GOLDA MEIR PRIME MINISTER of ISRAEL on MEET THE PRESS, Sun., Sept. 28 Channel 13 at 12 noon E.S.T. or Channel 4 at 6:00 P.M. E.S.T. TONIGHT, Saturday and Sunday three of the finest BOB WHITE Pam Oslergren 1421 Hill St 761-1951 Guitar sna , banjo children's fiddlesea shanties £ M fddle ballads auto harp love sons etc. etc etc. SAT. AFTERNOON-WORKSHOP GRADY TUCK LIMITED ONY ____ ENGAGEMENT2 WEEKS ONLY! "THE GREATEST! ACADEMY GREAEST" AWARD "THE BEST WINNER FOREIGN FILM OF EEAR "BEST FOREIGN FILM" -Ne Y., hm 01. -Nawma 8wof d +ar a'WAR AND PEACE' 16 A GREAT FILM. NOT EVEN 'GONE WITH THE WINO' OR '®EN-HUR' IS COMPARABLE " PART I STARTS WED. OCT. jST PART H STARTS WED. OCT. ST THE TWO PART RODUCT ONof r LEO TOLSTOY'S WAR ancIPEACE PRESENTEDBYTHEWALTER READE ORGANZATONAD ATRA IN COLOR.RELEASBYCOM TNEyA SPECIAL DISCOUNT FOR CLASSES The Entire Production of "WAR AND PEACE" Will Be Sha In Two Parts. Each Part Will Be Shown For One Week! TICKETS NOW AT BUOXE oxF4LBY UAL Send self-addressed, stamped envel ope with check or money order. week sat. sun. days fri. 1:00 P.M $2.00 $2.00 200 P.M $2.00 $2.00 4:30 P.M $2.50 $2.5 SP. $2.50 $2.5 8:00 P.M. $2.75 $2.50 Children 14 and under $1.00 at all times TC1IKTIVMA 1!Et UftcASfD l!PAALt FOR G ! A Y F'fTH >F'C~oruM emsmsteuenasusmamoonemer second fr'ont page , t i CYI at 1 NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Friday, September 26, 1969 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three the n ews to day /rl: The Associated Press and C olle~e Press Serice SEN. CHARLES E. GOODELL {R-N.Y.) called U.S. troop pullout in Vietnam by December 1970. Signaling growing Republican efforts in Congress for a total to hasten the pace of withdrawal from Vietnam, Goodell said "The prosecutionI of the war with American troops must be ended, not merely reduced."l He said he will introduce legislation to bar funds for mainten- ance of U.S. military personnel in Vietnam after Dec. 1, 1970. PRESIDENT NIXON called for far-reaching Social Security reform linking benefit hikes automatically to cost-of-living { increases. In a special message to Congress the President asked for an interim 10 per cent benefit increase effective next April to be financed by raising the maximum Social Security wage base starting in 1972. The president also proposed to erase Social Security inequities affecting persons who work past retirement, widows, recipients over 72, veterans, and the disabled. GUNFIRE BROKE OUT in the midst of white construction workers picketing a U.S. Labor Department hearing. Hundreds of men blocked the main entrance to the U.S. Customs House in Chicago yesterday where officials were conducting a hearing into alleged discrimination against black workers on government: financed building projects. Three gunshots rang out, but no one was hit by the bullets. It3 was reported that two blacks were arrested in connection with the shooting. BLACK CONGRESSMEN urged the Senate to reject the nomination of Clement F. Haynsworth to the Supreme Court. Eight of the nine Representatives jointly stated that the South Carolina jurist's record on civil rights "clearly demonstrates his in- fidelity to the principles of racial equality." Earlier, Roy Wilkins, civil rights leader, called the nomination of Haynesworth a threat to American blacks in his testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee. BRITISH TROOPS spread a barbed wire 'peace line' across ' Londonberry after the death of a Protestant man in a street fight. Militant Protestant leaders blamed the army for the incident. Residents of Protestant and Roman Catholic districts piled upr GA urges class halt '01[i. onOct15 Letter supports }stment strike By LAURIE HARRIS Graduate Assembly will formal- ly urge President Robben Fleming to cancel all University activity on Oct. 15 in support of the nation- wide student strike to protest the war in Vietnam. The motion was made at a reg- ular meeting of the assembly Wed- nesday evening. In a letter to Fleming, all deans. and department heads, GA will ex- press support of the New Mobil- iation which is organizing the fall anti-war offensive, and encourage the separate units of the Univer- s ity to do the same. -Daily-Sara Krulwich J ohnson blasts 'i-nelia barons' Nicholas Johnson, member of the Federal Communication about 450 students in Trueblood Auditorium yesterday. J centration of media ownership in the U.S. SIGNATURES FOR PEACE: Petition drive as ks to support anti-wair is Commission, addresses a group of Johnson spoke of the increasing con- GA also plans to aid the mobil- ization in various publicity cam- paigns, explaining the New Mobil- ization effort and asserting GA support for the strike. GA will also urge Fleming to co011 *ressm1stand behindthis statement at last coiig essiien IFriday's anti-war teach-in and make all University buildings and resources available for teach-ins * sand rallys on Oct. 15. statement Some GA members argued that cancelling classes might detract f his-from the effect of large numbers Mich- Prof. Sam Warner of the i of students and faculty not at- where tory department, explained what tending classes. d won would be done with the petitions. But their objection was defeat- )r less. "If we get a large enough num- ed by the argument that the vot- sk an ber of signatures, we will present ing population would take heed of etnam the petitions to the Congressman. Fleming's anti-Vietnam stand. C 'S The intent, of course, would be The