r-, MEN= I U page three T4r £iti 4an '' '"NEWlS PHONE: 7641-0552 1 4 9 RUSE NESS PHONE: ,r 764-0554 KOOPER IS KOMING! AL KOOPER and the EASY DOES IT BAND will be at HILL AUDITORIUM on FEBRUARY 6 with our own FLOATING OPERA Tickets go on sale tomorrow in the Michigan Union lobby $2.50 $3.00 $3.50 Sunday, January 31, 1971 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three IN r B The A soc iated Press THE NIXON ADMINISTRATION is tightening its special revenue-sharing legislation to keep at least a thread of federal control over local spending of the shared funds. The rules to be proposed will not be as restrictive as existing pro- grams, officials say, but will be designed to ensure that federal money flowing to states, cities and counties will be spent for the broad pur- poses outlined. The special revenue-sharing legislation calls for eventually re- placing more than 100 existing programs set for specific purposes. THE NEW MILITARY GOV ERMENT of U Tanda accused I U.S. continues raids over southern Laos; Mansfield protests CHEEP ! CHEEP! CHEEP ! . r Sponsored by the inter-cooperative council L If ti E The University of Michigan Bands Presents a POPS" CONCERT featuring PETER NEO AND HIS TRIO with The University of Michigan Symphony Band Sunday, Feb.14 HILL AUDIT TICKETS: $2.00 MAIL ORDERS: UNIVERSITY OF MI( 3:30 P.M. neighboring Sudan of invading Uganda and threatened to "meet force with force," a radio broadcast from Uganda reported last night. The broadcast attributed the statement to Maj. Gen. Idi Amin,t leader of the military coup that overthrew the regime of Dr. Milton} Obote Monday. Two days after taking power, Amin announced that Tanzanian troops were preparing to attack Uganda from the south on behalf of Obote, who is in Tanzania. This attack never materialized. Radio Uganda early yesterday broadcast an appeal to "misguided tribesmen" who fled to the jungle to return to their posts. * * * A VIRTUAL BLOCKADE of Berlin by East Germany went into its fourth day yesterday with West German Chancellor Willy Brandt defiantly stressing the city's ties to West Germany. The East German pressure tactics, openly supported by the Rus-' sians, are aimed at breaking West Germany's ties with West Berlin. These ties are disputed by the Communists, cautiously endorsed by, the Western allies who want to safeguard their own rights, and con- sidered absolutely necessary by the West Germans. Berlin, surrounded by Communist-ruled East Germany, must be guaranteed economic and political freedom in any future agreement between the powers, Brandt emphasized. PENTAGON OFFICIALS predict the big drop in defense in- dustry Jobs will flatten out during the next fiscal year. Discussing the new $75 billion defense budget, officials say de-3 fense-related industrial employment will decline by 80,000 workers: in fiscal 1972 starting July,1. That would amount to less than one-: third of the 250,000 job loss predicted for this fiscal year. A total of $36.4 billion has been allocated for purchasing goods' and services in the 1972 fiscal year, an increase of $300 million but $9 million less than below the peak in fiscal 1968. The new budget's spending proposals reflect a leveling off in de- fense hardware and goods buying as well as a cutback in Vietnamt war material With buying for the Vietnam war declining, the Pentagon is now emphasizing "investment proposals." This means catching up with; war-delayed modernization of equipment and facilities in the United States.and preparing for a smaller, perhaps volunteer, military. ** * AN ORGANIZED EFFORT began yesterday to have govern- ment, corporation and union workers report abuses and corrup- tion within their organizations. In a campaign promoted by public interest advocate Ralph Nader, employees were urged to "blow the whistle" on abuses ranging from polluting the environment to consumer fraud and the Defense De- partment. Addressing the Nader-sponsored conference on professional re- sponsibility, Sen. William Proximire (D-Wis) said he will introduce legislation permitting federal employees to sue for damages when they suffer unjust retaliation for reporting government abuse. He said that current laws and commissions are worthless in this field. Nader said he is establishing a Clearinghouse for Professional Re- sponsibility where "organization dissenters on matters of important public interest" could contact and pass on information "they think will help citizens as well as further their code of professional employment ethics." [Iii r Z TFW1T 1 ifi I i Pondering. West German Chancellor Willy Berlin with Mayor Klaus Schuet of trade to the divided city ent Briefs, at left.) By The Associated Press T h e intensified bombing raids by U.S. B52's over areas of southern Laos continued yesterday, strengthening re- cent speculation t ha t South Vietnamese forces would soon stage an attack into Laos. - Hundreds of tons of bombs were dropped by some 400 planes over the Ho Chi Minh Trail, the network of roads and paths that serve as supply routes for Com- .. munist forces from North Viet- nam to South Vietnam and Cam- bodia. Recent heavy bombing raids ov- er Laos and Cambodia have drawn charges that they violate agree- ments between Congress a n d President Nixon