. I 1 page three P S'itt~n tti1 NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Friday, January 30, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three I the V news today by The Associated Press and College Press Service GENERAL ELECTRIC CO. and its 12 striking unions were reported closing in on a settlement of a 95-day strike yesterday. Informed sources in Washington reported that the unions would gain wage increases of more thai 80 cents an hour, or some 25 per cent, over 40 months, and a favorable contract termination date under the proposed settlement. About 42 per cent of the GE work force has been striking. The strikers were averaging about $3.25 an hour when their contract ex- pired last Oct. 26. In a development related to the strike, the company announced in Utica, N.Y., that it was laying off 1,500 workers in defense contract work. A spokesman attributed the action to a cutback in defense con- tracts and the impact of the current strike. A FEDERAL GRAND JURY yesterday indicted three men on a charge of conspiring to kill Joseph Yablonski, United Mine Workers Union insurgent leader. The jury said Yablonski's death was plotted for six months and that one of the three had a fund from which he paid the other two for their part in the slaying. The federal indictment also charged the three with conspiring to obstruct justice because Yablonski was about to be a witness before a federal grand jury convened in Washington, D.C., to investigate union activities. A second charge was conspiring to deprive Yablonski of his rights as a union member. THE TRIAL of the Chicago 7 continued this week with the major .development being Judge Julius Hoffman's decision to bar Ramsey Clark, former U.S. Attorney General from testifying as a witness for the defense. The Government objected to Mr. Clark's appearance and Judge Hoffman ruled thatsClark could make "no relevant or material con- tribution" to the case." William Kunstler, a defense attorney, said that the judge's ruling was "absolutely unheard of in the history of the United States" and "sets a precedent that is horrendous to contemplate." Kunstler noted it was the first criminal case he knew of in which a witness willing to testify for the defense was barred from the stand by the judge. U.S. STEEL CORP., the nation's largest steelmaker, an- nounced price increases of from $4 to $6 a ton on products used to make cars and appliances. The move ended a drive over the past week and a half by most steel companies to raise prices on more than half the industry's ship- ments. U.S. Steel is a major supplier to the auto industry. In Detroit, General Motors Corp., which is believed to buy between one-third and one-fourth of its steel from U.S. Steel, had no comment on the price hike. In making the announcement, U.S. Steel said the price move was in line with those recently announced by the other companies. U.S. Steel's move came two days after it reported a decrease in3 income from $253.7 million in 1968 to $217.1 million in 1969. SECURITY AUTHORITIES in Northern Ireland ordered another weekend liquor ban in Belfast to help prevent further outbreaks of violence. They also extended a ban on public parades throughout the province until Feb. 5 which was due to expire at midnight Saturday. Unrest erupted in a short but violent encounter early yesterday when a Protestant crowd stoned British troops barring a march on Belfast's Roman Catholic community. In London, British Home Secretary James Callaghan blamed disturbances in the North Ireland capital this week on teen-age hoodlums, some of whom were drunk. A similar ban imposed last year was credited with helping to calm things down in Belfast. I ~- -Associated Press New council on environment President Nixon names three members of the newly created Council of Environmental Quality. The nominees from left to right are: Undersecretary of the Interior Russell Train, chairman of the group; Gordon McDonald, vice chancellor at the University of California; and Robert Cahn, Pulitzer Prize winning reporter for the Christian Science Monitor. All appointments are subject to Senate confirmation. FACULTY SPONSORSHIP: Curri culum Co mmittee sets new Course Mart guideines Women attack Carswell Reject nominee on grounds of sex discrimination. WASHINGTON (ZP} - T w a strong-voiced women, one a Hawaii congresswoman a n d the other best-selling author Betty Friedan, told the Senate Judiciary C o m m I t t e e that Judge Harold Carswell's nom- ination to the Supreme Court should be turned down on sex discrimination grounds. His "basic philosophy," said Rep. Patsy T. Mink (D-Hawaii, is "totally unbecoming of a man being considered for appointment to the highest court of the land.": She cited one judicial action - his v o t e as a federal appeals court judge against reconsidera- tion of a woman's claim that she was denied a job because she had small children. Carswell, who had not sat on the case, voted along with nine other circuit judges against re- consideration by the full court. "Such a judge," said Mrs. ink- "in my opinion is not fit to serve on the Supreme Court." Mrs. Friedan, author of "The Feminine Mystic," called Cars- well a "sexist judge" who "evi- dently believed women should be "defiled and used as sex objects." The all-male committee ack- nowledged with a bit of what Sen. Birch Bayh (D-Indiana) called "male smugness," that women of- ten are victims of unfair discrim- ination. The case that aroused the wo- men is now on appeal to the Su- preme Court. It involves a mother of pre-school children who was turned down by Martin Marietta Corp. for the j o b of assembly trainee. The women charged her federal civil rights had been violated.