~te SfrAi!3an BIait33 Vol. LXXXI, No. 68-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, August 14, 1971 Ten Cents Eight Page! Campus cinema groups tangle By CHRIS PARKS Trouble which has been brew- ing of late between campus film societies boiled over this week as two groups, the Orson Welles Film Society, and the American Revo- lutionary M e d i a (ARM) found themselves showing the same movie on the same night. The showing of They Shoot Horses, Don't They" by Orson, Welles at Auditorium A, Angell Hall, and by ARM at The Alley (formerly Canterbury House) has 7 resulted in an advertising war in the pages of The Daily, and a call for a boycott of OrsonnWelles by ARM.b The specific ques tion causing the current ill feelings stems from the conflicting showings, but the, roots of the problem go back to ongoing rivalries, and attacks of 1 vanadalism perpetrated on ARM and other film groups. The current controversy dates : back to an ad placed by ARM in The Daily last Saturday which claimed Orson Welles' showing of the movie had been cancelled. This was followed by an angry 36 square inch ad in Thursday's Daily by Orson Welles reaffirm- ing their showing and charging that ARM's ad represented "bla- tant competition." ARM MEMBERS and sympathizers distribute leaflets at the Orson Welles Film At Thursday, and Friday nights' Society's showing of "They Shoot Horses Don't They" at Auditorium A, Angell See FILM, Page 6 Hall. CITE FIRST AMENDMENT House unit reports out budget bill The House appropriations com- mittee has reported out the Higher Education Bill, which includes $72. 733 million for the University's Ann Arbor campus - $500,000 more than the recently passed Senate version of the bill The move has sparked speculation that the additional money was provided to al- low the University to make some pay- ments to the city of Ann Arbor for police and fire services. Capitol sources, however, declined to comment on the committee's intent for the additional funds. In the Senate, attempts by Sen. Gilbert Bursley (R-Ann Arbor) to add $500,000 for payments to the city failed after Sen. Charles Zollar (R.-Benton Harbor) told the Senate the University had agreed to ending those yearly payments. The bill also includes another $500,000 that was provided in the Senate bill for police and fire services-presumably to aid the University in setting up its own police and fire service should the city cut-off some of those services to the cam- pus. The bill also contains a section which would require full-time professors to spend a minimum of 18 hours per week in the classroom and requires graduate school instructors to average 10 classroom hours weekly. The section had been objected to by the Michigan chapter of the American Asso- ciation of University Professors. If passed by the House, which will re- turn from a week-long recess Monday, the bill would go to a House-Senate confer- ence committee where the monetary dif- ferences would probably be halved. The University had requested $1.45 mil- lion dollars for payments for city services. The payments would amount to exactly 18 per cent of the city's police and fire department budgets. Pros sue By TAMMY JACOBS Legal proceedings for three Eastern Michigan University (EMU) professors who claim they were not rehired for po- litical reasons continued yesterday in the U.S. District Court of Judge Damon Keith in Detroit. The three professors have filed a suit against EMU President Harold Sponberg Ireland quiet after rioting BELFAST, Ire. (M) - Quiet returned to North Ireland yesterday after a week of the worst riots in this province for half a century. A British general claimed the illegal Irish Republican Army (IRA) has been "virtually defeated." This British claim was immediately challenged by Joe Cahill, chief of staff of the IRA provisional wing and one of the five most wanted IRA leaders. He told newsmen at a secretly arranged meeting that the IRA was not beaten and enough men, weapons and ammunition are avail- able to continue fighting the British troops. Cahill promised that "Urban guerrilla tactics will continue", and asserted that despite difficulties, supplies were being received from across the southern Ire- land border. Despite the warnings and threats of the IRA, Brig. Marston Tickell, the British Chief of Staff in Northern Ireland said that the major problem now was the thousands of refugee families who left their homes in the North after being burned out or being threatened by shoot- ing or arson. More than 7,000 people have left homes in Northern Ireland, swelling emergency r relief centers to capacity on both sides of the border. Tickell told a news conference