CINEMA II Fri. & Sat. LIFEBOAT-:00 NOTORIOUS-9:05 MARAT SADE-1 1:00 Sunday MARAT SADE-1:00, 3:00 Aud. A, Angell Hall 15c page do ree 94C Swnirligtan D'A t1y NEWS PHONE: 764-055 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Friday, February 5, 1971 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three iN news. briefs By The Associated Press ANWAR SADAT, Egypt's president, announced yesterday that his government will observe a 30-day extension of the Middle East cease-fire. But he demanded that Israel make a partial pull-back of its forces from the Suez Canal during this period. Sadat's announcement came a day before the expiration of the six- month cease-fire at midnight Friday. Israel already has agreed to extend the truce, and Jordan said it would follow Cairo's lead. The resolution calls for Israeli withdrawal from all Arab territory seized in the 1967 war, in return for Arab recognition of Israel's right to exist as a nation with secure and recognized boundaries and an Arab guarantee of Israeli shipping rights in the Suez Canal. Sadat said Egypt would extend the current true until March 7 in hopes that U.N. mediator Gunnar V. Jarring can show "real progress" toward a peaceful settlement by that date. ROLLS ROYCE crashed into bankruptcy yesterday. Account- ant E. Ruper Nicholson was named the receiver for the company. The crash was blamed on a commitment to build 600 engines for the Tristar Jet projected by the Lockheed company in the United States. Development costs have soared and Rolls expects to lose $18 million. Rolls said there will be substantial layoffs among its 90,000 man force. Minister of Aviation Frederick Cornfield, said next week Parlia- ment will be asked to nationalize essential parts of Rolls. The nationalization is a major embarrassment for the Conserva- tives, traditional foes of nationalization. JOHN CONNALLY, Nixon's nominee for secretary of the Treasury, has filed documents with the Senate showing that while governor of Texas he accepted $575,000 for his work as an executor on the estate of oilman Sid Richardson. Sen. Fred Harris, (D-Okla.), had requested the documents at last Tuesday's hearing before the Senate Finance Committee where Con- nally denied he violated Texas constitutional prohibitions on earning outside income while governor. The committee agreed and approved his nomination. Apollo module ready to make lunar landing SPACE CENTER, Houston tY' - Apollo 14 astronauts were due to have landed on the surface of the moon in their lunar module Antares at 4:16 a.m. this morning. Navy Capt. Alan Shepard and Air Force Major Edgar Mitchell will command the lunar module while Navy Cmdr. Stuart Roosa will remain in the command module orbiting the moon. Shepard and Mitchell were to cast off in Antares at 11:50 p.m. EST last night. Next was four hours of tests for the moon lander in orbit while Roosa began his 40 hours alone aboard Kitty Hawk, during which ------ time he is to photograph a moon crater which may be the liRh-*ItQ -Associated Pre Artist's conception of lunar module - i HOUSE SKEPTICAL: Congress receives sharred revenue plai t i { I r ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL ALL SHOWS ALL TIMES admission only 99C i The 1961 payment came a day after he testified before the Senate WASHINGTON (Al) - President receive only 9 per cent of their Armed Services Committee that if he was confirmed as Secretary of Nixon yesterday sent to a skepti- share of the $5 billion a y e a r. the Navy he would not accept any of the estate payments. cal Congress a $5-billion-a-year However, states that negotiate * * *,general revenue-sharing p 1 a n with their own local governments THE VATICAN has developed a more lenient way of dealing 'which contains a new proposal to and reach mutually acceptable ithEaticAhoasdeveleedasr ienthurwaydoofrieal encourage states to determine how distributions will receive 10 per with Catholc scholars who challenge basic Church doctrine, they would share their m o n e y cent. In the process it has informally put aside the terms "heresy" and with localities. The money would be allocated "heretic." The President said the p 1 a n to states on the basis of popula- Every Wednesday members of the Congregation for the Doctrine of would grow automatically to pro- tion with a slight bonus to those the Faith are to meet and review writings of various theologians and vide an estimated $10 billion a with higher tax rates. report about them. year by 1980 in federal money to State governments would con- The severest pnishment an unrepenent theologian can undergo is states and localities. trol an average of 52 per cent of being blacklisted as an author in error and expelled from his teaching In a message to Congress the the grant and be required to pass ost President made clear that general 48 per cent directly to cities and pot -1 towns. The difference between the new and old ways of handling cases of ee sharing is t hae " cIncluded in the plan is a provi- doctrinal error lies in a provision in the congregation's recently adopted stone of his "new federalism" po1- sion to cut off revenue sharing norms for more consultation with bishops of a given theologian and icy..funds to governments that dis- with the theologian himself before arriving at a judgment. The plan faces difficulty in criminate on grounds of race, No more formal edicts of excommunication are to be issued against' Congress. where majorR aspects color or national origin. offending theologians who refused to change their viewsave bee e It would be enforced through the bur Mills (D-Ark.) and John courts or through administrative Byrns (R-Wisc.), respectivelyp d Dial 5-6290 the chairman and ranking Repub- __prceedngs lican on the House W a y s and ?... Thi$ Means commiittee which will con- jidrtebl.Pli c o _1_wifesider the bill. nuHwadBkeIR-en wife I Sen. Howard Baker (-en) landing site of Apollo 16. After two orbits of separate flight, Shepard and Mitchell fire Antares' descent engine and begin threading through mountain peaks to the Fra Mauro valley. During, their 33%/ hours on the moon, the spacemen will m a k e two moon walks of four to five hours