Pace Ten I HE MICHIGAN DAILY .Wednesday, February 28,1973 PageTenWE MCHIAN DILYWednsda, Feruay 28197 Conflict over POWs threatens Paris talks PARIS (Reuter) - A new con- ances that the month-old Vietnam flict between the United States1 and North Vietnam over Hanoi's sudden refusal to release Ameri- can war prisoners yesterday threatened to stall the Paris Viet- nam peace conference. Secretary of State William Rog- ers sought - but failed to get - an urgent meeting with North Viet- nam Foreign Minister Nguyen Duy Trinh to seek an explanation why Hanoi was holding up the release of more captives. The North .Vietnamese had said that no more prisoners would be released until the United States and South Vietnam gave assur- P e ki Bethune in, Atlanta ceasefire agreement would properly observed. be Continued violations of the cease fire, the North Vietnamese - and the Russians - charged were en- dangering peace in Vietnam. Rogers had sought the meeting with Trinh on President Nixon's orders. But spokesmen in Paris , ;, ** ,}, ..r . < said there would be no meeting be- tween the two until at least today. } : . }. : However, other American and North Vietnamese officials did '}} meet last night - presumably to discuss the problem Since a Rogers-Trinh meeting was regarded by the Americans as of the highest priority - to be un- dertaken before any further busi- ness at the peace talks - the work of the 13 - party conference could .,.. be stalled until the prisoner issue is settled.'"} Rogers held a previously-arrang- ed meeting here last night with So-- viet Foreign Minister Andrei Gro- myko, but U. S. officials did not disclose whether the prisoner issue Rogers meets Gromyko in Paris tame up.---- WANTED: MARRIED COUPLES IN UNIVERSITY HOUSING: I'd like to interview you for a thesis on American life styles. If you are 21+, married 2 years+, call Susan B r a m, 764-6337 (Day) or 662-9407 (Eve.) You will be paid. BUMMED OUT ON CAR REPAIRS So are we but we do offer no rip-off service VW-CORVAI R-GM VOLVO-DATSON DIAGNOSTIC SERVICE 663-2441-1150 Rosewood Modifiled Sports Cars -r BARBER BILLIARDS BOW LING FOOSBALL STAND TABLE TENNIS MICHIGAN UNION OPEN DURING SPRING VACATION F I HAWAII Make a break this summer. Walk into a lush sub-tropical rain for- \. est swim in a crsa clear pool beneath a secluded waterfall, snor el thru warm waters over a coral reef, swim, surf, or just sleep on the warm sand. You say you'd like to but you've got to earn some bread this summer? So do your 8 hour gig, but do it here, then set yourself free on some sunshine and beautiful people. Hawaii's wages, higher than the national average, can pay for your trip and ut y back at school in the fall with what you would have earned at a .. hometown job. TASBED P.O. Box 17221 Honolulu, Hawaii 96817 Enclosed is $4.25 for guaranteed housing employment aid. I under- stand this entitles me alone to your service. No C.O.D.s please. Name Address....... ................. City........................State ..........Zip Skill.. ............. .... AP Photo . +I ATLANTA (UPI) - A man ten- atively identified as Mark Beth- une, wanted in Detroit for the slay- DAILY OFFICIAL ing of a policeman, was shot to BULLETIN death on a rooftop yesterday at. MorrosdBrown College, Atlanta po- g lice said." .: .: It was not immediately known WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 28 hetherthesuspect was nktiledDAY CALENDAR whether the suspect was killed by Near Eastern Lang. & Lit., Ctr. for police bullets or committed sui- Near Eastern & N. African Studies, His- cide. The shooting reportedly took tory of Art: L. Golembeck, Royal On- place on a roof at the +college. tari Museum, "Iran and Turan in the placeon a15th Century A.D.," 1528' C. C. Little, Bethune, 22, of Detroit, was 3 p.m. wanted in the fatal shooting Dec. Religious Affairs: Frank Rhodes, 27 ofta Detroit policeman and the dean, LSA, "Evolution, Ethics, and So- wounding of his partner, and in the SPR G BR E woundingofcfour other officers in 5 CA N A K that city Dec. 4.S (IA Two other men have been charged with the shootings and one RATES of them, John Percy Boyd Jr., 22, was slain here last Friday in a gunfight with city policeman Bob- MAR 440 by W. Davis. Ai Atlanta man, Owen Darnell Wingfield, 30, was also killed in the exchange of bul- lets. i A Bethune was believed to be in the Atlanta area and a Detroit of- ficer had come here to aid local OPEN 7 PM officers in the case. M-PIN I.. -____MINIM= ciety," Aud. 3, MLB 3 p.m. Creative Arts Festival: "Sexual Medi- tation: Motel; Songs," discussion screening with filmmaker Stan Brak- hage, Residential College Aud., 3 p.m. Psych, 171 Film Series: "Un Chien Andalou; Dream of the Wild Horses," UGLI Multi-purpose room, 4 p.m. Student Lab Theatre: Improv. fig- ures; "We Can't All Be Heroes," Frieze Arena, 4 p.m. Botany