that the I1JA had suffered 50 casualties since Monday, including 20 to 30 dead. More than 230 other suspected IRA terrorists have been jailed in the army roundup that began last Monday. EMU in job dispute and eight members of the EMU Board of Regents, charging the defendants violated their first amendment rights. All three claim their teaching contracts were not renewed because of their radical political activities. David Cahill, assistant professor of po- litical science, who calls his case "the clearest outrage," said his -contract was not renewed because of his ties with Sec- ond Coming, an Ypsilanti underground newspaper, and "because I was active in student politics at Indiana State. "The EMU political science depart- ment was satisfied with my work," Ca- hill added, and added Sponberg refused to say why his contract was cancelled. The other two are Richard Sroges, as- sociate professor of psychology and a for- mer faculty advisor for the EMU chapter of Students for a Democratic Society (SDS), and Lawrence Hochman, asso- ciate professor of physics, who ran for vice-president of the United States on the New Politics Party ticket in 1968. The party's national candidate for president was black militant Eldridge Cleaver. Earlier this week Gerald Fulford, EMU director of fiscal analysis, admitted he wrote a note included in Cahill's person- nel file. "What kind of garbage do you suppose this bird is peddling under the guise of social and cultural benefits?" Fulford wrote. . The note was attached to a newspaper clipping telling of Cahill's connection with Second Coming, Fulford testified. Fulford was subpoenaed by the plain- tiffs as part of a strategy Cahill describes as "using as witnesses for our side all the administrators who essentially wrong- ed us." Fulford admitted he sent the clipping and note to four EMU administrators. "It was a spontaneous thing," Fulford said later. "I made that very clear in court. I just thought these people might be interested. "It is not a normal part of my job," he added. Fulford denied he inserted the clipping and note in Cahill's file. John Hayes, chief of EMU campus po- lice, also testified he provided Sponberg with Indiana State Police intelligence reports on Cahill. In other testimony Gary D. Hawk executive director for EMU's universit relations, said he attended a campus rall in May, 1970 and reported on activitiE there to university officials. Four other former EMU professors als were plaintiffs in the original suit, btu Keith dismissed their motion Wednes day. Attorney George Newman, who s, y ly es so ut i- is being retained to press the suit by the Michigan Federation of Teachers, has said he will appeal the deci ion. Wallace defies court b reopenng black school By The Associated Press to be bussed to integrated schools orx Alabama Go v e r nor George Wal- main in local schools. lace challenging the federal courts, yes- The freedom of choice program h terday ordered the reopening of a black been declared by the courts to be an u school closed two weeks ago by a court acceptable solution to the problem order to speed integration, segregation. Wallace said the court order handed New Hope is one of more than 140 f down July 30 would force students to be merly all-black or predominately bla bussed to schools 20 to 22 miles away. schools in the state closed by the cou The bus trip, Wallace said, is dangerous under a stepped-up integration formu due to "bumper to bumper" traffic. Their schools' pupils were reassigned Wallace's order will open the New Hope predominately white schools. Junior High School in Livingstone County, In Washington, the White House s Ala. under the so called freedom of choice it does not plan at this time to do an plan in which parents are given the de- thing about Wallace's action, because vision of whether they want their children feels no law has been violated. re- has un- of 'or- ck rts la. to aid ny- it Presidential press secretary Ronald Ziegler said yesterday, "The governor of Alabama has made some statements. We will continue to watch the situation." However, in Birmingham, Alabama civil rights attorney C. W. Clemon filed suit in federal court charging that Wal- lace's order would sabotage integration plans. The suit names Wallace as the defend- ant and asks the court to enjoin the governor, the school superintendent, and school board members from "deviating from any plan of desegregation currently or hereafter to be ordered by the court." "Unless restrained and enjoined," the suit says,."the action of Wallace -and ac- quiescence therein will immediately im- pede and frustrate meaningful desegre- gation of the schools." George Wallace