Wed nesday & Thursday 4:10 P.M. November 12th & 13th DEPARTMENT OF SPEECH STUDENT LABORATORY THEATRE presents A SLI(GHT ACHE by HAROLD PINTER ARENA THEATRE, Frieze Building ADMISSION FREE (Late-corners will not be seated) Ruckley at Hill: On disorders and the Left E I By STEVE KOPPMAN "Fashion is very important for aca- demicians," said William F. Buckley, glar- ing at the professor who had asked his opinion on why most faculty members were liberals. "There's no group in America that's easier to push into conformity than uni-- versity professors," added the reknowned conservative writer-orator. These remarks were heard by some 5000 people who filled Hill Aud. Sunday after- noon to satisfy their curiosity about the eloquent Buckley. Rocking gently on his heels, the editor of the National Review presented his view of the increasing violence in American society. Decrying the "apparent inability of the community to cope with disorder," he re- lated rising crime with what he called the "moral imperialism" of the New Left. "The cost of civil disobedience has come down too far," Buckley said. "Breaking the law has become a life style," he added, charging radical students with trying "to capture public sympathy by provoking the police in using unneces- sary force." Buckley noted that during the Detroit riots, 7,231 people were arrested. Five months later, he claimed, only forty were in jail-mostly for other crimes. "It's statistically riskier walking twelve blocks in New York at night," declared Buckley, "than to participate actively in a riot." Attempting a diagnosis, Buckley said, "America has given itself over to the promulgation of unrealizable goals." "With the 'Great Society'," he said, "the government was supposed to improve the quality of our lives-giving us a sense of spiritual satisfaction-taking a job the church has failed to do for two thousand years." "The New Left," he added, "painfully recognizes thes3 goals cannot be achieved." At the end of Buckley's speech a panel of three faculty members commented on some of his assertions. "Don't you think," asked Philosophy Prof. Frithjoff Bergman, "that one major reason for increasing crime is the criminal policies of this government?" "You're really out of this world," replied Buckley, "if you think $1.8 billion a year of purse-snatching in New York is a protest against the Vietnam War." Buckley's remarks were also criticized by History Prof. Beverly Pooley. The third faculty member, History Prof. Stephen Tonsor defended Buckley, charging that Bergman had prepared his remarks before hearing Buckley's speech. "The first two speakers (Bergman and Pooley) gave me an insight into the neur- otic nightmare world of the liberal in- tellectual," added Tonsor. SGC VOTE LAST DAY -Daily-Richard Lee William F. Buckley speaks at Hill Aud. a the news today by The Associated Press and College Press Service MASSIVE PROTESTS against the apparent U.S.-Japanese agreement on the return of Okinawa are expected in Japan this week. According to political observers, the protesters will urge Japanese Prime Minister Eisaku Sato to block the United States' attempt to maintain the Asian island as a key U.S. military base, after it is returned to Japan in 1972. Sato will meet with President Nixon in Washington next week to conclude the agreement for the return of Okinawa, which was cap- tured by American troops at the end of World War II. The Japanese government has refused to make any commitments in advance of the Washington talks. However, leftist forces, including three opposition parties, have demanded that Sato declare opposition to the use of Okinawa for U.S. military operations before he leaves for Washington. A MILITARY COURT sentenced one of the "Fort Dix 38" to three years in prison for rioting and arson. im4r iAIP r r i'Attn Batty page three Tuesday, November 1 1, 1969 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three The life blood of the political machines. Don't let it start at the University of Michigan! By not voting in the bookstore referendum you are per- mitting a minority to impose a $175,000 cash obligation on all students at the University of Michigan. Students, rise up and vote on the 10th and 11th -vote NO- on the bookstore referendum. Police clash with blacks 'in Memphis MEMPHIS, Tenn. '(A) - Police and black demonstrators clashed last night following the arrest of 52 civil rights marchers, including the Rev. Ralph David Abernathy, head of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. I Ti ,,"+ +.,w ,,..