4 :2 4 4 4 4i 4 .4 J4 4 '4 6FI1BENWY)OUSB PRESENTS ALL THE FLOATING",OPERA 'YOU CAN EAT THURS., SEPT. 17 ADMISSION $1.00 Thursday-Friday, Sept. 17-18 WAGiES O'F FEAR dir. GEORGES CLOUZOT (1951) Yves Monyand trucks nitroglycerin in Central America. A truly explosive film. T&9:05 Architecture 662-8871 75 Auditorium pae three P xrl i gtt Bttii Thursday, September 17, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three news briefs $y Te AssocaedJPres A FEDERAL JUDGE in Brooklyn, New York ruled the Viet- nam war constitutional yesterday, and said neither President Johnson nor Nixon had usurped their power in waging it. "The Congress repeatedly and unmistakingly authorized the use of armed forces of the United States to fight in Vietnam," Dist. Judge Orrin Judd Wrote in a 50-page decision. The decision came in a case involving Malcolm Berk, 21, of Flushing, Queens, who sought to avoid service in Vietnam, where he is now stationed. He argued that the war was unconstitutional. AMERICAN AND ALLIED FORCES continued to suffer var- ious setbacks in different parts of Indochina yesterday as 15 American helicopters were destroyed or damaged from South1 Vietnam's Mekong Delta to the jungles of southeast Laos. , In Cambodia, a big offensive by government forces remained. stalled. Some combat commanders were reported anxious to call off the divisions-size drive to avert disaster. There were urgent talks on the future of the offensive between senior field officers and the military high command in Phnom Pehn. Some officers feared that North Vietnamese troops were manuever- ing into position behind the government task force to cut off the only withdrawal route.I * * * JOHN SINCLAIR, head of the revolutionary White Panther Party, has been transferred from Marquette Prison in the Upper Peninsula to Southern Michigan Prison at Jackson. Sinclair is serving a nine-to-l 1year sentence for possession of marijuana. Gus Harrison, director of the State Department of Corrections, said the transfer was both "precautionary" and "routine" since Sin- clair is scheduled to appear in federal court ih Detroit next week and, "We were also concerned about possible trouble" at Marquette Prison. Harrison denied a report by Sinclair's brother David that the transfer last Friday came after Sinclair and 60 black prisoners sign- ed a petition asking for better prison conditions. FOUR EMPLOYE GROUPS and the railroads resumed in- direct talks in their deadlocked wage dispute yesterday after a federal judge lifted his threat of contempt action against 'the unions.I District Judge Howard Corcoran dropped the punitive proceed- ings after being assured that workers had returned to their jobs and operations were normal on three railroads hit by picketing Tuesday. Corcoran left in force an order restraining the unions from strik- ing until 1:45 p.m. EDT Sept. 23. It was the short-lived violation of that order which provoked the threat of contempt.a S * * THE DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION concedes in ar confidential report to the White House that the much-disputede supersonic transport may have some harmful effects on the en-t vironment. But it says they would be minor. The document presented to the President's Council on Environ-1 mental Quality terms the still unbuilt SST an insignificant polluterI but adds: "In a few areas additional research is needed to increaser confidence that largescale SST operations will not significantly af-r fect the environment." The report concedes airport noise from the SST would be higherI than desired and that occupants would receive radiation doses great-C er than persons flying in subsonic jets at lower altitudes. * * *r THE CHIEF SENATE SPONSOR of a constitutional amend- ment providing for election of the president by direct, popular D vote conceded defeat yesterday on a key test of strength. With the Senate set to vote today on whether to cut off debate,a Sen. Birch Bayh (D-Ind.), told newsmen: "We do not have enough votes right now."s A two-thirds majority is required to bring the debate to a halt.r Bayh said he has no hope of winning that margin now. He placed the number of votes on his side in the 50's. - Jordan faces civil war as army, guerrillas continue ighting NEWS PH ONE: 764-0552 BSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 By The Associated Press The desert kingdom of Jor- dan teetered on the brink of open civil war yesterday in a deepening crisis that split the 4, country into armed camps and threatened repercussions throughout the Middle East. The deepening crisis in Jordan ' heightened the uncertainity about the fate of 54 airline hijack host- ages held by Marxist guerrilla op- ponents of King Hussein's new military regime. The, United States is reported to have evidence the most ad- vanced type of Soviet surface to air missiles have been introduced into the Egyptian cease-fire zone alohg the Suez Canal. The SAM-3 sites are presumed manned by Russian military per- sonnel. Israel charged .last week that SAM-3s had been taken into the zone in violation of a military standstill agreement paralleling the cease-fire accord. Meanwhile, in Washington, a State Department spokesman said that Israeli planes have flown ov- er prohibited areas of the Middle East ceasefire zone, contrary to terms of the ceasefire agreement. On the deserted streets of Am- -Associated Press man, the Jordanian capital, King 15 miles north of Amman. Huessein's army faced rebellious defying a plea by the new Palestinian guerrillas demanding the overthrow of the 34-year-old _ monarch. Hussein unleashed the guerril- las' fury by installing a military government that immediately im- posed martial law and promised to "strike with an iron fist against anyone creating disorder in the Field Marshal Habis Majali, a British-trained Bedouin fiercely u~e loyal to Hussein and despised by the Palestinians, was appointed as military governor with'author- quent labor settlement, are ity over the entire country. ted to have great impact. One of Majali's first acts was to d Motor Co. announced yes- appeal to the guerrillas to respect y it was increasing the price a new cease-fire with the royal 1971 models by an average army and to lay down their arms. 53 each, but left the door But Yasir Arafat, chief of the for a further boost when its over-all guerrilla command, con- act with the United .Auto demned the new regime as Fas- ers is completed. cist, placed his forces on a state d was the first of the Big of "emergency alert" and t o I d to announce prices on all them to defy the order to surrend- nes. er weapons. ANN ARBOR CIVIC THEATRE proudly presents its 41st season -i "CACTUS FLOWER" Oct. 14-17 "MAN OF LA MANCHA" Dec. 16-20 "SUBJECT WAS ROSES" March 3-6 "BLITHE SPIRIT"March 31-April 3 "IN WHITE AMERICA" April 21-24 "THE BRASS AND GRASS FOREVER" May 5-9 (an original musical)- DON'T DELAY-ORDER YOUR SEASON TICKETS TODAY (Use This Coupon) PALESTINIAN GUERRILLAS stop a truck yesterday in Zarqua, Jordan,7 The guerrilla patrol was one of many that refused to lay down arms, d military governor appointed by King Hussein. $100 MILION LOSS DAILY: Woodcok oins picke as strike at GM Conti NAMF PHONE t IV11 1MG ADDRESS, CIT Y_ 71 41r Please reserve sets of season tickets, as indicated below, I have enclosed $ 1 'understand the tickets will be mailed to me in the fall. I have enclosed a self-addressed, stamped envelope. 6 SHOWS 5 SHOWS Wed. balcony $ 8.50 _ $ 7.00 Wed. orchestra 10.50 9.00 Thurs. balcony 8.50 7.00 Thurs. orchestra . 10.50 9.00 Fri. balcony 11.50 10.00' Fri. orchestra 13.50 12.00 Sat. balcony 11.50 10.00 Sat. orchestra 13.50 12.00 OPTION: If you prefer tickets for only 5 shows, please indicate which show you wish to omit. MAIL to P.O. BOX 1993, ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN 48106, DETROIT IA') -- A veteran of auto industry picket lines, United Auto Workers President Leonard Woodcock joined striking union members picketing at three Gen-I eral Motors Corp. plants on De-I troit's West side yesterday. The professorial, soft-spoken leader of some 344,000 striking union members arrived at the first plant sites at 7:15.a.m. and step-, ped into the picket lines to chat! softly with the pickets. The. pickets at GM's Flee twood, Fisher and Cadillac plants, were orderly and somewhat subdued. AtI Cadillac, there were only four picket signs and 25 pickets. Business and workers, who de- pend on money spent by, General Motors Corp. were beginning tol feel the increased pinch of a strike against GM. The company estimates