i I I TATE EndsWed I h1:00-3:00-! 7:00-9:05 "ONE OF THE YEAR'S TEN BEST" esday! 5:00- P.J the im4c -REX REED A AV &-V COLOR IJ lUntied Arut 7 n ews to day by The Associated Press and College Press Service BRITISH AND SOVIET proposals for outlawing biological and chemical warfare will have top priority when a 15-nation disarmament committee reconvenes today in Geneva. The committee has been recessed for three-and-a-half months while various disagreements were being settled. The British proposal would ban biological warfare, while the Soviet one would ban all biological and chemical armaments, includ- ing tear gasses, defoliants and herbicides, such as those used in Viet- nam by the United States. A COMPROMISE version of the vetoed education and pov- erty appropriations bill was produced by the House Appropria- tions Committee. The committee bill provides $19.3 billion for the Departments of Labor; Health, Education and Welfare; the Office of Economic Op- portunity and related agencies. The bill is $693 million above President Nixon's budget, but $445 less than the bill he vetoed Jan. 28 as excessive and inflationary. The bill ,however, contains a ban agairst using any of the money for school integration purposes such as bussing. There is also a pro- vision which would allow the President to adjust the amounts spent - thus making the appropriation totals comparatively irrelevant. These two aspects of the bill are expected to come under heavy attack on the House floor. The appropriations for the departments involved are for the cur- rent fiscal year which began last July 1. These departments mean- while have been operating under stopgap financing resolutions, the latest of which expires next week. * * * PRESIDENT NIXON set up a Cabinet-level "working group" to help school districts achieve desegregation. Nixon said he wants desegregation to be implemented with a minimum of disruption - whether by bussing or otherwise - of the educational routines of children. He would also like to maintain the neighborhood school concept as much as possible and to insure that desegregation problems are dealt with uniformally throughout the country. The chairman of the committee will be Vice President Spiro Ag- new who will be assisted by Secretary of Labor George Shultz, Atty. Gen. John Mitchell, Postmaster Gen. Winton Blount, HEW Secretary Robert Finch, Office of Economic Opportunity Director Donald Rums- feld and presidential assistants Daniel Moynihan and Bryce Harlow. CHET HUNTLEY will leave the NBC "Huntley-Brinkley Report" this summer.J On NBC's early evening newscast yesterday, David Brinkley said, "Chet Huntley, on vacation, is in Montana where he announced today that Aug. 1 he will leave NBC News, and the Huntley-Brinkley Report, after 131/2 years and go into a private enterprise, the de- velopment of a big recreational area in Montana."I Huntley announced his plans for developing a $19.5 million year- round tourist resort near Yellowstone National Park at a news con- ference with Montana Gov. Forrest Anderson.p Huntley said he will leave NBC sometime between May 15 andd Aug. 1. Initial construction on the resort, to be called Big Sky of 1 Montana, will begin at that time. ZAMBIAN PRESIDENT KENNETH KAUNDA asked Secretary of State William Rogers to close down the U.S. consulate ina Rhodesia. -F Rogers was visiting Kaunda as part of his 10-nation tour of) Africa. The Secretary of State said he doubted that the consulate would be closed, but promised to convey the request to President Nixon.-o Tuesday, February 17, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three £frti~an A-A. Senategru backs Caswel WASHINGTON ( -- Judge G. Harrold Carswell's nomi- nation to the Supreme Court now goes to the Senate after winning the approval of the Senate Judiciary Committee by a 12-4 vote yesterday. The four votes against recommending Senate confirma- tion of the 50-year-old Tallahassee, Fla., jurist, nominated by President Nixon on Jan. 19, were cast by Democrats. Chairman James O. Eastland (D-Miss.), said a majority report will be filedlimmediately but 10 days have been granted for preparation of a minority report. This will delay taking up the nomination in the" page three 1 " -Associated Press The Hershey exit Gen. Lewis B. Hershey leaves Selective Service headquarters in Washington yesterday as he retires as head of the nation's draft system after 28 years in office. See story on this page. UNION BALLROOM: Free Huey Coalition holds ,birthday party TICKETS ON SALE NOW! PTP BOX OFFICE, MENDELSSOHN THEATRE ART HUR MILLERS 8:30 P.M. * - - * * * * *9 FEB. 24-25 By LARRY LEMPERT "All the power to all the peo- ple!''" was the rallying cry Sun- day night; as more than 250 mem- bers of the Black Panther Party and its supporters gathered in the Michigan Union Ballroom to cele- brate Huey P. Newton's birthday. The evening of speakers, films, and music was organized by the Free Huey Coalition to raise funds for Newton's legal defense. Newton - imprisoned minister of defense of the Black Panther .,. .9 . .. " ;;", ,t . S:; 4 FISCAL MATTERS Colleges, state confer starring DOUGLASS WATSON JOSEPH BULOFF BE"l MILLER CARLE BENSEN Direte d JOSEPH ANTHONY Party - is appealing a conviction for voluntary manslaughter in the killing of an Oakland, Calif. po- liceman. The Panthers protest that Newton's conviction and im- prisonment is one example of re- pression. "That manslaughter charge is complete bullshit," s a i d speaker Terry Drye of the Black Berets. "If they want to put us in jail, they're going -to have to fight for it," declared Black Beret G a r y Wilson. Wilson is one of the "Ann Arbor Six" now facing trial on charges stemming from a police raid on Beret headquarters last August. Amar Casey of the Black Stu- dents Union (BSU) attacked the University for its allegedly repres- sive role. "The University doesn't+ educate, the University teaches you to regurgitate," he said. "It doesn't broaden your mind, it pro- grams your mind," he continued. "We must be seeds among the people, take root among the peo- ple, become part of the people," Casey declared. He announced+ that BSU, in conjunction with the Berets, will implement a free breakfast for school children pro- gram and conduct a clothing drive in the Ann Arbor area. Nancy Kohn, a member of Wo- men's Liberation, University law student Ellis Boal, White Pan- ther Skip Taub, and a representa- tive from the Detroit chapter of, the National Committee to Com- bat Fascism, also spoke.