Join The Daily CIRCULATION DEPT. Come in any afternoon 420 Maynard I news briefs By The Associated Press im4c £fri~i~an Dat4* l I Wednesday, April 7, 1971 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three DOORSOUPEIN 12:45i SHOWS AT 1,3,5,7,9 P.M. STARTING M M HIGHEST:: -Wanda Hale. New York Daily News THURSDAY KING HUSSEIN of Jordan told Palestinian guerrillas yes- terday to end their attacks on his army and fight the Israelis occupying Jordan's West Bank instead. The king said his army, which has fought the guerrillas for 12 consecutive days, would willingly support the guerrillas against Is- rael's West Bank positions. ECUADORIAN PRESIDENT Jose Maria Velasco yesterday fired his nephew as Defense Minister, heading off the second challenge to his power in less than a week. Velasco fired his nephew, Jorge Acosta Velasco, under pressure from disaffected army leaders, who announced their plans to try the former minister on, charges of fomenting army disunity. Velasco also released Gen. Luis Chavez, leader of last week's coup, from prison, and appeared to have weathered the latest crisis in his sporadic 36-year dictatorship. Velasco has been proclaimed President five times, and bounced out three times. A WILD MELEE in which three were arrested erupted yester- day in a San Francisco court following the setting of Aug. 9 as the start of the Soledad Brothers murder trial. George Jackson, one of three black convicts accused in the death' of a white guard at Soledad Prison in Jan., 1970, started the fray involving spectators, prisoners, and riot police by striking a baliff at- tempting to confiscate a newspaper. The Soledad Brothers took part in an unsuccessful escape at- tempt in Aug., 1970, in which a judge and a youth died. SENATE LEADERS of both parties said yesterday that they had no knowledge from senators concerning alleged FBI tapping of their lines. Both Majority Leader Mike Mansfield (D-Mont) and Minority Leader Hugh Scott (R-Pa) denied knowledge of FBI bugs on con- gressmen's phones. House Democratic Leader Hale Boggs (D-La) ac- cused the FBI of planting wiretaps on congressmen, and angrily de- manded the resignation of FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover. Atty. Gen. John Mitchell denied the FBI had ever bugged Con- gressional phones, and demanded an immediate retraction of Boggs' blast at the aging Hoover. INTERIOR SECRETARY Rogers Morton yesterday sent to Congress his proposed solution to an Indian land-claims dispute that has been holding up final approval of the controversial Alaska oil pipeline. The Senate and House Interior Committees scheduled hearings for April 29 to discuss Morton's proposal, which would compensate Indians in the pipeline's path with $1 billion and 40 million acres of land. If approved by both the Indians and Congress, the settlement will end a court injunction that has been delaying actual construction of the 800-mile. $1 billion pipeline. G :Refugeesreport mass executions in East Pakistan: CALCUTTA, India (M)- U.S. and other foreign refugees from East Pakistan reported yesterday that both Bengali sep- aratists and their antagonists, the West Pakistan army, have staged mass executions in the port city of Chittagong. Burning and looting. in Chittagong during the 12 day civil war between the secessionist Bengalis of East Pakistan and the Punjabi national government centered in West Pakis- tan has left it an almost deserted wasteland, they said. The Bengalis were still fighting outside Chittagong but the city itself was in the hands of West Pakistan's army, re- ported some of the 37 Americans and 82 o t h e r foreigners reaching Calucutta on the British ship Clan MacNair. "The army only had to see a Bengali on the street and they shot him," said a Briton. "Chittagong is now desterted. Everyone has fled to the vil- C o p fs lages outside."C up f o s The Britons said, though, that for two weeks before West Pakis- tan's army arrived, Bengalis had 1 in Ceylon, been murdering West Pakistanis living in Chittagong. Leon Lumsden, an American en- urfe k- jse gineer working on a U.S. aid pro- ject reported: "Soldiers just walk- ed up to anyone wearing a lungi, COLOMBO, Ceylon (R) - The the native Bengali dress, and shot Ceylon government slapped on them through the head." He esti- stiff curfews throughout the is- mated he had seen 15 Bengalis land nation yesterday aftef claim- killed. ing it ,had crushed an 'attempted Meanwhile, the State Depart- takeover by a revolutionary group ment reported that 307 Americans called the People's Liberation have left Dacca in East Pakistan Front. for Karachi in West Pakistan Except for authorized personnel, aboard five flights of Pakistan In- all of the nation's 12 million peo- ternational A i r w a y s transport ple were ordered to stay off the planes. That left approximately streets from 3 p.m. until dawn. 450 Americans still in East Pak- Prime Minister Sirimavo Band- istan. aranaike said in a radio annjounce- Stories told by refugees and in- ment that government troops were formation gathered by reporters deployed throughout