Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, November 30,19-7/ PageTwoTHEMICIGANDAIY Tursay, oveber30,19I Anti-IRA bill causes protest in S. Ireland By AP and Reuters DUBLIN - The government's plan to smash the out- lawed Irish Republican Army (IRA) plunged the Irish Re- public into a political crisis yesterday. Demonstrators marched on parliament as Prime Minis- ter Jack Lynch battled to push through legislation giving him wide powers to crush the IRA in the South. As Lynch spoke to parliament thousands of IRA support- ers marched to the building through pouring rain demand- ing the defeat of the anti-IRA legislation and the release of their' jailed leader, Sean MacStiofain. At the rally before the .march, speakers from the Soviet arms used in Ireland By Reuters and AP The British government c o n- firmed yesterday that a rocket launcher captured from the Irish Republican Army (IRA) Tuesday was of Warsaw Pact design. But Ian Gilmour, British minister for defense, cautioned that t h e country where the weapon w a s made did "not necessarily" sup- ply it to the IRA. The launcher, which was found in a car stopped in Londonderry, was a seven-rocket anti-tank wea- pon of the kind made in several communist countries in eastern Europe and supplied to various forces outside eastern Europe. IRA guerrillas fired 15 of the rockets at 10 targets Tuesday, kil- ling a British soldier and a police constable and wounding 13 o t h e r soldiers. Three more rockets were fired yesterday, but there were no cas- ualties. Three other deaths in northern Ireland on Tuesday -- a soldier shot accidentally during operations and two IRA suspects blown up by. their own bomb - raised the death toll in the North to 645 in the last three years. IRA and its political arm, the ". Sinn Fein, declared virtual war on the Lynch govern-, ment. MacStiofain, sentenced to six} months in jail for IRA activities, was reported critically ill in a AP Photo military hospital after 11 days of , est refusing food. Lynch's proposed legislation A South Vietnamese Ranger is treated by medics. Field reports yesterday said heavy monsoon rains would allo corto j IRA - had slowed ground fighting in the north, where government troops are trying to regain ground lost pects if a senior police officer swore on oath that he believes to North Vietnamese earlier this year. U. S. warplanes hammered again at the southward move- them to be members of the banned ment of supplies through North Vietnam's panhan die. organization. --- The prime minister's fhanna SI L C Il1E E AR S Fail party has a majority of only I CHINESE ARMS: one in parliament, and the oppo- sition Fine Gael and Labor par- ties are opposing his anti-IRA bill on the grounds that it infringes ba- bels atl ilipino toops sic human rights. But early last night Lynch gain- ed valuable bargaining time by MANILA (Reuters) - Philip- order to check, he said, a state Moslem city af Marawi, not far winning a postponement in the pines Pres. Ferdinand M a r c o s of rebellion and insurrection and from Basilan. vote until today. said yesterday a group of rebels in order to institute sweeping re- In nearby Cotabato Provinde A later bulletin reported that po- apparently armed from abroad forms. Earlier he had charged several days later, government lice halted the marchers about 100 was fighting government troops that an unnamed foreign power troops clashed with a 500-strong yards from the high iron gates in on the southern island of Basilan. was supporting a communist re- group of Moslem outlaws. front of the parliament building. The group had wiped out a bellion in the Philippines. It was' A ship caught running arms to Dems vie for top leadership WASHINGTON (,') - Former Democratic Party treasurer Ro- bert Strauss received fresh support yesterday in his bid to capture the chairmanship of thetDemocra- tic National Committee (DNC). Supporters listed 18 governors and a former vice-chairman behind his candidacy. Strauss and Lawrence O'Brien, former party chairman, are two of the contenders in the race to re- place Jean Westwood, who was picked for the job last July by Sen. George McGovern (D-S.D.). Since McGovern's defeat, many party leaders have urged Westwood to step down and let the DNC pick her replacement at its upcoming meet- ing. Last week Westwood opened the door for such a move with a state- ment stressing that the party, not her political future, is most im- portant to her. Mary Lou Burg, who served un- der O'Brien as party vice chair- man, has