} i COMM 1AN DER CODY And the Lost Planet Airmen About that time a strange disease Did seize the populbtion For many folk of all degrees Did dance without cessation They kept at dancing night and day And never left their leaping Until their strength had ebbed away And death came on them creeping. TONIGHT & TOMORROW -DOORS OPEN 8 PM.- $2.00 Tour By CAROL HILDEBRAND If the central campus environment seems a little dull, there is something you can do to broaden your perspec- tive. Take 35 cents out of your pocket, head for the corner of Huron and State, and flag down one of Ann Ar- bor's muddy green and orange buses. Once on the bus, you probably won't find any of your friends. Young mothers with pre-school chil- dren and shopping bags will out-num- ber you. Elderly people, bundled warm- ly, will abound. High school students will probably overwhelm you. These are the people served by Ann Arbor Transit Authority (AATA). In September Ann Arbor contracted the AATA for a new public transporta- Ann Arbor with tion system. Past systems had been * unreliable, and overly expensive. People seem generally pleased with the new system. "I think this is a nice bus service," commented one woman who works downtown and rides regularly. "Yes, I like riding the bus when it's not too bumpy," smiled Jeanne Rice, a fifth grader at St. Thomas School. City Councilman LeRoy Cappaert (D-Fifth Ward) says the city subsi- dizes AATA with about $200,000 an- nually. "Previous companies have been sub- sidized," he says, "but never to this degree." He believes Ann Arbor must develop a good transportation system or problems of cars, streets, and park- ing spaces will only multiply. If you ride anytime except early morning and mid-afternoon, you wi probably miss the city's four "scho trippers." Because so many students use buse. especially to get to Huron High SchoC the company has added extra bust to accommodate them. High school students think the sere ice is "generally okay." They tall laugh and make out. "But they should make a more d rect route," advised Herb Johnso: Huron high junior. "I go to sleep on it every morning, added Mary Chambers, a senior. Si rides 40 minutes each way. "Once in a while they send a min bus for us," laughed one girl. And or driver told how he occasionally pic] up 100 kids at a single stop. "Some of the drivers just aren't tt A ATA good," some student complain. Al- leged noise and cigarette smoking were sources of conflict between drivers and students earlier in the fall. If you decide to tour Ann Arbor by bus you will find three lines to choose from-orange, red, and green. Green line is the "scenic tour," ac- cording to one driver. Green line buses spin down Huron Parkway every half hour. All lines eventually end up downtown. Recently the city acquired federal money to buy new buses. Combining federal and city funds, the AATA ex- pects to purchase 16 new ones, Ten buses move down the streets now, piloted by 27 men and five women. So, tour Ann Arbor if you like. "You can take a crosstown bus." page three NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 1 y+ri4;' I' 1 Saturday and Sunday VI RDIANA D}ir. LUIIS BUNUEL (1961) From the creater of Belle de Jour, an uncorn- promising probing of repressed sexuality. Bunuel was exiled from Spain for his au- dac ity. Short: EXCERPTS FROM DRACULA Bela Lugosi 7&9 ARCHITECTURE 662-8871 75c AUDITORIUM Saturday, January 24, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three - . , 1 U _ " T_ _ ! c DIAL - - - --- --- - 3 th news today by The Associated Press and College Press Service A FEDERAL GRAND JURY will convene in Cleveland next Tuesday to begin a multi-state investigation into the slaying of United Mine Workers insurgent Joseph Yablonski and his family. U.S. Attorney Robert B. Krupansky called for the probe into "the broadening aspects of the Yablonski investigation." Krupansky said he did not know how long the investigation would last, but said it would take a "number of days." FEDERAL EDUCATION COMMISSIONER James E. Allen Jr. announced plans for "reorientation of American education towards man-centered environmental study." The drive against pollution through education would be directed towards students on all levels. To set up the program, Allen said, a new staff within the Office of Education will be established, a major national conference on ecological education is planned, and legislation to finance the en- vironmental education program will be requested. * * * CONGRESSIONAL DEMOCRATS have decided to give an "equal-time response" to the President's State of the Union address. "This is not a Democratic rebuttal," said Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.), the party whip. "I like to think of it as a view of the state of the union through the eyes of the people who are living the state of the union." The format of the program which will be aired Sunday, Feb. 8, will focus on interviews in which citizens from various areas of the