A PRP GRAM OF VISION FOR A N"W WORLD J ust a rrived I ror-a Australia Bewilderrng -Fasc.,tin POON-TANG TRILOGY by Ben Vcn Meter Completely umn hibitd New American Cinerna m FALL OF THE HOUSE OF USHER Raore 1928 Oavant nard eclasic Visuallv nf r C by THE CABINET OF DR. CALIGARI: Hiahly expresionistc THE MAGICIAN Powerful ant x- a r fanta -., FLAG Extremely cret' 'tire C OLD GLORY Excellent cret ve cmr on uarralIsm SNOW WHITE BUFFY SAINTE A RIE October 4! DAVID LIPSON ( nusprodiqy playinq his -itanscriptian for piano of t movement ofrBach s 3rd BRANDENBURG CONCERTO and speakinq on and playinq other works THR-DAY, SEPT. 25 secolIi x4r Ahrciptan kt g NEW~S PHON~E: frontt page Thursday, September 25, 1969 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three I the n ews today b TIhe As toca/i / Pressand Gollege Press Servtice Scott chosen Senate GOP THE SMOTHERS BROTHERS yesterday sued CBS for $31.1 million. Tom and Dick Smothers charged the network with breach of contract and infringement of their constitutional rights for canceling the Smothers' weekly comedy program last April following a dispute over censorship. The suit alleges that the constitution was violated by CBS's maintaining power of censorship over the program, and asks that the network be permanently enjoined from censoring entertainment programs. Griffin elect( Cab Collowav inns LINES VERTICAL t JarmesI nfirmta Sabt 1 abstract fil hram Th a8 P.M. THE JUSTICE DEPARTMENT announced yesterday a re- National tilm Bo~ ard Cand 1236 Washtenaw organization of its civil rights division. RI 1 1 :00 P . at Fore-st, near S. Un iversty) The division has been racked with dissension for the past month F;-PT- FOnUM i A T,-3 :00 otin c and Refreshments and FUN after- over the Nixon administration's policies on school desegregation. 1 :00 p.. ards Everyonedwelcome! dNo Yielding to apparent pressure from the attorneys who comprise muallal63nowled7eneeded.)i dFor further info. call 663-2827 the civil rights division, the Justice Department discarded the geo- 665,6806. 761 -7356. graphic sections and within the division. The measure is designed to enable the division to have a consistent enforcement policy on - s _.______ ..______________ ____.."-______a nationwide basis BIG FOUR negotiations on a Mideast settlement are ex- pected to resume in mid-October. HIRE SOME HAVY SOUNDS United Nations Secretary General U Thant announced yesterday that the four countries-France, Great Britain, the Soviet Union and the United States-have reached agreement on restarting the nego- tiations, which were suspended last July. Meanwhile, French Foreign Minister Maurice Schumann yester- D day told the U.N. General Assembly that peace in the Middle East depends solely on the outcome of the four power talks. * * TIE AFL-CIO yesterday urged the Senate to reject the nomination of Clement Ilaynesworth. Jr. It Takes 2 000 Watts of L ght and Sonud SIX MEN and a Elliot Bredhoff, general counsel of th" AFL-CIO industrial union T0hSdepartment, told the Senate Judiciary Committee that the Supreme Court nominee had violated the conflict-of-interes statute by pur- Woman to Make FULL FATH and Credit. chasing stock in Brunswick Corp. while the company was involved in a case pending before Haynesworth's court. Haynesworth's nomination for the Supreme Court has come under R EM EM B E R THE RHYTHM METHOD? fire recently because of the Brunswick case and other alleged con- flicts-of-interest. THE SENATE anproved yesterday a 53.75 billion food stamp CALL 764-940 O 769-6308 program, far greater than the administration's proposal. The program would provide free food stamps to families with an income of less than $60 a month, and allow all families with an income of less than 81500 a year to buy food stamps. . : ; The approved program, a substitute for President Nixon's $2.1 i t a s as new leader; By WALTER SHAPIRO Daily Washington Correspondent WASHINGTON-Senate Re- publicans elected Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania m in o r i t y leader to fill the vacancy caused by the Sept. 7 death of Everett McKinley Dirksen. The Republican Conference also chose Michigan's Robert P. Griffin to replace Scott as minority whip. Scott defeated Howard H. Bak- er, Jr. of Tennessee for minority leader by a vote of 24-19 yester- day morning, and Griffin edged Baker 23-20 for minority whip on the third ballot yesterday after- noon. The Scott-Baker race was based on a combination of ideology, age, and geography. Scott, 