CREATION WE ARE ESTABLISHING A TOTALLY NEW KIBBUTZ IN ISRAEL WE NEED OTHERS TO COMMIT THEMSELVES TO THIS Venture in Pioneering and Communal Living page three aloe Sici'titn ttiiy NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINE HSS PHONE: 764-005-t Friday, January 15, 1971 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three 1 I We Are Looking For YOUNG ZIONISTS Who Are Ready To Immigrate to ISRAEL, in SEPT. '71 or SEPT. '72 IF INTERESTED CONTACT GARIN KIBBUTZ HASHACHAR c/o LESLIE FRIED 116 W. 14th ST. NEW YORK, N.Y. 10011 TEL: 212-ORS-1164 news briefs By The Associated Press an ILS project CHINA WEEK JAN. 10-16 -Friday, Jan. 15- mixed media/panel/workshops "CULTURAL REVOLUTION" mixed media event-around CBS News color documentoar -PANEL- -WORKSHOPS- Robert Williams Education for Liberation William Hinton Art, Media and Culture Orville Schell Communes and Leni Sinclair Collectives 7:30 P.M. ADMISSION $1 NATURAL SCIENCE AUDITORIUM off Diag IN CASE OF STRIKE: University Reformed Church, 1001 E. Huron near Fletcher H U RRY HONEDON'T MISS IT! 482-3300 Spend a marvelous evening with eight ofdthe boys. Mart Crowley's /N Tilt ...is ot a musical. ACmamCiCRfatIi.AN AGnvReeese CobyDoe[ 1~i rI; THE NIXON ADMINISTRATION yesterday halted new ap- plications for the government's $140 million subsidized housing program. Housing Seeretary George Romney said the program has been Mfound riddled with abuse. Romney said a portion of the so-called 235 Program for low and moderate income families dealing with the purchase of existing homes, rather than new ones, will be shut down until reforms can be made. Romney's action contradicts the administration's previous state- ments refuting the program's critics. SOUTH VIETNAMESE rangers yesterday battled to a key mountain pass in Cambodia. The forces, led by an armored column and aided by bombers and artillery, killed 41 North Vietnamese troops in a clash aboutj 95 miles north of Pnom Penh. THE DEFENSE DEPARTMENT has not ruled out additional U.S. aircraft aid to South Vietnamese troops operating in Cam- bodia. Pentagon sources said yesterday Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird believes such operations would not violate the congressional prohibition on the use of American advisors or ground troops in Cam- bodia. The aircraft would airlift and resupply the South Vietnamese. troops. SCOTLAND YARD yesterday began an intensive search of London hoping to curb a terrorist gang called the Angry Brigade. The terrorist group is suspected of and has claimed responsibility' for the bombing of a Cabinet Minister's home and a kidnap threat against another minister. London police have been alerted to keep a close protectiveI watch on the homes of cabinet ministers and some members of parlia- ment. * * * High court Ibars Govt.' mail hunts WASHINGTON (Y - T h e Supreme Court yesterday bar- red the Post Office from inter- cepting mail to publishers of obscene books and magazines. In a unanimous decision, Justice William Brennan Jr. said two federal laws used by the Post Office were not "sen- sitive" enough tothe right of free speech. The laws were declared uncon- stitutional. In a second ruling, the c o u r t required hundreds of Southern cities to obtain federal Approval before expanding their boundaries to take in more white voters or changing the locations of polling places. Since annexations and polling location changes may discriminate against black voters, said Bren- nan, approval of the U.S. attorney general or a U.S. district court in Washington is required. The ruling applies to the areas covered by the 1965 federal voting right law. The Nixon administration had appealed to the court to uphold the obscenity laws. Otherwise, the government argued, the Post Of - fice's "power to shield the public from fraudulent advertising" would be weakened. The court's decision, however, does not affect the government's power to prosecute dealers. Also, the court specifically bypassed the issue of whether people have a constitutional right to receive ob- scene books and devices by mail. Brennan held the invalidated laws unconstitutional on two counts. First they put the burden on the publisher to prove he has a right to receive his mail. Then, the justice cited a 1965 court decision which struck down movie censorship procedures in Maryland. -Associated Press PRESIDENT NIXON'S FAMILY watches him throw snowballs yesterday in Lincoln, Nebraska, where he addressed a University of Nebraska convocation. Nixon challenges youth to work in system' with 18-year-old vote LINCOLN; Neb. OP)-Declaring that "there can be no generation Mon.-Thurs. at 11 7 & 9-Fri.: 7, 9, 1 1 482-3300 I F PAEREH A U.S.-CANADIAN commission yesterday reported that ser- ious pollution is harming health and property around the lower Great Lakes. The commission made 22 recommendations, ranging f r o m a' Eclampdown on phosphorous discharges from detergents to tighter curbs against underwater oil drilling and waste disposal from ships. The joint governmental commission was set up in 1911 to handle cross-boundary matters. SLAIN BLACK LEAD gap in America," President Nixon yesterday challenged a campus audience to try out "the system" through the newly extended right to vote for 18-year-olds. Only once did Nixon mention any new administration aims-he detailed a proposal to consolidate the Peace Corps, Vista and related ER 1 Tributes mark King's birthdays "No one should miss it! "A tender love of two youngsters that surges and explodes. A stunningly beautiful drama. The'picture is fascinating in magnificent natural colors. The director has guided the action like a master choreographer, staging a stately pavane of unyielding tempo and doom. The exceptionally appealing young players, their nude scene together and one candid glimpse of a male sauna bath, are entirely within the content of this extraordinary picture, joining beauty and horror in a rich, scaldingI eyeful and a haunting love story."