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January 13, 1971 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1971-01-13

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.


RADICAL FILM SERIES
Presents
CLIVE DONNER'S
THE CARETAKER
FROM A PLAY BY
HAROLD PINTER
TON IGHT
CANTERBURY HOUSE-330 Maynard
7 9 11 P.M. Admission 75c
MAGIC HOUSE FAMILY

page thiree

T4IP

£ id~i!3an

46F

NEWS PHONE: 764-0552
BUSINESS PhONE: 764-0554

Wednesday, January 13, 1971 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three

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Free You rse wt
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Tpnight at EMU's PEA
TICKETS 4$.00 at -Ca
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ASE AUD.
mpus Corners
e Rubaiyat
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news bif
By The Associated Press
ABOUT 50 POLICEMEN fired a barrage of gunfire and tear
gas into Black Panther headquarters in Winston-Salem, N. Car.,
yesterday forcing the surrender of a man and a 15-year-old boy
later charged with stealing a truckload of meat.
Police Chief Justus M. Tucker said officers opened fire on the
Panther headquarters after a "shot, or shots" were fired from an
upstairs room. No one was reported injured.
The police surrounded the house after a meat truck driver
reported his stolen truck was parked in front of the headquarters
and the meat was being taken into the building.
JORDAN'S GOVERNMENT and the Palestinian guerrillas,
agreed on a new cease-fire yesterday after five days of fighting,
but firing broke out in Amman barely an hour after the agree-
ment was announced.
The government accused the guerrillas of opening fire on a securi-
ty post near an old Roman citadel in the city. Authorities claimed that
some shells landed on nearby houses, killing two women and wounding
one.
The guerrillas issued a statement in Beirut claiming that Jor-
danian government troops had attacked commando bases in northern.
Jordan, inflicting a number of casualties.
* * *
PRESIDENT NIXON threatened yesterday to counter what
.he considers an enormous price increase by Bethlehem Steel by
inviting expanded imports of lower-cost steel from Japan and
Western Europe.
A Bethlehem Steel spokesman said the company had no comment.
Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler said the President was deeply con-
cerned that the increases would 'drive up prices if other steel produc-
ers followed the Bethlehem lead.
* * *

-Associated Press

Supreme Court rules
on N.Y. welfare issue
WASHINGTON (IP) - States may cut off aid to welfare mothers
who refuse to allow inspecting social workers into their homes, the
Supreme Court ruled 6 to 3 yesterday.
Home visits, said Justice Harry A. Blackmun, are a reasonable and
constitutional way of protecting the children and a "gentle means"
of making sure federal and state welfare money is distributed properly.
The ruling upholds a 1946 New York state law directing case
workers to visit welfare recipients as'frequently as necessary to make
sure assistance is given "only in such amount and as long as neces-
sary."
The visits are not required by federal regulations and they were
enjoined as unconstitutional in 1969 by a U.S. District Court in New
York City.
Chief Justice Warren E. Burger and Justices Hugo L. Black, John
M. Harlan. Potter Stewartkand -__ __
Byron R. White Joined Blackmun
in reversing the judgment on an
appeal by New York welfare offi- l PlN ixon
cials.
Justices William O. Douglas,
William Brennan Jr. and Thur-
good Marshall dissented. 1) f)'cC S"
Douglas said the court was en-
forcing regulations' against poor
people that would not be imposed
on defense contractors and other in dauger
recipients of government "larges-
se."
Marshall, with Brennan con- WASHINGTON (AP)"-- Presi-
curring, said the ruling subjects dent Nixon's two top legislative
the poor to searches that are not projects for the New Congress-
imposed on owners of warehouses. family assistance to reform the
Federal welfare officials s id welfare program and sharing of
the ruling would encourage other federal revenues with the states
states to adopt such regulations. -are caught in a potentially
The decision was the third this deadly Senate-House crossfire.
term in which t h e court ruled H.R. 1, officially the first bill
against an assertion of constitu- introduced when the House recon-
tional rights. In all three cases venes Jan. 21, is expected to com-
the lineup of justices was the same bine the family assistance plan
except that Black crossed over to with a 10 per cent boost in Social
dissent in one of them. Security benefits.
"The caseworker is not a sleuth Onlur tyearfth
but rather, we trust, is a friend Only last year the House passed
in need," Blackmun wrote, speak- similar legislation only to see it
ing for the majority. Marshall re- die in the Senate adjournment
plied in dissent: "Of course, case- pile-up. And just before the Sen-
workers seek to be friends, but the ate adjournedh Jan. 2 Finance
point is that they are also re- Committee Chairman Russell
quired to be sleuths." Long, D-La., told his colleagues:
Mrs. Barbara James had refused "My only regret for the last year
to allow a caseworker to visit her is that I cooperated with the
home in 1969, though she said she scheme family assistance to the
would meet willingly with the extent I did."
caseworker elsewhere. Long's reaction does not neces-

