DIAL 8-6416 ENDING WEDNESDAY Shows Tonight at 7 and 9 Doors Open at 6:45 page t loree 94B , 'iC4 iogFC1T 4:3a4hpit" NEWS PHONE: 764-055: 8151 FSS PHONE: 764-0554 Tuesday, April 6, 1971 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three I Religious groups set anti-war action STARTING THURSDAY By The Associated Press A week of religious holidays has been met with a strong anti-war drive by churchmen across the nation. Four national religious journals, Prot- estant and Roman Catholic, have issued a joint Holy Week editorial saying the United States is "repeating the crucifixion of Christ" in Southeast Asia. The move came yesterday as other re- ligious leaders and groups protested the war on a broad front. In a "Call to Penitence and Action," the editorial accused U.S. leaders of "cruel deception" about the w a r, of inflicting massive destruction on t h e Vietnamese people and supporting an oppressive Sai- gon government. It continued: "Let no one say that we are confusing religion and politics. Christ was crucified by soldiers of an imperial army in a con- quered land under a ruler who enforced distorted law and maintained oppressive order." In other actions against the war, six religious leaders disclosed plans for a week long interfaith vigil and fast in front of the White House beginning last night. In New York, the Central Conference of American Rabbis, representing about 1,100 Reform rabbis across the country, called the war an "unspeakable tragedy" and called for a complete pullout of Amer- ican troops by the end of 1971. Sunday, a group of antiwar veterans was granted the use of Yale University's Battell Chapel as a symbolic sanctuary for draft resisters and deserters. Three veterans - dressed in their uni- forms - from a group of about 100 mem- bers of the Vietnam Veterans Against the War stood up in the midst of the crowded Palm Sunday service to formally ask for the use of the chapel as a sanctuary for a week. A former Marine Corps sergeant read their petition : "We who have seen thousands of peo- ple mindlessly slaughtered in the name of their freedom ask sanctuary for those who no longer will lend themselves to a con- flict which perverts the principles of their beloved nation." A spokesman for the chapel council granted the request. The Rev. William Sloane Coffin Jr., the university chaplain, emphasized that the sanctuary would be symbolic because there would be no resis- tance if federal marshals entered the chap- el to arrest any deserters or draft resist- ers. -Associated Press VETNAM VETERANS are greeted by Yale Chaplain William Cof- fin, as they are given permission to use the Yale chapel as an anti- war symbol for a week. news briefs By The Associated Press i SEN. MIKE MANSFIELD (D-Mont.) stated yesterday that the President's power to impound funds appropriated by Congress should be challenged by a House court suit. Mansfield declared that President Nixon's refusal to spend monies voted by Congress "raises a grave constitutional question" that the Supreme Court should rule upon. About half the appropriations now impounded are for highway construction, and over a billion of those impounded are earmarked for the military. THE SENATE yesterday approved legislation designed to in- crease trade with the communist countries of Eastern Europe. Included in a bill explanding the authority of the Export-Import Bank, the key provision would allow American businessmen to use the bank to finance deals with Eastern European countries. Sales would have to be approved by the President and licensed by the Commerce Department. The bill must now go to the House where it is expected to face hard opposition. Govt. says U.S. troops at lowest level since '66 By The Associated Press The U.S. Command yesterday announced another cut- back in American military manpower in S o u t h Vietnam, dropping the number to the lowest level since late summer, 1966. President Nixon is scheduled to announce tomorrow the next round of troop withdrawals. He has already indicated that he will maintain or speed the present rate of 12,500 men a month. The U.S. Command in Saigon announced a reduction of 4,600 men that dropped the over all troop strength to 301,900 as of last Thursday. Since 11 ( 11 r$ t f 4 Ii 1 i I THE LABOR DEPARTMENT yesterday announced the ap- pointment of twelve public, labor and industry members to theI Construction Industry Stabilization Committee, created by presi- dential executive order a week ago. John Dunlop, dean of the College of Arts and Sciences at Harvard University and longtime construction labor management expert, was chosen as chairman and one of the public members of the committee. The new committee, created to stabilize construction wages, holds its first meeting today. -Associated Press King commernoration Demonstrators grasp hands outside New York's St. Patrick's Ca- thedral Sunday during vigil to commemorate the 1968 slaying of Martin Luther King. REBELS SEEK ARMS-:* E. Pakistan forces hold border villages 11 * CHUADANGA, East Pakistan REP. HALE BOGGS (D-La.) yesterday demanded the imme- dpeheik Muibur Rahman's i diate resignation of FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover. stretches of East Pakistan terri- Boggs charged that the FBI tapped the telephones of Congress tory along the border with In- members making a comparison with "the tactics of Hitler's Gestapo dia yesterday, vowing to fight un- and the Soviet Union." til they