GUILD HOUSE 802 Monroe MON., OCT. 6-NOON LUNCH EON-25c PROF. MARSHALL SAHLINS Dept. of Anthro.: "Growing Contradictions of Liberalism" TUES., OCT. 7-NOON LUNCHEON (Speaker to be announced in Tues. edition of Daily) SUNDAY EVENING-7 P.M. Meeting of STUDENT RELIGIOUS LIBERALS at GU ILD HOUSE.RBarbecue supper. MONDAY NIGHT THE ARKA FILM SOCIETY PRESENTS 1421 Hill St. The Baron of Arizona seconlI rtont pae (,;4r ir ri ttn 43ai NEWS PHONE: 764-9552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Sunday, October 5, 1969 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three A Hit of Purple SAM FULLER, Passion by the Unforgettable Goddard's Favorite Director. 7:30, 9:30 75c the ' n ews to day by The Associated Press and Collece Press Service THE WHITE HOUSE refused to deny reports of secret contacts between Washington and the new leadership in North Vietnam. The refusal, coming while President Nixon is engaged in thorough discussions on Vietnam with adviser Dr. Henry Kissinger, increased speculation that the U.S. is making a new approach to the North Vietnamese leadership since the death of Ho Chi Minh. Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler, who declined to speak about the secret negotiation reports, said the Nixon administration is care- fully watching the situation in South Vietnam when asked about further troop withdrawals. SOUTH AFRICA defied a United Nations deadline by-refusing to relinquish control of neighboring South-West Africa. The deadline. adopted Aug. 12, was a followup to a 1966 U.N. vote terminating South Africa's mandate over South-West AfricaI and calling for its eventual independence. South African Foreign Minister Hilgard Muller wrote U N. Secre- tary-General U Thant that the resolution terminating the mandate was "without justification in fact and in law." Strong negative reaction is expected from African U.N. delegations which have asked for sanctions against South Africa if they do not leave South-West Africa. RED CHINA fired a hydrogen bomb in the atmosphere and staged its first underground nuclear test last month, Radio Peking annouced. The Chinese-language broadcast said the underground explosion took place Sept 23 while the atmospheric test was conducted Sept. 29. The blasts were detected by the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission at the time but the Red Chinese remained silent about them until now. * t # 4 WILLY BRANDT, West Germany's chancellor designate, be- gan discussions with party leaders on the structure of his new government. Meeting in Bonn, Brandt and the leadership of his Social Dlmo- cratic party talked about details of the coalition government with the Free Democratic party.- The new alliance emerged after last Sunday's federal electionf failed to give either the Social Democrats or the ruling Christian1 Democrats a clear majority. THE SENATE FOREIGN RELATIONS COMMITTEE plans new hearings to get out of the Vietnam war. Sen. J. W. Fulbright (D-Ark.) said the public sessions are sched- uled for Oct. 27 and Secretary of State William Rogers and Secre- tary of Defense Melvin Laird have been asked to testify. "The Senate has a duty to help the President in finding a way out of the Vietnam morass," said Fulbright, announcing the five-day WASHINGTON (U - A White House official reported yes- terday there is no evidence Judge Clement F. Haynsworth, Jr. "has ever been involved in any illegal, unethical, or e v e n questionable transaction with Robert G. Baker," former Sen- ate aide convicted of income tax evasion. Clark R. Mollenhoff, deputy counsel to President Nixon, released a two-page letter a n d a four-page memorandum which he said he has sent to some half-dozen persons, most- ly Republican senators, who had expressed concern about re- ports a b o u t the relationship between the Supreme Court nominee and Baker. "Judge Haynsworth says he will testify under oath that he has had only three casual conversations with Robert G. Baker, that he has not seen - - or talked to Baker since 1958 and that they have never en-Gul gaged in any conversations on any business transaction," the{ f memorandum states.1 Nixon aides deny Haynsworth ties to Bobby Baker ""'''""""""" -Associated Press SENATE JUDICIARY COMMITTEE members James Eastland (D-Miss.) and Roman Hruska (R-Neb.) examine the controver- sial financial records of Judge Clement Haynsworth during a hearing on Haynsworth's nomination to Supreme Court. NON-CREDIT COURSE: THETGREATEST!" ACADEMY AWARD "THE BEST WINNER! FOREIGN FILM OF THE YEAR. "BEST FOREIGN FILM" "'WAR AND PEACE' IS A GREAT FILM-... NOT EVEN 'GONE WITH THE WIND' OR 'BEN-HUR' ICUIS COM~PARABLE" 1 t y y- f,.d w-hip, U: PART I NOW SHOWING PART II STARTS WED.- C)C. SH YHE TWO PART PRODUCTION OF LEO TOLSTOY'S PRLS$& D BY ThE WALTER REAE O-G,, A CN AND SATRA .IN COLOR - RELEASED 8 8Y CNTNENTAL SPECIAL DISCOUNT FOR CLASSES The Entire Production of "WAR AND PEACE" Will Be Shown In Two Parts. Each Part Will Be Shown For One Week! week Sat. sun. -?