ART page th Tuesday, January 13, 1970 Q LOAN JANUARY 12-16d.h 3524 and 3529 SAB v Hours: Mon.-5-7, Tues. & Thurs.-7-9, Wed. & Fri.-4:30-7 __<_=__<_::>_<-=_ <--_O<-_ _<--_ <-->_<-->__<--___ --____-::I ree 4I, tt~i~an til NEWS PHrONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Ann Arbor, Michigan Ppge T Pae - essand College Press Service ...._ ._ I by The Associated Pr Shows at 1, 3, 5,'7, 9 DIAL 5-6290 William Faulkner's Pulitzer Prize-Winning Novel "The Reivers" is now a film! "'The Reirers' fills one with o a'''- joyous sense of life and laugh- : % ; ? ?;.. ter. A marvelous time is had by t'>-;. ::;::...:;;;;; all."-New York Magazine= Steve McQueen : The Reivers with SHARON FARRELL and WIL.L GEER J r- - ENDING WEDNESDAY DIAL 8-64116 She is woman: animal, saint, mistress, lover. Which is the true Based on The Alexandra Quartet by tawrence Durreil Panavision" Color by De Luxe 2Q Thursday: "CAMILLE 2000", HOUSE SPEAKER JOHN McCORMACK'S chief aide and a lobbyist have been indicted on charges of conspiring to use the Democratic leader's office to influence matters before govern- ment bodies. Martin Sweig, who worked in the speaker's office for 24 years, has been suspended from his post of administrative assistant since Oct. 16. Sweig allegedly pressured several federal agencies in behalf of persons, including underworld figures, who were referred to him by SNathan Voloshen, the lobbyist named in the indictment. Some of the agencies contacted during the six-year conspiracy, according to U.S. Attorney Robert Morgenthau, are the Departments of Justice, Treasury, Defense, and Labor, the Post Office, the Selec- tice Service System, and the Bureau of Prisons. * * * A PARIS DAILY NEWSPAPER Le Figaro reported yesterday that an Iraqi arms purchasing mission is in Paris negotiating a contract for 50 France Mirage jets. The report follows government confirmation \ three days ago of an agreement to sell 50 Mirages to Libya. Both announcements have received angry attacks from the French press and government critics. In making th Libya announcement, French officials stressed the government policy of not selling arms to countries which it considers belligerents in the Middle East. Although Iraq is not on that list, Iraqi planes were the only ones to bomb Israel during the 1967 six-day war and Iraqui tanks shell Israel daily. SAN FRANCISCO MAYOR JOSEPH ALIOTO announced yesterday that he will not run for governor of California in the next election. The statement followed disclosure of Alioto's participation in fee-splitting with Washington state officials during a series of anti- trust suits there. Alioto pointed to his duties as mayor and a pending libel suit against Look magazine which linked him with the Mafia as his reasons for not running._ Rober Boas, California Democratic chairman, followed Alioto's statement with a call for unity behind Jess Unruh, Assembly minor- ity leader, as the party's candidate for governor. BLACK YOUNGSTERS disrupted a session of the New York j State Senate yesterday and set minor fires =-- which were quicklyI extinguished - in the Capitol building. The demonstrations came as the senators were approving a reso- lution designating Jan. 15 as Martin Luther King Day in the state. The youths demanded educational reforms and called for the release of a group of Black Panthers arrested in New York for al- legedly plotting attacks on Manhattan department stores, commuter railroads and white policemen.e * * * * THE U.S. 1ST INFANTRY DIVISION and the 26th Marine Regiment will comprise more than half of President Nixon's with- drawal of 50,000 servicemen from Vietnam, the U.S. Command has t announced. Their departure will begin in mid-February and should be com-t pleted by mid-April. The 1st Infantry, with 18,000 troops, was the' first Army division sent to Vietnam. Other homebound units are the 3rd Brigade of the 4th Infantry Division, three squadrons of the Air Force's 12th Tactical Fighter Wing and some unidentified Army, Navy and Air Force support groups. x As in the two previous withdrawals, troops with the longest serv- ice will be sent back to the United States and those with shortert service periods will be reassigned to other units in Vietnam. Suprem~e Court takes no action on Southern desegregation issue .Ag S ree Vte ruing on - ~~*** atorneys' loyalty ath WASHINGTON (Af -- The Supreme Court agreed yester- day to decide whether the states may keep "subversives" from practicing law or bar Communist party candidates from running for public office. : :_ The court took on these civil liberties issues as it returned from a four-week holiday recess. Unexpectedly, it did not announce a new decision on the pace of school desegregatioh in the South. ;,. ;,The first case, from New York, challenges the right of fitness committees to ask prospective lawyers whether they .'