Thursday, August 19, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY ;Page Seven Th -da Auut 9r17 TEMIHGA-AIYPaeSee B-52s hit N. Viets in DMZ SAIGON (M0 - American B- 52 bombers hit North Vietnam- ese positions in the demilitariz- ed zone (DMZ) yesterday in the biggest such raid this year. The « North Vietnamese, how- ever, continued to press ahead in their drive against the south. The attack came in eight raids hitting in an arc around the South Vietnamese fire bas- es in the northern front which have been hard pressed of late from continual North Vietnam- ese attacks. Despite the heavy bombing, however, attacks on the South Vietnamese bases in the region continued yesterday, and South Vietnamese commanders p r e- dicted even heavier attacks in the next two weeks. Intelligence reports cited a recent buildup of North Viet- * namese forces in the area, with about 10,000 troops now alleg- edly deployed immediately be- low the DMZ. Further, an in- crease in mortar and rocket attacks from the' north is ex- pected from the present 5 00 rounds per day to around 1,000. It has been speculated that the North Vietnamese may be planning a major offensive to coincide with South Vietnam's National Assembly elections on August 29 and presidential elec- tions October 3. Arabs meet on federation DAMASCUS, Syria (P) - Egyptian, Libyan, and Syrian leaders met yesterday to go over the final draft of a constitution designed to unite their countries in the Federation of Arab Re- publics on Sept. 1. While yesterday's session was largely ceremonial, matters of * substance will be discussed to- day and formal approval is ex- pected tomorrow. The idea of a federation was first formulated in Tripoli, Libya in 1969. When the federation was for- mally proclaimed on April 17 of this year Sudan, originally in- tended to be one of the mem- bers, asked for more time due to internal difficulties with its Communist Party and a rebellion in its southern portion. Sudan is now expected to join the federation early next year. I 1 Rioting breaks in Londonderry after shootings LONDONDERRY, Northern Island (M - After killing two men yesterday, British troops stormed past barricades in Londonderry's Bogside Catholic district, arresting two opposition members of Northern Ireland's parliament. One of the two was killed by army marksmen yester- day following an early morning shoot-out, and the second was shot after waving a pistol in the air at civil rights rally 15 miles away in Strabane, Rioting broke out in the Bogside following the shoot- ings, and the army moved into the area to remove 23 street barricades which the ALABAMA GOV. George Wallace waves a copy of his executive order blocking a federal court integration plan for Hobson City and Oxford, Alabama. Wallace was met by a jeering crowd of black youths when he arrived in Hobson City to sign the docu- ment. Wallace orders seek to halt desegregation By The Associated Press Alabama Gov. George Wal- lace prepared an executive or- der yesterday to block a fed- eral court school-pairing de- cree, and proclaimed "freedom- of-choice" for the schools in the all-black communities of Hobson City and nearby p r e- dominantly white Oxford. The order comes on the heels of similar orders last week in which Wallace defied federal court desegregation orders. The court's pairing decision, handed down August 6, ordered all pupils in the first t h r e e grades of both communities to attend the previously all-black Calhoun County Training school, and for those in grades 4 through 12 to attend pre- dominantly white schools in Oxford. Wallace said yesterday he was acting at the request of the black mayor of Hobson City, and the white mayor of Oxford, and of parents and school children of both com- munities. Despite claims that he w as doing what the people wanted, Rev. J. L. Stringerf of t he Hobson City Citizens Advisory Board was sharply critical of the governor's action. Wallace, Stringer charged, "is coming here to perpetuate segregation." Opposition to busing for ra- cial balance was also expressed yesterday by residents of San Francisco's Chinatown district. Some parents of the area have threatened to boycott school this fall if court-ordered bus- ing plans are carried out. The move is being taken, they say, in an attempt to pre- serve their Chinese cultural heritage. The federal