country will discuss their questions and concerns with Democratic leaders from both the House and the Senate. FORMER BIAFRAN leader Gen. Odumegwu Ojukwu, has been granted asylum by the Ivory Coast. In announcing political asylum for Ojukwu, the Ivory Coast government also made it clear that Ojukwu will not be allowed to set up a government in exile, and barred him from any political activity. SELECTIVE SERVICE officials in 15 states said they will not be able to fill their February draft quotas. The officials said the federal directive issued last Tuesday, setting number 60 as the ceiling on all draft calls, will result in a failure to draft enough men. An official spokesman for national Selective Service headquarters conceded that Selective Service might fail to meet the total Pentagon call for 19,000 men in February. He said the Defense Department would have to seek addit'ional men in' a later call to make up the difference. -Associated Press Biafrai relief A Nigerian longshoreman unloads foodstuffs from the United States, intended for starving Biafrans, at the Nigerian capital, Lagoa. HO USE ACTiION UTNCERTA. IN: " e Senate passes major crime b aleral opposion Gov. Kirk to defy ey high cour Rejects order to desegregate WASHINGTON L4' - Florida Governor Claude Kirk said yesterday he w ill order his school boards to defy the Su- preme Court's Feb. 1 desegre- gation deadline even i it means going to jail. Officials of three other southern states, meanwhile, joined Kirk in asking that all the states in the nation be brought under uniform rules of public school desegrega- tion.t; In New Orleans, the attorney generals of Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama announced plans for a national effort to insure that all public schools are governed by the same desegregation rules that apply to Southern states. Atty. Gen. Jack Gremillion of Louisiana and Atty. Gen. A. F. Summer of Mississippi said in New Orleans yesterday they plan to see that "the same rules for a- ministration of public schools in Louisiana, Mississippi and Ala- b a m a, imposed by the federal courts, apply in alifrnia and all other states." " They said their first move will be to intervene as friends of the court in a Pasadena, Caif., school desegregation case. Gremillion and Summer issued a prepared statement with Atty. Gen. MacDonald Giallian of Ala- bama who did not attend the con- ference on the steps outside the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. The Supreme Court on Jan. 14 ordered officials in two Florida districts and in 12 other districts in Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana and Misissippi to desegregate their public schools by Feb. 1 and adopt a "unitary" systm of education. Kirk told the court it will be impossible for Florida to meet the deadline. He said the state will not have .available the "mllions of dollars' needed to bus school children in the counties until Sep- tember, after the legislature meets. Kirk also asked the court to bar Secretary of Welfare Robert H. Finch from withholding any fed- eral funds from Florida for non- compliance with the Feb. 1 dese- gregation order. The governor thenreturned to Tallahassee where he told a news conference he will issue an order that will make it impossible for the counties to comply with the Feb. 1 order, even if it means go- ing to jail. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan, 420 Maynard St.. Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- dayg through Sunday morning 'Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier, $10 by mail. Summer' Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $3.00 by carrier. $3.00 by .mail. WASHINGTON (f') - The Sen- ate passed yesterday one of the major crime bills urged by Presi- dent Nixon, a measure to arm the government with new legal wea- pons to fight the Mafia and oth- er underworld syndicates. Known as the Organized Crime Control Act, the bill was passed by a 72-1 vote after the Senate re- jected all amendments offered by senators who contended some of . WE..WIIATA WV01ELYWA AIRBORNE ASSAULT Israeli's hit Egyptian island WSer~UPMwrrsuM. t ioaK emu GAR I at.PHten Ltt CAtIR FERECSa D QAA1 .s111G it HM Wt KEu~1H ta WiJCE OMER I EOGRt W(SSA R[IRtE I tII RIWrJSI M ufGE 51TH JS1OArWI0I1K GU M From the country that gave you "I,AWOMAN" "INGA" and "I AM CURIOUS" . (YELLOW) Fanny Hill' is a "porno-classic!" -ARCHER 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 TEL AVIV (P) - Israeli air- borne commandos withdrew from the Egyptian island of Shadwan in the Red Sea yester- day after a 32-hour occupation, leaving behind destroyed mili- tary installations and dead Egyptian soldiers. A top Israeli commander said the raid was staged to show the Egyptians they are vulner- able. He indicated more may come. The Israeli military command in Tel Aviv said the command- os took with them certain "mili- tary equipment" - presumably a British-made radar station capable of