I_, SOLD OUT! NI 1 E v. 2:30 and I5 8:30 , 7Z6 Except for $2 REAR 2nd BAL. Reduced Seats on sale at 12:30 p.m. Sun. at Box Office HILL AUDITORIUM I Sat.-Sun.-Nov. 14-15 PE RSONA dir. INGMAR BERGMAN "Gives me a close shave every time." -S. Agnew WED.: Boetticher's Commanche Station 7 & 9:05 ARCHITECTURE 662-8871 75c AUDITORIUM DIAL 5-6290 Shows 1, 3, 5, 7, 9:10 ''CATCH-22' says many things that need to be said again and again! Alan Ark- in's performance as Yossar- ian is great!" -Joseph Morgenstern, NEWSWEEK "IATCH -2 IS THE MOST MDVING5THE MOST INTELLI- GENTTHE MOST HUMANE -OHNTO HELL WITH IT!- IT'S THE BEST AMERICAN FILM I'VE SEEN THIS -VINCENT CNY YE A! ~N.Y. TIMESAN$Y, AMIKE NICHOLS ILM ALAN ARKIN 34J IEU i ' I i neWS briefs By The Associated Press THIRTEEN IRAQI POLITICAL PRISONERS, including form- er Chief of Staff Gen. Ibrahim Feisal al Ansari, have been re- leased, the government announced yesterday. The act was seen as a move to placate opposition and -form a national political front. Informed sources said about 50 other prisoners not named in the list were freed earlier. Former Prime Minister Abdel Rahman Bazzar was among them. Ansari was arrested in 1968. S i a d i a h Jabr, daughter of a former prime minister, also was freed. She was jailed in January on charges of conspiracy against the ruling National Revolutionary Command Council. WEST GERMANY and communist Poland announced early yesterday they had agreed on a draft treaty to normalize rela- tions after 21 years of enmity. A West German press spokesman told newsmen after the nego- tiating teams had met for a marathon five hours that the treaty would be initialled Nov. 18. Negotiating teams headed by West German Foreign Minister Walter Scheel and his Polish counterpart, Stefan Jedrychowsk, met into the early hours in the final session of the present round of talks that lasted 11 days. Sources close to the talks said it was agreed that the treaty text, will be published at the time of signing - not at the initialing cere- mony. Scheel will initial the treaty for West Germany but the signing is expected to be carried out by Chancellor Willy Brandt, since the Poles have made it known they would like to see him in Warsaw. The sources stressed there was no difference of opinion on the treaty between Bonn and its allies. * * e page three C14C iri iottn EWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PUONE: 764-0554 Sunday, November 15, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three I ME -Associated Press GIs go to Pot? This photograph, according the CBS f r o m whose television monitor it was made, shows soldiers smoking marijuana at a base 50 miles north of Saigon. A pipeful of grass is placed in the breech of the shotgun then blown on to get high. PASSAGE UNLIKELY- Sexism amendment scorned bycoalition .Daily Classifieds RrinR Roelts --__ -__ __________THE COURT-MARTIAL of an Army Sergeant in the alleged My Lai massacre resumes at Ft. Hood, Texas tomorrow after a WAS 3Y2-week recess, with the defense hopeful it eventually will be coalitic allowed to put Lt. William Calley on the witness stand. . Img te Calley is on trial at Ft. Benning, Ga., on charges of murdering constit THE PILOT PEOPLE 102 Vietnamese civilians at My Lai on March 16, 1968. An attempt sex dis to complete the jury selection in the Calley case will also be made fizzled tomorrow. Lead present a The attorney for Sgt. David Mitchell, on trial at Ft. Hood on ganizat a charge of assault with intent to murder, has subpoenaed Calley as wouldr a defense witness. But there has been no word on whether Army they a officials will allow Calley to appear at the Mitchell court-martial. Birchl rhno-hold; I whistle A DOZEN NATIONS proposed yesterday that the U.N. Gen- ago. eral Assembly urge an immediate end to the testing and deploy- After ment of nuclear weapon systems to help the U.S.-Soviet strategic ence or arms limitation talks now going on in Finland. for the The 12 neutral members among the 25 countries active on the their-i Geneva disarmament committee circulated a resolution to that effect sembla for consideration in the disarmament debate currently in progress in meant, the assembly's Main Political Committee. ed, it's POLITICAL CLOWNS FROGS FORETELL DOOM? UNITING THEATRE * Malysinsfea atasi. AND REVOLUTION R R Sians ear c KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia A) - Hardly a same year Malaya's 12-y Monday, November 16 TICKETS $1:50 at tear was shed for the hundreds who croaked in munist terrorists brokec H, Fishbowl and S.U. battle. But the week-long amphibious war, which -In early 1969, fro 8 P.M. B Fishbowe andus U. was fought by hopping and biting, has unsettled Penng, went into actio UNION BALLROOM Centicore Bookshop soothsayers in this superstitious nation. race riots that staggere Combatants were frogs. Two armies of them, the capital of Kuala Lun DOING: totaling in the thousands, had a no-webs-barred Zoologists say the w war from last Saturday until Thursday over the to limited, properly sedu scant few breeding grounds left by unusually high rak State game wardenI Seize the Time-ag it-prop documentary on the BPP and Bobby Seale rains. ed by telephone, said n The Independent Female, or, A Man Has HIS Pride Malayan veterans recall that frog battles are frogs fought but added: not rare here, but large numbers of the popula- Fighting starts all a tion firmly believe big ones occur only before a sudden flurry of frogleg national calamity, and this was one of the big- frogs rip and tear at ea gest. Some bystanders eve "___________h__ _ _cnnffof tha f fi,..