page three B iri tgttn aai NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Thursday, January 15, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three by T he Associated Press and College Press Service WEST GERMANY CHANCELLOR WILLY BRANDT reject- ed diplomatic recognition of East Germany in a speech yesterday. Brandt also used his state of the nation address to throw cold water on East Germany's demand that Bonn loosen its ties or end its membership in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. He noted that East Germany's partners in the Warsaw Pact military alliance, which includes the Soviet Union, appeared to be more flexible than East Germany in responding to Bonn's initiatives. The statements by Brandt will probably dampen speculation in diplomatic and press circles that West Germany might be moving toward a reconciliation with the communist regime in East Germany. . . * PRESIDENT NIXON has ordered further substantial cuts in his budget for the coming year. While the exact nature of the cuts was not revealed, administra- tion sources say the new adjustment could be as large as $2 billion. Nixon made the request at a cabinet meeting Tuesday, which suggested to some that by seeking spending cuts he might be tryingt to avoid raisirig taxes in a congressional election year. MICHIGAN SENATE DEMOCRATS yesterday named George Fitzgerald of Grosse Point Park as their minority leader. Fitzgerald, 68, succeeds Sen. Sander Levin of Berkley who step- ped down to consider the possibilities of entering the race for governor in this fall's elections. A five-year veteran of the senate, Fitzgerald was labeled a compromise candidate by some who saw him as acceptable to both conservative and liberal wings of the party. Fitzgerald denied the charge, but said, "I don't like to see the caucus get wound up in conflicting opinions and ideologies." -* * * FEDERAL SECURITY AGENTS have begun investigating the possibility of sabotage at an Atomic Energy Commission plant severely damaged by fire last spring. An around-the-clock investigation has been ordered to determine whether the May 11 fire was started deliberately. Part of the reason for the probe is a series of what the AEC called "troublesome" events since the fire. The plant is a critical link in the country's nuclear weapons'+ production system, as the sole producer of plutonium, a vital in-+ gredient in some types of warheads.- Actual news of the fire was withheld by the government and released the same day that Apollo 11 landed -on the moon. Stockpiles1 of plutonium are allowing warhead production to continue, but the plant must be operable by April to avoid any subsequent delays. S* « DEMONSTRATORS AGAINST the war in Vietnam were arrested in Oakland, Cal. and Los Angeles yesterday for allegedly blocking the entrances to selective service induction centers. Nineteen men and women were arrested in -each city. Police said+ some had to be lifted bodily into a van, but that most cooperated+ when told they were under arrest.t PRESIDENT JOSEPH MOBUTU of the Congo indicated 7 yesterday that he may be ready for a reconciliation of the two Congos whose relations have gone from bad to worse in the past few months. Mobutu returned yesterday from Yaounde, where he helped cele- brate the 10th anniversary of Cameroon independence. While there, he apparently made a reconciliation with Jean Bokassa of the Central Africa Republic, patching up a year-old rift. Upon returning to the Congo, Mobutu said, "If Ngouabi had been there we could have been reconciled with him as well." Marien, Ngouabi, president of the People's Republic of Congo, charged Mobutuy a few months ago of trying to instigate a plot against him. Supreme Court WASHINGTON (A - The Supreme Court yesterday ruled 6 to 2 that public schools attended by about 300,000 students in five Southern states must be desegregated by Feb. 1. Chief Justice Warren E. Burger and Justice Potter Stew- art objected, saying the court should have heard ,argument before acting so that "the varying problems" of individual school districts could have been explored. The decision reversed a Dec. 1 ruling by the U.S. Circuit Court in New Orleans that the 14 school districts involved could postpone desegregation ? Rebukes East Germany WEST GERMAN CHANCELLOR WILLY BRANDT delivers state of the nation address. See The News Today. CITY OBSERYANCE: Nation to honor] By The Associated Press The 41st anniversary of the birth of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., will be remembered today across the nation with school closings, religious services, march- es, special dedications and other observances. No activities observing King's birthday are planned for the Uni- versity. Ann Arbor Mayor Robert Harris has named today as "Martin Luther King Day" in the city. -In Syracuse, N.Y., a playground will be named in honor of the slain civil rights leader. A Re- quiem Mass in Chicago will be conducted by five Negro Roman Catholic priests. Amemorial radio address will originate from a high school in Detroit that bears his name. At least 10,000 persons are ex- pected to parade up Broadway and gather for an anniversary rally- on 34th Street near Eighth Avenue in New York City. Scheduled to take part are Mayor John V- Lindsay and Dr. Ralph D a v i d Abernathy, who succeeded King as head of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. There were a number of ob- servances last spring on the first, anniversary of King's April 4, 1968 assassination. But the birth- day memorial has assumed great- er proportions and city councils in Boston, Cleveland and Los An- geles have called on Congress to designate Jan. 15 as a national holiday. King's widow, Coretta Scott King, will attend official dedica- tion ceremonies of a planned Mar- tin Luther King Jr. National Park at the new gravesite of the Nobel Peace laureate. The grave is next to Atlanta's EbenezeraBaptist church, where King was co-pastor with his father. In anticipation of t h e ceremony, the body was moved there this week