NW York Daily mmes New. York Post."Nr 4 /9A FRANKOViCH PROOI -7'... lNii Positivelly f ENDS Thursday low Yok ima OUCTIoN the news today by The Associated Press and College Press Service E I I Tuesday, March 24, 1970 .-99L CAL- 41P 4hr 4LAP ttt1 page three Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three .. Nrwseek ~1 TECHNICOLOR 000 DAYS" From COlumbla Pictr"lWe FRI.: "ANNE OF 1000 DAYS" 3 WEEKS IN LONDON Detroit/London/ Detroit Departs Returns July 31 $259.00 For further information, phone or stop in. STUDENTS INTERNATIONAL 1231 S. University 769-6871 11 TONITE at the PRESIDENT NIXON will issue a lengthy statement to the nation this morning on the school integration situation. The President has spent weeks discussing the problem with key administration leaders, educators and black leaders inside and out- side the administration, White House spokesmen said. The statement will not be televised. A RAILROAD UNION LEADER told Congress yesterday that any delay in forcing the settlement of stalled rail industry negotiations could bring on a nationwide strike. William W. Winpisinger, chief negotiator for four AFL-CIO shop- craft unions, said he preferred Congress enact the forced settlement proposed by President Nixon rather than risk further delay. His appeal for a congressionally enforced settlement ran counter to a long record of bitter union opposition to imposed solutions for labor disputes. The rail workers in the 15-month-old dispute over wages and job jurisdiction are working under a 37-day strike ban ordered by Con- gress. It expires April 11. CARLO GAMBINO, regarded by authorities as the Cosa Nostra's 'boss of bosses,' was arrested by the FBI in New York yesterday. Gambino was charged with conspiracy in connection with a plannedh$6-million armored car robbery. A Senate committee has called the 67-year-old Gambino one of "the most powerful under- world leaders in the United States." A NORTH VIETNAMESE ADVANCE has driven 80,000- 100,000 Laotion refugees out of the area south of the Plain of Jars, a U.S. government official said yesterday. ' Edgar Buell, a refugee administrator in Laos for the U.S. Agency for International Development, said in a news conference that 4,000- 5,000 of the refugees are likely to die from disease. The North Viet-, namese advance has been going on throughout the last week. Shortly before Buell spoke with newsmen, Laotian premier Prince Souvanna Phouma told the nation in an Army Day speech that years of fighting had made refugees out of 700,000 Laotions. The country has a population estimated at three million. CAMBODIA'S new government yesterday held out prospects for improved relations with the United States. Cheng Heng, the provinsional head of state following the over- throw last Wednesday of Prince Norodom Sihanouk, emphasized he intends to return Cambodia to a position of "true neutrality." American forces operating in Tay Ninh Province in South Viet- nam have been ordered to exercise caution to avoid border violations or other incidents involving Cambodia, informed sources said yes- terday. VIRUS-CANCER RESEARCH has produced two new cancerj tests, scientists from the National Cancer Institute announced yesterday. One test serves as an indicator of whether a patient will be a good candidate for surgery by challenging his natural defense mechanisms. The other is a skin test which may be valuable in identifying persons with a high risk of developing cancer. Both tests grew out of virus-cancer research being conducted by the federal government. ** * THE FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION is toning down its announced package warning for 8.5 million users of oral con- traceptives. After pressure from physicians, drug manufacturers and high government officials, the 600-word leaflet announced earlier this month is being extensively reworded, an FDA spokesman confirmed yesterday. In a major change, the revised draft says "rare instances of blood clotting are the most important known complications of the oral con- traceptives." The original wording was much sharper on clots. The warning would be contained in all packages of oral contra- ceptives for the education of users. -Daily-Nancy wechsler Eviction protest Court rules for hearings rirt welf are cutoffs WASHINGTON (-- The Supreme Court yesterday gave the more than nine million Americans on welfare the right to a formal hearing before their benefits can be suspended. The 5-3 decision requires welfare officials to allow any individual threatened with a cutoff to appear in person and to challenge and cross-examine witnesses, including the case4 worker. Meanwhile, the welfare payments would be con- tinued. Only this kind of an evidentiary hearing, said Justice William J. Brennan Jr. for the majority, satisfied the 14th GOLIARD BRASS [NSEMBLE with the Vox Humana Chamber Ensemble (16 voice madrigal group) all dontations go to Martin Luther King Fund 9 P.M. 1421 Hill 761-1451 Picketers gather around the mobile home of Mrs. Sarah Golden at the Bell Home Village in Belleville to block the removal of her home. Thirty-five Tenants Union and UAW members gathered there yesterday for the protest. See story, Page 12. 