low NA'T1ONAL ~ENe~AL CORPORKThON 2ND WEEK NAT[ONAL OeENERAL COPORATION FOX EASTERN THEATRES ' FOXVILLBGE 375 No. MAPLE RD..769-1300 Feature Times Monday-Friday 7:00-9:30 Saturday-Sunday 1:00-3:40- 6:30-9:15 Thursday, May 8, 1969 4IB Mfriiigrn 34a'tly NEUS PHONE: 764-0552 IUSINEISS IlONE.I: 76-03, Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three MGM PA(SLATS A STANLEY KUBRICK PRODUCTION "An unprecedented psychedelic roller coaster of an experience." -Life VNNER F "BEST VISUAL EFFECTS" SUPER PANAIS1ON -'METROCOLORt Dems By NADINE COHODAS The controversial Ann Arbor Hous- ing Commission' recently has under- gone a shift in its partisan makeup. The term of} commission chairman Lyndon Welch, a Republican, expired May 5 and Mayor Robert Harris has appointed Democrat Robert Weeks, a professor of engineering English at the University, to take Welch's place. The new appointment gives the Democrats a 3-2 majority where the Republicans previously had the edge. The commission was formed 3 years ago to arrange for the con- struction of low cost housing and to place indigent citizens in already, existing low cost housing. The com.? mission so far has not constructed any units. A recent letter to Council from the Ann Arbor NAACP claims the commission also has failed inherit to respond adequately to several tenants' needs. Weeks said yesterday he will pre- sent a statement of his views con- cerning the commission at its meet- ing tonight. "I don't know if it is conventional for someone in my position to make a statement," Weeks said, "but I feel very strongly about the importance of the commission." "There's a saying around city hall that it's a whole new ball game,", Weeks said. "This does apply to the mayor and council, but in the hous- ing commission, we have a new pitcher but we're still in the ninth inning." Weeks said the commission was scheduled to build 151 units, but there is "still not a spade in the earth'" "We have to get the con- tracts completed for these units and Jousing Commission THA REPE'TORY g COMP ANY PTP SUBSCRIPTION OFFICE, OPEN 10 A.M.-1 P.M., 2-5 P.M., TUESDAYS AND THURSDAYS SEPTEMBER 16-28 SAROYAN'S Ia Another delightful APA revival of an Americanela ss SEPTEMBER 30-OCTOBER 12 Ghelderode s 'A whiff ofsataniqils'lphur" by the author o the APA hit "Pantagleize" ' Direcfed by John Houseman OCTOBER 14-26! Gogol's Directed by s r hStephen Porter . GRII3K\3 At satiric.al farce on the bwnblings of bureaucracy! get work underway before we're home Iree l he added. Welch said yesterday he believes he is "leaving behind me diligent, competent people. I hope things pro- ceed from there." Weeks was first appointed to the commission last summer by Repub- lican Mayor Wendell Hulcher to re- place Democrat William W. Conlin. However, Welch who was then chair- man of the commission threatened to resign if Weeks appointment was approved by Council. Hulcher even- tually withdrew his support of Weeks who subsequently was not appointed. The first order of business at to- night's meeting is expected to be the selection of a new commission chair- man to fill Welch's position. Another personnel shift in the commission also may be in the offing. The Ann Arbor News reported May 2 that Mayor Harris had asked Louis Andrews, a Democrat and an at- torney and consultant to the Michi- gan Municipal League. to resign from the commission. Harris did not, say why. At that time Andrews declined to comment on Harris' reported' state- ment, but said he and the mayor had had "discussions as to whether I should remain on the Housing com- mission," Andrews said yesterday he still had not reached a decision but indicated he expected to do so "in the very near future." The NAACP letter to Council claims the Housing Commission gives "preferential treatment in terms of early placement" to tenants who "can either support themselves or ills whose immnediate families can sup- port, them." Furthermore. the letter contends that tenants who have sought as- sistance from the Legal Aid Clinic or the NAACP "are given a different type of preferential treatment." Citing a specific tenant complaint unresolved by the commission, the letter says a woman with six children was evicted by a court order, but neither the Housing Commission nor the Emergency Housing Office found new accommodations for her. As a result, the letter says, .three children were temporarily placed in New York with their father and three stayed in Ann Arbor, However, no members of the family in Ann Arbor are able to live together. 4? I the n e ws tCosdays b)v he Associal/ed Press~ and C ollcg Press Service- .,t THE DOLLAR and other major Western currencies were sold off for West German marks during hectic European trading yes- terday. A record $106 million flooded into West Germany in an hour of trading, banking circles in Frankfort reported. $1.5 billion on foreign currencies has 'flowed into West Germany since Charles de Gaulle resigned as president of France April 28. Both the British pound an dtle French franc were at their floor levels in relation to the mark-the'point at which the Bank of Eng- land and the Bank of France are obliged by international monetary rules to fork out gold and dollars to support thee value of their money. The European Common Market's'monetary committee, the body whichI must approve a change in the value of the currency of any of the six member countries, is meeting tomorrow. SECRETARY OF HEALTH EDUCATION AND WELFARE, Robert H. Finch yesterday said the administration will propose ' a program of direct cash assistance instead of food stamps for welfare recipients. Finch made the disclosure to the Senate Committee on Nutrition yesterday. Finch said, "Cash income, not a succession of payments in kind, best preserves the dignity and freedom of choice of the individual to meet his own needs through the workings of the private market." "We