,, THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, March 24, 1973 - -T HE---M IC HI...G AN. D AILY..---at.u.....y.... r...... I RA Provos reject British reform plan BELFAST (Reuter)-Irish Re- by the British government to lif publican Army (IRA) guerrillas the ban on the Sinn Fein, the poli in Northern Ireland yesterday de- tical party behind the IRA. This clared "We fight on"-dashing would enable them to take part in hopes that peace was about to elections for the new Northern break out following Britain's plan Ireland Assembly proposed in the for radical reform of government white paper. here. But while there have been signs A statement issued in Dublin on that Britain might well legalize behalf of the IRA's Provisional Sinn Fein-and the republican clubs Wing rejected the British white which are the political front foi paper on the future of the North the rival Official IRA-if the guer and said it left the guerrillas "no rillas renounce violence, it was choice but to continue armed re- thought impossible that this step sistance." could be taken now under an ul- There.was no firm indication timatum from the guerrillas. here whether the "Provos" as they A lifting of the ban on Sinn Fein are widely known, would imme- as a result of the threat of con diately resume their campaign of tinuing violence by the guerrillas bombing and shooting, suspended observers here said, could swing since last Sunday in what has even moderate Protestant opinion amounted to an undeclared cease- behind the militant Protestants, wh fire. are holding a mass rally in centra But the refusal to lay down their Belfast today to protest agains arms brought immediate criticism the white paper. from Catholic political leaders and the official wing of the IRA. The Michigan Daily, edited and man aged by students at the University o Paddy Devlin of the Social Demo- Michigan. News phone: 764-0562. Second cratic and Labor Party, the Catho- Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich lic minority's main political voice Igan. 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor hichThurday ppeaed t theMichigan 48104. Published daily Tues- whih Tursdsayappealed to'"thay hrugh SudymrigUie Provisionals to stop fighting, called ity year. Subscription rates: $10 by the Provisional's commitment to carrier (campus area); $11 local mail violence "blind" and "insane." (in Mich. or Ohio); $13 non-local mai for te oficia IRA(other states and foreign). A spokesman for the official IRA summer Session published Tuesday in Dublin said the decision was "a through Saturday morning. Subscrip ttrof some regret." ionrates: $5.0 by carrier campu "matter o oerge. area) ;r$6.50 local maill (inr Mhch.ps o The official I R A discontinued Ohio); $7.50 non-local mall (othe its military campaign last May. At states and foreign). that time the officials, regarded as ---- more politically inclined than the Provisionals, calledfor free poli- R D tical expression in the North. Read Daily The Provisional statement ap- pears to set as a prime condition' for any future ceasefire a decisions ieds 't r n ) l s :S Q r r I. See 65 exciting powerhouses, including sleek front- wheel drives and classic era sporting cars, oil set against the backdrop of one of the world's finest auto collections. Free movies, '72 Indy. Hours: 9-5 weekdays, 9-10 Fri., Sat., Sun. Henry Ford Museum, Dearborn, Michigan. thruMarch25- Henrig FordMuseum .., ® , X On its way to the Space Center NEW DRAFT LAW Students riot in PARIS (Reuter) - Hundreds of Many university students have thousands of high school students also gone on strike in sympathy. boycotted classes here yesterday In the most spectacular demon- in continuing protest over a new stration Thursday, more than S0,- law which forces most youths to 000 youths jammed southern Paris complete their one-year of com- boulevards in a noisy march headed pulsory military service before go- by crash-helmeted leftist militants. ing on to higher studies. There were violent clashes at More than two and a half million the end of the march between sev- high school pupils stayed away eral thousand hard-core protestors from school Thursday and demon- and nearly as many riot police. stration marches took place Screams of pain were heard as throughout France. police, advancing through a hail of paving stones and bottles, clubbed down stragglers after using tear- Dmgas to dispersesthe demonstrators. emoc'rats Unrest over the new military France service law has been growing in recent weeks. Student leaders claim that the law discriminates against poorer youths, who they say will have difficulty starting university stud- ies if they are forced to do their service first. In the past, most students were given deferments from military, service up to the age of 27, but the new law provides deferment' only for medical students. 1 i::}} -":::.....::...n.:.w 'V..'C. t:. v ...... .h..... :.. ........... " . : .:. . :41 f wokngo he17 inth Studenyn PubliatiosBud ing .420fMAYNARD d .:.:. . ..::: :.. :: ::, .. ..... .. \ ::... ....?+..::n .:.. ...w.wr ."-:., v.i-v -..... . ...... ..... .. ..v ..n .... ........ ....... : ::.?.X ..r.. f :}"T A, .n '~ . r'.