Saturday, January 1$,1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Saturday, January 18, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY HAIRCUT Michigan Union Barbershop HAIRCUT Michigan Union Barbershop I -. II NTERIOR INNOVATOR? Alaska 's controversial governor under fire in Senate hearings t 5TATE info: 662-6264 HELD OVER 5th WEEK.. There bad cops andthn are food cops--and1 then there's Associated Press News Analysis JUNEAU, Alaska UP) - If Walter J. Hickel's two years as governor of the largest and most undeveloped state in the na- tion are any indication, he could be an innovator and an activist as head of the Department of the Interior, Already, the plain-spoken Alaskan's few public statements concerning his new position have made him the most con- troversial of President-elect Nix- on's cabinet appointees. Controversy is no stranger to Bickel, who as Alaska's gover- nor, has frequently opposed poli- cies of Interior Secretary Stew- art L. Udall. Characteristically, he has said he looked forward to the sharp questioning he faces at the hear- ings of the Senate Interior Com- mittee. "I think I'll enjoy it as much as they will," he said. His widely-publicized state- ment that he is against "con- servation f o r conservation's sake" follows his belief that Alaska's development has been hampered by unrealistic federal restrictions. At the interior committee hearings he was likely to air his views thatAlaska's situation is unique; that different policies may well be in order for other parts of the country. A case in point would be the federal water standards devel- oped by the Interior Depart- ment untler Udall that would have required streams that have never been used for industrial purposes to be maintained at exactly the same standard of purity. These standards would make expansion of the pulp industry in heavily forested southeastern Alaska impossible, Hickel said last year when pressed by the Interior Department for adop- tion of the controls. The state has continued to hold out for what officials be- lieve would be a more reason- able standard. On the other hand, Hickel has been firm in his enforcement of pollution control standards in the state's offshore waters. Getting the multi-billion bar- rel oil field in A r c t i c Alaska into production has been one of Hickel's prime goals. He order:d the attorney-gen- eral last month to file suit against the Interior Department to block establishment of free trade sub zones in Maine, Geor- gia and Hawaii. The increase of foreign crude oil through the zones would cur- tail domestic oil exploration and production, especially in high- cost development areas like Alaska, he said. Although Hickel opposed an increase in the state oil sever- ance tax last year, he is not an unalloyed petroleum industry apologist as he has been por- trayed in some quarters. Because the great majority of Alaska's oil provinces are pub- lic, domain, he was considering as governor imposition of re- quirements in lease agreements I : . 1 I. that the oil be refined in t h e- state. He laid groundwork for possi- ble construction by the state of a refinery for production of finished petroleum products from the state's 121 per cent petroleum royalty. As secretary of the interior, Hickel will be able to lift the "freeze" imposed by Udall on selection by Alaska of the 103 million acres to which it was entitled by the Statehood Act. He has declared he will do just that. "We will have to convince the natives that their interests will be protected," he said in a re- cent televisibn interview. The freeze was imposed to protectthe natives' aboriginal rights until a federal settlement is made with them by Congress. Hickel has indicated he has far-reaching plans to overhaul the Interior Department, which he contends has become a sort of "catch-all" agency through the years. Among Hickel's plans is se- paration of the Bureau of In- Sdian Affairs from the interior department in the interest of administrative efficiency, since it is the only branch that is not concerned with natural resourc- es. The Department of Health, Education and Welfare would be a more logical place for it, Hickel said. He also espouses establish- ment of a cabinet-level depart- ment of fisheries and a national agency forraising the United States from its position as fifth in the world in fisheries pro- duction. Hickel has favored p u b l i c power projects for Alaska, in- cluding the proposed $1.2 bil- lion Rampart Canyon project that was ruled out by the In- terior Department in 1967 af- ter years of intensive study. STEVI VICCEJN AS TBUJIJT" uSEmaS EomAUNE AORC TECHNICOLOR*FROM WARNER BROS.-SEVEN ARTS 40IN SHOWS AT : 1:00-3:00-5:00-7:00 & 9:15 IKTITAF _- - -- - .. _ _ __ ___ _ ^ _ TONIGHT and SATURDAY r Mad Marvin Invites You to Trip with him and his friends in a colossal PAMELA MILES and DAVE JOHNS 4 s 1421 Hill St. 8:30 P. the news today b The Associated Press and College Press Service THE NATIONAL LIBERATION FRONT a n d North Vietnam laid down a hard line yesterday on the eve of the first session of the enlarged Paris peace talks. An indication of the tough bargaining to come was given by the number three man in the NLF delegation, Tran Hoa Nam. The only possible agreement, he said, "must be based on an end to the criminal American war of aggression" and the total withdrawal of American troops. On the American side of the talks Henry Cabot Lodge told Senators in Washington he is approaching his new posi- tion as chief U.S. negotiator with an open mind on a possible Vietnam settlement. After meeting with members of the Senate Foreign Re- lations Committee he told newsmen "I've always said that a military victory was not possible in Vietnam . . . I'm not a hard liner or a soft liner. I'm a realist." SENATE COMMITTEES gave clearance yesterday to three more of President-elect