. : 5.": .4 i v t to rr t ~ "a:: " .-.m " ";.. ~ ~s {":"'rb: ". r., r t+ f U OF M ROMANCE LANGUAGES DEPT. IONESCO'S Le Roi Se Meurt in French APRIL 2nd-2 p.m. 1.50, $1.00 APRIL 2 and 2-8 p.m. $2.00, $1.50 LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATRE ;a:~~~~~~~~~.4.,.. :v............. ..........."......:. . ...... ...: ::{c:*."° .,; ^t'"J. :i: r::}'GPr'=: :ri:"'rti :{4:;$'9::.:.. ...w.... . . . ...r.. . . . . . .:.. . . . . . . . .>;.. . . . ..... LIFE AND DEATH a contemporary Lenten morality play by DONALD H. POSTEMA an original multi-media production SUNDAY, APRIL 4, 6:30 p.m. CAMPUS CHAPEL Washtenaw at Forest 662-2402 l OvER 4t DIAL 8-6416 The 12 Chairs' is a comedy to warm the heart and leave the ribs ach- ing!" -Judith Crist, NBC A wild and hilarious chase for a fortune in jewels -~ Brok Ri RONOD DOORS OPEN 12:45 Wanda Hale. New York Daily News SHOWS AT 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 P.M. :y . NEXT: "GOING DOWN TIE ROAD" . ACADEMY AWARD NOMINEE Dial 662-6264 Now On Our Screen! At corper of 1:10-3:45-6:15-9 p.m. State and Liberty Sharp! LIT "TLI 110IG 'AS ITSNI M MOST EL TD .31 ITR A{ P OT DUSTiN HOITHAN "U1TLE BIG MAN p~age three CI P Ski [igan~ DaNwtly NEWS PHONE: 764-0--W BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Saturday, April 3, 1971 NIGHT EDITOR: W. E. SCHROCK Page Three In e wsbriefs By The Associated Press THE SENATE LABOR COMMITTEE approved yesterday a bill providing the $1.5 billion in school desegregation aid money asked by President Nixon but containing strong restrictions on its use. The bill is the result of a compromise between the administration and Senate Democrats and includes some of the provisions of an alternative bill to the Nixon proposal introduced by Sen. Walter Mon- dale, (D-Minn.). These include strict safeguards on the spending of the money by local school districts, some earmarking of funds for specific purposes, and the requirement that the federal money be used to develop qual- ity schools and not just help with desegregation problems. * j, * REBEL ARMY COMMANDERS in Jessore East Pakistan saidI Thursday Bengali freedom fighters would battle the Pakistani army to the death but conceded their control is shaky in Jessore and dozens of other cities in the breakaway province. Strong West Pakistani troops are dug in outside Jessore and have already made one attack, killing scores. Wednesday a column of Pakistani troops destroyed rows of peasant homes and shot anything that moved, the rebels reported. Whole fami- lies, they claimed, were machine-gunned as they fled their burning huts. Meanwhile, the State Department announced yesterday that the U.S. has accepted an offer by Pakistan to evacuate Americans from East Pakistan by Pakistani International Airlines. A CLOSE ASSOCIATE of Israeli Premier Golda Meir declar- ed yesterday Egyptian President Anwar Sadat's new proposal for re-opening the Suez Canal was absurd and indicated that Israel would reject it. Information Minister Israel Galili said that a re-opening of the canal would probably be accompanied by the massing of Egyptian troops on the canal's east bank. The Jerusalem government has said it is willing to withdraw from the canal banks if there is peace, but not back to its old borders which it considers insecure. A THREE JUDGE federal court panel ruled yesterday the constitution does not guarantee employes the right to strike and that government workers may be barred from striking. The United Federation of Postal Clerks had filed suit against' Postmaster General Winton Blount contending the right to strike is fundamental and protected by the Constitution. The court noted that although public employes have no consti- tutional right to strike, they maintain through Presidential order the right to organize and bargain collectively. Support for ;,,, , . Calley mounts across nation r . ', k' '; fly 1ne AssoCiatea ress Petition drives, draft board resignations and other dem- onstrations of support for Lt. William L. Calley Jr. continued yesterday with some appeals to President Nixon to grant him executive clemency. An Omaha, Neb. patrolman said he collected 500 signa- tures on a clemency petition in one day. About 2,000 persons staged a "sympathy march" through downtown Dallas. Mem- bers of draft boards in Arkansas, Michigan, Florida, Wyom- ing, Montana and Kansas resigned. Calley, 27, convicted of the premeditated murder of at least 22 Vietnainese civilians--- - - -- -Associated Press Peace protest Housewife Louise Bruyn of Newton, Mass., arrives at the Capitol in Washington yesterday after her 44-day, 450-mile march to protest the war in Indochina. HOODED MEN: Ypsilanti principal tarred, feathered YPSILANTI - The principal of Willow Run High School, which was the scene of racial incidents last month, was tarred and fea- thered Thursday night by a group of hooded men who forced him from his car at gunpoint. State police said Wiley Brown- lee, 42, suffered minor injuries in the incident which occurred as he was coming home from a meeting of the Willow Run School Board. Brownlee said the hooded men instructed him to walk to a road- side ditch. "They rapped me on the back of the head with a shot- gun and I think I was not uncon- scious, but stunned," he said. "For a moment I thought they wer1e going to pour gasoline on and set fire to my car, then they came toward me and began to pour tar over my