lw omomdmw I page three FRESHMEN APPLICATIONS ARE BEING ACCEPTED FOR SOPH SHOW Cl4e M.. ir rt ttn DaiItv NET'S PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Saturday, March 28, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three II t4 CENTRAL COMMITTEE The annual theatrical production run entirely by SOPHOMORES. Applications AVAILABLE at UAC Offices 2nd floor Union or call 764:8718 Sat. and Sun. - March 28,29 The Seventh Seal' dir. INOMAR BERGMAN (1956) "God is dead or death is God" The film is here. 7 & 9:05 ARCHITECTURE 662-8871 75C AUDITORIUM Nixon firm on Carswell KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. (Pi) -- White House press secretary Ron- ald Ziegler yesterday said t hat President Nixon is still standing firmly and confidently behind Judge G. Harrold Carswell's nomi- nation to the Supreme Court. The reaffirmation of support for Carswell came in response to ques- tions about a Miami Herald story from Washington which said the administration is making no spec- ial lobby efforts on behalf of the nomination. The Herald also reported that one Senate source said the Presi- dent was somewhat discouraged by widespread opposition to C a r s - well in the Senate and the legal community. A vote to recommit the Carswell nomination is .scheduled for April 6 in the Senate. If the nomination survives that test, a vote on con- firmation has been set for April 8. Sen. Frank Moss, D-Utah, yes- terday became the 34th senator to publicly announce his opposition to Carswell. Forty senators are on re- cord in support. Asked whether Nixon still is op- timistic about the nomination, Ziegler replied: "Yes, very much so. The President is confident Judge Carswell will be confirmed. He stands behind him and sup- ports him in all aspects of the debate." Ziegler said no consideration whatever was being given to with- drawing the nomination and there was no indication Carswell would ask that it be pulled back. 3 strikes face U. S. WASHINGTON (A) - Nationwide trucking negotiations collapsed yesterday, leaving the possibility of work stoppages in the airline, train and trucking industries The new major labor crisis came during spreading flight delays of the nation's airlines in a slowdown by federal air traffic controllers, and warnings from rail union leaders that their long-simmering wage and job-jurisdiction dispute could explode into a nationwide strike at any moment despite a temporary lid imposed by Congress. In the trucking conflict, Teamsters Union acting presi- dent Frank E. Fitzsimmons said, "Negotiations for renewal of the national freight agreement have reached an impasse." transportation -Associated Press. TEMPORARILY GROUNDED passengers lounge and sleep on the floor of LaGuardia airport. PICKET FOOD SERVICE: Students show gt reactons I 1I iii I STUDENT BOOK SGRVICE KILLER SALE EVERYTHING ridiculously Reduced in Price. ALL USED BOOKS AT 50% OFF AND MORE By MICHAEL SCHNECK Students in the University res- ident hall system had a chance to show their commitment to the cause of the Black Action Move- ment (BAM) yesterday as pickets prevented cafeteria workers from entering dormitories to prepare food. Reaction to sacrificing their stomachs varied widely among the affected students. "Why don't you call the po- ganizations such as the Cantebury lice," screamed a girl in South House agreed to serve food to stu- Quad. The dietician explained dents. The food was free though that the presence of police would the coalition urged that contri- only cause more trouble. butions be made. "I paid for this food and they Food was served all day in the have no right to deprive me of 'it," Fish Bowl and in the lobby of the girl continued. South Quad. Other students were favorable Approximately 40 pickets were to the strike, also at the plant department Sthik it'satibubuilding on Hoover street wherfl "I think it's a tribute to the they attempted to prevent main- organization that they were suc- tenance personnel from entering cessful in shutting down the foo and leaving the building. service." said another South Quad ALL NEW BOOKS AT 20% OFF AND MORE II the news today by The Associated Press and College Press Service CHRISTIAN-DEMOCRAT MARIANO RUMOR was named premier of Italy yesterday, thus ending a 49-day government crisis. Italy has been in )a political turmoil for over a month as leaders -~ of the Christian Democrat party have been trying to form a center- ileft coalition. The new government consisting of the Christian Democrats, the Italian Socialists, the Unitarian Socialists and the small Republi- can party will be sworn in today. ALL WEEK Open till 9 P.M. IIIL I hi I 'I h IN 1 BEDAZZLED FIGHTING