ANN ARBOR CIVIC THEATRE Presents: J. M. BARRI E'S "TWELVE POUND LOOK" 8:00 P.M. Tonight and Sat. Night at Civic Theatre Building 201 Mulholland Dr., Ann Arbor One-Act Play Workshop-FREE OPEN TO THE PUBLIC kPeace By CHUCK WILBUR "The trip to Paris has given us new tools to work w it h in the anti-war struggle," says Barbara Fuller, director of the Interfaith Peace Council. Fuller recently returned f r o m the Paris peace talks as a representative of theCitizen's Conference on Ending the War in Indochina. She and 170 other members of the conference met two weeks ago with rep- resentatives of the principal parties in the Indochina conflict to gain a better understanding of the requisites for peace, Conference members met with t h e negotiating teams of the United States, North Vietnam, the Provisional Revo- page three de lega t lutionary Government PRG) of South Vietnam, and the Saigon government. The group also spoke with represen- tatives of the Cambodian United Front - a group opposing the Lon Nol regime and United States and South Vietna- mese intervention in Cambodia - and members of "third force" or neutralist elements of South Vietnam. According to Fuller some of the con- ference members were more skeptical of the friendliness of the PRG and North Vietnamese officials than she. "Yet I found it hard to believe that the gen- uineness which I continually encounter- ed was put on," she said. In contrast to the PRG and North Vietnamese delegations, Fuller describ- returi ed the Saigon delegation as "terribly on edge." She felt this was because the South Vietnamese knew that all the confer- ence members opposed American in- volvement in Vietnam and that "they had been told that the only Americans who opposed the war were long-haired students. When they saw our straight looking group they didn't know what to think." She s a i d the Saigon officials em- phasized their call for a cease-fire in South Vietnam. The PRG has opposed a ceasefire until the United States sets a date for the withdrawal of all its forces from Indochina. Although Fuller was not among the 12 conference members allowed to meet Sfro I with United States chief negotiatorI vid Bruce, she was informed of the c4 versation. Bruce had said that he was a ne tiator and not a policy maker and I he did not wish to discuss the histor: the Indochina conflict. Fuller met with several represen tives of the "third force" in South Vi nam - those who support neither PRG nor the Saigon government - cluding Buddist leader Thieh N: Hahn, Au Truong Thanh, former e nomics minister under the Ky gove ment, now an exile in Paris, and v representatives of Catholic anti-, groups. "Hahn stressed the need for ac sation of killing on the part of b ~aitu. sides in the war before the negotiating of a political settlement of t h e con- flict," Fuller said. Thanh told the conference that form- er South Vietnamese president General "Big" Minh could win the presidential election scheduled to take p la c e in South Vietnam in Oct. 1971 "if the elec- tions were not too rigged," Fuller said. Minh was not allowed to run in the last election and is now in exile. It remains to be seen, Fuller noted, whether or not he will be allowed to be a candidate in October. Thanh felt that the PRG would not refuse to negotiate with Minh, as they have with the pres- ent Saigon government. See DELEGATE, Page 6 Pris Ifritoitan NEWS PHONE: 754-055 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Friday, March 19, 1971 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three CONTINUOUS SHOWINGS FROM 1 O'CLOCK Cinema PHONE 482-3300 FREE PANIG am {. ,l ' f It . 4 neWS briefs { ~~~~~By The Associated PrTess ' i:?'" V: THE MEXICAN GOVERNMENT, angered at the formation of a Communist guerrilla group by Mexicans trained in Moscow > and 'North Korea, yesterday ordered the expulsion of five Soviet diplomats. T ..:: Foreign Minister Emilio O. Rabasa said he had called the tem- porary charge d'affaires of the Soviet Embassy, Dimitri A. Diakonov,. and told him that he and four other diplomats were unwelcome and mustleave. r Mexico recalled its envoy to Moscow on Wednesday for consulta- tions that were described by informed sources as "a temporary dipl.,- I:.."t matic withdrawal." HOUSE LEADERS suddenly switched plans yesterday and put off until next Tuesday a vote on the proposed constitutional amendment to lower the voting age to 18 in all elections. The amendment, which is expected to pass overwhelmingly, was (f dhl scheduled to be brought up as soon as the House completed work on Prime Minister