Pcige Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tu ipd,-r\.,nuarv 90 1 ... a- IX17 7r I l w : Ily, lu i l ly ,I r .Kissinger, 'Iho resume secret talks Waiting for You Welcome Back I Da Nang base bombed by mistake; 10 injtred By AP and UPI PARIS-The talks between Henry Kissinger and Le Duc Tho resumed yesterday in an apparently icy atmosphere. An aura of grim confrontation hung over the new efforts to ne- gotiate a Vietnam peace settlement. In Vietnam, American fighter-bombers from the Air Force, Navy and Marines yesterday mistakenly bombed the sprawling Da Nang Air Base in what military sources said was an apparent navigational error. Nine Americans and a Vietnamese military guard were -AP Photo Smiling suspects Four of seven Watergate trial defendants and their attorney talk jovially between court sessions in Washington yesterday, where they are charged in connection with the break-in of Democratic head- quarters and the alleged bugging of the offices. From left: Virgilio Gonzales, Frank Sturgis, Eugenio Martinez, attorney Henry Rothblatt, and Bernard Barker. RAIRLAND BATTLES: ...Syrian, Israeli armies clash High Court to rule on slow trial issue WASHINGTON ,) - The Su- preme Court yesterday agreed to decide whether prisoners who were denied a speedy trial are entitled to have their convictions set aside or only to have their sentences re- duced. In the case accepted yesterday, for review later in the term, the U.S. Circuit Court in Chicago ruled the government had been unrea- sonably slow in bringing a local man to trial for auto theft and ordered his sentence reduced by 10 months. The Ft. Leavenworth, Kan., prisoner, Clarence Strunk,Kap- pealed to the Supreme Court, argu- ing that under the Constitution's guarantee of a speedy trial "the conviction itself was no longer valid." In a second action, the Court ruled ruled 6-3 that state supreme court judges may be elected from districts that are unequal in popu- lation. The unsigned, one-line decision agreed with a three-judge federal panel in Baton Rouge, La., that "the rationale behind the one-man, one-vote principle which evolved f out of efforts to preserve a truly representative form of govern- ment is simply not relevant to the makeup of the judiciary.'' injured. President Nixon's security ad- viser and the North Vietnamese Politburo member conferred for 41/2 hours in a Communist-owned villa in a Paris suburb. It was their first meeting since the talks were suspended on Dec. 13 and President Nixon unleashed an un- precedented wave of bombing at- tacks on the North Vietnamese heartland. For the first time, there werej no smiles or handshakes between, the two sides, and Tho left Kis- singer standing on the doorstep for almost a minute without sending an aide to escort him inside. Kissinger finally pushed open the door and walked in, followed by deputy assistant secretary of state, William Sullivan, and other aides.I At the end of the meeting, the North Vietnamese again broke with long-established custom and conspicuously failedd to escort the Americans to the door. Kissinger, left grim-faced, without his fa- miliar smile. Communistsources said private- ly that Tho's snub to Kissinger was a reflection of the strong feelings aroused in North Vietnam by ther bombing of Hanoi and Haiphong in which thousands of civilians were claimed killed or injured. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michiaan. News phone: 764-0562. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich-I igan 420 Maynard Street. Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues-1 day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier icampusiarea); $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). B-M BARBERS znd STYLISTS Michigan Union TUES. Early Silent Classics GREAT TRAIN ROBBERY Dir. Edwin Porter 1905 PLUS: FOUR GRIFFITH SHORTS Battle of Elderbush Gulch, (1913), Judith of Bethu- jia (1913), The New York Hat (1912), Lone- dole Operator (1911), And three films by George Melies. Shows at 7 & 9 p.m. WED. INTOLERANCE D. W. Griffith 7 & 10 p.m. ARCH ITECTURE AUDITORIUM Price Now $1-Sorry! HE SHE I Sunday & Monday: Quarter Nights (BEER & WINE) Tuesday: 12 Price Night Dkncing Every Night frcm 8 p.m. to 2a.m. 341 South Main 769-5960 By Reuters Syrian and Israeli forces fought a series of air and ground battles over the