THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Wednesday, September 20, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three " .... , CINEMA We are showing a lot oft rngmar Bergman's films this term. Here is your chance to see (or review) the film which made this director world famous. TUES./WED. T THE SEVENTH, SEAL MADE IN 1957 THUR.: AMERICAN UNDERGROUND RETROSPECTIVEw -Program 2 7 and 9.p.m, ARCH ITECTURE AUDITORIUM 75c i4- DIAL 668-6416 Today is Bargain Day WINNER 1972 CANNES FILM FESTIVAL JURY PRIZE AWARD Only American Film to be so Honored Military f unds bil in Senate WASHINGTON s(R The Senate Foreign Relations Committee re- vived the foreign-military-aid au- thorization bill yesterday and set the stage for the third 1972 senate floor test of sentiment on cutting off funds for the war in Indochina. After loping $581 million from the House-passed authorization measure, the committee adopted anew an end-to-the-war amendment sponsored by Sen. Edward Brooke E (R-Mass.). It would cut off funds for U.S. Lavelle named in unauthorized bombing strilkes DENVER UP)-Three of four senators investigating unau- thorized bombing strikes against North Vietnam said yester- day that former Seventh Air Force commanding Gen John Lavelle apparently was the highest officer involved in or- dering the raids. However, Armed Servlces Committee Chairperson John Stennis, (D-Miss.), said he did not know when his group would issue its final report to the Senate on the bombing case or on the nomination of Gen. Creighton Abrams as Army chief of staff. The preliminary opinions that Lavelle was the apparent top source of orders for unauthdrized air raids came following a two-hour, closed-door hearing with Maj. Gen. Alton Slay, La ' frv,.normer d Aiity hiP f4 ---__ I KURT' VONNEUT JR'S GREAT NOVEL forces in Indochina within f o v r months after passage, conditioned on release of prisoners of war and an accounting for Americans re- ported missing in action. The Senate adopted the 3. 1 ti e amendment by a 49-47 vote on Aug. 2 after it had been tacked on to a3 military-procurement authoriza- tion bill. It was eliminated by a House-Senate conference commi'- tee. The House had voted to authorize $2.131 billion for military foreign AUnivesaIPicture TECHNICOLOR' 1 AP Photo Four members of .the Senate Armed Services Committee arrive in Denver yesterday to question Major Gen. Alton Slay about unauthorized bombing raids against North Vietnam. From left: Sen. Peter Dominick (R-Colo.), committee chairman Sen. John Stennis (D-Miss.), and Sen. Barry Gold- water (R-Ariz.) The fourth member, 3ea. Harold Hughes (D-Iowa) is standing behind Se. Dom- inick. -- Everyone Welcome! aid, compared with administrati.n requests totaling $2.251 billion. 1iHe Senate committee allowed $1.55 bi1. PACKAGED BOMB: lion in recognition of Senate re ec- 'IO Urrrr GRAD COFFEE HOUR Wednesday, Sept. 20 8-10 p.m. West Conference Room, 4th Floor RACKHAM OUTSIDE ON THE TERRACE "io" of a si.82-bii1on autnoizatIn. by a 48-42 vote on July 24, Fun, Food, People NEW PEOPLE WELCOME! LAST DAY OF SALE WAH R'S BOOK STORE. 316 S. State St. Absolute Cea rance 10,000 BOOKS LEFT, PAPERBACK AND HARDBACK SUPPLIES, SHELVES -EVERYTHING MUST GO- Open 9 a.m.-9 p.m. Mon.-Sat., 0 BORDER'S BOOK SHOP IS COMING) Rejection of the earlier bill in the Senate followed adoption of an amendment for troop withdrawal from Indochina by a 50-44 vote. The House three times this year has refused to accept an Indochina troop-withdrawal deadline, the last 208-160 vote coming Sept. 14 on an amendment to the defense ap- propriation bill. The funding authorized in t h e Senate committee action is below the levels of the House authoriza- tion bill and its companion appro- priation bill in all categories of se- curity, assistance. The bill to be brought to the Sen- ate floor would allow during the comning year $500 million for mi~i- tary assistance grants, $550 million for supporting assistance and $400 million in military credit s a I e . In addition $100 million would be authorized for additional relief p.o- jects for Bangladesh. The House plans to take up its appropriations bill today or to- morrow and complete action on it this week. By The Associated Press An Israeli diplomat was killed yesterday by a booby-trapped parcel delivered to his embassy in London. British postal authorities in a sorting office found four more packets containing explosives last night, all addressed to officials at the Israeli Embassy. The ex- plosives were defused. The Israeli Embassy in Paris also received two explosive par- cels, but they were dismantled. The booby-trapped mailings came on the heels of the Israeli raid into Lebanon which r a s aimed at destroying Palestinian guerrilla bases. The Israeli gov- ernment vowed that those respon- sible for the death of the London diplomat "will meet their just desserts." The mailed bombs indicated that Israel's strike against Arab guerrillas in Lebanon had not ended the terrorist war against Israel. In another Middle East develop- ment, authorities in Syria ar- rested a U.S. military officer and possibly will seek to exchange him for Syrian soldiers cap!tred by the Israelis. Soon after the morning cxplos- ion in the London embassv, 1-e Lebanese Embassy there said it received an anonymous telephone call warning: "You will be next.