DIAL 662-6264 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINEE! at State Liberty * 1:10-3:45-6:15-9 P.M. * -NOTE SPECIAL SHOW TIMES! 75 Wednesdays are Ladies Davs! 7 75 Ladies only 6-Bits Wed. 1-6 P.M Z page three $ Sici4i1a tti NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 HUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Thursday, April 8, 1971 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three iii nw ars briefs By The Associated Press Representatives or file lawsuit to 2ND HIT WEEK "LIEL' Pani *Tchncolor* halt war effort A FEDERAL GRAND JURY indicted 23 members of the Black P. Stone Nation yesterday on charges of obtaining money by fraud from a community organization funded by the Office of Economic Opportunity. The 123-count indictment released yesterday said the black street gang members obtained money from The Woodlawn Organization through stealing and kickbacks. The indictment claimed the gang leaders systematically stole funds from the program by claiming salaries for teaching duties they did not perform. ==wpm ACADEMY AWARD NOMINEE -BEST FOREIGN FILM- -INTERNATIONAL FILM AWARD -JOSEPH BRUSTYN AWARD -BEST ACTRESS, CATHERINE DENEUVE -BEST DIRECTOR, tUIS BUNUEL "One of the Year's 10 Best !" GEORGE MEANY, president of the AFL-CIO, accused the administration yesterday of pursuing what he called misguided eco- nomic plans and trying to make labor "the scapegoat for the eco- nomic mess.'.' Testifying before a 'Senate banking subcommittee, the labor chief said wage curbs recently decreed for construction workers are unfair and unworkable. U.S. REPRES~ENTATIVES flpniamin Rose PRESIDENT FRANCOIS DUVALIER of Haiti is believed to Farren Mitchell (D-Md.), leave U.S. Dist have suffered a second stroke since November and may be serious- yesterday. Along with Rep. Michael Harrin ly ill, U.S. sources reported yesterday. President Nixon seeking an order to stop "All indications report to the fact that Duvalier suffered a stroke days unless Congress approves a declarati around mid-March," a source said, adding that a team of French y Cgs ro adcra doctors is believed to have flown in to treat the ailing 63-year-old chief of state. CLERICAL WORKERS: * * * -Associated Press enthal (D-N.Y.), left, and rict Court in Washington gton (D-Mass.) they sued the Indochina war in 60 ion of war. _ Somewhere between the innocent girl and the not so innocent mistress is the bizarre, sensuous story of 1RI~t4~V; -VINCENT CANBY, N.Y. Times -ROGER GREENSPUN N.Y. Times -LEONARD HARRIS, CBS-TV -REX REED -NEW YORK FILM CRITCS -ANDREW SARRIS, Village Voice distributed by Moron Films IN COLOR THE UNITED WOMEN'S CONTINGENT of the National Peace Action Coalition attacked President Nixon yesterday for tightening rules on abortions at military hospitals and said he should not inter- fere with women's "rights to control their own bodies and lives." The attack stemmed from Nixon's order to all military base hos- pitals to abide by abortion laws of the states in which they are located. The effect of the directive is to reverse service regulations issued last summer which had liberalized the rules on abortions at military hos- pitals. * * * THE PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF CHINA has invited the Ameri- can contestants in the world table tennis tournament to visit and FBI fires women for peace activities WASHINGTON (R) - Three The women's complaints come in women said yesterday they were the midst of rising criticism of asked to resign from their clerical FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover and jobs with the FBI because they controversy over FBI policies to- worked with an antiwar group in ward the antiwar movement and their off hours. student activists. WASHINGTON (P) - Three antiwar Congressmen yesterday asked the U.S. District Court here to declare the Vietnamese war il- legal and to order it stopped in 60 days unless Congress approves it. Since the Constitution gives Con- gress the right to declare war, they said, the Nixon administration and the Johnson administration before it violated their right as congress- men to decide whether the nation should fight. It is the first time members of Congress have sought sunh a court test. TherSupreme Court has con- sistently refused to hear other suits against the war. Last year it refused a direct test of a Massachusetts law against sending its state residents to fight undeclared wars. That case is now working its way up through lower courts. "This is something we hope will not be justanother futile gesture," said Rep. Michael Harrington, (D- Mass.) The suit was filed by Har- rington and Reps Farren Mitchell, (D-Md.), and Benjamin Rosen- thal, (D-N.Y.) Lawrence Velvel, one of five young attorneys who drew up the suit, said recent legal trends make it likely the courts will consider the suit. The question of whether con- gressmen are being denied a right to decide on the war is not political but legal, he said, Courts refuse to hear cases they consider political. Velvel said a ruling could be ex- pected under normal circumstances in three or four months. .In other antiwar actions, Wiscon- sin Gov. Patrick Lucey said yes- terday he did not see how Presi- dent Nixon and Congress could ig- nore the result of a referendum in which Madison voters endorsed by 66 per cent an immediate with- drawal of American men and equipment from Vietnam. 