-m gh t Cha i iA d h th.. tn.r .' HINGTON (R) - With a on of women's. groups scorn- latest advances of the fick- ate, the struggle for greater utional guarantees against crimination apparently has in its most promising year. ers of women's rights or- ions have declared they rather leave things the way re than settle for Sen. Bayh's substitute for the ds-barredamendment that d through the House weeks a women's news confer- n Thursday, a spokesman, eIndiana Democrat s a i d failure to support Bayh's nute plan to rescue some .nce of t h e amendment "As far as we're concern- dead." [rople ear emergency with Com- out; and gs at Butterworth, near n. Two weeks later violent ed the nation erupted in mpur. ars are fought over rights ctive mating grounds. Pe- Mohammed Khan, reach- he had no idea why the "Elephants do it too." t once, with the scene a s. Jaws gnash audibly as ach other. pn report frogs carry off n. ned to the same place - the next day in smaller ell back to regroup and, nother skirmish. they all disappeared to ts and the war was over. Finding fault with t h e Bayh substitute Thursday were officials from the National Woman's Party, the National Organization for Women, t h e President's Task Force on Women's Rights and Re- sponsibilities. Bayh originahy led what ap- peared to be an easy fight to pass the House version, but many of t h e 80 other senators officially listed as sponsors of the measure had second thoughts. When it became obvious it could not pass the Senate - as it had twice before in years when the House balked - Bayh set out to find a compromise. The Bayh substitute is the first. order of business for a returning Senate this week, but it appar- ently will be removed from the calendar without protest. The original version of the amendment reads simply that "equality of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or any state on account of sex." Bayh's proposal calls instead for extending the 14th Amend- ment's equal protection clause to sex discrimination cases, but also would "recognize the need for a flexible standard in cases where differen t threatment under the law may be justified." Women's groups object the ad- ded language would prove an ex- cuse to continue discriminatory practices, particularly in employ- ment. The original version was intro- duced 47 y e a r s ago. In recent times, it was mostly the hostility of Judiciary Committee chairman Emanuel Celler (D-N.Y.), that prevented it from reaching the full House until this summer. Rep. Martha Griffiths (D- Mich.), won support of two-thirds of her colleagues to force Celler's committeelto dischargethe pro- posed amendement for the victor- ious House vote. Syria cup puts Assad " n power DAMASCUS DP - Syria's eighth coup in 24 years of in- dependence w a s described here yesterday as a battle for internal political survival by groups of the 'Baath Socialist party, with foreign policies not an immediate factor. The winner was Gen. Hafez al Assad, the defense minister and chief of the Soviet-equipped Syr- ian air force. The losers were Gen. Salah Jadid, leader of the party, President Noureddin Atassi and former Premier Youssef Zayyen, all Marxists. Diplomats said it was not clear if the potmidnight coup had anything to do with the defeat handed Syria's tank forces in Jor- dan's civil war in September. It is known that Assad refused to provide air support for the tanks lest Israel's jets launch retalia- tory strikes. Assad was described as a mod- erate. Arab diplomats said that while the basic cause of the coup was internal politics there was a possibility that Syria now-would abandon its go-it-alone attitude in the fight against Israel and cooperate more closely with the rest of the Arab world. Syria refused to sign the U.S.- initiated Middle E a s t cease-fire last August along with Egypt an Jordan. Unlike the previous coups and the dozen minor revolts in Syria since it gained independence from France in 1946, this government turnover lacked t h e usual tank rumblings in the streets and the presence of military power. In fact, most inhabitants of La- mascus awoke yesterday morning unaware that Assad had seized power and that the old leaders were in jail. In its broadcasts, Radio Da- mascus made no mention of the coup. The capital was calm. Shoppers thronged the bazaars as usual and government ministries were open for business. According to the Arab UIplo- mats, Assad and his followers surprised Atassi, Jadid and Zay- yen at their homes late Friday, the Moslem sabbath. Although Jadid was listed only as assistant secretary-general of the party, he has the power be- hind the regime. The diplomats said Assad's move was not an immediate attempt to make radical changes in Syria's policy. "Jadid tried to drum Assad out of the party by removing him as defense minister," one diplomatic informant said. "Assad simply moved first to assert his authority once and for all." Assad is on record in the past of protesting Syria's dependence on the Soviet Union for military aid. But informants in Damascus dis- counted suggestions t h a t Assad might curtail the activities of So- viet military advisers in Syria or weaken links with Moscow. "The Soviet Union supplies all of Syria's weapons and much o its ammunition," onediplomat said. "Assad needs a strong arm~ my and the army cannot be strong without Russian support." ow Otners scoii at the idea that zrog ights mignt be a bad omen, but old-timers recall: -In the early 1940's frogs clashed furiously, leaving hundreds dead, in separate encounters in Kedah and Malacca states. Soon after, the Jap- anese invaded and occupied Malaya; -In 1948, frogs went to war in Kedah. That Lner r eaa w enLn ey cai The battalions returr near a Hindu temple - numbers. Again, they f later in the week, had ar Then, mysteriously, their various frog haunt ."::: r:: J'....J.J'...... .............. r...J...Y... . . ......... .... .. ... .......rr............. .. ..................... . .............. ... r