COME TO TOWN and COUNTRY RESTAURANT Fine Food Chops, Steaks, & Shrimp Soul Food Home Cooked Open Pit Barbeque -Open-- 6 a.m. till 9 p.m.-Mon.-Thurs. 6 a.m. till 3 a.m.-Fri. -Sat. 8 a.m. till 7:30 p.m.-Sunday 730 NORTH MAIN Delivery and Catering 769-2330 ROLAND KIRK SAT., FEB. 6 10 p.m.-3 a.m. SUN., FEB. 7 Matinee 5 p.m.-$3.00 Evening 9-12 p.m.-$3.75 Ibo, 17111 Third 341-0770 no age limit "---------- wwww"s Does her anger at a domineering husband justify a wife's taking a lover? This wirfe was n . driven out! > diar ofaema housewife -NEXT- ''LOVE STORY"S STARTS FEB. 12 n e wsbriefs By The Associated Press A BLAST AND FIRE at a Thiokol Chemical Corp. plant yester- day leveled a munitions building, killing more than 25 persons and injuring more than 100. The blast at the Brunswick, Ga. plant sparked a blaze that con- sumed the remains of the building where magnesium trip flares were reportedly being manufactured for use in Vietnam. The division manager for the Thiokol plant said the FBI was assist- ing in identifying bodies. He said also that the possibility of sabotage' was being checked into. A WHITE HOUSE presentation on revenue sharing yesterday apparently left a number of House Republicans unconvinced. Chief GOP spokesman on revenues, Rep. John Byrnes (R-Wis.. said afterward he opposed the President's proposal to turn $5 billion over to state and local governments with no strings attached. Byrnes cited a lack of working revenue and the government's in- ability to spare the money from its own spending pressures as practical problems inherent in the plan. * * A NEW JERSEY school board yesterday resumed in the Supreme Court the protracted battle over prayers and Bible ' readings in public schools. Appealing to the court to modify or reverse its 1963 ban on Bible; readings and prayer recitation, the Netcong School Board told the justices "spiritual weapons" are the nation's most powerful resources. Last February, a New Jersey judge ordered the board to cease the daily reading in the school gymnasium of prayers from the_ Congressional Record. Participation by students and teachers was: optional. BATTLES between Britsh troops and teen-agers erupted last night in scattered-parts of Belfast. Rioting over the past two years has stemmed from religious and political differences with the Catholic minority claiming the Protest- ant majority has denied them equal opportunity in jobs, housing, and voting. i ithfochoo'a, a.rliev,.in the dAar, ftav Aldi,,'s c~a.ehc~r1n. Thursday, February 4, 1971 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three Nixon urges bil tolimit strikes WASHINGTON (A' - Citing a threatened nationwide rail- road walkout March 1, President Nixon yesterday renewed his urgent request to Congress for the first new law in a quarter century to forestall major strikes. "The urgency of this matter should require no new emphasis by anyone," Nixon said in a reminder of December's one-day national rail strike that Congress halted until March 1 with a special law. Secretary of Labor J. D. Hodgson said, however, the White House has no hope that Congress will enact the proposed new law in time to head off -_ Zt4P S W'i ! Wn Da4llR -Associated Press Lindsay listens New York Mayor John Lindsay listens during a press conference yesterday after he was named co-chairman of the "Commission on Cities in the '70's." EGYPT PROPOSAL: Mideast cease- fire extended one month Ro tie i J are fro re INDIVIDUAL TICKET SALES FISHBOWL, Feb. 8-9 MENDELSSOHN BOX OFFICE February 10-20 gtaJ y**-U* &JLJCtl ziu u 0.d WASHINGTON (') - A Cairo man Catholic district for arms. The troops were showered with bot- broadcast reported last night that s of acid and other missiles. Egypt will agree provisionally to * * .extend the current Mideast cease- fire for one month, until March 5. SOVIET BLOC FISHING VESSELS were sighted Tuesday fish- The Cairo radio broadcast, heard ng in restricted international waters 60 miles off the coast of New by U.S. monitors, did not spell out Jersey, the Coast Guard reported. just what conditions the Egyp- Under treaties with the Soviet Union and Poland, fishing in the tian government might be attach- ea is banned at this time of year to preserve fishing stock. ing to its agreement to a one A Coast Guard spokesman said the cutter Vigorous was speeding Informants here said they ex- )m Connecticut to "apprise" the commander of the flotilla of treaty pect Egyptian President Anwar quirements. No further action is contemplated, he said. Sadat will give more details in a GROUPS CITE PROGRESS Black voters register in South i B 'V GET YOUR MANWITH A Want Ad yi: .. ___ - ~-~- "Old-Time and Bluegrass Music" The Sloney Lonesome Boys speech scheduled to be delivered to the Egyptian National Assembly today. The broadcast said: "To show its good intentions and in response to international public opinion, Egypt will not proclaim the end of the cease fire. "The United Arab Republic will proclaim that it will not open fire for one month, ending March 5, provided the Israeli government announces during this period that it is prepared to implement the Security Council resolution. "Should the Israeli government actually be prepared to implement the resolution, it should also set a timetable for withdrawals." A cease fire has been in effect since a U.S. peace initiative got under way last summer. However, Arab-Israeli talks under United Nationsauspices have begun only recently. U.S. diplomats have been work- ing behind the scenes for an ex- tension of the cease-fire. Israel has said it would not be the first to resume shooting. The Egyptians had indicated t h e y wanted progress in the talks as a condition for extending the truce. The Security Council resolution referred to in the Cairo broad- cast presumably was the Novem- ber 1967 peace guideline resolu- tion passed by the U.N. body after the six-day Arab-Israeli war. the March 1 strike threat of nearly 500,000 rail workers. "We are hopeful of resolving that one by bargaining," Hodgson told newsmen at the White House. But Nixon said the current wage dispute