k WELCOME IACK STUDENTS! Try Our Famous-Delicious PIZZA and CHICKEN ---Introductory Offer-- FREE Beautiful MICHIGAN PEN with Each Order of a Large or Medium Pizza (While They Last) THOPSONS PIZZA 211 E. ANN ST. (Next to Armory) CALL 71-0001 FREE DELIVERY OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 4:30 P.M.-1 :30 A.M. I I Sat. & Sun. Until 2:00 A.M. Doors Open 6:45 P.M. A87-9 P DIAL 8-6416 "A FRANIC FUNNY COMEDY . S S Wone is indeed made weak with laughter." at ER Id and om *H 1r By The Associated Press CLASHES BETWEEN Jordan's regular troops and Pales- tinian' guerrillas threatened yesterday to generate a heightened crisis in the chronically tense Middle East. At the same time United States sources said yesterday that the U.S. has firm evidence of Egyptian violations of the Middle East cease-fire agreement. Iraq announced yesterday that its 12,000 troops in Jordan would help the guerrillas if the Jordanian Army moved against the com- mandos. This followed five days of clashes between the army and! the guerrillas and an attempt Tuesday night on the life of King Hussein. The confirmation by Washington sources of evidence of Egyptian cease-fire violations came after repeated Israeli charges and Egyptian denials of any infractions. Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Dayan has reportedly threatened to quit his post if Israel takes no action on the alleged infractions. * * * VICE PRESIDENT Spiro Agnew said yester4ay that the real advocates of peace "are those who respect the rights of others, not those who infringe on those rights; those who seek accomo- dation, not confrontation." Speaking at the American Legion Convention in Portland, Ore. Agnew said that when faced with the choice, the American people will "choose the policemen's truncheon over the anarchists' bomb, but true peace lies neither in bomb or truncheon. It lies in that pattern of mutual respect and forbearance that is the essence of civilized society." He added that the constitutional guarantee of free speech and assembly does not cover "smashing windows, burning offices, assault- ing people in the streets." While the Vice President spoke, an estimated 300 youths circled outside the convention hall chanting anti-war slogans. They were part of the People's Army Jamboree, a group of war protestors who had made two antiwar marches through central Portland earlier in the convention. UAW names two firms . as strike targets DETROIT (RP) - The United Auto Work- ers, after rejecting new contract offers from the Big Three automakers, yesterday named General Motors and Chrysler as the target firms for a possible strike. If agreement between the union and the companies is not reached by Sept. 14, one or both of them will be struck. UAW President Leonard Woodcock said the union had decided to exempt Ford Motor Co. from a strike threat because "we want to have at least one firm pro- ducing minicars to meet the competition from the imports." Woodcock said that either GM or Chrys- ler, or both, would be struck at mid- night Sept. 14 if an agreement is not reached. "We don't give a damn if we run through the strike fund," Woodcock told cheering representatives of Chrysler's UAW rank and file earlier in the day. "We can strike without money as we did in the past." page three Z I P 'tr ri ttn 347 ''b'NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE:, 764-0554 -. Thursday, September 3 1970 -Associated Press L.A. HERALD EXAMIN Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three Gene Wilder, out of' "The Producers" "'START THE REVOLUTION WITHOUT ME" Closing shop Virginia Carson of Raleigh, N.C., tosses "Vote to End the War" buttons in air as she and other workers of Project Pursestrings close their lobbying head ters yesterday following the defeat in the Senate of the McGovern-H amendment to end the war in Vietnam. Virginia now plans to join the cam staffs of anti-war congressmen.- McLUCAS TO APPEAL Attorney for Panther w seek to overturn uerdc Donal Sutherl fresh fr M*A*S to the dquar- atfield However, one member of the union's in- npaign ternational executive board, which made the target decision, said he doubted the union would strike Chrysler and GM' at the same time. The target decision was made after the Ill GM, Ford and Chrysler councils v o t e d overwhelmingly to reject the company of- i fers made Tuesday. The Big Three, who employ about 713,- b 000 UAW workers in the United States SI, and Canada, said their offers would raise wages alone by 7.5 per cent .in the first e appeal year and by 3 per cent in each of the last U.S. Su- two years of a three-year contract. They said is would cost them $2.3 billion over ded kos- three years, speech Woodcock said that if GM were struck, rally ex- it would be a selective strike aimed at he three cutting off GM's production by striking the one assembly plants but leaving parts plants, er seven which supply the other automakers, in operation. t r ... - ' D OP 1 77- OORS EN AT 2:45 Dial 5-6290 SHOWS AT 1, 3, 5, 7 &9 P.M. "Finally we have a film that is of, instead of simply about, youth.. .'The Strawberry Statement' is not but to probe the big issues. It wants us to feel the bafflement, joy and anguish of Simon as he gropes for maturity in a world that would stagger the strongest. And this task it achieves beautifully .. . a welcome presence of visual and verbal wit (so rare in most 'youth' films) and a, blessed absence of sex and drugs. The casting is well- nigh