each, becoming t h e fifth and sixth humans to step on the lunar soil. Science experiments to be left on the m o o n include a mortar package which will fire four rock- et grenades into the moon's sur- face months from now. Starting at 5:38 a.m. tomorrow, Shepard and Mitchell h o p e to; make the longest h i k e on the moon yet attempted. They will scale a crater called Cone, their prime science target' on the moon, in a search for rocks dating from the birth of the solar system. Shepard and Mitchell are sch- eduled to blast off from the moon's surface at 1:47 p.m. They will rendezvous with Roosa, aboard# Kitty Hawk. Apollo 14 zipped into lunar or- bit yesterday only a few hours af- ter the astronauts a n d Mission Control had cleared up a subnor- mal battery reading. Apollo 14 leaves moon orbit to- morrow night, starting t h e 68- hour trip home with a powerful rocket thrust over the backside of; the moon. The command ship will blaze back into the earth's atmosphere Tuesday and is to splash down in the South Pacific near Samoa at 4:04 p.m. 1 boards ask draft bldg. in Calif. OAKLAND, Calif. (') -- A bomb blast shattered dozens of windows and blew in doors early yesterday morning at the Oakland Army In- duction Center. Police said apparently no one was hurt. Newsmen permitted in the building saw some minor in- terior damage, but none to draft records. The center, a nine-story build- ing to which Northern California draftees come for military induc- tion, has for years been the target of antiwar and antidraft protests. It was the scene of antidraft demonstrations in October, 1967, when 315 were arrested, and in De- cember 1967 when 300 were arrest- ed. Officers said the blast went off at about 12:30 a.m. in a mail box close to the building. Police said a warning of the ex- plosion was whispered to a tele- phone operator five minutes be- fore the blast. The operator called the police. Three men were seen running from the scene about three min. utes after the explosion. Authorities later said they had no substantial leads. Dozens of windows up to the second story were blown in, along with the building's heavy doorjs. Large plate-glass shop fronts in four adjoining buildings were shattered. Signs were ripped off. Damage was estimated at under $5,000 to the induction center, with additional damage to an adjoining bar and grill, several stores and a small hotel. L ater, police told newsmen they thought the explosive used w a 6 either dynamite or nitroglycerine "because it was too powerful for black powder." Some type of shrapnel appar- ently was used in the device, they said. A newsman noted that the front of the draft center was pock- ed, and a mail box adjacent the one where the bomb was planted "had a hole you could put your fist through." He said the shattered mail box where the bomb was placed had a "crater" below it blown out by the bomb. The y4ichigan 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, Michigan48104. 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 mal. i- t mop- 3rd and FINAL WEEK! Does her anger at a domineering husband justify a wife's taking a lover? was driven to find out! who plans to submit the adminis- tration bill next Tuesday with 3 co-sponsors, indicated yesterday! some attempt might be made to' bring it up for a vote in the Sen- j ate if it is blocked in the House. of Under the Constitution, the House pul originates tax bills. ni Nixon said the plan would re- Wi duce needs for heavier property s t and sales taxes, open new job op- portunities at the state and localr level, decrease competition be- tween domestic and defense needs, and attract more energy and tal- ent to state a n d local govern- mnents, States that use a federally de- creed formula, which would pass on roughly half of the no-strings federal money to localities, would ONE TONIGHT'S WEEK ,SHOWS ONLY COLOR ACoWeNAS ' 7, 9, & 11 PHOM _.M io rt ~42-3300 FRE 16TEPA R K [N 6 mi fac ob thz sev cas adi str def bui mil cal re mo lic pri rejection of budget cuts LANSING ({) - Administrators varying degrees of sympathy for the state's financially pressed the plight of the schools. blic schools pleaded Wednesday Several suggested that educa- ht that legislators reject Gov. tors might find more satisfaction illiam Milliken's plan to c u t and less "pain" in offering solu- a t e education support by $27 tions than in trying to avoid being Ilion. caught in the problem of the School administrators said they state's financial pinch. ce massive deficits, contractural Milliken, in a Jan. 8 letter to ligations and legal commitments lawmakers, called for a two per at must be met regardless of the cent, $15-million cutback in state verity of any state budgetary or education aid totaling $969 mil- h crisproposal, which Milliken lion this year for elementary and vanced u n d e r constitutional secondary schools. ictures against state spending In addition, he asked a $12- ficits, is part of a $160 million million reduction of the "grand- dget balancing program the ad- father" clause in the aid law that nistration has advanced since guarantees no school district will culating effects of a national suffer a decrease in support from cession and the 67-day general one year to the next. )tors strike. State experts figured last sum- Lawmakers attending the pub- mer the guarantee would amount hearing by the House appro- to about $3.5 million when first ations Committee reacted with adopted. Since then, estimates have risen to $19.5 million. Milli- ken's plan would leave the fund- ing formula at $7.5 million. diary of a a h usS wit Order Your Daily Now- Phone 764-0558 1 CLAUDE CHABROL FILM FESTIVAL TONITE Les Cousins, 1959 Country cousin Gerald Blain comes to live with fast-moving Parisian Jean-Claude Brialy. "Our initial impression of the two cousins - Blain as moral; Brialy as decadent - are later undermined and our sympathies are evened out."-Robin Wood " People are not so simple as they r Rome. Before Christ. After Fellini. " nere is no end, no beginning. There is only the infinite passion of life.," -FELLINI An ALBERTO GRIMALDI Production uru T g31g rn'r Jrvmw 3Infpu T !. rA :emr <: E I I