Personal Explorations (An informal seminar in "experiential" or "situation" theology) All interested students are invited to share, clarify, and explore with others those values, ideas, and feelings most relevant to their lives. Participants in the seminar will examine many of the basic value- judgments and assumptions upon which their lives are based and talk about the subjects-taboo or otherwise-which they feel are important. Plans for future meetings will be made at the first-session. -- I page three 94C Iir4t ttn 43 a4Ot NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Wednesday, February 11, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three TH U RSDAY, FEB. 12, 7:30 P.M. 2222 STUDENT ACTIVITIES BUILDING Convener: Lloyd W. Putnam, Office of Religious Affairs Sponsored by: The Office of Refiigous Affairs 2282 SAB 764-7442 J "TWO OF THE YEAR'S BEST!" -Neal Gabler, Mich. Daily "Besides being one of the truely funny sophisticated comedies, it starred one of the best looking chicks ever."-Neal Gabler I VERY FMY, IMMENSELYAPI "A 'beautiful' movie. One of the finest and most immediate adap- tations of Shakespeare I have ever seen."-Neal Gabler "DAZZLING" -LIFE PARAMOUNT PICTURESpmn ets A SiffIL 11 The FRANCO ZEFFIRELLI Produt ion.r ROMEO 'JULIET LA . m dnr the news today by The Associated Press and College Press Service APPROXIMATELY 600 STUDENTS were arrested when they tried to stage a protest march at Mississippi Valley State College. The predominantly black school has been the scene of marches demonstrations, and at least one rock-throwing confrontation with campus security officers during a four-day boycott by students back- ing 30 demands on President J. H. White. The demands include recruitment of more qualified instructors, written rules for conduct of security officers, abandonment of rules governing student dress, and more public telephones. The arrests followed an ultimatum to striking students from college President J. H. White that they must return to classes Wed- nesday or the school would be closed until Feb. 23.I * * * TERRORISTS attacked passengers waiting to board an Israeli airliner in Munich, Germany. The grenade-hurling terrorists killed one passenger before being caught up in a gun fight with police. Twelve persons, including three of the terrorists, were wounded in the fight at Munich's Reim airport. It was the fifth Arab guerrilla action against El Al, Israel's national airlines, in the past 30 months. * * * TUNISIAN STUDENTS protesting U.S. aid to Israel pre- vented Secretary of State William Rogers from speaking yester- day.t An estimated 1,000 students besieged the American cultural center in Tunis yesterday, battling with police and forcing Rogers to cancel a scheduled visit to Tunis University. The students refused a invitation to appoint a delegation to present their views to Rogers, and said the demonstrations would end when he left Tunisia. Rogers arrived from Morocco Monday night on the second leg of his 10-nation fact-finding and goodwill tour of ten African nations. Leaders of both the Moroccan and Tunisian governments warned him against any further American arms and or any other aid to Israel. The leaders also told the secretary that any peace settlement in the Middle East which fails to take account of the interests of the Palestinian Arabs is inconceivable. AN AVALANCHE - Europe's worst of the century - struck a French ski resort yesterday, killing 42 persons. Loosened by up to 60-mile blizzard winds a mass of snow jumped a highway and river before destroying a hotel in Val D' Isere, France. More than 60 persons were injured, while 26 are still missing. Most of the dead and injured were young people in the middle of a ski vacation. * * * THE PENTAGON was said to have underestimated project costs by billions of dollars. In a statement released yesterday the General Accounting Office said that the military has overrun costs in 38 major projects, aver- aging 50 per cent over original estimates. In addition, the statement said the Pentagon has concealed $10 billion which was supposedly saved by Nixon administration defense cuts. The statement added that a major reason for the cost overruns is that the Defense department has often gone ahead with new weapons without first establishing a reasonable chance of success. It also cited production delays and performance defects. THE DEMOCRATIC POLICY COUNCIL urged the Senate to block the Carswell nomination and expansion of the ABM. In a statement yesterday, the policy council sharply criticized President Nixon's last two Supreme Court nominations, saying they indicated an insensitivity to the racial situation in the U.S. The Democrats also said the Safeguard expansion proposed by Nixon was risky and unnecessary. In addition the statement blamed present inflation on the Re- publican administration, citing the White House's refusal to use pressure to influence private industry wage and