J Wednesday & Thursday March 31st & April 1st DEPARTMENT OF SPEECH STUDENT LABORATORY THEATRE presents NEXT by Terrance McNally and A TRAGICOMEDY IN ONE ACT by Nikos Kazantzakis ARENA THEATRE, Frieze Building Promptly at 4:10 P.M. or earlier if theatre is filled ADMISSION FREE ii piage three Sfr1i i an a it NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Wednesday, March 31, 1971 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three presents LEN CHANDLER Columbia Recording Artist-Four Nights THURS.-SUN. Night 330 MAYNARD ST. April 1-4 8 P.M. Doors Open iU news briefs By The Associated Press BRITAIN'S CONSERVATIVE GOVERNMENT, faced w it h inflation and unemployment, yesterday announced sweeping tax cuts for industry and higher welfare benefits for the elderly. Anthony Barber, chancellor of the exchequer, announced the government's national taxation budget to a packed House of Com- mons. In addition to the higher pensions for the old, Barber also increased war pensions and unemployment benefits. These increases will have to be paid for -in higher social welfare contributions by workers. * * * FORMER SEN. GEORGE SMATHERS, an official of the Association of American Railroads, urged Congress yesterday to rescue the nation's ailing railroads with a $36 billion program. This would include federal loan guarantees, grants, tax breaks and regulatory reform over a period of 11 years. Smathers testified on a report by America's Sound Transporta- tion Review Organization (ASTRO), an industry study group for which he is general counsel. A railroad union official, Stephen Ailes, who appeared with Smathers, said the government's share would be less than one- fifth of the $36 billion. Other specialists, however, have estimated that the total federalr and local government contributions could run to $1.5 billion a year if various tax breaks sought by the industry were included. * * * Soviets agree on biological weapons ban GENEVA L) - The Soviet Union, in a surprise move yes- terday, broke nearly two years of deadlock in the Geneva dis- armament talks by agreeing to the Western idea of a separate ban on biological weapons of war. The Soviet policy shift coincided with Soviet party chief Leonid Brezhnev's call for a five-power conference on nuclear disarmament, made yesterday at the opening of the 24th So- viet Communist party congress in Moscow. The conference would include the United States, France, Britain and the Peo- ple's Republic of China. In a six-hour report to 4,943 delegates from 80 countries, he also held out the prospect? AAFC APRIL 1 75c Marx's Brothers Night at the Opera -Associated Press Thumbs up, Jacks Red-bearded Digby Jacks, a Communist, makes a thumbs up sign yesterday after he was elected new president of Britain's National Union of Students at the union's annual conference in Lancaster. Aud. A-Angell Hall 7:00-9:30 'i a THE U.S. PAROLE BOARD will rule today whether to free VOLUNTEER FORCE: Teamsters President James Hoffa, who has been serving an eight-year jury-tampering sentence in Lewisburg, Pa. since 1967. Most Teamsters sources report that Hoffa, whose five-year termt Hu elk s as president expires in July, would be easily re-elected if freed from OAspi a v be r prison and available to run. - Hoffa was approached in prison by persons who offered to seek' the aid of Sen. John McClellan (D-Ark.), in Hoffa's parole bid fora $1 million, the Justice Department has acknowledged.v McClellan, who conducted extensive Senate investigations into the activities of Hoffa and the Teamsters in the 1950s, said Monday WASHINGTON (iP) - Debate on The he opposes a parole for Hoffa. The abortive effort to enlist his aid a two-year draft extension open- Comm never reached him, officials said. ed in the House yesterday w it h billion, opinions conflicting about its bud- jection a * * * gfnfin o, - inrno+ivPC fr. n a on army 'es, draft House Armed Services ittee boosted that to $2.7 , tying in Pentagon p r 0- s for the second-year in- The White House has tak- public stand against that 1. bill before the House would rize the President to abol- udent draft deferments, in- g those for divinity s t u - and would add a third year present two-year nonmili- ervice requirement for con- ous objectors. of better relations with the United States and the People's Republic of China. Meanwhile in Geneva, Soviet delegate Alexei Reshchin pre- sented a draft convention prohibit- ing development, production and stockpiling of biological weapons and toxins. The draft provides for destruction of all these arms within three months after the treaty enters into force. Cosponsored by Bulgaria, Czech- oslovakia, Hungary, Poland, Ro- mania and Mongolia, the Soviet draft was virtually the same as a British draft convention introduced at the 25-nation talks in July 1969. Until now, the British proposal had been stiffly opposed by the So- viet block who had insisted on a package ban on both biological and chemical weapons. The Soviet draft provides for a ban on, all biological agents and toxins that are not specifically de- signed for the prevention of dis- ease or other peaceful purposes. It also calls for a ban on all mili- tary equipment or means of deliv- ery employed in the warlike use of biological w e a p o n s. Signatories would be pledged not to assist or encourage any other country to vio- late the treaty. Introducting the draft Roshchin told the conference his