over the level of U.S. involvement in Indochina. Senate Majority Leader M i k e Mansfield (D-Mont.) yesterday reiterated his opposition to t h e raids, saying they "wvent way be- yond" a presidential statement of June 30 pledging no U.S. air or logistics support of South Viet- namese operations in Cambodia. Various intelligence reports yes- -Associated Press terday indicated a major build-up by the North Vietnamese along the the future trail, notably near the outlets leading into the sensitive northern Brandt, left, confers in West sector of South Vietnam. z as East German harassment Despite the increasing U.S. aer- ers its fourth day. (See News ial attacks, begun last October, the North Vietnamese have still been able to push throughsizable numbers of supply laden trucks. U.S. officials, including Secretary of State William Rogers, h av e cited the infiltration as a threat - 5 . sht to the United States' troop with- 1 1 01 S (J drawal program, thus necessitat- ing the bombing attacks. Rogers said Friday that the United States "would not rule out - 0the use of air power to support Asians in any effort they make to fight the common enemy ard and his fellow crewmen, Ed- Northetnam"adng t gar Mitchell and Stuart Roosa, was North Vietnam's buildup in relaxed and scheduled a visit Laos that caused the threat to with their families through a completing troop pullouts on glass partition that has helped schedule. isolate them against disease However, Mansfield said yester- germs since Jan. 11. day the escalation "may well hin- A Saturn rocket, unleashing der the withdrawal of U.S. troops a thrust of 7.9 million pounds, rather than accelerate. it." is scheduled to lift off the pad One of the raids, Mansfield at 3:23 p.m. EST, hurling the said, could be to increase Senate redesigned spacecraft on the support for the McGovern-Hat- road to the jagged highlands of field amendment to force with- the moon 228,899 miles away. drawal of all American forces' If the flight goes as plained, from Southeast Asia by Dec. 31. Apollo 14 will go into iunar Sens. George McGovern (D- orbit at 2:01 a.m., Feb. 4. After S.D.) and Mark O. Hatfield (R- a day of circling the moon, Ore) reintroduced their proposal Shepard and Mitchell will trans- last week. fer into the lunar module An- The raid yesterday marked the tares for the trickly descent to third successive day of intense the jagged Frau Mauro region bombing in the northwest-South on the eastern shore of the Vietnam-Laos area and the sev, moon's dry Ocean of Storms. enth time in the last two weeks. roRi~um $2.50 $3.00 CHIGAN BANDS -1024 Administration Bldg. The University of Michigan Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104 Mail orders will be accepted from 211-215 ALL SEATS RESERVED CAMPUS BOOTERY ON SCHEDULE: Apollo 14 set for take CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (M) - The nearly flawless countdown of Apollo 14 clicked steadily onward yesterday toward a blast-off this afternoon that will send the astronauts on one of the most crucial space missions yet attempted. If they succeed, the three- man crew commanded by the oldest of the spacemen, 47- year-old Alan Shepard Jr., could bring back fascinating clues to the conclusive birth of the moon and the solar system near- ly five billion years ago. If they fail, as the Apollo 13 crew did when an oxygen tank explosion forced them to limp home with the lunar module as a lifeboat, the remainder of the Apollo program could be in jeopardy. On the eve of the flight, Shep- GENOVESE 4 p.m.-Rackham Mon., Feb. 1 SHOE SALE FINAL CLEARANCE SAVE UP TO 50% ON MEN'S - WOMEN'S Fall, Winter Footwear WOMEN'S SHOES DRESS and CASUAL STYLES TRmYUTlS Ann Arbor Civic Theatre production of BLYTHE SPIRIT by NOEL COWARD 7:30-10:30 p.m., Mon., Feb. 1 & Tues., Feb. 2 at CIVIC THEATRE BUILDING 201 Mulhollland Dr.-AA Performances March 31-April 3 TRUEBLOOD THEATRE TED HEUSEL-director Black, Brown, Navy, Red $590_$790 Reg. 12.95-15.95 II Ir Fashion Shoes by Citation, Mandarins, Cover Girl, Daters SPECIAL GROUP TWICE TODAY ! 2:30 & 8:00! SPECIAL STUDENT DISCOUNT! ''1 3.l Dress Styles Pant Boots Casuals Loafers $3 90_$490 Reg. 7.95-19.95 I Come to the CINEMA GUILD CLAUDE CHABROL FESTIVAL "Chabrol was there at the very beginning of the New Wave, first as a critic for Cashiers du Cinema and then as the direc- tor of perhaps the first New Wave film. His Le Beau Serge (1958) pre- ceded Truffaut's The 400 Blows by a few months, and when Godard's Breathless appeared, the original triumverate of New Wave directors was established." -ROGER EBERT, Chicago Sun-Times, Jan. 24 Starring JUDY GARLAND FRANK MORGAN a RAY BOLGER BERT LAHR * JACK HALEY Sat. and Sun. Matinees 1 :00 P.M. and 3:00 P.M. child 75c adult $1 .50 00 P'TH rOrUM FIFTH AVENUW AT LWtURTY DOWNTOWN ANN AROR~ INFORMATION 761-3700 theatre emptied after each show i{ I SHOE BOOTS Leather and Vinyl Fashion Boots $"90'$1590$'1890 Reg. 17.95-29.95 MEN'S SHOES FLORSHEIM*-(Discontinued Styles ...... . $1600 CIN Wa Alice in Saturday, ..............,,......~v....~............. EMA II ilt Disney's Wonderland 250 PAIRS by Bostonian, Mansfield, Dexter, Eskipades $9.90 Lined Boots Boot Styles Loaifers $13.90 7p.m and 9p.m. i . _ I I r '-4 1 1 s __________________,-,-