THE MICHIGAN HAIL. THIIRIgDAV. MA's ' T~~lE MICIIIE~~AN.h. x:1:h! 1I:TA 1A .', 1.. L:l I ,i.lH I 1 )elay Action )n Michigan rime Change Board of Canvassers Postpones Ruling on Referendum Petitions LANSING (P) - A determined y lawyer yesterday blocked any nmediate time change for Mich- Mks. Zoe Burkholz of Benton arbor, a member of the State lard of Canvassers, insisted she 1 not want to act immediately rule on the legalities of peti- >ns seeking Ran election to put lohigan on Daylight Saving me. Other board members 'went mng with her and it was agreed delay any action until June 24, Snext meeting date for the ard. Disregard Ruling This was in spite of Atty. Gen. ank Kelley's ruling that "It is e clear duty of the State Board Canvassers" to perform its sta- toi'y obligations without refer- ct to any pending litigation. A' group representing the Mich- 5n, Farm Bureau and bowling ey and theater proprietors are eking to head off a popular vote. has appealed the issue' to both e State Court of Appeals and preme Court. Kelley had expected the can- ssers to act on the petitions yes- 'day. Certification of the peti- ns automaticaly would have put chigan on Daylight Saving me. Notifies Officials Kelley went so far assto notify v George Romney and other te department heads theres ght be a time change yesterday. lley had recommended pushing e clocks one hour ahead at mid- ht last night.] Mrs. John Waite of East Lan- ig, chairman of the Board of nvassers, went along with the lay. She said the issue was so portant it should not be decideda tl a fourth member was sworn Nathan G. -Conyers of Detroiti s appointed to fill a vacancy esday by Gov. Romney. No Court Grant< T'he State Supreme Court has used to grant the group op- sing the petitions an order ask- the- Board of Canvassers to d up its action until legal is- e are settled.c Mvrs. Burkholz said the attor- y general's opinion that the ard should act without waiting ' a decision by the courts was itrary to a previous opinion.x When the canvassers were asked certify the results of an election1 Lering the Constitutional Con- ition in 1962, the attorney gen- q advised the board to withhold 'tification until legal questions re settled in the courts.l Reconciliation of Opinions MIrs. Burkholz said she wantede econciliation of the two differ- opinions. We can't possibly make a deci- n without looking deeper into s," Mrs. Burkholz said. the June 24 meeting will be Id to draw up rules for hearing uments from both opponents I supporters of the time change. Arguments are expected to take day or more before the can- ;sers will make any decisions on tification. As a state executive ard, the Canvassers Board has right to hold hearings on mat- s' that concern it. THE EASTERN MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY PLAYERS presents Sheridan's comedy The IVA S MAY 10-15 Seats $1.50. Res., HU 2-3453 Curtain 8 p.m.; Sun. Mat. 2 p.m. Consul Calls THEATRE lT! 0 A YT /'- r Army Trial Ivory T'ower2 Uses(Cort Scene1 'Witch Hunt' To Present Thoughts, Emotions J -Associated Press ANOTHER BROKEN WINDOW A SMASHED WINDOW IS CHECKED at a Philadelphia Art gallery yesterday by Richard Frey after objectors to the display, part of the "Week of Angry Arts" in the city threw a baseball through the window for the second time in several days. The program which includes poetry readings, art -shows, folk concerts and discussion programs, is aimed at protesting the war in Vietnam. Court Martial Begins The "Trial Drama" is an Of Doctor Refusin, increasingly popular theatrical phenomen. This is probably the To Train U.S. Medics result of the selective reality which is automatically provided COLUMBIA, S.C. uP~-A civilian by the court-room atmosphere- attorney told an Army general its sense of dialogue brought to court martial yesterday its trial a crucial boil with just the proper of Capt. Howard B. Levy "is a amount of life or death to salt witch hunt" because of the, man's the water. This prefabricated dra- political beliefs. matic structure was doubtless a Levy, 30 a doctor on the Army's part of the attraction to the hospital staff at nearby Ft. Jack- authors of "Ivory Tower." Then, son, went on trial before a 10 too, there is the comfort of a con- member panel of high ranking of- vention. The success of Weiss's ficers, four of whom are veterans "The Investigation," and the of the Vietnam fighting. eminently popular legal entangle- He ischarged on five counts of ments of "A Man for All Seasons" refusing to obey an order that he have created a strong foundation train Vietnam bound Army Special for "Ivory Tower" to build itself Forces medics in the treatment of upon. Unfortunately, that .build- skin diseases.' Levy is a derma- ing is caught in an identity crisis, tologist. and the decision is split, between One of Levy's attorneys Charles a house of cards and a high-rise Morgan Jr. of Atlanta, put the of dubious quality. question to each of the officers. First, let