page thiree 41 f ~ . . z " FOR TICKETS, CONTACT THE MUSKET OFFICE, TELEPHONE 763-1 134 MAIL ORDER FORM WILL BE PRI NTED IN TUESDAY'S MICHIGAN DAILY. 9..4P £Izdligatn 43 tti1y NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Sunday, January 24, 1971 ... Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three I Ni neows briefs By The Associated Press # De ms criicize Nixon speech PRESIDENT FERDINAND .E. MARCOS of the Philippines, is expectd to announce a new policy toward the Communist bloc in his State of the Nation address Monday. Leftist students have called for a rally outside Congress at + the same time. The scheduling of the rally has made Manila tense t ." because of the possibility of a violent confrontation between demon- strators and police. Students hurled bottles and stones at Marcos as he and his wife emerged from Congress after the State of the Nation address last year.- In view of last year's violence, 50 schools around the Congress area have suspended classes for Monday to "avoid injury and vio- lence to students," the Department of Education said. Police are also guarding all American oil firms and hunting suspects who hurled fire bombs or set off dynamite at the headquarters of the Esso and k Caltex companies, killing one man. i THE SOUTH AFRICAN GOVERNMENT announced yesterday that it will try the Anglican dean of Johannesburg on charges of subversive activities. -Associat The Very Rev. Gonville ffrench-Beytagh, a British subjectAAasftr was taken into custody by security police Wednesday night. The dean is an outspoken critic of South Africa's racial discrimination. Cambodians leave the area of Phnom Penh yesterday fo He is the latest of nine clergymen of various denominations - all the attack on the Cambodian capital's airport. opposed to government policy - to suffer government action since ---- the beginning of 1970. W 4" " r - President Nixon's broad proposals for Cabinet over- haul and revenue sharing face a long, hard struggle in Con- gress with slim chance of success. Prospects seem brighter for some sort of welfare reform and health care legislation. The President's six-point program presented in Friday night's State of the Union speech continued to receive muted responses yesterday from many Democrats, praising the gen- eral goals while awaiting specifics. But it seems clear that his proposal to combine seven existing domestic departments - plus related independent agencies into four new super- - AN OIL TANKER ran aground in fog and light snow near New Haven, Connecticut yesterday, spilling an estimated 386,000 gallons of home heating oil into the channel of New Haven Harbor. A Coast Guard spokesman said much of the slick had not been contained and an outgoing tide was carrying it into Long Island Sound. THE SOVIET UNION, has stopped without explanation its previous buildup of SS9 missiles. The halt has put the Nixon administration's strategists in an embarrassing spot as they work on plans to ask the new Congress for more funds for an antiballistic missile system to defend Minutemen missiles.; The SS9's are the nuclear rockets which reportedly could destroy U.S. Minutemen intercontinental missiles in their silos.; WAGE DISPUTE: Milwaukee poliec home with 'blue f] MILWAUKEE, Wis. W) - An estimated 93 to 95 per cent of Milwaukee's policemen s t a y e d home from work yesterday in a "sick call" job action. The action is a result of a dispute regarding wages and grievance procedures which would cut some of the po- lice chief's disciplinary powers. The union is demanding a two- year contract, which the city said PLANS LEGISLATION Sen. Case charges CIA with subsidizing Radio Free Europe would cost '$11 million. bring the pay for an ex patrolman, now $9,700 a $12,500 immediately an in the second year. The city has offered year package it says it' million, including a boost 700 a year for experience men now with an unspe crease in the second az years. Efforts to settle the continued through the d ever trustees of the N Professional Policemen's tive Association said they cepted a proposal that union and the city acc and binding arbitration. State highway patrols over traffic duty on N County's freeways, freein man deputy sheriff's sq and six one-man detecti vehicles for work on cit the sheriff's office said. A spokesman said plan make all squads two-mar total of 60 men after nig The state patrol sai three dozen officers had signed to Milwaukee, wo hour shifts, and the en man force had been aler ready if called. There war .agencies is in deep trouble be- fore the specifics have been presented. At least two potential Demo- cratic presidential candidates im- mediately seized on the fact that the President stressed executive reorganization rather than more substantive proposals to deal with the nation's economic and social ted Press problems. "It failed to deal adequately with the critical problem of un- liowing employment, it failed to come to grips with the need to reorder our ._ priorities-and offered instead the type of reshuffling of the federal government that is a poor sub- stitute for action, said Sen. Birch Bayh, D-Ind. 1 "There wasn't a line in the J speech for the man who is out of work," said Sen. Henry M. Jack- son, D-Wash. 7u ' Democratic National Chairman Lawrence O'Brien accused Nixon of ignoring two concerns that It would "rank above all others", the war perienced and the economy. year, to O'Brien, who