--- - days fri. 1:00 P.M. $2.00 $2.00 2:00 P.M. $2.00 $2.00 4:30 P.M. $2.50 $2.50 8:00 P.M. $2.50 $2.75 8:00 P.M. $2.75 $2.50 Children 14 and under $1.00 at all times TI99I MAY'iK PURCH4ASED SEPARATLY PMR EACH PW. F'IF'TH rumV The three conversations, Mol- lenhoff said, took place in 1954, "+1957 and 1958 "at a time when Mr. Baker was an employe of the Democratic majority of the United States Senate and was presumed to be a man of good reputation." Baker resigned under fire in 1963 as secretary to Senate Democrats and is currently appealing his tax-evasion conviction. !end to war By ROB BIER The Michigan Petition Drive for Peace is preparing for the Oct. 15 Vietnam war protest as organizers plan to expand the petition effort to additional Congressional dis- tricts. UCLA Communist, to coimue teaching The letter states that facts on The anti-war group has decided Haynsworth's purchase of stock that Bloomfield Hills and Birm- LOS ANGELES (AI Angela Davis, a Communist, can lecture at the University of California at Los Angeles but students won't receive academic credit for her course, Chancellor Charles E. Young said yesterday. In a 14-6 vote Friday, the board of regents declared Miss Davis, a 25-year-old black assistant pro- fessor. "shall not be authorized to give instructions in any course un- der the jurisdiction of the school, department or other academic session. agency approved by the regents." CONFLICT OF INTEREST? Long backs depletion rate Aiw -iicw"k TODAY AT 1 :30 and 7:30 ACADEMY AWARD WINNER! BEST ACTRESSI BARBRA STREISAND COLUMBIA PICTURESaY4 RASTAR PRODUCTIONSaexeo ci~ I BARBRA OMAR SIREISAND SHARIF WILLIAM WYLER- -' RAY STARK °d "'o" TECHNICOLOR*.PANAVISION 4x Orgnal Sound Track AlbumonColumbia Records BATON ROUGE, La., (P) Sen. Russell B. Long has col- lected at least $329,151 in oil royalties since 1964 which have been free of federal income tax- es because of the 2712 per cent depletion allowance he now is defending in Congress. This income is the tax-shel- tered portion of the $1,196,915 which Louisiana Mineral Board records show Long has received during the past. 51 years for his interests in four state oil and gas leases. The Senate Finance Commit- tee, headed by Long, currently is considering a House-passed bill cutting the depletion allow- ance to 20 per cent. Under pres- ent law, 272 per cent of gross income from oil, gas and other minerals is exempt from federal income taxes. While presiding over Finance Committee hearings last week, Long agreed with oil industry witnesses who argued that re- ducing the depletion allowance "would be a breach of faith by Congress." The Louisiana Democrat, who has been identified with the oil industry since he came to the Senate two decades ago, de- scribes himself as a "very small independent" in a field domi- nated by giant firms. "Most of my income is from oil and gas,' Long said in an in- terview. There is no ban against mem- bers of Congress having such fi- nancial holdings, and Long said, "I don't regard it as any con- flict of interest." "A long time ago I became convinced that if you have fi- nancial interests completely parallel to your state, then you have no problem," he said. "My state produces more oil and gas per acre than any other state in the Union. If I didn't repre- sent the oil and gas industry, I wouldn't represent the state of Louisiana." Records here disclose that since 1954 Long has received $1.2 million in overriding royal- ties on four tracts leased by the state. An individual who holds an overriding royalty does not share the costs of finding and pumping oil from the lease. Applying the 2712 per cent depletion allowance to this $1.2 million yields $329,151 which has been free from the bite of federal income taxes. Besides these four state leases, Louisiana records indicate the senator has an interest in at least seven private leases. Roy- alty payments from private leases are not disclosed in pub- lie records. Long also is listed as one of three trustees on family trusts which, according to records, have collected $961,443 for hold- ings, in state leases in 5 years. Young said he interpreted this to mean Miss Davis, who says she is a Communist, can lecture onI the campus but "by virtue of the? regents' actions, no credit will be given for this course."1 He told a news conference that! he considers Miss Davis "in every respect a full member of the fac- ulty " Young called action by the board of regents to fire Miss Davis and to keep her from teaching while she appeals the dismissal "a vio- lation of the spirit if not the letter' of justice and due process." Miss Davis was fired by the re-+ gents Sept. 19 after she said she belonged to a Communist club. She accused the regents of racial prejudice. Regents s a i d a long-standing University of" California policy prehibits Communist party mem-' bers from teaching on campus. + Miss Davis maintains the rule is unconstitutional. The UCLA Philosophy Department hired her, to teach "Reoccurring Philosophi- cal