2 $1.500 HELD OVER BY POPULAR DEMAND! 11CATC 1122 IS THE MOST MOVING THE MOST INTELLIGENT, THE MOST HUMANE - OHTO HELL WITH IT! - IT'S THE BEST AMERICAN FILM I'VE SEEN THIS YEAR!" -VINCENT CANBY, N.Y. TIMES tAliMn muEmNmt~fmvimmS NtVwIt A MiKE NICHOLSFILM ALANARKIN TONIGHT'S SHOWS: 7 and 9 rna w II 1 page three a4ire SI~43IIUI ai NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-055- Wednesday, January 27, 1971 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three news0bries By The Associated Press Topic rec. artists THE High Level Ranters LAST 2 DAYS "the best folk group in England." -MICHAEL COONEY A BIPARTISAN, session-opening drive for a Senate rules change suffered a severe setback yesterday at the hands of Vice President Spiro Agnew. The rules change would have made it easier to halt filibusters. Agnew said he is going to stick with the precedents and turn over to the Senate for decision the constitutional issues involved in the rules fight.4 The result was to put supporters of a rules change on notice that they will have to muster a two-thirds majority to break a filibuster by opponents. THE APOLLO 14 ASTRONUATS climbed aboard spaceship trainers today to practice a new landing technique intended to guide them to a pinpoint landing in one of the roughest areas of the moon, the craggy Fra Mauro highlands. Upon reaching the moon the astronauts will set up a nuclear- powered science station and collect rocks which might hold clues to the moon's origin. Two nights ago a small leak was detected in a hydraulic pack-. age associated with one of the rocket's engines. The package was re- moved and the defective parts replaced. Launch officials said the countdown would be unaffected. A crowd of 500,000 is expected to be present at the take-off scheduled for 3 p.m. Sunday. * * * SOUTH VIETNAMESE and American forces last night joined B the Viet Cong and the North Vietnamese is a cease fire in Vietnam to celebrate Tet, the lunar near year. The Saigon government began the Year of the Boar with a pro-j posal that all sick and wounded prisoners of war be freed by both sides. Calling this a "decisive year for peace," President Nguyen Van Thieu predicted the Communists would try to take over the South by political maneuvers because they could not win on the battlefield. Thieu's emphasis on the elections suggests he may be opening a bid for a second term as president. * * * wh THE VATICAN NEWSPAPER accused the government ofIm Guinea of massacre yesterday for executing four political Ro prisoners.Un Sources in the West African country reported by telephone that to Ito t four of the 58 persons awaiting execution for plotting to overthrow abo President Sekou Toure had been hanged on a main street in the capi- plo tal, Conakry. All four had been leading officials in Toure's government. 'PROTECT KIDS' Jaycee 'andits' inab d4 -Associated Press MI1*11s attacks Nixon sfund. sharing plan WASHINGTON ca--President Nixon's plan for sharing federal revenues with local governments is wasteful, unfair to areas most in need and likely to force a general tax in- crease, Rep.. Wilbur D. Mills, (D-Ark), told the House yester- day. Mills, chairman of the House Ways and Means Commit- tee which will consider the $16 million tax-sharing program, reserved an hour of House time for a detailed criticism of the plan, which amounted to his reply to Nixon's address. The President's State of the Union speech was primarily devoted to promoting the idea. Wilbur DA Mills d., ERRIGAN CASE: I st American Tour " .. alternately raucous and sensitive . . . but always a slam bang eve- ning of first rate enter- tainment." --LONDON TIMES KAMA " SUTRAW NEXT WEEK- JOHN COHEN (of the NEW LOST CITY RAMBLERS) 9:36 .604 MEW t THE MOTION PICTUREf KAMA SUTRA SEEN BY / MILLIONS OF MEN AND WOMEN IN EUROPE AND ASIA IS NOW I FREE TO BE SHOWN IN THE UNITED STATES... ANSWERS QUESTIONS EVEN A MAN AND WIFE DON'T DARE ASK EACH OTHER! O.E TO TH. KAMA SUTRA 1 WANT TOSHNOW"OU UOM.THINI..In..~ A GC fTIfltM-ww..-.-w..%08fO t AEG(R .0d RICHA*RD R.l ro.