THERE IS A MEETIN' AN OPEN HOOT with: THE SPANISH TROUBADOURS JIM STRAND SCOTT ARROWSMITH VICKY and DAVE NEWMAN CENTER-331 Thompson 50c FREE COFFEE (Come in the back door) Bring an instrument and/or your voice NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 x4r irli '* Da tit second. front page Friday, March 28, 1969 the Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three Page Three TROOP WITHDRAWAL: news today __by The Associated Press and College Press Service EGYPTIAN PRESIDENT Gamal Abdel Nasser accused the Nixon Administration of giving unwavering support to Israel. In his sharpest attack on American policy since the change in' administration, Nasser said yesterday the Arabs had h o p e d for a friendlier attitude in Washington when Nixon took over. "But thus far there is no indication of any change in America's attitude toward Israel. The United States continues to give its com- plete support and backing to the Israeli viewpoint," he said. f Nasser also said the Big Four must act quickly to defuse the sit- uation in the Middle East because it is nearing the explosion point. "The crisis can not wait any more time than it has," he said. "It is a miracle that it has remained so long without exploding." Jordan accused Israel of attempting to head off a big four meet- ing aimed at settling the Middle East conflict. Jordan made the accusation at a meeting of the U.N. Security Council yesterday. nesday to head off the Big Four meeting. Friday March 28 9-. 2 P.M Joda aid srael:tged a aiadon a Jordanian village Wed- Israel said the village was hit because it was a headquarters for LEAGUE SNACK BAR teroist forays. NORTH VIETNAM and the NLF denounced, as trickery the efforts of Washington and Saigon to get private talks on a Viet- ---Admission Free--- nam settlement started. They did not reject the concept of private talks but the condi- tions attached, particularly those laid down by South Vietnamese __President Nguyen Van Thieu. T'hpY i ' f'PYPt I''"' cafath v+r 1a +h i v~n [hnGra. U.So tol declares readiness old secret Viet k March 28, 29 director ARTHUR PkNN (Bonnie and Clyde) Warren Beatty CINEMA GUILD DR. CHICAGO dir. GEORGE MANUPELLI FR IDAY, MARCH 28 A RCH IT ECTURE 662-8871 AUDITOR IUM .eir statement yesteraynne htte xetIrsdn Nixon to feel the weight of public pressure to end the war. A NLF spokesman said, "Thieu insolently demanded the NLF should proceed to its own dissolution and the population should end its fight against American aggression. At the same time he opposed a coalition government as well as withdrawal of American troops."I. SENATE REPUBLICAN LEADER Everett Dirksen accused{ federal officials of harassing businessmen about job discrimina- tion. Dirksen made the accusation yesterday at the opening of a Senate inquiry into the Nixon administration's enforcement of the nondiscrimination section of the 1964 Civil Rights Act. Dirksen said people employing hundreds of thousands stream into his office to complain of the treatment they receive from federal agencies enforcing nondiscrimination in hiring.1 "This punitive harassing is going to stop or somebody is going to lose his authority," Dirksen said.'"I'm going to the highest author-t ity in the government and get somebody fired." * * Secretary of State Rogers before Fuibright committee REGIONAL PROGRAM: Architects exchange views ais WASHINGTON W -- Secretary of State William P. Rogers de- clared U.S. readiness yesterday for secret talks with the enemy on a Vietnam settlement. He also expressed a U.S. willing- ness for simultaneous U.S. - North Vietnamese t r o o p withdrawal "over a very short period of time." But Rogers avoided saying such private negotiations have already begun at Paris - on grounds that talking about secret talks impairs their usefulness - and he indicat- ed the enemy has not yet accepted Saigon's latest offer for informal meetings. Rogers testified at Senate Fore- ign Relations Committee hearings, giving a global account of t h e foreign policy of the new Nixon administration. It was the new secretary of state's first such appearance be- fore the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, headed by Sen. J. W. Fulbright, (D-Ark), and the cor- dial atmosphere contrasted with the chill accorded Dean Rusk dur- ing his latter months as secretary of state. Many committeemen f oun d ~Rusk too tough on Vietnam poli- cy. "I think your first performance has been excellent ... very useful and an auspicious beginning," Ful- bright told the 55-year-old Rog- ers, a former lawyer, at the wind- up of three hours of testimony. Rogers ranged through current foreign issues in his overall pre- sentation - defending President Nixon's go-ahead for an anti-bal- listic missile system, expressing hope for a Middle East solution, foreseeing potential substantial progress in dealing with the Sov- iets. On Vietnam, he offered the full- est outline publicly delivered by the Nixon administration to date on how it hopes to achieve peace. The secretary of state said that basically, a satisfactory settle- ment bringing stability to South-' east Asia probably must come from an international political agreement rather than a Korea- type solution leaving sizable U.S. forces still on the scene for.guard duty. He treated the Viet Cong's at- tack on the Saigon government's offer of private negotiations as probably "propaganda". and said that past negotiating progress in the Paris talks and "out of the way places" had come through se- cret sessions, also in Paris. On the military side,' Rogers said, the United States is seeking agreement with North Vietnam on mutual troop pullouts which would scale down hostilities and promote peace talks. "We are prepared to begin with- drawals of our forces simultane- ously with those of North Viet- nam," he said. By SHARON WEINER obtain reactions of the visiting Seven schools of architecture in students to the different programs tle Great Lakes Region will -wind of architectural educations up their