flawless. Rock music is used for once with taste and perception ... I was greatly moved by it, and I loved itl" -RICHARD CHRISTIANSEN, Chicago Daily News THE STRAWBERRY STATEMENT AROCBEd CHARrO4M -EN CNKER <:PROOUCTIONFRiOMnGM METROCOLM TEACHER DISPUTES and money problems have delayed _ school openings ii many areas of the country. Voters in several cities have rejected proposed tax levy increases or school operat- ing budgets. An Associated Press survey shows that tens of thousands of youngsters received extra vacation time in a number of states, in- cluding Michigan, Illinois and Oregon. In Michigan, teacher walkouts over pay and fringe benefits have delayed school openings in 10 districts. The largest area affected was Highland Park where teachers walked out in demand for higher wages. Classes for the district's 11,900 students, including students at Highland Park Community College, were to have started Monday. Illinois school officials reported teachers' strikes delayed the start of classes in at least seven districts. Schools in the largest struck district, 22,000-pupil East St. Louis, wereto open yesterday but were delayed by a strike of the area's 1,000 teachers. A spokesman for the teachers said that the teachers demand higher salaries and larger fringe benefits. COMMUNIST TROOPS have advanced to within easy rock- et and mortar range of the Cambodian capital of Phnom Penh, but have not yet shelled the city. The city is poorly defended, with only two battalions guarding its highly vulnerable eastern flank. Meanwhile in Paris, North Vietnamese Ambassador Xuan Thuy said yesterday that there could be no cease fire in Vietnam until the United states agrees to withdraw all of its troops from the country, and replace the present Saigon government with a provisional coali- tion. They said that a cease fire could exist only when "all the funda- mental questions are agreed upon." Thuy's announcement presumably came as a reply to fourteen: senators who urged President Nixon Tuesday to propose a compre- hensive standstill cease-fire for South Vietnam at the stalemated peace talks in Paris. NEW HAVEN, Conn. (P) - Attorneys for Black Panther Lonnie McLucas are seek- ing to overturn a jury's verdict that he was guilty of conspiracy to murder in the killing of a fellow Panther in May 1969. Monday, within hours of the jury's find- ing, the lawyers filed a motion to set it aside. They indicated that they would file an appeal when McLucas is sentenced la- ter this month. The jury's verdict came after six days of deliberations - a total of 35 hours. The jurors found McLucas innocent of three other qharges - kidnaping resulting in death, conspiracy to kidnap and binding with criminal intent. Conspiracy to murder carries a maxi- mum of 15 years in prison. McLucas' lawyers argued that the ver- dict was "against the law and the evi- dence." The charges against McLucas stemmed from the death of Alex Rackley, a' Black Panther from New York City whose body was found in a Connecticut swamp. Seven other Panthers, including na- tional chairman Bobby G. Seale, are await- ing trial in the case. The state charged that Rackley was kill- ed as a police informer on orders f r o m Panther leaders. McLucas said he partici- pated in the slaying in fear of his own safety., Seale denied on the stand that any such order was given. McLucas is the first of eight Panthers to be tried as a result of the torture-death of Rackley, a New York City Panther. Theodore'Koskoff, McLucas's attorney, told a crowd of about 200 onlookers and demonstrators on the New Haven Green outside the courthouse that he would ap- peal the convictioni and pursue th "all the way," referring to the 1 preme Court. News of the jury's verdict prece koff to the Green and touched off es from demonstrators. They gene pi'essed relief over acquittal on t charges but spoke of the influence conviction could have on the oth defendants. f, Viii: ' GC - - ,f .S: ,;.. Yf i:i, { :%; .',. ' ' r ,c; iS% I;; t, ((t .i Got Nothing To Do? COME TO THE CHI PHI ZIA /": r /i lyA > f r 'y }N ;r Na: r;r :,J i f : l :F yr +.i:r" { I1 QG.'ji r } { f i::ff'. "' ;/ h. __________________________________________ -.-- 95% of the Reading Population Reads Only 250 to 300 Words Per Minute or Less, Rent your Roommate with a Classified Ad 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 mall. Summer" Session published, Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5. by carrier, $5 by mail. FA ST RAI G I Join The Daily Sports Staff U r i -Associated Press Agnew speaks Vice President Spiro Agnew waves amiably to the crowd of American Legion- aires following a talk at their convention yesterday. Agnew is flanked by Legion National Commander J. Milton Patrick. LAWN DANCE THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER THIRD, 8-12, AT THE CORNER OF HILL AND WASHTENAW (5n Wnshtnnw Is Not Difficult to Learn Those who completed courses held this past year at the Bell Tower Hotel achieved speeds of 800 to 2000 w.p.m., with the -same or increased comprehension they had at their slower reading rates. 4th SMASH WEEK! THIS COTTON DOESN'T SHRINK!' SEE HOW EASILY YOU CAN: --save hours, use your time more efficiently -learn to read 3 to 10 times faster than you do now -improve your comprehension and increase your enjoyment of reading material 4 r_ ' ° o . a - .' - , , , . ._ "F at a cost less than HALF that of other commercial reading courses offered in this area! I 1"M - 'U I 1.U XL'V.* E I