-.,uers.wer a +,sta am..er Senate unit to pass lottery bill Stennis agrees to discuss other reforms by Feb. Th1 e protesters were arrested after Following the sentencing of Pvt. Jeffrey Russell, some 40 of his they headed up a mass march by civilian sympathizers, who were sitting in the courtroom, erupted in a black coalition w h isc h is de- angry shouting. Two were arrested. manding more black representa- Russell was the first of five soldiers to face a general court- tion in school affairs and support- martial for alleged participation in a stockade uprising last June. ikape ainat ly ck uni' s *. * * tal. Fo letts, Overbecks, Slaters, Ulrichs, Wahrs HELD OVER BY POPULAR DEMAND "'Putney Swope' is attracting crowds day and night in New York that are exceeded only by the fans of 'I Am Curious (Yellow).' Downey's trump card is his refusal to honor the taboos that hollywood fastidiously obeys." -Newsweek "PUTNEY SWOPE" The Truth and Soul Movie 6:30,8:00, 9:30 "I ';TH Fo'UM THE ROCKEFELLER REPORT on Latin America calls for the creation of a panel to deal with Communist subversion in the Americas. In a report on his fact-finding trips to Latin America, which was made public yesterday, Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller (R-N.Y.) recom- mended, in part, that President Nixon attempt to set up a Western Hemisphere Security Council composed of the United States and other American countries. The council would be based outside the United States.f This proposal is the only major recommendation of the report which was not disclosed by Nixon in his Oct. 31 speech on hemis- pheric problems. After the arrests, some 100 marchers hurled bottles and rocks at police barricades. The police re-f taliated by turning on tear gasf fogging machines, which dispersed the protesters.I Earlier, a federal judge denied an injunction prohibiting police from attempting to stop the march. Police spokesmen had said they would permit a single-file proces- sion along the sidewalks, but not a mass march in the streets. Sen. Stennis DISCUSS REFORM: -Associated Press Sen. Mansfield T a a t Y I I NATIONAL GENERAL CORPORATION FOX EASTERN THEATRES FOH VI LaI 375No. MAPLE PD.-"769-1300 MON-FR I.--7:10-9:20 SAT.-SUN.-5:10-7:15-9:30 BUTCH CASSIDY AND ThE SUNDANCE KID I 'll If you thought there was a monopoly on records in Ann Arbor TRY Marvin Gardens Record Shop 215 S. STATE (in the Little Things Shop) NOW IN STOCK New: Led Zeppelin Steve Miller Jefferson Airplane Joe Cocker Easy Rider Al Kooper ,I Why Are You A Poor Talker? A noted publisher in Chicago re- ports a simple technique of every- day conversation which can pav you real dividends in social and business advancement and works like magic to give you poise, self- confidence and greater popularity. According to this publisher, many people do not realize how much they could influence others simply by what they say and ,how they say it,-Whether in business, at social functions, or even in cas- ual conversations with new ac- quaintances there are ways to make a good impression every time you talk. To acquaint the readers of this paper with the easy-to-follow rules for developing skill in everyday conversation, the publishers have printed full details of their inter- esting self-training method in a new booklet, "Adventures in Con- versation," which will be mailed free to anyone who requests it. No obligation. Send your name, ad- dress, and zip code to: Conversa- tion, 835 Diversey Pkwy., Dept. 169-01N, Chicago, Ill. 60614. A postcard will do. Edschool 'retreats'm By JIM NEUBACHERa Special To The Daily i HARTLAND, Mich. - Reform of the education school's teacher- training program and reorganization of its decision-making structurey may be the result of ideas proposed here during a student-facultyI retreat last weekend.v In a large cabin surrounded by oak trees on a cold, blue lake, 55s students and 35 faculty members of the education school'spentr the weekend discussing