Wednesday and Thursday-October 14th and 15th DEPARTMENT OF SPEECH Student Laboratory Theatre presents I RISE IN FLAME CRIED THE PHOENIX by TENNESSEE WILLIAMS pag4e thiree im4c 'trl i n Dati1 NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Tuesday, October 13,. 1970 Ann Arbor, Michgan Page Three FUMED OAK A Admission Free AND by NOEL COWARD RENA THEATRE FRIEZE BUILDING promptly at 4:10 P.M. oeewsdrbriefs ~By The Associated Press - APPLE WINE,- IS FINE AT THE ODYSSEY DURING APPLE WINE NIGHT-EVERY TUESDAY, 208 W. HURON 761-01 10 ann orbor film cooperative presents paoul .newman Uin cool hand luke the greatest man since louis xiv--m.k. t ~tonight' tuesday, oct. 13th, auditorium a angel [halt FIVE NIGHTS OF VIOLENCE and fires on the island of Bermuda resulted yesterday in the arrest of an opposition party leader as the British colony's 300-man police force kept watch to stem further violence. Frederick Wade, the public relations officer of the Progressive{ Labor Party, was one of 15 persons arrested early Sunday when police r used tear gas to break up a 72/2-hour window-smashing spree by some 500 persons. He was charged with obstructing justice and held' without bail. Although the opposition party has blamed the violence on racial, differences, the cause is unclear. SOUTHERN-LED SENATORS were defeated yesterday in an effort to fuse the school desegregation issue with equal rights for women. The Senate rejected 57 to 17 a constitutional amendment that would have given states an "absolute right" to sanction the freedom- of-choice desegregationls plans that the Supreme Court has found to be largely unworkable. The amendment was offered to a pending constitutional amend- ment by Sen. James Allen (D-Ala.), who said it would simply extend to Southern states "the same privileges and immunities enjoyed by states in other parts of the nation." * *. *a THE U.S. STRATEGIC AIR COMMAND sent its full Pacific fleet of B52 bombers over Laos yesterday for a fourth straight day, of saturation raids against the Ho Chi Minh Trail. About 30 of the mammoth bombers unloaded 30 tons each of ex- plosives on North Vietnamese supply depots, transfer points and in- filtration routes running southward in the jungles of eastern Laos. The sustained bombing campaign was timed for the onset of the dry season in Laos'as the monsoon rains depart. In this period, the North Vietnamese regularly step up the movement of reinforcementsr and supplies toward their hideout bases at the trail's terminals in Cambodia and South Vietnam. As on the three previous days, the Strategic Air Command con-t centrated all or nearly all its Thailand-based B52s on Laos, guiding the high-flying bombers to targets with radar signals from the ground.r declines ruling 'on abortion case WASHINGTON {A - The Supreme Court declined yester- day to decide whether expectant mothers have the right to medical abortions in the early stages of pregnancy. The abortion case was among scores that the Supreme Court declined to hear. At the same time, the court agreed to review a small handful of cases including two obscenity cases. The court refused to hear a case from Milwaukee, Wis., where the state's anti-abortion law has been declared in viola- tion of women's privacy rights by a three-judge federal court: However, this term the justices'---- will review the District of Colum- bia's abortion law which has been grounds by a federal district court here. The Wisconsin c a s e appeared vell Q e far more significant because the ruling sent to the court for re-, view spoke in terms of humanj 7 rights rather than'whether the -Associated Press ROBERT LEMIEUX (right), lawyer who has represented many members of the separatist Quebec Liberation Front, listens to Justice Minister Choquette's declaration at a televised news con- ference Saturday. Choquette offered safe passage out of Canada to the kidnapers of British diplomat James Cross if Cross was released unharmed. Quebec kidnappers present new demand's 75 c. 7 and 9:30 75c rn!I,. % HELD OVER-2nd BIG WEEK "A BEAUTIFUL A N D ENGROSSING FILM. NOTHING SHORT OF MASTER- LY. PURE PLEASURE. -Judith Crist, New York Magazine More successful than Ken Russell's inter- esting rendition of 'Women in Love' earlier this year." -Vogue I' Ann Arbor Civic Theatre presentsk "CACTUS FLOWER" by ABE BURROWS October 14-17, Trueblood Theatre Ticket Prices: $2:00 - $2.50 Box Office Open Mon. & Tues., 10 A.M.-5 P.M.; Wed.-Sat., 10 A.M.-8 P.M. 764-5387 P.O. Box 1993 Ann Arbor 48106 1 i r 7 l a 7 1 l i MONTREAL W)--Terrorist kid- napers holding as hostages a Brit- ish envoy ;and a Quebec minister' gave authorities three life-and- death options yesterday. The federal government, fearing! more political abductions,tmoved' troops into Ottawa to bolster. po- lice security for officials and for- eign diplomats. The Canadian French separa- tists who seized the two hostages' last week gave provincial author-! ities these choices: -If all six ransom demands are rejected, both British Trade Com- misoner James Cross and Quebec Labor Minister Pierre Laporte will be killed.: -If two demands are met-the release of 23 "political prisoners" and a halt to the police investiga- tion-Cross will be freed but La- porte will be held under threat of death' -If all demands are met both men will be released. naped Saturday, minutes after the provincial government