t pag4e three im4c TWO MORE CLASSICS STARRING W. C. FIELDS MATINEES ONLY "The Old Fashioned Way" 1:30 and 3:45 "Tille and Gus" 2:45 and 5:00 PFP'TH PoI'UM .t U y IFTH AVENUE AT LBERTY f DOWNTOWN ANN ARROW INFORMATION 761-9700 -didL Ldd6- & tr4tpan &tti NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Friday, April 17, 1970 . Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three I the by The Associated Press and College Press Service not continuous with "All the Loving Couples" SAVE THIS AD Thurs., Fri.-April 16, 17 LES GIRLS dir. GEORGE CUKOR (1939) A comic Rashomon recitation by dancing girls, Gene Kelly, Mitzi Gaynor, Kay Kendall. Sat., Syn.-April 18, 19 YOU ONLY LIVE ONCE dir. FRITZ LANG (1937) Henry Fonda and Sylvia Sydney in Lang's ver- sion of the Bonnie and Clyde story. SHORT: Peoples Park EXAM WEEK MOVIES Thurs., Fri.,-April 23, 24 A- DAY AT THE RACES dir. SAM WOOD (1937) The hilarious anarchy of the Marx Brothers. Sat., Sun.-April 25, 26 HORSE FEATHERS dir. NORMAN McLEOD (1932) More of the Marx Brothers' insanity. SHORT: His X Marks the Spot-- Buster Keaton THE U.S. AND USSR opened negotiations in their strategic arms limitation talks in Vienna yesterday. President Nixon said in a message to the formal opening cere- mony that he hoped the two great powers could first agree to curb their nuclear missile arms race and then reduce their arsenal of these weapons. There appeared to be an uneasiness on both sides as a result of the build-ups in nuclear weapons by both countries since the Helsinki preliminary talks last year. A WELFARE REFORM BILL providing for a guaranteed minimum family income passed the House yesterday and now moves to the Senate. The reform bill, strongly endorsed by President Nixon, would give every family $500 annual income for the first two members of the family and $300 a year for each additional child. A family of four would thus receive at least $1600 per year. Single persons and childless couples would not receive benefits under the proposed legislation. Under the proposed program, welfare payments would not be cut for the first $60 a month of earned family income. Above that level, reduction would be fifty cents for each dollar earned. The program would also increase benefits to aged, blind and disabled adults. Voting for the bill were 140 Democrats and 103 Republicans. Against it were 84 Democrats and 71 Republicans. TWENTY-THREE AMERICAN defectorsfromrmilitary serv- ice have been granted asylum in Sweden since March 2. In announcing the latest statistics, the Swedish Immigration and Naturalization Board also reported that 409 Americans have been given asylum for "humanitarian reasons" since 1967 when the influx of defectors and protesters against the Vietnam war began. Stockholm police said that of the 409 who have been admitted to Sweden, 52 have been apprehended on narcotic drug charges and some of them will be expelled after serving their sentences. PROTESTANT EXTREMIST the Rev. Ian Paisley was elected to the Northern Ireland Parliament yesterday. Paisley defeated Bolton Minford of the ruling Unionist party and Laborite John McHugh.e The result was a setback for Northern Ireland's prime ministery James Chichester-Clarke, who is trying to reconcile Catholic-Protes-t tant antagonisms in a country where Protestants outnumber Catho- lics 2-1.L Paisley-a towering anti-Catholic-is now seeking to stop a civil rights movement that would remove discriminations against the Catholic minority.I THE JUSTICE DEPARTMENT said yesterday that Supreme f Court nominee Harry A. Blackmun sat as a federal judge in three _ cases involving firms in which he held stock. The information was contained in a letter from Deputy Atty. Gen. Richard Kleindienst to Chairman James 0. Eastland (D-Miss.) of the Senate Judiciary Committee. The Justice Department said, however, that Blackmun's hold- ings were insignificant, and in one case he voted against the Ford Motor Co. in which he held $2,500 worth of stock. -Associated Press Horsing around Students from a Stonington, Connecticut, hig h school demonstrate against pollution by using non-automotive transportation. Similar activities are planned for a nationwide observance of Earth Day next Wednesday. JOHN COLLINS: Caufornia grand jury Udicts accused slayer l"ofEM coed, Postal reforms unveiled Nixon asks pay hike,' 8-cent letter WASHINGTON ( -- Presi- dent Nixon yesterday unveiled a compromise plan to reform the postal system, give more pay to mail handlers, and avoid a 10-cent letter charge. Nixon pared down his r at e request to eight cents, a two-cent increase over the present rate. The proposal, largely worked out by federal and union nego- tiators, were designed to improve chances of congressional and public approval. AFL-CIO President G e o r g e Meany, appearing before news- men at the White House, was one of the first to support the plan, declaring, "This is one of the most significant events in the his- tory of collective bargaining." As part of a compromise, Nix- on not only revised postal rate increases he proposed just tw o weeks ago but also abandoned his 1969 plan to turn the Post Of- fice Department into an indepen- dent corporation. His present plan; is to create a United States Postal Service that would be insulated from political pressures and patronage while remaining a part of the executive branch. Other principal features of the program are: -Postal workers would get an eight per cent pay increase, over and above the six per cent