future directions of education instruction at the University. Saturday and early Sunday were spent in small discussioni groups. Students and faculty members outlined problems of thec school, and began drawing up programs for solving the prob- lems. " Sunday afternoon, the executive committee of the education schoolt met with the group and listened1 to a number of the proposals. ci The most significant proposal called for an ad hoc committee of students and faculty members tot oversee reorganization of the ea- ucation school's structure and cur- - ricula. Another important proposal out-t ALFRED HITCHCOCK lined a program for accelerated1 FESTIVAL planning of alternatives to the# current teacher-training program. Nov. 11-Tuesday The executive committee will Taaconsider the plan, and other pro- TheadyVanis s gramsproposedat the retreat more carefully at a special open ( British--1938)meeting today at 10 a.m. in the1 Incredible spy movie star University High School's audi-t ring SIR MICHAEL RED- torium. GRAVE and DAME MAY The major discordant note of WHITTY One of Hitch- an otherwise quiet weekend camel when a "black caucus" of students{ cock's last British Films, and faculty members read a short I "Absurd idea, but quite delight- statement criticizing the school for ful."-Francois Truffaut its treatment of black needs and 75c problems. At today's meeting the blacks 7 and 9 Architecture will present to the executive com- 662-8871 Auditorium mittee a position paper formally outlining their complaints. WASHINGTON M- T h e Senate Armed Services Com- mittee, yielding to liberal Sen- ate Democrats, yesterday agreed to send the draft lot- tery bill to the floor after promising to open extensive hearings on further draft re- form by Feb. 15. The liberals, led by Majority Leader Mike Mansfield of Mon- tana and Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass), had objected to the committee's plans to report out the lottery- proposal without also approving other proposals in Pres- ident Nixon's draft reform bill. In agreeing to send the lottery proposal to the full Senate, the Armed Services Committee said it would insist that the advocates of sweeping reform offer no amend- ments from the floor. No immediate comment by the reform advocates was available yesterday. However, it appeared likely they would agree to the committee's conditions since the other reforms would be considered within three months. The draft lottery was approved by the House of Representatives last month. As it stands now, the bill pro- vides for the random selection of eligible Selective Service regis- trants, with 19-year-olds being chosen first. The system would limit the reg- istrants vulnerability to one year. Once he turns 20, it would be high- ly unlikely that he would be draft- ed, administration officials say. Sen. John Stennis (D-Miss), chairman of the Armed Services Committee, warned liberal sen- ators that any attempts to amend the bill on the floor would prompt him to withdraw it, killing all chances for its passage this year. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Seeond 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. III I ALFRED HITCHCOCK FESTIVAL NOVEMBER 11-16 ONE SOLID WEEK OF MYSTERY AND ARTISTRY FROM HITCHCOCK HIMSELF ) NOV. 11-THE LADY VANISHES With Sir Michael Redgrave and Dave May Whitty NOV. 12-SPELLBOUND With Ingrid Bergman, Gregory Peck NOV. 13-NOTORIOUS With Ingrid Bergman, Cary Grant and Claude Rains NOV. 14-NORTH BY NORTHWEST PANAVISION0 COLOR BY DELUXE M Sug ed fa MATURE Audiefes I NED'S BOOKSTORE YPSILANT I This new store carries more trade (non-text) books than any other in the Ann Arbor-Ypsilanti area. Unusual 1970 calendars, thousands of paperbacks, lots of them used, some hardbacks. 10%o OFF ON ALL BOOKS PRE-CHRISTMAS SALE WED., THURS., NOV. 12, 13 Mon.-Thurs.--9-9; Fri -9-6; Sat.-12-5:30 Try Daily Classifieds iI Vote in the SGC Elections Students for Effective Action endorse the following candidates: Vote against the ' m $275,000 gamble of student money. They're playing a long shot with it. The machine will be at the polls November 10 and 11. Get out and vote NO! Stand up and oppose the few that Highly Recommended Phil Anderson Recommended Al Warrington 11 ,I ,