avoided the war d $13,000 issue in last fall's campaigning, said in his statement: a three- "President Nixon attempted to worth $7 avoid the painful subject of the t to $10,- Indochina war by promising to d patrol- deliver to Congress next month cified in- a detailed 'State-of-the-World' n d third message." O'Brien said the use of air and dispute sea power to back up the Vietna- ay. How- qilwaukee Protec- y had ac- both the ept final men took { Milwaukee g 24 one- |||| . uad cars ve squad 1y streets, r s were to f< n units, a :htfall. Ed nearly been as- rking 12- f -. tire 375- . ted to be . s no words Arms sale' ossible to S., Africa.., LONDON AJP)-Prime Minister Edward Heath returned from the Commonwealth summit confer- ence yesterday declaring that no- thing decided by the Common- wealth ministers tied his hands on a possible proposal to sell arms to South Africa. Conservative party officials ex- pect the prime minister to an- nounce in Parliament at least. a limited sale of maritime weapons to the South Africans. The action is expected to raise a stormy re- action at home and in most of the Commonwealth. Former Laborite prime minister Harold Wilson let go a vitrilic blast at the proposed arms deal at the start of what is shaping up as a double-barreled opposition on- slaught on the Tories in conjunc- tion with the government's anti- strike legislation. But Heath and his followers be- lieve they have the full backing of the electorate in their cam- paign to halt crippling wildcat strikes and curb the power of the trade unions. Home secretary Reginald Maud- lin, who sat in for Heath during the prime minigter's tour of Com- monwealth capitals stated the ad- ministration's confidence in a speech Friday night to a party rally. The opposing fury against the antistrike legislation, Maulding said "will not impress the public; at the ballot box they demon- strated strong support for our proposals. I do not doubt for cne minute they would vote in the same way today." Officials said Maulding con- sulted Heath in Singapore before including that remark in his speech. Conservative newspapers promptly interpreted it as a clear warning to the opposition that the administration would not hesitate to call a snap national election if the opposition to the union leg- islation becomes intractable in Parliament. Heath is facing a four-day-old nationwide postal strike, which has halted the mail and tied up teleJ phone and telegraph communica- tions. Still with the Tories' popularity sinking in the latest opinion polls, an early electoral confrontation seemed unlikely. WASHINGTON (IP) - Sen. Clif- Case said, "the bulk of Radio ford P. Case (R-New Jersey) Free Europe's and Radio Liberty's charged yesterday that secret I budgets comes from direct CIA Central Intelligence Agency sub- subsidies." sidies have financed most oper- Case called for an end to such ating costs of Radio Free Europe financing in announcing he will and Radio Liberty which b e a m introduce legislation Monday to broadcasts to Communist Eastern bring the two stations under the Europe. congressional authorization and Although both claim to be non- appropriation process. governmental organizations spon- A member of both the Senate sored by private contributions, I Foreign Relations and Appropria- tions Committees, Case said tax returns of the two stations show combined operating costs of nearly $34 million for fiscal 1969. Case claimed from $12 million to $20 million in free media space is donated annually to the cam- paign to raise funds for the sta- tions. but that "the return from the public is apparently less than $10,000" while contributions from corporations and foundations like- wise account for only a small por- tion of their budgets, from the governor's office on more There was no immediate com- plans to use state forces. L wre ment from the CIA. "Every effort is being made t L R E M E M B E R Senate sources reported that avoid disruption of police service mee operati despite claims by the two stations and so far we've been successful," regarded limi they are private organizations, said Police Chief Harold Breler. by Nixon an U.S. government officials assigned Despite the job action, officials reached betw to the American consulate general said there was no significant rise William Rog 1p in Munich maintain very close in crime in the city, of the Senat contact with them. The action came less than a The Demo The sources said one official is week after the end of a six day menting on I assigned as a full-time liaison to period in which 20,000 New York ganize the go 1 assure their program content con- City policemen refused to work i failed to tak forms with government policies. a dispute over back pay. questions ofp PREGN , York Cit provide lilTare an aeamIZAbortion. formatio nancy.'] Koming Soon iod only your ch (The Easy-Does-It Band) nancy c alternat we have 1. to r. LLOYD BASKIN, LARRY ATAMANIUK, RICHARD GREENE, PETER ROWAN, ANDY KULBERG ice. CO 1-215-87 from Boston cast Ronnie Hawkins Greenbrier Boys, Bill Monroe and Blues Project of "Hair" Band, Toronto Bill Monroe and the Bluegrass Boys, bass, flute piano, organ, drums the Bluegrass Boys, Earth Opera lead vocals Jim Kweskin guitar, Jug Band lead vocals violin, viola Sat., Sun.-J an. 23, 24I Jim Roberts, lyricsS-2 II * THE SILENCE T ALL TOGETHER NOW AS rainTH SDurILNC dir. 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