- The Lebanese government ha been trying to curb guerrilla ac- tivities inside Lebanon. Scotland Yard launched an in- ternational hunt for the assassins, and suspicion centered mainly on the Black September group of Palestinian guerrillas who mur- dered 11 members of the Israeli Olympic team in Munich. Both the London and Faris bombs were postmarked mi Hal- land, officials said. The bombs U-M BARBERS and HAIRSTYLISTS Custom Haircuts MICHIGAN UNION were mailed in similar large, bulky envelopes. Shachori was the first Israeli official murdered in Britain. West German security officials were believed checking whether the London bombing was con- nected to threats by Arabs in West Germany 17 days ago that death packages would be mailed to German Jews and Israeli dip- lomats. Diplomatic sources in Beirut said Syria may be holding Maj. Richard Barratt, an assistant military attache of the U.S. Em- bassy in Amman, Jordan, in hopes of winning freedom for five Syrian officers captured by Israel in June. Barrett, of Laramie, Wyo., was arrested Sept. 9 while on his way from Jordan through Syria to Beirut. Officials of the U.S. Embassy in Beirut reported his arrest Monday. The officials said no reason was given for his arrest a n d that they didn't know where in Syria he was being held. The diplomatic sources in Bei- rut said there hadn't been any hint from Syria that Barrett was being held for an exchange. But they added that pending some word to the contrary from Syria, this was a likely supposition. Israeli ,diplomat assassinated as terrorist activity spreads of staff for operations. Stennis - with Sens. Peter Dominick, (R-Colo.), Barry Gold- water, (R - Ariz.), and Harold Hughes, (D-Iowa) - took Slay's wheelchair testhnony at Fitzsim- ons General Hospital, where Slay, who now heads the special train- ing command at Lowry Air Force was said to be recovering from a Sept. 11 hernia operation. Stennis was the only one of the four senators who refused to com- ment directly on the ultimate re- sponsibility for the raids. Dominick said that, according to the testimony of Slay and others, he felt that higher authorities nev- er were told of Lavelle's new rules for engaging the enemy. Hesaid such orders were, "only passed down to wing commanders and subordinate officers." Hughes said there was "no evi- dence implicating anyone else" higher up the chain of command. Asked by reporters if Lavelle could be labeled the "bad guy" in, the case, Goldwater replied that one would "assume that Gen. La- velle could come under that title." Stennis said Slay told the sena- tors Lavelle made it clear to him in conversations, but without writ- ten orders, that, each time U.S.I pilots flew over North Vietnam,I they were to react as if there were hostile actions by the North Viet-; namese even if there were none. Slay, according to Stennis, also said he was receiving accurate re- ports on what happened during the unauthorized raids while falsified reports were filed through regular channels. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0562. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich-F igan 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day 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). N.Y. Rep., i i fights in second try By The Associated Press Former Rep Allard Lowenstein (D.-N.Y.) won a second shot yes- terday at Rep. John Rooney (D- N.Y.) in a tightly regulated court- ordered special Democratic par- ty primary in New York City that barely upstaged ardently contested primaries in Massa- chusetts. Rooney, a fourteen-term mem- ber of the House, fought for his political life after state courts found last June 20's Democratic primary marked by "irregularis-, ties." Overseeing the election were assistant state attorneys general assigned to each of the district's 60 polling places. Rooney won the June 20 contest by 890 votes, but the courts found 1,920 irreg- ular ballots of the 29,562 cast and ordered a new election. In Massachusetts, interest cen- tered on a challenge to Demo- cratic Rep. Louise Day Hicks in Boston's reapportioned 9th Dis- trict, a House seat bid by anti- war Vietnam veteran John Kerry in the 5th District. Hicks who was defeated twice in attempts to be mayor of Bos- ton, ran a bitterly fought cam- paign against state Sen. Robert Cawley as she sought a second term in Congress. - Kerry, a onetime spokesman for Vietnam Veterans Against the War, waged a strenuous battle against 10 opponents including state Rep. Anthony DiFruscia, whose campaign offices allegedly were broken into Monday by two Kerry workers including Kerry's brother. UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT j featuring: T & T Wed.-Sat. 9:30-1:30 SUNDAY: Jam Session 3:00-8:00 208W. Huron LUNCHES DAILY - - -- - - SHOP THURSDAY AND FRIDAY 9:30 A.M. 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