PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, MARCH S, 1967 PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, MARCH 8, 1967 'MIXED EMOTIONS': Ford Imparts Views on CIA, Rights Bill, Presidential Race Rubinstein Plays Romantic Piano in Sumptuous Style ii r I /t ,_ -- __ _ ___-- A pil I By MARK R. KILLINGSWORTH House Minority Leader Gerald R. Ford expressed "mixed emo- tion" over whether private organi- zations should have gotten covert financing from the government. He was interviewed Thursday after a talk in connection with the Uni- versity's Sesquicentennial celefra- tion. Mixed Emotions Asked about recent disclosures that the Central Intelligence Agency had covertly subsidized scores of private organizations, in- cluding the National Student As- sociation, Ford said he has "mix- ed emotions about whether gov- ernment subsidization should have been done openly or covertly. "If it had been done openly, students from abroad would have challenged the sincerity of United States students," he said. "But that's a little, paradoxical, since I'm sure all the students from be- hind the Iron Curtain were get- ting government 'subsidies. It would have been a case of the pot calling the kettle black." Ford, a member of the special "watchdog" subcommittee of the House Appropriations Committee overseeing the CIA for eight years before he became minority leader, added that he had supported the covert CIIA financing of private organizations when the plans were proposed to his subcommittee. "I can't say that we ever got into considering an alternative way of financing "private organi- zations," he said. "This was pri- marily an executive branch deci- sion-rightfully so." But, Ford continued, now "I wouldn't rule out" open financing of such groups through the State Department or the Department of Health, Education and Welfare in the wake of the CIA disclosures. "In the current atmosphere there might be more argument for it," he: said. "Overall the CIA has done the job it's been intended to do," Ford added. "The degree of control over the CIA improved very significant- Jy in the years I was on the sub- committee. The degree of control by Congress improved starting about 1960 and it's my impression today, that regarding the proce- dures and people involved, the CIA is adequately monitored both pol- icy-wise and by Congress." Civil Rights Asked about the Administra- tion's proposed new civil rights bill -- whose controversial fair housing section narrowly squeaked through the House and died in a Senate filibuster last fall - Ford said that "the attitude (of House Republicans) will probably be rea- sonably similar" to what it was in 1966. At that time the House Republi- can conference opposed adoption of the housing section (Title IV). Comparing the old section with the one recently proposed, Ford declared, "There isn't too much difference except in the way the Title IV provisions are implement- ed." (The Administration's new bill provides for a year of voluntary compliance before legal sanctions directed against realtors would take effect. As in the old bill, private housing is largely exempt.) The bill also provides for jury reform and other measures, and, said Ford, these new provisions "will get strong support. If the President wants action on the rest of the bill, inclusion of the Hous- ing section could dim the chances of the rest. . "Title IV is in no better position now than a year ago. It might be less well off," Ford continued. "I dont see where the Presidents new bill meets the constitutional ob- jections Senator (Everett) Dirksen (R-Ill.) has proposed." Ford added that he has not dis- cussed the bill yet with Dirksen, who, as .Senate minority leader, led the successful fight against last year's housing section in the Sen- ate. Asked about the race for the 1968 Republican Presidential no- mination, Ford said that the two front-runners are "obviously" Gov. George W. Romney and former Vice-President Richard M. Nixon. After them, Ford continued, comes "a whole field of potential Presidential darkhorses" who "run the gamut" from Ohio Gov. John W. Rhodes, New York Mayor John V. Lindsay, New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, former Pennsyl- vania Gov. William Scranton, Cal- ifornia Gov. Ronald Reagan, and Sen. Charles Percy (R-Ill.). "I would automatically exclude myself" from the list of potential darkhorses; Ford added. "I feel strongly my position should be to continue as Republican leader and member of the House. Ford added, "I thoroughly enjoy the responsibilities of the legisla- tive branch. People ought to do what they're best at." Should the Republicans capture both the White House and the House of Representatives in 1968- Ford said, "I just couldn't ask for any higher