71 Wednesday & Thursday November 11th & 12th page three 1 Cl4P Sfrtitn Ar NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Department of Speech Student Laboratory Theatre presents DYLAN by Sydney Michaels AND CHARLIE by Slawomir Mrozek ARENA THEATRE, Frieze Building Promptly at 4.:10 p.m. or earlier if theatre is filled! ADMISSION FREE Tuesday, November 10, 1970 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN Page Three y briefs n e - W-S-By The Associated Press Supreme Court denies hearing pow "amomed I Jewish Brothers and Sisters! WHAT WAS LIKE? WHAT AUSCHWITZ REALLY DOES IT MEAN TO US? "NIGHT AND FOG" A MOVIE AND DISCUSSION' THURS., NOV. 12-8 P.M. SHALOM HOUSE-1429 Hill St. THE PROJECT COMMUNITY PRESENTS A Children's Film Festival EVERY SATURDAY Starting November 7th through December 19th at CANTERBURY HOUSE-330 Maynard St. From 10 A.M. to 12 Noon FREE REFRESHMENTS AT INTERMISSION Admission at the Door: 50c Little People, $1 Big People Series Tickets (7 weeks): $3.00 Little People, $6.00 Big People Tickets on Sale at The Project Community Office 2547 Student Activities Bldg. or call 763-3548 for further information FILM SCHEDULE NOV. 7 (FROM FANTASIA) A WORLD IS BORN GULLIVER'S TRAVELS MOONBIRD FROGS IN MALAYSIA of four different varieties and num- bering over 3,000 fought a furious battle lasting more than six hours, local newsmen reported Sunday. The frog war took place in a swamp valley beside a Hindu temple at a rubber estate near Sungai Siput, 100 miles north of Kuala Lumpur, newsmen continued. At first, only about 50 frogs were involved. But soon the num- bers swelled, newsmen reported, and about 1,000 people assembled to watch the frogs bite and tear at each other. Many were dead at the end of the battle. Maria Soosay, 30, who has lived for years near the area, said the war is almost an annual event. Other frog wars have been reported at various times in different, parts of West Malaysia. No one has so far come forward with any theory why such battles take place. PHILIPPINE ELECTION VIOLENCE became evident yester- day when two men were reported slain preceeding today's balloting for 320 delegates to a constitutional convention. , The Philippine News Service reported that a town councilor and a relative of one of the candidates were shot to death in Ilocos Sur Province, a region noted for its political turbulence. The town mayor was also injured-in the incident, the news service added. One of the major concerns of election officials is a number of "private armies" they fear will be used to terrorize voters during today's balloting. JORDAN-PALESTINE PEACE AGREEMENT was implement- ed on schedule in Amman and Orbid yesterday, the Arab truce supervision force announced. Col. Abdul Latif Abu Dahab, the second in command of the force, said all troops in the two towns have been withdrawn. The situation was calm throughout the country and no incidents have been reported for the past three days, the colonel added. Under the agreement, which ended the 11-day civil war inI Jordan the army and the guerrillas were required to withdraw from all Jordan towns by noon today. AN IRANIAN AIRLINER was seized in stormy weather over the Persian Gulf yesterday by nine men, six of whom are described as criminals being expelled from an Arabian shiekdom. Thirteen other persons aboard the plane - including two guards and five crew members - were allowed to fly on to Iran, the plane's original destination, three hours after his had landed in plane's original destination, three hours after it had landed in * * * By The Associated Press The Supreme Court voted yesterday not to rule directly on the Massachusetts legislative move declaring the Vietnam war illegal. State officials had asked the court to rule without the controversial legislation being tested in lower courts first. Six justices voted against the state and three justices dissented. Only Justice William O. Douglas, one of the dis- on anti-war -Associated Press THE FAMED Civil War locomotive, "The General," will now go to Kennesaw, Georgia rather than Chattanooga, Tennessee on the basis of a Supreme Court decision yesterday. The dispute of ownership my be the first that the court has settled with a loco- motive as prize. BOARD REPORT: B1 tg pay rises asked for rail road workerg senters, set forth his views. Massachusetts had argued that without a declaration of war the President has no authority to send American troops into combat in Southeast Asia. The Nixon administration coun- seled the court against granting the state a hearing. Justice De- partment officials said a judicial inquiry into the legality of the war would hamstring the Presi- dent, insult Congress and em- barrass the nation. Voting against a hearing were Chief Justice Warren E. Burger and Justice Harry A. Blackmun, both of whom were put on the court by President Nixon and Jus- tices Hugo L. Black, William J. Brennan Jr., Byron R. White and Thurgood Marshall, holdovers from past administrations. Dissenting with Douglas w e r e Justices John M. Harlan and Pot- ter Stewart. Douglas, in a lengthy dissenting opinion, rebutted point by point the