Ann Arbor Women's Film Festival and Workshops SUN., MAR. 28 2:00 p.m.-TRIAL OF JOAN OF ARC BRESSON, director :s (Childcare provided) 7:30 p.m.-ALL ABOUT EVE BETTY DAVIS and ANN BAXTER UNION BALLROOM. FREE : r;: I :;: I : .t'i page three , irl t ttrt :43 a t"6'1 1 j NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Sunday, March 28, 1971 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three news bAriefs By The Associated Press Pakistani Govt. 1~ victory Inl civil y :.:.<<. : : 'rd'; Writer-In-Residence presents GARY SNYDER March 29 thru April 4 During the week Snyder will read his poetry and hold lectures and discussions on ecology, an- thropology, Asian culture, Zen, mind-body. MONDAY, MARCH 29-discussion at the Residential College, 8:00 p.m. ' TUESDAY, MARCH 30 - poetry reading, Rackham Auditorium, 8:00 p.m. FULL SCHEDULE OF EVENTS IS FORTHCOMING BUTTERFI ELD BLUES BAND- Live 2 record set 492 7E-2001 UNIVERSITY SUPER NON-PROFIT STORE IN UNION I THE WHITE HOUSE plans to roll out its third "inflation alert" early this week. President Nixon will also decide whether to set wage standards in the construction industry. If the inflation alert is tougher than the first two and if Nixon, acts to curb construction costs, it would represent a new offensive by the administration against inflation. h i It would be the kind of anti-inflation policy expressed by the Federal Reserve board. The board, by law independent from the i s ns field Laos White House, is reluctant to pursue Nixon's requested easier money policies for fear of inflation. " The last inflation alert, issued three months ago, threw the l White House spotlight on wage and price increases in the oil, copper, railroad and t bimnilp indimfip.mnr nthp nvasion i i aiioa anuauaioon inausuries, among ormers_: W. WASHINGTON (P) - Senate That alert was stronger than the mild exhortations against Democratic Leader Mike Mans- inflation contained in the first. field said yesterday the U.S.- Dr. Hendrik Houthakker, a member of Nixon's Council of backed South Vietnamese inva- Economic Advisors, hinted that recent price increases of lumber sion of Laos has triggered a North and steel will be mentioned in the coming alert, along with comments Vietnamese reaction that "has ^A. on the inflation problem in the construction industry. created a very precarious posi- tion" for the Laotian govern- ment. THE JUDGE in the My Lai murder trial of Lt. William In addition, Mansfield told re- Calley yesterday permitted the jury to rehear transcript testi- porters, "it creates the possibility mony from eight more witnesses. of invasion into South Vietnam The jury has previously reheard testimony from 12 witnesses, by North Vietnam." It began deliberations March 16. The Montana Democrat express- After a full day of deliberations yesterday, the jury was expected ed concern over news reports that - the North Vietnamese had ad-_ to spend at least some time in debate today also. But the trial vhe wthinf mes o the judge, Col. Reid Wm. Kennedy, announced he and court attaches Laotian royal capital of Luang would not be on hand to accept any verdict today and it would Prabang and, earlier this week, have to remain secret until court resumes at 8:30 a.m. tomorrow. shelled the city's airfield for the PAKISTANI GOVERNMENT soldiers sta # * * first time. Dacca, capital of East Pakistan. Yesterd. DEMOCRATIC GOVERNORS agreed yesterday to seek an "One of the corollaires of the reported in that city. between the governme incursion in Laos - or the invas- ofrblSekMju. expanded role in the buildup to the 1972 Presidential campaign. ion - has been and will continue of rebe Sheik Mujibur. Fifteen of the 29 Democratic governors conferred privately at a to be stepped up enemy activity St. Louis airport motel and their chairman, Gov. Robert Scott of in central Laos and endangering GOVT. FILES PAPERS: North Carolina, said afterward: the royal capital, which I think i___ We do want to have a part of the action, to feel that we are could be taken without too much being heard and have a significant input into the affairs of the trouble," he said. "If they don't take it," Mans- ; 4/j Fd a p t party. field added, "it will only be be- I NY. cause of the feeling on both sides CHICAGO MAYOR Richard Daley termed the Vietnam war toward the king." King Savang WASHINGTON (AP) - The Nix- In the a waste of resources," and called for an end to the Asian Vatthana resides in Luang Pra- on administration, under fire knowledg conflict. bang, north of the administrative for what some critics say is a youn Daley, seeking an unprecedented fifth consecutive four year capital of Vientiane. wholesale spying on citizens, has conspirir term as Chicago's chief executive, listed Friday what he termed The Montanan said the Laotian denied it seeks "an unbridled incite a "the nation's priorities for the '70s." invasion widened the Indochinese discretion ... to ride roughshod" ges tha On his list of priorities facing the nation, Daley included elimi- war and that 'the South Vietna- over the constitutional protection gathered nation of poverty, an end to racism and rebuilding of cities. meer and an expedited e against unreasonable searches. used mo "These are not only local priorities," Daily said, they are national ananexpe __ne. _- _ At the same time, in documents national priorities and they must command the support of our national The Michigan Daily, edited and man. filed in federal court, the govern- nal pros government