government it- self took action against bus- ing yesterday also. The Jus- tice Department asked the Su- preme Court to stay a desegre- gation plan for Corpus Cristi, Texas, which would require the busing of 15,000 pupils. Catholic residents had erected. Two opposition members of parliament, John Hume, a Ca- tholic and Ivor Cooper, a pro- testant sympathetic to t h e Catholic civil rights canse, were arrested during the skirmish. The two, accordingt the army, had led a mob of 300 persons blocking the s t r e e ts against army efforts to remove the barricades. In nearby Strabane mobs be- gan building barricades a n d fighting with troops following a civil rights rally addressed by civil rights leader and mem- her of parliament Bernadette Devlin. Devlin called on the crowd attending the rally to boycott all businesses not in sympathy with the Catholic civil rights cause- It was at this rally that one of the two shootings which sparked yesterday's Bogside riots took place. In London the Northern Ire- land Civil Rights Association announced a mass march to be held in that city to protest al- leged army brutality which it said was turning "Belfast into another My Lai". Meanwhile Northern Ireland Prime Minister Brian Faulkner flew to England for crises talks with British Prime Minister Ed- ward Heath. Air expctant in Berlin as talks resume BERLIN (R) - The F o u r Power talks on easing tensions in Berlin reconvened for a se- cond session yesterday amid an air of expectency which in- dicated a make or break point may have been reached in the 17 month old dialogue. In the meetings, ambassa- dors from the U.S., England, France and the Soviet Union have been discussing means of reducing the tensions created by the division of Germany. The major point of the meet- ings seems to be the question of access to Berlin from West Germany. Discussion has cen- tered on whether or not the Russians will guarantee free- dom of movement through East Germany. Historically, the Soviet gov- ernment has refused to make such guarantees, claiming the matter was up to the discretion of the East Germany govern- ment. American ambassador to the talks Kenneth Rush said yes- terday that he hopes for a set- tlement in the near future. Newsweek on "Sweet Sweetback's Baadasssss Song" "A Van Peebles tour de force! 'Sweetback' is one of the most effective metaphors of black degradation ever filmed. These moments represent personal cinema at its best-one man,atell- ing it like he sees it, his dream of liberation unadulterated by studio pressures or commercial considerations!" -Paul D. Zimmerman N.Y. Times on "Sweet Sweetback's Boadasssss Song" "Technically, the film dazzles, is a rough diamond glittering an inquisitive light upon a people and what is, in fact, their own business. Van Peebles employs the camera like a surgeon!" --Clayton Riley Gannett News on "Sweet Sweetback's Baadasssss Song" "It is a frantic, powerful and subjective film. Your reaction will depend upon your feelings about the issues but you certainly will not be neutral and untouched by it!" -Bernard Drew Cue Magazine on "Sweet Sweetback's Baadasssss Song" "I haven't had this electrifying a movie experience in a long time. 'Sweetback' is certainly among the strongest portest film I've ever seen! 'Sweetback,' which should kick up a hell of a storm, is exciting, groundbreaking filmmaking, as strong and certain in its art as in its like-itor-lump-it stance!" William Wolf Sweel Sweelback's Baadasssss Song 730, 9:15, 11 p.m. -TONIGHT- ARM at 330 Maynard LAST 3 DAYS The Drunkard -Wm- H. Smith Presented by Ann Arbor Civic Theater Thurs., Fri., Sat., Aug. 19, 20, 21 8:30 P.M. AACT Bldg. 803 W. Washington ADMISSION FREE Program Info. 434-1782 Thur., Fri., Now Mon. & Tues. th ru-j OPEN 6.45 ____________________ Shows at Tuesday! 302"e ussWEAWPe 434-72 7 P.M. & 9 P.M. 11/2mi. E. of U.S. 23 SAT.& SUN. at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 P.M. "FRESH, GOOD-NATURED, EXHILARATING FUN." -GARY ARNOLD, WASHINGTON POST "MASTERFUL !" -SAN FRANCISCO EXAMINER Bnrit, fast, fu . Los Angeles Times SPECIAL APPEARANCE BY STEVE Mc+QUEEN BRUCE BROWN'S A A film by, Bruce. ("Endless Summer") Brawn Rated [ MEL0VIN5VAN PEtLES and JERtYGtOSS pesent "SWETlSWTBACtKS tdtiAl a CINEMATION INUSTRIES Release -COLOR OF~IFTH4For'um Ton uu 'Ii ^a"UnATm a lnTO1 tite at 9 P.M.