- The benefit was part of a week of nation-wide demonstrations in1 support of the Panthers.< Senate until the end of Feb- ruary or early next month. Eastland predicted a 2-1 con- firmation vote for Carswell, the second Southerner nominated by Nixon to fill a Supreme Court va- cancy that has existed since Abe Fortas's resignation last May. Nixon's first choice, J u d g e Clement F. Haynsworth Jr., of Greenville, S.C., was rejected by the Senate in November by a 55- 45 vote after a bitter battle over judicial philosophy and ethics. The Judiciary Committee had backed Haynsworth's nomination by a 10-7 vote. All but one of the committee's seven GOP members, including Republican le.ader Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania and his deputy, Robert P. Griffin of Michigan, voted to approve Carswell's nom- ination. Both opposed Hayns- worth on the final vote. Sen. Marlow W. Cook, R-Ky., passed but will be permitted to cast a vote within 24 hours. An aide said Cook had not made up his mind when the roll was called at the committee's closed meeting. The Democrats w h o voted against recommending Carswell's confirmation were Philip A. Hart of Michigan, Edward M. Kennedy of Massachusetts, Birch Bayh of Indiana, and Joseph D. Tydings of Maryland. Kennedy was one of four com- mittee members who were absent but were permitted to vote by tel- ephone. The committee's rules bar the use of proxies.- The virtually solid support of GOP committee members for Carswell's nomination contrasted, with Republican defections that. played a key part in the Senate's rejection of Haynsworth. In the Senate vote on Hayns- worth's nomination, 17 of the 43 Republican senators voted against confirmation. Clarence Mitchell, director of' the Washington Bureau of t h e NAACP said the vote "is a kick in the teeth for those of us who have sought to quell the fires of racism among Negroes in the United States. "No platitudes and no excuses offered for the nominee can ever erase the fact that on this day an advocate of white supremacy andc an enemy of civil rights got the support of an official body of the United States Senate," said Mit- chell. Acting draft head - e appointed WASHINGTON (P) - Col. Dee Ingold, a longtime aide to former Selective Service director Lewis B. Hershey, was named acting di- rector yesterday and said he will attempt no policy changes during what he expects to be a brief term in office. The White House announced the appointment of Ingold to give t h e Selective Service temporary leadership between yesterday's de- parture of Gen. Hershey, who headed the draft for more than 28 years, and t h e anticipated ap- pointment of his successor. The White House has been seek- ing a replacement f o r Hershey since Oct. 10 when it announced that Hershey, 76, was to be reas- signed as an adviser to the Presi- dent on manpower mobilization. Hershey still was in his office yesterday morning and met with Ingold as soon as newsreports ar- rived of t h e White House an- nouncement. Ingold said yesterday afternoon he had not yet been officially no- tified of his appointment but had known of it informally since Fri- day. Asked how he feels about his temporary assignment Ingold said, "I don't know. How would any- one feel?" Ingold, 65, has been assistant to Hershey specializing in the management of the 18,864 mem- bers of local draft boards through- out the country. Answering questions, I n g o 1 d said he thinks President Nixon's aim of a draft-less volunteer ar- my "would be an excellent thing if it can be provided." 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 thrugh 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. HELD OVER "Two of the year's 10 Best" -Neal Gabler, Daily "A VERY FUNNY, IMMENSELY APPEALING MOVIE ~ '" anyN Y "~ By ROBERT KRAFTOWITZ Representatives from the state's1 public colleges and universities met with members of the state Senate Appropriations Committee over the weekend and discussed the future trends and financial needs of the state's public colleges and universities. President Robben Fleming and two vice presidents represented the University at the conference, which took place Sunday and yes- terday in Jackson. The conference was held in preparation for more specific dis- cussions between college adminis- trators and state legislators con- cerning the state's appropriation to higher education for the 1970- 71 fiscal year. This was the first time such a conference has been held prior to the formal budget deliberations in Lansing. According to Arthur Ross, vice president for state relations and planning, the appropriations com- mittee has scheduled a hearing in early March to discuss the Univer- sity's requested state appropriation to its 1970-71 general fund oper- ating budget. Ross and Stephen Spurr, vice president 'and dean of graduate studies accompanied Fleming to the weekend conference. Among the major topics discuss- ed were: -The objectives of higher edu- cation in the 1970's; -Methods proposed by the col- leges for meeting these objectives; and -Methods for securing more educational benefits from current expenditures for higher education. Meanwhile, administrators re- main pessimistic about convincing the Legislature to approve -n al- location to the University's gen- eral fund above the amount re- quested last month by Gov. Wil- liam Milliken. "While it will be difficult to get more money than the governor recommended, we certainly plan to press all the items in our orig- inal request," Ross said yesterday. Vice President for Academic Af- fairs Allan Smith said last week that a tuition increase is likely if the Legislature does not approve an appropriation to the University which is substantially higher than Milliken's recommendation. OPENS THURS. THRU MARCH 15 Th-I "Hip Off-Broadway Hit Knocks The Box & Other American Fetishes" " *.. you'll think you never laughed so hard". -Johanna Steinmetz, Chicago Today "... more aching laughter than I have heard on Broadway this year" -Tom Prideaux, Life, 12/19/69 "Go And See GROOVE TUBE" --Clive Barnes, N.Y. 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