IN CAMBODIA increased yesterday as the Viet Cong attacked the Cambodian army and South Vietnamese forces clashed with Viet Cong. South Vietnamese rangers claimed they killed 53 Viet Cong in an attack on a Viet Cong stronghold two miles inside Cambodia with support of Vietnamese jets. Meanwhile, Cheng Heng, the Cambodian provisional head of state, declared in a nationwide radio broadcast that the Viet Cong "have begun actions against the Cambodian people and our soldiers in provinces near the border." * * * FEDERAL GOVERNMENT spokesmen said yesterday it will strengthen regulations affecting radioactive emissions from nuclear power plants. An Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) spokesman agreed that the new regulations would essentially mean "a closer watch on exist- ing plants to assure continuance of operation well within maximum' standard - and they would give even greater assurance that future plants would have more built-in safeguards to assure operation well within standards." occupant. Other students took the attitude of a non-striking though sympa- thetic engineer who commented, "as long as it isn't indefinite, its a good tactic to directly involve more people in the demands." "I think it is necessary though it does entail a certain amount of personal inconvenience," said a striker. Many students took the attitude of a disappointed breakfaster who said, "I'm not sure exactly whatI this accomplishes by keeping peo- ple from eating, but I can go for one day without food." The two largest dorms on cen- tral campus - West and South Quads - had no food all day. On the Hill, the dorms with the exception of Alice Lloyd had their foor service curtailed for s o m e part of the day. Mr. Ennen, director of Stock- well, said "The kitchen crew is out and we will not serve regular meals." He added, however, that breakfast meals were used all day > long with beans and soup served for supper. At Markley there was no break- fast or lunch but dinner was serv- ed. One student joined the Mark- ley Hall picketers with a s i g n reading "We want food." Plans for feeding students who did not have any food from their dorms were formulated by the Coalition to Support BAM. Various churches and other or- Alabama voter tempted by country musie MONTGOMERY, Ala. RP) -- Voters who show up at political rallies in Alabama like country music, and the candidates for gov- ernor this year, as usual, are giv- ing it to them - in large and expensive doses. The bill for campaign enter- tainment alone is running into thousands ofndollars a week. And the cast includes some of t h e biggest names in the country mu- sic field, such as Roy C 1 a r k, Jeanie C. Riley, and Sonny James. Campaign workers who b o o k the entertainers are close-.mouth- ed about how much they pay. But if the performers got what they' normally charge, Gov. Albert Brewer and former Gov. George C. Wallace, the two major candi- dates, would have spent something like $30,000 in the first two weeks of the campaign. However, in both headquarters, campaign aides say it isn't cost- ing them anything like that much. Wallace also has had Grand Ole Opry singers. Later, his head- quarters says, he plans to have the entire "Hee Haw" cast for two performances. The current contract covering 425,000 truck drivers, expires Tuesday midnight. The breakoff came after t h e Teamsters rejected a three-year industry offer to hike wages and benefits nearly $1 per hour, in- cluding 75 cents an hour in wages. The union reportedly is insist- zng on at last $1.70 more pay per hour, plus other major benefits. Most of the truckers now average $4 hourly in wages. Trucking negotiations three years ago broke out in a rash of hit-and- run Teamsters strikes across the country and a nationwide indus- try lockout in retaliation before it was finally settled. Leaders of four AFL-CIO rail- road shopcraft unions, meanwhile, said they are on the verge of los- ing control of their 45,000 mem- bers who have waited 15 months for a pay raise. "A strike is almost certain," said one source, expressing doubt that union leaders can hold t h e rail workers in line even until the 37-day no-strike law enacted by Congress expires April 11. President Nixon asked Congress to impose as binding for the rest of this year a rail settlement in- cluding a 68-cent hike in current wages of $3.60 an hour plus a controversial provision to let mem- bers of all four unions do a limit- ed amount of work in each others' jealously guarded traditional job jurisdictions. Three of the unions have agreed, but the fourth - Sheet M e t a l Workers - refused, fearing the loss of jobs to the other unions. Congress ducked