iageIii r'ee STUDENTS AND YOUTH CONFERENCE ON A PEOPLE'S PEACE FEBRUARY 5, 6 & 7 2500 PEOPLE (with sleeping bags) FROM ALL OVER THE COUNTRY NEED PLACES TO SLEEP Ci4c Miittn ttitu NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Wednesday, February 3, 1971 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three GOT ANY FLOOR SPACE? CALL 763-1107, 819 news briefs By The Associated Press -7i Ji 1~ MATURING/ THE WORLD'S LARGEST BEAR From ALASKA toBAJAI inCLR AN A B D B PRODUCTION d A TRUE-LIFE ADVENTURE FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY! THE BEST ANIMAL-SCENIC EFFORTS OF ANY KIND EVEN RANKING WITH DISNEY." Lee Straight-VANCOUVER SUN STARTS TODAY ONE WEEK ONLY adults-$2.50 PIPTH POrUM SHOWS 01FTH AVENUE AT LBIBWATV 0 :0 under 12-75c DOWNONANN A4:3 7:00 O 9 GINIMA BULD1 CLAUDE CHABROL FILM FESTIVAL FEBRUARY 1-7 4 films from the man who learned suspense from Hitchcock. Creator with Godard and Truffaut of the NEW WAVE Chabrol exposes the swell of passion with sudden violence Heroic gastronomy and the subtle grace of the 7 Capital Sins. "Chilling and beautiful" ". the Cinema of Cruely and Compassion" ) x Jacqueline Sassard and Stephane Audron in LES BICHES A MURDER IN EVERY MOVIE: Thu., Feb. 4-LEDA (WEB OF PASSION) 1959. Jean-Paul Bel- mondo's gastronomic orgy. An emotional film of love and murder. Fri., Feb. 5-LES COUSINS 1958. Country cousin come to live with decadent Parisian Jean-Claude Brialy. " Sat., Feb. 6-LES BICHES 1968. Another triangle of lesbianism and irony. Chabrol "back in business again" Sun.. Feb. 7-LE SCANDALE-THE CHAMPAGNE MURDERS. Chabrol in Hollywood. A wine-making empire, and Tony Perkins not playing a psychotic for once. 7 & 6 PM 75c ARCHITECTURE 662-8871 AUDITORIUM NOTICE: Cinema Guild announces petitiong for membership on its board. All interested and qualified persons are welcomed. Underclassmen especially encouraged.I Sign-up for interview appointments in Architecture Auditorium lobby. A sign-up sheet will be posted on the central column there. CHRYSLER CORPORATION white collar workers went on strike yesterday, but United Auto Worker negotiators and the auto company reached a contract agreement when the walkout was only three hours old. Details of the agreement were not disclosed, but the settlemen was believed to match the 13 per cent salary increase given to nonuniol personnel at Ford and General Motors., THE SENATE FINANCE COMMITTEE yesterday gave 13-0 approval to the nomination of John B. Connally as secretary of the treasury. The action apparently assured easy Senate confirmation for the Texas Democrat, former governor of Texas and secretary of the nav3 under President John F. Kennedy. * * * . MICHIGANREPUBLICANS took control of the State Senate without one word of debate yesterday. Though the Senate is divided evenly between Democrats and Re publicans, the GOP can effectively break ties by using the vote of Lieutenant Governor James Brickley. On a voice vote, with two democrats absent, the Senate named Sen, Milton Zaagman of Grand Rapids as president pro tem and Sen. An- thony Stamm of Kalamazoo as assistant president pro tem. PRESIDENT NIXON asked Congress yesterday to move ahead full speed with welfare reform, combined with a 6 per cent, rather than 10 per cent, increase in Social Security benefits. Presenting its case to the House Ways and Means Committee, the administration asked for basically the same bill passed only by the House last year, based on a federally assured income of $1600 per year for a family of four. * * * NEGOTIATIONS between Western oil companies and Persian Gulf producing countries, concerning petroleum prices, collapsed last night. The breakdown in the talks raised the threat of an oil cut-off to Western Europe and Japan. I The Persian Gulf countries supply 85 per cent of the world's oil exports. UGANDA'S rebel army leader named a new cabinet yesterday, made up almost entirely of civilians. Maj. Gen. Idi Amin, who toppled President Milton Obote's civilian regime last week, appointed 16 civilians to fill 18 cabinet seats. Amin kept the titles of head of state, minister of defense and com- mander of the armed forces for himself. THREE EXPLOSIONS destroyed a hijacked Indian airliner at Pakistan's Lahore airport yesterday, bringing relations between India and Pakistan to a new low. The hijackers claimed to be "freedom fighters" for Kashmir State, which is claimed by both India and Pakistan. -Associated Press SECRETARY OF DEFENSE Melvin Laird testifies on President Nixon's plan for an all-volunteer Army, before the Senate Armed Servic: Committee yesterday. TOUCHDOWN FRIDAY: Apollo 14 set for moon orbit, landing SPACE CENTER, Houston (A- sharply toward a valley in an an- The Apollo 14 astronauts s p e d cient moon mountain range called through space yesterday right on Fra Mauro. time for arrival tomorrow in lunar Roosa remains on board Kitty orbit and an exploration the next Hawk, keeping the mother ship day on the surface of the moon. ready for the return of the moon Mission Control said spacemen explorers. A 1 a n B. Shepard Jr., Stuart A. Mission Control said yesterday Roosa and Edgar D. Mitchell doz- that the planned crash on t h e ed off and on yesterday but they moon of the spent Saturn third- awoke occasionally to look back at stage rocket hull will be slightly their mother planet. off target. The racket, which -.? ; I' , t 1 ,t i E f f t J T E T Laird defends volunteer army before committeel WASHINGTON F -- Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird rejected yesterday the idea that frontline soldiers in an all volunteer Army would consist primarily of blacks and other disadvantaged minority citizens. "This will not be the major problem," he said. "We will have a well rounded, well-trained military service" if Con- gress provides sufficient pay and education incentives. He estimated it would cost an additional $5 billion a year for servicemen's salaries if the nation is to attract and keep sufficient volunteers so the draft can