}n '::v : : ':, , .. . . . . v . . v.. .......... .. . vx :v :v::: m .._ .. : ".:. .;. .v . ::: .:y.: ". :,,"::: :: . . :. .. y . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . _ . . : . : . , : . . . . . . . 4 v v } { k r n : . 4 , - . y t . t : , . . . J t : J ' " > ? : . . t . . n . . . . . } . :,~ Thf e sd fM E E T Ig NGa r o o hnth forayn e b intete~SB d in g-" working onhthe b9d4nA A committee WASHINGTON (P-The Demo- cratic National Committee (DNC) overwhelmingly approved a slate. of new members yesterday in its biggest show of unity since last fall's presidential election. The slate of 25 at-large seats on the DNC was put together by party Chairman Robert Strauss and the executive committee and accepted by acclamation after endorsement from the floor by both party regu- lars and reformers. The compromise had been reach- ed in preliminary meetings of the executive committee when Strauss agreed to drop two black repre- sentatives from his own original list and replace them with two pre- ferred by the black Congressional Congress. He also agreed to add a labor member favored by the re- formist elements which backed Sen. George McGovern's presiden-: tial campaign. The only other possible con- flict reaching the floor at yester- day's meeting was over the method of selecting new at-large members for the executive committee. It ended in a compromise by which the executive committee picks its own six members subject to ratifi- cation by the next full meeting of the national committee. The unity drive picked up ir- resistible support when Sen. Harold Hughes (D-Iowa), one of the found- ers of the reform wing of the party, spoke for the compromise slate, and Jean Westwood, party, chairman during McGovern's can- didacy, called it "a slate we can all live 'with." TUESDAY & THURSDAY DUSTIN -LILUBIG NIA" Panavision Technicoklox 7:15 & 9:30 P.M. Modern Languages Aud. 3 (E. Washington at Thayer, Ann Arbor) $1.25 New World Film Co-op FNNooMFIRGRET RODTBNWH A KATHARINE HEPBURN WEEKEND TONIGHT_-March 2 STAE OOR A fin rarely shown in Ann Arbor Co-starring GINGER ROGERS and ADOLPHE -MENJOU From a play by Edna Ferber and George S. Kaufman Directed by GREGROY LA CAVA 'Stage Door': In Defense of Hollywood The RKO-Radio version of "Stage Door," which covery of the picture, is the tortured young wo- was opened at the Music Hall yesterday, is not man who has waited a year for the One Role. merely a brilliant picture (although that should There are the other young ladies of the ensemble, be enough), but happens as well to be a magni- and a cleverly individualized bevy they are, whose ficently devastating reply on Hollywood's behalf to several destinies tragically or comically counter- all the catty little remarks that George Kaufman point those of the primary four. and Edna Ferber had made about it in their play. The twists end turns of the narrative are sen- Those impolite playwrights had filled the sibly motivated, the direction of Gregory La Cava mouths of the aspirant Bernhardts of their Foot- has given it zest and pace and photographic elo- lights Club with gall and wormwood whenever the quence, and the performances are amazingly good Hollywood topic arose, which was fairly constantly. -considering that Mr. Kaufman's Hollywood is It was, we were told, a factory and a graveyard of art a place of complete untalent and all-pervad- ing witlessness, of sables for the body and starva- tion for the soul, etc.-all very wittily expressed and neatly packaged (through the courtesy of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer which had backed the show). For a factory and a graveyard and other un- pleasant institutions, Hollywood had done some rather incredible things with the Kaufman-Ferber contribution, not the least of them being the transformation of a fragile piece of theatrical wishful-willing into a far more soundly contrived comedy drama. Script-writers Morrie Ryskind and Anthony veiller have taken the play's name, its setting and part of its theme, and have built a whole new structure which is wittier than the ori- ginal more dramatic than the original, more dra- matic than the original, more cogent than the original. Where the team of K & F (who really should. . . . . . .{ have been ashamed) drew Hollywood as the leering man with the waxed black mustache, RKO has countered by showing that the villian of all seri- ous acting fledglings is the Broadway producer who is too busy to look and listen. But with this premise, which was the whole sum of the stage's "Stage Door, ' hlie film edition had only begun its narrative. Back it goes to the Footlights Club where the sagestruck maidens nurse their disap- pointments and sharpen their claws (on whatever victim is nandy) and gossip betimes over the tri- just a canning factory. Miss Hepburn and Miss , angular sham battle being fought by Ginger Rog- Rogers, in particular, seemed to be acting so far ers, Katharine Hepburn and Gail Patrick over and above their usual heads that, frankly we hardly THE TRIN RO Wednesdays Are1 Adults only 75c Bargain Days! 1-5 PM Wed. Shows at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 PM SOON: PAUL NEWMAN in: "THE LIFE & TIMES OF JUDGE ROY BEAN" J 2:/01 117172 plete vegetar- home made o u p s, freshly Offering comp ion meals,I breads and so I