price decisions. The request was part of an election year policy statement chal- lenging the Republican administration on a wide range of issues, in- cluding pollution and environment controls, foreign affairs, and crime control. SECRETARY OF DEFENSE Melvin Laird said he would look for ways to improve the Vietnamization program during his visit to Vietnam. -Laird and Gen. Earle G. Wheeler, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, arrived for the three-day visit yesterday. They are expected to return to Washington with recommendations for further U.S. troop withdrawals. Laird said he had been instructed to make a "consolidated re- view" of the Vietnamization program, which began when Nixon and South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu announced plans for a gradual American withdrawal last June 8. -Associated Press Rev. Jackson at MSU Rev. Jesse Jackson (at right), civil rights advocate, talks with Michigan State University students and members of the staff for the Center of Urban Affairs between speaking engagements in East Lansing. The urban affairs center sponsored Jackson's visit to the campus. STRIKE CONTINUES: Detroit police arrest picketers during scuffle at Fruehauf Corp. Nixon asks penalty on, polluters Fines of $10,000 a (lay against offenders asked WASHINGTON (M - - Presi- dent Nixon proposed yesterday a $4 billion program for muni- cipal waste treatment to im- prove water quality, backed by stricter clean-up standards and enforcement powers. In a special message to Con- gress, Nixon requested nationwide federal enforcement p o w e r s against both air and water p 1- lution, to be armed with the threat of court-imposed fines of $10,000 a day against offenders. In addition, Nixon proposed the department of HEW be given the authority to regulate the compo- sition of vehicle fuels, and ordered a 5-year research program to de- velop a pollution-free automobile. At the same timd, the HEW de- partment issued proposed new standards to control vehicle pl- lution emissions, applying to 1973 and 1975 models. These are years when major model changes are due. The President took no direct ac- tion against solid wastes - trash - but ordered research to re- claim and re-use materials from discarded products, or at least to find ways of disposing of waste materials more esily. He singled out junk automo- biles as one of the major solid waste problems and directed his new Environmental Quality Coun- cil to find ways of promoting their prompt scrapping, so they would not clutter up the land- scape. Nixon said the price of an auto- mobile "should include not only the cost of producing it, but also the cost of disposing of it," While most of his message dealt with pollution problems, Nixon also proposed a plan to carve out new park and recreation lands. One approach would be to step up federal and state purchases of land for parks and recreation through full use of the Land and Water Conservation Fund. The other half of his plan was to see whether some of the land already owned by the federal gov- ernment - one-third of all the land in the nation - could be adapted or converted to park use. or sold to raise money to create new parks. Nixon asked Congress for f u l1l funding in fiscal 1971 of the $327 million now available in the Land and Water Conservation Fund, and said he would propose legisla- tion to assure a reliable income for the fund. NPTH rorUM RIRTw AVRNI.0 qT t1900TY T01 f9oC No ordinary love story;... COLUMBUS-7 :15 only ROMEO-9 :00 only TECHNICOLOR A PARAMOUNT PICTURE Direct from Off-Broadway Creative Arts Festival presents The Dayop Theatre (o. in THE (ONCEPT Special To The Daily DETROIT-After daytime nego- tiations and conflict with police, workers voted last night to con- tinue their strike against the Fruehauf Corp. The union membership rejected a company offer to settle the strike. "The strike goes on and the morale is high," a union spokesman said. Black leather jacketed members of the Detroit Police Department's Tactical Mobile Unit (TMU), in an angry confrontation with pick- eters, arrested two persons in sepa- rate incidents yesterday morning. Robert Roberts of Detroit, a photographer, was arrested and charged with malicious destruc- tion of property under $100. Also arrested w a s Sandy Jenkins, a striker, who was charged with as- sault and battery of a police of- ficer. Witnesses however, claim Rob- erts was apprehended after taking a picture of a patrolman hitting a picketer w i t h his riot stick. Witnesses to the other incident contend Jenkins threw a snowball at one of the TMU members. Robert Quick, arrested Monday for concealment of a deadly wea- pon, was arraigned yesterday in a Detroit recorder's court. A De- troit city ordinance defines a knife with a blade of over three inches as a deadly weapon. Union officials claim the arrests are part of an ongoing harrass- ment of picketers. The strikers, their ranks swell- ed