the politically dangerous decision to impose a settlement of wages and working conditions on American workers for only the second time in peace- time history and voted the tem- porary delay instead. Meanwhile, airlines were forced to cancel more than 200 flights yesterday at the peak of the yebr's second busiest travel period, be- cause 25 per cent of air traffic controllers stayed home. It was the third day of a pro- test by members of the Profes- sional Air Traffic Controllers' Or- ganization (PATCO) against what they claim is overwork, under-pay, under-staffing and obsolete equip- ment. Only 1,213 Men-of a normal force of 1,625-showed up at the 21 centers that direct airlines once they leave airport control. And, in increasing numbers, t h e controllers at airports reported they were ill. Establish mal talks, deadline WASHINGTON (3)-The leader of the nation's letter carriers has set a new nationwide postal strike deadline of 2 p.m. next Thursday if there is no breakthrough on a pay increase-but he reportedly is optimistic the deadline will be met. Government and union negotia- tors announced they had "reached a basis for negotiations", at a ses- sion that ran past midnight Thurs- day, and they scheduled more talks for yesterday afternoon. But key congressmen said they expect no settlement over the weekend. Congress, in any event, could not take any final action be- fore next Tuesday. The administration has made a counter proposal to union demands for a 12 to 20 per cent raise but security was to tight that even the House-Senate conferees awaiting a settlement on which to act- said they had no idea what it was. James H. Rademacher, presi- dent of the AFL-CIO National As- sociation of Letter Carriers, who threatened a walkout in five days if there is noibreakthrough, was quoted by a union source as being optimistic but as saying the five days expire at 2 p.m. Thursday because of the Easter recess. "I have to go by the mandate of my group," the source quoted Rademacher as sayig. "Unless there is some kind of evidence of agreement being reached, next Thursday is the absolute latest the way it looks now." Congress began its Easter recess Thursday. night. The Senate, which will act first on any pay bill, returns Tuesday and the 10- day House recess is to be cut short Tuesday if a pay bill is ready for approval. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University at 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, $3.00 by mail. The Faust story updated by Peter Cook, Dudley Moore and Raquel Welch Fri. and Sat.-March 27 and 28-7 and 9:30 Aud. A, Angell Hall, 75c AND Sunday Matinee-March 29-1 and 3 P.M. REBECCA - Directed by Alfred Hitchcock HI Cinema V GREAT DIRECTORS' FESTIVAL I i I SATURDAY and SUNDAY ONLY TWO BEST SELLERS -TOGETHER! Why I Became a Jewish Draft Resister ALAN SOLOMONOW National Director Jewish Peace Fellowship WED., APRIL 1st, 8 P.M. A brlNt -N.Y News , U l "Devastating to the well- tuned funny bone." -N.Y. TIMES PETER SELLERS HAENS ABOVEt "THE BRIGHTEST, LIVELIEST COMEDY THIS YEAR!"N Y TIMES "IT'S A COMIC MASTER- PIECE" -MCCALLS MAGAZINE 'I'M ALL RIGHT a Starring PETER SELLERS IAN CARMICHAEL TERRY-THOMAS Screenplay by FRANK OtARVEY and JOHN BOULTING B a the novel by ALAN HACKNEY Produced by ROY BOULTING Directed by JOHN SOULTING A OULTING BROTHERS PRODUCTION When in Southern California visit Universal Studios i" HAS THAT YOUTHFUL ACCENT WHICH PLACES IIN A LEAGUE WITH ZEFFIRELLI'S 'ROMEO AND JULIET.' "-John Mahoney, FM and Fine Arts Magazine "AN INSTANT CLASSIC. IT HAS A HAMMER-LOCK ON HISTORY, PERFORMANCE, PATHOS AND ROOTING INTEREST!" -Archer Winsten, N.Y. Post I "EPIC BATTLE OF THE SEXES."-Vincent Canby, N.Y. Times f RICHAR p~BRTON asHENRYVI GENEVIEVE BUJOLD as ANNE BOLEYN THE IIALWALLIS PRODUCTION SCosarrinPAP IWENE PAPAS A New Film by Jean-luc Godard A '' 0k mpt j('I ' teted h dh 'I e$Sin it'e eit Te /g~x t e ei April 9, 10, 11, 12. Presented by the Wayne Cinema Guild. Shown in Helen DeRoy Auditorium, located off Clss Avenue on the Wayne State University Campus. Advance sale re- served performance tickets $1.50 or $2 at the door. Advance tickets go on sale Monday, ,March 9 at the University Center box office. Tickets may also be purchased by sending a samnedpAsef-.~adressed Prvuelone with the. corretamont inn i. CREDENTIALS 1. He burned his draft card. 2. He spent a year in Federal a draft resister. . prison as 3. He is now National Program Direc- tor of the Jewish Peace Fellowship. 1 I I RESPONSE TO HIM WILL BE Re-release .,y Cinema V SAT.-"Jack," 1:30, 5:15, 9:00-"Heaven," 3:15, 7:00, 10:45 SUN.-"Jack," 1:30, 5:15, 900-"Heaven," 3:15, 7:00 FRITHJOIC)F RFPCMAN~