and its resources. aged by. students at the University oi ment concedes "it is simply not The * * Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second possible" to prevent innocent ment is k Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich-- JURORS IN THE SHARON TATE murder trial began de- igan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, persons from falling under sur- ment to liberations yesterday to decide between life imprisonment and Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- veillance. without day through Sunday morning Univer- Wa utb aacd h death sentence for convicted killer Charles Manson and three sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by What must be balanced, the case of nfollowers.carrier, $10 by mail. government contends is the right " women e-Summer Session published Tuesday of the individual to privacy and "Pun" P The trial, which began June 16, has been described by court through Saturday morning. Subscrip- the need of the government to with con officials as the longest in California records, tion rates: $5 by carrier, $5 by mail. protect national security. office in -Associated Press and guard Tuesday in ay, heavy fighting was ent troops and followers r~ 0 rIaims war Heavy battles still reported NEW DELHI, India (R) - The Pakistani government claim- :ed yesterday that the army has won control in its eastern province Where civil war has been raging since Thursday. But reports from the frontier said heavy fighting was s t i l1 going on. With both East and West Paki- stan under a strict censorship blackout, news of the conflict was sketchy. Sparse reports that did get out of Pakistan were sharply conflicting. The official Pakistan radio net- work said Shiek Mujibur Rahman, leader of the outlawed Awami League, who had been spearhead- ing the rebellion was under ar- rest. "The army is in full con- trol of the situation throughout East Pakistan and life is fact re- turning to normal," the radio said. Indian radio monitors, however; said they heard a clandestine .broadcast of Shiek Mujib in his own voice denying his arrest and reporting he was in the "liberated" port city of Chittagong. Reports reaching Indian towns along the 1,349-mile border with East Pakistan said heavy fighting was continuing throughout the province, with the Pakistan ai r force bombing Dacca and other cities to beat Shiek Mujib's follow- ers, who were reported armed mainly with spears and daggers. Bitter rivalry has existed be- tween East and West Pakistan, separated by 1,000 miles of Indian territory ever since Britain estab- lished the dominion in August 1947. Shiek Mujik has been campaign- ing for years for independence for East Pakistan which his follow- ers believe has been exploited by the government of West Pakistan. Last week Shiek Mujib confer- red at length with Pakistani Pre- sident Agha Mohammed Yahya Khan seeking independence for East Pakistan's 70 million people. ontinue e documents, which ac- ged the FBI overhearing g woman charged with ng to cross state lines to riot, the government ar- t much of the intelligence on domesic groups is re for pro.-ction of the security than for crimi- ecutions. national security" argu- being used by the govern- justify its wiretapping court permission in the White Panther Lawrence Plamondon. He is charged nspiring to bomb a CIA Ann Arbor. SONY ii5iACUL4#, ................ ................ "It is the sense of shaved idocy that HENRY WILLIAMS makes 'Hi, Mom!' so much more sat-DA isfying than the more pretentious US. SELECTIVENERVCEUSSEM 'Getting Straight, 'The Landlord' and Stanley Sweetheart.' 'Hi, Mom!' is talking on the not only funnier than these films, IT IS THE FIRST LEGITIMATELY FUNNY FILM I'VE SEEN IN A VERY LONG TIME. It works because it is Law Club Lounge Law School consistent, because it is witty, be- . - Monday, March 29 3.15 p.m. cause it is played beautifully and be- cause it resolutely refuses to use most no admission charge of the cliches of current filmm mk- i:. .: . . . .... . .......... ..... ..._::::::. ... "ENORMOUS EXUBERANCE! . FUNNY MOVIE!" -Richard Schickel, Life Magazine.k+ "THIS IS WHERE aT' AT!" -Penelope Gilliatt, New Yorker Magazine "UPROARIOUSLY FUNNY!" -William Wolf, Cue Magazine "STANDS OUT FOR ITS WIT:1 AND GOOD HUMOR!" -Roger Greenspun, New York Times - E- N2< ~T j PRESENTS THEIR ANNUAL CABARET DANCE * Saturday, April 3, 1971-9:30 P.M. until 2:00 A.M. HiM oni!Ypsilanti Light Guard Armory-Ypsilanti, Michigan to use on the beach, at a conference, in the classroom, or just for in-the-home enjoyment, pick up Sony's remarkable TC-60 Cassette-Corder. An unbeatable value at just $59.95 The TC-60 - you never heard it so good! Features: * AC/DC Operation * Pushbutton Controls " Micrphonea nd Auxiliary Inputs 59.95 * Record Interlock prevents accidental erasure Here's another Sony "sound" idea! The Sony Model TC-60 AC/DC Cassette-Corder is your best choice for inexpensive, portable, cassette recording. It offers unmatched Seny quality, handsome styling, and a variety of outstanding Sony convenience features. You get iamous Sonymatic Recording Control that automatically sets and monitors record level for perfect recordings every time. And with Sony's Remote Control Microphone you merely flip a switch on the microphone to start and stop recording! It even has a special Personal Earphone that lets you listen privately without disturbing others. If you ever wanted a portable tape recorder ©SERSCOPE, . . *