125 FIGHTERS: +! III Nixon denies Israeli request for more jets. Amendment's command that citizens be afforded due pro- ces of law. He said he realizes the hearings would cost the states money and that payments once made would be impossible to recoup, even when a cutoff is proved to be justified. But, Brennan said, the eligible recipient's interest in receiving aid that he may desperately and im- mediately need, coupled with the state's interests in not barring a deserving person by mistake, out- weighs administrative and fiscal burdens. Public assistance is not mere charity, Brennan said, but-quot- ing from the preamble to the Con- stitution-a means to "promote the general welfare, and secure the blessing of liberty to ourselves and our posterity." The ruling united three liberals, Brennan and Justices William 0. Douglas and Thurgood Marshall with two generally conservative justices, John M. Harlan and By- ron R. White. The Court was considering New York and California procedures for reviewing welfare cases before sus- pending aid. In one vote, the Court ruled both states' procedures un- constitutional. Chief Justice Warren E. Burger and Justice Hugo L. Black filed strong dissenting opinions. The third dissenter, Justice Potter Ste- wart, said the issue was a close one for him but that he had decided the New York and California pro- cedures challenged in the court do riot violate the Constitution. Black's dissent stressed the ad- administrative b u r d e n hearings would cause the states. He said the court action serves to "paralyze the government's efforts to pro- tect itself against making pay- ments to people who are not en- titled to them." "1 BACH CLUB PRESENTS ANOTHER FANTASTIC PROGRAM!! Live Performance of Randolph Smith's SONATA MOVEMENT IN B MINOR GINA ERDREICH, Flute RUTH BURTON, Violin PHIL ZARET, Cello with short, ILLUMINATING remarks (with musical illustration) by Randolph Smith (Bach Club Pres. and Founder) on: " What Makes a Piece a Piece * How to Write Music * How to Plagiarize Music " Bach's Musical Offering ABSOLUTELY NO MUSICAL KNOWLEDGE IS NEEDED TO UNDERSTAND THE REMARKS WEDNESDAY, MAR. 25-8 P.M. 1236 Washtenaw at Forest (near S. Univ.) EVERYBODY WELCOME! Refreshments and Fun tfterwards. 663-2827, 761-7356, 764-9887 CINEMA Y's GREAT DIRECTORS' FESTIVAL TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY-MARCH 24, 25 JAN NEMEC'S ""ORATORIO .. FO R <.. PRAGUE" ; ; :=.; :}{ I '. l+i titi" Ji:" rn"" ti' 'Ka4 E H.ti f l ! 1 it 'v ii MX hti km f}1 1}"e :.{ f{4 M4. ~ : { P WASHINGTON (I)-The United States yesterday stalled action on an Israeli request for additional warplanes because "in our judg- ment Israel's air capacity is suf- ficient to meet its needs for the time being." In announcing the decision, Secretary of State William P. Rogers told a news conference that President Nixon decided to hold the request for 25 additional E'4 Phantoms and 100 A4 Sky- hawks "in abeyance for now." On the other hand, the United States responded favorably to Is- rael's request for economic as- sistance. The amount involved is in the neighborhood of $100 mil- lion, Rogers said. In Jerusalem, Israeli, Foreign Minister Abba Eban asked the United States to reconsder ur- gently its decision against sending further warplanes to Israel now, or face the prospect of "an ex- panded conflict" in the' Middle East. In a statement b r o a dc a s t throughout Israel, Eban expressed disappointment and concern at the decision. He said it might "in- crease the belligerence" of Egypt. But he thanked Rogers for his promise of $100, million in econ- omic aid. He also said Israel attaches im- portance to Rogers' comment that the United States is carefully ex- amining the Middle East conflict and the arms buildup in that re- gion. At the outset of his first news conference in three months, Rog- ers read a statement on the Israeli request. He said the request has been "carefully and sympathetic- ally considered in the light of the military situation." The United States, Rogers said, will 'keep a "close watch on the military balance in the area." He assured Israel that this country will provide aircraft "promptly if the situation requires it." Officials in Washington said that the reported introduction of SAM3 Soviet ground-to-air mis- siles into Egypt, though disturbing, did not affect Nixon's decision to deny Israel's request for war- planes because