the nation slipping into East Pakistan indi- after the insurgents led a series cate the West Pakistan army is of attacks Monday on police sta- becoming increasingly isolated in tions, security patrols and govern- t h e major cities of secessionist ment buildings in Colombo, the East Pakistan. capital city. The West Pakistan army is in Government sources said large control of at least the major cities numbers of rebels had been killed in the province, Dacca, the cap- or wounded. ital, and Chittagong. Members of the front are nick- Elsewhere in the 55,126-square- named Che Guevarists, after the mile province, and even on the dead Cuban revolutionary. It is outskirts of Dacca and Chittagong, not known whether it has any ties the followers of rebel leader Sheik to Latin American revolutionar- Mujibur Rahman and his outlaw- ies. ed Awami League were reported A government spokesman said to be in control. 20 fully armed rebels were cap- -Associated Press Downed billbOard on I-94 '3illboard Bandits' terrorize highways AN AMERICAN SST may yet be built if plans to finance the aircraft through a public stock issue backed up by $1 billion in By The Associated Press The shrill, biting staccato whine of a chain saw pierces the cold, night air. Thud. Another billboard falls to the ground along a highway in southern Michigan. Since Feb. 1, at least 75 bill- boards have dropped by state roadsides, victims of what high- way department spokesmen have dubbed the "Billboard Bandits." "I imagine it's ecologists," says Capt. William Holland of the Washtenaw County sheriff's department, commenting on the fallen billboards. Virtually all of the signs, of- ficials said, were illegally locat- ed and destined for eventual re- moval by t h e State Highway others were too close to t h e road or otherwise unlawful. L a w enforcement officials thought they had the case cracked last month. Seven Ann Arborteen-agers wereearrested in the town of Fowlerville, near the scene of t h r e e billboard choppings. Police said they found in the teenagers' car a hatchet, a chain saw and maps of Washte- naw, Jackson a n d Livingston counties, where the choppers have struck frequently. The seven pleaded innocent and are awaiting trial on charg- es of malicious destruction of property. But the latest strike left au- f 3 i t . p p 47 Daily Classifieds 14 Ta & T: Ibank loans are realized. Edward Uhl, president of Fairchild-Hiller Corp., largest subcon- tractor on the government-financed, recent cancelled Boeing Co. SST, appeared to be taking the lead in attempts to revive the pro- Meanwhile, President Nixon asked Congress yesterday to appro-i Ge u spriate an extra $97.3 million to finance the clean-up costs of winding up the SST program. Department under a 1966 bill- thiorities at a loss again. board control law. The highway department said About 15 billboards in Wash- virtually all of the signs chop- tenaw County were chopped ped down were on its list for down last weekend. One of them, removal, but the department has a $5,000 three-dimensional sign, limited resources for taking was in a legal location, but the down signs. RADICAL FILM SERIES Presents ODD MAN OUT TONIGHT (Wednesday) Shows at 7-9 P.M. Admission 75c CANTERBURY HOUSE-330 Maynard I II II 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, $i0 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5 by carrier, $5 by mail. i 3 I 1 i I III 3020 Washtenow MATINEE EVERY DAY BOX OFFICE OPENS 12:45 A mailboy and a tuned-in f Chimp give the network brass a KING KONG 4 HEADA CHE! WALT DISNEY productions s THE4 BAREFOT EXECUTIVE TECHNICO.R' nO ;: M71Waft Ssrey ~*i*1 UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN CONCERT DANCE ORGAN IZATION PHYSICAL EDUCATION DEPT. 21st ANNUAL Spring Dance Concert Barbour Gym- Dance Studio tured at Gampaha, 20 miles from Colombo, and a "blueprint f o r violence" spelling out the Insur- gents' strategy w a s in official hands. Bandaranaike said government troops repulsed 25 attacks during which some policemen and sol- dieds were wounded. The prime minister announced she h a d outlawed the People's Liberation Front and s a I d the government would not hesitate to hand out drastic punishments to stamp out the insurgency. Monday's outbreak of violence followed a series of disorders brought on by left-wing militants in recent weeks. SALE ON KLH PRODUCTS Y1 AT HI F1 STUDIO 121 W. WASHINGTON Downtown across from Old German Rest. NO 8-7942 Your Safe, Legal New York ABORTION Can Be Done Tomorrow! (212) 222-6023 or 222-6025 Mon.-Fri., 9-5 (213) PL7-3170 24 hrs.,7 days A registered nurse sched- ules you at lowest avail- ' able 'cost. SHOW TIMES 1-3-5-7-9 EVERY WED. IS LADIES DAY 1 to 6 P.M. a Theatre will be closed after EVERY Performance on Sunday, April 11th APRIL 8, 9,& 10 8:00 p.m.-$2.OO APRIL 10 MATINEE 2:30 p.m.-$1.SO TICKETS AVAILABLE- MARCH 29 BARBOUR GYMNASIUM and AT DOOR Information 764-1342 NATONLGENERAL'S 375 N. MAPLE RD. 7&9-1300 MON.-FRI. 7:30-9:15 SAT. 4:10-5:50 7:35-9:20 GP0) COLOR byOetuxe =Unitedfatmts SAT. 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