rfimm mmm COUPON mmm WIni U1 II I I I1 PIZZA 1 761-0001 .1 It I $100OFF On a large one item (or more)} I pizza. One coupon per pizza.I tI Pick Up Only I U 1 211 E. Ann St.-Next to the Armory I * Expires April 15 Blow Yourself QI To POSTER SIZE S«.udm, Sbch sad WO* or C*$wc Ptw iroe2!n' ,2%' to S a1. We vIseed vo a 2 ft.x 3 ft. LOJ ,. pritoPOP-ART MOSTERt. value ofar M 3 3x 4FsD. up $7.50 Add Skfor Pet i dlg=ECH. NC-OAD~ Add I.cs Sb ?a Send Cbveck r Mmaey Oren PHOTO POSTER, lot. 210 E. 23rdSte AI-T New York, N . 00 NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 S P £Ifri~igan. Iaztl second front page Tuesday, April 15, 1969 . Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three Lin Piao chosen Nixon outlines domestic lans; to succeed Mao calls for tax, crime measures TO1KYOS 1A Thn(hne 'nm~io^rnr~ r. .... .,. NATIONAL GENERAL CORPORATION HELD OVER FOX EASTERN THEATRES. 2nd WEEK FOR VILLAGE 375 No. MAPLE PD..769-1300 Mon. thru Fri. 6:30-9:15 S:t. -Sun. 1:00-3:45- 6:30-9:15 "m i vrs xLv ur --- i ne L communistparty congress yes- terday approved a new party constitution and declared that Defense Minister Lin Piao will be the successor to party chair- man Mao Tse-tung. The party also formally declared that Mao Tse-tung's thought is the law of the land, ending weeks of speculationR concerning the future of Maoist doctrine in China. A communique broadcast by the official Communist Chi- nese News Agency Hsinhua said the 1,512 delegates to the first party congress since 1956 unanimously approved the new con- --__- ---._-_stitution, which "has clearly -, -WASHINGTON - Presi- dent Nixon yesterday unveiled the broad spectr um of his ad- ministration's domestic pro- gram. { } v RC tests MGM presents a Jerry Gershwin-Elliott Kastner picture starring Richard Burton - Clint Eastwood" Mary Ure M!J "Where Eagles Dare" Metrocolor o*W 3020 Washtenow, Ph.434-1782 Between Ypsilanti & Ann Arbor FEATURE TIMES Thurs., Fri., Sat., Sun. 1:00-4:30-8:00 Monday & Tuesday 7:30 P.M. TECHNICOLORPANAVISIONFROM WARNER BROS.-SEVEN ARTSW educational I 3R patterns (Continued from Page 1) together. New and without insti- tutional inertia, the college is the topic of much of the RC's "mean- ingful dialogues." Teaching is usually the center of controversy, with instructors admitting their methods, de- serve re-evaluation. Says one, "I'm a new teacher, and, you know, I don't really know how people get educated, so I keep trying new things, I keep experimenting." Besides attempting to transform courses into discussions, teachers try abdicating the "formal distant authority" r o 1 e traditionally ascribed to them. Professors have offices in East Quad's basement, where students come freely to chat. Resident fellows inte dorms are "pals, not policemen," according to one RC student. And Robertson, more a father figure than a distant bureaucrat, enjoys a respected and amicable Sposition. Students occupy his of fice without political motives and talk with the dean or his gregari- ous secretary Mrs. Razelle Brooks -the college's mother-in-resi- dence. No administrative office on campus rivals it. Criticism, too, is handled in a distinctive manner. When a dispute in literary college departments surfaces, it signals serious differ-I ences among professors, one RC professor explains. But when some facet of RC is criticized, there are no such implications. Criticism and re-evaluation are the name of the game. It goes on all the time, aiming toward improving the col- lege and the education it offers. But when you're new, and you dare admit you really don't knows how people are educated, you can afford a few mistakes.X TOMORROW: THE CURRICULUM reaffirmed Marxism, Lenin- ism, Mao Tse-tung's thought as the theoretical basis of the party's thinking."} The new constitution, like the old, calls for congress meetings at least once every five years. It provides for party membership for workers, peasants, "revolutionary servicemen" and "other revolu- tionary elements" who have reach- ed the age of 18. The old consti- tution opened membership to "any Chinese citzien who works and does not exploit the labor of others."~ According to Hsinhua, the next order of business is to elect a Cen- tral Committee. The committee was riddled by purges begun in August, 1966 as part of the "culd tural revolution," Mao's sometimes bloody campaign to regain incon- : tested leadership. The first big sign of his con- fidence in te outcome of the revolution came at a Central Coin mittee meeting last October, when' Liu Shao-cbi, formerly the Chi- Ma s-ug, lf nese president, was ousted from - _______ all government and party posts UNIONS M11AY STRIKE:~' and accused of leading a faction - .J tJX .4 trying "to usurp the leadership of the party, the government and the, " e4 army" to promote "bourgeois" B r t s In a special message to Con- gress, Nixon outlined a pro- g r a m embracing continued high taxes, larger Social Se- curity benefits, a crackdown on crime, and a two-stage tax reform, While dealing in generalities for the most part, the