sent a letter to DNC members endorsing StraussDfor party chief. In her letter, Burg defends Strauss against attacks that he is not sympathetic to party reforms and that his friendship with John Connally, head of the "Democrats for Nixon" organization in the re- cent election, would impair his ef- fectiveness as party chairman. Likely candidates other than Strauss and O'Brien are George Mitchell r of Maine, who directed Sen. Edmund Muskie's unsuccess- ful campaign for the party's nomi- nation this year, Charles Manatt of California, and possibly McGov- ern's running mate Sargent Shriv- er. ADVANCE SALES AND INFO PTP TICKET OFFICE-MENDELSSOHN LOBBY 764-0450 4 Performances Dec. 2 and 3 - EE a The ShowYOU ASKED FOR The show YOU DIAL 8-64 16 May well be the most, heautiful film ever made. -Newsweek AM Awr e 9D.gH. regce's G-T-T C& irgn the sy" tjfp t r 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- 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); $750 non-local mail (other! states and foreign). military detachment on the is- land, some 550 miles south of Manila, he said. Marcos said the fighting w a s still going on, but he did not in- dicate whether there were any casualties. Nor did the president, in a tele- vised address to local government leaders gathered at Malacanang Palace, identify the rebels or their source of foreign backing. Marcos declared martial law Sin the Philippines Sept. 22 in the third outbreak of fighting in the predominantly Moslem South since he imposed martial law. Early last week some 400 men, mostly Moslems and branded by the government as Maoists, stag- ed a 26-hour uprising in t h e Maoist New Peoples Army guer- rillas in northern Isabela Pro- vince a few months ago alleged- ly called at a North Korean port. Intelligence sources also claim- ed at the time that some of the arms bore Chinese markings. p I * STARTS FRIDAY AT THE "Ll E I "'PLAY IT AS IT LAYS' IS A -SMASH H IT! It ranks high among the best movies I've ever seen.-One of the most rewarding experiences you'll ever have in a motion picture theatre." --Rex Reed, Syndicated Columnist THOSE ZANY IDIOTS, THE MARX BROTHERS, BACK AGAIN IN HORSEFEAT IRS, Groucho, as college president Quincy Adams Wagstaff, defies the Marx credo in his witty song, "I'm Against It." There's a hilarious biology lecture by Groucho; Chico and Harpo as a pair of unlikely college athletes, and a frenzied football finale, involving chariots, hot dogs, banana skins, elastic bands, and countless pigskins. ALSO: Laurel & Hardy in the hilarious TWO TARS I I "An acid-paved freeway trip which has' the sting of a rattlesnake! -N.Y. Daily News "AN ORIGINAL WORK OF MOVIE ART." -N.Y. Post "Beautifully performed by Tuesday Weld and Anthony Perkins." -N.Y. Times "FRANK PERRY'S BEST WORK BY FAR." -Harper's Bazaar "My Oscar bet for just about the best of everything."-Cosmopolitan Magazine AN IMPRESSIVE FILM." -Gene Shalit, WNBC-TV \OMINICKDUNNEANDF P FILMS. INC PRESENT A NEW FRNK PERRY FILM TUESDAY WEED - ANTHONY PERKINS COMING TUESDAY-Glenda Jackson in Ken Russell's WOMEN IN LOVE NEXT THURSDAY-Francois Truffaut's JULES AND JIM ALL SHOWINGS IN AUDITORIUM "A," ANGELL HALL-$1 Tickets for all of each evening's performances on sale outside the auditorium at 6 p.m. -TONIGHT--November 30th-ONLY! 7 & 8:45 p.m. k SHOP TONIGHT AND FRIDAY UNTIL 9:00 P.M. VOTED ONE OF THE TOP TEN FILMS' OF ALL TIME! A group of highly qualified film producers and critics selected by the U.S.C. Per- forming Arts Council to pick milestone pictures-Those which gave new concepts and advanced the art and technique of film-making - has picked "FANTASIA" among its top ten! -UPI News, Nov. 18th FAR AHEAD OF ITS TIME .. . BEST AUDIO-VISUAL EXPERIENCE IN TOWN!" William Wolf, Cue "BEST FAMILY FILM!" Joseph Gelmis, Newsday "A TOTAL EXPERIENCE IN SIGHT, SOUND AND COLOR . . . MAKE FANTASIA A MUST!" Bob Salmaggi, Group W Network I TUESDAY WEL BEST PERFORMA 1972 VEN4ICE FILMI "PLAY IT AS IT LAYS' ~I AL lOAN TAMMY GRIMES-ADAM ROARKE i FESTIAL JOANDIDION an JOHN CRFCDRY DONN "JOAN LII WU FRANK PERRY W ROMNICK DONNE" FRANK PER A UNIVERSEL P1(1111 E IMN(1 r_---,di I 1 THUR., FRI.-7:20 and 9:00 SAT., SUN.-5:40, 7:20, 9:00 __ __ __ _ 6 not continuous with "REEFER MADNESS" A I . I Miss J likes the jaunty look of a double breasted pea jacket... / // WR-Mysteries of the Organism next FRIDAY VV /f next SATURDAY zo/ lightweight, softly textured wool/nylon bonded to acetate for warmth. 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