Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY I uesday, February 27, 1973' Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY I uesday, February 27', ~ 973 APPROVAL EXPECTED: Vietnam ceasefire conference opening marred by differences ANAIS NIN Lecture and Readings from Her Work TONIGHT 8 p.m. Rackham Lecture Hall SPONSORS: Center for Continuing Education of Women, Department of English, Women Advocate's Office By AP and Reuters PARIS - The international con-k ference to give great-power back- ing to the Vietnam peace agree- ment got off to a brisk and busi- nesslike start yesterday, but fun- damental differences emerged on how the ceasefire should be made effective. But clashes of principle and pro- cedure among the 13 participants seemed capable of compromise and the confident forecast of delegates was that the parties involved will sign a "hands-off-Vietnam" prom- ise on Friday. China's foreign minister C h i Peng-Fei, U.S. Secretary of State William Rogers and France's Mau- rice Schumann were among six terday's opening session. ed bilaterally with the govern- speakers at the first session of the Canada, he said, would quit the ments or from international organ- conference, which brings the big International Commission of Con- izations because this was more ra- five powers together to discuss In- trol and Supervision on April 301 pid, a spokesman said. dochina for the first time since unless some system could be North Vietnam's delegate, Nguy- 1962. agreed for dealing with violations en Thanh Le, appeared to dash These exchanges came after the of the cease-fire. American hopes of getting the con-! conference had swiftly adopted a Presenting a formal resolution on' ference to exert pressure to make set of rules for itself. They pro- the issue he urged a definite role the ceasefire in Laos effective and vided for U.S. and North Vietnam- for > U.N. Secretary-General Kurt to halt the fighting in Cambodia. ese experts to produce the first Waldheim - a role empowering He told a press briefing t h a t draft of a declaration which the him to reconvene the conference in North Vietnam disagreed with a conference as a whole will pre- 'ertain circumstances. proposal by Rogers that the con- sent as its final act. The Canadian demand won im- ference should discuss Laos and Mit~t,.he11 n fr-nmediate backing from Rogers - Cambodia. FREE PUBLIC INVITED """": "I of Canada, whose country is one of four supervising the cease-fire, laid down a virtual ultimatim at yes- Nixon maintains 5.5 per cent pay ceiling but in quick succession Ch i n e s e, North Vietnamese and Viet Cong spokesmen turned it down. Essentially their objection is that' the United Nations should stay out I f the Indochinese scene. As they see it, the problem of peacekeeping should be settled by the parties to the war themselves. The North Vietnamese also re- jected Western ideas for the con- ference to discuss coordinated mul- tilateral aid for the economic re- construction of Vietnam. 'The Michigan Daily, edited and man- agd by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0562. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich-' igan. 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- clay through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (campus area); $11 local mail (in Mich. or Ohio); $13 non-local mail (other states and foreign). Summer Session published Tuesday; through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus area); $6.50 local mail (in Mich. or Ohio); $7.50 non-local mail (other states and foreign). EVERY WEDNESDAY: MOJO BOOGIE BAND THURSDAY: LIVE MUSIC FRIDAY AND SATURDAY: LOCOMOBI LE WASHINGTON (A) - The Nixon administration said yesterday it will retain the 5.5 per cent guide- tine for wage increases during Phase Three. But at the same time it signalled some loosening of the pay standard. Confusion and contradictlmn cloak- ed the major economic policy an- nouncements. The confusion developed when President Nixon's chief economic spokesman said that Phase Two's basic wage standard would remain in effect. At the same time, the ad- ministration embraced a broadly worded policy statement which skirted any mention of the 5.5 per cent standard. The statement said "No single Saccharin: cancer