68, has been closely as- sociated with the eastern liberal wing of the p~arty since entering Congress in 1941. Baker, 43, a moderate conservative in his third year in the Senate, was boosted by such freshmen as Robert W. Packwood (Ore) and Marlow W. Cooke (Ky). Both wanted younger Senate leadership. However, the age factor appear- ed to have gone in favor of the elderly Scott and may have in- Csured his election. r Al aide to Sen. Richard S. Schweiker (Pa). Scott's campaign manager, said that the margin of d that it victory was provided by "three or he entire four" conservative western Re- ce, since publicans who did not want their d. They identity revealed. e dormi- However, according to various ts Union Senate sources, these conservative Is, and a supporters were among the older Senators. They were thought to be ome stu- Wallace F. Bennett (Utah), Gor- Ioor with don Allott (Colo), Milton R "Build- Young (ND) and Len B. Jordax em. (Ida. These senators apparently em- aken, the phasized seniority over ideology. Student 'Their sentiments were expressed e leaflets by Jordan, who reportedly told n campus Scott several days ago, "You de- norning" serve it, Hugh." s on the Baker's supporters, who believed e a book- they had enough votes to win, were Pierpont bitter over what they termed "a a new doublecross" by the four Senators. dum on Most of the other voting was along ideological and regional lines. terrupted Thirteen of Scott's 24 supporters ed to re- . - ecuto i- broke with the Nixon Administra- ecause it tion on the recent ABM vote. Sen. Scott Sen. Griff in DIAG AT 2:00: Supporters to hoi rally for books toj Subscribe to The Michigan Daily - - S--m fltA A n 2.r- 5 g l S - . m w .. *. . 4 ... .- . ...- .. -- -..S....... s -- - - -- - - ;* v ;-l~-~- Ma 1 .> = 7+ GS :;:: {t. r.P . c' ! -1 k ,1' 1 : fA. k4 A M ']d"-ti am 'Q 'rt m d i"° ] ! ': F u sl a: w .C Y I Yf >J +5il i l3Te4 1:r..i1 billion proposal, is expected to face hostility in the House of Rep- r esent aties- AMEIDABAD, INDIA was rocked by Hindu-Moslem rioting this week which resulted in over 600 persons killed. More than 1,000 people have been injured and 10,000 left homeless6 in the 170-mile area affected by the riots.t Moslems accounted for 75 per cent of the dead, cantara, conductor: Hill Auditorium,+ 8:00 pm. DAILY OFFICIAL BI LE TIN General Notices THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25 Day Calendar D)epartiment of Romance Languages and Literatures: International Confer- enne on the Epic Poem LaAraucana: Ratkham Buildin. 10:15 a.m. Physical Chemist ry Seminar: Jeremy Biurdett, Dept. of Chemistry, "Some Unusual Ftrce Constants and Potential Fuiictins in a Number of Inorganic ad Organic Compounds"; 1200 Chem- ist: - 100 p. ~epatrtment of Journalism and Law School Lecture: Nicholas Johnson, Fed- eral Cmmunications Commissioner, "The Media Barons Updated": True- tblood Auditorium, 4:10 pin. Academic Affairs Committee Meet- ing: Discussion of ROTC, 2009 Angell Hall, 7:30 p.m. Open meeting. Linguistics Lecture: Professor Kena- neth Pike, Department of Linguistics. "Tone in Tibeto-Burmese Languages of Nepal"; Rackham Amphitheatre. 7:45 p.m. University 'hilharmonia: Tlheo Al- Department of Mathematics: Review class for Society of Actuaries' GeneralF Mathematics Examination. Thursday. September 25, 3010 Angell Hall, 4:00 p.mi. All Education undergraduates: Pre-. classification for Winter Term (II) 1970, Sept. 29-Dec. 2. Obtain material in 2000 University School beginning Sept. 29. Make ap~pontments with adviser. Regents' Meeting: October 17. Com- munications for consideration at this . meeting must be in the President's hands no later than October 2. Graduate School Foreign Language. 'Test: Application blanks are available in tahe Language Secretary's office, 1014 Raekham Bldg.. or in 3014 Rack: ham Bldg. for the Graduate School Foreign Language Test. The next ad- ministration of the test will be on Saturday, November 1, and applica- tions are due in Princeton, New Jersey before October 8. Placement Service' 3200 S.A.B. GENERAL DIVISION National Security Agency Professional Continued fron Page 1,} Regents' meeting in October and voted to hold the rally today. They also voted to limit the rally and subsequent action to the bookstore issue. Several speak- ers had urged the group to extend the planned action into other areas, including the anti-ROTC campaign. "This is an iron-clad issue," one girl explained. "It's the best place to fight, because