hope, within the next few months to bring to the Congress a set of welfare reforms which will begin to rationalize these systems and place emphasis on cash assistance as the most flexible and useful form of aid," he added. REP. RICHARD McCARTHY (D-NY) said the Pentagon,. plans to transport 1100 rail cars filled with World War II poison' gas across the country. The gas, in one ton cylinders, will then be dumped in the At- lantic Ocean. McCarthy said yesterday that the Department of Transportation has granted a permit exeinpting the Defense.Department from certain safety requirements for the movement of highly toxic materials. In letters \to Secretary of Transportation John Volpe and Secre- tary of Defense Melvin Laird McCarthy has raised the question of what effect the disposal will have on sea life. M M LEBANESE GUERRILLAS have encircled a Lebanese border village close to tpe Israeli border, Beirut sources said yesterday. A Lebanese government communique said the mountain village of Hasbaya is under seige by about 2,000 Arabs of the Al-Saika- Thunderbolt organization affiliated with Syria's ruling Baath party. The charge brought a sharp denial from Al Saika headquarters in Damascus and a warning to Beirut not to interfere with the com- mandos' forays against Israel. NORTHERN IRELAND'S prime minister, James Chiches- ter-Clark won a unanimous vote of confidence in parliament. The vote yesterday came after Chichester-Clark pledged universal suffrage in local elections. At present voting in local government elections involve property qualifications and the Roman Catholic third of the population claim this works unfairly against them. The new prime minister placed the task of restructuring local government in the hands of Brian Faulkner. Faulkner was his leading' opposition for the top post. Wt 1. Wowl NWhat is it? Grape -Day-Eric Pergeaux 'rape boycotters rally for support and start march to Detroit boycottersbegin march .Aw- y 2. What happened to our Viper Mark IV? I just could't identify with that car. 4. Do t you think you ougt t O -hold onto a car more than a month, Chet? When yousee a great buy coming your way, you have to grab it. Python LTD. Fully equipped. "{-v 3. That's what you said about the Sidewinder Eight. But a Python is some- thing else. Four-on-the. floor, six-barrel carb, console tach,..and whut a steal! . That's what I did yesterday- from Equitable. At my age the cost is low, and I get solid protection now that will continue to cover my family later when 1 get married. Plus a nice racst egg when I retire. By ERIKA HOFF Local supporters of the California grape pickers' strike rallied at City Hall, at 10 a.m. yesterday before beginning their three day, 45-mile march to Detroit. Close 'to 100 students, housewives with children, and a few businessmen heard speeches of encouragement by several per- sons, including State Sen. Roger E. Craig (D-Dearborn), Hijinio Rangel and Council- man Nicholas Kazarinoff (D-3rd ward) Rangel is a striking farm worker from Delano, Cal., who was sent by strike leader Cesar Chavez to direct the boycott of Cali- fornia table grapes in Michigan. Afterwards nearly all of the supporters present at the rally left with the march for Ypsilanti where a rally was held last night. The marchers are to reach Detroit Sat- urday where a rally will be held in Kennedy Square. Groups marching from Battle Creek, Saginaw, Flint, Grand Rapids, and Muskegon will meet in Detroit. Craig noted the diversity of the group at the wally and said that the march wold "hopefully call attention to the justice of the farm workers' cause." Craig has been the principle defender of the boycott campaign in Lansing., "This march is a symbolic act," said Craig, "but a three-day march does not make a movement, and not forever can we settle for symbolism." Craig said even- tually direct action most= be taken. "We must show the growers and Congress that as a new force in the nation, farm workers will no longer settle for subsistent wages and inhuman working conditions," he said. The California grape pickers, now in the third year of their strike, are seeking r4cognition of their union as a bargaining agent acid extension of the National Labor elations Act to include farm workers. Craig left City Hall with the marchers and said he will march with the grpup for as much of the three-day period as pos- sible. "I will be going to Lansing later to- day for the United Farm Workers Organ- izing Committee to talk to A&P," Craig said,. Rangel's address, punctuated by shouts of Huelga!" and "Viva la Causal", called on the consumer to support the strike by not purchasing California table grapes. "The farm workers can't win in California without the support of people around the country," Rangel said. Karzarinoff welcomed the migrant work- ers who came to Ann Arbor. He termed the strikers''cause a "just cause" and said that Michigan consumers must not buy Cali- fornia grapes because "buying grapes in Michigan is depriving workers in Cali- fornia of food and shelter they need to live," The march is timed to coincide with the first arrival of grapes to market. The boycott "has caused many of the chain food stores in the Ann Arbor-Ypsi- lanti area to stop selling California grown grapes. I would you pay a little something to get through your next language exam? At Berlitz, we have a secret device for getting you through language tests. It's called a Berlitz instructor. He's a man who's gotten'"dozens of seemingly hopeless stu- dents through dozens of seemingly impossible exams. He does it/by first finding out just how hopeless you are, then he sits with you and virtually brainwashes you until you not only speak the language. You understand. Of course, all this costs a dollar or two. But seeing it could make all the difference between making it and flunking, it's a small price to pay. With the riglt set of wheels you'llgo a