i ENJOY ISRAELI EVENINGS at the Rive Gauche with Israeli food, music, singing, and landscapes FRIDAY & SATURDAY (Jan. 22,23) from 9 P.M. at the Madelon Pound House 1024 Hill EVERYONE WELCOME! age three im4c Siigqtn out 1y NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 -".. Wednesday, January 20, 1971 Ann Arbor, Michigan Pace Three .. .....I i a ~ . n briefs n e w.s...By The Associated Press I CINEMA II Aud. A Angell Hall SEVEN SAMAU RI Friday, Jan. 22 7:00, 9:30 THE MAGNIFICENT SEVEN Saturday, Jan. 23 7:00, 9:05 THE BALCONY Saturday, Jan. 23 11:00, Sunday, Jan. 24 1 :00 and 3:00 P.M. ________- THE DEPARTMENT of Health, Education and Welfare an- nounced yesterday it will cut off a major portion of matching welfare aid to Indiana and Nebraska April 1. The two states violate federal public assistance regulations 'by' failing to increase grants to keep pace with cost of living increases. Indiana stands to lose $39 million a year and Nebraska $15 mil- lion under the major welfare program - aid for dependent children. The department recently canceled similar plans to terminate $684 million in welfare matching aid to California after Gov. Ronald Rea- gan promised to initiate court action to resolve the conflict.; The two states can postpone the cut-off action by appealing! HEW's decision in the court. RICHARD RUSSELL of Georgia, for years one of the most powerful members of the Senate was reported in critical condi- tion yesterday after a six weeks bout with a respiratory infection. Doctors had described his condition as serious since he entered the hospital Dec. 8 but changed this yesterday to critical. Russell is the first American in history to serve more than half his life in the Senate. He was elected to the Senate in 1932 and took office in 1933. Prior to that he was Georgia's youngest governor, 33. PRESIDENT NIXON yesterday ordered a halt to further con- Rep. Car struction of the cross-Florida barge canal to prevent what he termed "potentially serious environmental damages." Money for the 107-mile-long canal was authorized by Congress in A i e r 1962. It would run from Mayport on the Atlantic coast near Jackson- ville to Yankeetown on the Gulf Coast. Nixon said the canal's total cost, if completed, would be about ' $180 million and about $50 million already has been committed to con- i to D e m o C struction. The purpose of the canal, Nixon noted, was to reduce tranhpor- WASHINGTON (AP)-Rep. Carl tation costs for barge shipping. He added that it was designed at a; Albert of Oklahoma was over- time when the focus of federal concern in such matters was still al- whelmingly nominated by the most completely on maximizing economic return. Democrats for speaker yesterday, * * * after which Rep. Hale Boggs, AN OIL SLICK from a ripped-open tanker fouled ocean Louisiana won the five-way race for House Democratic leader. beaches near San Francisco yesterday. The Coast Guard estimated that 500,000 to 1.9 million gallons Boggs beat back Democratic of bunker fuel oil gushed from the Oregon Standard after a collision caucus challenges from Rep. Mor- early Monday with its sister ship, the Arizona Standard. otherU candidates for the leader- Standard Oil Co. of California, owner of both vessels, pressed a ship job. gigantic cleanup campaign which began before dawn Monday and Boggs won on the second ballot continued around the clock. after Rep. Wayne Hays of Ohio Officials said that with good weather the oil spread over San withdrew from the race and threw Francisco Bay after two tankers collided may be disposed of in two his support to Boggs. or three days. Rep. James G. O'Hara of Michi- There was no immediate estimate of damage to property and 'gan also withdrew but did not wildlife. announce support for any of the The Coast Guard said it was the biggest oil slick in the bay's three remaining candidates. history, spreading at least a dozen miles. The final vote was 140 for High court limits pleas for illegal confession claim WASHINGTON (M - The Supreme Court unanimously yesterday limited the opportunity of convicts to win new trials on allegations their confessions were involuntary. Ruling against a California convict, the court said a prisoner must show more than "shortcomings" in the weigh- ing of his confession at trial before he can have a new hear- ing. He must show, said Justice Potter Stewart, that if his version of the facts are correct the confession was forced and iadmissible as evidence. The ruling undoubtedly will restrain whatever tendencies -Associated Press l Albert ggs elected ratic posts 0 ISQUITE SIMPLY, TEBEST AMERICAN FILM I'VE SEEN THIS YEAR!" vinc ecbY, u N. Y. TIMES PARAMUNI PICIORS CORPONININASSOCAAINWI IlmrnS INC POINTS A MIKE NICHOLS FILM ALANARKIN JOSEPH HELER MARTINRASAR;INCHAROBERPN1N;ARTHURCARfUNKEL;JACK CILfORD;BUCK HENRY;O8BNEWHART;ANTHONYPERKINS;PAULAUMM.. MARTIN SHEEN; JONVlGIT& ORSON WELIE S ASOREEDLE. SCREENPLAY BY RUC HENRY PRODUCED BY JOHN CAILEY & MARTIN RANSUIFF MRECTEOSMIIEN ICHOLS PRssiladOslC!EP Pr POSYistTATCNlcMNICts- PmUNISIV NAPAMMUUTPICRIt 1' UAMRIi5tRES IRPASS RREISOR A DIUAIAAN Sat.