Thurs., Fri.-Sept. 10, 11 LAST YEAR AT MARIENBAD dir. ALAIN RESNAIS (1961) An early master piece of the New Wave ,by the director of La Guerre est Finie. SHORT: Battle of the Century, with LAUREL AND HARDY 7 & 9:05 Architecture 662-8711 75c Auditorium fU page three afire Sfrttn NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Thursday, September 10, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three By The Associated Press SECRET FILES show two ship lines gave illegal campaign contributions to key members of Senate and House committees. Justice Department records indicate that nearly $6,000 was given to congressmen who cdntrol a rich flow of federal subsidies for the shipping firms. \v} THE SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY met criticism yes- terday when presentingth th Hdadouse Waysalnd.Means Commit- I - Committee members of both parties qubstioned President Nixon's ~ proposal and chided David Kennedy for not giving them an updated estimate of the obviously growing, budget deficit for fiscal 1971. D -aly Chairman Wilbur Mills (D-Ark) did not comment on the proposed A FATHER guides his son to the first day of class lead levy, but some other members of the tax-writing committee told OdnEeetr coli hcg.Shost Kennedy they dislike the use of a tax bill to discourage the addition Ogdnr Elementarlby olwniago aSchoos tsh of air-polluting lead to high-octane gasolines, cutywrmakdbwiepadbsnesm s Kennedy said that the proposal is both a revenue and an anti- nrcur-rredsgrgtnpas- polution measure. DE SEGREGATION RESULT? I6Ind hrc I $10.50 per month - E EWE WE W MC~N DEPOSIT H i h a s n e t '.Railroad strike i 4 V postpon ed five days, for talks WASHINGTON (P) - A nationwide railroad strike scheduled for midnight last night was postponed for five days after the govern- ment asked four unions to keep talking in hopes of reaching a peace- ful'wage settlement. "The unions stated td us very firmly that this is the only ex- tension they plan to give," Assistant Secretary of Labor W. J. Usery said of the agreement to move the strike deadline to one minute past midnight Monday. Usery added that there was some progress in the four-hour ne- gotiating' session that led to yesterday's strike postponement; but "it is a long way from a settlement." Chief industry negotiator John Hiltz said that granting the de- mands for three-year wage boosts of 40 per cent or more plus cost- of-living increases and other ben-' efits for some 500,000 workers now averaging $3.50 per hour would bankrupt the nation's railroads.s t s The strike delay was requested after consultation among top fed- eral agencies, including the White House. I, new At the White House, tsery call- 3020 Washtenew, Ph. 434-1782 Between Ypsilanti &.Ann Arbor Box Office Open 6:30 SHOW TIMES Today and Fri. 7-9 Sat. and Sun. 1 -3-5$7-9 RATED X Positively No One Under 18 Admitted EVtZ4Ay 5 i 4 4 -Sara Krulwich yesterday at' roughout the many opened sm Curling FREE DELIVERY AND SERVICE CALL: NE-AC TV RENTALS 662-5671 I hisMoiescol MOBILE, Ala. UP) - Mobile County's public school system, the state's largest, opened under a new desegregation plan yesterday with indications that many parents were holding their children out of school or takings them to schools of their choice. A newsman estimated that only about 150 white pupils showed up at formerly all-black Blount High in nearby Prichard. School of- ficials had said about 1,000 white pupils and 1,679 blacks had been assigned to the school under federalcourt orders. Fewer than 20 white pupils were seen reporting for enrollment at formerly all-black Central High School, now a middle grade school. ed for. "hard bargaining" during the postponement to avoid inter- vention by President Nixon or Congress in the dispute involving railroad clerks, trainmen, track maintenances workers and dining car employes. Nixon still has authority to de- lay any strike in the dispute for 60 days by appointing an emer- gency board under the Railway Labor Act, but Usery said, "The government ,f e e 1s- an emergency board is not the answer to good, hard collective bargaining." In the two previous nationwide rail strike threats, Nixon named emergency boards in both cases. Congress ,finally imposed a wage settlement for shop men in one dispute and negotiations are still continuing in the other dispute over elimination of firemen's jobs. I The last time Virgil Tibbs had aday like this was f °"In The Heat Of The Night" O THE MIKE S o Vx;awb St. "-,sad'. 11-6 J I II _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ____.. __ _ -----___ _.__. a About 340 white pupils and 1,238 b Fewer than 100 whites of the7 High School, formgerly all-black, s .enrollment. The school has aboutO 800 black pupils. Reporters counted between 250 and 300 parents and pupils in the Vigor High School auditorium, where nonconformers were sent when they attempted to register their children despite assignment elsewhere. Although no official figures were available, widespread absen- teeism was reported. However, many parents normal-, ly do not register their children on the first d a y, preferring to bring them in after the opening- day jam. The school situation here was further complicated last weekend when the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) endorsed a de- segregation plan that would cre- ate two separate school districts, one black and one white, and that would, in - effect, resegregate the school system. CORE plans to offer its plan to the U.S. Supreme Court when it hears a final appeal of the Mo- bile case next month, along with five other significant desegrega- tion appeals. KFT/NA 4 " AD Poiee, Indians clash over fishing dispute AUDITION NQW! TACOMA, Wash. 