NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-05054 -..&L Ld&- & 41P mtr4togan :43atil page three Ann Arbor, Michigan Wednesday, November 24, 1971 11217 S University across from Campusiheateri ENDING WEDNESDAY C .7 I DIAL 8-6416 Shows TODAY At 1-3-5-7-9 "it is a trip much worth taking. Not since '2001' has a movie so cannily inverted consciousness and altered audience percep- tion." -Time Magazine IHELLSTROMCHRONICLEI STARTING THURSDAY FREE THE SPIRIT! FREE THE PEOPLE! BEAUTIFUL FREAKS! STREET PEOPLE! GREAT VIBES! 154 children drop in on the folks. news briefs By The Associated Press PRESIDENT NIXON yesterday named a 14 member rent Advisory Board to help formulate Phase 2 regulations to control rents. Headed by Thomas Curtis, a former Republican congressman' from Missouri, the Board is expected to adopt the same guidelines for rent increases, as the Pay board has on wage increases. THE PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF CHINA'S admission into the United Nations and the ouster of Nationalist China marks the bankruptcy of U.S. policy of "being hostile, isolating and block-' ading the Chinese people", Premier Chou En-lai said yesterday. "It marks the defeat of U.S. imperialist hegemony in mani- pulating the United Nations and monopolizing international affairs since World War II," Chou En-lai said. FOREIGN MINISTER ABBA EBAN yesterday called world condemnation of Egyptian President Anwar Sadat as an "aggres- sor and inciter of war." Eban said the world had a responsibility to denounce Sadat for the Egyptian leader's pledge to renew the battle with Israel. ISRAELI DEFENSE MINISTER Moshe Dayan was accused yesterday in Parliament of illegally digging for archeological treasures. Uri Avnery, a parliament representative, said it was not pos- sible to impose stiff penalties on antiquity thieves while "Dayan digs without hinderance" in Israel and occupied Arab territories. COL. ORAN HENDERSON, defending himself against charg- es of covering up the My Lai massacre, testified yesterday that two days after the attack he "was satisfied there had been no wrongdoing". He said he accepted reports that 128 Viet Cong were killed and 20 to 28 civilians were killed inadvertently when caught in artillery and helicopter gunship crossfire. * THE READING RAILROAD, claiming it cannot pay approxi- mately $11 million in debts and taxes coming due shortly, yester- day filed for reorganization under the federal bankruptcy laws. The Reading was the second Philadelphia based- railroad to take such action because of staggering financial problems, blaming its financial difficulties on government forced commuter service. MEMBERS OF THE CHILDREN OF GOD movement will be urged to visit their families over the holiday period to counter charges they are being held in the group's colonies against their wills, a leader of the fundamentalist group said yesterday in Houston. Parents of teen'-agers and young adults who live in the colonies of the so called "Jesus Freaks" have charged that leaders of the organization hold some mysterious power over their children and don't allow them to leave. "To prove our faith in them, the members, we hereby are going to have a massive worldwide demonstration throughout all our col- onies . . . that these lies that some have been telling about us are not true," the leader said. _XExotic Gifts T1F WASHINGTON (N) - The Senate Judiciary Committee yesterday unanimously approved the Supreme Court nomi- nation of Lewis Powell Jr. and endorsed the nomination of William Rehnquist by a vote of 12 to 4. President Nixon's nominees for the two court seats that have been vacant since early September are now expected to be brought up for confirmation in the Senate during the later part of next week. Republican leader Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania said he has "no doubt in the world" that both nominations will be con- firmed although Rehnquist will be opposed from the floor. Powell, 64, is a wealthy Richmond, Va., lawyer and former president of the American Bar Association. Rehnquist, 47, formerly a lawyer in Phoenix, I Senate unit a court pproves nominees. j udiciary -Associated Press SENATE JUDICIARY COMMITTEE members Edward Kennedy (D-Mass), left, and Philip Hart (D-Mic.) were among four senators on the committee who yesterday opposed the nomination of William Rehnquist to the Supreme Court. COSTLY AMENDMENTS: Nion may veto tax relief legislation, Ariz., is a Gen. John top aide to Atty. Mitchell. WASHINGTON (,P) - Presi- dent Nixon told Senate Repub- lican leaders yesterday he would scriously consider vetoing his own tax relief bill unless it is stripped of costly amendments and a Democratic plan for pub- lic financing of presidential campaigns. Senate Republican Leader Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania quoted Nixon as saying he would give "very serious con- sideration to vetoing the bill" following a breakfast meeting he had with Scott at the White House. Sen. Wallace Bennett. (R- Utah) told the Senate the $27 billion tax cut bill it passed yesterday "begs for a presiden- tial veto." because of the cam- paign finance provision, and because it would cut taxes far more than Nixon proposed as a step to stimulate the economy. Senate Democratic Leader of Montant declined to say whether Congress would pass a new tax bill this year if Nixon vetoed the current measure. "Let's wait and see what he does," Mansfield said. Bennett, ranking Republican on the Senate Finance Commit- tee, said Senate amendments in- creased the revenue reductions