Justice Department's argu- ment against hearing the case. Sh"We have neverruled, I believe, S that when the federal government takes a person by the neck and ry submits him to punishment, impri- he sonment, taxation, or submission. to to some ordeal, the complaining c- person may not be heard in court," cy Douglas said. "The rationale in cases such as he the present is that the govern- kement cannot take life, liberty, or property of the individual and es- cape adjudication by the courts ge of the legality of the action," he 5 wrote. to In the past the court has declin- er ed every time to hear suits ques- ve tioning the war's legality. At first, nt only Douglas dissented. Subse- 5 quently, he was joined by Ste- 1, wart. Yesterday, the dissenters 1, picked up Harlan. law Court hears arguments on death penalty WASHINGTON (P)-U.S. Soli- citor General Erwin N. Griswold advised the Supreme Court yes- terday to leave to the people any changes in the way the death pen- alty is imposed in the United States. Speaking for the government at a hearing, Griswold said changes being urged on the court are not required by the Constitution, are impractical and could add to the frequency of death sentences. The former Harvard Law School dean said he could understand a desire to limit capital punishment. But he said the court should be guided by the separation-of-pow- ers principle and leave the matter of change to state legislatures. "This is something that should be done by the people," he said toward the end of a solemn, three- hour examination of two death- penalty cases to which the fate of more than 550 condemned men and women is tied. This was the third time the court has heard pleas for stand- ards to govern juries and for split- ting off the sentencing phase from the determination of guilt. The court did not reach a? deci- sion in the last two terms, leading to speculation the justices are closely divided. Griswold stressed that only in recent years have lawyers argued that the Constitution requires jury standards and bifurcated trials NOV. 14 NOV.21 NOV. 28 RETURN TOIOZ OUR GANG THE TRUTH ABOUT MOTHER GOOSE PROFESSOR VON DRAKE-POPULAR SONGS DR. SYN ALIAS THE SCARECROW THE GOLDEN FISH STOP, LOOK AND LAUGH (3 STOOGES) RED BALLOON DEC. 5 ALICE IN WONDERLAND UNICORN IN THE GARDEN MR. MAGOO AS WILLIAM TELL DEC. 12 ROBIN HOOD SUZIE, THE BLUE COUPE A COWBOY NEEDS A HORSE WILLIE, THE OPERATIC WHALE DEC. 19 ICABOD AND MR. TOAD THE MOUSE ON THE MAYFLOWER WASHINGTON (P) - Wage in-} creases averaging $1.32 an hour, in' a series of steps through 1972, were recommended yesterday for more than 500,000 railroad work- ers by a presidential board seek- ing to prevent a nationwide rail strike fDec.10 THE SOVIET UNION yesterday released the Turkish colonel - whose plane strayed into Russian territory with two U.S. generals The recommended wage settle- Oct. 21. ment would bring wages 36 per The Sovietsinformed the U.S. yesterday that the two Americans $368 e ve the pr sent prabl will also be released but no date was given immediately for the be the biggest money settlement handover. in the industry's history. NEW METHODS Bssi Beggars gain sophistication HAVE A 'NEW' WARDROBE FOR THE COST OF CLEANING ..woo% NEW YORK (MP)-For the panhandlers of New York City, the days of "Can you spare a dime for a cup of coffee?" are long gone. As in any modern American business, pan- handling has come up with a new bag of gimmicks to increase productivity. A man, wearing a neat business suit and car- rying a slick valise, comes up to you in the Port Authority bus terminal near Times Square. "Hey buddy," he says. "Help me out, huh? Lost my wallet somewhere and haven't got enough change to get home to New Jersey. Need 40 cents." Another man, observed recently on a Man- hattan street corner, has come up with a more elaborate and probably more profitable version of the same game. He held a fist-full of cash and jazz trumpeter Miles Davis. A tall, thuin young man wearing hippie-garb and long hair wandered through the large crowd waiting outside Madison Square Garden saying, "How 'bout some change so I can see Miles. Gotta see Miles." Begging is against the law. In New York it is illegal for persons to loiter for the purpose of begging or soliciting. The maximum penalty is $250. Few beggars, however, are ever arrested. Most citizens don't bother turning in complaints. Down on the Bowery, an area of the city famous for its derelicts, things are, in a sense, more refreshing. At least there is little fakery. A stranger walking past the darkened build- ings of the Bowery one night was approached by a panhandler who crept from the shadows of his The nation's railroad indust and four AFL-CIO unions in tI dispute have 30 days in whicht consider and negotiate on the re( ommendations of the emergen board under federal labor law. If there were no settlement, tl earliest the unions could stril would be 12:01 a.m. Dec. 10. The board's recommended waE increases would provide for a per cent increaseretroactive1 last Jan. 1, another 32 cents pt hour or 8.5 per cent retroactii to last Nov. 1, another 4 per ce April 1, 1971, and