Support the 'U' see a movie tonight By ROBERT BARKIN There may be a solution to the nagging problem shared in connon by all University students. If- you want your tuition to go down, go to more movies. This startling revelation is not as bizarre as one might think. According to the University's schedule of investments, 6,940 shares of Butterfield Michigan Theatres Company, are owned by our favorite conglomerate. Butterfield is the owner of the State. Cam- pus. Michigan, and Wayside theatres locally, as well as others around the state. Because the company is privately owned, the total number of shares outstanding is unknown. But according to a source in the University's accounting office, the holding is about one-third of the company's stock. The University also owns 37,500 shares of the parent company Butterfield (W.S.) Theatres Inc., about 25 per cent of the stock. This company is also privately held. According to Graham Conger of the University's investment office, the University received the stock in 1950 from Paramount Pictures. Wilbur Pierpont, vice president and chief financial officer, said yesterday that "in essence the stock was received as a gift." According to Pierpont. Paramount was ordered to divest the theatres as part of an anti-trust action. "The action involved a purchase arrangement," Pierpont said. "We pay back the company through the dividend. That is our only obligation." The stock's worth is unclear because there is no trading of the stock, according to Conger. In addition, most theatres around the country are privately held so there is little market value for comparison. Page Three Conger said that the Butterfield family owns the rest of the theatre stock. "The University has little to say in the direction of the holdings, being a minority stockholder," he said. ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN Friday, June .16, 1972 News Pho so: 764-0552 PODG0RNY VISI1: U.S. suspends Hanoi ombiag SAIGON o-The United States hatted honmhang attacks an the Hanoa region yesterday an a shuow of good wall durang the vasat there of Sovtet Nakolsa Podgorny, Ametacan tn- formants reported. But rads continued an the southert- etor of North Vaetnam just above the demalatarazed zone. The temporary suspensaon was ve wed by some oh servers as a precautionary measure to avoad any incidents that might involve Podgorny during his tour of the Hanoi region. Podgorny flew to Hanoi yesterday morning after talks in Calcutta with Indian leaders on the Vietnam war Diplomats in Moscow believe he is on a peace mission. Informants said it appeared unlikely that the American Proxire seeks trial for Gen. WASHINGTON (A) - S e n . William Proxmire (D-Wis.u, cal- ted yesterday for court marlist proceedings against Maj. Gen. John Lavelle, who has acknow- ledged ordering unauthorized air strikes against North Vietnam. Defense Department repire- sentatives told reporters t li a t "as of today" the case is clos- ed. There is no plan, they asaid, to take further action against Lavelle, who has been removed from command and retired. Lavelle has acknowledged he ordered at. least 20 unauthoriz d strikes against a buildup of communist supplies from Jan- uary to March 10 this year, This was just before President Nixon authorized massive raids into North Vietnam. In one report yesterday, Sen. Clifford Case (R-N.J.) released excerpts from a letter of a Navy pilot aboard the aircraft car- rier Hancock who said he. was sent over North Vietnam iLa t deliberate attempt to d r a w communist fire. The officer. whom Case de- clined to identify by name, charged this was done so Navy fighter bombers would have an excuse to bomb targets t n a D were otherwise off limits. (See LAVELLE, Page 7) air raids would be suspended beyond his visit unless there is a political development. Reporting on air action Wed- nesday, the U.S. Command said Air Force, Navy and Marine jets carried out more than 230 strikes across North Vietnam from the upper Red River Valley is the Hanoi region to the coast. Across South Vietnam, U.S. Air Force fighter-bombers flew less than 200 strikes, about 50 per cent below the average. Spokesmean said this was because ot a low level of battlefield ac- tivity and overcast skies. South Vietnamese forces, who appear in the final stages of lifting the 70-day siege of An Loc, inched northward alone Highway 13. They were trying to clean out pockets of North Viet- namese resistance. ARM show nowe free To celebrate their aquisition of Detroit News stock, American Revolutionary Media (ARM) will present the scheduled John Fa- hey concert tomorrow night for free, according to ARM spokes- person George DePue. Those who already have tickets may receive a refund at the box office and remaining tickets will be distributed free at the Pawer Center box office on a first- come first-serve basis stareinr noon tomorrow. Anyone wishing to attend tOw concert will need a ticket to pre- vent "hopeless overcrowding," DePue said. SOUTIl VIETNAMESE soldier flashes peace sign near An Loc yesterday as the long seige of the crucial city appeared finally to have been lifted. lie and his friends are being evacuated as relief troops =arrive. IlTS JAIL CONDITIONS: Rape victim files suit against s herff, Waslitenaw County By JAN BENEDETTI A suit seeking over one mil- lion dollars in damages has been filed in Circuit Court against Sheriff Douglas Barvey anti Washtenaw County. Donald Nor- ris, the defendant in the suit, claims that he was sexually at- tacked and beaten by inmates of the county jail last February. Norris, 17, was then in jail for failure to produce a $5,000 bond on a first offense breaking and entering charge. The suit charges that the jail officials failed in their duty to "maintain the jail in a safe and proper manner." The lack of an adequate night patrol or monitoring of the jail cells constituted a violation of the duty to protect inmates, the suit claims. Norris "suffered permanent physical and psychological dam- age" due to the negligence of jail officials, the suit contends. Harvey could not be reached for comment last night. The county jail has been the focus of much controversy of late. Another suit, still pending in Circuit Court, charges illegal and unconstitutional adminis- tration of the jail. Norris surrendered himself to the police on the breaking and entering charge, on Feb. 18. He said he was 'tried" on the following night by a kangaroo court of inmates, then sexually assaulted. The attacks were re- peated two days later. According to Norris, nobody was around to help. Norris, after reporting the in- cident to his attorney, was re- leased on personal bond. Davis to speak in Detroit Angela Davis, recently acquit- ted of a complex conspiracy charge in California, will speak Sunday at 4 p.m. at the State Fairgrounds Coliseum in Detroit. The speech will be part of the Black Expo '72 program, now underway at the fairgrounds, located south of Eight Mile Rd. at Woodward Ave. The state chapter of the South- ern Christian Leadership Confer- ence, which is sponsoring the exposition, has given the coh- seum, which seats 8,440, to the Free Angela Committee rent- free. Admission to the fairgrounds will be $1. Davis had originally planned to speak at the University of De- troit, which refused her permis- sion to appear on campus. Free Angela Committee repre- sentatives will be in the Fish- bowl today to organize rides. Another group is arranging rides in conjunction with the Univer- sity housing special programs of- fice, in the basement lobby of the Michigan Union, just outside the University Cellar. For further information, call 665-8042.