assembly also defeated a to be to prod him into action in sup- tin in two eecd a July port of our statement," he said. votion, in two extremely c1os e If the Congressman already op- votes, which deplored disruptive poses the war. such a drive could action as a demonstration tactic serve as a mandate for more posi-n dissolving ROTC on campus. By ROB BIER The Vietnam Teach-In last weekend has produced at least one new anti-war organization, the Michigan Petition Drive for Peace.! The group already is planning, making contacts, and getting ready for a kickoff petition drive to circulate petitions in six igan congressional districts the congressman last electei by a margin of 15,000 votes o The petition reads, "We a immediate cease fire in Vi( and a withdrawal of all troops and military supplies, completed not later than 4, 1970." barricades of rubble and iron in the city as it was feared that the this Sunday. death would touch off more violence. . The aim of the petition drive is OSA LECTURE SERIES Sex: A very pregnant issue i i 1 E i I i i f i i By TAMMY JACOBS "Can a virgin become preg- nant?" This was one of the questions asked and answered during an informal presentation on sex subjects ranging from contra- ception to abortion Tuesday night at Rackham Aud. Some 450 students gathered to hear Drs. Marshall and Mar- guerite Shearer give the first in a series of presentations call- ed "Communication on Sex," sponsored by the Sex Education Committee of the Office of Stu- dent Affairs (OSA). "Yes, there is a possibility of virgin pregnancy," explained Dr. Marguerite Shearer to the young man who had asked the question. "And you don't have to go to the East to look for a star," added her' husband. Dr. Marshall Shearer is an assistant professor of 'psychia- try at the University. His wife is Assistant Director of the Uni- versity Health Service. The audience of curious and, in some cases, anxious students was told birth control a n d "morning after" pills are now being dispensed at the Health Service for those who demon- strate a real need for them. Parental permission, Dr. Shear- er said, is no longer required. Topics covered by the lec- ture included contraception, the mechanics of intercourse 'from arousal to orgasm, causes of pre- marital sex on campus, veneral disease and abortion, and the psychological aspects of love. Dr. Shearer drew loud ap- plause when she spoke out against abortion lawvs. She em- phasized that Health Service records are strictly confidential, but added, "I'm laying for the first daughter of a legislator that comes into my office preg- nant!" Curiosity and the desire to experiment causes many of the premarital relationships on campus, asserted the Shearers. "Playing house is fine when you are five and seven," commented Dr. Marshall Shearer. "Certain- ly you should get it out of your system before you're fertile!" When the program ended, several students reluctant to ask their questions in public gathered around the Shearers for private answers. Others fill- ed out evaluation forms, most of them judging the program as "adequate" or "very adequate." Still others left Rackham Aud. asking. "When do I get to try it out?" The next phase of the pro- gram will be presented in about three weeks. Called "Discovery," the presentation will gather sex experts into a large room to an- swer and discuss questions re- lating to all aspects of sex. The third and final phase will consist of seminars in the dorms led by student discussion lead- ers. tive action on his part. The districts and the congress- men chosen are: No. 2, Ann Ar- bor, Esch: No. 7, Flint, Riegle: No. 14, Grosse Pointe, Nedzi; No. 18, Bloomfield Hills, Broomfield: No. 11, Upper Peninsula, Ruppe. Committees have started meet- ing this week to make plans in several areas. One group is saek- ing contacts in the five districts besides Ann, Arbor and preparing for the organization of the out- state districts. Another is planning action in other states and a third committee is working on setting up meetings with the con-resszmen involved.' A trial drive will be held this Sunday in the Burns Park area of Ann Arbor. Several local citi- zens have already been contacted and workers are asked to report to Warner's house, 1322 Granger. between noon and 1:00 p.m. The Petition Drive has estab- lished a temporary office in Lane Hall, Room 104, However, no other action will be taken on ROTC until the faculty report is presented October 1. The group also delayed taking a stand on the bookstore issue. Mathematics Prof. Bernard Gal- ler, associate director of the Uni- versity Computing Ceiiter, will participate in a NATO-sponsored Iworking conference on Software Engineering in Rome, Oct. 27-31. This conference will be concern- ed with the problems of genera- tion, portability, and exportability of computer programs. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michin. News phone: 764-0552. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier, $10 by mail. Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $3.00 by carrier, $3.00 by mail. i SNI PR A MAJOR HOL "THE GRADUA IN A STORY AS COME AT THE SNEAK PR TION EAK PREVIEW TON IGH T tOMPTLY 8:45 P.M. PLYWOOD FILM WITH ONE STAR OF TE" AND TWO OTHER YOUNG STARS MODERN AS TODAY. EITHER 6:15 OR 8:45 AND SEE BOTH ZEVIEW AND OUR REGULAR ATTRAC- -ATE. I , MICHIGA COMING OCTOBER 3rd ACADEMY AWARD WINNER! BEST ACTRESSI BARBRA STREISAND -. 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