Political garage

H HURRY
HN I DON'T MISS IT-

I

Spend a marvelous evening with eight o4 the boys.
Mart Crowley's
,as not a musical
AwMC AeO&'w "-ANGuenGa alsPee -C.kbrDde* I J
Mon.-Thurs. at 7& 9-Fri.: 7, 9, 1 1
ainma'D

MILLIONS of federal dollars intended to help poor Indian
schoolchildren have been sidetracked and used for other purposes,
according to the NAACP Legal Defense Fund and the Harvard
Center for Law and Education.
The report criticizes the Bureau of Indian Affairs for not making
sure the money went where it was intended.
Although the federal government did not respond immediately,
there were a number of. denials by state and local officials from areas
mentioned in the report.
* * *
THE SANTA CLARA COUNTY grand jury says it has con-
cluded its investigation into the rock-throwing demonstration in
San Jose against President Nixon's campaign motorcade Oct. 29
and no felony charges will be filed.
Police have arrested four men on misdemeanor charges who are
awaiting trial.
The flurry of rock throwing occurred as President Nixon left a
rally where he backed the re-election bids of Gov. Ronald Reagan and
U. S. Sen. George Murphy.

r
E
7
1
7

Pittsburgh Mayor Peter F. Flaherty, in garbage-collecting garb,
ponders yesterday what to do with trash piled in a freight elevator
in City Hall. About half of the city's 3100 nonuniformed employes
are on strike, forcing the mayor and aides to collect trash
themselves.
"PRICELESS ARTIFACTS":
~''team announces
Egyptian discovery
ANN ARBOR - "Priceless artifacts" - gold, jewelry, and beads
- have lain hidden for decades in the Cairo Museum's royal mummy
room.
The unsuspected artifacts were discovered by a University of
Michigan team of scientists who today are making their first report
in this country of preliminary findings of their December expedition
to Egypt.
Dr. James Harris, D.D.S., a U-M orthodontist, geneticist and an-
thropologist, leaded the group. The team completed the first head-to-
toe three dimensional x-ray examination of the 29 mummified pha-
raohs and their queens.

, * C

POSTMASTER GENERAL Winston Blount forecast yester-
day higher postage rates by mid or late spring and conversion of
the post office to the semi-autonomous postal service by late
June.
'Blount introduced seven of the nine members of a new boarda
governors which will take control of the postal service by Aug. 12.

of

'

-t

WED.
JAN. 13
8 P.M.

P

£ir~i9~Irn

3Daitiy

THURS.
JAN. 14
8 P.M.

STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BUILDING, 420 MAYNARD STREET

T.

Some 20 per cent of the mum-
mies, whose graves had been pil-
laged centuries ago, still had sac-
red jewelry hidden on and in the
bodies. This is the first discovery
of royal Egyptian artifacts since
the discovery in 1922 of the tomb
of King Tutankhamen, who reign-
ed during the 14th century B.C.
The x-ray discoveries include:
-The Sacred Eye of Horus, a
semi-precious stone or ceramic
protective funerary artifact, found
under resin on the upper left arm
of Seti I (1343-1292 B.C.), th e
father of Rameses II.
-a large "gold" bracelet on the
right forearm of Thutmosis I,
(died 1447 B.C.), an early "vic-
tim" of women's liberation, dom-
inated by h i s wife, Hatshepsot,
who controlled the throne,
-and a heart scarab in t h e
body of Queen Makare. A 1968 ex-
pedition by the same U-M group
revealed that' what was believed,
to be the mummified body of her
infant buried with her was really,
an adolescent baboon.
The first cache was also pillaged
by modern grave robbers before
authorities learned of it.
Fe place to meet
INTERESTING people
Bach -Club
presents
Life and Death Matters
in Bach's Cantata 106
A lecture performance by
FREDERICK STROUP
assisted by
ABBIE VAN DER WALKER
contralIto
HUGH GULLEDGE
tenor
TIM MOUNT
bass
JANE HARDIE
recorder
JOHN FINK
recorder
NANCY CRITELLI
cello
MR. STROUP
keyboard
Refreshments Afterwards!
Thurs., Jan. 14, 8 p.m.
S. Quad West Lounge
EVERYONE WELCOME!
Positively No Musical
Knowledge Needed.
Further Info:
764-7638 or 769-2003

