to school is con-" stitutional.Fa ird s Acting on a suit filed by a group of Winston-Salem taxpayers L against the State Department of Public Instruction, the high court" knocked down an injunction which would have prohibited use of tris in The suit had been seen as a possible barrier to school desegre- gation plans that required crosstown busing. WASHINGTON (P)-Secret * * * terday he will continue to advise BRITONS yesterday withstood the first day of a nationwide china in an effort to "reduce An postal strike by not writing or by using expensive private mail mains in office. services. Laird said that U.S. air supp The strikers promised to maintain "essential" services such as the June invasion by U.S. andE emergency telegrams and telephone calls to fire brigades, police will continue. and hospitals. Although the defense secreta The Post Office stand against its workers corresponds with the new in his statement, his useC Conservative government's policy to halt big pay increases in its acknowledgement to widened U battle against inflation. i Cambodian troops fighting theI NEW CONGRESS CONVENES Dayni Democrats. try to end selliri Trial may violate Geneva accords WASHINGTON Up) - The Justice Department may have violated the Geneva Conventions when it granted immunity for Paul Meadlo to testify in the My Lai trial of Lt. William L. Calley. The Geneva Conventions, one covering civilians in time of war and one covering prisoners of war, obligate the United States to prosecute persons alleged to have committed "grave breaches" of the conventions. Meadlo, now a civilian living in Terre Haute, Ind., testi- fied Jan. 11 that he helped kill unresisting villagers in the March 16, 1968, raid. Calley, leader of Meadlo's unit, is on trial by court martial at Ft. Higi1 Court Benning, Ga., on murder charges. To obtain Meadlo's testimony, rles 011 Asst. Atty. Gen. Will R. Wilson, of the Justice Department's Crim- inal Division, granted immunity guaranteeing that his testimony contenipt would not be used to prosecute him. -Associated Press fense Melvin Laird orts air Indochina ary of Defense Melvin Laird said yes- using U.S. airpower throughout Indo- merican casualties" as long as he re- port has been used in Cambodia since South Vietnamese forces and that it Rry tried to suggest there was nothing of the term "airpower" lent official .S. support of South Vietnamese and North Vietnamese in Cambodia. Unlike his past statements Laird did not limit his descrip- tion of air operations in Cambo- dia to interdiction-the interrup- tion or destruction of supply and troop movements Apparently anticipating new troubles from antiwar sepators by as the scope of U.S. air operations c in Cambodia unfolds, Laird said B the administration has authority p from Congress to conduct air and as sea operations so ing as it does not commit U.S. ground-combat troops outside of Vietnam. ty The dispatch of American heli- t copters to aid the "allied offen- e sive" in Cambodia comes six and a half months after President - Nixon declared "no U.S. air or - logistics support" would be used _ to aid South Vietnamese fighting - in Cambodia. y Now, however, U.S. helicopters - operating for the first time from r 7th Fleet ships off the Cambo- dian coast have been providing w firepower and logistics support- - ferrying supplies and aiding in o communications-for the Cambo- L dian-South Vietnamese force bat- f tling to repoen the highway to the sea. Granting immunity, however limited, to a person the govern- ment is obligated to prosecute ap- pears to violate the treaties, but a Justice Department official said he sees no conflict between Wil- son's action and the Geneva Con- ventions. I n an interview, Asst. A t t y . Gen. William Rehnquist agreed there might be a violation if the United States is unable to t r y former servicement accused in the My Lai slayings. In accepting the Geneva Con- ventions, the United States agreed to pass laws to provide for pun- ishing violators. But there is con- cern now that there may not be adequate law to cover soldiers in- volved at My Lai who have since left the Army and therefore are no longer subject to military law. Both conventions specifically outlaw "willfull killing, torture or inhuman treatment . . . willfully causing great suffering or ser- ious injury to body or health" of protected persons. Although no government sources say so, it is generally thought that none of the men in this legal gap will ever be brought to trial. Robin Hood: man or myth? PENKRIDGE, England () - Charles Wilkes, retired history schoolmaster, yesterday completed years of research and concluded that Robin Hood's name was Alf, never wore Lincoln green and op-' erated 50 miles from Sherwood Forest. Wilkes contends Robin was Al- fred de Hunterden, a noble thrown out of his manor for revolting against Henry If. He did rob the rich, but there is some doubt he ever gave anything to the poor. And, the schoolmaster said, there's no use trying to find any traces of Little John, Will Scarlet or Friar Tuck. They just weren't,1 he concludes. WASHINGTON (P) -- The Su- preme Court decided yesterday that contempt citations appended to a defendant's penalties follow- ing his conviction should be ruled upon by a second judge. Justice William Douglas deliver- ed the unanimous opinion, in which he did not defend court- room disruption but instead de- clared that a Judge "not reviled by the contemnor" should decide the contempt issue. Douglas, who is regarded as the court's most liberal member, said it is basic to the Western tradi- tion that a courtroom be "a hal- lowed place of quiet dignity as far removed as possible from the emo- tions of the street." The justice denounced court- room "vulgarity" as he delivered the opinion condemning a defend- ant's personal attack on a Penn- sylvania trial judge. The defendant, Richard A. May- berry, on trial before Judge Al- fred A. Fiok in Allegheny County Criminal Court in 1966 for a pri- son break, called the judge "a dirty sonofabitch" and a "tyran- nic.,ii