pag~e three Zi~re Sfiicaux tti1 NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PRONE: 764-0554 5th Week shows ot 1,3,5;-,9 G MCN.p 5-6290 Wednesday, January 28, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three I ' ___I William Faulkner's Pulitzer Prize- Novel "The Reivers" is now a "'The Reivers' fills one with a ioyous sense of life and laugh- ter, A marvelous time is had by all."--New York Magazine;:; Steve McQueen ~The Reivers with SHARON FARRELL and WILL GEERNEXT HELD OVER! 2nd WEEK... NO 2-6264 SHOWS AT: 1:00-3:05-5:10-7:15-9:30 The Most Explosive Spy Scandal of the Century! W the by The Associated Press and College Press Service. S THEWITHDRAWAL of 50,000 more American troops from Vietnam will begin today. The U.S. Command announced the withdrawal will begin with .... 3,000 Marines from 19 units leaving over a five-day period, the re- mainder following before April 15. The withdrawal will raise to 10,000 the number of troops pulled" out sine.President Nixon announced the first manpower reduction The announcement came as allied headquarters reported sixY clashes with Viet Cong forces ranging from the southern Mekong Delta to jungles near the Cambodian border north of Saigon. 59 North Vietnamese, three Americans, and five South Vietnamese were re- ported killed. * * *. SUPREME COURT NOMINEE G. HARROLD CARSWELL told the Senate Judiciary Committee that he is not a racist. "I have no notions, secretive, open or otherwise, of racial superior-x ity," swore the 50-year-old appeals court judge. Yesterday's opening day of hearings on his nomination centered chiefly on Carswell's racial views. Carswell replied to questions con- cerning press reports detailing a speech the Georgian native gaven in 1948 in a losing race for the state legislature in which he affirmed -Associated Press a belief in white supremacy, Carswell defends views Carswell was also heavily questioned about reports that he had helped switch an all-white Tallahasse Fla, golf club to private owner- Supreme Court nominee G. Harrold Carswell responds to ques- ship in 1955 to avoid integration. tions -efore the Senate Judiciary Committee. In the first of the Retreating from an earlier testimony in which he denied having hearings on the nominations senators focused on reports of any administrative affiliation, Carswell admitted that he had been Carswell's allegedly racist views. "an incorporator" of the club. NiXOn returns H EW bill for WASHINGTON A)- Following up a dramatic, televised veto, President Nixon sent back to Congress yesterday a bill appropriating federal spending for education and health, and a Republican leader said the GOP would rally to sustain the President's action. The President told Congress he vetoed the $19.7 billion Health-Education-Labor appropriation bill because it would feed inflation, foster inefficiency and misdirect money. Congress had boosted the bill nearly $1.3 billion beyond the level Nixon had recommended. Congress now faces the decision whether to override the A UNIVERSAL PICTURE " TECIINCOIOR' II Alpha Kappa Psi (Grad. Business) Phi Delta Phi (Law Fraternity) invite U of M COE DS to a T. G. i Thursday, Jan.29 at the "PH ID" Hocse Thompson at Madison (Next to South Quad) 9-11 P.M. *. * * EGYPT REPORTS its commandos have destroyed an Israeli military headquarters in Sinai, but Israel denies the claim. The Egyptian high command announcement says that one of its rocket command crossed into Sinai, "destroying most of the encamp- ment and equipment" and killing a large number of Israeli soldiers. The announcement described the Sinai headquarters "one of the most important military targets, since it holds command over the entire Sinai army positions as well as the Gaza strip." Israelis military spokesmen counter the reported rocket attack actually hit a deserted strip near a settlement far to the north, "causing no damage or casualties whatsoever.'' * * * THE FEDERAL GRAND JURY INVESTIGATION of the murder of the Yablonski family opened with the testimonies of relatives of both the slain and the accused. Kenneth and Joseph Yablonski, sons of the slain United Mine Workers insurgent leader, each testified for about 15 minutes and then left without comment. The Yablonski brothers have said they feel the killings were an outgrowth of their father's unsuccessful bid for the UMW presidency. Also testifying were the mother and sister-in-laws of Paul E. Gilly, one of the three accused men. By CHRIS UHL In a cluster of cabins in Orton- ville, Michigan a number of stu- dents discussed peace as a way of life in a retreat last weekend. The two-day event was sponsored by Hillel House and the Center for Research on Conflict Resolution. A panel on peace and the inter- national scene and a variety of workshops were the main events of the retreat. Returning students brought back differing evaluations f these activities. .!1 RETREA T: Group gathers, holds' discussions on peace You Earn 24 Hours of Every Day... 4 -... y, t 7 / 1 n '-' 1' I, , f By ROBERT WILLARD "You know I started B a c h Club because I wanted to meet girls," explains Bach Club Founder and President R a n - dolph Smith in a soft-spoken drawl. In three years the tall, goateed graduate student has pioneered the club from eight to almost 75 members. When he came to the Univer- sity three years ago he felt a definite need for more mixing among students. "It has not been