Wednesday and Thursday, October 21st and 22nd 'Department of Speech Student Laboratory Theatre PRESENTS LA MUSICA by Marguerite Duras page (tre ir4c Si4titan Batty NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Tuesday, October 20, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michgan Page Three neWS briefs By The Associated Press . r IL II 0 C:) OPER _EoTo _ NEW YORK MAYOR John V. Lindsay, a member of the Re- publican party, endorsed Democrat Arthur J. Goldberg for gov- ernor of New York yesterday, breaking with GOP Gov. Nelson - A. Rockefeller. Lindsay, however, announced that he did not intend to join the Democratic party. He also endorsed Goldberg's running mate for lieutenant gover- nor, Basil Paterson, who represents Harlem in the State Senate. AN EXPLOSION destroyed a greenhouse for research on plant viruses at the Stanford Research Institute branch near the University of California campus at Irvine. Stanford University severed its affiliation with Stanford Re- search Institute last January after the Institute became a target of violent student protests against war-related research projects. The Orange County sheriff's department said the explosion appeared to have been caused "by the setting of some kind of device." ** * PRESIDENT ANWAR SADAT of Egypt has chosen Dr. Ma- hmoud Fawzi, a veteran diplomat and personal foreign affairs adviser to the late President Gamal Abdel Nasser, as prime min- ister, sources reported yesterday. Fawzi, 70, was the only member of the old government of King Farouk to serve under Nasser. He was foreign minister in 1952 and later became foreign affairs adviser. A GROUP of militant Young Lords occupied an East Har- lem church for a second day yesterday, keeping vigil over the body of a 34-year-old member they said was murdered in' a city jail. About 200 youthful Puerto Ricans guarded doorways to the First Methodist Church where the body of Julio Roldan rests, as sup- porters and ewsmen milled outside. Police said Roldan was found hanged in his cell in Manhattan's "Tombs" lrison Friday. The death was ruled suicide. *3 PRESIDENT NICOLAE CEAUSESCU of Romania advocatedI yesterday at the United Nations the emergence of a new Europe based on peace and cooperation with no country interfering in the internal affairs of another. Ceausescu, the only head of state from a Communist country present at the UN's silver anniversary session, drew considerable attention. He asked for the elimination of all military blocs and the dis- mantling of military bases of one state on the territory of another. * * * PRESS CENSORSHIP in Uruguay was extended yesterday to all financial information. The move was viewed as a sign that the government might be planning severe economic measures. Partial censorship was ordered last year by President Jorge Cacheco Areco's government as part of the special security measures aimed at halting a wave of terrorism and social unrest. On Thursday, the government suspended all bank and foreign exchange operations. The financial crisis arose after the Parliament overrode a series of presidential vetoes aimed at lowering the Ur- uguayan budget deficit to $16.5 million.i Students, Nixon talk at OSU COLUMBUS, Ohio {A - President Nixon paid an un- announced visit yesterday to the sometime-troubled cam- pus of Ohio State University and wound up in a face-to- face debate with students about the Vietnam- War. The so-called Oval in the center of campus was dotted with loung- ing students when Nixon stepped from his limousine, walked across the lawn and began shaking hands. Within five minutes, at least 1,000 young men and women had gathered, completelynencircling the chief executive and mingling cheers and laughter with shouted obscenities and antiwar chants. One young man in a white T- shirt approached Nixon and said, "You can take my draft card." The youth said he did not want to die in Vietnam. "I'm winding down the war, boy," Nixon replied. After reciting his record on troop withdrawals, he added, "You watch us, boy." Another young man stepped up and said, "Will you shake the hand of a hippie?" The chief executive apparently did not hear the remark and the youth continued, "We don't care about Ohio State football - just stop the war."- Ohio Stafe football coach Woody Hayes had appeared earlier on the speakers platform with Nixon and local Republicancandidates when Nixon spoke to a generally friend- ly crowd of over 40,000 in down- town Columbus. Some 500 persons marched from Ohio State University the three miles to the site of the rally to protest Nixon's policies. Pat Nixon was in Detroit yes- terday campaigning for Lenore Romney, Republican candidate for theSenate in Michigan. Rom- ney is fighting an uphill battle against two-term Sen. Philip Hart. A Southfield, Mich. high school, where the President's wife was due to make an appearance, was evacuated some 15 minutes before her scheduled arrival time after receipt of a telephone bomb threat. She entered the school about a half hour after the 2500 pupils were permitted to file back Inside. -Associated Press PRESIDENT NIXON mingles with students yesterday during a surprise visit to the Ohio State University campus. While some students flashed the peace sign, others heckled the President about the Vietnam situation. ATTACKS ADMINISTRATION: NAACP sues HEWon misuse of federal education funds T CKETS STILL AVAILABLE FOR Thurs., Oct. 22, 831 Steve Miller Band and Bread [i st Floor Mihgan Union Sat., Oct. 24, 0:30 Ten 'Wheel Drive and Sha-Na-Na Ho lg HomeComing '10 WASHINGTON ()-The NAACP' Legal Defense Fund filed suit against the Nixon administration yesterday, charging widespread and willful failure to enforce fed- eral laws requiring nondiscrimina- tion in the use of federal educa- tion funds. The action, although purported- ly coincidental in timing, repre- sents the first legal followup to last week's scathing report by the U.S. Civil Rights Commission. The commission said it found gov- ernmentwide failure to enforce federal nondiscriminatory pledges.1 The defense fund's suit, filed in the U.S. District Court here, is in behalf of 25 public, elementary, secondary and college students in Mississippi, Louisiana, Tennessee, I ann arbor film cooperative presents lee mnarvin and jane fonda in cat ball1ou "the best gunslinger since elfego baco"-M.K. tonight!u tuesday oct. 20th ACCEPTS