President promised to fill in details and start specific recommendations to Congress this week. The general recommendations listed in his message called for: -Increased S o c i a 1 Security benefits to help meet increased living costs.I -Unspecified new measures to battle organized crime, racketeers, narcotics traffickers, and peddlers of obscenity. -Tax credits designed to at- tract private financial help for meeting urgent social needs. -A program to strengthen a. national drive for equallemploy- met opportunity for all Amer- icans. -A thorough reorganization of the Post Office Department. How- ever, Nixon took no stand on whether to put the service in the hands of a semi-private corpora- tion. -Home rule for the national capital'which would include a representatve in Congress. -Cutting in state and local governments on part of federal revenues to help them avoid "ra constant fiscal crisis"-a step bound to please, many governors and mayors who are on record for this. -A far-reaching, new program for developing mass transit sys- tems, airways and airports. I-A comprehensive labor-man- power program taking in job training and placement, improved unemployment insurance, and better health and safety features. -Reforming the tax system in the itrest of wiping out unfair- ness and abuses, plus the first full- dress revision since. 1954. A few steps are to be taken this year, but the main review is slated for 1970. In response to congressional im- patience at Nixon's pace in put- ting together his domestic pro- gram, he told the Senate and House members Monday that in the first 12 weeks of his admin- istration: "Peace has been the first priority." --Associated Press t, and his successor, Lin Piao """" MMO nment faces _._. ._ Mao and Lin earlier were elect- ed chairman and vice chairman of the congress. The Central Com- mitte, once it is elected, will for- mally choose the top party of- ficers-certain to be Mao and Lin.; According to Hsinhua, the con- gress also unanimously approved a report by Lin which "expounds profoundly Chairman Mao's theo- ry of continuing the revolution under the dictatorship of the pro- letariat . . . and sets forth the fighting tasks hereafter for the whole par'ty and the whole na- tion." E I i t serious opposition from labor LONDON (/P) - British Prime volt presents the most serious Minister Harold Wilson's Labor challenge to the leadership of Wil- government is preparing to face son's government in the nearly an open rebellion from the back- five years it has held office. bone of its political support, the The government's decision was trade union movement. ' seen as virtually certain to inten- The union opposition is-expect- sify demands from trade union ed to result from the government's leaders for a massive one-day decision yesterday to speed up strike May 1. moves to curb strikes. The Union heads are also de- By some accounts, the union re- manding a special meeting of the Trades Union Congress to oppose are secret until then, the budget was understood to include meas- ures which would take the equiva- lent of $960 million in purchasing power away from British consum- ers in the coming year. The only issue economic ana- lysts in London here were debating was whether the new budget would involve tax increases, some alter- native plan of forced savings, or a combination of both. There was. full agreement that once again Britain's budget would have to dis- courage the purchases of imported goods that have kept the nation's foreign trade booki in the red. V- k DIAL 5-6290 NEXT "Hell in the Pacific" the news today by The Associated Press and College Press Servic'e Michigan Union Life Memberships All male students who have attended U-M for 8 semesters may pick up their lfe memberships at the Michigan Union business office. ~ 22 2~22~ >2 - ~ '"-2 S24 .h .. 222"'}.': . 2.k ... ., . . . : . ~ :, , ; ...< . 4l" .... ..: r"2"?%i4:::... On. .2. . : YOUK OUGHTAL14 CAMUSITR-RT M aE , ..u ~ .,., , ONilbl SALE THEk INCLUDES: AVAILABLE AT: . E SSAY DDAG LFICT ION ANGE LL H ALL THE TRIAL of Sirhan Bishara Sirhan went to the jury yesterday. Earlier in the day, the state rested its case against the assassin of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy by asking the jury to return a verdict of first degree murder. The defense has asked for a verdict of second- degree murder, arguing that Sirhan was mentally unhinged when he shot Kennedy last June. The jury may return any one of four verdicts including aquittal or second-degree manslaughter. In a 44-minute statement, Superior Court Judge Herbert Walker cautioned the jurors against considering the subject of penalty in their deliberations, and instructed them to reach a verdict without being influenced by pity, passion, or prejudice. * * * ALEXANDER DUBCEK, chief of the Czechoslovak Com- munist party, will reportedly confer with Soviet leaders this week. The meeting will take place prior to Thursday's crucial session of the party's Central Committee. The committee meeting is expected to be