*i*0iR SCMIOT -Ao-E-t.fx pr B~dtt C oI - Shows at 7:15 and 9:00 0 P;PTH POrMu FH'TN uI a AT'rnspYv lii OOWNTOvmI ANN AROR LLJINFORMATION 751-9700I STARTS FRI DAY DOWNHILL RACER and LOVING I Grand jury jais nun for refusal to testify HARRISBURG, Pa. (A)-A nun York City, was held in contempt o charged the federal govern- of court by U.S. District Judge nt tapped telephones within the R. Dixon Herman after she failed man Catholic Church in the to testify. She had been granted ited. States and Rome was or- immunity by the court on two oc- red jailed yesterday for failing casions. testify before a U.S. grand jury Sister Jogues was named a co- out an alleged bomb-kidnap conspirator in the case against t. six persons charged with plotting Sister Jogues Egan, 52, New to kidnap presidential adviser Henry Kissinger and blow up tun.- nels in Washington on Feb. 22. Herman ordered her held without bond, but said she could get out of jail as soon as she agreed to testify "within the life of the rus grand jury." The jury could sit up to 18 months. etting the dealers and they'd At the same time the govern- ist get more." ment attempted to seek immunity Describing the operation, the for three other grand jury wit- o-chairmen said most of the nesses, but Herman recessed court rug suppliers "were in our age until Wednesday morning. roup-that's why the Jaycees Indicted by the grand jury ere able to move about among Jan. 12, were the Rev. Philip Ber- lem once they got identified rigan, now serving a.sentence at s being big buyers." Danbury, Conn. for destroying Some of the guys sat in on draft records; Eqbal Ahmad, a ot parties," they said. "None Pakistani graduate student; ,the ver used any of the drugs. Revs. Neil McLaughlin and Jo- They undertook the project, seph Wonderoth, and Anthony ail said, because most Jaycees Scobdick, a former priest, all of ave children and would "sure Baltimore; and Sister Elizabeth ate to see any of our kids on McAlister of Tarrytown, New York. is junk." IAll but Father Berrigan are free on bond ranging up to $60,000. His The place to meet brother, the Rev. Daniel Berri- NTERESTING people gan, also in Danbury on the draft records charge, was named as a co-conspirator. Herman ordered Monday that, the six defendants be arraigned here at 11 a.m. Feb. 8. L In an obvious effort to counter- act pressure on congressmen by governors and local officials, Mills listed states he said would gain and those he expects to lose under various possible ways of imple- menting the program. "If the purpose of revenue shar- ing is to meet the needs of our economy today, then revenue shar- ing is a poor and wasteful means of attaining those ends." Mills stated. "Under any of the formulas that have been developed so far, substantial funds are given to states and localities where there is little or no need, as well as to those where there is need." The most likely effect of sharing reve- nue, he continued, would be to raise federal taxes. If this were done, he said, available informa- tion "suggests that the distribu- tional. effects of revenue sharing would hurt most the urban states where we hear most about the need for revenue sharing, includ- ing Illinois, Ohio, Pennsylvania and New York. Mills criticized mainly the por- tion of the Nixon proposal calling for distribution of $5 billion a year with no strings tied. Nixon suggested also that $11 billion more be shared with the stipulation that the states use it in specified general areas like ed- ucation. They would develop their own programs. All but $1 billion of this $10 billion would be diverted from present specific categorical federal air programs. Mills indicated some sympathy with the block grant approach. But he also said the likelihood of $15-billion federal deficits "at least should flash a caution light for us to go slow with these pro- posals for giving away federal revenues. "Myconcern is that once this road is begun, where does it end?" Mills said. "Once the $5 billion or so is obtained in this manner, what could be more natural than at some future time to demand in the strongest terms possible, fur- ther increases in funds available. "What worries me most about not imposing taxes at the same level of government responsible for the expenditures is that this means there is no balancing of priorities between taxing and spending." Nixon pushes for renewed action on bills WASHINGTON (MP - President Nixon asked