be ended safely. Laird gave his views before a skeptical Senate Armed Services Committee as he presented the administration's plea for a two-year extension of the draft and 5 per cent pay hike for lower-grade enlisted menl +- as part of the plan to elimi- nate the draft by mid 1973. s1 Committee Chairman John C.Jd a Stennis (D-Miss.) said going into the marketplace to compete on a salary basis for men would attract a great number of "dropouts, mis- fits, ne'er-do-wells, whatever you want to call them."t l f Stennis also asserted that com- LO ii11itar peting for men on a salary basis instead of drafting men from all walks of life would destroy the WASHINGTON 0P) - The State spirit of t h e modern American Department told Congress yester- Army. day that $693.1 million in Food Laird insisted it is difficult to For Peace .funds have been con- attract men into. the services be- verted into military assistance for cause of the low pay scales, not- Korea and South Vietnam, a n d ing that a New York City police- other countries since 1965. man receives $9,500 a y e a r to Undersecretary of State J o hn start. N. Irwin, testifying before the By comparison, he said, a re- Senate-House Economic Com- cruit who has just completed bas- mittee, said the conversions were ic training receives only $2,700 a made with U.S. permission over year - $600 less than the feder- the past six years from local cur- ally established minimum w a g e rencies generated by the program. which amounts to $3,300 a year. Irwin released statistics showing Laird said all military payrolls that in the period 1965-70, South and allowances in 1964 totaled $14 Vietnam converted $446 million in billion, but will hit $29.4 billion Food for Peace funds to mil- this year for an Army of roughly tary purposes and Korea $221.3 the same size, million. Stennis declared he supports The money derives from the sale the idea of volunteer military ser- of American foodstuffs for local vice but added, "the volunteer ob- currencies. Irwin said the money jective to me is a flight f r o m can be used for any purpose that reality unless the size of the arm- the receiving country sees f i t, ed forces is to be reduced . . . far consistent with its wellbeing and below any figures I consider our security. ninimum requirements." Senuril ______Sen. William Proxmire (D- Wis.), chairman of the commit- -ice r vealstee, said, "If a country needs these icefunds for security reasons, it should make its case on that basis, rather than to pervert Food For Peace to food for war." Sen. George McGovern (D-S.D.) the first director of the Food For Since the proposal went to the Peace program, testified Congress ate commission Monday, the ear- must move quickly to consolidate iest date for the increase is May all provisions of existing law which 1-100 days. However, postal of- affect U.S. military assistance icials said the temporary increases to other nations to improve Its are likely to go into effect "on or ability to supervise the programs bout May 15." properly. - Asst. Postmaster Gen. James W. "If that is the inevitable result Hargrove, who outlined the rate of the law as it now stands, t h e >ackage at a news conference, said law ought to be changed and we he proposals will allow the postal ought to limit all funds connected service to "operate on a sound fi- with this program to nonmilitary ancial basis for the first time inI purposes." ann arbor film co-op General Membership Meeting Wednesday i 1 t t 3 r The astronauts started a sleep period shortly after 10 a.m. EST yesterday and were awakened at about 7 p.m. A 10 second rocket burn Mon- day night changed the Apollo 141 flight plan slightly and assured it of an on-time rocket into lunar orbit at 2:01 a.m. tomorrow. TheI lunar landing is scheduled forI 4:16 a.m. Friday. Doosit Apollo 14 toward he moon was fired Sunday toward a lunar collision tomorrow about 186 miles west of the Apollo 12 land- ing site in the moon's S e a of Rains. ~1 Postal Serv 8:00 p.m. 3529 SAB Board Vacancies Must Be Filled Mission Control said the burn, Monday was not as precise as had WOT been planned and Apollo 14 will be ;WASHINGTON () - The U.S. slightly outside the predicted point Postal Service unveiled yesterday of arrival in moon orbit. This is a rate increase package headed not considered a problem, how- by an eight cent letter stamp that ever, because later rocket firings officials said would put the mails will refine the flight path. on a sound financial basis for the first time in decades. After the initial rocket firing In addition to a two cent increase to place Apollo 14 into a moon or- in regular first class postage there bit of 69 by 195 miles, the astro- would be a one cent hike in the cost nauts -will fire another rocket of airmail stamps, an eventual ;burst four ho~urs later to drop toduln fnwsae n aa an orbital low point of 11.5 miles, zine rates, and a one-third increase the lowest command ship orbit ev- inratesoadvetir ne. er attempted. in rates for advertising. The proposed new rates must be This 'ow orbit sets the stage for cleared by the independent postal Shepard and Mitchell to board rate commission established by the the lunar lander they call Antares postal reorganization legislation and to cast off from command of last year. If the commission does not act within 90 days, temporary ship Kitty Hawk. Then they drop increases may be put into effect - after 10 more days. r; l I ti 1_ ° ' PRESCRIPTION EYEWARE and SHADES many years." He conceded that the price of stamps and other postage may have to be increased even more as postal costs rise, particularly wages of postal unions and man- agement for a contract expected to take effect July 1. .: 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 St., 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. Does her anger at a domineering husband justify a wife's taking a lover? 9 r ANNIVERSARY SPE(IAL ALL SHOWS ALL TIMES admission only 99c i 615 6..MwrLA0 6623903 '-mmlikk I !!-- -I '!i III "WIW.