there is no ques- tion about our being in the right." Qualification Test for Liberal Arts Maj- ors math and engineering majors not required to take test but encouraged to apply). Two tests will be given this fall in Ann Arbor: application deadlines: October 8 for October 18 test; and November 21 for December 6 test. Bul- letin and registration form available at Placement Services. There is no test given for NSA in the spring. Foreign Service Officer Examination Sfor U.S. Dept. of State anid U.S. In- formation Agency. Information booklet and applications at Placement Services due Octber 24 for test Dec 6. This is the only test given this year, all grad- uates should apply now if interested. Federal service Entrance Examina- tions are being held throughout the school year in Ann Arbor. December graduates should contact Miss Webber at 764-7460 to apply for the Octoberi 18 exam. Applications are due October 8 for the November exam, none given in Deemnber. Spring graduates may take the fall exams, or apply for exams next semester. Processing your GS rating takes time, so think ahead. Casualty Actuarial Society, Chicago. Ill., is offering tests for actuarial work in automobile, fire, liability and health fields, leading to recognition as a qual- ified actuary. The tests are given in Ann Arbor on Wed., November 12. ap- plications are due October 1. ask at Placement Services, Career Planning Division for applications. Subscribe to The Michigan Daily Several speakers argued was necessary to attack t University system at on all the issues are linke cited the ROTC issue, th tory overflow, the Tenan battle with local landlord "eed for open admissions During the debate sc dents covered the front d newspaper and painted ing condemned" over th After the votes were to students moved to the Activities Bldg. to prepar and to plan organizing on for last night and this m The controversy center Regents' decision to create store under the control of and their insistence on school-by-school referen proposed funding. The students who in the Regents meeting vote ject the Regents' plan b lA c tin nlnr1 t rl.t n. apes not allow student control and F Among those voting for Baker, on- because it stipulates how a funding ly Cook opposed deployments of r'eferendum must be run. tie ABM. In other action, Neil Bush, de- Twelve of the 13 Republican fense attorney in the Central Stu- Senators from the Northeast sup- dent Judiciary (CSJ) lock-in ported Scott while 6 of the 7 trials released a letter addressed Southerners supported Baker. to President Robben Fleming, the Scott denied that his election Regents, and Roland Gainsley, was based on ideology, contending head of the University security. that his experience "appeals to The letter alleges that the ad- more senators than ideological Tes "tenalles thatnde mad- lIeasons." Scott also told reporters dresses "intentionally and mfalic- "to stop calling mne a liberal. Call iously" caused the Administration me what I am-a ioderate." building to be closed, and that this . Observers felt Griffin's election action was in violation of SGCasuscapign rule1 o de~n~tatinsas whip was due to his campaign- rule 1 on demonstrations. ing quietly for the post while other The statement further requests Republicans were concentrating on that (CSJ> notify the defendants the race for minority leader. to appear before it and take ap- Griffin said his election "bal- propriate disciplinary action. ances the leadership "geography- wise and ideology-wise." When questioned on how he differs from Scott "ideology-wise." Gliffin re- EMY AWVARDS I fused to elaborate. NOW AT THE CAMPUS THEATRE IAL 8-6416 mo DIAL 8-6416 ENDING WEDNESDAY Wednesday Is Ladies Dav FOR ALL YOUNG LOVERS WHEREVER YOU ARE The motion picture to be seen again and again- A M AN ACADEMY ANd AAWARDS nU~d OMAN ~aWINNER. WINNER IACADE INCLUDING BEST ACTRESS KATHARINE HEPBURN PETER O'TOOLE LION IN JOAN CRR zjoiW VVINT R II DIAL 5 -6290 . " !ii~fl ;Mn~iY Pl IN A'\T}1'-,, NaPKIN ~ SHOWS AT 1:534 SEPTEMBER 30-OCTOBER '12 rnIcxuG~ CirU"1r06-! iiu.iit ..mnu i n; 11 1L Directed by John Houseman plus "PLAY" by Samuei Beckett f b, _ - ; - ., _; . = '= r" , s , ,.H.,, 4 , , r .. ii S _.- .. bJf c1t4ce C1.do~ I lopol LI I II I lI I I I i F. IHA presents BUFFY SAINTE MARIE, -. . __ . . - A 4 JOIN IN! Pagan Rites of Fall MAX KADE'S- Okioberfesi SATURDAY, SEPT. 27 603 Oxford Rd. (Across from the Arb) --- --"COUPON--.-.- THOMPSON'S D177A l-I'. U'- r VITTORIO DESICA'S ThA Ditu.IeA TIJa I