the scene of a showdown between supporters of Dubcek's reform program and pro-Soviet hard-liners. Meanwhile, Czechoslovakia was scheduled to participate yesterday in the latest Warsaw pact military maneuvers. Prague's agreement to participate has been linked by some ob- servers to the mystery surrounding a government announcement Saturday-which was withdrawn two hours later-that more Soviet troops would be sent to Czechoslovakia. ISRAEL AND EGYPT engaged yesterday in both air and land fighting. In the eighth consecutive day of gun dueling across the Suez Canal, the Israelis reported one soldier killed and three wounded. The Egyptians in turn claimed one civilian was wounded and several civilian homes were hit by artillery. Both sides acknowledged that one Egyptian MIG had been crippled in a dogfight with Israeli jets. The Egyptians charged that Israeli planes had violated their airspace over Port Saia, which has recently been used by the Soviet fleet. the strike controls. The TUC rep- resents nine million workers. The British government also ap- proved a tight new budget yester- day. Wilson was understood to view both the tough budget and the strike controls as musts in his drive to restore Britain's economic health and bring its foreign pay- ments out of the red. Informants say the prime minister argued forcefully in an afternoon Cabinet session for action now on the strike controls. The sources said the precise for- mula for the strike controls is to be worked out in the next three weeks and presented to Parliament for approval by summer. It had originally been expected that the proposals would be introduced no earlier than next year. The more - controversial pro- posals in the labor package in- clude mandatory secret ballots be- fore any union-backed strike can begin, an obligatory cooling-off period before wildcat action, and fines against violators of strike curbs. This last provision especial- ly touched off outcry from labor. Ray Gunter, former labor min- ister in Wilson's Cabinet, said Monday the split between govern- ment and the union movement is critical. "I see no hope of the Labor party winning the next election- certainly not under its present leadership,' he declared in an in- terview. The next election must be held by March 31, 1971. Wilson is gambling that the economy will have been righted by then. The budget will be announced in the House of Commons today by Chancellor of the Exchequer LSA. curriculum panel approves RC experiment By RICK PERLOFF The literary college curriculum committee yesterday approved the establishment of an experimental student-run course in the Resi- dential College. The course, entitled "Communi- cation, will be offered as a one term experiment this fall. There is a limit of 30 students who will be allowed to take the course as a substitution for one of the two required "core" courses. However, an unlimited number may take it as an elective. The RC Representative Assem- bly-the college's student-faculty decision-making body - approved the implementation of the course last week. However, all new courses that offer college credit require curriculum committee ap- proval. According to the students who planned the course, it is designed to give students an alternative to the required curriculum and to instill in them a quality of "independent scholarship." The course will be taught by three or four student leaders who will be guided by three faculty advisers. One unit of RC credit will be the student leaders upon success- ful completion of the course. In addition, written evaluations of the students will besubmitted by their student teachers. The fac- ulty advisers will write evaluations for the teachers. The student leaders will be pri- marily juniors. Some sophomores are also expected to teach. They will be selected "on the basis of their being well-read, having depth of knowldege and ability to relate to other students," explain- ed !Lynn Eden, '71, an originator of the course. Prof. Carl Cohen of the philoso- phy department, an ex-officio member of the curriculum com- mittee and associate director of the RC, supported the experiment. In other action, the committee approved a request from the po- litical science department to offer all 300 and 400 level political science courses for four credits, instead of three. All courses in the department will now be worth four hours. 100 level political science courses are presently worth four credit hours. In addition the committee ap- proved a proposal from the Eng- lish department to teach English 123 and 325 for four hours. Roy Jenkins. Although its termsi granted to both the students and WORRIED ABOUT FINALS? SPECIAL JURY AWARD to "JOANNA" Rio Film Festivl-Rio de Jonero Before You Think of CHEATING... come in and talk to us about the alternatives: extensions and other special arrangements. & SPECIAL THIS WEEK ON LOOPHOLES & "ONE 0 YEAR' 10 BE Holl's Alpert. A Saturday Reew IF THE S I rthur Knight w "IRREVERENT, OFF BEAT, WACKY. . ENJOYED IT" -Gordon Beauchamp, Michigan Daily II