from Atlanta's Southview Cemetery. until next fall. The court's usual unanimity in school desegregation cases broke, although none of the eight just- ices opposed in any way the court's holding that racially separate public schools are illeg- al. Additionally, Justices John Marshall Harlan and Byron R. White said school officials gener- ally should have up to eight weeks to desegregate once a federal court finds they are not comply- ing with the "yardstick" devised by the Supreme Court. And Justices Hugo L. Black, William O. Douglas, William J. Brennan Jr. and Thurgood Mar- shall said the views expressed by Harlan and White represent a re- treat from the court's ruling in a Mississippi case last October which stipulated that every school district is obligated to terminate dual systems at once. Yesterday, in a separate decis- ion, the court refused to hear an appeal by the. state seeking to reopen that issue. Once again, the high court re- jected the advice of the Nixon administration. It had urged the court to go along with a fall. dead- line, but suggested it be broaden- ed to encompass the more than 300 school districts in Alabama, Florida, Georgia; Louisiana, Mis- sissippi and Texas that are not already committed to student de- segregation.- WASHINGTON (1P)-Millions of women taking birth control pills are exposing themselves to a broad range of suspected diseases, in- cluding cancer, and may be en- dangering future generations, in- vestigating senators were told Wednesday. The hearings by the Senate monopoly. committee headed by Sen. Gaylord Nelson,{D-Wis.), mark the first look Congress has taken at the pill in the 10 years it has been on the market. Although all of the day's wit- nesses called for caution in use of the pill, none was as critical as Davis, who helped found Johns Hopkins' contraception research center in 1963. Citing reports that listed more than 50 separate possible side ef- fects from the. pill, including fatal blood clotting, Davis said that even if these were ignored "the nagging specter of cancer remains." "Breast cancers," he said, "have been induced in at least five dif- ferent species of animals by treat- ment with the same synthetic hor- mones being marketed in oral con- traceptives." "Every important agent that has been shown to cause caucer in , humans," he added, "also has been shown to cause it in animals and there is no reason to believe oral contraceptives will be the single exception." Davis recommended that no woman be allowed to use any oral contraceptive more than two years. Evidence has indicated the alleged dangers are manifested after pro- longed use. He suggested instead use of an intrauterine device -- commonly called a loop-and said that his center has developed one that is smaller, less likely to be rejected and has proved 99 per cent effec- tive in preventing pregnancy. Two other witnesses -- Dr. Mar- tion S. Legator of the FDA's cell biology branch and David M. Carr of McMaster University in On- tario - warned of possible genetic damage from the pill. 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 mail. segregation. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN f o r m to Room 3528 L. S. A B 1 d g ., before 2 p.m., ofthe day preceding pub- lication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. Items ap- pear once only. Student organiza- ion notices a r e notaccepted for. publication. F or more informa- tion, phone 764-9270. THURSDAY, JANUARY 15 Day Calendar Mental Health Research Institute Seminar: Dr. Leo V. DiCara, Assoc- iate Professor, Rockefeller University, "Instrumental Learning of Visceral and Glandular Responses": 1057 Ment- al Hlealth Research Institute, 3:45 p.m. Physics and Astronomy -Joint Theore- tical & Nuclear Coloquium - H. Y. Chiu, Goddard Center, "Neutrino As- trophysics": P & A Colloquium Room, 4:00 p.m. Urban Planning Lecture: Mr. Mel Ravitz, President, Detroit C m m n Council, "Relationship of C e n t r a 1 Cities to their Suburbs": Architec- ture Auditorium, 4:00 p.m. Frontiers in Geology and Geophy- sics Lecture Series: Leon Knopoff, Professor of Geophysics, UCLA speak- ing on "Mechanisms for Continental Drift". Thursday, 4:00 p.m., R oo m 170 P&A (Aud. E). 17Michigan Chamber Ensemble: Theo Alcantara, conductor: Rackham Lec- ture Hall, 8:00 p.m. Placement Service GENERAL DIVISION 3200 S.A.B. Current Position Openings are receiv- ed by Gen. Div., openings in all areas, (Continued ion Page 6) r 95% OF THE READING POPULATION READS ONLY 250 TO 300 WORDS PER MINUTE OR LESS FAST All those who completed courses held this past year at the Bell Tower Hotel achieved speeds of 800 to 1800 w.p.m. with the same, or increased comprehension they had at their' slower reading rates. - SEE HOW EASILY YOU CAN:- -save hours, use your time more efficiently -learn to read 3 to 10 times faster than you do now' -improve your comprehension and increase your enjoyment of reading material- at a cost less than HALF that of nearly all_ other commercial reading courses!_ Bring a book to a free, live demonstration of the reading skills which will be taught in a GUARANTEED course offered this semester, Demonstration Thursday, January 15th, 7:30 P.M., at the Bell Tower Hotel, 300 So. Thayer St., across from Burton Tower (CotiuedonPag 6 0 JANUARY 12-16 - 3524 ad 3529 SAB 1 OHours: Mon.-5-7, Tues. & Thurs.-7-9, Wed. & Fri.-4:30-7 ^ n O 3> < >0 = 0<®<= 0 => < > <= 0 => < > -V0= > r.....- .... .._. -.._._ ANTER IJRY Ht US PRESENTS . : ; ' n ash: > ,: :: ;r ifi;;} v: v >r: '4 F f }". F hYZ'Yi is t:;'f fit: :: .; ::": 'r r' f :, ,;; : , ':. : < } : "::.+.",",.;,, {''Xt "':;rr rye +. } f<, ;, .: .;, : :. ":: : r. ... ...,- .. J, .: >: ,. ,. ... r r .., :r:; ":;a" ..;;t s> ? t < to s }. {''S i, ., } r '' n ',mot'' ..e". : "xhr' :": :...... .:Y.hw rr.E:f., }l:+ra r{.x'tt".; ... . 1. Theey ore perfect on /a highly complex, imperceptible level. Nothing is obvious, J Y9/1T IY'1A P1YA'f'rt t hc F\Ib r s atN rtirw .r ,... ri. w. .. .. w. .........t ...: Ll. ._. _ .__.. .L _i. __! _J;ll U U rsfrIAter iur~ amnc