government had agreed to a separate treaty on biological weapons to help the ne- gotiations out of their deadlock. But he stressed Moscow still insists negotiations must start soon on a similar ban of all ^nemical weapons, including defoliants, her- bicides and tear gases used by U.S. forces in Vietnam. U.S.. war actions hit byMuski~e WASHINGTON (P) - Sen. Ed- mund Muskie of Maine has ex- pressed regret that he didn't speak out earlier against American mili- tary involvement in South Viet- nam - perhaps as much as six years ago. "I've often wished that I'd ex- pressed my doubts publicly at that time," said Muskie in a television interview. In the Senate yesterday, Muskie said "obsession with the body count" has led to indiscriminate U.S. bombing in Southeast Asia. Senate Republican L e a d e r Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania called that "a dreadful charge" and said current critics might better have spoken out six, seven or eight years ago. Muskie, now the top prospect for the 1972 Democratic presidential nomination, advocates a Con- gressional deadline for American withdrawal by the end o fthis year. Describing the evolution of his view about the war in a record- ed television interview on the David Frost show produced by Westinghouse Broadcasting Co., Muskie said, "I had doubts about about it that I expressed." get L-uustlilg pay illcel141V President Nixon's "zero dra THE U.S. POSTAL SERVICE, confident of an increase in unee Army. postal rates by mid-May, is sending out 5 billion eight-cent Nixon asked $987 millio stamps to post offices across the nation. first-year pay boost tow The proposed rate increases have not yet been approved by tracting enough volunteer the five-member Postal Rate Commission, created last year when the need of the draft byJ legislation revamping the old Post Office Department was passed. 1973. 2:45 The rate commission has been asked to act on a proposal that --_~~ 5, 7, 9 would raise a regular stamp by two cents, an air mail stamp by . . S DAY one cent and second and third-class postage rates by 142 per cent and H 7c 11,I e , ves for crease. aft" vol- en no action r as the The ard at- author -s to and ish stu June 30, cluding dents, _ . to th e . tary se e / scienti 4 Doors Open 1 Shows at 1, 3, DIAL 8-6416 TODAY IS LADIE L#32 per cent, respectively. A host of amendments, including at least three to tie the draft to C.im es back the Indochina war, are expected com es back to require three days of debating and voting with a final vote plan- HONG KONG RP - Communist ned for tomorrow. No major China released a hijacked Philip- amendment is expected to pass. pine Airlines jetliner yesterday House draft opponents p 1 a n and the plane landed at Hong first to try to abolish the Selec- Kong with all aboard except the tive Service System, then block five young Filipino hijackers. any draft extension beyond its The hijackers diverted the plane June 30 expiration. If this fails yesterday morning from a domes- they will try to extend it one year tic flight in the Philippines, re- instead of two. fueled at Hong Kong and flew to House Republican Leader Ger- Canton. ald Ford of Michigan said he per- The passengers, including four sonally favors the bill's tripling Americans. landed in the southern the President's $987-million p a y request to $2.7 billion as a "ma- Chinese city shortly after noon jor incentive Lo move to an all- U.S., Russia attempt to end Pakistan fight yesterday. volunteer force.', I - 3020 Washtenow, Ph. 434-1782 4th BIG WEEK NEW DELHI (AP) - The United States, the Soviet Union and In- dia are seeking a common ap- proach to bring an end to t h e fighting in East Pakistan, Indian official sources reported yester- day. Sources close to the Indian For- eign Ministry said discussions were under way in Washington, Moscow and N e w Delhi, in addition to parallel talks at the United Na- tions. The sources, however, did not I New From Levi ! For the Student Body: Boot Jeans $1.50 disclose what action w a s being considered. A U.S. Embassy spokesman con- firmed that diplomatic discus- sions were taking place between India and the United States about East Pakistan but said he could not disclose any details. The diplomatic offensive was re- ported as there was mounting evi- dence that the Pakistan army had tightened its control o v e r the Eastern province w h e r e a civil war between the armed forces and the followers of Sheik Mujibur Rahman's Awami League broke out last Thursday. A plane load of 60 Yugoslav evacuees arrived in New Delhi from Dacca en route to Belgrade with accounts of the situation in the provincial capital since Sun- day. Foreign newsmen have been expelled from East Pakistan and the government h a a imposed heavy censorship throughout the nation. T h e Yugoslavs, representing families of engineers and techni- cians working in Dacca, said the army was in full control of that city and that there did not appear to be any resistance. 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 mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5 by carrier, $5 by mail. SHOW TIMES WEEKDAYS 7 and 9 only SAT. and SUN. 1-3-5-7-4 I " CT I' 462-3900 SEX RITIIIILS OF THEOCCLT COLOR STRAIN THE BOUNDS OF THE IMAGINATION people who know no limits in a search for erotic sexual ecstasy N~iGN 111! CHI {State IECKMATE Street at Liberty PRE-SH RUNK loom r ON rrw RADICAL FILM SERIES presents A0l