page three 94P trl tg tn Ba4lin NEWS PHONE: 764-050o BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Tuesday, March 30, 1971 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three 0 I . news briefs By The Associated Press I of RATING DOORS OPEN 6:45 -Wanda Hale.NewYork Daiy News SHOWS AT 7 AND 9 -a ......... D NEXT: "GOING DOWN THE ROAD". CINEM f.A ,_OVILD Tuesday-March 30 AMERICAN FILM STUDIES PROGRAM STAG ECOAC H dir. JOHN FORD (USA) 1939 Classic Western focusing on relationships between assorted stagecoach passengers under pressure from Indian attack. All star cast- ANDY DEVINE (famed for Andy's Gang), JOHN WAYNE (famed for the Pledge of Allegiance), Tim Holt, Claire Trevor, and Thomas Mitchell (he won the Oscar). "THE RENAISSANCE OF THE WESTERN." Andrew Sarris 662-8871 AUDITORIUM 7 & 9:05 75C ARCHITECTURE ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR, Hollis Dole announced yesterday that offshore petroleum leasing would be stepped up in order to make the nation more self-reliant in vital fuels. Dole stated in the department's International Petroleum report that this was brought about to combat increased demand for foreign oil despite the program of oil import limitations that began in 1959. The assistant secretary also estimated that his department could, with adequate funding, find 10 billion tons of low sulfur coal in the East by 1976 in order to meet air quality requirements.E * * * REP. ABNER MIKVA, (D-Ill.), who is currently studying j U.S. prison conditions, says penal reformers should consider coed jails. Mikva says putting men and women in the same prison would remove some of the main complaints of male prisoners and cut down on homosexuality. His recommendation is based on a series of recent visits to prisons and on answers to a questionnaire he distributed to inmates. Mikiva's idea is patterned on the coed dorms now in existence on many college campuses, in which men and women have separate rooms but may associate freely. * *. * FORD MOTOR COMPANY announced yesterday the recall of its entire production of Pinto minicars for modification to prevent possible ignition of fuel vapors in the air cleaner. A spokesman for the company said a "few" cars had been des- troyed by fire in the engine compartment, but reported that there was no case where the flame had penetrated the passenger compartment. A total of 204,000 of the cars were involved, starting from original' production last July until March 19, when modifications were made on all cars coming off the production line. WILLIAM BARRON, West Virginia's 1961-65 Governor, was sentenced to federal prison yesterday minutes after he pleaded guilty to bribing the foreman of the fedral court which acquitted # him in a 1968 bribery-conspiracy trial. Barron was sentenced to 25 years in prison, the maximum under the three counts of conspiracy, bribery, and obstruction of justiceI to which he pleaded guilty.{ Less than an hour after he was sentenced, Barron left in custody of two U.S. marshalls to be driven to the Medical Center for Federal Prisoners at Springfield, Mo. * * * THIRTY-THREE CREWMEN were missing yesterday from the tanker Texaco Oklahoma, which broke in two in heavy Atlantic seas 120 miles northeast of Cape Hatteras, North Caro- lina. Eleven men of the tanker's crew were rescued from a life raft by a passing freighter, which headed for New York as the Coast Guard continued its search for possible survivors of the accident. The Coast Guard said it was a mystery why nearly two-thirds of the crew apparently did not escape the sinking ship. Pakistani rebels continue struggle NEW DELHI, India UB - East Pakistani rebels led by Shiek Mujibur Rahman reported yesterday to be keepingup their struggle to make East Pakistan an independent nation, despite the strength of the armed forces of West Pakistan. Official Indian sources said the 51-year-old sheik who heads the now outlawed Awami League is free, according to information received by the New Delhi government. West Pakistani authorities have been claiming that the sheik was taken into army custody following his unilateral proclamation of independence. The Pakistan government radio station in the Western provincial capital city of La- - hore said the "situation in; East Pakistan continued to be fuy under control."x -Associated Press EAST PAKISTANI CITIZENS bearing harpoons demonstrate for their independence in Dacca. LICENSES AT STAKE: Court to decide on prtvate club racism i But Indian sources questioned this claim. They said t ha t the Pakistan armed forces were con- tinuing to bomb some parts of the province and had used paratroop- ers for the first time to quell the revolt. While official informants d i d not disclose the source of their in- formation, it was presumed that Indian military units based near the border with E a s t Pakistan were able to monitor military ra- dios and flights of airplanes. The Indian sources s a i d the Pakistani paratroopers appeared to be trying to wipe out five clan- destine transmitters broadcasting messages