the SAM is a de- fensive weapon and the adminis- tration recognizes the right of both sides to defend themselves. Hi g court ton movie ease The Supreme Court yesterday agreed to rule on the alleged ob- scenity of the film "I Am Curious (Yellow)." The court will hear an appeal by Grove Press, Inc., the importer of the Swedish film and owner of American distribution rights. The appeal challenges Maryland's mo- tion picture censorship law and seeks a ruling that will prevent all injunctions against films. Such a decision would prohibit all offi- cials from preventing adults from seeing any movie in any American theater. The court also agreed to review a ruling in Boston that banned showing of the movie. "I Am Curious (Yellow)" has been banned from showing in Ann Arbor until the question of its ob- scenity will be taken to trial. The Fifth Forum theater and lawyers for Grove Press appealed the tem- porary injunction in the Circuit Court of Appeals, and State Court of Appeals, but were refused both times. The Defense has taken the case to the State Supreme Court, ques- tioning the constitutionality of the clause in a state obscenity law which allows judges to issue re- straining orders against the show- ing of films upon receiving a com- plait from any local official. They are awaiting a reply from -the court. In a separate ruling, the court held (6-2) that the Swedish film, "I, a Women," is not obscene. The decision reversed the conviction of the owners and manager of a Louisville, Ky., movie theater where the movie had played. Chief Justice Warren E. Burger, dissenting, said "we should not in- flexibly deny to each of the states the power to adopt and enforce its own standards as to obscenity and pornographic materials." "States ought to be-free- to deal with varying conditions and prob- lems in their area. 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 mail,. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $3.00 by carrier, $3.00 by jmail. NATIONAL GENERAL CORPORATION NOW FOX EASTERN THEATRE A SHOWING FOR VLLBGE 375 No. MAPLE RD.-"769-1300 TIMES 1:30-4:00 6:45-9:20 Committee formed to study child care center CHILDREN'S PRICE AT ALL SHOWS " Dazzling! Avivid experience. thrilling! A cliffhanger in space!" -L. A.Times i'FRANKO IPCw EST R hor Clmbi ~ NO EVENING SHOWS-TUES., MARCH 24 _ "TRIBUTE TO KING-MONTGOMERY TO MEMPHIS" ONE'SHOWING-8:00 P.M., ONLY By HESTER PULLING President Robben Fleming and the Child-Care Action Group for- mulated plans yesterday for of- ficials and Action Group members to study the feasibility of a Uni- versity-supported child care cen- ter. The meeting was a response to last week's demands for child care which the group had presented to Fleming. "There just isn't enough child- care available," one woman said as three children crawled under the conference table and played around the room. "We want some real commit- ment on the part of the Univer- sity," another woman added. "Child-care is the type of benefit that women are entitled to." The group then discussed with Fleming the possibility of starting a center in the University School's nursery school room. The Univer- sity School, under the auspices of the education school, is closing in June, and it already has physical facilities appropriate for small children. Fleming agreed to check into this idea and also made plans to establish a committee to work with, the child-care group. The child-care group insisted the proposed University School center would be only a beginning. I f I "Begun as a documentary of Czec- hoslovakia, and then simply con- tinued when the Russian tanks moved in . . . marked with the restraint and beauty- of Nemec's style . . . so moving that one is near tears from the first mo- ment!"-N.Y. TIMES a TOUR EUROPE "Soft Skin"-6:45 "Oratorio"-8:45 ~"Soft Skin"--9:15 BY CAR THURSDAY,I YVES ROBERT'S "Alexander" FRIDAY-MARCH 26, 27 MILOS FORMAN'S C& "Firemen's Ball" SATURDAY, SUNDAY-MARCH 28, 29-PETER SELLERS IN "Heavens Above" and "I'm All Right, Jack" MONDAY, TUESDAY-MARCH 30, 31 SHIRLEY CLARKE'S MICHAEL ROEMER'S "Cool World" & "Nothing But a Man" WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY-APRIL 1, 2 JOSEPH LOSEY'S 2 MICHAEL TRUMAN'S "The Accident" Ca "Model Murder Case" FRIDAY, SATURDAY-APRIL 3, 4 BO WIDERBERG'S KAREL REISZ'S "Elvira Madigan" &"Morgan" SUNDAY, MONDAY-APRIL 5, 6 CLAUDE BERRI'S BRUCE BROWN'S "The Two of Us" & "Endless Sulmmer" I See Europe as you want to see it, with the freedom and flexibility of your own car. * Students International will handle all of your auto needs with one of our overseas programs ... and it's easy. We eliminate the red tape and will arrange for your U.S.N.S.A. Auto Grant, saving you money on leases, rentals and purchases. 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