easy,' 'he sighs. "Once you have been what you are and you are not successful, no matter what you do, you have lost old members." But Joe Marcus '71 threw in his artistic talent on posters and they started serving jelly do- nuts and allowing more time af- ter the program for mixing. A summer Bach Club r member suggested they pass out leaflets at registration. Suddenly a t - tendance skyrocketed and Bach Club was a going thing. Roughly 75 people gathered last Wednesday night at the Campus Chapel to groove to classical music and Prof. Thom- as Taylor of the music school. After an unexpectedly large number of late arrivals, the stereo rolled on, hummed on, turned on and turned off to a reserved audience. There were the usual plague of fidgets the last half hour as the club heard portions of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony over an ancient, scratchy monoraul record play- er. But after the program most people stayed around for the re- freshments. The Bach Club's humorous posters have attracted the most people. "I saw their posters at one of the record shops - it was really good," admitted Ro- bert Lowenstein. "I've always been interested in Beethoven. STUDENTS SWING Bac lub A lasiamxe Tonight's meeting helped me to "bone-up" on the specifics of the 9th symphony - it opens up a new field," said Randy Holm- es. And other guys just like jelly donuts. "The club could always use more people," said Smith, "I wish people would get off their asses and go out and do things, i.e., Bach Club. So many stu- dents like to come but never get around to it. Often people go to one or two meetings, they don't like it that nobody talks to them or they d6n't meet the love of their life and give up." In a word, Bach Club is a mixer. All that is suggested is that you enjoy classical music - some of the officers of the club can not read music and h a v e never played an instrument. Ac- cording to a regular member, Fred Shadko, "The less y o u know about music, the more you can learn in the Bach Club." Andy Hoffman, who attended a workshop on the Middle East con- flict commented, "Nothing was re- solved. We skipped from one topic to the next. I didn't get too much out of it, but it was interesting." Jim Morganstern expressed dis- satisfaction over the results of an- other workshop. 'Everybody was trying to ex- pound his own philosophy. Many of the people didn't even know where the discussion was headed,"' he said. This was not the reaction of all the participants, however. There were those who found the work- shops invigorating. "People came up here confused. They were supporting the estab- lishment. Now after the panel and workshops they are beginning to realize that the establishment ways have failed," Larry Schwartz said. "It is becoming clear to them that we need a new approach-a new way to resolve conflict, a bet- ter way to find peace," he added. A rift became apparent between those seeking inner-peace and those more interested in peace in a broad political sense. Michael Latka a chemistry major from Hillsdale College said, "You have to first possess an in- ner-peace before you can hope to affect a universal peace.,, "I feel like I have been attend- ing a history class or a sociology class," Latka added. "I interpreted the title of the retreat, 'Peace as a Way of Life' to mean peace as a personal way of life.". Midway through the weekend, Rabbi Gerald Goldman of Hillel House sensing the need for a more personal approach to the peace problem, held a special gathering to discuss the topic of inner-peace. For many the exchange was the highlight of the retreat. Goldman opened the session by emphasizing the need to establish priorities. He spoke of students as beging bouhd down by obligations. "It is necessary for the student to weed out the unimportant obligations and to set up prior- ities," Goldman said. He suggested people as a first priority. veto or to write a new appro- priation bill closer to Nixon's recommendations. It would take a two-thirds vote in both branches to overrule the Nixon veto and make the present bill law. Sen. Hugh Scott, (R-Pa.) said Republicans in the House or if necessary, in the Senate will side with Nixon in numbers sufficient to block an effort to override the veto. He acknowledged the GOP will have to enlist some Democrat- ic support. "I would expect the veto to be sustained in the House and, if not there, in the Senate," Scott said. Scott said Republicans anti- cipate 125 to 130 GOP votes to sustain Nixon in the House, "and sufficient fiscally concerned Dem- ocrats to provide the margin." The House is expected to take up Wednesday the veto of a bill which it passed on Dec. 20 on a vote of 261 to 110. Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield of Montana said, how- ever, there is a good chance Nixon would be overruled in the Senate, if the issue gets there. "If the House overrides, I think our prospects would be fairly good," he said. "If the House does not override, that's the end of the ball game." If the veto is sustained Congress will have to write another bill, and it is expected that the Democrats will again put in more money for some programs than Nixon wants, leading to another confrontation. Nixon offered little in the way of compromise to gain additional support. Some legislators had expected him to give a bit on his opposition to a $600 million item for grants to schools in areas where large numbers of children of federal em- ployes and servicemen attend them. The figure was nearly $400 million more than the administra- tion had recommended. Nixon promised only to study the program and make recom- mendations later. The bill contains $1.7 billion for HEW, nearly $1 billion for Labor and 1.9 billion for OEO.