Page Two THE MCHIGAN DAI LY Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY In te news International SAIGON - Up to 5,000 North Vietnamese troops backed by tanks overran a South Viet- namese base yesterday, inflicting heavy losses and pushing the remnants of the fleeing gov- ernment forces into a tight pocket, the Saigon command said. It said half of the 369-man ranger battalion defending the isolated Dak Pek border camp 300 miles north of Saigon and 12 miles from the Laotian border were either killed, wounded or missing after all- night human wave assaults. Lt. Col. Le Trung Hien, chief spokesman for the Saigon com- mand, said the base was used for tracking North Vietnamese troop movements. National WASHINGTON - The Senate settled its bit- ter school busing controversy yesterday voting for new standards designed to limit court bus- ing orders but allowing judges to issue such orders as they see fit. The compromise, adopt- ed 47 to 46, states that the new limitations in the bill are not intended to limit the power of the courts to order busing if this is neces- sary to enforce the equal rights amendments of the Constitution. The principal new limita- tion is a congressional policy finding that pu- pils should not be bused beyond the next near- est school to their homes. SAN FRANCISCO - Two witnesses were jailed yesterday for refusing to testify before a federal grand jury investigating a Symbionese Liberation Army bank robbery involving news- paper heiress Patricia Hearst. Paul Halverson, a graduate student, said that President Nixon has set a precedent by refusing to comply with court subpoenas. "I am making the same arbitrary decision," he said. The second wit- ness, Cynthia Garvey, declared that the grand jury was not a legal institution and that she would not cooperate with it. COLUMBUS, Ga. - Attorneys for William Calley filed motions yesterday in federal court requesting all eyewitness accounts of the My Lai incident obtained in 1969 and 1970 by John Ehrlichman, former aide of President Nixon. The motions are among several filed recently in U.S. District Court here seeking previously undisclosed government and Army reports con- cerning the slaying of Vietnamese civilians at this morning My Lai in 1968. The defense is attempting to have overturned Calley's court-martial con- viction for the slaying of Vietnamese civil- ians. LAS VEGAS - A convicted killer who au- thorities said gained his freedom by switching identities with another inmate has been ar- rested, the FBI said yesterday. An FBI spokes- man said Wallace Rhodes, 25, was arrested near a relative's home shortly before midnight. Rhodes of Henderson, Nev., had been the ob- ject of a nationwide search since he was in- advertently freed in Dallas on May 2. Au- thorities said he went free after an identity swap involving three prisoners and at least two aliases. Prison officials said the inmates hatched the scheme about a month ago when Rhodes and inmate Richard Rusk, 24, were waiting to be transferred to the federal prison in Marion, Ill., from Ogden, Utah. Rhodes was to serve a 10-year term for kidnaping, and Rusk was supposed to wind up in Dallas where he faced narcotics charges. But the two men switched places, and Rhodes eventually was freed by a U.S. magistrate in Dallas. Local Former Detroit Mayor Jerome Cavanagh, hospitalized three times in recent months, has indicated he may resume his campaign for the Democratic nomination for governor in a few weeks. "The doctors tell me that by the end of May I'll be in sufficiently good health to be back at work and in sufficiently good health to make a decision to run or not," Cavanagh said. Cavanagh, 45, was admitted to the hospital (St. Joseph's Mercy) in January for treatment of hypertension and high blood pressure. Later this spring he had one kidney removed. Weather As indicated yesterday, the cool air will return again today. In spite of the efforts of the tropical air to the south of us, the polar air to the north will dominate our weather if only by a slight margin. Showers and thun- dershowers will be in our area through to- night. Maximum temperatures today with mostly cloudy skies 65 to 70 with minimums tonight 48 to 53. Around Ann Arbor The Human Rights Party is holding its County Convention Saturday at EMU's McKenny Hall from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. The convention will nominate candi- dates for county, state and con- gressional office. Interested citizens can get rides to Ypsi- lanti from the HRP office at 516 E. William at 9:30 a.m., 12:30 p.m. and 2:30 p.m. The