-Thurs. Shows at 7 & 9; Fri. at 7, 9, & 11 ~ r 482-3300 LIHTDP A R H I N R 'drop the low man each time around. The Democratic caucus turned down, 111 to 55, Conyers' pro- posed resolution directing the party's committee on committees to put the Mississippians at the bottom of the seniority list on their respective panels. Consideration of rules changes,I including modification of the seniority system, was put over un- til today. exist in federal courts to act favorably on habeas corpus petitions by prisoners who arej convicted in state courts. The decision bars a hearing for Veron Atchley, convicted in 1959 of killing his estranged wife in Palermo, Calif., by firing six bul- lets into her body at close range. Although Atchley won a reduc- tion of his death sentence to life imprisonment, all appeals w e r e turned down, including one in the Supreme Court 10 years ago. However, in 1967 the U.S. Dis- trict Court in San Jose said he was entitled to a new hearing and the U.S. Circuit C o u r t in San Francisco agreed in 1969. Califor- nia appealed to the Supreme Court and won yesterday's rever- sal. Atchley's challenge was over the confession he gave to an insur- ance agent who came to talk with him in prison ostensibly about in- surance but really to take the con- fession on a hidden recorder. The federal courts in Califor- nia said Atchley was entitled to a new hearingrbecause the Califor- nia trial court "had excluded rel- evant a n d perhaps crucial evi- dence on the issue of whether the confession was voluntary." Specifically, the courts said, the trial judge had not found o u t what police said to the insurance agent, whether the agent had feigned sympathy, or whether 'U.S. hc budget a N.Y. police vote to end job action NEW YORK (R) - The city's patrolmen voted yesterday to re- turn to patrol duty during the af- ternoon, ending a six-day job ac- tion. The 225-113 vote came during a stormy delegate meeting of th e Patrolman's Benevolent Associa- tion a n d the policemen started back to work even as the vote was underway. Earlier, the first two tours due on duty spurned their union lead- ers back-to-work appeal pending the outcome of the meeting. An indication of the direction the vote might take came when a source in the PBA let it be known an earlier secret vote of the 26, 000 patrolmen, showed 87 per cent were willing to return. It was reliably reported the del- egates secured the vote when they assured patrolmen t he courts would not invoke the Taylor law - which bans strikes by public employes - against them and that any appeal of a decision in a trial of the controversial p a y parity case would be expedited. PBA " President Edward Kier- nan had asked his men to return to work Monday after a trial was set for yesterday on the parity is- sue. The patrolmen refused, about 85 per cent of them maintaining their job action. Police Commissioner Patrick V. Murphy said Monday he was with- in 48 hours of asking the mayor for National Guard assistance to meet police needs. Indications were that there was no great upsurge in crime, fewer calls for assistance were being -re- ceived, arrests had dropped sharp- ly and that the skeleton force of police was responding to m o s t emergencies. Cold weather also helped keep the crime rate down. Busing cut Atchley was trying to obtain a WACTHTNTrrM OI 1P) P lsn., n lawyer. i A GOVERNMENT STUDY GROUP concluded yesterday that widespread poisoning from mercury in food is unlikely. But it said the government must move with utmost urgency to remove deposits of the metal from polluted waterways. The scientists also urged further curbs on industrial discharges of mercury and a virtual ban on pesticides containing the metallic com- pound. i o -- --4i .t,&~,. * Areyou still reading the way your parents read? In the first grade, when you were taught to read "Run Spot Run," you had to read it out loud. Word-by-word. Later, in the second grade, you were asked to read silently. But you couldn't do it. You stopped reading out loud, but you continued to say every word to yourself. Chances are, you're doing it right now. This means that you read only as fast as you talk. About 250 to 300 words per minute. (Guiness' Book of World Records lists John F. Kennedy as delivering the fast- est speech on record: 327 words per minute.) The Evelyn Wood Course teaches you to read without mentally saying each word to yourself. Instead of reading one word at a time, you'll learn to read groups of words. To see how natural this is, look at the dot over the line in bold type. grass is green You immediately see all three words. Now look at the dot between the next two lines of type. Petitioning Now Open For CINEMA 11 BOARD Interviews to be held Wed., Jan. 20 and Thurs., Jan. 21 in 3516 S.A.B. Sign up on S.G.C. Bulletin Board, S.A.B. Lobby (ask at desk) Boggs- 88 for Udall and 17 for kw) - rins o- an oU " . RepB.s, isof U alifona. 