Leader of militant Jewish
group arrested in New York

NEW YORK (AP)--Rabbi Meir
Kahane, head of the militant
Jewish :Defense League, was ar-
rested yesterday in connection
with a demonstration in Decem-
ber. The anti-Soviet tactics of Ka-
hane and his group have figured
in U.S.-Russian controversy.
The rabbi was arrested on a
bench warrant when he missed a
court date to answer charges
stemming from a Dec. 27 demon-
stration to protest death sentences
given two Soviet Jews. The sen-
tences were later commuted,
Freed on $3,000 bail, Kahane
charged his arrest was "the start
of a campaign hatched in Wash-
ington to stop the JDL."
Last Sunday, Kahane said his
group was forming teams to "fol-
low, question and harrass" Soviet
diplomats in' New York to provoke
a crisis in Soviet-American rela-
tions in order to stop the two
countries from "building bridges
over Jewish bodies."
"I applaud the harrassment, the
bombings and any other things
DIAL 8-6416
ENDING WEDNESDAY
"'BORSAUNO' SCORES!
-Playboy Magazine
"ONE OF THE YEAR'S
BEST FILMS! -Hostf

that can be done to save the 3 /2
million Jews in Communist Rus-
sia,"
In New York, the Overseas Press;
C' 1 u b condemned attacks on
American correspondents in the
Soviet Union and gave Soviet
Ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin 48
hours to reply to the incidents.
The correspondents' club hinted it
would take "some significant ac-
tion" if Dobrynin, who is now
home for consultations, did not
intervene "in the interest of a
free world press."
Mayor John V. Lindsay denied
the city was acting under pressure
from the U.S. State Department
and called Kahane's arrest "coin-
cidental."
The mayor said he had assured
the State Department police would'
take "every step necessary to see
that the international community
in our town is safeguarded."
There were no reports of imci-
dents involving Soviet diplomats.
A heavy police guard limited ac-
cess to the Soviet mission on East
67th Street and passersby entering,
the block were carefully watched.,
A continuous stream of diplo-
mats entered and left the building
by automobile, escorted by police,
in unmarked cars. At one point,
a busload of performers from the1
touring Moscow Circus arrived.

sadily preciuae any agreement on
some version of welfare reform.
At one point in the complicated
Senate maneuvering over the bill
that died he voted for inclusion of
a welfare reform section.
Nixon has been promised a
hearing on his proposal to deal
the states in on billions of federal
revenues on a no-strings basis.
But Chairman Wilbur Mills, D-
Ark., of the House Ways and
Means Committee who will be in
charge, reiterated that he is still
firmly opposed to the plan, both
in principle and because starting
it now would increase government
deficitsaalready estimated at $15
billion a year.
Mills added that the measure he
will introduce will include the
House-passed welfare bill with
only relatively minor modifica-
tions.
The Social Security section of
the bill, Mills said, will provide for
a greater increase in benefits than
the 5 per cent the House approved
in 1970. The Senate voted for a
10 per cent increase with a greater
boost in the minimum payment.
"It is apparent that a 5 per cent
increase now is not enough in
view of the rise in living costs,"
Mills said.
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 St., Ann Arbor,
Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues-
day through Sunday morning Univer-
sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by
carrier, $10 by mail
Summer Session published Tuesday
through Saturday morning. Subscrip-
mon rates: $5. by carrier, $5 by mail

To Delve Into the Fascinating

and Varied Worlds of
PUBLISHING and PEOPLE
THERE IS MUCH TO BE LEARNED AND MUCH FUN TO BE HAD LEARNING

SNEAK PREVIEW
TONIGHT AT 9:30 ONLY
A complete feature length showing of a brand new
movie. This film has just finished production and
tonightssow is a
PRE-PREMIERE SHOWING
BEATLERAMA ENDS TONIGHT

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"Gangland French style!,
They kill a little, love a
little, fight a little!"
-N.Y. TIMES
si THURSDAY *
"HAGGARD&SIGNE"
(The Red Mantle)

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Come and Explore the Possibilities and the People at One of Our

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