Page Seven Saturday, May 22, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Senate voting set for next week on amendments to draft proposal j WASHINGTON (P) - The Senate yesterday agreed to a + series of votes over the next two weeks on key amendments to a bill to extend the military draft, which would expire June 30 un- der existing law. Advocates of increased mili- tary pay raises and shorter ex- tension of induction authority agreed to the votes under a bi- partisan threat of a closure move to cut off debate. But the agreement does not deal with the expected introduc- tion early n e x t month of an amendment to cut off funds for U.S. troops in Indochina. The agreement provides f or these votes: Tuesday, May 25 - amend- ments by Sen. Gaylord Nelson, (D-Wis.), to bar draftees from Vietnam and by Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.), to bar a $6,000 combat enlistment bon- us. Wednesday, May 26-amend- news briefs By The Associated Press I CLIMBING FOOD PRICES helped spur an increase of 0.3 per rent in the cost of living in April. Despite the sharpest cost-of-living hike in three months, the White House pointed to a slowing of rises in other fields as in- dicative of slowing inflation. THE PURCHASING POWER of the average American fam- ily dropped in 1970, for the first time in over a decade. Median family income stood at $9,870, up $440 from 1969, according to the Census Bureau. But while median income rose 4.7 per cent, consumer prices rose 5.9 per cent - resulting in a loss of purchasing power of 1.2 per cent. The average annual increase in purchasing power over the past decade for the average American family has been well over three per cent, according to the Census Bureau. THE OREGON STATE SENATE yesterday passed a bill to exempt state residents from serving in the Vietnam and other wars that have not been declared by Congress. The purpose of the bill, which now goes to the House, is to try to obtain a federal court test of whether a war can be fought !out a declaration by Congress. The bill, copied from a Massachusetts law now being tested in federal courts, provides that the Oregon attorney general would defend any Oregon citizen who might be prosecuted by the federal government for refusal to serve in an undeclared war. Ten Republicans and all 16 Democrats voted for the bill. Four Rpublicans opposed it. LT. GEN. SAIYUD DERDPHOL, Thailand's commander of operations for Communist suppression yesterday expressed con- cern that the North Vietnamese are moving close to the border of Thailand. The North Vietnamese took full control ol Laos' Bolovens Plateau on Thursday and their troops advanced with 22 miles of a Mekong River port, 20 miles from Thailand's southeastern border. RIOT-IEQUIPPED POLICE f r o m Kent and surrounding cilics Thur day pushed a crowd of some 300 college-age persons fr om lhe- city's tavern ars - to the Kent State University campus. Police arrest ed 60 persons on charges of trespassing, verbal abuse. ersiying open beer containers and disorderly conduct in a - third straight night of mss downtown gatherin-s. 'The students Werr prelesting alleged polite iarassment, ACADEMYAWARD WINNER BEST SUPPORT NG :. ACTORf John Mlills t Best Cinematography M. a ments by Sen. Peter Dominick, (R-Colo.), for an 18-month draft extension instead of two years in the House-passed bill and by Sen. Harold Hughes (D- Iowa), to raise the $987 million in pay raises to the $2.7 billion in the House bill. Friday, J u n e 4 - amend- ments by Sen. Mark Hatfield R-Ore.), to stop draft calls af- ter June 30 and by Ser. Rich- ard Schweiker (R-Pa.), to limit the extension to one year. Schweiker said the timing of the votes will help his one-year amendment. He said he expects the increased pay, which com- bines in one year administration proposals for a two-year period, "to pass most strongly" to set the stage for the one-year ex- tension. "If we can win the pay-one- year battle this ye ar, it will mean we can get the volunteer army next year," he said, The voting agreement was worked out in the office of Dem- ocratic leader Mike Mansfield at a meeting attended by Sen. John Stennis (D-Miss.), chair- man of the Armed Services Committee and floor manager of th e bill, Republican Leader Hugh Scott, and Sens. Schweik- er, Hughes, Nelson, Kennedy and Mike Gravel (D-Alaska). Mansfield, asked about Sten- nis' statement that action is necessary on the bill by June 15 to assure final congressional ac- tion after a Senate-House conference by June 30, said, "It's going to be difficult, very difficult. It could well extend beyond June 30 and beyond." Asked is he expected "dire consequences" for the country if this happens, Mansfield said, "I think the draft itself is a dire consequence." Mansfield pointed out that the Selective Service System has said it will be able to draft from the pool of previously deferred young men if the law runs out without congressional action. Protest police harassment Policemen Thursday make one of 60 arrests as they move against a crowd of 500 protesting police harassment. This was the third night of civil disorders in the Ohio city. (See News Briefs) POMPIDOU ANNOUNCEMENT: Franc'e entds vet on Brtih aretetry PARIS (P) - France yester- day cast aside its long-standing veto of Britain's entry into the European Common M a r k e t. President Georges Pompidou de- clared he saw no reason why agreement on London's member- ship could not be clinched next month. The veto imposed by Charles de Gaulle was lifted in a two- day conference here between Pompidou, who is De Gaulle's successor, and Prime Minister Edward Heath of Britain, This action confirmed specu- lation over the past weeks that France was softening its veto and would support British entry into the Common Market. The Common Market was formed after World War II but Britain chose to stay out, pre- ferring to stick by its special re- lationship with t h e United Slates. It changed its mind 10 years ago and began discussing mem- bership. DeGaulle voiced disap- proval and vetoed Britain's ap- plication for entry in 1963. It appears that the British citizens are against Britain join- ing the Market. Opinion polls published this week reported that only 23 per cent of those questioned wanted to join the market. EXCLUSIVE SHOWING Shows at 2:30-5:35-8:45 DIAL 5-6290