Golan Heights Monday and. Syria called on other Arab rmiies to move immediately to confront Israel on the battle- front. Israel reported shooting down six Syrian MIG-21 jets without losing a'plane in air battles above the front where tanks and artil- Iery. ought until dusk last night. A . military spokesperson in ",Damascus',, Syria, said four Is- -.raeli planes had been shot down during' eight hours of fighting in which three Syrian jets, two tanks and two radar stations were hit. Syrian gunfire destroyed 15 Is- raeli tanks and 10 artillery bat- teries, 'an4 a number of positions and observation posts on the Golan Heights, the Syrian army command ieported. Israel claimed to have knocked out six Syrian tanks in the fight- ing-the. most serious so far in ladelphla hit hy school strke again PHILADELPN IA. (UPI) - Pub- lic school teachers, vowing to defy any court order against a walkout, yesterday resumed a strike that kept 285,000 pupils out of class for three weeks last September. Despite temperatures as low as 14 degrees, pickets appeared as early at 4 a.m. outside several schools in the .nation's fourth larg- est city. A spokesman for the Philadelphia Federation. of teachers said the picketing was "at least as effec- tive" as last September when the city's 280 public schools were clos- ed by the walkout. The Board. of Education had.c vowed to keep the schools open de- spite resumption of the walkout over a contract dispute but by mid-morning 13 of the city's 22 high schools were closed. . the run of blow-for-blow battles along the explosive ceasefire line since mid-October. It denied any of its own tanks were de- stroyed or knocked out of action. In at least six separate air raids beginning yesterday morn- ing, Israel claimed to have blast- ed four Syrian radar stations, two guerrilla bases, a gun bat- tery and three military camps inside Syria. At the height of the fighting, Syria called on other Arab states and armies to move immediately to take their place along the bat- tle line with Israel. The appeal, broadcast in an official commentary over Dama- scus radio, said Syria hoped that the Arab states' attitude would not be confined to moral support and "statements from a dis- tance." Arab silence would give the Israelis the opportunity to pre- pare for a new "expansionist leap" which would lead to the loss of additional Arab territory, it said. "The voice of the Arab masses . calls for all Arab states and armies to take their normal place along the confrontation line against Israel in order to accom- plish the 'historical and sacred mission of liberating Arab terri- tory," the statement added. i _._ - - - ---- --- OVERBECK BOOKSTORE WILL BE OPEN Join The Daily CIRCULATION DEPT. Come in cany afternoon 420 Maynard NEW WORLD FILM COOP presents Monday, Jan. 8th-Thursday, Jan. 9:00 A.M. to 8:00 P.M. FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE 11th I (Regular hours Monday-Friday: 9:00-6:00 Sat.: 9:00-4:30) * COMPETITIVE PRICES 9 BANK AMERICARD 0 MASTER CHARGE 0 APPLY FOR YOUR OWN OVERBECK CHARGE DUJSTIN BIG MvAN" Panavision't Tchnicolor ®"m 1216 SOUTH UNIVERSITY 663-9333 0 $4.00 per month 2.3 cubic feet purchase for $79.50 from 336 S. STATE - 769-4980 (formerly Slater's Books) UAC-DAYSTAR PRESENTS Jr. Walker & The Alistars! I Luther Allison-Bobby "Blue" Band MOJO BOOGIE BAND ALSO Lenny Bruce in "THANK YOU MASK MAN" "perhaps the best animated short ever made"-N.Y. Times WEDNESDAY & THURSDAY 7:30 p.m. Jan. 10 & 11 9:30 p.m. NATURAL SCIENCE AUD. (U of M campus) ---- COURSE MART 315 3 hours credit, pass-fail, taught by Prof. E. Katz Rudolf Steiner's Road to Sensible and Supersensible Knowledge MEETS M W F 10 A.M. IN ROOM 1041 RANDALL LAB The course offers a unique opportunity to study in depth two of Steiner's basic works: 1. Knowledge of Higher Worlds and Its Attainment "Luther Allison's impeccable, unbelievably fast guitar work made' almost every other guitarist pale by comparison-and at this festival, that's saying something.'" John Weisman DETROIT FREE PRESS review of 1 972 Blues and Jazz Festival "Luther's playing is a blend of Jimi Hendrix and B.B. King ... the effect is dazzling." THE MONTREAL STAR I I Photo Credit: DOUG FULTON SATURDAY, JANUARY 20, 7 p.m.-Hill Aud. Reserved seats 4.50, 3.50, 2.50 now on sale MICHIGAN UNION: 1) -5:30 MONDAY-SAT. ~~.uwmw' . <. - .