the strike is costing more than $100' million each day in lost sales, lost wages to workers, lost tax revenues and lost revenues to suppliers. Some of GM's 39,000 ,suppliers already have laid off workers and more are making plans for such action if the strike continues more than a week or two. And the im- pact was felt in other places not so directly tied to the corporation. The United Auto Workers struck GM at 12:01 a.m. Tuesday, idling: 344,000 workers in the U.S. and, Canada. Another 72,500 employed' by GM facilities were exempted from strike action because their production or work supplied Ford Motor Co., Chrysler Corp. and American Motors Corp. Three-year contracts covering 713,000 Big Three workers all ex- pired at midnight Monday, but Ford and Chrysler were exempted from strike action by the UAW for the time being. The price of 1971-model cars is one area where the strike and the subsec expect E For terday of its of $15 open contra Worke For Three car lin White scores upset in Mass. as Humphrey nominated to Senate Read and Use Daily Classifieds V. Watch the landlord I get his. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- agedi by students at the Universitv of SMichigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- gan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $i0 by carrier, $10 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- Ition -rates: $5. by carrier, $5 by mail. Y Y 1 i f By The Associated Press Boston Mayor Kevin White won the Democratic nomination f o r governor of Massachusetts Tues- day in the biggest battle of pri- maries in six states that produced: no major surprises - unless nom- inations of two Catholic priests are so rated. White lost his home town but in the four-man r a c e won by more than 10.000 votes over the party-endorsed candidate, Senate President Maurice Donahue. Gov. Francis Sargent w a s unopposed for the Republican nomination. Four Demociatic senators won renomination - Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts, John Pastore of Rhode Island, Henry Jackson of Washington and Joseph Tydings of Maryland. Hubert Humphrey easily captured the Democratic Senate nomination in Minnesota to start a political comeback. Only Tydings ran into trouble, but he overcame a stiff challenge from a conservative, George Ma- honey, a perennial office seeker who benefited from a gun lobby campaign. Tydings is a p r i m e mover for strong gun controls. His Nov. 3 foe will be Rep. Glenn Beall Jr., whose father Tydings unseated in 1964. Beall easily won the GOP nomination over two op- ponents. Two Democratic governors were renoininated, Marvin Mandel of Maryland and F r a n k Licht of Rhode Island, as candidates for governor were nominated in7 Min- nesota -and Oklahoma as well as Massachusetts. This week's voting produced no discernible national trend, with conservatives and liberals b o t h winning. Th e major victories seemed attributable more to per- sonalities than issues. Of special note was that Ken- nedy, who faced no opposition for renomination, ran behind the Democratic vote for governor in Massachusetts and behind his 1964 race when he was-unopposed. With 2,001 of 2,019 precincts in, Kennedy had 511,557 votes to 659,418 cast for governor, mean- ing 147,861 voters left Kennedy's name blank. In 1964 there were 142,115 blanks against 608,791 votes. The defeat of two veterin House Democrats, Reps. Philip Philbin of Massachusetts and George Fallon of Maryland came as some surprise although they had been listed as possible upset losers. ML! Corner State & Liberty Sts. DIAL 662-6264 1 ;. .. OPEN 12:45 P.M. SHOWS AT 1-3-5-7-9 P.M. I THE LANDLORD'S GETTING JUST ABOUT EVERYtHING BUT THE RENT "THE LANDLORD" is about: Wasps. - The military- Rent parties. :- Arrows dipped in industrial complex. Fanny's barbeque sauce to IF k I @. CINEMA' II screenplay by PINTER; LOSEY, Dir. "Bizzaro events surround an auto crash in0decadent ---- ----_I ------------------ s- ----- ------ An attempted Margie's pot liquor DuBois' school axe murder. ; and palm readings. in the cellar. k,. ' I ._ t . ! _ ___ i academia" _ _ _ i. , --.. ; ------------ w - -------------- - ---------------------- i -L. TAFFER 'Ternatives He's going to crack your plaster. .... :: S EEEE'E*EUU UIU Ii i I1