first "visitation week" to- The participating schools are day. Washington University at St. Each of the schools, all members Louis, Illinois Institute of Tech- of the Association of Collegiate nology at Chicago, University of Schools of Architecture (ACSA), Illinois at Chicago Circle Campus, PRESIDENT NIXON RESHUFFLED government regional is hosting members from other offices handling urban and social problems. participating colleges in order to The aim of the move is to make it possible for citizens as well as state and local officials to turn to central offices for help with prob- lems involving the national government. U ITf'l-e eI Nixon's first step yesterday was to set up eight regional head- quarters for five departments and agencies with activities in what heI called disadvantaged areas in our society u g velopment, Health, Education and Welfare, the Office of EconomicI Opportunity, and the Small Business Administration. By MARY RADTKE Nixon said, "I believe these reforms will have a major impact State members of the American on the quality of American government-an impact which will benefit Studies Association will discuss all of our citizens." "Black/White Culture in America" * at a conference here this weekend. THE RULING LABOR PARTY lost three seats to the Con- The conference chaired by his- servatives in the British parliament, in a special election. tory Prof. Robert Sklar, will ex- Triumphant Conservatives claimed their partys' victories showed plore the implications which the public is tired with leadership of the Laborites. They called on America's black/white culture has Prime Minister Harold Wilson to resign and order a general election. for a variety of the arts, including The special elections to fill vacant seats cut the Labor major- literature, poetry, history, music and the cinema. Participants are ity to 71, but the swing from Labor to Conservative, if projected, will drawnafrom the faculties of col- give the Conservatives a large majority in the 1971 general elections. leges all over Michigan. * * * The conference begins this aft- FORMER PRESIDENT Dwight D. Eisenhower's cardiac de- ernoon wtih a series of talks on terioration appeared to have halted yesterday. "Black/White Literature in Amer- In a medical bulletin issued by Walter Reed Army Hospital, dca" that range fso aldwin. Prf doctors said "Gene Eisenhower has rested more comfortably today Harold Cruse from the history de- and there is no evidence at this time of further deterioration'of his partment will comment on the congestive heart. papers read. Notre Dame^ University at South Bend, Iowa State University at e culture This evening in the UGLI Multi- purpose Room four black poets will read and discuss their work in "An Evening of Black/White Poetry and Drama." Herbert' Woodward Martin of Acquinas College will join Ethridge Knight,I Dudley Randall, and Charles Sim- mons, who particpated in the Black Poets Festival held earlier this year, Tomorrow morning the confer- ence will discuss black/white his- tory from early America to the presentin a series of talks focus- ing on "an interpretation of Negro life" in American culture. In the afternoon a presentation of black/white music will be made by Sonny Willis Blues Group, who specializes in urban blues. Ames, University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee, and Michigan. Prof. Robert Metcalf, chairman of the school, explains "This is the first organized attempt to get an exchange of ideas with archi- tecture students in the big great lakes colleges." "The program is designed to get reaction on our innovations," he At a "sandwich seminar" held yesterday in the architecture school's new s t u d e n t-faculty lounge, the students generally agreed that all of their schools are trying to accomplish the same things in different ways, and that the mutual exchange of ideas will help all of them in their own pro- grams. The seminar served as a "dress rehearsal" for a video taped panel discussion to be held today. With the aid of a grant from the Graham Foundation in Chi- cago,video reports from the seven schools in this regional consortium will be compressed into a single movie to be shown at the June convention of the ACSA in Chi- cago. Hopefully, says Prof. Theodore Larson this presentation will en- courage the formation of similar ACSA programs in other regions of the country and lead to a stu- dent exchange program on a na- tion-wide ,scale. 1 l i i I c c r Read and Use Daily Classifieds SPRING SALE NO 2-6264 SHOWS AT 1,3,5, 7:05, 9:05 10 Minutes Later r rv "YOU WILL NOT EASILY FORGET HIM" --Cuc 0 R T H S E E N .Y THE NEW JUDGE is on Display! STOCK NO. 545 -Hard-top Coupe -Safety track axle -Radio -Power steering -Power disc brakes -Heavy-duty 3-speed transmission with console STICKER PRICE $3802 Sale Price $3298 GTO Hard-lop Coupe STOCK NO. 164 --Gold with black cordova top -Safety track axle -Radio .-Retractable headlight covers -Turbo hydromatic with console -Power steering -Soft Ray windshield STICKER PRICE-$3867 Sale Price $3326 Firebird Hard-lop Coupe STOCK NO. 321 -Red with black cordova top -Black interior trim -Custom chrome trim outside -Radio -White wall tires STICKER PRICE $3128 Sale Price $2734 SPAGHETTI DINNER TIME Is Sunday, March 30, at SDT sorority 1405 Hill St. from 5:00-8:00 P.M. PRICE: $1.25 ALL ARE INVITED BRING YOUR FRIENDS! / A SERVICE of The Alternative MAD MARVIN Invites You to Trip with Him and his stoned out friends in a Comedy Program. Klinger-Warner Pontiac Friday ONLY 7:30 and 9:30 769-1200 3500 JACKSON ROAD Natural Science Auditorium I I1 presents AND HIS BAND W.C. FIELDS-"HURRY, HURRY" LAUREL AND HARDY-"TWO TARS" -featuring vintage cars in the wildest comic destruc- tion scene ever CHARLIE CHAPLIN-"SHOULDER ARMS" -A classic satire on WWI Also "INSPIRATION" -famous Czech animated film featuring a dream world in a drop. of water, "Wig-Wag" - an early "Drag" comedy and for camp fans-a CAPTAIN MARVEL SERIAL CHAPTER! I i . . I 11 i _ _