three more per cent hikes effective on Oct. 1971, on April 1, 1972 and Oct. 1972. The board, headed by Lewis B Gill of Merion, Pa., was appointE by President Nixon under the Rai way Labor Act to halt an earli strike threat. In addition to wage increas the board urged the railroad it dustry and the unions to set i a high level standing committ headed by a neutral party to re ommend long-range solutionsi the industry's tangled labor-ma Iagement relations. Another recommendation is1 negotiate changes in "restricti' work rules," with the aim of cu ting the railroad industry's cost Both Gill and Secretarys Labor James D. Hodgson saids a White House news conferen that the proposal for a long-ran railroad labor-industry study con mittee could be a most significai part of the report, and that bot sides had accepted the idea. Hodgson said that he viewE the proposed neutral chairman the joint rail labor-industry con mittee as a "combination catalys mentor, counselor and occasiona ly a stern father." M. er es, n- Up ee c- in n- to. ve it- ts. of at ce ge n- nt th ed of n- st, Ll- 44% of welfare women trained, want to work WASHINGTON (R) - More than one-third of women re- ceiving welfare are trained for and willing to work, a new fed- eral study indicated yesterday. But it found they are kept from jobs by such things as ill health, young children and inadequate day-care arrangements. Perry Levinson, a researcher for the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, report- ed an increase from 25.3 per cent in 1961 to 44.5 per cent in 1968 of welfare mothers with high employment potential be- cause of -education or previous job experience. While four of every five of these mothers would want a steady job, 80 per cent could not work because they had chil- dren under age eight and lacked d a y-c a r e facilities for the youngsters, Levinson found. Some 38 per cent of this high- potential group also cited poor general health, as an important factor in their joblessness. Nearly 40 per cent of the women with high job potential had four or more problems blocking their wayrto full em- ployment, Levinson found. In addition to young children and illness, these included need to care for someone at home, lack of confidence, feeling of powerlessness, and mistrust of others. Eppley also found that the proportion of welfare families without fathers at home in- ,creased from two-thirds to three-fourths. Why buy all new outfits \ when we can add new life to your present ward- robe? Our expert Dry Cleaning helps keep your clothes fresh and new looking. So try us soon. We'll be happy to serve you. stopped passersby saying: "Do me a favor, pal? abandoned doorway home to beg some change. My car go towed away and I don't have enough "What do you need the money for?" asked the cash to get it out of the police garage. All I need stranger. is four more bucks and I'll have the $75 for the "I'm just a wino," the man said with a smile. fine and the towing fee." The stranger, caught off balance by the stub- Clever, huh? So clever, in fact, that this pan- ble-afced man's uncharacteristic straightforward- handler and other industrious beggars may take ness, gave him 50 cents and asked: "What kind in as much as $200 or more a week by simply ask- of wine?" ing for spare change. The man chuckling, replied: "Port-white One ploy was observed at a recent concert by port." .. . . .... ................ . ......*.....r*. ...... rr. ...r ..... . .... ............... ... .. ....... ...... . a . :::.... . . . .........***........ : .:.::...... . . ............ . r..**..........'............. w:" :"::. .v: ::::v:::l :Y:: n.......... .... . .. r........ . . . . . . . ..::.:.*................................... .......................... SPECIAL---THIS WEEK ONLY---Tuesday-Saturday, Nov. 10-14 Sair Sha dug Reg. $5.00 IOW$35 0w 607 south forest avenue.#r make your appointment early at 665-3601 Y . .. .n. The University of Michigan School of Music ad Departmnent of Art present - PUCCINI'S OPERA .. . .U .~~ WW~ ~ w r' W .... . W . U ~W . T OUR LOW REGULAR PRICES ARE THE BEST IN TOWN LADIES DRESS ...............$1.85 & up MENS SUITS.. . .............$1.80 MENS PANTS................... $ .90 LADIES SLACKS .................$ .95 SWEATERS.................$ .85 & up BLOUSES ................... $ .90 & up SKIRTS .. .... ................$ .90 COME AND COMPARE "'JOE' is not merely an extraordinary film; it is a small artistic miracle. Only rarely in the turmoil of human events does a work of such brutal directness to the core truths of the conditions of life that no matter what one's beliefs, there is no denying its validity. 'JOE' is approached for sheer impact and importance only by 'Z,''PATHS OF GLORY,' and the final scenes of 'EASY RIDER.' No one conceiving this film, a year ago, could have known how loudly it would speak today. It is a one-in-a-million." -Harlan Ellison, L.A. Free Press HELD OVER >,ti vof course " I~ I I For the student body: FLARES by Levi Farah Wright PREGNANT? Need Help? Safe, legal, and inexpensive N.Y. Clinic affiliate CALL 24 HOURS 1-215-878-5800 For confidential alternatives to your pregnancy