Indira Gandhii a bill for funding the Boeing supersonic transport. office in New Delhi, India, yester But as soon as the vote on the SST was announced, Democratic----- -- --- leadership cancelled the rest of the week's legislative program. TESTIMONY RER TRANSPORTATION PROBLEMS were treated yesterday bys the Nixon administration as two programs were revealed to Congress.u A proposal to share $2.6 billion in federal revenue, touted as promoting transit diversity, was spelled out to Congress in the{ President's fifth message on special revenue-sharing funds.so n d Also presented to the Washington lawmakers was a proposal s i l pn for a state by state reform of the auto insurance system based on the no fault principal. The proposal was received by a lukewarm com- FT. BENNING, Ga. (A') - Lt.j mittee but was strongly supported by the nation's insurance industry. William Calley Jr.'s jury asked * * * ysedytberfehdote ROMAN CATHOLIC PRIESTS in the United States have ..yeterday to be refreshed on the indicated they are willing to accept married priests among their earliest stages of the 1968 Ameri~ rank, itwas epored ysteraycan infantry assault on My Lai, ; ranks, it was reported yesterday. The Rev. Frank Bonnike, president of the National Federation of { their resuest indicating a verdict Priests' Councils, announced the acceptance when the federation at his military murder trial may} voted 193-18 to ask American bishops to pursue an immediate end to be a long way off. mandatory celibacy. The six-man panel, in its sec- The federation, representing nearly 60 per cent of the nation's ond day of deliberation, asked to 59,000 clerics, also condemned continued U.S. involvement in the be read portions of the testimony Vietnam war. of six witnesses about the bodies Vietnamwar. G f 2nvIieif u ivil ill di i ArgenIne city Britain hit by From Wire Service Reports Strikes in Britain and Argentina yesterday came near to halting the business and industry of both countries. Two million workers closed vital sectors of British in- dustry in protest against the Conservative's government's legislation to curb strikes, while a general strike paralyzed Argentina's second largest city, Cordoba. Troops riding tanks and armored cars patrolled the streets of Cordoba, which has been declared under a state of emergency. The city has been a center of resistance to Argentina's military-backed FOR THE 2nd WEEK THE SUNDANCE KID and C.W. MOSS (of Bonnie & Clyde fame)-under other cover names-meet the forces of society on the racetrack of life. T.M.K. Corner State & Liberty Streets "Always The Finest in Screen Entertainment" Program Information 662-6264 Shows at 1:15-3-5-7-9 p.m. "A ROARING VISUAL DELIGHT" -L.A. TIMES "A REAL THRILLER" "A MUST" -UPI -PLAYBOY ROS4RT R4DFORD ~ iCNA4L J.POLLARD "LITTLE FAUSS & BIG HALSY" s -Associated Press is sworn into her third term of rday. EAD: Alley tri*'al eris verdict so were shown 20 color slides of the now uninhabited village of My Lai, taken 20 months after the so-called massacre of its un- resisting inhabitants. Earlier, the jury took an extend- ed luncheon break so one of its members, Maj. Harvey Brown, could receive renewed precaution- ary treatment for a minor ail- ment which 'sent him to a hospital during the night. governments. The Cordoban strike, which is in its second day, seemed completely effective. Public transport, tele- communications and other serv- ices, as well as business, were at a standstill. Argentine President Roberto Le- vingston, who faces serious econ- omic problems and growing criti- cism from both left and right, met for three hours Wednesday night with the country's top military leaders, including the commander in chief, Gen. Alejandro Lanusse. Lanusse has in the past few days indicated he favors a much quicker return to constitutional government than Levingston, who is on record as favoring a delay of four to five years. But in Britain, as vast areas lay silent under a one-day demonstra- Abortion ref ormers seek ballot LANSING (P) - Backers of Michigan's abortion law reklorm bill say they are prepared to make it a ballot issue if there is no ac- tion in the House of Representa- tives. The measure already has passed the Senate by a narrow 20-17 vote, but proponents now fear it may be bottled up in a House com- mittee. tion, the powerful 7 Congress disowned t by voting strongly a strike action. FOUR WITNESSES attacked provisions in a bill spon- sored by pollution subcommittee Chairman Edmund Muskie (D- Maine) yesterday and another measure backed by the Nixon