Nixon's cabinet appointees while marathon quizzing of Secretary of the Interior des- ignate Gov. Walter J. Hickel continued. The Armed Services Committee gave clearance to Rep. Melvin Laird of Wisconsin who will become secretary of de- fense. At the same time it approved David Packard as deputy secretary of defense. Also approved was David M. Kennedy as secretary of the treasury. Questions had earlier been raised concerning Ken- nedy's plan to place his holdings in trust, but were resolved after Kennedy revised the trust proposal. Hickel was asked to explain what one senator called exor- bitant profits Hickel reportedly made in a gas distribution firm while governor. Hickel denied he had done anything to raise the value of the gas company stock which he had placed in trust when he became governor. THREE SOVIET COSMONAUTS, of the four involved in the Thursday's space linkup and transfer came down yesterday. Landing in the snow covered Kazakhstan steppes, the cosmonauts were greeted by villagers who rushed with over- coats to protect them from the 31 degree below zero weather. Soyuz 5, with one cosmonaut aboard, remained in orbit PRESIDENT JOHNSON formally recommended to Congress yesterday that it raise the pay of its members from $30,000 to $42,500 a year. In a special message Johnson said the present salary "by today's standards is woefully inadequate." Johnson's message also asked pay increases for top-level officials in the judicial and executive branches. The pay raises he suggested, already revealed in the State of the Union message, will take effect automatically in 30 days unless the House or Senate changes or vetoes them. Objection to the pay boost came from Rep. H. R. Gross (R-Iowa) who yesterday called the measure "outrageous" and said he would seek a roll call vote on the proposal. THE JUSTICE DEPARTMENT announced yesterday it has filed suit against International Business Machines (IBM) corporation for anti-trust violations. Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark said the civil suit alleged that IBM has pursued manufacturing and marketing policies in the general purpose digital computer field that deny other companies the opportunity to compete effectively. The suit alleged that IBM has discriminated among cus- tomers and has limited development of computer program- ming and support industries through a policy of marketing as a package the computer system, programming know-how and related support. The suit against IBM, which had record net earnings in 1968 of $871 million, was reported to be the largest monopoly case during the Johnson administration. * . . DIST. ATTY. JIM GARRISON'S office asked yester- day for delay in the trial of Clay L. Shaw, charged with conspiring to assassinate President John F. Kennedy. The request for a delay followed a demand by a federal judge for additional evidence before he would release autopsy photographs and x-rays. A report on the autopsy findings Was released Thursday but Garrison's office continued to de- mand the actual photographs. Garrison contends they will reveal Kennedy was shot from two different directions. laugh program Thurs., Fri., Sat., Sun.-11:00 P.M. Vth Forum-separate admission Returning by overwhelming popular demand to sing blues, ballads, originals, and contem- porary folk music. Accompanied by guitar, recorder and harp with DAVE JOHNS play- ing guitar and harmonica. Next Friday and Saturday-Bob Franke and His Band I I THE COMEDY GREATS--Program 1 W. C. FIELDS-"California Bound" MARX BROS.-"Incredible Jewel Robber y" -pantomine LAUREL AND HARDY-'Big Business"-one of their really great 'ones with one of the wildest comic destruction scenes ever filled. "It will drive you mad." "THE GREAT CHASE"-Uproarious! 60 years of great movie chases. Featuring: Douglas Fairbanks, William S. Hart, Perils of Pauline, 30 minutes of Buster Keaton's greatest comedy epic THE GENERAL. "HAPPY ANNIVERSARY"-Highly creative, experimental French comedy-Aca- demy Award Oberhausen Film Festival, 1963. PLUS-Continuing BUCK ROGERS space serial and BETTY BOOP cartoon. 1 p.- . '9 UNIVERSITY ZY MUSICAL SOCIETY I i{ I i E it I IW presents Special Concert ARTUR RUBINSTEIN I World Renowned Pianist in recital "ARTISTRY&EROTICISM" Cue Magazine MY "Time" "THE MOVIE HAS THE CAREFUL TEMPO OF A MINUET, WHICH COUNTERPOINTS ITS DESPERATE EROTICISM!" N YTimes WED., JAN. 22,8:30 in Hill Auditorium PROGRAM Two Impromptus, Op. 90 .. Schubert "Appassionata" Sonata .................Beethoven, O Prole do Bebe (Bay-s Family) .........Villa-Lobos Ballade in G Minor, Op. 23 Nocturne in F-sharp major, Op. 48 .......... Chopin Scherzo in C-sharp minor, Op. 39 Tickets: $7.00-6.50-6.00-5.00-3.50-2.50 HAGUE PHILHARMONIC s XI.n x$ v{ ? J tfy p+ f hn4n >i+rh f.<+W Rf :ti f ryN. emu players seriesF THE HOUSE OF BERNARDA ALBA -a fiery drama of Spanish women January 15-19 Quirk Auditorium For Reservations Call 482-3453 (Weekdays, 12:45-4:30 p.m.) All Seats Reserved at $1.75 11 "SURELY THIS IS AMONG THE MOST EROTIC OF MOVIES! The movie's artistry raises the subject matter to the level of personality exploration. THE, EXPERIENCE IS BIZARRELY COMPELLING 9' Cue Magazine "'A HIGHLY EROTIC FILM! IT SHOULD BECOME A CAUSE CELEBRE WITH THE WHATEVER-TURNS- YOU-ON SET! Glenda Jackson is really tremendous! ENGROSSING! OFFBEAT AND DIFFERENT!" WINS Radio I WRITER-IN-RESIDENCE PROGRAM presents WILLEM VAN OTTERLOO Conductor JERZY KOSINSKI 11 FRI., JAN. 24, 8:30 "(LEAVES NOTHING TO "SEXUAL AND INVECTIVE THE IMAGINATION! AND PERFORMANCES OF GOES TOO FAR! s MEMORABLE QUALITY!" N.Y. Daily News A BIZARRE MODERN DRAMA OF A MAN AND TWO WOMEN N.Y. Post LOCKED IN A SENSUAL GAME OF SEX. -,.,a ae-m ~ noe e wr m um wr em o411:e En/l:C" TODAY IRO6RAM 2 P.M. Reading and Discussion with Prof. Bauland. ' i i.: r nr- \f!c ' A. 1 1 1 ,' 1 A dA~~c Svmphonische Etude. .... ..... . A ln rieseen