page three ZtiI P BiitCt 34 A 4tin NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Tuesday, January 12, 1971 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page TI "AS DAZZLING A CALVACADE AS HAS EVER BEEN PUT ON A SCREEN!" -Newsweek Magazine SHOWS AT 1 :00 3:30 6:05 8:40 . 0brat ------ ---- t1AAidNURA 37N MAPLE RD MON.-FRI. 7:05-9:15 StPisanis d Panavision Color SAT. SUN. 2:00-3:45-6:30 a :159:1 r0 nws briefs By The Associated Press THE UNITED AUTO WORKERS has set a strike deadline of 10 a.m. Tuesday, Jan. 19 at Chrysler Corp. UAW President Leonard Woodcock said yesterday the union's 120,000 members at Chrysler would strike then if agreement is not reached on a new contract. PAUL MEADLO, a former soldier under the command of, Lt. William Calley, testified yesterday he helped Calley kill Vietna- mese civilians with automatic rifle fire. Meadlo, testifying under a grant of immunity, said, "Calley or- dered me to help him kill the people, so I started shooting them too." THE SUPREME COURT agreed to hear boxer Muhammad Ali's appeal on his draft conviction yesterday and refused the case of James Hoffa, Jailed president of the Teamsters Union. All's decision meant he will have his chance to fight Joe Fraz- ier for the heavyweight title this March in what is expected to be the richest title bout in ring history. For Hoffa, the court's action means he will continue to serve a remaining five year prison term and will be unable to keep his office unless his parole board gives his leave. * * * U.S. DEFENSE SECRETARY Melvin Laird said yesterday he "will meet or beat" his announced withdrawal target in the gov- ernment's program to reduce U.S. troop strength in South Viet- nam. Laird said it would amount to "additional thousands" of troops withdrawn this year. PRESIDENT ANWAR SADAT told a massive rally of cheer- ing Egyptians yesterday that Israel will be punished for "her ag- gression," but insisted Cairo seeks peace. While attacking the United States for allegedly urging the Egyp- tians to "concede to Israeli demands," Sadat said his nation was! "eager to reach peace but we will accept no compromise:" THE UNITED STATES delivered a stern oral protest to the Soviet Union yesterday against the harassment of Americans in Moscow. According to a .U.S. Embassy spokesman, the Soviet Foreign Min- istry replied that Americans would not be suffering such harassment if Soviet citizens would be left in peace in the United States. The harassment has been' in retaliation for activities of Jewish militants against Soviet diplomats and performing artists in the U.S. * * * THE DEFENSE DEPARTMENT'S draft call for February will be 17,000 men, the same number called in January, a Depart- ment spokesman said yesterday. The Pentagon will continue inducting men into the service but their numbers are expected to decline gradually as the administra- tion's termination date of July 1, 1973 for draft calls approaches. * * * BETHLEHEM STEEL CO., the nation's No. 2 producer, started a new round of price increases yesterday that may possi- bly be passed on to the consumer. The, new boosts in heavy construction steel products comprise about 15 per cent of the entire industry's shipments. Bethlehem de- I clined to say how much it alone produces. F ______ ___--___ ____ THE BEATLES. "Ag N9din RE-RELEASED THR6 UNIEARST -Associated Press B~olivian revolt Bolivia's military patrols the streets of La Paz, the nation's capital, yesterday after an attempted coup by a right wing army clique. President Juan Jose Torres termed the situation, "under control. COMMON CAUSE: Group fights phony car aitgn poicies Nixon signs. cul in business tax SAN CLEMENTE, Calif. (A- - President Nixon, see to create jobs and promote economic growth, annoui yesterday complex rule changes reducing the short-I tax load on business but designed to cause no long-term loss. The move will cut $2.6 billion from tax collections year and the reductions will reach a peak of about billion in 1976, the President said. This will have the effec channeling billions into the sagging economy. The new formula will provide a faster tax write-of: funds plowed into new plants and equipment purchases. TUESDAY Let It Be-6:30 Yellow Sub-8:00 Hard Day's Night-9 30 Help--1 :00 WEDNESDAY, Yellow Submarine-6:30 Let It Be-8:00 Sneak Preview-9:30 Hard Day's' Night-I 1:00 WASHINGTON (P) - Calling campaign spending a national scandal, John W. Gardner, head of a public interest lobby, brought s u i t in federal court yesterday to bar the use of dum- my fund-raising committees. Gardner's class action suit named the Republican and Dem- ocratic national committees and the Conservative party as de- fendants but he said: "This is not an attack on the political party system or on any individual party official or con- tributor. It is an attack on un- limited campaign spending." The newly organized Com- mon Cause, which Gardner heads, charged that political parties established a "multi-. plicity of dummy national com- mittees" to encourage individual contributions to a single candi- date in excess of the $5,000 limit allowed. The election law states that no one person may contribute more than $5,000 Gardner maintained also that political committees violate the rule that they cannot receive or spend more than $3 million per year. The complaint said political committees arranged for banks and others to make loans of ov- er $5,000 to contributors with the knowledge that the funds would be