Residential College Players present page t o ree Thursday, April 1, 1971 C14C Siiri!3an atly NEWS PHONE: 764-0554 BUSINESS PHONE: 764.0554 NIGHT EDITOR: ROBERT SCHREINER ENDGAME and BEDTIME STORY by Samuel Beckett by Sean O'Casey Page Three CONGRESS CONSIDERS AMENDMENTS: 4* A :ril 1, 2, 3--8 P.M. EAST QUAD AUD. -ADMISSION 50c- "1 I news briefs By The Associated Press House rejects draft end Writer-In-Residence presents GARY SNYDER March 29 thru April 4 M During the week Snyder will read his poetry and hold lectures and discussions on ecology, an- thropology, Asian culture, Zen, Red power. THURSDAY-lecture on Zen poetry and painting Angelt Hall, Auditorium B-8 p.m. SATURDAY-discussion at South Quad, 2 p.m. THE MICHIGAN SUPREME COURT yesterday upheld a voter- approved constitutional amendment forbidding public aid to private and parochial schools. The court also said the amendment does not cancel any programs carried out by the state in aid of parochial schools except for direct grants to them. The court said "auxiliary services" such as health examinations, speech correction, visiting teachers and remedial reading and special counselors for delinquent, disturbed and mentally handicapped children are permitted if performed by public employes under public direction. * * * HOUSE DEMOCRATS yesterday adopted a compromise end- the-war resolution that aims at withdrawal of U.S. troops from Indochina by the end of 1972. The 132 to 68 vote for the resolution at a party caucus marked a shift in sentiment in the House,{which has steadfastly supported ad- ministration policy in Vietnam in the past. The key provision of the resolution declares the sense of the Demo- crats in the House to be that the House "should work to end the U.S. military involvement in Indochina and to bring about the release of, all prisoners at a certain time, during the 92nd Congress." . * * THE HOUSE APPROPRIATIONS COMMITTEE added $101.1j million to President Nixon's 1972 school budget yesterday in the first of the annual money bills sent to the House floor. It recommended new appropriations of $4.77 billion for the Office of Education and related agencies for the fiscal year starting July 1.j This is $251 million more than was provided for the current year and technically $298 million less than Nixon requested for the comingr Iyear. However, the funds requested included $400 million which the com-I mittee could not approve because it requires separate authorization inI legislation not yet acted on, providing for a National Student Loan Association to handle the student loan program. . * * A U.S. COURT OF APPEALS yesterday upheld the right of a union to strike selected railroads, but ordered a further hearing by a lower court to determine whether the union was bargaining in good faith. The current case with its implied strike threat began in 1970 when some 170 railroads were involved in labor disputes with four unions. Settlement was reached with three of the unions earlier this year, but! the transportation union failed to go along with the settlement. * * * THE FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD differed with the Nixon ad- ministration yesterday in calling for a six-month limit on the Presi- dent's power to control wages and prices.{ Specifically, the board favored a House-passed amendment that would restrict wage and price controls to six months if the President ever decided to impose them. WASHINGTON (R) - An effort to abolish the draft and the entire Selective Service System as the manpower supplier for the Indochina war was rejected by the House yesterday E73 to 11. At the same time the House wrote draft deferments for divinity students back in to a two-year draft-extension bill by a 114-29 vote. The amendment to dismantle the draft system was intro- duced by pep. Bella Abzug, (D-N.Y.), who said that action should be "merely the first - step to ending that ignomin- e ous war in Indochina." 7 7 1 It was quickly and easily reject- 1 y dThe House was considering a draft extension bill nearly tripling President Nixon's pay-boost in- centives for his "zero draft" all- volunteer army plan - to $2.7 billion from his $987 million re- quest. ".:, . >;.::;;;:,: ,;,.:The bill also would authorize Pr sident Nixon to establish stu- -Associated Press dent draft deferments and in- crease the nonmilitary service ob- Pakistani war damage ligation for conscientious object- .East Pakistani civilians probe through the wreckage following two ors to three years from two. Abzug's amendment would have days and nights of fierce attacks by units of the Pakistan army on dismantled the Selective Service strongholds of the East Pakistan independence movement. Civil System as of next Jan. 1. She said war broke out Friday after Sheik Mujibur Rahman proclaimed East that step by Congress should be Pakistan independent