Mondale to Marcos: Respect human rights MANILA, Philippines (AP) - Vice President Walter Mondale gave Philip- pine President Ferdinand Marcos a pointed message yesterday - improve his martial-law government's record on human rights or face continued friction with the United States and loss of American popular support. Mondale also met with a half-dozen anti-Marcos dissidents, and one of them, former Foreign Minister Salvador Lopez, said afterward he was satisfied the American was not here on a pleasure trip." "HE MADE IT clear his visit is linked to the policy of human rights," Lopez said. It was the first full day of Mondale's five-nation Far East swing, aimed at demonstrating U.S. commitment to the Mondale region. He travels to Bangkok today for talks with Thai leaders, then goes to In- donesia, Australia and New Zealand before heading home. IN WHAT HE called a "candid" 90- minute discussion with Marcos, Mon- dale brought up the subject of political prisoners. Among them is Marcos' most prominent opponent, former Sen. Benigno Aquino. At a news conference, Mondale said he told Marcos of concern among members of Congress and the American public about allegations of human rights violations. He said he had warned that failure to improve the situation "could adversely affect our ability to improve and broaden and deepen the relationship between the United States and the Philippines, Marcos which is our primary objective." Brezhnev, Schmidt to discuss bilateral trade Stormy weather AP Photo A ski mask proved to be fitting attire for this Stratford, Texas student when a freak spring snow storm dumped 11 inches of the white stuff on the town yesterday. Tree branches broke under the unexpectedIn-od and travel wa.sdif- ficult, but no roads were closed. BONN, West Germany (AP) - Soviet President Leonid Brezhnev will seek expanded trade with West Germany on a four-day visit here beginning today. Contrasting with the official welcome are protests planned by human rights campaigners, led by retired Soviet Maj. Gen. Pyotr Grigorenko. Making his first trip to the West in almost a year, Brezhnev will hold ex- tensive talks with Chancellor Helmut Schmidt on East-West disarmament, detente and bilateral cooperation, the Bonn government said. No surprises are expected. THEY WILL SIGN a 25-year economic agreement setting a framework to expand bilateral trade and encourage more deals by West German industry to help exploit Soviet raw materials. West Germany is already the Soviet Union's biggest trading partner in the West, with a volume last year of $4.36 billion. West Germany imports 10 per cent of its natural gas from the Soviet Union and wants to increase that amount. Schmidt views the talks as a chance to "deepen the basis of trust" between Bonn and Moscow, government spokesman Klaus Boelling told repor- ters on the eve of the visit. BUT THE chianceilor will also take a strong stand on Soviet recognition of the status of West Berlin, 110 miles in- side Communist East Germany. "The chancellor will make clear that Berlin must be included in the large concept of detente, in the interest of the people living in the city and in the in- terest of decreasing tensions in East- West relations," Boelling said. The Soviets treat West Berlin as politically separate from West Ger- many, while recognizing East Berlin as the capital of East Germany. This stan- ce has blocked signing of 1973 Bonn- Moscow treaties on cultural exchanges, scientific cooperation and legal assistance. IN THE WESTERN view, both parts of the city technically remain under jurisdiction of the allied victors over Nazi Germany - the United States, Britain, France and the Soviet Union. The 1971 Four Power agreement recognized West Germany's right to expand itsclose ties to West Berlin. Western diplomatic sources in Moscow said the most significant aspect of the trip is that the 71-year-old Brezhnev is healthy enough to travel. He was supposed to follow up his state visit to France last June with a visit to Bonn in September, but the date was repeatedly postponed, reportedly because Brezhnev was ill. Several protests are planned in Bonn durin Brezhnev's three-day stay in Bonn and one-day trip to Schmidt's home in Hamburg before departing CINEMAII I I A THURSDAY, May 4 TOM JONES Director-TONY RICHARDSON, 1963 A bawdy tour of 18th century England. ALBERT FINNEY plays a country lad with a roving eye, who must leave home for London. On the road he takes up with, among others, a lascivious lady who may be his mother, and a wayward highwayman who may be his father. One of the funniest movies of recent years. Eating chicken will never be the same after seeing TOM JONES. Awarded Best Picture, Best Actor, and Best Director by the New York Film Critics. I The Ann Arbor Film Cooperative - PRESENTS AT AUD. A THURS. MAY 4 A CLOCKWORK ORANGE (Stanley Kubrick, 1971) 7& 9:3--AUD. A A bit of the in-out-in-out and the old ultra-violence. Very horrorshow. This nightmare vision of the not too distant future is, perhaps, Kubrick's best work. Winner of the New York Film Critics' Award for Best Picture and Best Director. -.- brilliant, a tour de force of extraordinary images, music, words and feel- ings . . . dazzles the senses and the mind."-N.Y. Times. From the novel by Anthony Burgess. MALCOLM McDOWELL, PATR1CK MAGEE. TOMORROW: WOODY ALLEN DOUBLE FEATURE "EVERYTHING YOU ALWAYS WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT SEX" & "WHAT'S UP, TIGER LILY?" I