us handle the tower- Maj. James E. Davis, a Vietnam ing attempt at "psychological veteran, said he would not pre- drama." Justice serves her mythic judiced in the case even though function of a blind unmasker. he is a Negro. Everyone-save the neat persona Other Vietnam veterans on the of common sense in the form of panel include Maj. Nasami N. the Prosecutor-is exposed with a Misimoto, who is of Asiatic extrac- flick of serpentine legal tongue. tion; Lt. Col. Charles W. Hanlon The wife, who loves blindly during and Maj. Boyd D. Parson, who lost the examination, is cross-exam- an eye in a mine explosion in the ined right into the opposite cor- fighting. ner. To say nothing of the Ameri- on Tlpm-hih+rn f - Last Act. And we are not disap- pointed, for the poet does indeedj lay bare his soul-promptly in theE alloted time before the final cur- tain. Psychological revelation has always been a difficult effect in the theatre, where time is lim- ited and motives must be project-j ed rather than introspected. But "Ivory Tower" makes littlej or no use of either realistic ges- ture or surrealistic setting and conversation. Thus, the character is left to indicate his passions only by the vehemence with which they erupt. And so, the stage is filled with regular and not unskilled ;I : E eruptions \which necessarily re- mind one of Yellow Stone Park. But if it is not a successful play of emotion, neither is "Ivory Tower" a profound play of ideas. The values which the poet (modeled obstensibly on Ezra Pound) expresses are accepted gratuitously. Nobility of purpose alone is questioned. The authors of "Ivory Tower" show us only an anti-Americanism founded upon the tortured experiences of their poet's childhood. Men become fascists, we are asked to accept, merely out of an overwhelming father-hatred. HEW Reorganization Shifts Power To Stop Segregation, AMERICAN REACTION: Greek Government Charges Treason Plot by Papandreou ATHENS (MP-Andreas Papan- dreou, U.S. trained politician- economist son of a former pre- mier, was charged yesterday with conspiracy to commit high treason by overthrowing the monarchy. He was transferred in a closed army van from a hotel in an Athens suburb, where he had been held since the army seized power in Greece April 21, to Averoff Prison in downtown Athens. Under Greek law, Papandreou, 48, could be sentenced to life im- prisonment if convicted. The new military regime has indicated that no death penalty- is contemplated. U.S. diplomats have sought as- surances that Papandreou would not be executed. Magistrate Socrates Socratides ordered Papandreou arrested after questioning him in connection with a civilian investigation into the alleged Aspida army conspi- racy plot. Aspidk means shield. The government charges leftist army officers in Aspida plotted to overthrow the monarchy, take Greece out of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and set up a Socialist state. A three member judiciary com- mittee must decide whether there is enough evidence against Papan- dreou to warrant a trial. The legal procedure leading up to this could take weeks. Gen. Gregory Spantidakis, the new deputy premier and defense minister, asked in Paris about the prisqner's fate, said, "We are not a government of executioners." Papandreou, rallying point for antimonarchist feelings, is a for- mer U.S. naturalized citizen and his wife, Margaret Chant of Chi- taught economics in American cago, and their four children. universities. However, since Papandreou is no He has been chairman of the longer an American citizen, the economics department at the Uni- American government has little versity of California at Berkeley power over any action that might and an economics instructor at the be taken as a result of the Aspida University of Minnesota. He was trial. the leader of the left-wing of the At the University of Colorado, Center Union party, which fell a letter to President Johnson from power in ,June of 1965 as a urging the President "to use all result of pressure from the Greekj the prestige and power of your of- monarchy. fice to prevent the possibility o1 Prominent members of the U.S. harm" to Papandreou has 'been educational community have ex- circulated by the economics de- pressed, concern for his safety. partment. The American Embassy has been States the Colorado letter, "We in contact with Papandreou's have followed the scholarly work American wife, and she is report- of Mr. Andreas Papandreou with ed well. Papandreou came to the admiration and we consider him United States in 1940 and became an asset to Greece; he must be a naturalized citizen. He returned protected if a non-Communist, to Greece in 1961 to become the progressive movement is to develop director general of the Athens in Greece." Center for Economic Studies. j The Colorado professors com- / He subsequently renounced his mented that it was unthinkable U.S. citizenship in 1964 and won a that "a European