convention will be followed by a five-dollar-a-plate testimonial dinner for former HRP City Councilmembers Jerry De- Griec and Nancy Wechsler at 1910 Hill St. in Ann Arbor. For more information about the con- vention or the dinner, call 761- 6550. The Indian Progressive Study 905 and 613 are this week's winning state lottery numbers. The second chance winners are 686 and 710. May Bonus numbers are 882, 771 and 575. - Group warmly invites all pa- triotic Indians and friends to a meeting on "Ever - Increasing Prices: Unbearable Burden on the People - What are Its Real Causes?" The meeting takes place today at 7:30 p.m. in Room 678, U.C.B., Wayne State University. Guild House is sponsoring a poetry reading tonight at 7:30 p.m., 802 Monroe. Poets fea- tured will be Robert Manis, Wil- liam Farmer and Stephen Ber- ry. Duplicate Bridge will be played, and open to the public, at 7:30 p.m., in the Union's As- sembly Room. The remaining Freshmen Registers from 1974 will be up for grabs at a recycling sale today. Soft cover copies will go for 5o cents and hard cover for only a dollar. 1968 Freshman Registers will also be sold at 50 cents. If this is the deal you've been waiting for, go to the UAC office on the second floor of the Union between 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. Tonight at the movies, Cine- ma Guild offers Such a Gor- geous Kid Like Me at 7:30 and 9:30 p.m., Architecture Aud. Cinema II is showing Costa- Gravas' Z in Aud. A Angell Hall, 7:30 and 9:45 p.m. HARRY'S ARMY SURPLUS WE'RE PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE A SECOND ANN ARBOR LOCATION 201 E. WASHINGTON tents 0 pants 9*surplus sleeping bags BACKPACKER'S SUPPLY DEPOT 201 E. Washington (ot 4th) 994-3572 1166 Broadway (north of Broodwav bridte) 769-9247 OPEN MON-SAT. 9-6 Friday, May 17, 1974 TV tonigh 6;00 2 4 7 1 13 News 9 Andy Giffithi 20 vyage to the Bottom of the Sea 24 ABC News-SmWlk/ Rteasoer 30 alceatennial Leetale series 50 star Trek 56 Atiques 6:30 2 1 CS News-Walter Cronkte 4 13 NBC News-4eba Chancelor 7Ca Newas-Smith/ Reasoner S Dream of Jeenuis 24 Dick Van Dyke 7:00 2 Truth or Consequences 4 News 7 To Tel the Truth 9 Bevry Hilbilies 11 To Tell the Truth 13 what's My Line? 20 Rilemni 24 Bowing tor Dollars 30 56 Aviation weather 50 Mission: Impossible 7:30 2 What's My Lne? 4 Hollywood Squares 7 Secrets of the Deep 9 Bewitched 11 Wild,Wud world of Animals 13 Truth or Consequences 20 Denny McLain-Variety 24 Orzie's Girls 30 56 Wall street Week -Lous Rukeyser 8:00 2 11 Dirty saly 4 13 Sanford and Son 7 24 National Geographie 9 Pig and whistle 30-56 washington Review 50 Hogan's Heroes -:30 2 i1 Good Times 4 13 Lotsa Luck! 9 Tommy nanks-Variety 20 ye to -Discussion 30 Under the Dome 50 Merv Griffin 56 Off the Record 9:00 2 11 Movie "Captain Nem and the Un- derwater City (English 1970) 4 13 Girl with something RoEtra 7 24 Six Mllion Dollar Man 9 News-David Compton 20 Good News 30 Masterpiece Theatre 56 Nova-science 9:30 4 13 Brian Keith-Comedy 9 Sports Scene 20 Seven Hundred Club 10:00 4 13 Dean Martin 7 24 Toma 9 Tommy Hunter 30 Paremt in Teeris III 50 Perry Mason 56 heater in America "Hogan's Goat" 11:00 24 7 11 13 24 News 9 CBC News-Lloyd Robertson 50 Night Gallery 11:30 2 Movie "The Neon Ceiling." 1971 Lee Grant 4 13 Johnny Carson 7 24 Elton John 9 News 11 Movie Jerry Lewis "Disorderly Or- derly" 1964 20 Right On s0 Movie "The it Sleep" 194 Humphrey ogat Lauren Bacall 12:00 9 Movie (English 196) 1:00 4 13 Midnight special 7 Don Kirshner's Rock Concert '-Torture Garden" 1:20 511News 1:30 2 Movie THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXIV, No. 8-S Friday, May 17, 1974 s edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. Published d aoi l y Tuesday through Sunday morning during the Univer- sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (campus area); $11 local mail (Michigan and Ohio); $12 non-local mail (other states and foreign). Summer session published Tues- day through Saturday morning. ubscription rates: $5.20 by carrier (campus area); $6.50 local mall Michigan and Ohio); $7.00 non- local mail (other states and foreign). in Revoutionary SONGS INSTRUMENTS CHORAL MUSIC by militants of Anoo, Mo- zombique. South Africa, and Zimbabwe . . . pius street musig Ir o m Tanzania and Afro-Brazilian sons. New and Surely the best of its kind! (Stereo LP) $5.00 (post-paid) LSM Inorocmation Center, Box 94338, Riehmond, B. C. Canada eVgy st CHARLES CHAPLIN in one of his greatest films "A KING OF NEW. YORK" co-starring Dawn Addams, Oliver Johnson, and Michael Chaplin Mon.-Sat. 7:15-9:30 Sun. 5:00-7:15-9:30