Congress yesterday to enact quickly 40 administration bills that languished in 1970. But he deferred explicit appeals for action on two of his main tat - gets: increased Social Security payments and welfare reform. In his first special message of the new year, Nixon acknowledged some of the 40 measures have been revised this, year to meet legitimate concerns expressed by members of the Congress. One of the major proposals in the package would provide $1.5 billion by mid-1972 to school dis- tricts facing racial desegregation problems. "I believe," said Nixon, "that the items of unfinished business I propose today merit the prompt and careful consideration of the Congress. I believe they are good measures." The presidential message did not encompass all the items he failed to get from the 1970 Con- gress. The President said he will sub- mit separate messages later to cover strikes creating national emergencies; S o c i a 1 Security amendments; bail reform; aid for higher education; reform of the draft; and steps toward creating all-volunteer armed forces. Nixon cited also-but did not list among his 40 submissions- "one especially urgent item of un- finished business which I proposed to the 91st Congress: welfare re- form." "In fairness to the taxpayers, to the communities, and also to the children, we can afford to delay no longer in discarding the pres- ent system and replacing it with a new one," he said. House Republican Leader Ger- ald R. Ford of Michigan said all the Nixon proposals are meritor- ious and Congress should move swiftly on them. WENATCHEE, Wash.(YP)-Vol- in the area from marijuana to g unteer undercover men, all opium." ju members of the local Junior The Jaycees, given the code Chamber of Commerce, say a name "Bandits" by the sheriff's cc 10-month investigation turned office, learned to identify drugs, dr up an "unlimited supply" of il- how to "make a buy" that would gr legal drugs in this farming com- stand up in court, and met users w munity of 18,000. and pushers on their own th The investigation by the Jay- ground. cees, in conjunction with the The "Bandits" worked in two- p Chelan County sheriff's office man teams, three nights a week, resulted in about 50 arrests. seeking to penetrate the local Larry Graybeal, co-chairman drug rings. V of the Jaycee drug abatement The plan, a spokesman said, hf program, said the undercover "was to knock off the whole- hf men were able to "buy anything salers. Otherwise, we'd just be th Delta Sigma Delta _ -- fI!- -I/-Dental Fraternity Tlir i Ai mPi iin~ lilt LAW LLUD ireasurer is pulling nis hair out because the social chairman is giving away a free ski trip at the "GIVEAWAY MIXER" ''LIVE "OPEN'' BAND" FRI., JAN. 29 6-9 p.m. 1502 HILL STREET I TV RENTALS $10.50 per month NO DEPOSIT FREE DELIVERY AND SERVICE CALL: NE-AC TV RENTALS 662-5671 Law Club Lounge 9 No Charge to Co-Eds. Thurs., Jan. 28, 1971 -12 P.M. A G-G Production *I c IOiI The Polus Hofhaimer Ensemble 8-voice choir, 4 recorders 4 crumhorns, mute coronette guitar, percussion PERFORM ING RENAISSANCE DANCE MUSIC plus a short election of officers Refreshments (including CHILI) ofterwa rds THURS., JAN. 28-8 pn.. SO. QUAD, W. LOUNGE EVERYONE WELCOMET Positively no musical knowledge needed ! ! Further info: 764-7638 ATTENTION: Look for the story on the Bach Club in the Daily, page 2, sometime this week. Starting the week after next, Bach Club Daily ads will gener- ally occur only on Thursday. i 'i1 I For the student body: '~Genuine SAuthentic ' Navy PEA COATS $25 Sizes 34 to 46 CHECKMATE State Street at Liberty Really interested in Film Making? GENERAL MEETING Basement Canterbury House Wednesday, January 27-7:30 TOMORROW NIGHT l F, THE SeaTrain* IS COMING AND SO IS DAVID BROMBERG STUDENTS FOR THE PEACE TREATY and LIFE CULTURE WEEK PRESENT I I i I CINEMA II JOHN FROWNS Speaking on the Peoples Peace Treaty JANE FONDA Winter Soldier Investigation TOM HAYDEN Chicago Conspiracy 10 Defendant ARCHIE SINGHAM Third World Liberation REV. PHILIP LINDON THIS FRIDAY JANUARY 29 HILL AUDITORIUM 8:30 P.M. j :v :: ::_;.. Walt Disney's Alice in Wonderland Saturday, 7 p.m. and 9p.m. TICKETS: $2.50, $3.00, $3.50 On sale at UNION (CELLAR), STUDENTS INTERNATIONAL and DISCOUNT RECORDS