of four AFL-CIO unions emphasizes the need for broad new legislation to deal with national emergency strikes in railroad, air- line, shipping, longshore and trucking industries. Spokesmen for organized labor and the railroad industry indicated they would mount stiff opposition in Congress against the law. Nixon's proposal, almost iden- tical with one he made and Con- gress ignored last year, would abolish the separate Railway La- bor Act covering rail and airline labor disputes and bring them un- der coverage of the Taft-Hartley Act now covering other industries. If enacted, Nixon's proposal would be the first legislation limit- ing strikes since the Taft-Hartley Act went into effect in 1947. Nixon's bill would give the White House three new options to deal with transportation strikes threat- ening the national interest. The first would allow the Presi- dent to extend the present Taft- Hartley Act 80 day cooling-off in- junction for an additional 30 days. Or, the President could appoint a special board to determine whe- ther to permit a partial strike and partial operation in a nationwide dispute. In railroads, that would mean letting unions strike certain lines but leave others operating for as long as 180 days. If there were no settlement in 180 days, an industry-wide strike or lockout, or further action by Congress in a special law could proceed. The third option would permit the president to appoint a neutral panel to impose as a final solution in a labor dispute the last offer of either the union or the management, on the theory that the two sides would move closer together to avoid los- ing too much if each other's last offer were accepted. 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. Seniority foes meet opposition WASHINGTON ( - Tradi- tion-oriented H o u s e Demo- crats yesterday rejected an ef- fort to remove a 72-year-old southerner from a committee chairmanship after shouting down two other moves to di- lute the power of congression- al seniority. The party caucus voted 126 to 96 to retain Rep. John McMillan of South Carolina in the District of Columbia Committee chairman- ship he has h e 1 d for 22 years. Younger liberal members h a d sought his removal, asserting he runs the panel autocratically and has no real concern for the needs of the predominantly black city of Washington. McMillan's supporters countered that the critics are just men em- bittered by ideological differences with the chairman, especially his opposition to home rule for the District now ruled, in effect, by Congress. Earlier yesterday the caucus handily defeated attempts to lim- it length of service by all Demo- cratic committee chairmen to four two-year terms and to prohibit a ny representative 70 or older from serving as chairman. The McMillan vote followed a plea by the powerful Ways and Means Committee chairman, Wil- bur Mills (D-Ark.), to retain the chairman or risk losing the White House to the Republicans in 1972. If McMillan were defeated, Mills told his fellow Democrats, it would be seen as a slap in the face to Southerners and the South and would cost the Democratic party Southern support in the 1972 presidential elections. The vote quashed the attempt by liberals on the conservatively dominated committee to win elec- tion to the chairmanship of Rep. Charles C. Diggs Jr. (D-Mich.), a black. "Hillbilly music with counterpoint." -Carter Katz "I've always noticed that for every tuxedo suit that's sold, there's a hundred pairs of overhauls, and that's why I stick to swamp opera." ATLANTA, Ga. -) - More than 100 groups still quietly con- duct voter registration drives across the South-trying to reach an estimated 1.6 million blacks who remain unregistered despite the 1965 Voting Rights Act. "Substantial progress has been made but there is much left to be done," said John Lewis, director of the nonpartisan Voter Educa- tion Project, Inc., one of the largest groups active in voter registration work. "You don't hear as much about voter registration now that the era of the big protest march is gone," he said. "But the job of registering blacks still involves hundreds of people. "There's still resistance to our work," added Lewis, "but of a more subtle shading. The project's annual report says more than two million blacks have been registered in 11 Southern states since pas- sage of the Voting Rights Act. The report said 3.36 million blacks are on file, out of 5 mil- lion voting age blacks. The white registration is about 17 million out of 20 million in the voting age group, the report said. "As the report indicates," Lewis said in an interview, "the pool of unregistered black voters represents a great deal of as yet unexercised political muscle in the South. I would not be at all surprised to see the first black congressmen come from the region during the next five to 10 years." The report, compiled from cen- sus tables and tabulations of county registration figures, said Texas has the highest percen- tage of registered black voters, 84.7. The lowest percentage, 55.4, is in North Carolina. ARK COFFEE HOUSE TONIGHT 9 p.m. --Clayton Mac Michen Come hear them put those notes in there out of context. ........;C......... . ,v; ...... . v....."........ .. ,F ... . .'' CLAUDE CHABROL sA FILM FESTIVAL - CC~ 8 I TONIGHT- t LEDA (Web of Passion) 1959 Chobrol with Jean-Paul Belmondo's gastronomic orgy. A TRUE-LIFE SUZY PARKER DIDN'T FIT THE DECOR A "I like the screen full of color, 20 colors on the ONE WEEK ONLY I Ha~sc ershly emotional film of love and murder.0 THPrU 7 :5Architecture -__________ c~~w' 662-8871] 75c Auditorium adls $2 5 -4 '. The University of Michigan Bands * Qpresents a hPOPS" CONCERT f eatuing PETER NERO AND HIS TRIO t The University of Michigan Symphony Band Sundy, Feb.14 330 P.M. 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 GOT ANY FLOOR SPACE? CALL 763-1107, 8, 9 Rome. Before Christ. After Fellini. An ALKW RTOOMALDI Piokrtm "FLII' AYIO N COLOR by 0 Aebm FONAV!SION ®JCD NOW 1 0 United Artists S TONIGHT at 7-9 P.M. Order Your Daily Now- r I I CINEMA II Fri. & Sat. LIFEBOAT-:00