Page Three THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, April 2, 1972 Page Three THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, Apil! 2, 1972 !. 'TH BLIND PIG A WINE, CHEESE, BLUES CAFE II new s..briefs. by The Associated Press SEN. WILLIAM FULBRIGHT (D-Ark.), says his Senate Foreign Relations Committee will use the Pentagon Papers as a basis for hearings on the foreign policy decisions leading to U.S. involvement in Vietnam. EEOC sets' new sex bias rules From Wire Service Reports The Equal Employment Op- and Other Things NOW OPEN-7:30 A.M.-2:00 A.M. 208 SOUTH FIRST IT CAN'T BE DESCRIBED- IT MUST BE EXPERIENCED The committee's study, to begin in May, will examine the possi- portunity Commission (EEO bility that "the present conflict in Southeast Asia might have been C) has included among its oust GRAD COFFEE HOUR Wed., April 5 4-6 p.m. 4th Fl. Rackham avoided had the United States not disregarded Ho Chi Minh's friend- ly overtures to the United States during and immediately after World War II," in Fulbright's words. JORDAN will receive 15 to 20 jet fighters from the United States over the next two years, diplomatic sources said yesterday. The U.S. has displaced Great Britain as Jordan's principal arms supplier in recent years, with a military aid program now running about $45 million annually. According to government analysts, the new shipment of jets would still leave Jordan's aid force vastly out-} numbered by those of its immediate neighbors - Syria, Iraq, and Israel. Jordan's King Hussein, visiting Washington, is concurrently urg- ing that Jerusalem be divided into Israeli- and Arab-controlled sectors. * * * ITALY'S PARLIAMENT handed over lawmaking rights in the fields of health, education, transportation, agriculture and public works to 15 regional governments yesterday. The decentralization program gives unprecedented power to the Italian Communist party, which controls local governments in three of the regions. The Christian Democratic party, backed by the Ro- man Catholic Church, dominates in the other twelve areas. * * * RUSSELL LONG, chairman of the Senate Finance Commit- tee said yesterday he would support additional tax-reform mea- sures to reach wealthy persons who pay few or no taxes. latest regulations a non-sex discrimination policy dealing with pregnancy and child- birth. In regulations to be published in the Federal Register this week, the employment commission says that to deny a woman a job be- cause of her pregnancy constitutes a violation of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Moreover, disabili- ties related to pregnancy - in- cluding recovery from childbirth, miscarriage, and abortion-should be treated by employers similarly to other temporary disabilities in terms of reinstatement and in- surance payments, according to the new regulations.! The guidelines do not carry the force ofulaw, but they can influ- ence court hearings on job dis- crimination. Also, under a bill signed by President Nixon last week, EEOC now has the power to sue employers and labor un- ions in order to gain compliance. Other inequities criticized by Lemonade and Cake for all i 9i McGovern addresses veterans Senator George McGovern (D-S.D.) discusses the plight of monority Vietnam veterans with a group in Milwaukee yesterday. McGovern and Hubert Humphrey are the co-favorites in the Wisconsin Demo- cratic primary Tuesday. ISR SURVEY Study says society's attitudes may harm school dropouts F, U of M Folklore Society presents BLUES POWER Son House, Mance Lipscomb, Robert Pete Williams APRIL 15-8 P.M. at the POWER CENTER for the Performing Arts "Now," said the Louisiana Democrat, "I would like to see some the commission include discrepan- additional taxes on people who pay all that money into foundations cies between the pension plans of where, theoretically, they are giving to charity and it turns out male and female employes, and that the charity they are giving to is themselves." the household" and "principal Long, who has extensive oil holdings, was careful to reassert wage earner" status. that levies on the U.S. oil industry should not be boosted. State employment laws apply- * * *ing special conditions to women, A CHLORINE GAS-LADEN BARGE has become wedged in such as limited working hours and a