4k- ------- COMPLETE STOCK OF CLASSICAL MUSIC MI-NUS ONE 365 Classics to choose from S We supply everything but the butterflies music SHOPI 417 EAST LIBERTY (Opposite Thompson' NO 2-0675 Corner State & Liberty Sts. DIAL 662-6264 ~TTE OPEN 12:45 P.M. Shows at 1-3-5-7-9 PM. ENDS WEDNESDAY Come see how thevampires doit. MetroGoldwyM ayer presns ADan Curtis Production GP Metrocolor MGMQ DOUBLE FEATURE-STARTS TOMORROW page three /rrgt ouIai i NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 7684-0554 Tuesday, September 15, 1970 Ann-Arbor, Michigan Page Three I ew brief DWS GS, ByTheAssociated Press NIXON ADMINISTRATION housing officials ale making attempts to assure minority groups a fair share of housing built with federal funds or guarantees. The proposal the officials are considering would impose quota- like compliance standards on developers and would bring strong pres- sures for integration on much of the nation's private housing market, now divided along racial lines. In effect, developers woulld be prohibited from using federal funds to build either all-white or all-black projects. The standards woulld be applied through the entire range of programs operated by the Department of Housing and Urban Devel- opment (HUD). VICE PRESIDENT Spiro Agnew said 'yesterday that the current drug culture "threatens to sap our national strength unless we move hard and fast to bring it under control." Speaking at a Republican fund raising dinner, the vice president accused some songwriters and motion picture makers of brainwash- ing young Americans with lyrics and films.. Agnew said he wasn't suggesting that a conspiracy exists among them but that "the cumula- tive impact of some of their work advances the wrong cause." * * * AUTHORITIES closed all schools in Bogalusa,- Louisiana yes- terday after fighting broke out between white and black pupils at one of the high schools. The city schools' superintendent said the schools would be "closed until further notice." Police and sheriff's deputies used tear gas to break up the fights at scattered spots on the large high school campus, where 1,109 stu- dents are enrolled. * * s* IN CAMBODIA, yesterday,"government forces suffered one of the worst setbacks in the , six month old Cambodian war when communists hurled back the advance troops of the army's firstt major offensive about 55 miles north of Phnom Penh. In South Vietnam, communist, forces continued to shell Firet Base O'Reilly, a forward artillery base in the northern end of Vietnam.c The U.S. military command announced yesterday that Amer- ican forces in South Vietnam had dropped by 3,200 men last week1 and announced an expected cut of 1,315 men for the near future. iE 'Guerrillas hold Americans as' Israeli citizens ' Palestinian guerrillas in Jordan put American hostages in the same category as Israelis yesterday and said all would be held until Israel agrees to a prisoner exchange. In Washington, White House press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said "we deplore and denounce the holding of hostages by any nation." But he limited this to the detention of about 55 persons, including Americans, by the guerrillas and specifically ex- empted from the denunciation the holding of 375 Arabs by the Israeli government. Asked whether it is an American objective to obtain the release of any of the 375 Arabs held in custody by the Isra6lis, Ziegler said that the government has no indication any of them are being held hostages. The Popular Front for the Lib- elation of Palestine said the host-U TInli ages remaining from last week's air hijackings had been divided into grouts of three and seattered -Associated Press Ronald Reagan - New California bill bans, forced busing, "One of the year's 10 best pictures !" -Roger Greenspun, N. Y. Times - - .. "A brilliant transfer to filmfor Camus's country of the mind.' --LIFE MAGAZII SACRAMENTO, Calif. ( ) - Gov. Ronald Reagan signed into law yesterday a bill to prohibit the busing of school children without parental consent, a prac- tice he said, "can only promise to jeopardize educational quality by diverting public funds . .." The Republican governor read a prepared statement in which he criticized "those who charge that opposing compulsory busing is somehow equivalent to encour- aging discrimination." "Those who make this charge lack understanding of the real needs of our children, whatever their race or ethnic background," he said. With, the bill's author, Repub- lican Assemblyman Floyd Wake- field of South Gate, standing by his side, Reagan said that "forc- ing children to be herded onto buses and carted across town each day - away from their familiar home environments - represents a vast and dehumanizing manipu- lation of school populations." The bill, which originally would have prohibited busing for t h e I I ROBERT REDFORD KATHARINE ROSS ROBERT BLAKE SUSAN CLARK "TELL THEM WILLIE BOY IS HERE" lon ., A UNIVERSAL PICTURE I1 TV RENTALS $10.50 per month NO DEPOSIT FREE DELIVERY AND SERVICE CALL: NEJAC TV RENTALS 662-5671 NEW IN AKIN ARBOR "JUMBO" STEAK HOAGIE 1139 Broadway, 769-.524 Leading-Dlemocrats face primary battles ILf- vvin gl44if 1 aten aovu1 cnabrcu in several Jordanian hideouts. "No one is going to see the host- ages," a spokesman said in Am- man.* "They are dispersed, 'three in each place. Any attack on any of these places will endanger their lives."