-Money for nearly a dozenosmaller agencies comprised the balance of the $19.7 billion figure. Vote set LANSING (A)-The State House of Representatives will vote today on a controversial parochiaid bill which would make all private schools eligible for state aid of about $25 million. Both Democrats and Republi- cans, however, agreed that one key vote-scheduled by the House yes- terday-will not resolve the issue. The House defeated parochiaid last May, but the Senate approved it in September after Gov. William Milliken endorsed the concept in his special education reform package. In paving the way for the vote tomorrow, the' House agreed to postpone consideration of several other related proposals until after deciding how it stands on the basic concept of parochiaid. But that sum is expected to be reduced to 23 million if the prin- ciple of granting public funds to church-run schools is approved. In a report released last Jan- uary, the Joint Legislative Com- mittee on Non-Public Schools said it would cost the state less money to provide state aid for non-public schools now than it will to educate non-public school students in pub- lic school later. University officials are waiting for the outcome of the parochiaid vote and the vote on the rest of Milliken's budget before com- menting on Milliken's assertion that the state's public institutions of higher education must cut their budgets or risk having it done for them in Lansing. "We'll just have to wait until Milliken actually turns in his bud- get," Smith added. However, the vice president has already pre- dicted the need for a tuition hike to supplement the University's budget. with 5% Special Passbook Savings at Ann Arbor Bank. Continuous compounding does it. Isn't it time to look into it? Member F.O.I.C. ANNARBOR BANK 4 CAMPUS OFFICES "*Eat liety Street tearMaynrd "*ouht vrsdly 8 feltUniwerat1 + Medkat GCe trs MentatAl "*M namot hRoad at HarrtPadiwa And 7 More Oiosee serving ANN ARBOR/DEXTER WiITMOE LAKE MEMBER: FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION **FEDERAL. RESERVE SYSTEMA Drug bill to include 'no-knock' provision NED'S ANN ARBOR BLUES FESTIVALS GENERAL MEETING SUNDAY, FEB. 1 ,4 P.M. SOME COMMITTEE POSITIONS STILL OPEN QUESTIONS: 7/69-0594 or 665-8736 BOOKSTORE 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- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier, $10 by mati. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $3.00 by carrier. $3.00 by mail. WASHINGTON ()-The Sen- ate voted Monday to retain in a pending drug control bill a clause allowing federal narcotics agents to stage no-warning raids. The idea is to prevent suspects from destroying narcotic evi- dence while raiding officers wait outside the door to get in. The action came as the Sen- ate aproved, 70 to 15, an amend- ment offered by Assistant Re- publican Leader Robert P. Grif- fin of Michigan. The Grifin amendment to the administration-backed drug con- trol bill permits issuance of such "no-knock" warrants. But it adds some restrictions to ease doubts some senators have ex- pressed that no-knock raids vio- late the Fourth Amendment's guarantee of privacy and pro- tection from unreasonable search and seizure. Moments before, the Senate beat back twin attempts by Sen. Sam J. Ervin (D-NC), to kill the Griffin amendment and to substitute his own language al- lowing no-warning raids only if officers at the scene determined that without it, vital evidence was certain to be destroyed. Also defeated was an amend- ment by Sen. Harold E. Hughes (D-Iowa), which would lower substantially the maximum pen- alties for use of marijuana. Hughe's subcommittee on alco- holism and narcotics has been studying the issue. YPSILANTI This new store carries more trade (non-text) books than any other in the Ann Arbor-Ypsilanti area. Unusual 1970 calendars, thousands of paperbacks, lots of them used, some hardbacks. prse htn-kokrisvo stdin.h:ise RADICAL FILM+ SERIES TEN DAYS THAT SHOAK 10% OFF Presents ON ALL BOOKS THE WORLD Directed by: SERGE EISENSTEIN (also known as OCTOBER) SILENT 1928 ANN ARBOR'S BRIGHTEST NIGHTSPOT Mon.-Thurs.-9-9; Fri.-9-6; Sat.-12:5:30 We think we're interesting- .among the movie offerings , , , indisputably the most significant . . .replete with magnificent scenes of mass movement, with amazingly observed characters, and with extremely striking and beautiful camera shots . . . a brilliant director."--Nation . . .epic substance . . ."-Theatre Arts Ten Days That Shook the World is a film classic, It portrays the Russian Revolution as seen by Eisenstein, himself a participant in the Revolution, who in the years which followed became the foremost film director in Russia. It was made as an "intellectual film" -an example of Communist art. "The legitimate function of art is a purely a practical one; its purpose is solely to produce convictions and to lead to actions. Dur- ing the Revolution, for exomnI its duty was to nrovoke revolutioraorv act. PponI went from the theatre or th cinemn tn the DON BAILEY the f, C We hope you will. 1 i | U 1