1 page three 94P Mfrt~ig;an 41, flatfu NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 lg MUSKET MY FAIR LADY AUDITIONS ARE STILL OPEN B.Y.O. sheet music to the Union Hobby Shop TONIGHT 8:30 P.M. Friday, October 23, 1970 Arn Arbor, Michgan Page Three I 11 i yyiii Committee sign-up MUSKET office 2nd floor Mich. Union Any Weekday Afternoon y briefs n e www s,,,.By The Assciated Press I MICHIGAN'S CIVIL RIGHTS COMMISSION issued charges Wednesday against the Grand Rapids police department for "abusing" three black Grand Rapids residents. The charges came after the Commission investigated two sep- arate complaints of verbal and physical abuse of one woman and two young boys by police officers. The Commission charges state that the police officers' conduct was prompted by unlawful racial discrimination and cite the Grand Rapids police chief with failure to discipline the officers involved in the incidents. The charges ask for an order directing the police department to take disciplinary action against the officers and to assist the com- plainants in petitioning the City of Grand Rapids for payment of damages. VIETNAMESE COMMUNISTS yesterday indicated their position would be damaged if they accepted President Richard Nixon's peace plan. North Vietnam and the Viet Cong both re-emphasized their re- jection of the plan at the Paris peace talks. Communist representatives stated that Nixon's offer of an all- Indochina cease-fire would weaken them militarily. North Vietnamese spokesman Nguyen Thanh Le said his dele- gation'srejection of the five point proposal was "total, all-inclusive, categorical and definitive." x Chile's govt. declaresStae of emergency SANTIAGO, CHILE (-) -- The government declared a state of emergency yesterday as 10,000 soldiers and' police searched Santiago for the terrorists who shot and seriously wounded Maj. Gen. Rene Schneider, chairman of Chile's joint chiefs of staff. The state of emergency allows police to search and arrest without warning. Schneider, 57, was reported in critical condition last night after emergency surgery. Political organizations backing Marxist Salvador Allende for president blamed the as-_~ -Associated Pres Maj. Gen. Rene Schneider "FRIENDLY ATMOSPHERE': GEORGIA'S GOVERNOR LESTER MADDOX has declared Monday. the day of the Muhammad Ali - Jerry Quarry heavy- weight fight, an official Day of Mourning. At a press conference yesterday, Maddox denounced Ali as a draft dodger and added the hope that Ali would lose the fight. "To glorify an individual who has so callously forsaken his duty to his country represents an affront to every American who has answered the call and sacrificed to protect out great republic," Maddox added. Maddox had previously failed to get an injunction against the fight. * * * JOHN T. SCOPES, the Tennessee high school teacher whose belief in evolution led to the famous "monkey trial" of 1925, died of cancer Wednesday. The celebrated trial pitted the Bible against Darwin's theory of evolution, and led Scopes to abandon his teaching career. Scopes outlived all other participants in the carnival-like trial. STUDENTS DEBATE RE Arizona impose s can de Fo my sicl ed for th Un Nixon, Gromyko confer over issues WASHINGTON (P) -- Presi- Ziegler said, following the two a nt Richard Nixon and Russian a half hour discussion of ma reign Minister Andrei A. Gro- East-West issues. rko met yesterday in a discus- Gromyko added that he ho] n which the White House term- the talk "will be of positive sign "helpful for laying the basis icance for the development a improved relations between improvement of Soviet-Ameri e United States and the Soviet relations." V n r Y] o] l ij Ee nin"I Students will face regents today- in Tempe, Ariz. at an open hearing to debate a harsh new statewide conduct code drawn up by the Arizona regents. The code is set to go into effect Monday. It is set forth in a 58-page document that one student described as "lawyer's language." Students have challenged that some of the re- strictions "border on the unconstitutional" and have condemned the code as a model of campus repression. Among provisions of the code are: - A ban on the distribution or wearing of arm bands, buttons or signs, banners or posters which h a v e controversial significance in "a manner which distracts and substantially interferes with the normal activities or appropriate discipline of the university." - A prohibition against participation in any crowd, assembly, parade, demonstration, sit-in or similar event which substantially interferes with or disrupts the normal activities of the university or any university sponsored or supervised func- tion. - A ban oni lish "any malic ing, printing or the honesty, in ber of the Univ to bring such p ridicule." According to the student ne' sity in Tempe,t gents over thec state's universit "The preside off passing thec a chance to say yesterday. "The regent way, and it wi something happ Jensen said t State to the neu said no actiont tomorrow. union. Nixon's first business meet "The meeting was conducted in as President with the Soviet a friendly atmosphere through- ficial contrasted in outward t out," Press Secretary Ronald L, with some recent administrat criticisms of the Kremlin line GEVTS After U.S. intelligence spot G evidence of Soviet-Egyptian M east truce violations and poss missile sub base-building in Cu Li Coue White House officials last mo xdwere apprehensive that the Kre lin is shifting back to a coldV publishing or threatening to pub- stance. ious falsehood, expressed by writ- Ziegler declined to answer picture, which tends to impeach rectly whether U.S. doubts ab tegrity or reputation of any mem- Kremlin interest in Nixon's" versity community or which tends of negotiations" policy have e ed. erson into disrepute, contempt or B hd.s But he accented the positiv his brief report on t