on behalf of Sheik Mu- ijib. ALIC COPER "LOVE IT TO DEATH" Reg. 3.25 SALE ON WARNER 1883 UNIVERSITY CELL.AR SUPER NON PROFIT GENERAL STORE IN UNION From Wire Service Reports WASHINGTON - T h e Su- preme Court agreed yesterday to consider whether private so- cial clubs which have liquor li- censes can continue to exclude blacks. The Court accepted for re- view an appeal by a Moose Lodge in Harrisburg, Pa., whose racially exclusive policy was rul- ed illegal in November by a three-judge federal court. If the Court upholds the rul- ing the decision could upset the racial policies of private clubs across the country. The Harrisburg club's rule against black members or guests was tested three years ago. A member broughta black guest, K. Leroy Irvis, the Democratic leader of the Pennsylvania House, to the club for dinner and drinks. Irvis w as refused service. Irvis sued, leading to the rul- ing by the district court in Har- risburg in November that the lodge could not keep both its Pennsylvania liquor license and its racially exclusive policy. In another case, the Court agreed to consider a government contention that no person con-j victed of a serious crime may' legally posess a gun. The court will hear next fall a government appeal from a rul- ing by the U.S. Circuit Court in New York overturning the con- viction of a Bronx man tried under the 1968 gun control law. Kenneth Bass, who was con- victed as a previously convicted felon on two counts of possess- ing firearms and given concur- rent 15-month prison terms, ap- pealed on the grounds that the law applied only to interstate movement of guns. Bass was turned down by a U.S. district court but won in the circuit court. The govern- ment, which has used the sec- tion 150 times, contends t h e lower courts have split on its meaning and therefore a Su- preme Court ruling is necessary. There have been no independ- ent reports from East Pakistani government and the imposition of stiff press censorship in the rest of the country. Indian monitors heard the Dacca radio station, which the a r m y took over three days ago, for about seven hours Monday. Sheik Mujib's rebel radio said a battle was under way for con- trol of the station. It went back on the air late Monday and iden- tified as "Radio Pakistan," indi- cating that the army was still in control. The rebel radio also reported that. Awami League forces h a d captured two of the eastern pro- vince's three military canton- ments - Cool and Jessore - and were battling for possession of the only remaining one in Dacca. Official sources in the Indian border town of Agartala, capital of Tripura State, said the sound of tanks and mortars and ma- chine quns could be heard in the Sonamura area of East Pakistan, just three miles across the border. controls on SAN CLEMENTE, Calif. () - President Nixon yesterday signed an executive order aimed at sta- bilizing wages and prices in the construction industry. He also re- ported that "contractors and la- bor leaders have indicated their willingness to cooperate." Nixon signed t h e order after conferring at the Western White House with Secretary of Labor James Hodgson. In a statement, Nixon said con- struction wage increases negotiat- ed last year were more than dou- ble those won by factory workers while unemployment in the in- dustry reached a level nearly dou- ble the national average. "Continued excesses c a n lead only to less building, to continued unemployment and to further dis- tortions in the practices of the in- dustry and in the economy of the nation," Nixon said. The President ordered Hodgson to set up a 12-member committee with seats for contractor and un- ion representatives, review all col- lective bargaining agreements to determine whether they fall with- in broad wage criteria. Hodgson said the new system provides for enforcement - but without w h a t he termed heavy handed federal intervention. In a related move, Nixon also reinstated the Davis Bacon Act, calling for payment of union scale wages on government building projects, which he had suspended Feb. 23. I r f i ' ann arbor film cooperative -PRESENTS- TONIGHT--MARCH 30 Casino Royale Jean-Paul Belmondo-Woody Allen Orson Welles, David Niven, Charles Boyer Aud. A-Angell Hall 7-9:30 75c THURSDAY-APRIL FOOLS DAY-"A NIGHT AT THE OPERA" A DOUBLE FEATURE-STARTS TOMORROW . ACADEMY AWARD NOMINEE "Best Foreign Film" -William Wolfe, Cue "AN EXTRAORDINARILY BEAUTIFUL FILM!" ASO "ONE OF THE MAJOR MOVIE SURPRISES OF THE YEAR!" -Rex Reed "One of the most de- lightful comic dramas in recent years." -Time "A WINNER!" -Playboy "QUACKSER FORTUNE HAS A COUSIN IN THE BRONX" "Bathed in the rush of gorgeous i m a g e s and sounds, 'First Love' is a visionary concentration of the glories and the pain of human desire, render- ed incredibly sensual by the presence of Domini- que Sanda." -N.Y. Times= "'A Man and a Woman' 'Elvira Madigan' and now 'First Love' . . . remark- ably beautiful!" -City East Magazine WINNER SAN SEBASTIN FILM FESTIVAL MAXIMILIAN SCHELL'S "FIRST LOVE" FIFSSTH VtrU] m I I