by n e a r l y 60 students and workers from Ann Arbor and De- troit, arrived at the company gates before police and were able to prevent strike breakers a n d, scabs from entering parking lots for several minutes. Then the TMU personal moved in, roughly shoving and jabbing picketers as they formed a corridor at one of the gates to enable cars to enter the company lots. One woman screamed, "Go home and give it to your wife, not to us," referring to one officer's use of a riot stick. The police concentrated their efforts on keeping one gate open. However, when company execu- tives began arriving in their lim- ousines at a side entrance the po- lice w e r e forced to shift their forces in order to protect the com- pany leadership and their auto- mobiles. PSYCHO-DRAMA OF EX=DRUG ADDICTS! "without question the most "movingtheatrical experience in New York." - Walter Kerr, New York Times TRUEBLOOD AUDITORIUM Thurs., Feb. 12-8 P.M. Fri., Feb. 13-7:15 and 10 PM TICKETS $2.75-ist floor Union Available: M-F 11-4; Sat. 1-3 Non-violent vigil planned 1 Coming: Sun., Feb. 15 3 P.M., Hill Aud. TOM WOLFE-Author of Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test IR? Interfaith Council for Peace and Michigan Council to Repeal the Draft are sponsoring a "pro- peace, anti-military" vigil at noon today at the Ann Arbor office of the Selective Service System. The local vigil is planned to co- incide with the first day of a national fast and vigil at the White House, sponsored by Clergy and Laymen Concerned about Viet- nam. The Ann Arbor action is the first of a weekly series of Wednes- day vigils planned to continue through Passover. Marchers will leave the Inter- faith Council for Peace office at 602 E. Huron at 11:45 a.m. and walk to the Selective Service of- fice at 103 E. Liberty. "It is through this door," say vigil organizers, "that young men pass from a free society w h i c h holds that ultimate value lies in the individual into another world in which dreams, hopes, con- science, even life are sacrificed to the service of goals they can have no part in establishing." Organizers say the vigil will be silent and non-violent. "We go in peace, to protest violence," say the vigil's organizers. Also scheduled for tomorrow is a march in support of national Black Panther leader Huey New- ton and six Ann Arbor Black Berets arrested last August. The march will begin on the Diag and proceed to the County Bldg., end- ing in a rally there. U' faces eost of schools for Northwood's children NOW PLAYING NATIONAL SENtRAL CORPORATION FO . EASTERN T .-EA7- FOX VLLaI 375 No. MAPLE P©. "769.1300 TIMES MON.-FRI. 7:10-9:05 (Continued from Page 1) According to Scott Westerman,t superintendent of the Ann Arbor public schools, the cost of educat- ing each child is $988. Westerman says that Michigan State University "has provided full-scale education for the child- ren who live in its housing, and has also reimbursed the l o c a l school system in per pupil cost." "It therefore seems legitimate for the University to spend as much as it costs. the community to educate the children," he adds. DUSTIN HOFFMAN MIA FARROW 4OHNANT)MARY BACH CLUB presents "Bach's Music- An Introduction" plus people, food, fun, etc. EVERYONE INVITED! Wed. Feb. 11-8 P.M. 1236 WASHTENAW 665-6806 663-2827 663-3819 Try Daily Classifieds 1f 1 AomoittlZ. ® _ 662.2.56 L t ocrate. 'O wrtOi t 4h .All etsoott owt "One of the year's most pleasant But Feldkamp disagrees. "If these units were-on the public tax rolls, the students wouldn't have to pay the per pupil cost," he says. "They should only pay as much as Ann Arbor residents pay." Ann Ar- bor residents pay a percentage of their property assessment set in millage elections. The University would like to reach an agreement which could cover a three-year period, starting with the next fiscal year, says Pierpont.nHe hopes to reach a set- tlement in Marbh. The agreement would have to be approved by the Board of Edu- cation and the Regents. Howard M. Brilliant, a graduate student in the aerospace engin- eering department, has been award d the Edward H. White II Fellowship for the current aca- demic year. The fellowship was established in 1967 after the accident at Cape Kennedy which took the life of astronaut White, a University alumnus. The fellowship is award- ed on the basis of over-all aca- demic excellence and outstanding contributions to student activities. SAT. AND SUN. 1:30-3:20 5:15-7:10-9:(5 2col quotw,.0 4e rr movie experiences." "'The Reivers' fills one with a joyous sense of life and laugh- f ter. A narvelous time is had by all."-New York Magazine. -Time * FRI.-FEB. 13th-11:30 ONLY SUSPENSEFUL AND MEANINGFUL UKC ZU 'UE I A N D RADICAL FILM SERIES Steve McQueen "The Reivers" PRESENTS Eventually: "VIVA MAX"- MORGAN Directed by KAREL REISZ - K with VANESSA REDGRAVE* DAVID WARNER KING KONG Mich- iras 6 al: wednesday february I11 *"Best Actress" at Cannes Film Festival I I I I II I