Themes in Black Literature"; while the school processes her ap- peal. Miss Davis, who will continueE receiving her salary, said she would deliver her first lecture' Monday. University officials said 169 students were registered in+ her course. "I think we're going to have a confrontation," said Regent Wil- liam Coblentz of San Francisco following t h e board's Friday! meeting. "I hope it's not too ser- ious." "Of course I'm concerned," Miss Davis said. "I am worried about people getting injured or killed."' Young said he feels Miss Da- vis' dismissal was "an inappro- priate violation of the Constitu- tion. There's no question about+ this in my mind." in Mortgage guarin teins uance Corp. known as MAGIC and his investment in the Greenville Me-' mnorial Gardens, a South Carolina cemetery firm, "demonstrate that there were no financial transac-1 tions between Judge Haynsworth and Bobby Baker." far neither has shown any greatj enthusiasm for President Nixon'sI There will be a meeting for all the people arrested last week in the LSA Bldg. sit-in tonightt at 9 p.m. on the second floor of the Student Activities Bldg. choice of the South Carolina jur-I ist, now a member of the 4th U.S. Circuit Court. Scott has said he will vote for Haynsworth in the Judiciary Com- mittee but hasn't committed him-? self on the floor test. And he has said expression of concern over the nominee's judgment on ethicalI matters "justifies some carefult thought." Griffin conveyed to the Presi- dent last week a report on some moderate Republicans' unhappi- ness over the appointment -- ap- parently with at least an impli-j cation that withdrawal might bea a good idea. "This sort of action provides a meaningful alternative to some- one who is hesitant about joining t h e parade or other activities," Warner added. The petition drive was organized during the recent Vietnam Teach- In. The group is concentrating on s i x congressional districts in Michigan where the congress- man's margin of victory in the last election w a s 1500 votes or The drive plans to collect enough signatures to get the congressman to support their petition and in- troduce it in Congress. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second C lass 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, S10 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $3.00 by carrier, $3.00 by mail. 3020 Washtenow, Ph. 434-1782 Between Ypsilanti & Ann Arbor NOW SHOWING Pady Duke Cr OLe ''It is my conclusion," Mollen- On Oct. 15, the day of the Na- "o;tional Moratorium on Vietnam, hoff said, "t h a t Judge Hayns- the Drive will have an assignment worth's actions were completely station set up at the First Presby- proper, and I believe the explana- trian sChurch on Washtenaw tions will make this apparent to Ave. for those who wish to collect y. signatures. The split among Republican "Assignments will be available senators over the nomination pos- there for anyone who wishes to ed a thorny first t e s t for the take part," History Prof. Sam GOP's brand new Senate leader- Warner, the group's advisor, ex- ship team. plained. "People can choose to go Minority leader Hugh Scott of door-to-door, cover a shopping Pennsylvania and his lieutenant, center or other business place, or Robert P. Griffin of Michigan, help in covering the rally that were moving cautiously but thus! evening." ingham, in the 18th Congressional district, would be the Drive's next target. Contacts have already been made in the district and organi~z- ers will be there this weekend to begin planning the petition drive in the area. m MMMMEMMME IN HILL AUDITORIUM SECOND ANNUAL DANCE SERIES NATIONAL BALLET OF CANADA ...... Fri., Oct. 11 PROGRAM: Solitaire, Four Temperaments; and The Nutcracker, Act. II. Program Information: 662-6264 1:10-3:45-6:15-8:45 P.M. "VANESSA REDGRAVE IS SIMPLY GREAT IN 'THE LOVES OF ISADORA'!"-,/fE Magazine I 1I VANESSA REDGRAVE "THE LOVES OF ISADORA" i JOSE LIMON DANCE COMPANY NIKOLAIS DANCE COMPANY DANZAS VENEZUELA RAYOL WINNIPEG BALLET. 8:30, Sat., Nov. 1 8:30, Wed., Jan. 21 8:30, Tues., Feb. 17 2:30, Sun., Mar. 15 Produced in association with Universal Pictures ltd. TECHNICOLORC IJ" l4 I *For these modern Dance Companies, Lecture-demonstrations are scleduled for Fri., Oct. 31, and Tues., Jan. 20 respectively. Tickets: $1.00. Season ticket subscribers to the Dance Series will receive complimentary admission. SEASON TICKETS: $17.50-$15 00-$12.50-$10.00-$7.50 SINGLE PERFORMANCES: $6.00-$5.50-$5.00-$4.00-$3.00-$2.00 I I MISHA DICHTER CANTERBURY HOUSE AND RADICAL FILM SERIES PRESENT THE WAR G E Directed by Peter Watkins, this semi-documentary won an Academy Award for its imaginative depiction of World War Ill. It opens on a nation in the grip of international crisis, follows the wholesale evacuation of its cities the hombstrike the fire storm the Grim aftermath Brilliant y oun g Amercian Pianist Winner at Tchaikovsky Competition in Moscow in 1966 Monday, Oct. 6, 8:30 P.M. IN HILL AUDITORIUM PROGRAM: 1~~~~~.~