National General Theatres FOX! VILLaGE W. 375 No. MAPLE RD.-7694300 Paramount Rctures presents PAUL JOANNE ANTHONY NEWMAN WOODWARD PERKINS WUSA '"WUSA A $1UATROSENNERG-PAULNEWMAN- JOHN FOREMANPROWKTION cqLAURENCE HARVEY', TEOI-NCOWO * S &O4*AAR~JAMNT ~1PCTUK SHOW TIMES Sat.-Sun. 1:00-3:00-I Mon.-Fri. 7:00-9:15 5:00-7:00-9:15. OPENS THURS. & FRI.! 2 PERFORMANCES ONLY U of M PROFESSIONAL THEATRE PROGRAM "AN AVALANCHE OF HILARITY!" -Time Magazine Financiers to pressure Congress on bank bill WASHINGTON (JP) - Top officials of. three banks in which congressmen own large blocs of stock have been asked to press the lawmakers to get a weaker version of a pending bank reg- ulatory bill. The three congressmen a r e on a Senate-House panel due to meet Wed- nesday to seek a settlement on the bill to ban one-bank holding companies from branching out into other busi- ness fields. The American Bankers Association asked the bank officials to contact the congressmen personally in pushing for the exemption-fiddled Senate version of the bill. The congressmen and the bank offi- cials involved are: page three -Rep. J. William Stanton (R-Ohio) a stockholder in the Lake Country Na- tional Bank, Painesville, Ohio. T h e bank's president, Albert R. Pike, who was asked to contact Stanton, v a s Stanton's campaign treasurer in the recent election. -Rep. Henry S. Reuss (D-Wis.), who owns stock in Marshall & Ilsley Bank in Milwaukee. The association made its request to bank vice presi- dent Donald N. Baxter, who once fig- ured in a grand jury probe of improper lobbying on a bank bill in Wisconsin, but Baxter said another banker hand- led the request. -Rep. Leonor K. Sullivan (D-Mo.), a stockholder of the Mercantile Trust Company in St. Louis, whose presi- dent, Donald E. Lasater, was asked to contact her. Lasater said, however, the bank decided not to take any action. "We are pleased that she is a share- holder," Lasater said. "But I don't feel that gives us any particular right to speak at this time." The three congressmen were in- volved in another recent controversy when a rich campaign fund for banks sent more than $40,000 in contribu- tions to members of the Senate and House Banking Committees. Reps Reuss, Sullivan and Stanton all refused the m o n e y. The $2,500 check for Stanton was sent to Pike and arrived in the mail on election day. It was returned the same day, an aide said. The American Banking Association included the names of the three banks and the cong~ressman-stockholders in a letter that wentout last week to 69 bankers in the home district of the 12 legislators on the Senate-House con- ference committee. The letter stressed the bank group's support of the Senate version of the regulatory bill. It asked the bankers to contact the conferees before Wed- nesday and said, "If at all possible, please make your contact in person." A. N. Renner, a Marshall & Ilsley bank official to whom Baxter referred inquiries, said the bank made no spec- ial effort after receiving the letter, but said its lobbyist in Washington had al- ready been in contact with Reuss and another conferee, Sen. William Prox- mire (D-Wis.). "We haven't worked nearly as close with Reuss as we have with Sen. Prox- mire," said Renner. Stanton's campaign treasurer, Pike, said he had not attempted to contact the congressman. "He's not available," Pike said. "He has been out of the country on a vacation somewhere. I did not contact him. I don't k n o w whether I would have anyway." The exact value of the bank holdings of Stanton, Reuss and Mrs. Sullivan is not known publicly. But the three congressmen named the banks on re- ports to the House Ethics Committee, which requires that the lawmakers list any stock holdings of $5,000 or more without giving details. Ifrtian NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Tuesday, November 17, 1970 Ann Arbor Michigan Page Three ri "'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 of course WED., THUR.-7, 9 ERI.-7, 9,11 Vf N SAT.