refused the ransom demand for Cross. The kidnapers threatened to execute the two hostages at 10 p.m. S un d a y but apparently changed their minds after Quebec Premier Robert Bourassa broad- cast an appeal for negotiations a few minutes before the deadline fell. Peace group plans mass demonstrations, The case involved Sidney Bab- bit, a 60-year-old doctor who has been charged with performing an illegal abortion. Now a resident of Hallandale, ° Fla., -his trial in Milwaukee is scheduled for Nov. 30. Wisconsin law permits thera- peuticvabortions whenhnecessary to save the life of the mother. Otherwise abortions are criminal offenses punishable by up to three years in prison and $5,000 fine. The three-judge federal court in its ruling last March said the state does not have the constiu- tional power "to deny to, a woman the basic right reserved to her under the Ninth Amendment to decide whether she should carry t See COURT, Page 10 mmmmWm"NWMMmw I 11 WASHINGTON () - The Na- tional Peace Action Coalition said yesterday it will hold massive antiwar demonstrations in 31 cities including Detroit on Oct. 31, three days before the Nov. 3 gen- eral election. Jerry Gordon, a Cleveland anti- war leader, told a news conference that the rallies and marches will be peaceful, legal and "non-con- frontational." He said some antiwar groups oppose the timing of the demon- strations but he doesn't think the rallies will hurt the chances of peace candidates. Gordon said, however, that the people are disillusioned with the politicians who had pledged earlier to work toward withdrawal from Vietnam. They have been cowed by Vice President Spiro Agnew, Gordon said, and have betrayed their an- tiwar supporters by endorsing President Nixon's standstill cease- fire. He said the Nixon plan leaves intact Nixon's support for the Thieu-Ky regime, continues U.S. intervention in Indochina and sets no date for withdrawing all the troops. The'coalition advocates imme- diate withdrawal. "The tragedy is that the Sen- ate doves have hailed the speech and called for a moratorium ,on protest against the war," Gordon said. "There is no moratorium on the killings in Southeast Asia, no moratorium on the bombings there and no moratorium on the Thieu- Ky repression against the anti- dictatorship forces." "We don't think there is going to be any violence. We don't think' it's going to upset t*he election," said Mrs. Ruth Gage-Colby of New York, representing the Wom- ens International League fdr Peace and Freedom. "The Senate has backed off its peace stand," she said. "The doves . . we don't know what they are. Chickens, anyway." Gordon said he expected the biggest rallies or marches Oct. 31 to be in New York City and Bos- ton. WASHINGTON (P) -- President Nixon'has vetoed a bill to clamp a ceiling on broadcast spending by candidates for major public of- fice, the White House announc- ed yesterday. The President said the bill "plugs only one hole in a sieve." Nixon's action was announced on the last day he had to decide on the measure, which cleared Congress by wide margins. The bill would have set a limit of seven cents per vote cast in the general electionor _$20,000, whichever was .higher, as" the spending ceiling for candidates running for president, vice presi- dent, Senate, House, governor and lieutenant governors It also would have provided that no broadcasts could charge a n y political candidate more than the lowest charge paid by any com- mercial advertiser for the same time period and would have re- pealed ejual time requirements for iresident and vice president cand- idates only. Ii Providence, R.I., Sen. Jo h n Pastore, (D-R.I.), sponsor of the bill said, "I regret the action very, very much. "My reason for sponsoring the bill was because I feel the strength of our democracy depends upon a well informed public and be- cause of.the astronomical expens- es involved in electronic b r o a d- casting which is an essential and integral part of the campaign pro- cess. This bill was sound and wise," Pastore said. "From a practical standpoint, I would be less than honest if. I don't admit that the Republican party is-pretty well off, financially speaking, and this might have constituted some of the motiva- tion" for the veto, the Senator said. Nixon, in a veto message to the Senate, said the bill does not limit the over-all cost of campaign- ing. "It merely limits the amount that candidates can spend on radio and television," he said. Nixon also contended the bill raises prospects of more, rather than less, campaign spending. National General Theatres [OX VILLR6E 375No.MAPLE RD.-769-1300 ENDS TUESDAY Mon.-Fri.-7:00-9:15 Sat.-Sun. 2:0O 4:30-7:00-9:15 L . ---, BEST STEAK HOUSE STEAK DINNERS NOW SERVING At Reasonable Prices FILET-1.59 SIRLOIN-1.53 Above includes Baked Potato, Salad, and Texas Toast STEAKBURGER-.79 Includes Baked Potato and Texas Toast; i. Barbr Yve Streisand / Montand On A Clear 9eFQ 217 S. STATE ST. Next to State Theater I I1 PRESENTS The Pennsylvania Ballet OPENING THE DANCE SERIES IN HILL AUDITORIUM Sat., Oct. 17, 8:30 PROGRAM: Ballade (Gabriel Faure); Interlude (Jacques Ibert); Figitive Visions (Rokofie f f); and Pas de dix (Glazounov). OTHER ATTRACTIONS IN THE DANCE SERIES: MARTHA GRAHAM AND DANCE COMPANY. . .. Monday, October 26 'n A A XT L A XT T T ' VTT* 7 flATYTTflflr -n n a - X"* A -.. n a.. ,- - l I TT f III ,