tracking all shipping around the mouth of the Gulf of Suez. Last month Israeli commandos slipped into Egypt proper and came back with a Soviet-built radar station. The command said that while on the island the Israelis killed 70 Egyptian military men, cap- tured another 62, sank three Soviet-built torpedo boats and destroyed installations that were not described. The dead in- cluded 40 crewmen of two tor- pedo boats sunk by Israeli jets at the outset on Thursday, the command said. ' The command added that the first two torpedo boats w e r e sunk by jets 10 miles off the is- land. The third was sunk, it said, by the Israeli forces that occupied the island. The commandos came under attack around midnight by Egyp- tian plans. The Israelis report- ed no casualties in the attack, although the Egyptians claimed at least 50 Israelis were killed or wounded in the operation, The Israeli command ack- nowledged the loss of three men killed and six wounded in the initial stage of the operation on Thursday. Even as the Israelis began to move off the Island, Israeli jets swept over the Suez Canal and bombed military targets near Cairo once more. They hit military c a m p s near the industrial city of Hel- .wan, south of Cairo, and Huck- step, northeast of the Egyptian capital. All planes returned safely, the Israelis said. An Egyptian military com- munique carried by the Middle East News Agency from Cairo said: "Four low-flying enemy warplanes violated Egyptian air- space today. Two of them bomb- ed camps near Helwan, south of Cairo, and the other two bomb- ed a camp at Huckstep, north- west of it. "The bombing caused no dam- age in equipment but seven men were wounded, one seriously." Later the Egyptians report- ed an attack by Egypt's air force on Israeli positions in the occupied Sinai Peninsula. its provisions trespass on individ- ual rights. The measure now goes to the House, where there is no prospect of early action on it. The bill for the first time would make largescale illicit gambling enterprises a federal crime. These are defined as involving five or more persons, being in operation for more than 30 days, and hav- ing a gross take of more than $2,- 000 in any one day. Bribery of local officials - such as police, prosecutors, or judges - in connection with illegal gambling activities also would be- come a federal crime.. Another major .feature of the bill is designed to root out rack- eteer infiltration of businesses and labor unions, through criminal forfeitures and use of antitrust concepts like divestiture, dissolu- tion and reorganization. The bill provides also for extra sentences of up to 30 years in prison for habitual and profes- sional criminals and for leaders of organized crime. The Senate retained in the bill a section overruling a Supreme Court decision that would give de- fendants access to confidential government files to determine if illegally obtained evidence was be- ing used against them. An amendment by Sens. Philip A. Hart (D-Mich.), and Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.), to strike out this part of the bill was de- feated by a 53-20 vote. Other parts of the measure pro- vide for a comprehensive revision and strengthening of evidence gathering procedures in organized crime investigations and prosecu- tions. Some senators objected that these new procedures would not be limited to organized crime and could impair civil liberties. The American Civil Liberties Union appealed to all senators to reject the bill, saying it contained "man- ifold possibilities for abuse." One of the disputed sections would authorize no-bail imprison- ment for contempt or recalcitrant witnesses who refuse to testify after a grant of immunity. innocen.t ANN ARBOR, Mich. (A') - Ern- est Bishop, the 29-year-old labor- er accused of the first-degree mur- der last July of University coed Margaret Phillips, was found in- nocept by reason of insanity yes- terday. The Washtenaw County Circuit Court jury of nine women a n d three men deliberated f o r 11/2 hours Thursday and yesterday be- fore reaching the verdict. During their deliberation, the jury asked for a replay of a tape recording in which Bishop, under the influence of sodium amatol, a so-called "truth serum," told a psychiatrist how he killed Miss Phillips., Under state law, Bishop is turn- ed over to the State Department of Mental Health. He will be com- mitted to a state institution for life or until declared cured. He cannot be retried. , I' fe JeryGrssan Nchla Dmerol eros iomeroes new...and from Sweden WHAT IS THE -an all-campus orchestra! -sponsored by MUSKET and G&S! -performing "George M!" and "Pirates of Penzance!" : >:<: .s,"; :: : <:>:« ;:::.. £ :.:;x : <:} . - : r > :<$ f: 4 k : f III(! 'M1:}F?; . TSui s i y:;ii;': i } r } { {{:tiS 'k.:i %' '.v C C. ' y $$x,, { J:1 h. { '? ' : i '; ? v hY Famous Brand---Permanent Press SLACKS te o $14.oo $588 21pair shoo PERSONS UNDER _ 18 NOT f ;:r },Yj F ;:-. ,,q 8{ ° iA Sian Ua for Auditins on