-5, 7,9,11 LJJ ITH Or Jm7 COLOR A CueriON REEASE 4 ® rRT A8N " T 08T Congress convenes3 session WASHINGTON (M)- Congress reconvened yesterday for a lamre- duck session strongly flavored by the politics of 1970-and of 1972. Senate Republican Leader Hugh Scott said it would be "an un- mitigated disaster." Democratic Leader Mike Mans- field welcomed his returning ma- jority - and accused Republican! campaigners of subjecting them to offensive personal vilification, and "political slicksterism." Mansfield and Scott agreed that congressional leaders and Presi-: dent Nixon should draw up a rock- bottom list of legislative tnusts for action by the lame-duck 91st Con- gress. "I trust that the list will be mercifully short," Mansfield said. But he said he couldn't guess how! long the session would last. "In-! deed, the 91st may yet be known as the unending Congress," Mans- field said. "I would hope the session couldj be treated as a cleanup and wind- up session," said Scott. He saidN that with two more Republicans due to join the Senate minority - in the 92nd Congress, opening Jan. 4, President Nixon would do better to bide his time on con- troversial matters involving for- eign policy and defense. In the days aheadsthis year Scott said he expects a lot of ora- tory about the outcome of the Nov. 3 elections, a lot of attempts to win hasty enactment of pet projects- Among the measures awaiting fction: a once-vetoed measure to finance housing and assorted other government projects, and a-trans- portation appropriation with the built in controversy of a $230-mil- lion item to' continue the super- sonic transport aircraft project The Michigan Daily, edited and man- akec. by students at the University of 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 mat Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5. by carrier, $5 by mail. -Associated Press Old opponents square off President Nixon (right) holds his own in grinning contest with newly-elected Sen. Hubert H. Hum- phrey (D-Minn) as Nixon welcomes his former opponent in other games back to Washington. Hum- phrey was one of a number of newly-elected senators to visit the President yesterday. ICC CRITICIZED Agency chairman eats for free news briefs By The Associated Press CUSTOMS BUREAU OFFICIALS said yesterday they have seized markedly larger quantities of illegal d r u g s in recent months because of a stepped-up enforcement drive. Deputy Customs Commissioner Edwin R. Rains said increased manpower - about 300 new agents recruited last year - is respon- sible. "They're just coming into effectiveness," he said. The Customs Bureau said marijuana accounted for the largest number of its seizures, averaging 600 per month. It added the quan- tity of marijuana seized was larger than any other drug. AMERICAN MOTORS CORP. reported yesterday a loss of $56.2 million, the equivalent of $2.28 a share, for its fiscal year ended last Sept. 30, compared with a profit ,of $4.9 million, or 26 cents a share, for its 1969 fiscal year. American Motors had a loss of $16.4 million in its fourth quar- ter, compared with a loss of $2.9 million in the closing quarter of its previous fiscal year. JURY SELECTION for the court martial of Lt. William Cal- ley Jr. charged with the premeditated murder of 102 Vietnamese civilians at My Lai 32 months ago, was completed yesterday, with final defense.and prosecution agreement on six jurors. The six - ranging in rank from captain to colonel - include five combat veterans of Vietnam. Two jurors without combat exper- ience in Vietnam who were earlier seated were removed following a ruling by the trial judge, Col. Reid W. Kennedy, allowing for two ex- tra pre-emptory challenges. A pre-emptory challenge is one in which no reason need be given for the dismissal of a prospective juror. As a result, two of the first three officers seated, both of them previously assumed to be permanent jurors, were removed. Witnesses in the case were scheduled to begin testimony today following the four days of jury selection. SYRIA'S new revolutionary government announced yester- day it would seek to join the proposed Arab federation of Egypt, Libya and Sudan - restoring in part the 1958 United Arab Re- public of Gamal Abdel Nasser. The old Syrian-Egyptian merger collapsed in September 1961 after existing mostly on paper. The announcement of the Syrian plan was made by Radio Da- mascus in the name of the new leader, Gen. Hafez Assad, the air marshal and defense minister who seized power on Friday. ELEVEN BOMBS were thrown from cars in San Juan, Puer- to Rico, over the weekend, iiijuring two persons and causing an estimated $13,000 in damage. A high police official, however, said he thought they were "isolated incidents and not the'start of a terrorist campaign." Five bombs exploded Friday night in the city's business district, causing light damage. Six bombs went off Saturday night, five of them in the city's major hotel district, and one in the office of Buck, Seifert & Jost, American consulting engineers. Hello, 'm JohnnyCash the sound of the Hohner haroia WASHINGTON (MP)-The chairman of the Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) says he sees nothing wrong in being wined and dined by interests his agency regulates. At the same time, Chairman George Stafford is moving to fire one