- "I believe that Judge Carswell demonstrated a total lack of un- derstanding of the concept of equality and that his vote repre- sented a vote against the right oD women to be treated equally and fairly under the law," said Mrs. Mink. Mrs. Mink, who is of Japanese ancestry, said she could not "dis- miss" the speech Carswell made in 1948 affirming a belief in white supremacy. "I believe," she said, "his words must be weighed along with his lack of sensitivity for women's struggle for equality." "Male supremacy, like white su- premacy, is equally repugnant to those who really believe in equal- ity." Sen. Marlow Cook (R-Ken- tucky), one of Carswell's cham- pions, lectured both women that they were condemning the judge "on very thin ice." By DAVE CHUDWIN The LSA Curriculum Commit- tee yesterday established guide- lines concerning who may teach Course Mart classes and set up a committee to approve proposed Course Mart offerings. The Course Mart program al- lows students to suggest courses on subjects not taught by Univer-; sity departments - like science fiction literature-or courses with experimental methods of instruc- tion. The committee agreed that all Course Mart classes must be spon- sored by a member of the LSA faculty. Faculty members f r o m other schools and colleges within the University and other univer- sities may also sponsor courses with the approval of the LSA dean and executive committee. Under one of t h e guidelines Laird cites requisites for volunteer army qualified graduate students may do the actual teaching involved in the courses. However, the spon- sor is officially responsible for the class. After lengthy debate, committee members voted to allow under- graduates and non-academic to teach Course Mart classes under the sponsorship of a faculty mem- ber. In such special cases the com- mittee ruled t h a t the sponsor mnust approve the qualifications of the instructor, the subject matter involved, the method of grading, the mode of instruction and must sign the grade sheets of students who enroll in the class. The committee also established a new Course Mart committee to pass on the qualifications of pro- posed courses under policies set by the curriculum committee. The only question left unresolv- ed by yesterday's actions is the number of Course Mart offerings a faculty member would be able to sponsor. That will be decided next Friday when the curriculum committee will give final approval to the entire Course Mart pack- age. History Prof. Shaw Livermore, committee chairman, said the new Course Mart committee and guidelines would lessen the time spent on the Course Mart and al- low the curriculum committee to consider more basic reforms. DIANA KJAER - Hans EmbackKeve Hjelm Written and Directed by MA- AHLBERQ;w"] Produced byTORE SJOBERG for MINERVA-EUROPA COLOR by DeLuxe "Distributed byCINEMATION INDUSTRIES IGNm aNRCKRECORDI .AwaSeblon ua ecora.npa te.o WASHINGTON, tP)-Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird yester- day warned that s'hiting to g draft-free military force will re- quire a slash to about two million men, lowest since before the Ko- rean War. Laird also said such a limited force-about 1.3 million below cur- rent levels-will be possible only if Congress votes more money to meet "the tremendous expense" of strengthening the National' Guard and Reserve. "I personally believe that you have to get down to a level for an all-volunteer service . . . near the two million mark," the defense secretary told a youth group.. A special commission is expected' I - to recommend to President Nixon witiin the next two or three weeks K formula for achieving an all- volunteer force. Some key Penta- gon civilian and military author- ities have privately expressed skep- ticism that such a goal is feasible. without huge spending increases. Laird mentioned no cost figure in connection with Guard-Reserve strengthening. The Pentagon will spend about $2.9 billion this year to support a ready Reserve-Guard totaling about one million men. A regular military force of close to two million men would be the smallest since June 1950 when there were 1.46 million Americans in uniform. I T r '!I oru!yA FRI.-7:15, 9:00, 10:45 SAT -7:15, 9:0, 10:45 - NOW 4M DIAL 8-6416 MARK'S isopen9.a.m.1-3p.m., serving sandwiches, soups, cereals, coffees and pastries, etc. BUT: / We can't be open nights anymore because we're losing too much money after 3:00 p.m. We've talked over a lot of alternatives, and the only possibility of re-opening at night is to ask for membership fees of $5.00 per month per person. Until we do get enough subscriptions to open nights, we will continue to be open only days, from 9:00 to 3:00 p.m. Your subscription entitles you to come in six nights a week (we will be closed Sundays) from 6:00 p.m. to 1:00 a.m., a chair, part of a table, a floor, a ceiling, lights, heat, and maid service. We need at. least 270 subscriptions before we can re-open nights, and at least that same amount each month to continue to remain open nights. Does this community want a place for quiet conversation, chess, chamber music, and a decent cup of coffee? NAME ADDRESS PHONE GOLDEN LION WINNER ! ALICE'S RESTAURANT Presents "TO BE A CROOK" SHOWS AT 8 AND 10P.M. S0c l I f i 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! MONDAY through FRIDAY at 7 and 9 P.M. r SATURDAY and SUNDAY at 1,3; 5,7,9 P.M. f " I ROBERT BRESSON WEEKEND "Never before in Ann Arbor" THURSDAY-FRIDAY, JAN. 29, 30 THE TRIAL of JOAN of ARC (1962) "Nothing is done to explain Joan of Arc" CATIIR1AYCIIv c AvlAN 21 EER 1 .., f.: : A UNNVERSA, PICTURE " TECHNICtLOR I i ENCORE! By Popular Demand: GRAD MIXER N0.2 CbIIAEAV "E" 1 1 I i i