built into the tax bill by some $55 billion over the next decade. "In addition to the tax loss provisions, the amendment to use federal income tax funds to pay the costs of presidential campaigns means that the bill begs for a presidential veto," Bennett said. The campaign finance plan would enable taxpayers to check a box on the returns to donate $1 to the Democrats, the Repub- licans, a third party or a non- partisan fund. Each major party could get up to $20.4 million in public funds for the 1972 campaign. That would be a major boon to the debt ridden Democrats. And the high command of the Democra- tic National Committee held a strategy conference Tuesday to discuss efforts to make sure the amendment becomes law. Nixon, in announcing their nom- inations on Oct. 21, described them as judicial conservatives. The four committee members who voted against Rehnquist's nomination were Sens. Birch Bayh (D-Ind); Edward Kennedy (D- Mass), Philip Hart (D-Mich), and John Tunney (D-Calif). However, a fifth member of the committee's liberal Democratic bloc, Sen: Quentin Burdick of North Dakota, voted with the ma- jority. Bayh said in a statement that Rehnquist's record "reveals a dangerous hostility to the great principles of equal justice for all people and individual freedom un- der the Bill of Rights." Sen. James Eastland (D-Miss), the committee chairman, said "the liberals have tried to build a case against Mr. Rehnquist, but they have failed utterly." Clarence Mitchell, director of the Washington office of the Na- tional Association for the Ad- vancement of Colored People, call- ed on "all senators who believe in human rights" to vote against Rehnquist. At the committee's hearings, Mitchell testified against Rehn- quist's confirmation on behalf of the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights. A witness for the AFL-CIO also opposed him. The civil rights and 1 a b o r spokesmen did not, however, tes- tify against Powell. Kennedy said Rehnquist has been "a voice of resistance to equal opportunity . . . a voice of greater government power at the expense of individual liberty." Both Bayh and Kennedy said that Powell, despite their disagree- ment with some of his views, has demonstrated a commitment to constitutional liberties and human rights. For the student body: FLARES by Levi Farah Wright ^ Lee Male CHECKMATE State Street at Liberty 2 spending bill WASHINGTON (A') - The Sen- ate passed the massive $70.8 bil- lion defense monies bill Tuesday night after rejecting a proposed 60,000 troop cut in U.S. European forces and approving an added $500 million for military sales to Israel. By a vote of 80 to 5, the mea- sure was sent to a Senate House conference committee. The Sen- ate had reduced the bill $2.7 bil- lion below President Nixon's bud- get and 200 million below the House total. For the second time in six months, the Senate upheld Presi- dent Nixon's European policies by rejecting a proposal to with- draw 60,000 U.S.ntroops from Eu- rope by next June 15.1 The President won a second victory in effect when anti-war senators decided against offering an amendment to cut off funds for Indochina wardoperations ex- cept for U.S. withdrawal. In another action the Senate moved to force the President to provide additional help for Israel by approving $500 million in cre- dits for the sale of F4 Phantom jets and other military weapons. By an 82 to 14 roll call vote, it approved an amendment offered by Sen. Henry Jackson (D- Wash.) and intended by him to "balance the unrestrained flow of sophisticated weapons to Egypt from the Soviet Union." A total of 78 senators have signed letters to the President urging funds to buy the planes be made available to Israel at once. The administration has been re- luctant to make that move. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier, $11 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5 by carrier, $6 by mail. AIRPORT LIMOUSINES for information call 1-800-522-3700 (TOLL FREE WATTS LINE) Tickets are available at Travel Bureaus or the Michigan Union 32 Trips/Day Senate votes huge defense 0 A1 ILEY CINFMA A FRED WEINTPAUB FAMILY PRODUCTION INV& 13= ta ® AM ®E®o a a m Warner Bros.. A Kinney Leisure Service presents A Fred Weintraub Family Production "MEDICINE BALL CARAVAN" Starring Tom Donahue -Milin Melvin Chan Lockman - Wavey Gravey - Willie Nourton - Maureen Titcomb - David Peel - with B.B. KING-" ALICE COOPER'" DOUG KERSHAW- STONEGROUND-"with additional music byTHE YOUNGBLOODS.DELANEYand BONNIE-and MOZART- Produced by Francois Reichenbach and Tom Donahue - Directed by Francois Reichenbach - A French Co-Production France Opera S.A.R.L. P.E.C.F. TECHNICOLOR* RESTRICTED Under 17 requires I i yU I from the Orient waiting for you U ~ at the j atth India Art Shop v 3 30 Maynard ANN ARBOR J 9>o<-> ->( - < >< - J .1.A AiAl.jL 11 T.JL II J R. A A) JR..1 L:I 1 V .11.1 A 330 MAYNARD MONDAY, NOV. 29 ONLY (the day after Vacation) LAST YEAR AT MARIENBAD dir. ALAIN RESNAIS; screenplay by ROBBE-GRILLET 1961 * A man tries to convince a woman (Delphine Seyrig) that they have met before, "perhaps at Marienbad," had an affair and planned to meet once again and run away together. * RESNAIS calls "MARIENBAD" ". . a film about the uncertinties of love . addressed less to the intelligence than to the feelings." * "Be prepared for an experience such os you've never had from watching a film a unique and intense experience . . . brilliant photography . . . sumptuous set- ting and staging.''-N. Y. TIMES 0 GOLDEN BEAR AWARD-VENICE FILM FESTIVAL $1.00 7 & 9:30 .4 i .....