7 rspend $1.4 billion on low-income But Stewart, speaking for the Rep. . F. Sisk of California. rural housing this fiscal year are Supreme Court, said these points eAlbert had onl thoke opposi- reported to have been cut one- aren more than "shortcomings"' Mic from Rep. John Conyers race third by the Nixon administra- which by themselves do not make Michigan who got into the race tion. Advocates of the program a case for an illegal confession. Monday as a gesture of opposition say it has no budgetary impact Yesterday, the Sureme Court to Albript'sefaiuresitoibackeatioven and such a cut is unnecessary. also ruled on the case of a Wis- to srip th rMississippi delegation The program is operated by the consin woman whose name was of its seniority. Farmers Home Administration in posted in bars for excessive drink- The party caucus elected Rep. t h e Agriculture Department. As ing. Six out of nine justices said Olin F. Teague of Texas as cau- recently as a m o n t h ago the states have the power to control Tcus chaa -in uet. ny agency talked ofsdoubling its sale of loquor but not the right to Teague was a last-minute entry, ho using-loan business from t h epuastgaoanne He received 155 votes to 91 for $761 million in 1969-70. p"t a stigma on anyone. Rep. Dan Rostenkowski of Illinois, Now, agency spokesmen say, the who had held the caucus chair- $1.4 billion goal for the year end- The Michigan Daily, edited and man- ?mnhpfor four years. ignx ue3 sudrrve aged by students at the University of manshiing next June 30 is under review Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second Boggs had led the five-way race ; but refuse to say whether the tar- Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- for House Democratic leader on get is still that large. igan, 420 Maynard 'St., Ann Arbor, the first inconclusive Democratic If the cutback is as large as re- Michigan 48104. Published. daily Tues- balot eserdybutlaked ~t tis eas tatagecydaythog Sunday morning Univer- caucus ballot yesterday, but lacked ported, this means that agency sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by the required majority. lending for the next six months carrier, $10 by mail. Udall was second but the win- will total around $300 million, far Summer Session published Tuesday ner depended on succeeding bal- less than what some housing au- through saturday morning. Subscrip- lots which, starting with the third, thorities say is required. ___nrate:_$___y__rr__r,_$__y__a___ t i 1 I FREE BOWLING EXHIBITION I ,' .- Today-i -3 6-8 p.m. d iI "BREATHTAKING, I rec -NBC it very highly.'Toda,' H AGBARD SIGNE L Ends Wednesday week and finish each page in 31 seconds. At 3,000 words per minute, you'll be able to read the 447 page novel The God- father in 1 hour and 4 minutes. These are documented statistics based on the results of the 450,000 people who have enrolled in the Evelyn Wood course since its inception in 1959. The course isn't complicated. There are no machines. There are no notes to take. And you don't have to memorize any- thing. 95% of our graduates have improved their reading ability by an average of 4.7 times. On rare occasions, a graduate's read- ing ability isn't improved by at least 3 times. In these instances, the tuition is completely refunded. Take a free Mini-Lesson on Evelyn Wood. Do you want to see how the course works? Then take a free Mini-Lesson.-r The Mini-Lesson is an hour long peek at what the Evelyn Wood course offers. We'll show you how it's possible to accelerate your speed without skipping a single word. You'll have a chance to try your hand at it, and before it's over, you'll actually increase your reading speed. (You'll only increase it a little, but it's a start.) We'll show you how we can extend your memory. And we'll show you how we make chapter outlining obsolete. Take a Mini-Lesson this week. It's a wild hour. And it's free. DIAL 8-6416 UNION LANES BUZZ FAZIO member Brunswick Advisory Staff For further information: 761-7403 or 665-0428 EASTMAN COLOR ,! , THURSDAY "LA VIOL" F and it grows when it rains- With training, you'll learn to use your innate ability to see groups of words. As an Evelyn Wood graduate, you'll be able to read between 1,000 and 3,000 words per minute . . . depending on the difficulty of the material. At 1,000 words per minute, you'll be able to read a text book like Hofstadtler's American Political Tradition and finish each chapter in 11 minutes. At 2,000 words per minute, you'll be .able to read a magazine like Time or News-