4th Week Shows at 1, 3, 5,7, 9 William Faulkner's Ps Novel "The Reive 'The Reivers' fills one with a joyous sense of life and laugh- ter. A marvelous time is had by ol"-Nt ew York Magazine Steve McQueen "The Reivers" with SHARON FARRELL and WILL GEER . DIAL 5-6290 ulitzer Prize-Winning rs" is now a film! page three SI P Sirii t an tit NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 JI . 1 :, I rA MAA Wednesday, January 21, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three leaders, Craig to leare Legislature LANSING (IP) - H o u s e minority ference late Monday. "I don't mind on the primary question and, "they "But how many of them w e r e the commitments I made before." He re- floor leader William Hampton (R- being a kamikaze pilot, but I have to couldn't even pass that." black community's blacks and h a w fused to elaborate, but reportedly had Bloomfield Hills) yesterday joined a go in a direction that makes sense." "That means that people on the in- many the white community's blacks? said he would back either Cavanagh steadily increasing number of state Craig said he has been unable to side aren't letting the people on the How many went as representatives of or Ferency if one ran. lawmakers who say they won't run for move the more conservative senate in outside in," Craig said. "Until they the black community and how many Meanwhile, Hampton's move in- re-election this fall. "the direction I want it to go" and open up the party it just doesn't mat- went as representatives of the UAW?" creased the probability of a major The lure of higher office - In added: ter." Of what he considers conservative change in the House GOP leadership Hampton's case the lieutenant gov- "Im not sure this is where it's hap- The senator said he believed his ac- factions, Craig said: "It would serve beginning with the 76th session next ernor's spot on a ticket with Gov. Wil- pening. I think I can force the party tion might have "a salutary effect" them right" if other potential Milli- January. liam Milliken - accounts for much of to the left without running for of- on the United Auto Workers union, a ken challengers backed out of t h e Other lawmakers who've said they the trend in legislative retirements. fice." force instrumental in defeating t h e nonrace and "let them go out and find won't return to the State Legislature But Sen. Roger Craig (D-Dearborn), Craig cited rejection this weekend primary proposal that s o m e feared a candidate." are: who told supporters last weekend that of a presidential primary proposal put would weaken the influence of fac- The possibilities he named included --Senate majority leader E m 11 he would not seek re-election or car- before delegates to a special Demo- tions within the party. former Detroit Mayor Jerome Cavan- Lockwood (R-St. Louis), who's eyeing ry out tentative plans to s e e k the cratic state convention. Many blacks argued against the pri- agh, Levin - who stepped down from the nomination for Secretary of State. Democratic nomination for governor, "For my political persuasion it was mary proposal f o r similar reasons. his Senate minority leadership post to -Sen. Robert Huber (R-Troy), a cited his own liberalism - and other a very disappointing scene," he said. They noted the 20-member black del- explore gt rnatorial chances - and candidate for his party's nomination people's conservatism - as the rea- Sen. Sander Levin, (D-Berkley), egation to the 1968 national party con- former party chairman Zolton Fer- to the U.S. Senate. son. "who has never been accused of be- vention and indicated they feared los- ency. Numerous others are sounding out "If I were really changing the world, ing a wild-eyed radical," backed what ing some of those numbers. Craig said he had not yet endorsed their own possibilities, but have not I'd be willing," Craig told a news con- Craig called a moderate compromise "Sure they had 20," Craig s a i d. any candidate but would "honor any yet announced their pltrns. "M" WORLD'S FAIR 1970 A UNIQUE TJANUARY 30 & 31 OPPORTUNITY MICHIGAN UNION TO VIEW A, UNITED EFFORT Noon till Midnight UAC-"M" Nationality Clubs the nTews today by T'he Associated Press and College Press Service STATE ENDS TONIGHT "ON HER MAJESTY'S SECRET SERVICE" Shows: 1:05-3:40-6:20-9 P.M. U.S. AND RED CHINESE diplomats resumed formal contact yesterday for the first time in two years in a one-hour talk which Americans described as "useful." The content of the discussion has not been revealed. U.S. Am- bassador Walter J. Stonessal Jr., who proposed resumption of the ambassadorial talk's last month, told newsmen the two sides had "discussed a number of matters of mutual interest." After the meeting a Chinese aide handed newsmen a 'statemen1 which said merely that the session had taken place and that botl sides agreed to set up a date for the next discussion through con- sultation. Observers suggested that the need for agreement on telecom- munications, trade, and exchange of scholars and journalists was discussed. * * L IL STARTS TOMORROW! HITCI4nc1I TOPAZ What is TOPAZ? Is TOPAZ a person? A code name? A mystery? It's all of these and more. TOPAZ is Leon Uris' best. seller about the most incred. ible spy scandal (or years. ...TOPAZ is a motion piture about the men and women to whom espionage is a way of life-.dangerous yet rewarding, frightening. Y . . and fulfilling. Men and vo. :,. ''* * , menca ught in the tangled :.. web of international tensions. ,x..., ,r, . . v',- :. - - -.