from the central government. followed by cutting off all funds March 31-April 3 Trueblood Theater Noel Coward's Presented by Ann Arbor Civic Theatre 8:00 P.M. TEAMSTER CASE: -. __ i -- - - Board denesHoffa bid for prison parole I I WASHINGTON (W) - The U.S. Parole Board yesterday denied parole to Teamsters Union Presi- dent James Hoffa. The refusal to give Hoffa his freedom means he will not be able to retain control of the Teamsters Union when his term as president expires in July. Hoffa, who has remained presi- dent of the Teamsters while in the federal penitentiary at Lewis- burg, Pa., was turned down when he first sought parole on Oct. 2, 1969. He entered Lewisburg March 7, 1967 under an eight-year sentence for jury tampering. The board continued Hoffa's case to June of 1972, long after the union election next July. Parole Board Chairman George Reed said the seven members of the board made the decision after fully reviewing the entire record of Hoffa's case. A statement issued by the board said Hoffa had been no- tified of the decision. for the war. She said the draft system "made possible the maintenance and es- calation of the war in Indochina without the approval of the American people or indeed t h i s body the House." Rep. Charles Gubser, (R-Calif.), said the deterrence to war is a, strong American military and if Abzug succeeded in cutting out manpower forces the reliance would have to go to nuclear wea- pons. The amendment by Rep. James Byrne, (D-Pa.), to put divinity deferments back into the bill was' approved after speakers argued the deferments preserve tradition- al separationl of church and state and have been granted in every American war except the Civil War. President Nixon asked author- ity to end draft deferments for divinity as well as all other stu- dents on grounds of fairness. revolts1n Ecuador QUITO, Ecuador (P) -- A mili- tary faction headed by an ousted general revolted yesterday against the government of. ose Maria Vel- asco Ibarra, elected president of Ecuador five times and o u s t e d three times. The nation's armed forces were reported to be seriously divided, with some units supporting the 78- year-old president and others backing the rebels. The rebellion grew out of a mil- itary quarrel. The leader of the rebellion, Qen. Luis Jacome Cha- vez, was ousted as head of the War Academy Tuesday after de- manding the regisnations of De- fense Minister Jorge Acosta Vel- asco and Gen. Julio Sacoto Mon- tero, the army commander. Velasco Ibarra was taken to the Defense Ministry building where he was holed up with his nephew, the defense minister, informed sources said. There they were at- tempting to rally military forces to crush the rebellion. The ministry building was re- ported surrounded by troops. Wit- nesses said tanks and other ar- mored vehicles had been sent to Ecuador's War Academy, rebel headquarters. The sympathies of these forces was not clear. CERTIFIED ABORTION REFERRAL ABORTION patient handled with greatest care and personal warmth af- forded by medical professionals (212) TR 7-8562 MRS. SAUL ALL INQUIRIES CONFIDENTIAL "1 BOX OFFICE OPEN 10 A.M. 'TIL CURTAIN TICKETS-$2, $2.50 at Stanger's or call 764-5387 ann arbor film cooperative PRESENTS APRIL FOOLS DAY SPECIAL! MARX'S BROTHERS in: A NIGHT AT THE OPERA . ACADEMY AWARD NOMINEE 'BEST FOREIGN FILM' S Incredibly sensual 1-- N. Y. TIMES "Without ever showing all there is to show, without pandering to the prurient and the obvious, 'First Love' becomes, through artistry and an intelligent use of sensuality, one of the sexiest movies in years!" -REX REED (Cannes Film Festival, 1970) "An extraordinarily beautiful film!" -WILLIAM WOLF, Cue Magazine "A love story that is universal and timeless! You will see 'First Love'...for the beautiful performances, for the beautiful visuality and for the beautiful Dominique Sanda!" -GENE SHALIT, NBC-TV SIDNEY GLAZIER presents MAXIMIUAN SCHELUS WINNER A U S N S B S INFILM FESTIVAL. FIRST LOVE JM91 'FIRST LOVE' 6:30 - 'QUACKSER' 8:10 - 'FIRST LOVE' 9:40 "One of the most delightful comedy dramas in recent years ! Wilder's delicate blend of humor and pathos makes the viewer thunk he is seeing young Charlie Chaplin!" I I 1_ I Aud. A Angell Hall 7-9:30 75c For the student body: NEXT WEEK-THE FOX & LAST SUMMER LEVI'S I I AT STATE & LIBERTY STS. BOX OFFICE OPENS 12:45 CORDUROY Slim Fits ......$6.98 (All Colors) Bells.........$8.50 DENIM Bush - Jeans Bells..... Pre-Shrunk Super Slims . . $10.00 $8.00 $7.50 ... $7.00 sponsored by Creative Arts Festival 1971 APRIL 2-3 7 and 9 p.m. Natural Science Auditorium $1.50 at the door I I i- CHECKMATE State Street at Liberty I A mailboy and a tuned-in . fI Chimp give the network brass a KING KONG HEADA CHE!= SWATDISNEY productions BAREIFOO ............ .::::.:.. EXECUTIVEg tt trs TV 0 1 E..- i I e.. .1 .M v mwlq m ma-rx 0 1