OPENS TONIGHT! i page three im4c AW 41P tr4t n 43, tt. 410 iiy NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Thursday, November 19, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three I news briefs By The Associated Press 1 ; . . ,..' r * - rr rr ,y . ;}S ?{:", :?: fi}' l i(f 1d's ;'. . ,,. I ih S O I !! F ;" 1 _" y How will you manage in 1991 The Graduate School of Industrial Admin- istration at Carnegie-Mellon University of- fers an innovative, relevant, and future- oriented program in management for ana- lytici ly-tra i ned students. We will be at your Placement Services Office Monday, November 23 DETROIT'S BOARD OF CANVASSERS in an unprecedent- ed move has refused to certify the city's Nov. 3 election, con- ducted on a computer punch-card voting system which failed. The 3-1 vote against certification could pave the way for an eventual new election if the Wayne County Board of Canvassers and the State Board of Canvassers also refuse to certify the Detroit re- sults. A DEFENSE WITNESS testified yesterday that Sgt. David Mitchell never stopped at a My Lai drainage ditch where the Army says Mitchell shot unarmed civilians.I The witness claimed he saw a prosecution witness - not Mitch- ell shoot into the ditch during the second day of testimony in the trial of 10 soldiers charged with murder of Vietnamese civilians at My Lai. -Associated Press About-face for flag burner THE U.S. COURT OF APPEALS refused yesterday to return Martha Myers carries a flag on a three-mile trek from to Seattle the trial of the "Seattle 7," charged with conspiracy a six-month jail sentence she had received for flag bur in a Seattle demonstration protesting the "Chicago 7" verdict. - - -- ---------------------- -_---- The defendants had protested the moving of the case to Tacoma, CALL 'UNCONSTITUTIONAL' Wash., claiming that it would deny them jurors from their own com- munity and would impose a financial burden. n Arlington, Mass. to Harvard Square to avoid rning. SEE US? BRING QUESTIONS! * * * THE UNITED STEELWORKERS unveiled their 1971 con- tract demands yesterday and President I. W. Abel said the union would strike if necessary to support the demands, which include "a very substantial wage hike." Other issues that the steelworkers will bargain for include im- Provements in the nensiAn1 rofgrams_ insura nee' and vacations Luar- Top scientists level attack at Contemporary Directions 1910-11 ! PRESENTS The Michigan Contemporar Directions' Ensemble SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1970, 8:00 P.M. RACKHAM LECTURE HALLj DAVID BATES, Conductor -PROGRAM- CHARLES IVES........From the Steeples and the Mountains JACOB DRUCKMAN ..... Animus I for Trombone and Electronic Tape JOHN HAWKINS..............Remembrances KARLHEINZ STOCKHAUSEN .......... Refrain -INTERMISSION- JOHN CAGE.......String Quartet in Four Parts LEJAREN HILLER ............... An Avalanche SPECIAL ADDED ATTRACTION: A PLAYER PIANO! Classic Piano Rolls of Ragtime and Jazz! Sponsored by: The Composition Department of the University of Michigan School of Music -ADMISSION FREE-- bill for defense site p~ i114- i i;jU~lI l 9 U~l, liu lu,UlV u Ml , g u- anteed salaries and a reduction in work week. WASHINGTON 0P) - A bill member nonpartisan Federation of' d * rwhich backers claim is needed to American Scientists sent letters keep subversives away from clas- urging senators to kill the measure WEST GERMANY, in a major step toward better relations sified. .o and sensitive which the House passed by 274 to with Eastern Europe, agreed yesterday to a treaty with Poland, s adfen and s t-: 65 earlier this year. aimed at easing 21 years of enmity. Jtaceat defense faciliti sth The scientists see the proposal Bonn and Warsaw have had no diplomatic contact for two de- termed it "not only unnecessary as a threat to laboratory work. cades. The treaty is expected to raise to consular level the Polish but unconstitutional." The measure would apply to cam- trade mission in Cologne and the West German trade mission in More than 800 U.S. scientist pus research on classified military Warsaw. signed petitions, and the 1,500- ___ ________-- Supporters of the legislation de- MARINE GENERAL- SPEAKS -U.S. was 'over optimistic' on war WASHINGTON (P) - Calling himself naive, Marine Corps Gen. Lewis Walt said yesterday he and other American leaders were overly optimistic in the early days of the Vietnam war because "we didn't appreciate the importance of the guerrilla." "This was a brand new war and we didn't' recognize it," said Walt, who led U.S. Marines in Vietnam for more than two years. Now assistant comman- dant, he will retire from the Corps in February. Those who wereroverly op- timistic, he said, were thinking of World War II and Korea-type conflicts and didn't understand "you just can't go in and wipe out" guerrillas. "When I got out there I didn't understand this war," Walt told newsmen at a Penta- gon briefing. He said he found in a recent visit that the Viet Cong guerrilla threat now is "pretty well in hand." The four-star general said that when he first arrived in Vietnam in 1965 it took him six months to find out what the war was all about, and that he had to get out into the villages and hamlets to learn for himself. To illustrate "how naive I was," Walt told of spending an hour talking with a village of- ficial and ending up feeling good about the situation. However, the Marine general said, he soon felt a woman tug- ging at him as she put a paper in his hand. The paper told him that the village official who had given him such a cheering report actually was the No. 