~ A hostage recently released said yesterday that the other hostages were anxious to be released, but were all "in very good heath and spirits." The guerrillas "assured us time and again that no mat-, ter what happened no harm would come to us," he said. Ziegler said 37 of the remaining hostages were believed to be Americans or Israelis or both and some had dual citizenship. Egypt's foreign minister accused the United States yesterday of blocking the Middle EastI peace talks, while Cairo Radio said Pal- estinian guerrilla air hijackings coulld upset the talks and give Israel the opportunity to seek more arms. Speaking at a dinner last night, Secretary-General U Thant pro- posed that hijackers of civilian airlines be brought to trial before an international tribunal. "This crime must be brought be- fore an international tribunal de- fending the interests of all peo- ple* and nations and not of any particular people or nation," j he said. In northern Jordan yesterday, fighting broke out for the second straight day between guerrillas and the Jordanian army. A state- ment by the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine said one of the clashes lasted several hours and at least two guerrillas were killed. The current "political standstill" in the Middle East is the result of America's "support of Israeli ac- cusations that Egypt had violated the cease-fire agreement," Egyp- tian Foreign Minister Mahmoud Riad said in a statement distribut- ed in Cairo by the official Middle East news agency. F amended into this final form: 11 * 'RMWUFIIIUwIUOWm s rdl uam..0.. -Tie asks effort onMideast UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (P) - Secretary-General U Thant chal- lenged the United States and the Soviet Union yesterday to take joint positive action in' what he said could be a last chance in heading off a new Middle E a s t. war. T h a n t said it was of decisive importance that the. two super- powers, supported by Britain and France, prevent failure of t h e Israeli-Arab peace tall,s under U.N. special envoy Gunnar V. Jar- ring. In an assessment of the big power role in the United Nations, Thant declared: "This is, I firmly believe, t h e way the United Nations was and is intended to work on difficult and dangerous problems, and it will be a happy augury for the future if, in its 26th anniversary year, an impressive demonst'ration of this process could be given to the world." Thant voiced his convictions in, the introduction to his a n n u a 1 report on the work of the United Nations. given on the eve of the opening today of the 25th anni- versary session of the 126-nation General Assembly. He made clear that he believed the one hope for Middle East peace rested in resumption of the suspended Arab-Israeli peace talks. He said the current peace move demonstrated that the United States, the Soviet Union, Britain and France, working from with- in and outside the United Na- tions, could provide a firm base upon which U.N. nmachinery can be effective. I By The Associated Press Two of the nation's top Demo- crats, Hubert H. Humphrey (D- Minn.) and Sen. Edward M. Ken- nedy (D-Mass), take the first steps toward new Senate terms as six states hold primaries today to select nominees for Novem- ber's mid-term elections.. Kennedy is unopposed for re- nomination in Massachusetts while in Minnesota, Humphrey is expected to win over his op- ponent, Earl D. Craig Jr., 31, a black studies instructor. The3 former vice president's 1i k e l y November opponent is Rep. Clark MacGregor, 48, Five Senate seats are at stake, all held now by Democrats. Be- sides Kennedy and Humphrey, who seeks to succeed retiring Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy (D-Minn), three other Democratic incumb- ents are favored to win today - Sens. Henry M. Jackson (D-. "No governing board of a school Wash), John 0. Pastore (D-R.I.) district sull require any student and Joseph D. Tydings (D-Md). or pupil to be transported for any r,._ -A COLOR." A PARAMOUNT PICTURE S.MAA P;PTH~FJorM FITH4 AVENUE AT I eRpTY DOWNTOWN ANN ARBOR FORMATION 761-970 ;.t u~z But Tydings, accused in a re- cent Iife magazine article of mis- using his influence in an overseas loan transaction, may get a close run from perennial candidate George P. Mahoney, making his ninth bid for statewide office in Maryland. In an important congressionalj contest, Rep. Donald Fraser, aj leader of House Democratic liber- als, is being challenged in, h i s Minneapolis district by conserv- tive city alderman Joe Greenstein. Mrs. Louis Day Hicks, c o n - troversial Boston City Council member, heads four Democratic contenders for the seat of retiring House Speaker John W. M c - Cormack, and Republican Rep. Hastings Keith is being challeng- ed on Cape Cod by state Sen. William D. Weeks. I I National General Theatres FOR VILLa6E 375 No. MAPLE RD. -7694300 Mon.-Fri. 7:25-9:45 Sat. 5:10-7:25-9:45 Sun. 1:00-3:00 5:10-7:25-9:45 COLUMBIA PICTURES p....n ELLIOTT CANDICE GOULD - BERGEN GETTiG purpose or for any reason with- out the written permission of the parent or guardiai." The law goes into effect Nov. 21, and opponents say they will im- mediately file a Superior Court suit challenging its constitution- ality. In his statement,,Reagan said: "Besides hampering the qual- ity of education our children need and deserve - by siphoning off millions of dollars in school funds which could otherwise be used for books, new classrooms, teachers and maintenance - forc- ed busing would also deprive them of the natural environment of the neighborhood school. "Indeed, compulsory busing shatters the very concept of the neighborhood school as the corn- erstone of our educational sys- tem." Hairstyling To Please NOW 4 SHOPS " ARBORLAND f MAPLE VILLAGEI * LIBERTY OFF STATE . EAST UNIV. 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