PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1967 PAE WOT~E I~IGN AIY HUSDYFERURY16g16 I CIA-NSA Ties Bring (Continued from Page 1) spokesman said it hires U. ican student leaders." dents, usually going to schoo The Ramparts article appears seas, as its representatives. in the March issue, not due on the Government officials argue newstands until next week. Besides the fact that only a few s raising the issue of draft defer- leaders knew of the financi ments, it said the CIA was so in- rangement guaranteed the volved secretly with the NSA's in- rity of the views expressed 1 ternational program "that it treat- many other students partici ed NSA as an arm of U.S. foreign in international conference policy." other activities. Inquiry Uniq ue 'Little Club' Offers, Allen W. Dulles, who headed the CIA when the link was forged,t said it was a response to wide- spread ,Communist influence in student organizations abroad dur- ing the early 1950s. The CIA funds apparently sup- ported official representation of the NSA at student conferences held throughout the world. A NSA The Washington Evening identified the three otherg as thF U.S. Youth Council hea-iquarters in New York World' Assembly of You Brussels, Belgium; and th( ternational Student Confere Leiden, Netherlands ash similar relations with the C The Evening Star said me FILMS YAF Film Prese As Hero of Moral By STEVEN ZARIT The new camp hero of the Far West, Ronald Reagan, appeared last night in a movie sponsored by the Young Americans for Free- dom and attended by an enthu- siastic crowd of about twenty. The film, "The Welfare State," was produced by the Church League of America (which is apolitical, and thus /tax-exempt) and feat- ured the usual strains of moral- istic melodrama that has come to be associated with Reagan. The homey music at the begin- ning and the simple sets estab- lished the mood of the film. Rea- gan meets the problems of today by calling for a return to the old, Acr oss Cam-pus proven ways of the Constitu to limited government an right to be rich. He argue life in McKinley's time wF bad, and McKinley freed Cu sides. .The plot of the film co that old nemesis, big goverr which is slowly eating in lives of each decent, u American. Reagan, cast in tl of the clean-cut, good guy, s to destroy the perils that is t ing this country into the I our ruthless, cunning enemi the Communists). Reagan comes armed with figures and quotes to demo the abuses of big governmer figures are those that app the late . show audience: taxes, government waste, taxes, the over-bureaucrats of government, high taxes.1 cried, high government spe though failing to note tha spending is on defense. He al swipes at Social Security (x insurance can do it better) eign Aid (foreign countri rich enough, as proven by non's balanced budget), and reclamation projects. On farm aid, Reagan sai most farmers would prefer on the open market with no dies or surplus control, s they would be free to comp the lower prices on an ov plied market. On graduated income CINEMA . stu- of the four student organizations Free Jazz Band on Fridays l over- carried on a limited amount of intelligence work for the CIA, d that making confidential reports on Friday evenings this semester Club, and no admission is charged. tudent overseas youth activities and on will again be marked by the weekly Lighting is by candles, and the al ar- foreign youth leaders visiting the presentation in the MUG of the tables are covered with red and integ- United States. Little Club, University Activities white checkered tableclothes. Some by the CIA funds for the four groups Center's unique contribution to the students come in for a cup of cof- pating were channeled through founda- campus. fee or a sandwich. Others come in s and tions, the newspaper said. It A special type of night club, to read or talk. Some stay for the identified the principal donor as Little Club features the musician- duration of the jazz program----9 to Star the Foundation for Youth and ship of Dave Berson's jazz quintet. 12 p.m.