administration. Appearing before Muskie's subcommittee as a group representing Environmental Action, Inc., Zero Population Growth, Inc., Friends of the Earth, and the Sierra Club, the witnesses urged more clean- up action under the 1899 Refuse Act. The Act, which they see as granting broad powers to crackI down on industrial polluters, empowers the Army Corps of Engineers to regulate the pollution which is dumped into navigable waters. e * THE FBI is making excellent progress in its investigation of the recent Capitol bombing but is not yet ready to make any arrests, a Congressional source reported yesterday. The source said J. Edgar Hoover's, discussion before a House appropriations subcommittee Wednesday "would bear out" a report in the Washington Daily News yesterday that the FBI is about ready to seek indictments against three to five people. of 3U vietnamese civilians iea along a trail in My Lai. Calley denies these slayings. These were the first victims at- tributed to Calley and GIs under his command. In a second charge, he is accused of directing the mass ' execution of at least 70 others in a drainage ditch outside the vil-1 lage, and with two ensuing slay-' ings of individuals. In his instructions, the judge, Col. Reid Kennedy, suggested to the jury that they dispose of the' first count in the indictment be- fore proceeding to the second and so forth. Their resuest for testimony about the charge of 30 killings thus may mean they are still de- liberating on that charge. { At their request, the jurors al- Ofcrrermnfor My Lai involveni WASHINGTON (P) - Gen. William C. Westmoreland has recommended that Maj. Gen. Samuel W. Koster and the gen- eral who was his assistant in command of the Army division involved in the My Lai massacre be demoted and reprimanded, Pentagon sources said yesterday. Koster, 51, a n d Brig. Gen. George H. Young Jr., 50, were told in a letter from the Army's general counsel that Westmore- land, the chief of staff, recom- mended Koster be reduced in rank to brigadierg Young to colonel. The final decision ministrative action, nonjudicial punishm made by Secretaryo Stanley R. Resor af generals are given reply to the charge The A r my in J missed criminal cha Koster, charges accu covering up t h er more than 100 Viet ilians at My Lai Trade Union Dr. Jack Stack, chairman of the he militants Michigan Coordinating Committee gainst s u c h for Abortion Law Reform, said Wednesday if House members are unable or unwilling to vote on the issue this year "there is growing -lsupport for a petition drive" to put the issue on the 1972 general election ballot. tent Rep. Richard Allen (R-Ithaca) main supporter of the bill in the House, said he would much pre- general and fer passage through the legisla- tive process. for this ad- Allen said he still hopes the a form of bill will be reported out of the vent, will be House Social Services and Correc- of the Army tions Committee, although he cal- fter the two culated committee members a r e a chance to 6-3 in opposition. es. Allen and Sen. Gilbert Bursley anuary dis- (R-Ann Arbor), sponsor of the ,rges against measure in the Senate, agreed using him of they will wait until late April or massacre of early May before deciding wheth- namese civ- er to try to put the issue on the ballot. I 1 Eureka!! The University Cellar is still 11 m m 14 I- - illy I Eur1ka1 The University Cellar is shill the (if it were any bigge FIFTEEN I ON ALLI (not just the fu Some ideas to Som er we'd have to sell tickets) PERCENT OFF NEW BOOKS n books . . . text too!) ne people to SALE having their great sale of the century. Don't miss CONTEMPORARY DIRECTIONS Presents THE SONIC ARTS UNION "Turn of the Road 1970" ROBERT ASHLEY DAVID BEHRMAN ALVIN LUCIER GORDON MUMMA DOUBLE FEATURE-ENDS TODAY Ig ...... "A remarkably pertinent, unpre- tentious film that creeps up on its f terrifying climax with near-come- dic easel Deeply affecting in its understanding of simple men thrust into the insanity of our blood- LYNN REDGRAVE lusting time."-Judith Crist. HYWEL BENNETT "HIGHLY EFFECTIVE, MEMORABLY INTELLIGENTI" NIGEL DAVENPORT -William Wolfe, CUE COLOR ~ J_______ ______ ALSO SHOW TIMES: "Barbarella"-7:1 5 MUM S P1pftsAlNO E"N POCIon "SNEAK PREVIEW"-9:00, 1 s s "Virgin Soldiers"-1 1 :00 read about Astrology Backpacking Black Lit. Gestalt Therapy Macrobiotics Organic Gardening think about Mr. Bear Brautigan Junge Pevls Pynchon Tolkien Miscellaneous Used books for 15c Used books for 1Oc Used books for 5c Surprises galore Live Electronic and Media Works Wi+r krrnf+ Vnnnont if i I '. i t