country and seat in the Greek parliament. member state of NATO should be Diplomatic circles believe that if allowed to fall under an oppressive Papandreou is convicted he will military dictatorship that has al- -be released after a brief prison ready abolished the very freedomsE term, then might be allowed to for which the Western world return to the United States with stands." Asks Dismissal Each said they would uphold the First Amendment which guar- anteesufreenspeech, and each said he would not be biased because Levy worked for a South Carolina Negro voter registration drive dur- ing his off hours. Morgan asked the panel to dis- miss the case, citing a federal tax case he said was reversed by an appeals court which held that political beliefs motivated incep- tion of that case. Morgan insisted that Col. Fancy had added to the original sum- mary of charges against Levy after reading the captain's confidential dossier. The attorney said the dos- sier, which he said he had never been allowed to examine, contain- ed reports on Levy's political ac- tivities prior to the start of his two year tour of Army duty in July, 1955. can cream.wnich turns out to (oh consternation) a hypocritical lusting after wealth and shallow appearances. When the ingenue defense counsel admits that he was "born on the wrong side of Mulberry Street, believe it or not," we easily believe. That has, after all, been the. basic plot motif for the American stage ever since the waited for Lefty. It is the young lawyer's self- disgust which leads him to defend what he believes to be the incor- ruptible individualism of his poet- client. We in the audience might also believe in this incorruptibil- ity, for the play gives not the remotest inkling to the contrary. However, we quickly realize that this would leave nothing for the WINNER OF 6 ACADEMY AWARDS INCLUDING BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR! COLUMBIA PIC'I'RES pmasents FRED ZINNEVI ANN'S FILM OF AMAN FOR AjL SEASONS From the play by ' S OBEITBOL TKICIOcR'Lg CAMPUS WASHINGTON (A)-A sweeping reorganization that in effect takes away the Office of Education's power to cut off federal funds to noncomplying school districts was announced yesterday by Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare John W. Gardner. The new move, tailored to meet demands from congress, calls for centralization of all civil rights enforcement personnel in the De- partment of Health, Education and Welfare into a unit directly responsible to Gardner. At a news conference, Gardner made public an exchange of letters with Rep. Daniel J. Flood (D-Pa), chairman of a House Appropria- tions subcommittee, outlining the new consolidations. Now the various agencies inside CiNEMA ii presents GEORGE SEGAL TOM COURTENAY in KING RAT (1965, directed by Brian Forbes) "Best since BRIDGE ON THE RIVER KWAI" --N Y Journal American FRIDAY and SATURDAY 7 and 9:15 P.M Aud. Angell Hall 50C the Welfare Department have the power to cut off funds, after hear- ing, toen force desegregation guide- lines in schools and hospitals. The new plan would affect 278 em- ployes now working in the Office of Education, the Public Health Service, the Welfare Department and various regional and central offices. Some civil rights spokesmen have been sharply critical of what they call the department's laxness in enforcing desegregation guide- lines in federally financed schools and hospitals of the South. On the other hand, Congress has been critical of the Office of Edur cation's cutting off of funds to southern school districts and has singled out Dr. Harold Howe, edu- cation commissioner, for much of the attack. ..,......... 7 i THE INTERNATIONAL DINNER-FILM SERIES CONTINUES WITH FELLINI'S AWARD-WINNING "LA STRADA" following delectable Continental cuisine Americans-$1 Foreign Students-50c FRIDAY, MAY 12-6 P.M. PRESBYTERIAN CAMPUS CENTER, 1432 Washtenow Reservations please: 662-3580 or 662-5529 SPONSORED BY THE ECUMENICAL CAMPUS MINISTRY Ewi ENDS TONIGHT Hombre means man.. Paul Newman is Hombre! PAUL N EWMAN FREDRIC MARCH RICHARD BOONE DIANE CILENTO "HOMBRE P'.i'e o*COLOR By' Deat m{ PRESENTS ALL THE * STARRING * Broderick Crawford as Huey Long * BASED ON * Robert Penn Warren's Pulitzer Prize winning novel Friday and Saturday 7:00 and 9:05 P.M. Architecture Auditorium * STILL ONLY 50c A Phone 434-0130 Enrte ce On CARPINTER ROAD FIRST OPEN 7:00 P.M. FIRST RUN NOW SHOWING RUN D\ONEN.wg / . YeCHNICOLOR m Shown at 7:50 & 11:25 ALSO-Shown at 9:30 Only .GUNFIGHT } .."ABILENE --. ~eIMTECHNICOLOR BOBBY DARIN EMILY BANKS PLUS: "DUTCH TREAT" COLOR CARTOON I OMWI TONIGHT!I NO SEATS Every Ticketholder RESERVED Guaranteed a Seat RODGERS .a HAMMERSTEIN'S ROBERT WISE PRODUCTION Coming to this city at last- The most . NO 2-6264;." :a 1}.?"JAma {agem? HgLD OVER 2nd WEEK ~TAI E BT -atie 64::1 E1.I 1 :30 4:05 6:20 9:00 ' * D~f ,ve$medi 6r U 3,"vx ' DinnyOBR IIRIHRO DGERS IOSC'AR HAMMERSTEIN II IERNEST LEHMAN