- A PRESIDENTIAL COMMISSION recommended yesterday that construction workers elect union negotiators with binding power to negotiate labor contracts, and give up membership votes to approve or reject agreements. "The whole concern there is to avert the growing rejection of contracts by the rank-and-file," said a spokesman for Secretary of Labor George P. Shultz, chairman of the labor-in-government com- mission. A unnamed source in the AFL-CIO Building and Construction1 Trades Department indicated that the recommendation met with approval there. The department is composed of 17 unions with some 3.5 million members. The labor source added that there might be some opposition from local unions to giving up membership ratification votes for wage and other agreements, but that in most instances "I don't think there is going to be adverse reaction to this." * * * THE ANTIPOLLUTION CAMPAIGN President Nixon will propose in his State of the Union message tomorrow emphasizes user taxes, tax incentives and research rather than expanded government outlays or enforcement authority. In addition, the President will propose tax credits to stimulate industry's own actions against pollution as well as user taxes to pay for clean-up, high administrative sources say. This "small budget" approach is expected to apply completely to air and solid waste clean-up efforts. Some new federal money is likely to be asked for water pollution efforts, the sources said. * * * PRESIDENT NIXON began his second year in office yester- day by announcing a "historic new precedent"-submission of a State of the World message to Congress following his State of the Union report. Nixon said the Union address, which he will deliver personally at a Senate-House session Thursday noon, will emphasize the fight against inflation, the forthcoming federal budget, and domestic concerns. The following report will be on foreign policy, * * * DEFENSE ATTORNEYS CHARGED yesterday that no Army Court could give Lt. William L. Calley Jr. a fair trial because the commander-in-chief, President Nixon, made the decision to charge him with mass murder at My Lai. The decision came down through the chain of high command and ultimately was carried out at Ft. Benning, attorney George Latimer assertedhat a pretrial hearing on defense motions. He sought dismissal of the charges. The trial judge-Lt. Col. Reid W. Kennedy-did not act on the! motion itself. He adjourned the hearing until Feb.9 when he will take more evidence on the "command control" issue. In response to a defense motion the court dropped two specifica- tions in the murder charge against Calley, reducing the number of killings from 109 to 102. Justices reinforce heroin .law Supreme Court upholds sentence WASHINGTON (1P) -The Su- preme Court, over the bitter dis- sent of its two liberal elders, up- held yesterday federal law that makes possession of heroin suf- ficient evidence of illegal importa- tion of the drug from abroad. Justice Byron R. White deliver- ed the 6-2 decision. Justices Hugo L. Black and Wil- lim O. Douglas charged the major- ity with weakening at least eight Bill of Rights guarantees. They stressed, particularly, that the de- cision alleviate the ,government's task of having to prove guilt at trial. The two holdover New Deal justices, lauding their colleagues, said in Black's words: "Few if any decisions of this court have done more than this one today to under- cut and destroy the due process safeguards the federal Bill of Rights specifically provides to pro-I tect defendants charged with crime in United States courts." Black, who will be 84 next month and has been on the court since 1937, wrote: "Our Constitution was not writ- ten in the sands to be washed away by each wave of new judges blown in by each successive polit- ical wind which brings new polit- ical administrations into tem- porary power. "Rather, our Constitution was fashioned to perpetuate liberty and justice by marking clear and explicit, constitutional boundaries for trials." The decision upheld the convic- tion of James Turner of Wee- hawken, N.J., on charges of two federal narcotics law violations- receiving unlawfully imported heroin and purchase of illegally imported heroin. His 10-year prison sentence stands. White, in the majority opinion, said the jury was wholly justified in concluding that possession of heroin is equivalent to possessing imported heroin. The r e a s o n, White said, is that only tiny amounts of heroin are produced domestically, if any is produced donestically at all. "To possess heroin is to possess imported heroin," the former deputy attorney general said. White said people in Turner's "class" are well aware of the facts concerning heroin. "We therefore have little doubt that the inference of knowledge from the fact of pos- sessing smuggled heroin is a sound one," he said. for HEW programs Senate approves bill ' . -Associated Press Algiers motel case The trial of Detroit policemen Ronald August, 31, and Robert Paille, 34, on federal conspiracy charges relating to the 1967 Detroit riot opened in Flint yesterday. The two had earlier been acquitted on a murder charge stemming from the same incident. SCHOOL DESEGREGATION: Florida board deems busing unn "ecessary Defies Nixon's threat of veto WASHINGTON (P) - Defying President Nixon's v e t o warning, the Senate overwhelmingly ap- proved yesterday a budget-raising appropriation for health and edu- cation spending. The bill, totalingmaoredt