FLAG ABUSE CASE, High Court to hear gun law case Virginia and Arkansas. Defend-I ants are Elliot L. Richardson, biecretary of Health, Education and Welfare, and his cvil rights chief, J. Stanley Pottinger. HEW was charged with "general calculated default" to enforce prohibitions against federal aid to schools that discriminate since 1964, when the law was enacted. Richardson commented in a statement that "HEW is committ- ed faithfully to carrying out both the letter and the spirit of the 1964 Civil Rights Act." Specifically, the defense fund accused HEW of: -Complete inaction against ra- cial discrimination in Southern colleges and universities; -Abrogation of its enforcement responsibilities it 2districts under court order to desegregate; -A hands-off attitude toward state departments of education that approve federal outlays for discriminatory purposes. It cited the purchase of portable class- rooms to create an allegedly segre- gated educational park in Hum- phreys County, Mississippi; -Failure to terminate aid to most of the 99 Southern districts that have been accused at one time or another of failing to carry out HEW-approved desegregation plans; -Allowing aid to flow to non- complying districts for as long as two years after administrative en- forcement proceedings were be- gun; and -Ignoring accelerated time- tables for, stiffened desegregation requirements decreed by the Su- preme Court. Joseph L. Rauh, a prominent liberal Democrat representing the defense fund, denied any political motivation in filing the suit less than one month before the na- tional election. "The Johnson administration made an inadequate enforcement effort but it was still an effort," said Rauh. "I don't believe the Nixon administration is making any effort." The suit contrasts HEW's record of cutting off funds to only four Southern districts in the past year with 46 terminations during the 1968-69 school year. It disputes the administration's contention that funds cannot be terminated to districts under, court-ordered desegregation plans. The suit demands that HEW act against any of the 426.court- ordered districts "demoting black principals, segregating classrooms and refusing to hire black teach- ers onthe grounds of race." Canterbury House to end weekend music programs WASHINGTON "')-The Su- preme Court agreed yesterday to rule on the 1968 gun control law and on state laws that make it a crime to cast contempt upon the American flag. The 1968 law requires manu- facturers and transferers of cer- tain kinds of firearms to register with the federal government. The court will hear- an appeal by the Justice Department from the decision by U.S. District Judge Warren G. Ferguson of Los Angeles that key sections are invalid. At the same time, the court granted a hearing to a New York art dealer who was con- victed in 1961 of violating that state's law against flag dese- cration. The dealer contends the law conflicts with the First Amendmen's free speech guar- antees. While granting hearings in these and other cases and re- jecting scores of appeals the court also heard arguments on the 1970 federal law that gives the vote to 18-year-olds. The states of Oregon and Tex- as said Congress exceeded its constitutional powers in passing the law. U.S. Solicitor General Erwin N. Griswold defended tle statute, though he noted Presi- dent Nixon, ,in signing the law last June, said he thought the 18-year-olds provision unconsti- tutional. The gun control law amended provisions of an earlier fire- arms registration act found by the court in 1968 to be uncon- stitutional. It was tested when the government indicted Donald - - -- - Freed of Los Angeles and Shirley Jean Sutherland of Beverly Hills, Calif., on charges of con- spiring to possess unregistered hand grenades. Dismissing the indictment last March, Judge Ferguson said registration would have required them to furnish information to the federal government that would have been incriminating under California laws. In the flag case, the owner of a Madison Avenue art gallery was prosecuted for exhibiting seven constructions by Marc Morrel, an artist and protester of the Vietnam war who used the flag in his sculpture. The one found most objectionable by New York state courts dis- played the flag as a male sex organ. I By KRISTIN RINGSTROM The folk and blues music pro- grams that have provided week- end night entertainment at Canterbury House for five years are being discontinued. "It had become just too much of a drain of energy and mon- ey," says Rev. Daniel Burke, di- rector of t h e Episcopalian church-run organization. "This drain overshadowed ev- en the nice parts to such an ex- tent that when the question - 'Is anybody having any fun any more?' - was asked, there was silence," Burke says. "So we decided that the best thing to do was to suspend the 'Canterbury House presents' weekend coffeehouse for the time being," he adds. Burke also says running the coffeehouse would require the auditorium a. angell hail 75c 7 and 9:30 kind of time and attention that would necessitate a full-t i m e managerial position, held by a person who knew both the mu- sic and the audience. Canterbury is not currently in a position to afford such a man- ager, he explains. Even when Canterbury House featured big-name performers, it grossed only enough to cover expenses. Lesser known artists always brought financial losses, Burke says. Regular CAnterbury H o u s e functions such as the Radical Film Series, Sunday morning services and Thursday night en- tertainment will continue, Burke says. Canterbury House will still be open as a place for people to drop in during the week and bands will occasionally play. CAUTION, HEAVY TRAFFIC COMING State & Liberty Sts. I-' i N - Valuable )IZ 4 TS @upoiisii 7 0 75c OFF ON A SPORTSMAN OR PARTYTIME PIZZA PIE EXPIRES OCT. 23rd at little Cae 4 I' - ia 1751 PLYMOUTH-665-8626 SAVE MORE! r 71 First American Jour of Australia's Eminent Orchestra The Melbourne Symphony Orchestra Willem van Otterloo Conductor SATURDAY, OCT. 24 at 8:30 IN HILL AUDITORIUM United Nations 25th Anniversary Commemorative Program: Sun Music I I I .............. Peter Sculthorpe Four Psyche Fragments ...............Franck Hymn to the Nations .................. Verdi oo l 1751 Plymouth Rd. at North Campus _ _ _ _..... 50c OFF - ON A MEDIUM OR LARGE P177A PIF i 11 it . U I II 1i u -