of his hearing examiners accused of accepting food and entertainment from parties in a proceeding before him. Stafford feasted for free on rock Cornish game hen, mushrooms in cognac and cherries jubilee last month at the American Trucking Association convention, where diners were enter- tained by 20 strolling violinists and comedian Victor Borge. In August, as Stafford moved to fire hearing examiner Bernard J. Hasson Jr. on grounds he violated the ICC's Canons of Conduct., he wrote all agency personnel: "I, as chairman, wish to impress upon you that Section 14 of the Canons of Conduct pro- hibit an employe from accepting meals, refresh- ments, other forms of entertainment from or social association with any person representing a party having an interest in any matter pending before him." Bu,t in an interview, Stafford said he sees no conflict between his order to ICC employes and his personal acceptance of meals at industry meetings. A House Commerce Committee investigative panel disclosed in hearings last summer that from 1966 through 1969, expense vouchers were sub- mitted by 43 hearings examiners indicating tran- sportation and hotel accommodations had been received at no expense to the government. Testi- mony also showed that three commissioners ac- cepted a railroad's hospitality in 1967 while in- specting rail facilities. Subcommittee chairman Torbert H. Macdonald (D-lass), charged the commission with permit- ting "flagrant violations" of its canons of conduct. "- U' It's a sound that's as mucha part of America as the lonesome wail of a freight train in the night. A sound that was first heard back in the 1850's when Hohner harmonicas soothed restless mountain men, homesick sailors and weary plantation workers. During the Civil War, the sound was Johnny Reb playing "Dixie" at Shiloh and Lookout Mountain. While across the lines Union soldiers play ed "John Brown's Body." Cowboys broke the prairie stillness with Hohners. Railroad men kept them in their overalls as the great iron beast pushed west. Wichita, Pocatello, Sacramento. The sound went with boatmen up from New Orleans. 4Lumberjacks in Coos Bay. Miners in Cripple Creek. Farmers in Dyess, the little town in Arkansas where I grew up. I remember hearing it back then. Good times or bad, the humble harmonica has been in America's hip pocket as we grew up. And it's still there today. Because it's a sound that's simple and true. Happy and sad. A reflection of life, past and present. It's not surprising that today Hohners fit so naturally with any kind of music. Blues, Folk and Rock: In fact, Hohner makes over 160 different kinds of harmonicas, from an inch and a half to two feet long. Popular models come in all different keys. There's e ve a neck holder so you can play harmonica and guitar at the same time. Me? I use the good old Marine Band for songs like "Orange Blossom Special." It gives me just the sound I want. Pure and honest. You can get the same sound I do by getting a Hohner harmonica today. At your campus bookstore or wherever musical instruments are sold. a~ a .~', 0 MOW h. ,I I I paid political advertisement THE FOLLOWING PERSONS OR ORGANIZATIONS ENDORSE THE COALITION, FOR MEMBERS-AT-LARGE OF SGC: JEANNIE LENZER BRIAN SPEARS MARNIE HEYN PAUL TEICH individuals: organizations:r JERRY DE GRIECK, Executive V.P. of SGC Sisters Rising JIM SANDLER, Pres. of U.A.C. Students for Educational lnnov:.tion BI LL HA R RIS, Administrative V.P. of U.AC.Suet o dctoaIInoeto DAVID BRAND, Pres. of L.S.A. Assembly Tenants Union Steering Committee BRIAN FORD, V.P. of L.S.A. Assembly The Radical Caucus of the Gay Liberation Front MARK PETERS, Pres. of Inter-House AssemblyRy LESLIE BLUESTONE, of New University Conference Students to Support the Auto Workers BILL BACHMANN, of the Teaching Fellows Union and Brain Mistrust Students Against War Research MAUREEN HUNTER, of Ann Arbor Conspiracy Radicalesbians KEN MOGILL, coordinator of U. of M. Lawyer's Guild NANCY LEDAR, of the Polis Literature Program New Education Collective ANDY WEISMANN, of L.S.A. Assembly Alice Lloyd Library KAREN SHARKEY, of the Education Students Advising Office JOEL BLOCK, District Steward, U. of M. Employees'Union American Revolutionary Media SANDY SMALLEY, coordinator of Alice's Restaurant The New Techniaue Psvchi-.tric Society Send check or money order, No COD's PPD $14.50 to: Upping Products P.O. Box 1849 Tucson, Arizona 85702 I - Vn !, Program Information 662-6264 Corner of State & Liberty Sts. THE ULTIMATE TRIP *HELD OVER 2ND WEEK In Stereophonic Sound OPEN 12:45 4 SHOWS DAILY! 1:15-3:45-6:15-8:45 Tomorrow-Wed. Is Ladies Day Wed. Ladies Pay 75c until 6 p.m. I II I.