h a n $19.7 billion, was approved by a 74-17 roll call vote. Called inflationary by the White House, the appropriation contains $1.26 billion more than Nixon's budget proposed for various health and education programs. One major administration tar- get: a $600 million item for aid to schools where attendance rosters are affected by children from nearby federal installations. Nix- on's budget offered $202 million in appropriations for federally affected schools. In the debate preceeding t h e vote, Senate Democrats argued the value of home-front spending in preparation. for their expected confrontation with the President, Sen. Mike Mansfield, the Dem- ocratic leader, said Congress will have to press the administration to "strike a better balance" in al- location of federal funds between American needs at home and in the defense a nd foreign affairs field. "It is unfortunate that the ef- forts made by the Congress to give further emphasis to the health, education a nd environmental needs of this nation - to start the shift of government resources to these vital areas -- are met with the threat of a veto," said Mans- field. Sen. Robert P. Griffin (R- Mich.), the Republican whip, ar- gued the administration case, call- ing the additional spending ex- cessive, misdirected and infla- tionary. But a senior Republican, Sen. Norris Cotton of New Hampshire, warned that even if a Nixon veto is sustained, the appropriations to which the administration objects would undoubtedly be written into a new appropriation bill. Before the bill reaches the White House, however, one issue re- mains. The Senate wrote instruc- tions specifying how the $2 billion provided for theyOffice of Eco- nomic Opportunity is to be .used, while the House left it to OEO to allocate its own funds. If the Senate decides to insist on ear-marking the funds, the bill will return to the House; other- wise it will proceed to the Presi- dent's desk. STARRING ERED[IIK S IfFORO " DANY ROBIN'"JON YVERNON . (JIRRIN DOR " MlCEL ccou PHI P'E MNDIR-* lAOE -ADE*"MICHE[LSUBQR oJO1NNFORSYTHE -MAlRICEI ARRE SAM JY[DR" lfRED HCNMCOCK A UNIVERSAL PICTURE " TECHNICOLOR . M...e .M:v;t From the country that gave you "I,A WOMAN" "INGA" and "I AM CURIOUS" (YELLOW) 'Fanny Hill' is a "porno-classic!" -ARCHIR WINSTON "In there with sex and love all the way!" -- N.Y. Post "Fanny is played by Diana Kjaer, who has a nice, body, lots of red hair, big blue eyes, and a lovely soft mouth into which she often sticks a finger." -N.Y. Times , TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (') - The Florida Cabinet passed unani- mously yesterday a resolution ad- vising local school boards they need not bus pupils to comply with the U.S. Supreme Court's Feb. 1 desegregation deadline.- The Cabinet's resolution, how- ever, did not constitute an order but was merely advisory, officials' said. "There shall be no duty on the; part of the school board to bush black or white children out of the school zone of their residence for the sole purpose of alleviating racial imbalance that the school, board did not purposely cause," said the unanimous resolution. The board, consisting of Gov. Claude Kirk and the elected heads of six state departments, sets policy for Florida's 67 county school systems, serving as 'the state's board of education. "We can have complete resis- tance to forced busing and still be in compliance with the law of the land," Kirk said. The governor said he would not issue an executive order directing school officials not to comply with the desegregation order until the Supreme Court acts on his plea to push the deadline back to September. State House Minority Leader Don Reed (R-Boca Raton) and State Sen. Tom Slade (R-Jack- sonville) launched a drive to get one million names on a telegram. inviting the Supreme Court to come to Florida to view the im- pact of its desegregation order. "They should get horses, ride about the+ see the effect of what ing," Reed said. on their county and they're do- RADIC AL FILM SERIES THiE BALCONY PRESENTS Directed by: JOSEPH STRICK Starring: Shelly Winters, Peter Falk, Ruby Dee, Lee Grant In this fantastic film based on Jean Genet's brilliant Theatre of the Absurd, a milk- man becomes a general; and a gas-meter reader becomes a bishop as they, among others, escape from the falseness of life into the falseness of their dreams. With the action set against the background of a revolution, D e a t h, the one ultimate reality, is the only act not permitted in THE BALCONY, where each man's dream comes true for a time-and a price. Even the chief of police and the rebel leader- have their fantasies: only Irma, the madam of this unusual brothel, is free from self-deception. When she bids us return to our homes to resume our lives where everything is even falser than what we have seen in her house of illusion, you'll think about it ... "Relentlessly funny, shaggy, shocking . . . ferociously brilliant . . ."-Time "Delightful farce . . ."-Newsweek 1 STUDENT MOBILIZATION COMMITTEE SMC MEETING TONIGHT LAUNCH ACTIONS PROPOSED BY MASS MEETING WORKSHOPS: "ON THE BEACH" will be rescheduled later in the semesterr, At THE HOUSE f 4 Jerzy Gross and Nicholas Demnetroules ne..anoSwny II . . .... ! campus campaign against GE ! investigation of war research on campus " anti-draft actions ! fight for h.s. students' right to organize BACH C.UB PRESENTS Dr. Thomas Taylor speaking on "TOWARD THE BRPTNVEWN WIWTH" PERS~ONs UNDER 1 R NC T i . . i .