defeat the Pakistan army. Atty. Gen. John Mitchell, Hoover's immediate superior, called The army of President Agha Boggs' charges "slanderous falsehoods" and said Boggs "should re- Mohammed Yahya Khan, trying nant at once and apologize to a great and educated American." to prevent t h i s province of 75 Republican leader Gerald Ford of Michigan challenged Boggs to million persons from seceding and prove his statements. becoming an independent nation} Yipies lan May-da activities appeared to be in control of the major cities, including Dacca, the provincial capital. Radio Pakistan continued to say that the army is in full con- trol of the situation in East Pak- istan "and is effectively dealing, with the armed infiltrators and miscreants who are now isolated." In Agartala, India, a border town, Mijanur Rahman, the act- ing leader of Bangla Desh - the name given the rebellious pro- vince - said his forces were try- ing to acquire arms from anyone who will sell them. Rahman, organizing secretary of the Awami League and t h e ranking East Pakistani leader still at liberty, said in an interview his representatives were negotiating in London for 100,000 rifles from any friendly country. Rahman said Bangla Desh also was man- ufacturing homemade a r m s in- side the liberated areas. He demanded that the United States and other powers clamp an arms embargo on Khan's regime in West Pakistan "for the sake of humanity, justice and civiliza- tion. then, continuing withdrawals have lowered the total to 300,- 000 or a little below. The U.S.Command announce- ment yesterday on the troop question came to the fore as light fighting was reported in Indo- china. There was no word of any fresh fighting at Fire Base 6,a South Vietnamese artillery outpost in the region where borders of Laos, Cambodia and South Vietnam converge. The Saigon command also re- ported a sharp engagement Sun- day in eastern Cambodia three miles southwest of the town of Snuol. In Laos, the Laotian Defense Ministry said North Vietnamese troops are building up their strength by installing antiaircraft guns near the royal capital of Luang Prabang. In Washington Senate Demo- crats yesterday called on the ad- ministration to stay out of this year's elections in South Vietnam and prove U.S. dedication to self determination. Introducing a resolution de- signed to guarantee U.S. neutral- ity, Sen. Adlai Stevenson III (D- Ill.) accused the administration of actively working for re-election of President Nguyen Van Thieu and Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky. 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. Leftists in Chile win 'mandate' SANTIAGO, Chile (P) - Marx- ist President Salvador Allende's leftist coalition government h a s won a firm mandate in municipal elections to continue the transfor- mation of Chile into a socialist state. In final returns from Sunday's voting, Popular Unity candidates, including Communists and Social- ists, received 1,375,063 votes. 48.7 per cent of the 2,832,784 to- tal. The election was t h e first chance f o r Chileans to express what they thought of Allende's first five months in office. More t h a n 8,000 candidates competed for 1,600 city and town council seats in 280 municipalities., The three main opposition par- ties - the Christian Democratic, National and Democratic Radical parties -received 1,343,484 votes or 47.57 per cent. However, they ran separate contests and com- peted against each other. Allende, first freely elected Marxist president in the Western Hemisphere, said the voting re- turns demonstrated thAt Chile is moving to the left. B u t he rejected opposition claims that he will drastically ac celerate his administration's pro- grams to make Chile a socialist country. ACADEMY AWARD NOMINEE! :10 -3:45-6:15-9 P.. MADISON, Wis. () - Hun- dreds of the nation's yippies gathered here this weekend to dance, sing, get stoned and set plans to join in a spring offen- sive against the Indochina war. The major focus at the meet- ing, called the New Nation Con- ference, was on May 1 - May Day - when radicals are plan- ning to descend on Washing- ton, D.C., for a festival cele- brating the signing of a "peace treaty" between the people of the United States and the Viet- The meeting, attended by namese. about 400 young people featur- The May Day action is design- ed a film designed to gain in- ed to trigger five days of sus- terest in the Washington ac- tained demonstrations around tions. the nation. Neither the film nor the "If the U.S. government won't sound track carried credits and stop the war, we'll stop the U.S. the film's narrator, a woman, government," the Yippies were did not identify herself. told at a Saturday night meet- The conference ended Sunday ing. w i t h demonstrators dancing Circulars w e r e distributed down Mifflin Street, throwing calling for an action at Kent eggs, rocks and bottles at riot- State May 4. equipped police. 3 1 I i I E 618 SnMin "Quolity Sound Th rough Phone 769-4700 ih Quality Equipment" fill i __ -_---.__. ___._____._^__ ICE . .. . v r }. "v 4: K}"t }',f::"..*K .":r.:.". ::::v: ................ I. ..'' ..k ..t . . ... .r. .. ..: .. , . .. . s v ...r . x ... : MATHE UN V RS T OF MICHIGAN. ... t ......n". ..."t.......v .n...A~?......v .. .^m .c~. :, 'S1Y:.:{'{};" 4.. CENTER FOR RUSSIAN AN EAS EUR PEA STUDIES ,r. .. ..r ......:.. ^^ " : ..t. . ....,.... ....t . . .. . . 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