given to a single can- didate or political committee. In the past campaign for ex- ample, the National Republican Senatorial. Committee g a v e roughly $5,000 each to such groups as "D.C. Committee for Effective Legislation" "Commit- tee to Further Educational Op- portunities," and "Citizens for Good Government Committee."i All were conduits to channel GOP money into the campaign of Sen. Winston L. Prouty (R- Vt.). In Indiana, GOP Senate can- didate Richard Roudebush had 40 separate committees. Form- er White House political aide and fund-raiser Jack A. Glea- son was the sole donor to 38 of them. In effect, what the administra- tion is doing in its campaig'n to spur production, employment and the sagging economy is to defer taxes for businessmen. The economic thinking behind the move was challenged, how- ever, by two Democratic senators who issued statements in W a sh- ington criticizing the President's action. Sen. Birch Bayh of Indiana said he can't see how "a minor adjust- ment" in depreciation allowances will encourage any increased in- vestment in plant° and equipment, and Sen. George McGovern of South Dakota' contended that ac-, celerating depreciation allowances is "among the least effective ways" of stimulating the economy. Under the guidelines laid down Monday, one key change will per- mit a 20 per cent speedup in claiming tax write-offs. "Past experience," the President said in a statement, "demonstrates that depreciation liberalization will stimulate the pace of spending on new plant and equipment, which has been levelling off, and thus create jobs. "As a result, federal tax col- lection in the long run will in- crease." Nixon said, too, that: "A liber- alization of depreciation allow- ances is essentially a change in the timing of a tax liability. The pol- icy permits business firms to re- duce tax payments now, when ad- ditional purchasing power is needed, and to make up these pay- ments: in later years. "Clearly, therefore, these steps toward meaningful depreciation reform are important for the pre- sent-in light of current economic conditions-and for the future-to maintain the growth which h a s made this nation the strongest and most productive the world has ever known." Another benefit Nixon foresaw is an increase in the competitive position of American exports, and strengthening the balance of in- ternational payments. 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 mai, bummer Session published Tuesday through' Saturday morning. Subscrip- Ion rates: $5. by carrier, $5 by mail Teachers. hi- Is govt. Pr1iicy WASHINGTON (AP)-Spc men for the National Educs Association strongly implied .terday that the nation's two lion school teachers will be ra against the Nixon administral in 1972 unless the President me positively to help public educat At a news conference calle announce that the federal gov ment's percentage contributior the support of public schools fallen to its lowest level;, in years, NEA president Helen E said: "The nation's teachers will whatever action is necessary make education a top priorit our public schools." Mrs. Bain said that a post step would be the creation o separate department of educa Although the federal gov ment will spend a record $2.9 lion on public schools in 197( an increase of $126 million the previous year, is will rer sent only 6.9 per cent of the 4 billion it will take to run schools. The high point of federal came in 1967-68 when federal sistance represented 8 per en the school dollar, according NEA's 29th annual report of ' timates of School Statistics." In 1964-65 the percentage federal aid was estimated by NEA at 3.8 per cent. The n school year it jumped to 7.9 cent and reached its peak of 8 cent in 1967,68. Failure of the federal govi ment to put up more money, NEA report said, means 1 states will have to pay $17.21 lion and localvgovernments $ billion. In addition, an estimated $ million will be needed for rep ment of bonded debt. Mrs. Bain said "resistance to creased taxes at the state and cal level has resulted in e school closings due to lack funds, record school levy defe bankrupt schools, cutbacks in e cational programs and' a sloe o PP? IFUNHFu m ?UBT Dawr4Tow"' ANN ARBOR NPORMATION 761-0700 Starts Thursday - "KAMA SUTRA" I DE RB CAMPUS, will meet with University of Michigan L.S.&A. stu- dents who are planning their junior-senior concentra- tions DATE: Thurs., Jan. 14 TIME: 4:00-6:00 p.m. RADICAL FILM SERIES PRESENTS CLIVE DONNER'S THE CARETAKER FROM THE PLAY BY HAROLD PINTER Tuesday, Jan. 12 Wednesday, Jan. 13 Alice's Restaurant Canterbury House Alice Lloyd Hall 330 Maynard 7-9-11 P.M.-ADMISSION 75c MAGIC HOUSE FAMILY LAST CHANCE TONIGHT! DIAL 8-6416 ENDING WEDNESDAY "'BORSALINO' SCORES! --Pla yboy Magazine "ONE OF THE YEAR'S BEST FILMSI -Te Catho ic PLACE: 2235 Angell Hall UM-DEARBORN PROGRAMS AVAILABLE: 1. Business Administration 2. Liberal Arts-including elementary and secondary teaching I doni cho ostuto FOLLETTS Textbook Dept. is updated to Today's way Frith Mechanical Access Card Selectors. Come in and See it Work. Rush Oarders for Course Books are ,TELEXED I 11 I - 3 I I "Gangland French style! They kill a little, love o little, fight a little!" -N.Y. TIMES * THURSDAY * "HAGBARD & SIGNE" (The Red Mantle) VIVIAN tAIN I A(HA L K 1MOYAN RS RQooxs ,JOSEPH STUN WHOWRT "FIDDLER on the ROOF" MC Syi JOHN KANOER ...__RFDFRR ~6 (The edMn.le Travel the Cosmos with 1 ' _ . , ... the iris bell adventure wed. at 8 p.m. in I