clothes." "The next thing I knew, they threw a lot of chicken feathers on me," he said. He told state polibe he was convinced the assailants, who numbered about five or six, were adults, not high school pupils. Asked by newsmen if he knew any reason for the assault, Brownlee said "My mind would of course have to go back to the racial tensions at the school and the fact that the school was closed for a couple of days last month." Brownlee also spoke of a threatening card he received from the Ku Klux Klan approxi- mately one month ago." "I must be doing something they don't like," he said, shrug- ging his tar-covered shoulders. at My Lai on March 16, 1968, remained under light guard in his quarters at Ft. Benning, Ga. He was released from the post stockade Thursday night, one day after his sentence to life impris-, onment, following Nixon's order that the soldier be freed pending{ review of his conviction. Among those urging Nixon to act with caution was former U.S. Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark. He said the President should not grant Calley clemency simply because of the "emotion of t h e moment." Clark added: "I can't judge this particular case, but if a man kills unarmed citizens that do not pose a threat to him, then he would be guilty of murder. I could see no grounds for clemency under those circumstances." Several veterans stood on the steps of the Statehouse in Provi- dence, R.I., collecting signatures on a petition asking Nixon to have the sentence lifted. Allan Sartiny of Central Falls who said he re- turned only a month ago from Vietnam duty said, "I killed quite a few people over there. If Calley is guilty, then I'm guilty too." All five members of local board No. 33 in Huron county, Mich. re- signed to protest the Calley con- viction. Board member James E. Briggs of Bad Axe said, "Why should I place my name on an or- der of induction for a man who might have to face trial for car- rying out an order of his superior officer?" In Dallas, about 2,000 joined a march organized by an insurance man, George Hughes. Some of the marchers carried posters reading, "Free Lt. Calley, b o m b Hanoi." !I climbs 'to six per cent k' WASHINGTON ) - Unem- ployment appears to have levelled off at an annual rate of six per cent; but the economy itself may be heading toward recovery, the head of the Bureau of Labor Sta- tistics (BLS) t o 1 d Congressmen yesterday. This interpretation 'of official unemployment statistics for March was given by BLS commissioner Geoffrey Moore before the Joint Congressional Economic Commit- tee. The committee called Moore to testify after the Labor Depart- ment last month halted regular news briefings onunemployment and economic figures. The official statistics, released by the bureau an h o ur before Moore's appearance, showed the jobless rate has again hit the 6 per cent mark after two months of decline. The 6 per cent repre- sents 5.2 million jobless men and women, the bureau said, and is an increase of 150,000 on an annual basis when seasonal adjustments are made. Democratic National Chairman Lawrence O'Brien said the job- less figures are the result of the failure of the Nixon administra- tion's economic policies. "They are,'' he said, 'but otne indicator of the result of the Pres- ident's misguided, dehumanized approach to the economy." Jobless rate _.. } ._.. j' ' F .,.[.. .:,I: ........ ..... f r4 I. . ..' n . 31i i .Tf :. ...:'.: j 1 1 s ..[ :r . z ';_ . ....... .... 3.,.. vk a..:','. I [ _.. X' jl a.. t, x. i " i "''I SEN. GEORGE'AIKEN (R-Vt.) has joined Democratic lead- er Mike Mansfield in backing a proposed constitutional amend- The Michigan Daily, edited and man- ment limiting a president and vice-president to a single six-year aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second term.Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- Aiken, the dean of Senate Republicans, said yesterday he wants Michigan 48104. Published daiy Tues- to free presidents "from the millstone of partisan politics." day through Sunday morning Univer- "It is an indisputable fact that no president can give his best to ity year. Subscription rates: $10 by the nation or maintain our prestige in the world as long as he is con- ISummerS ession published Tuesday stantly being fired upon by those whose principal purpose is to keep through Saturday morning. Subscrip- him from being re-elected," Aiken said. rates: $5 by carrier, $5 by mail. ACADEMY AWARD NOMINEE 'BEST FOREIGN FILM' "Incredibly sensual"-T h: "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 presentsM i WINNER A MAXIMIUAN SE SAN SEBASIAN, LOVE ~~FILM FSIA.~ FIRST LOVE 3Y Sat. "First Love", 3:20, 6:30, 9:40-"Quackser" 5:00, 8:10, 11:20 "One of the most delightful comedy dramas in recent years! Wilder's delicate blend of humor and pathos makes the viewer think he is seeing young Charlie Chaplin!" -Time Magazine UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN FILM SOCIETY presents ORSON WELLES' MR. ARKADIN with ORSON WELLES PATRICIA MEDINA MICHAEL REDGRAVE I 8:30 p.m. FRIDAY FRIENDS MEETINGHOUSE 1420 Hill 7:30 & 9:30 p.m. SATURDAY FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 512 E. Huron 8:30 p.M. SUNDAY FRIENDS MEETINGHOUSE 1420 Hill between State and Division APRIL 2, 3, 4 Contribution $1 761-9751 FREE 1 +I preview: "VOICES" IM Ei HELP RE-ELECT MAYOR HARRIS GENE WILDER L tA * E oRUN HASACUI Ill A