honor than to be con- sidered as a candidate for Speaker of the House." The minority leader is traditionally elected House Speaker when his party assumes control of the House. By R. A. PERRY One goes to a concert by Artur Rubenstein expecting to hear nineteenth-century romantic piano music played as beautifully as it is possible to witness today. The audience that gathered at Hill Auditorium this past Sunday thus received a predictable pro- gram rendered in a predictably sumptuous style by a man whose many years seemed not to have affected his hands and heart. Aldous Huxley w r o t e that "beauty is imprisoned . . between the notes of the music . . . The artist throws a net and catches something, though the net is trivial" Unlike m a n y pianists, say Glenn Gould, who gives us the most meticulous and fascinating picture of that net, Artur Ruben- stein attempts to capture and pre- sent the beauty and meaning held within the framework of nota- tion. He does not focus upon, but subsumes, structure and technique in order to reach and release the emotion and thought that lives within the work. Rubenstein is like Schnabel in this respect, except that he has a greater manual facility than Schnabel had, even at this late age. Rubenstein produced the most cleanly articulated and evenly flowing runs and arpeggios that this writer has ever heard. Progressions from pianissimo to forte were held within a control- led, subtle range so that even a triple forte did not receive the vehement pounding that many pianists are apt to express. Not a servant of strict tempo, Rubenstein molded Chopin's two Etudes, the Grande Polonaise, and the encore Nocturne to fit his con- ception of the shape of each, and only in the latter was this free- dom too personalized. His ap- proach to Chopin was sophis- ticated, flowing, and perhaps just a bit too facile. In the 1920's Rubenstein was one of the first to introduce Span- ish piano music in the concert hall. His playing Sunday of two pieces by Chabrier and Granados, although again warm and tech- nically perfect, did not convey the wit, bite, and idiom that Alicia de Larrocha infuses into this music. It is a shame that for the major work on the program, the pianist chose not a work by Beethoven or Schubert (he does not play mod- ern music), but the Sonata No. 3 by Brahms. In many ways the most trans- portive moments came in the Bach-Busoni Chaconne, in which Rubenstein truly gave the audi- ence gift of that ineffable beauty, that exists between the notes, and which even the greatest perform- ers can only occasionally reveal. It's Unequaled on the Screen FOR FOUR PERFORMANCES ONLY March 8 and 9 THE TONIGHT &r THURSDAY ONLY aGti Admission $2.00 Phone 761-9700 EMU THEATRE March 15-19 ANTON CHEKHOV ' ffreS 7r I I Court Challenges Senate's Order To Oust Wis. SDS (Continued from Page 1) Chief Justice Alvin Krueger said that the court "has the authority and jurisdiction over these inci- dents." SDS members went to the nine- member court Monday with their appeal. After the initial hearing the nine judges went into a cau- cus which lasted five hours. Their decision, according to Krueger, was unanimous that SDS may legally appeal. SDS members left all comment- ing last night up to their counsel, Cambell. Cambell told The Daily that if Henry Haslach, president of SDS on the Madison campus, was contacted that "He won't talk with you." Hashlach was in a closed meet-I ing scheduled to end at 12:30 a.m. Treasurer of the chapter, Bob Stanton told The Daily "I can't make any statement." If SDS is formally ousted from the Madison campus it will not be allowed to meet in any of the campus buildings, hold any dem- onstrations or take part in any campus political activities except the upcoming Vietnam war refer- endum, according to the resolu- tion. But they will be able to re- petition for registration in the fall. Student leaders, however, feel that due to the "activist" na- ture of SDS the organization could jeopardize its chances of accep- tance for registration if it con- tinues or plans any activities for the present semester. 40~ Hiarry~Ow" Palmer just hoped it wouldn't he his... d .tr mw-m. ... DIIAL 5-6290 . . y , . { p'.:. 4 j0 4 t N. ' .~ I, WAIT DISNMEY HOE! oimemae iwr . TECMICOLOR -Also- Disney Cartoon' FRIDAY "IS PARIS BURNING?" Cinema II presents Tennessee Williams' NIGHT OF THE IGUANA oIrHAonRI ITOMi MICHAEL CAINEN ?Funera inIerin TECHNICOLOR@ PANAVISION 1 :15-3:15-5:15-7:20-9:20 TA TE Next & "NIGHT OF THE GENERALS" Phone 434-0190 6nt*nc O CARPENTER ROAR The Area's Finest Drive-in is easy to reach-2 miles South of Washtenow Rd. on Carpenter. BOX OFFICE OPEN AT 6:30 F IRST RUN NOW SHOWING. FREE HEATERS a JACK H. HARRIS BEDTIME STORY but NOT for children SHOWN AT 9 P.M. ONLY S*O I