-while others stay only a groups Student Affairs. Most of the musicians are also short while. Many people find it a with In New York, personnel at the members of the University's jazz great and inexpensive place to the foundation's headquarters said all band, which recently toured Latin relax for a while with a Friday th in officials in a position to comment America under the auspices of the night date. e In- were tied up in meetings. The State Department. As the only weekly social event nce in Evening Star quoted the founda. Versatile Band sponsored by UAC, Little Club will having tion's director, former NSA Presi- Berson's versatile band presents have much to offer this semester. IA. dent Harry Lunn, as saying his a well-balanced program of ooth embers group was "not a CIA front." classical and modern individual- On tap is a happening," sched- istic jazz. The five-man band does uled for Jan. 27. There are also jthe work of seven, with two of the plans to have folksingers perform- musicians playing more than one ing from time to time throughout instrument. the semester. fCAn atmosphere of informality The Club will also be held three Z S R Vl a n prae h iteCu.Ascin(tmsti eetr at the North of the MUG is set aside for the Campus Commons. Melodrama tion- however, Reagan was most pas- d the sionate. He claimed that the grad s that uated tax redistributed the wealth as not (a Communist principle) and pre- ba be- vented many Americans from real- izing the Great American Dream ncerns of' an excess of money. The rich nment, should be rich, and the poor EUGENE STAUDENMEIER, to the should be poor. He did not ques- S-IRLEY TEMPLE d the ipright tion whether the American Dream he role was even a remote possibility for MOTHERS FOR A MORAL AMERICA ets out America's poor, who would be left throw- to the haphazard generosity of WITH A SPECIAL aps of private charities and big business. es (i.e., It is hard to decide if Reagan CINEMA GUILD BENEFIT PROGRAM is better as an actor or as a polit- facts, ical theoretician. He provides la- nstrate bels for everything: socialism, FLA SH GO RDON nt. His freedom, communism, welfare, F 'eal to public debt-labels that simplify high the arguments and make it clear high what side the good American MARS ATTACKS THE WORLD ization should be on. (938; BUSTER CRABBE and JEAN ROGERS) He de- There is no insight, however, ( nding, perhaps, because the performance and t most is marred by over-emotional out- so took bursts of sincerity and earnest- TH E B EAT L ES private ness. Perhaps insight might showj , For- that the answers are not to be! IN es are found in Reagan's generalizations Leba- that romanticize the laissez-faire public past and avoid the major problemsH that face our society today. to be subsi- TECHNICOLOR o that TI ete for (1966; JOHN, PAUL, GEORGE and RINGO) ersup- taxes, WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY Everybody loves Georgy- COMPLETE SHOWS AT 7 and 9:15 she's staying for the 50c Admission S7th hilarious week! AUD . 'plus SUPERIOR OFF-BEAT, AND ANGELL HALL 50c Donation ORIGINAL'-N.Y. TIMES $1.00 PER PERSON ALL PROCEEDS GO TO THE CINEMA GUILD D DEFENSE FUND COLUMBIA PICTURES PIANO PLAYERS openings NOW with Rich Bloch and the Gosliters at Bimbo's Part time - Steady Cao11.761-6797 after 6 p.m. Daily Classifieds Bring Quick Results presents THE TWENTY-SEVENTH ANNUAL CHAMBER MUSIC FESTIVAL in Rcackham Auditorium NOW! "An exquisite fable of infidelity" -Time Mag. WHEN YOU SEE"LE BONHEUR* YOU MUST HAVE AN OPEN MINI! A43fles varoa$s, M , ASTMNCOLOR R C en A M4 0R LU OERP RUA!p DIAL 8-6416 "Continuously Provocative" -N Y. Times BORODIN QUARTET (from Moscow)... . 8:30, Fri., Feb. Program: .Quartet No. 2 in D major ..BORODIN Quartet in F minor, Op. 95....................BEETHOVEN Quartet No. 3 in F major, Op. 73.............. SHOSTAKOVICH 17 THURSDAY, FEB. 16 7 and 9:05 p.m.-Cinema Guild STOCKHOLM KYNDEL STRING QUARTET (from Sweden) .... ............. .8:30, Sat., Feb. 18 with Konrad Ragossnig, Guitarist Program: Quartet in G major, OP. 64, No. 4 ..................HAYDEN Guitar Quintet ...................... CASTELNUOVO-TEDESCO Quartet No. 4.. .............................. BARTOK TRIO ITALIANO D'ARCHI (from Italy). .2:30, Sun., Feb. 19 Program: Trio in G major, Op. 14 ........................BOCCHERINI Trio (1959) ...................................PETRASSI Divertimento, KV 563, in E-flat major........... ..MOZART SERIES TICKETS: $8.00-$6.00-$5.00 SINGLE CONCERTS: $4.00-$3.00-$2.00 ait UNIVERSITY MUSICAL SOCIETY, BURTON TOWER (Hours: Mon. through Fri., 9 to 4:30; Sat., 9 to 12 Also at Rackham Auditorium 1 %/2 hours preceding each performance.) presents Andrzej Wajda's "Ashes and Diamonds" in the Architec- ture Aud. 7 and 9:15 p.m.-This week Cin- ema II will sponsor "Help!" (Bea- tles) and "Mars Attacks the World" (Flash Gordon) in Audi- torium A. 8:30 p.m.-Professional Theatre Program presents Play of the Month "Porgy and Bess" in Hill Aud. 8:30 pan.-University Musical Society Chamber Music Festival presents the Borodin Quartet in Rackham Aud. FRIDAY, FEB.17 7 and 9:15 p.m.-Cinema II will present "One Eyed Jack" in Audi- torium A. I smokey robinson and the miracles martha and the vandellas jimmy ruffin tami terrell the spinners chocker campbell I Thursday, Feb. 23rd, 7:00-9:30 P.M. I INDIVIDUAL SALES