gov- ernment increase Nixon signed into law Wednesday, and would reach top pay scales in eight years instead of the current 21 years. -The postal workers would bargain collectively with the pro- posed postal service over wages, hours and working conditions generally, with negotiating im- passes being finally resolved, if necessary, by binding arbitration. -Postal rates would be in- creased, but by considerably less in the aggregate than Nixon had recommended on April 3. -The Post Office Department would no longer be a Cabinet-level agency and the 'postmaster gen= eral would be hired by a bipartisan commission with his tenure "bas- ed on performance and not on politics." -The commissioners would have broad authority to fix pos- tal rates and pay scales but eith- er house of Congress could veto proposed rate changes by a two- thirds vote. Postmaster General Winton M. Blount said he is confident the Nixon-endorsed reforms w o ul d avert wildcat strikes of the sort that crippled mail services in a number of major cities last month. John Collins, the accused slay- er of an Eastern Michigan Uni- versity coed, was indicted by a California grand jury Wednesday in connection with a murder there last summer. Collins, a former EMU student, was charge'd by a grand jury in Salinas, Calif. with the murder of Roxie Ann Phillips, a 17-year old native of Milwaukee, Oregon. Miss Phillips had been visiting friends in Salinas last July when she accepted a date from a young man who reportedly g a v e his name as "John Collins' and said he was a college student from Michigan. Two weeks later her dead body was found in a rubbish. dump 17 miles west of Salinas. Collins and a friend, Andrew Manuel, had driven a car with a rented trailer to the Salinas area in late June last year. Collins and Manuel abandoned the trailer in California, and Man- Course Mart classes for fall announced 7 & 9:05 662-8871 75c Architecture Auditorium Got a Noisy Bug ('62-'70)? MUFFLER SALE Muffler and Labor for '62-'70 Bug $29.95 Wagon Werke, Inc. uel was subsequently convicted for larceny by conversion 1 a s t De- cember. Hewasiconvicted in Washtenaw County Circuit Court last December and given f i v e .Year, probation Collins is presently awaiting trial, scheduled f o r June 1, in Circuit Court for the murder of Karen Sue Beineman, a 19-year- old EMU coed who was strangled and dumped in an A n n Arbor Township ditch last July. Meanwhile, Collins' lawyers have filed a change of venue motion. In that motion, lawyer Neil Fink said that Collins' case has been the subject of massive radio and television coverage which, he claims has produced a strong community feeling against the de- fendant. No trial proceedings can begin against Collins in the California case until the case here is finished. The procedure will be for t h e Monterey County Superior Court judge to ask Washtenaw County Prosecutor William Delhey to place a "hold" on Collins until the proceedings here are done. The California authorities will then seek extradition. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the tUniversity 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 thrcugh 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 mal. By STEPHANIE RAPORTE Course Mart, which enables students to innovate their own courses for credit, yesterday an- nounced its course selections for the fall term. Nine new courses were approved by the LSA curriculum committee yesterday. They are: "The Mili- tary in Modern America," "Legal Rights and Police Practices," Physical and Quantitative Analy- sis of Social and Environmental Phenomena," "Introduction to En- vironmental Studies," "Counter- culture," "Organizational Leader- ship," "The Philosophy of Science Fiction," "Introduction to Photo- graphic Expression and Commun- ication." and "Planned Change." To propose a new course, a stu- dent must find a faculty sponsor interested in teaching the course or willing to work with a "quali- fied" graduate student who would teach it. The student and, sponsor then submit, the proposed syllabus to a committee of three faculty, three students, and an administrator. If the course is approved by this committee, the proposal goes be- fore the curriculum committee, oP' the college for final approval. Students can elect Course Mart courses Pass Fail but cannot count them toward concentration requirements. Registration for Course M a r t courses takes place only during registration in Waterman Gym in September. No student may sign up before this time, and courses are filled on a first-come first- served basis. Wen 1245 ROSEWOOD Phone 662-2576 VW AND PORSCHE REPAIR now give free rides to work, campus and home r r Low Record Prices FOR THE ANN ARBOR COMMUNITY Ss Reserve Your Place'With the SunI 1 lW f ADMITTANCE CAN ONLY BE GUARANTEED WHILE TICKET SUPPLY LASTS Order tickets direct from: KICKAPOQ CREEK INC. TYPING PRINTING Avoid the Hassle Check our Rates and Professiondl Service CAMPUS MULTISERVICE 214 Nickels Arcade 662-4222 31 N. Washington YPSILANTI DIAL 483-3534 Si Students International Store ALL THE MUSIC-ALL OF THE TIME Si SEM 3 29 399 499 (Retail 4.98) (Retail 5.98) (Retail 6.98) DO YOU RIDE A MOTORCYCLE? PARK FREE WHILE SHOPPING AT 122 E. WASHINGTON SHOWS AT 6:30-8 P.M.-9:30 Complete Always It's all yours Inventory and New Available at These SPECIALS "Go se 'Putney Swope': Tels it like it's never been told before."--Judith Crist, Releases Prices I Rated I. i" " t a r - A a-- ElA 1 A I *IMEC Ann DCA 'r pi CC II II