Louisville, Kentucky dam, forcing the evacuation of residents weight - lifting restrictions, are in the city's Ohio River area. superseded by the federal law in The Army Corps of Engineers is planning a crucial salvage sinecase of a conflucecommis- operation, in which a small sailboat will attempt to secure rescue cables to the menacing barge. The guidelines, which take ef- s h.fect upon publication, seek to photo by David Capps SON HOUSE .j r SON HOUSE is undoubtedly the king of the Delta Blues singers (Columbia Records). MANCE LIPSCOMB was a Texas sharecropper until he was discovered in the early 60's. He is now considered a great songster and blues singer, like the late Mississippi John Hurt. ROBERT PETE WILLIAMS won his parole from Angola prison by composing a song for the parole board. He is one of the most unusual and power- ful blues singers you'll ever hear. ALL SEATS RESERVED-$3.00 Tickets available 1 1 A.M.-2 P.M. daily at the Michigan Union For Info call 761-6945 Don't miss 'A Life Well Spent': "A portrait of the musical route of Manoe Lipscombe" Sunday April 9, 9 pm, at Cinema It in Angell Hall. THE ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY estimates f that state and local spending to fight air pollution will double r over the next four years to meet national air-quality standards. All states except Alaska have submitted to EPA their plans tot meet the standards by 1975. * * * BRAZIL'S NATIONAL OIL company reports that 21 workers ' have been killed by explosions and fire in the country's largest oil refinery. Forty-eight other workers remained hospitalized. JOHN SINCLAIR was among a group of witnesses testifying to the need of penal reform during a federally-conducted hearing in Detroit.j "The penal system in this state is a closed, arrogant system," the head of the Rainbow People's Party asserted. "Despite the propa-I ganda of the Departmhent of Corrections, the objective fact is that rehabilitation is a joke." I equalize "medical, hospital, acci- dent, life insurance and retire- ment benefits, profit-sharing and bonus plans, leave, and other terms, conditions, and privileges of employment." Another policy chided by the commission is the lower working age requirement for minor males provided under some state laws. The commission's original; guidelines on job discrimination according to sex date back to 1966 The current report marks by far! the most siagnificant revision of those guidelines to date. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0562. Second 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. $11 by mail. ISummer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5 by carrier, $5 by mail. tion rates: $5 by carrier, $6 by mail.# By PAUL RUSKIN A recently published study by the Institute for Social Research (ISR) indicates that high school dropouts may suffer neither financially nor emotionally from their lack of a complete high school education. The study claims that dropping out is not a problem in itself, but rather a symptom of "oth- er problems which have their origins much. earlier in life." Problems such as past school failure, low self-esteem, rebellious behavior, and low socio-economic level were cited both as reasons why students drop out and as explana- tions for differences observed between dropouts and non-dropouts. Led by Jerald Bachman, senior study director of ISR, the study dealt with imminent, as well as actual, dropouts. In 1966, 2200 randomly selected tenth graders from 87 high schools filled out comprehensive surveys concerning all aspects of their lives. Fol- low-up surveys were then conducted at yearly intervals to determine what changes had occur- red in the lives and minds of the participants. One year after the graduation date of the 1966 tenth grade class, the data concerning dropouts was correlated and compared with data for those students who had completed high school. One of the basic discoveries of the project was that differences which exist between stud- ents who enter college and those who gradua.te from high school but don't enter college are far more significantathan differences between drop- outs and graduates not entering college. Other findings of. the study challenged the validity of the current anti-dropout campaign, whose main thrust is to persuade students