'OP)-Gunshot' fire b r o k e out yesterday as a group of Tacoma policemen and other law enforcement personnel closed in on Indians along the Puyallup River h e r e in. an at- tempt to clear it of fishing nets - the legality of which is in dispute. Police said 60 persons, five of them juveniles, were arrested. About 15 policemen on foot. moved toward the Indian group- which an Indian spokesman ear- lier said totaled about 100 per- sons - after using a bullhorn to tell the Indians to lay down their arms. blacks were assigned there. 725 assigned to Washington Junior howed up during the first hour of vote lw* WASHINGTON (A') - Seven states yesterday.told the Supreme Court that Congress acted ,uncon- stitutionally in deciding that 18- year-olds may vote. The states argued, through In- diana' Atty. Gen. Theodore Sen- dak, that their power to set the minimum voting age at 21 can be overridden only by an amendment to the Constitution. Thus, th e states - Indiana, Idaho, Louisiana, Ohio, Utah, West Virginia, and Wyoming - joined a suit brought in the high court by Oregon and Texas, to ov- erturn the 18-year-old provision of the 1970 Federal Voting R ights law. The court is scheduled to hear arguments on the suit Oct. 19. A separate suit brought by a group of New Yorkers attacking the law will be argued today in U.S. Dis- trict Court here. Sendak's brief' f o r the seven states contended that three pro- visions of the Constitution give the states the authority to set vot- ing qualifications. The Indiana of- ficial quoted James Madison's Federalist Papers tQ support his yersion of the framers' intention. Backers of the 1970 law base Congress' authority primarily on Section 5 of the 14th Amendment. Sendal4 argued they are wrong. The amendment, ratified in 1868, was designed to protect the rights of former slaves against violations by 1 the states. Section 5 gives Congress power to enact "appropriate legislation." Sendak contended that' states do not violate anyone's rights by establishing a minimum voting age. Consequently, lhe said, Sec- tion 5 does not giye Congress the power to set the voting age at 18. Forty-six of the 50 states re- quire voters to be at least 21 years old. The exceptions are Hawaii, which gives the vote tp 20-year- olds; Alaska and Kentucky, with a 19-year minimum; and Georgia which set 18 as the-minimum. Sendak said the 46 states hav- ing a 21-year old minimum are not acting unreasopably. The general common law rule, is that an in- dividual does not have mature judgment until that age. who gathered some distance from 'the railway bridge. The fisheries personnel were in- volved in an "enforcement ac- tion," Assistant -Fisheries Director J. E. Lasater s a i d in Olympia. They were to seize any unlawful fish nets or gear at the river and to arrest anyone fishing. The dispute, a long-ranging controversy, centers on Indian claims that they are entitled to commercial fishing rights on the- Puyallup. Yesterday's i n c i d e n t stemmed from the, Indians insist- ing they still were due 32 hours of fishing under a special permit is- sued ,by the fisheries department. The department said the permit expired Tuesday evening. HE MIRISCH PROOUCTION COMPANY presents SIDNEY POITIER MARTIN LANDAU) A WALTER MIRISCH PRODUCTION "THEY CLLME MISTER TIDES! U Ste BARBARA McNAIRe .atee'ANTHONY ZERBE Screenplayby ALAN R.TRUSTMANand JAMES R. WEBB Stmt' by ALAN R.TRUSTMAN /asedm the characreatedbyJOHN BALL Music-QUINCY JONES EecutxePrducerWALTER MIRISCH PreducedbyHERBERT HIRSCHMAN Directed byGORDON DOUGLAS COLORbyDetue ' GP NIC1NAL MOON ICTSCOerOUINo WES AAMLUDONnl ns UITEDOCMS ruAts V of MH ARTS CHORALE Tues. and Thurs.-3:00-4:30 P.M. Angell Hall-Auditorium C MAYNARD KLEI N-Director I FRIDAY at the MICHIGAN S _ ;!III a _, ',I. j Observers said four shots ap- parently came from the area oc- Earlier yesterday, cupied by the Indians, a Burling- Bridges, speaking for ton Northern Railroad bridge be- group, said: "We are tween Interstate 5 and old U.S. are armed and prepg 99. Indians had armed guards at fend our rights witho each end of their encampment be- As a fisheries b tween that bridge and another on across the river tos U.S. 99. Police responded with tear with which Indians w gas. Indians on the bridg A police-, spokesnan said h iss p men were brought in to provide shots, police said, and protection for Washington De- men released tear gas partment of Fisheries personnel for the Indians. Maiselle the Indian fishing. We ared to de- our lives." oat moved seize a net were fishing, e fired four the police- and headed r- NEW STORE HOURS: Thursday Mon., Tues., and Friday 9 Wed., Sat. 9:30-5:30 :30-9:00 "FELLINI'S MAGICAL MYSTERY TOUR! I I Like a travelogue through an unknown galaxy. Transfigures everything in what once was called the Know World." N.Y. TIMES SUBSCRIBE NOW! DISCOUNTS! 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