.belong to subversive organizations or support the Constitu- tion. A three-judge court in New York City upheld the chal- 11 YS * I U~VI a Impassioned and impressive! Signals perhaps a new boldness in American cinema! Extraordinary!" -Time "One of the year's " 10 Best!" -Neal Gabler Michigan Daily "Dazzling ...Devastating... Brilliant! Must be seen by anyone who cares about... modern movies! " -Newsweek -Associated Press GOV. LESTER MADDOX leads 300 protesters around the capitol building in Atlanta, Georgia yesterday. The marchers called for a delay in integration of public school teaching staffs. transfer of teachers lenged New York system last February. The case will be heard this spring. At the same time the court will hear a second round of argu- ments in cases from Arizona and Ohio which challenge the right of state bar committees to ask pros- pective lawyers whether they be- long to organizations dedicated to the government's violent o v e r- throw. The appeal was made by the Law Students Civil Rights Research Council, the Columbia Law Stu- dents Guild, the New York City chapter of the National Lawyers Guild and six prospective lawyers. "Screening programs, such as New York's," the appeal said, "di- rectly threaten the independence of the.bar, state and federal, by inhibiting attorneys and' prospec- tive attorneys from associating with and representing unpopular groups or couses." The second case, from Minne- sota, challenges the right of the state to keep Communist party candidates off the ballot. Addi- tionally, it is a test of the 1954 Communist Control Act. The school case awaiting decis- ion involves about 300,000 stu- dents in 14 districts in Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana and Mississippi. In another decision, the Su- preme Court rejected contentions by black militant H. Rap Brown that he has a constitutional right to be tried in the Maryland coun- ty where he is accused of inciting a riot rather than in another county which has a much smaller percentage of blacks. Draft board power over C's upeld . WASHINGTON (A') - The Su- preme Court rejected 7?to 1 yester- day a challenge to the power of draft boards to compel conscien- tious objectors to work in hos- pitals. Timothy J. Boroski, a M o u n t 'Morris, Mich., free-lance. c o u r t reporter, had claimed such ord- ers were outlawed when the 13th Amendment prohibited slavery and "involuntary servitude." Boroski, 28, was convicted in 1967 and sentenced to five years in prison for refusing to report for work at Harper Hospital in De- troit. He had been classified a con- scientious objector by a draft board in Flint, Mich., but claimed that his ministerial work for Je- hovah's Witnesses entitled him to a ministerial exemption from the draft. The government said the Selec- tive Service program of forcing consciencious objectors to work in hospitals has constitutional auth- orization in the grant to Congress to "raise and support armies." Boroski's petition for a hearing was turned down with the nota- tion only that Justice William O. Douglas dissented. The conviction was affirmed last June by the U. S. Circuit Court in Cincinnati. Prmout ictuis presents tec~vicolr' " Paramount p'ct'rt "X" persons under 18 not admitted ...rU flAVUNU OC**yfllC H ELD OVER AGAIN Shows 7:00 and 9:00 presentst DR. RICHARD CRAWF ORD speaking on "BEETHOVEN'S EROICA SYMPHONY" Refreshments and FUN afterwards Everyone welcome! (No musical knowledge needed) WEDNESDAY!, Jan. 14-8 P.M. 1236 Washtenaw (at S. Forest, near S. Univ.) TRANSPORTATION provided to and from meeting For transportation call: 665-6806, 761-7356, 769-2003 663-6221 Further info: 663-2827, 764-9883, 764-9887 (Jenny), 764-1671 (Doug) NATONAL OeENtRAL eORPQRATON FOX EASTERN THNEAWRE3 FOX VIL aGI 375No.MAPLE RD.-769-1300 MON.-FRI.-7:15-9:15 SAT. & SUN.