that dropping out decreases their chances of finding a job. Furthermore, the survey reveals that em- ployed dropouts and graduates had "nearly iden- tical" weekly income levels and that "three- 'quarters of the dropouts rated themselves 'quite satisfied' or 'very satisfied' with their jobs, while two-thirds of the graduates expressed similar levels of satisfaction." On the basis of this evidence, Bachman calls the anti-dropout campaign "propaganda" based on "superficial interpretation of statistics" and urges that it be greatly curtailed. Bachman attributes several negative side ef- fects to the anti-dropout campaign. Among them he points to the bad name which the campaign has given to dropouts and to the fact that as a result of the campaign, many employers may now be requiring high school diplomas for jobs which previously employed non-graduates. As a first step in closing the gap between dropouts and society, the study proposes that "the range of educational opportunities for young people aged 16 to 18 be broadened, and serious consideration given to reducing the number of years necessary for attaining high school diplo- ma." After graduation, students interested in continuing their education could then enroll in publically supported, junior college-like institu- tions. On a more basic level, the study calls for ex- panded "early school and pre-school interven- tions" to "overcode many of the problems which are deeply-ingrained by the time an individual is ready to drop out of high school." The hearing, run by U.S. Congressmen John Conyers (D-Mich.),' and Robert Drinan (D-Mass.), is part of a nation-wide investigation by the House Judiciary Committee into the American prison system. I ON J I FELLI I1 SATYRI CON 1 ,1 t 1 omna Dial 662-6264 231 S. State St. Robert Redford George Segal Zero Mostel in I rIA Join The Daily Staff Once upon a time, Gaius Petronius, ARBITER ELEGANTIAE to Nero's court, wrote the world's first novel, the SATYRICON, now extant only in fragments, and long suppressed or expurgated in this country until a decade ago. Fellini takes parts of this, and in perhaps his greatest film, follows two handsome pagan hippies through picaresque episodes in a pagan world-as it was in Nero's time, and as it may be in ours. (For an excellent article, see Gilbert Highet's "WHOSE SATYRICON-Petronius's or Fellini's," Horizon magazine, Autumn 1970, p. 42) ITALIAN LAUGUAGE-ENGLISH SUBTITLES MONDAY EVENING!-April 3rd-ONLY! 1 J Open 12:45 SHOWS AT 1 p.m. 3 p.m. 5 p.m. 7 p.m. 9 p.m. The first fun f ' picture of the year ! i":'?:: The - -----,H I tRock p ... PANAVISION- COLORSYDELUXE COMING SOON - "THE LAST PICTURE SHOW" auditorium a, angell hall color -35 mm. CI N EMASCOPE Rated "X" 7 & 9:30 p.m. 75c Tickets for both shows on sole outside the auditorium at 5:30 p.m. i II CORRECTION An ad which appeared on page 11 of the Friday, March 31st edition of THE MICHIGAN DAILY for the Democratic party, carried an incorrect headline. The headline should have read: HRP Can't Deliver!!! On The Lavish Promises It Makes. The headline incorrectly substituted the word problems" for the word 'promises.' COMING TUESDAY-April 4th-Sam Peckinpah's THE WILD BUNCH Fantastic, gory movie COMING THURSDAY-April 6th-John Schlesinger's MIDNIGHT COWBOY Now rated "R", but uncut I I Iq I ULRICH'S BOOKSTORE'S 1st ANNUAL $300,0000 "BRAVO, BRANDO'S 'GODFATHER"" -New York Times "THERE IS ONLY ONE BRANDO. HE IS THE GOD- FATHER. THE CENTERPIECE OF WHAT PROMISES TO BE THE 'GONE WITH THE WIND' OF GANG- STER MOVIES." -Paul D. Zimmerman, Newsweek "'THE GODFATHER' IS A SPECTACULAR MOVIE, ONE OF THE FINEST GANGSTERTMOVIES EVER MADE." -Gene Shalit, NBC-TV "A TRULY EPIC FILM IN THE BEST CLASSIC SENSE OF THE WORD! EVEN MORE ENGROSS- ING THAN MARIO PUZO'S BOOK, IF THAT'S POSSIBLE!" -ABC-TV "A MARVELOUS MOVIE! A TOUGH BEAUTIFUL MOVIE!" -CBS-TV I TONIGHT: ROOM SERVICE Dir. GEORGE ABBOT, 1938 With the Marx Brothers in a farce about a theatrical troupe stranded in a posh hotel with no cash. PLUS a Marx Brothers short: The Incredible Jewel Robbery. Architecture Auditorium 7 & 9P.M. 75c Tomorrow night check-out the BLACK FILM SOCIETY INVENTORY involving every article in our store SALE except textbooks I eI 1 II U El 'U U El isieiiPiiuiuIhi EEl 1I 0 1!1 I I I I IIIII i IiIII I ld II I II