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 mall: The final tally in Tuesday's ref- erendum was 31,526 "yes" votes for withdrawal, to 15,977 "no" votes. The Wisconsin governor, a Dem- ocrat, said the result was "paltic- .ularly remarkable" because the same electorate in 1968 had voted 27,755 to 21,129 against withdrawal. Lucey, who had urged Madison residents to vote "yes" cn the proposition, said he hoped Nixon would take note of the result while drafting his speech to the nation Wednesday night on the troop with- drawal schedule. Fighting continues InI Ceylon COLOMBO, Ceylon (P)-Ceylon's government hurled armor and war- planes against hit-and-run Che Guevarist insurgents yesterday and claimed there were heavy rebel casualties in countryside skir- mishes. The government radio said air support was called into help dis- lodge insurgents in control of a key bridge at Alawwa, 50 milts from Colombo, the capital. Prime Minister . Sirimavo Ban- daranaike, who took office in 1960 as the world's first woman pre- mier, denounced the rebellion Tues- day and blamed it on an organiza- tion of young leftist militants known as Che Guevarists, after the Latin-American revolutionary.. The Guevarists, well-to-do radi- cal youths with Maoist sympathies and numbering about 20,000, are dissatisfied because Bandaranaike and her leftist coalition govern- ment have not carried out a pro- mised program of socialism. There were reports of scattered resistance in several other areas but security forces appeared to have the upper hand in the three- day-old fighting, the government said. play there, it was learned yesterday. State Department officials in Washington said they welcomed the invitation as a possible break-through in efforts to establish better re- lations with China. They said the United States would view favorably a reciprocal visit to this country by an athletic team from the People's Republic. i I The women said they were told that FBI regulations prohibit parti- san political activity. An FBI spokesman declined comment. Linda Janca, 21, and Christine Hoomes, 18, said they submitted their resignations as requested. Janice Bush, 19, said she is con- sidering a legal battle in an .at- tempt to hold onto her job. The women said in interviews with the Evening Star of Washing- ton that none of them held a secir- ity clearance or dealt with sensi- tive information. They said their antiwar tasks were as routine as their FBI duties. New Factory CELEBRATION 20% off on all JENSEN Speakers HI FI STUDIO 121 W. Washington Downtown across from Old German Rest. NO 8-7942 The trio said they had been work- ing for two months "stuffing en- velopes" for the National Peace Action Coalition, the organization, coordinating an antiwar protest set for April 24. Janca joined the FBI in 1968 after leaving her hometown of Biloxi, Miss. Hoomes, a native of Wood- bridge, Va., joined the FBI in October; and Bush, of Nunda, N.Y., was hired in January. "If I knew then what I know now, I probably never would have got- ten into the FBI," said Hoomes. Janca said when an FBI official described their work as political, she replied: "The war isn't politi- cal. It doesn't matter who's in of- fice." U r- WHY CART ALL THOSE CLOTHES HOME? Greene's way makes going home a cinch! JUST CALL GREENE'S for one of our fabulous Handi-Hampers storage boxes. Pack all the clothes you won't wear until fall-Clothes you would ordi- narily pack up, take home, have cleaned, pack up again and bring back in the fall. NOW, ALL YOU NEED TO DO is turn the Hamper over to Greene's. They c I e a n the lot at regular cleaning prices and store it in a refrigerated moth- proof vault. When you r e t u r n in the fall, call Greene's again, your clothes will be taken out of the vault, returned to you freshly pressed on hangers and packed in neat polyethylene bags, ready for your clothes closet. PRICE? $4.95 plus regular cleaning and pressing prices-includes $250.00 insurance. Call NOrmandy 23-23-1 or Stop at any Greene's Plant for Information DOWN WITH DULL TRY 1 SHNAKE 'V. MILKSHAKES! Ah ti- . v during our Now Through Sunday, April 18 ONLY P.S. BY THE WAY, we notice that some of the other shops around town are offering the Greene's Handi-Hamper idea. But they can't offer the on- the-premise refrigerated storage vault of Greene's exclusive Microclean process. It's a plus to you at the same price. WITH EACH AR BY'S ROAST BEEF SANDWICH! Jamocha, mon - a rich, mellow blend of chocolate and coffee whipped to a perfection of tastiness. Try just one Jamocha Shake, mon, and you'll be sat'in' Jamocha Si! t __ 11 - - :