Seminar: Dr. Joseph Ramus, Yale University, 'Biogenesis of Capsu- lar Polysaccharide in the Unicellar Red Alga Porphyridium," 1139 Nat. Sci. Bldg., 4 p.m. Statistics Dept. Seminar: Prof. A. G. Laurent, Wayne State University, "Structure and partitions - Some Dis- tributions Related to the Spherical Structure," 229 Angell, 4 p.m., coffee hour preceding in 1447 Mason, 3:30 p.m. Dentistry and Dental Research Inst.: 1. Bernstein, prof. of Biochem, & Envir. & Indust. Health, "Chemical Differen- tiation of Mammalian Epidermis," 1033 Kellogg, 4 p.m. Physics & Astronomy Colloquium: C. M. Surko, Bell Telephone Laboratories, "Elementary Excitations in Solid and Liquid Helium," P&A Colloquium Room, 4 pm. Zoology & Comm. on Tropical Stu- dies: J. H. Connell, University of Cali- fornia, Santa Barbara, "Species Diver- sity of Tropical Rain Forest Trees," 170 Physs-Astron, 4:10. Women's Studies Film Series: "Mes- sor Moneka," "Dorothea Lange," & "Modern Women: The Uneasy Life," UGLI Mulei-purpose Room, 7 p.m. Computing Ctr.: E. J. Fronczak, Res. Asst., "The MTS Command Language and Running Ttime-shared Jobs," Nat. Sci. Aud., 7:30 p.m. Philosophy and Undergrad. Philo. As- soc.: Allen Wood. prof., "Marx's Con- cept of Justice," Green Lounge, East Quad., 7:30 p.m. Museum of Art: "Sound and Light," informal gallery tour with light and sound environment," Museum, 8 p.m.4 Music School: Stanley Quartet,8Rack- ham Aud., 8 p.m. Music School: S. Riley, double bass, SM Recital Hall, 8 p.m. o ~NEW AT l nq' NSO COVER CHARGE, COME TO HEAR THE SOUND OF ' JERZY KOSINSKI's latest fiction, THE DEVIL TREE, will be on sale for $5.90 through Saturday, March 3, 1973. WEDNESDAY- THURSDAY AT 9:00 EDDY KAY LISTEN TO YOUR SONGS, BEST OF 50'S HITS, AND YOUR ALONG SONGS. FAVORITE FOLK & 60'S, TODAY'S FAVORITE SING- BIMBOS 114 E. Washington I i 665-3231 OPENFEVERY DAY AT 4:00 FOR DINNER' BEST JANSCH-Moonshine Reprise album MS 2129 Bert Jansch, pillar of Pentangle and veteran of 15 albums, has completed his eighth and most mellow solo LP, Moonshine. I [ 3 _._._ .. _.._._. I i at your University Cellar 9-10 p.m. weekdays 11-5 weekends SGC ELECT ION 4 WHO MAY VOTE? All may vote. students (graduate' students and undergraduates) I i LITTLE FEAT-Dixie Chicken Warner Bros. album BS 2686 Drool over these tasty new pieces of finger-lickin' good music. Not your greasy kid stuff for sure, this is the world's "funkiest" chicke.n. Umm, umm good! DIANE KIRKPATRICK WALTER SPINK ADALINE HUSZCZO MARVIN FELHEIM JAMES VANN BILL COLES AS HEARD ON WCBN-FM 89.5 Stereo AVAILABLE AT: Siscount records WHO MAY RUN? Any regularly enrolled student on the Ann Arbor cam- pus of the U. of M. This includes graduate and undergraduate stu- dents from all schools and colleges, HOW DOES ONE BECOME A CANDIDATE? Candidates must file a state- ment of candidacy and a $5.00 returnable filing fee by March 1, (Thursday). Candidates must also submit a platform and 2 wallet- size photographs by March 2 at 3:00. CAMPAIGNING is governed by the Election Code. PROSPECTIVE CANDIDATES.can obtain further information and copies of the Statement of Candidacy, Election Code, and the SGC Constitution at the SGC Offices, 3X Michigan Union, or call 763-3241. ELECTION SCHEDULE: March 1 (Thursday . . 5:00 p.m. Deadline for filing Statements of Candidacy. March 1 (Thursday - . 7:30 p.m. Candidates Meeting March 1 (Thursday) 9:00 p.m. Campaign Begins March 2 (Friday . ... 3:00 p.m. Photographs and Platforms due. I I "SOUND AND LIGHT" AT THE MUSEUM OF ART Spotlight on the Museum's Treasures with IllIumination 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 Museum of Art I f. re 300 South State St. ELECTION: MARCH 27, 28,and 29 I FREE ADMISSION REFRESHMENTS A4 I 0 601 LIGHT SHOW J _ __ _ _ ._ - _. _ --__._ __--- - -- - - - ._ _ i ; t flVF.rr 4, International Studies Center GREBLE, FRANCE 2 Semesters of comprehensive studies of European culture, courses in Philosophy, Art, Political Science, Literature, offered in the English Language. Outstanding American faculty-high aca- demic standards-intensive courses in French prepare our stu- dents to also study at the University of Grenoble. No previous language requirement. DIRECT INVOLVEMENT IN FRENCH SOCIAL LIFE, SKIING, HIKING, TRIPS TO OTHER EUROPEAN CITIES Sonie scholarships and summer jobs av'ailable INFORMATION AND PERSONAL INTERVIEWS MAY BE ARRANGED FOR TIME AND PLACE, CONTACT: mr C , . n-"ff'TTy -L g - 11, IL- - Ir I viI I r I I U! : lip 1 a }7 I 9 '4 OFFICE HOURS CIRCULATION -764-0555 COMPLAINTS AND SUBSCRIPTIONS 10 a.m.-4 p.m. C LASSI F I E D A DS - 764-0557 10 a.m.-4 p.m. DEADLINE FOR NEXT DAY-12:00 p.m. I i I-. I I I t 1 DISPLAY ADS -764-0554 /7 FoR ORc: NFO, CALL: BOB STEWARD HENDERSON FORD oN-ornn I MONDAY thru FRIDAY-12 p.m.-4 p.m. Deadline for Sunday issue- THURSDAY at 5 p.m. I ft ,F l 1 NiI KI r