1 Viet Cong in the settlement. "It took a while to catch on, to learn how to fight that war," Walt said, adding that the Mar- ines eventually found out they had to win the people over. Looking back, Walt indicated he feels the war could have been shortened if the American peo- ple could have been made to understand better and if U.S. military men had been allowed tc shut off the port of Hai- phong as an inlet of Communist supplies to North Vietnam. "We in the military didn't define the war in the terms we should have," he said. scribe it as necessary to maintain basic national security programs, including protecting essential in- dustrial facilities and production, and to safeguard classified data released to contractors. But petition signers, including six winners of the Nobel Prize- Hans Bethe, Arthur Kornberg, Salvador Luria, Linus Pauling, Al- bert Szent-Gyorgyl and George Wald-said the legislation en- dangers academic freedom and "would overturn eight decisions' of the Supreme Court that protect the right of the individual free- dom of employment." Representatives of the scien- tists presented the petition and a' sack packed with signature cards to Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D- Mass). sHetold them he thinks it is highly unlikely that Committee action will be taken on the bill before the post-election session ends. He said he will work for de- feat of the measure. "It gives the President and the security secretary of defense the power to designate virtually any institution a 'defense facility' and then to in- vestigate any person who has any connection with that institution. The national security does not re- quire such overboard measures," he added. A chief backer of the measure, Rep. Richard H. Ichord (D-Mo), chairman of the House Internal Security Committee, says it would balance individual interests against those of the nation and would bar subversives from sen- sitive positions in defense facilities Thanksgiving at. the UGLI The Undergraduate Library yes- terday announced its hours for the Thanksgiving Weekend as follows: Wednesday, Nov. 25, 8:00 a.m. to midnight; Thursday, Nov. 26, closed; Friday, Nov. 27, 1 p.m. to midnight; Saturday, Nov. 28, 8 a.m. to 'midnight and Sunday, Nov. 29, 1 p.m. to 2 a.m. No books will fall due Nov. 26 through Nov. 29. Reserve books will circulate for vacation use be- ginning at noon, Wednesday, Nov. 25, and will be due by noon Mon- day, Nov. 30. A limit of two books per person for vacation use will be the general rule. Nixon asks $1 billion aid hike WASHINGTON ) - Presi- dent Nixon asked Congress yesterday for an additional $1 billion in foreign aid, half of which was earmarked f or helping Israel build its mili- tary potential First indications were that the request faces a rocky legislative road. The money is in addition to the $2.8 billion Nixon had requested earlier for foreign aid in this fis- cal year. Neighboring Arab states of Jor- dan and Lebanon would receive $30 million and $5 million respect- ively for what White House aides described as internal security needs in those countries. Major sums would also go to Cambodia, South Korea, and South Vietnam. Of the slightly more than $1 billion total in the Nixon pack- age, $500 million would help Is- rael finance "purchases of equip- ment that havedbeen necessary to maintain her defense capability, and to ease the economic strain caused by her expanded military requirements." Nixon described the money as necessary to carry out plans for reducing direct U.S. military com- mitments abroad while increasing the ability of allies to d e f e n d themselves. White House officials conceded, however, that part of the need for more money can be traced to the U.S. intervention in Cambodia and to events in the Middle East which were not foreseen w h e i Nixon made his original request last January. Cognizant of the fact that anti- foreign-aid forces in Congress al- ready have trimmed his original request to $2.2 billion, Nixon call- ed congressional leaders to the White House yesterday afternoon in an effort to win support for the revised request. Even before the White House session, formidable opposition sur- faced on Capitol Hill when the Senatemajority leader, Sen. Mike Mansfield (D-Mont.), told news- men he opposes the added funds. Mansfield said he would be glad to listen to t h e administration case but added "this simply will add to the budget deficit which already is going to far exceed the original estimates." Sen. J. W. Fulbright (D-Ark), said he thinks new authorizing legislation, not just a simple ap- propriation bill, would be required to clear the requested additional aid for nations other than Is- rael, for which Congress has au- thorized additional assistance. U dl SHOP TONIGHT AND FRIDAY UNTIL 9:00 P.M. KRYSTAL BAVARIAN GLAS SKI PACKAGE C Paramount Pctures presenis PAUL JOANNE ANTNOI NEWMAN WOODWARD PERKI "'WUSA A STUART ROSERNPFRG - PAUt NIWMAN - JOHN FOREMAN PROOUCTION c.r LAURENCE HARVEY Farly " 1"COL *' O"I"" "F""ANW APUM ~NALGO+ ATENTR4S C il~rrt .,RD. mm~I IN WS -3:00- INCLUDES: Only $137.50 0 GARMONT PLASTIC BUCKLE BOOTS ..................... $45.00 KRYSTAL EPOXY FIBRE GLASS SKIS ..... .................. $75.00 (2 yr. unconditional guarantee) TYROLIA STEP-IN BINDINGS ..,....... ....................$26.50 BARRECRAFTER ALUMINUM POLES ........... .............$ 7.00 INSTALLED AND TESTED .......... .....................$10.50 SAVE $25.00 total $163.00 HOURS: Mon, Wed, Thurs, & Fri, 10-9; Tues & Sat 10-6; Sun 12-5 2455 S. STATE ST. 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