-N.Y. Timesj "It is on every level an amazing film. Definitely the most incredible, beautiful and impressive romance of our time." --Bernard Drew, Hartford Times OFFCIAL SWEDISH ENTRY AT XXth INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL IN CANNESa Prentoulis Films presents H mNAGBARD & SIGNE A LOVE AS ETERNAL AS THE MIDNIGHT SUN with Eva Dohlbeck * Gunnar Bonskrond *Oleg Vidov * Gite Henning. An ASA Film.AS-Movie Art Europe A. Edd fiet; Co-Production, Photography enning 8endtsen; Directed By Gobiel Axel. A PrantoulisFfilms Releose. TONIGHT -IN EASTMAN COLOR AT -U U~EE &DIAL 7-4 P.M. ~hi~LB~ -6416 By The Associated Press The nation observes the 42nd birthday of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. today with tributes to the murdered civil rights leader and renewed efforts to get the date declared a national holi- day. Memorial and religious serv- ices, rallies and demonstrations are scheduled across the coun- try, from small Southern towns where his crusade was launched to the larger cities where it later focused. Schools, businesses and gov- ernment offices will close in some cities, but numerous others have no plans for special ob- servances. In Atlanta, where King was born in 1929, his widow Coretta will attend a memorial service at the family's Ebenezer Bap- tist church. In Memphis, Tenn., where King died at the hands of an assassin on April 4, 1968, ex- cerpts of his speeches and writ- ings will be read to a gathering at a ,Baptist church. The Rev. Ralph David Aber- nathy, who succeeded King as head of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, w 11 1 lead a march to the Capitol to present petitions asking Con- gress to designate King's birth- day a national holiday. The date is now recognized as a holiday by nine states, but at- tempts are underway to have other states to follow suit. In Washington Wednesday. the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights paid tribute to King, calling him "an American hero who gave his life -hat others might live in freedom, and, above all, in peace." In New York, Mayor John V. Lindsay. proclaiming "Martin Luther King Day," urged resi- dents to "draw strength from King'stmemoryrjust asrwe drew strength from his pres- ence.", A former aide of King, Dr. Wyatt Tee Walker, will lead a demonstration in his memory outside the New York headquar- ters of the Great Atlantic & Pa- cific Tea Co. The retail food chain has been the target of past demonstrations for alleged job discrimination. King was shot deadfrom am- bush as he stood on the balcony of a Memphis motel. He was in the city leading a strike of city sanitation workers. federal efforts to tap volunteer service into one new agency. Nixon said the as yet unnamed new agency would "give young Americans an expanded opportun- ity for the services they want to give-and that will give them what is not now offered, a chance to transfer between service abroad and at home." In his prepared address at a faculty-student convocation at the University of Nebraska, Nixon claimed his administration "has no higher priority than to end the war" in Indochina. But Nixon emphasized the role of youth in achieving "great goals" to deal with environmental problems, urban blight, over-pop- ulation, rural ills and "poverty in a land of plenty." In a television-radio interview last week with four broadcast Journalists, Nixon cited a Life magazine poll that, he conceded, would indicate the younger voters at this time would not vote the way he might prefer. But he expressed the view that the youth vote will be up for The Michigan Daily, edited and man- agec by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second glass 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 mai, summer Session published Tuesday thrrugh Saturday morning. Subscrip- 'don rates: $5. by carrier, $5 by mal State, U.S. grants to aid heroin treatment center grabs in 1972 and indicated he would be making a pitch for it. His appearance here apparently marked the beginning of his per- sonal effort to solicit the allegi- ance of the newly enfranchised young voters. According to the White House, Nixon made his Lincoln appear- ance largely because the Univer- sity of Nebraska football team was designated national champions in a recent Associated Press poll. This was the President's fourth address to a campus crowd since taking office. -_ Gov. William Milliken yester- day announced a $65,700 grant for a Washtenaw County heroin treatment center, which will al- so receive about $45,000 in local matching funds. The grant, from federal funds; distributed by the Michigan Commission on L a w Enforce- ment and Criminal Justice, will allow the continuation and ex- pansion of a clinic presently run at the Summit St. Medical Center. About 210 addicts will be able to receive treatment from the center, according to official es- timates. T h e y will be treated with methadone, a less danger- ous drug than heroin. The program will be sponsor- ed by the Community Mental Health Center, which Gov. Mil- liken named last year as the lo- cal anti-drug coordinator. Authorities hope this pro- gram w ill serve to spearhead other similar programs in an attack on all kinds of d r u g s throughout the county. Mental Health officials plan to submit a series of grant ap- plications to the state in March in an effort to involve many lo- cal groups and agencies in the drug fight. They have asked all local agencies which could contribute to d r u g treatment to submit grants to the state. BENEFIT FOR WHITE PANTHER PARTY DEFENSE FUND ALLEN GINSBERG at FRI. NITE 8 & 10 P.M. $2.00 375N. AE R0. MON.-FRI. 7:05-9:15 Barbra Streisand Panavsion Color SAT.-SUN. 2:00-3:45-6:30 7:15-9:15 Ile sf "AS DAZZLING A CALVACADE AS HAS EVER BEEN PUT ON A SCREEN!" -Newsweek Magazine I SHOWS AT 1:00 3:30 6:05 8:40 in the university cellar FRIENDS OF THE WHITE PANTHERS PRESENTS ROCK & ROLL MUSIC Is still with coming through I at the UNION BALLROOM thousands of with I 'CH RYDER new and used books up R T 1 i US