link? WASHINGTON (') - The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) said yesterday it is finding blad- der tumors in rats fed saccharin, but is awaiting further studies be- fore making any decision on whe- ther to ban the artificial sweeten- er. "We're not going to take any ac- tion until we get a recommenda- tion from the National Academy of Sciences," said Virgil Wodicka, director of FDA's Bureau of Foods. He said FDA scientists are not sure whether the rat bladder cel- lular changes indicate cancer and, if they do, whether saccharin caus- ed it. But he acknowledged in re- sponse to questioning that the tu- mors are "suspicious." The safety of saccharin h a s been under extensive review since, 1969 when cyclamates were banned because they caused cancer in la- boratory animals. It is the only artificial sweetener still on the market. The FDA has not completed its two-year study of 96 rats, half male and half female, which were fed saccharin ranging from .01 to 7.5 per cent of their total daily diets. In January, 1972, the FDA re-' moved saccharinsfromits list of additives generally recognized as safe, and limited the average: adult's intake to no more than one gram. Where Ann Arbor touches the Atlantic Ocean! This--- year old Railroad Station has gone Seafood Restaurant. brings a bit of Maine right to Ann Arbor Dinner Nightly Including Sundays Lunch Weekdays 401 Depot t. Ann ArborMichigan Reservations Recomended 769-0592 standard or settlement can be equally applicable at one time to all parties in an economy so large, iecentralized and dynamic." President Nixon's decision to make the rigid guidelines m o rte flexible appeared to be a major :ncession to labor. Public a n d private statements of administra tion officials indicated the movr was *an attempt to win labor's backing for Nixon's revamped eco- aomic program. AFL-CIO Presi dent George Meany has opposed the 5.5 per cent standard as too low. Meany said he was not surprised at the Nixon administration decis- ion. "We eventually hope to get away from the ceiling," Meany s a i d yesterday at a news conference. "If we're going to have a figure, it should be 7.5 or 8 perncent.' Nixon announced last month that he was ending Phase Two's manda- tory wage-price controls for all but the food, health and construction industries. One of the relaxations that had been expected was permitting wage increases to take into ac- count the continuing rise in the cost of living which rose at an an- nual rate of six per cent last month. : o' 3 e r i r I Hai lwanteacuredvLacctdfrwi- 3 3 i r al o the dopeyoul n eed for a Europe trip. 761-0110 Od 2 re 208 W. Huron, Ann Arbor 3035 Washtenaw across from Lee Oldsmobile ll' -- -- ,1 1'. I'l Pass the word. SOFA can get you to Europe. Ohr wsevices available from OFA inchd: Africa, Israel, the Far East or anywhere; a great Car Plan, the Student Ptsitpaes. Ianguae - AND, get you back^ coursessdy Europe, and tow cost accommdaliom As the wholly owned subsidiary of ftt Mi hotels, holiday villages, and hostels. Student Travel Bureaus, SOFA eans Student Travel guide to Europe. I issue you the International Student SOFA- don t al on it-Send for I NOWK. Identity Cardandbookyouon any ofm. ..in *i~.in inmi ! our 86,000 student charter flightsSFpes ed eteFE oe within Europe. Asia. and Arica SOFA, pease send teM ' (including Tel Aviv.-Bombsy.Bangkok. Name Nairobi. etc.) Up to 7W# .savings 3 over normal fares. Add.e. r SOFA also ofers en estenshe array of tours allowing the Independent ; City Z I S student traveller to take advantage of Il Send to: SOFA' - inespensive group errangements end European i'do*TraelC~ siLL sightseeing. We teature culturally 1/ 136 East 57th Street. Suits 1205 3 rewarding Israeli kibbutz programs and No York, N.Y. 10M educational tours within Europe ande the Soviet Union. Te"(1)Pt150 jm - m , TUESDAY, FEB. 27 James Stewart Shelley Winters t WINCHESTER'73 A cowboy sets women and horses aside for the loveI of a new rifle, has it stolen, and romps through the West trying to get it back. "A frisky, fast moving, funny Western.--N.Y. Times 0S WEDNESDAY: WAGON MASTER with Ward Bond and James Arness ARCHITECTURE AUD. 7 & 9 $1.00 PATRICK MARVIN FELHEIM SPINK JAMES VANN NOW SHOWING DOUBLE FEATURE "The film is an extension for Rafelson, not a simple repeti- tion of 'Five Easy Pieces.' It deserves careful, serious an- alysis."