-1 :30-3:20- 5:15-7:15-9:15 The Michigan Daly, 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 mail. Summer Session publshed 'Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $3.00 by carrier, $3.00 by mail. "THE YEAR'S BEST COMEDY !" -SATURDAY RE/JEW A FRANKOVICH PRODUCTION' FOR COLUMBIA RELEASE 1 L --- -- -- Read and Use Daily Classifieds ----COUPON------- irrn pwi. fN U I R r t'THOMPSO'S: I UI Soff 50c off | a I a Large one item (or more> *U pizza. One coupon per pizza i Mon., Tues., Wed., Thurs. Only ; JAN. 12-15 s .rnrnrinrnrrruin srnrnrnin i 1 1 1 i I 1 s f 1 ATLANTA, Ga. (A') - A federal court order to establish a 57-43 per cent ratio of Negroes 'a n d whites on Atlanta Public school faculties was delayed yesterday until March 5 by U.S. D i s t r i c t Judge Frank A. Hooper. The delay was granted a f t e r three days of demonstrations by Atlanta pupils in protest to the order, originally scheduled to be- come effective Feb. 1. Hooper said he had obtained permission to extend the effective date from Judge Griffin Bell of the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals last Friday. School officials had asked for the month's delay to allow teach- er transfers to coincide with the beginning of the last quarter of the school year. Informed of the delay, Gov. Les- ter Maddox gave credit to demon- strations by Atlanta pupils. Maddox, who handed out Amer- ican flags to 300 protesting pupils yesterday morning and offered to lead a march on the federal court building, called for continued de- monstrations. Hooper's ruling came at a hear- ing on a hastily drawn plan to as- sure that faculties at all Atlanta city schools will be 57 per cent Negro and 43 per cent white, the same ratio as the city's pupil pop- ulation. The plan was drawn during sev- eral emergency sessions of the At- lanta school board prompted by a MINORITY LEADER RESIGNS U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals or- der handed down Dec. 1. Testimony on the merits of the plan is continuing. There was no indication when a ruling on the plan itself might be expected. As testimony was being heard, Georgia state Representative Ward Edwards was preparing legisla- tion which would abolish Geor- gia's compulsory school attend- ance law. Edwards said he will introduce the bill, which has the support of the Maddox administration, tomor- row, the second day of Georgia's 1970 General Assembly. Levin lea to consid Ves state se er guberna State Senator Sander Levin (D- Berkley) yesterday annoupced his resignation as Senate minority leader so he can "have time to ex- plore the possibilities of running for governor." Levin said he would make a decision on whether to be a can- didate for the gubernatorial nom- ination "within four to eight weeks." In order to provide for an order- ly transition of Democratic leader- ship in the state, Levin said he will continue as minority leader until his successor is chosen. He said he has called a meeting Wed- nesday of Senate Democrats for this purpose. Levin declined to indicate a personal choice for his successor. Levin said chances for the Dem- ocrats to win the 1970 guberna-+ tonal race were "the best since 1962." The last Democratic gov-+ ~nate post ernor, John Swainson, was in of- fice at that time. Levin, 38, has been a senator since 1965. He became minority leader in Jan. 1969, when insur- gent liberal senators toppled long- time leader Ray Dzendzel of De- troit. Prior to his election as floor leader, Levin served as state Dem- ocratic chairman. Former Detroit Mayor Jerome Cavanagh, former state chairman Zolton Ferency and State. Sen. Roger Craig (D-Dearborn) in- dicated at a meeting last month one of them might also seek the Democratic gubernatorial nomina- tion. Milliken is generally considered t h e Republican gubernatorial choice. He has said recently he is not yet ready to announce his candidacy. Cincinnati. I CANTERBURY SOUSE Presents T .: . ,. ....; y :::". }. , ?" ,t :'4 :.. . : ::{t;::::::::;:: 't;; ;f$i t h . . ,, , ; arc ti'. ; f.. S. }; ;i?$??: r i:.''rri ri:tii S ',"r . >i: ht 3 t~dt .y. { g t '+ tom: 6J=v:., ¢:. Once when lying on a cliff ©verloaking the Lang Island Saund, nat so for from where Walt V1/hi tmon did it, I thauahfi I heard the The University of Michigan Chamber Choir, conducted by Thomas Hilbish, will give a con- cert at 8 p.m. Jan. 14 in Hill Auditorium. The concert will be open to the public free of charge, On the program will be works by Bach, Schumann, Tallis; Bas- sett, and Schoenberg. Senator Levin canidcy - . SINGLE SHOWS NOW ON SALE! ANN ARBOR JUNIOR LIGHT OPERA proudly presents Herb Gardners' smash comedy A THO7USAND CLOWNS THURSDAY through SATURDAY, 15-17 January 1970 SCHERLING AUDITORIUM (University High Schol) Curtain time: 8:00 P.M. All seats $1.50. Box Office open 7:00 P.M. prior to performance dates only. AUDITION for ArtsCorale AUD C-ANGELL HALL T & Th-3-5 or Phone'764-2506 PROR= KLEIN, conductor I 5 GREAT PLAYS! 2 Performances Each MRI..AT..JAN. 33.24 BA ESLTRIP[ axaa 8nawu ran moo LFs orsseNcRQNz I i U PIANISTS!I PRESENTED BY THE UNIVERSITY MUSICAL SOCIETY SINCE A YEAR AGO -Serkin - Petrov - Richter - Haaser - De I.arrocha -Weissenberg - Pennario - Sandor - Graffman - Dichter - Ashkenazy - AND NOW CUE n.5h ~ m~uw DILI~~ d . U IE