h e Nixc o Dave Jensen, editor-in-chief of Gromyko talks ranging across1 wspaper at Arizona State Univer- Mideast, Vietnam, European the code was drawn up by the re- curity and Berlin a n d the U objections of the presidents of the Soviet strategic arms curb ne ies. tiations. ents asked that the Regents hold "We believe that the meet code until students saw it, and got was useful in that it allowed1 y something about it," Jensen said President to give the Soviet eign minister his personala s went ahead and passed it any- direct expressions on the subje Ii go' i n t o effect Monday unless ussed, ens at the hearing tomorrow." Ziegler added that a major p he reaction of students at Arizona of the President's foreign po w code has been "unfavorable." He eral Assembly in New Yik Fri sassination attempt on "ul- traright-wing groups . . .lin league with foreign elements S who see their interests affect- ed" by Allende's victory. Allende won a plurality rather than an outright majority in last months election, making it /ne- t cessary for Congress to affirm the choice. Congress is scheduled to do so tomorrow. But Allende's victory as Latin America's first democratically elected Marxist president was virtually assured last night when the Senate approved a constitu- tional provision containing "ef- i fective democratic guarantees" und which Allende had to promise to jor observe in return for Christian Democratic support. ped Allende called at the hospital to an- see Schneider, who doctors s a i d can faced further surgery today. Then Allende met with Chilean Pres- ident Eduardo Frei at Government ing House. He told the outgoing pres- of- ident, "this is part of a seditious one plan that can lead to very painful ion consequences." e.d ted e- , ba, nth m force school war di- integration out era as- WASHINGTON VIP) - A top of- ficial in the Nixon administration in yesterday raised doubts about the n- possibility of government prosecu- the tion of Southern schools that have se- failed to desegregate. .S.- Elliot Richardson, Secretary of go- Health, Education and Welfare, also announced in a press confer- ing ence that the administration would spend the full $4.4 billion thef voted by Congress on aid to ed- [or- ucation. and The $4.4 billion figure was voted ects by Congress over President Rich- ard Nixon's veto. Nixon had re- )art quested only $4 billion for educa- licy tion. den- Richardson also indicated that iday there a re no plans to withhold ela- federal aid from state college and university systems in the South. Russia holds U.S. generals Mosco (R) - Two U.S. Army generals, seized by the Russians after their plane strayed across the Soviet-Turkish border, were being held incommunicado yester- day as the Soviet Union launched an investigation into the incident. A U.S. Embassy official said it is "quite unlikely" that the gen- erals will be released soon. With them in the six-seat utility plane were a Turkish escort of- ficer and the American pilot. The plane apparently wandered off course Wednesday during bad weather and crossed the heavily fortified border. Details on how it was intercepted were not im- mediately made public. U.S. officials in Turkey said the generals were making an Inspec- tion flight from Erzurum to Kars. The Soviet Foreign Ministry said yesterday that the case is be- ing handled as a penetration into Soviet territory by a U.S. military plane, and that the craft h a d "violated Soviet air space." It was not clear whether the So- viets considered the men to be under arrest or merely in custody pending completion of the inves- tigation. The U.S. Embassy has requested permission to see the men, under the terms of the U.S.-Soviet con- sular agreement, which provides for access to U.S. citizens being held here within three d a y a of their detention. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- agecd by students at thie Universit o 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 ma, Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5. by carrier. $5 by mail. HEAVY TRAFFIC COMIG 'Ij a was planned pending the meeting will deal with tions. U.S.-Soviet re L I IS THE MOST MOVING, MOST INTELLIGENT, THE MOST HU- ft MANE-OH, TO HELL WITH IT! -IT'S THE BESTAMERICAN FILM I'VE SEEN THIS YEAR! It comes as close to being an epic human comedy as Holly- wood has ever made! Alan Arkin as Yossarian provides the film with its continuity and dominant style. Arkin is a deadly serious actor, he projects intelligence with such mono-maniacal intensity, he is both funny and heroic at the same time. The film is Nichols' third ('Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?', 'The Graduate') so it may be safe to say now that he's something more than lucky. He remains, as he was before, one of our finest directors. 'CATCH-22' is so good that I hope it won't be confused with what is all too loosely referred to as black comedy. 'CATCH-22', like Yossarian, is almost beside itself with panic because it grieves for the human condition."-Vincent Canby,N.Y. Times "IT'S ONE HELL OF A FILM! A COLD SAVAGE AND CHILLING COMEDY!" -Bruce Williamson, PLAYBOY "'CATCH-22' is, hard as a diamond, cold to the touch and brilliant to the eye!" -TIME MAGAZINE f; + 'i.:tr. ,y. .! "i .t M . 12 1" . jtjtef .t+hW' A VERY SPECIAL PREVIEW SPECIAL FEATURE IN COLOR PLUS OUR REGULAR FEATURE LATEI I T 0 N 1 G T Come as AT THE PREVIEW Late as STATEAT 9 :05 )U I~9:05 & See Both - "Soldier Preview THEATRE Blue" & Regular Shown again Feature DON'T MISS IT ! ofof t 10:45 - CiliABUILD Thurs.-Fri., Oct. 22-23 LOWER DEPTHS dir. AKIRA KUROSAWA (1952) Kurosawa's masterful treatment of Gorki's 1.50 AL)' RAIN and MIKE WHELLANS I British Isles traditional & modern virtuoso fid-I HIP, ,zitr fr mnijt FARAMIIPCTURESCORPORIAIoNIN ASSoMION TN fILMM S, INC. PRESENTS STARTING TODAY AT !!I I amUr antnm aia aanAnnon