-Steven Farber in the Sunday N.Y. Times "I RRESISTABLY FASCINATING! CONSUMATE PERFORMANCES!" -Jay Cocks, Time "A. Monopoly game for lost souls." -William Wolf, Cue JACK NICHOLSON BRUCE DERN ELLEN BURSTYN in BOB RAFELSON'S 1'"M King @1 Marvin Featuring the same director and star of "FIVE EASY PIECES" "FAT CITY"-7:15 "KING"-9:00 '"The hit of this year's Cannes Film Festival is JOHN HUSTON'S -CHARLES CHAMPLIN, Los Angeles Times starring STACY KEACH JEFF BRIDGES SUSAN TYRELL i f r i I i 1 i I i i { M-Creative Arts Festival PRESENTS A PRIMAL'VISUA EXPERIENCE* with artist-filmmaker STAN BRAKHAGE a discussion-screening of newworks -A series of films of sexual meditation. -Films intrinsically involved with light. -Several films that are strangers to the maker. -Film made in the Pittsburgh Morgue. TUES., FEB. 27-8:30 p.m. Natural Science Auditorium Brkhgewil-ALSO- Brokhoge will appear and show other films TUES.-3 p.m. in MLB Auditorium 3 WED.-3 p.m. in East Quad Auditorium ALL EVENTS ARE FREE ATTENTION r DIANE KIRK WALTER 751970 ADALINE HUSZCZO BILL COLES 1 i "SOUND AND LIGHT" AT THE MUSEUM OF ART Spotlight on the Museum's Treasures with Illumination by Critics, Experts, and Historians. A Background of Sound and a Climax of Light! WEDNESDAY, FEB. 28 AT 8 P.M. The University of Michigan Mus FREE ADMISSION LIGHT SHOW seum of Art REFRESHMENTS Imo~ --- NEW WORLD ME DIA presentsI * PLEASE STN BY * Your campus bookstore carries powdered eggs... POWDERED EGGS by Charles Simmons is a bawdy, hilarious yet poignant novel about a recent fugitive from college... twenty-one years old and much involved-with girls, the Catholic Church, jobs, an apartment, a sports car, writing a novel, a crazy Spaniard named Jose, an affair with an older woman, and the outer reaches of his own imagination. William Saroyan called it: "Great-a masterpiece." $1.25 plus all these other important new Penguins ROBOPATHS: People as Machines. Lewis Yablonsky. What can be done about the robopaths-the people who pull the triggers at Kent State, My Lai, and Attica... make policy in Washington ... and live next door? Dehumanized by regimentation, bureau- cratization, and indiscriminate violence, they are growing more numerous-and more frightening-in today's post-technological society. $1.45 COLD WAR AND COUNTERREVOLUTION: The Foreign Policy of John F. Kennedy. Richard J. Walton. In a radical re-evalua- tion of President Kennedy's foreign policy, the author contends that Kennedy was a hawkish counterrevolutionary whose vigor- ous anticommunism prevailed over his sympathy for the op- pressed peoples of the world. $1.45 THE BATTLE OF BOGSIDE. Clive Limpkin. A photographic report from one of the centers of strife in Northern Ireland. $4.95 SUPERSLAVE. Bill Stair and Tony Barrell. A cartoon for adults in alternate black-and-white and color, and in a landscape for- mat. A search or quest story like the first novels, but very much of our time. $2.95 DEAD END: The Automobile in Mass Transportation. Ronald A. Buel. A hard look at the fraud and corruption of America's auto-highway-petroleum complex, with surprising new sug- gestions for Improving mass transportation. $1.45 GREAT DAY COMING: Folk Music and the American Left. R. Serge Denisoff. $2.50 INVITATION TO AN INQUEST: Reopening the Rosenberg "Atom Spy" Case. Walter and Miriam Schneir. $2.95 FOUR BY OLAF STAPLEDON. The late Olaf Stapledce was a C l.. WHAT A GREAT PICTURE! THE MOVIE ALL OF ANN ARBOR IS TALKING ABOUT IS NOW IN ITS 3rd HIT WEEKI starring DAVID PEEL as Freemont Zapata "The Robin food of Guerrilla Television" I WINNER of 4 Academy Award Nominations Including BEST BEST PICTURE ACTRESS Max von Sydow Liv Ullmann M-kj WTV14 Yat MUSIC BY. DAVID PEEL and THE LOWER EAST SIDE JOHN LENNON and YOKO ONO TEENAGE LUST 1984 and others "In the very near future a band of radical freaks will take over control of a communications satellite and begin to broadcast messages to a captive world T.V. audience." WITH: WENDY APPLE (Putney Swope) ALEX BENNETT (WPL J-FM) ROBERTS BLOSSOM (Slaughterhouse-5) DAVID PEEL (Apple-"The Pope Smokes Dope") and MORE I Followed by discussion TONIGHT!-February 27th--ONLY!-7 & 9 p.m. . I {