IMPORTANT!" EVERY PAINT STORE SELLS PAINT WE FEATURE: - CANDLE MAKING SUPPLIES * ART SUPPLIES " PICTURE FRAMING SUPPLIES COME ON OUT AND GET ACQUAINTED DELF PAINT STORE page three Z t1 P Sirtligan Batty NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Tuesday, November 24, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three 2381 W. STADIUM BLVD. (near Jackson) 662-6690 BRING THIS VALUABLE COUPON WITH YOU! This Coupon Good for 10% OFF on any item at Delf Point Store. ! Expires December 31, 1970 ' ....... ........ ........ ....s ... .....w .sU U i [1 PRESCRIPTION EYEWARE and SHADES a lad n ews brief THE SENATE FOREIGN RELATIONS committee approved yesterday the 21-year-old Genocide Convention making it an international crime to take actions aimed at destroying entire national, ethnic, racial, or religious groups. It did so with four understandings that would, among other things, make clear that an individual nation retains the right to try its nationals for acts committed outside its boundaries. This would include charges that U.S. troops murdered Viet- namese civilians, which have led to trials such as that currently in progress of Lt. William L. Calley Jr. for the alleged My Lai massacre. INDIANA AND NEBRASKA may be denied federal welfare funds for violating government regulations, the Department of Health Education and Welfare said Sunday. In jeopardy is $23.3 million in funds to Indiana and $8.2 mil- lion to Nebraska. Examiners have found that Indiana has failed to make living- cost adjustments and allow payment to persons other than family members who care for welfare children. Irf Nebraska, the examiner ruled the state had failed to make the cost of living adjustment and failed to continue payments for chil- dren after a stepfather enters the home. TWO PERSONS were ejected from a federal courtroom yesterday in the first day of the Seattle "7" conspiracy trial. Judge George Boldt told U.S. marshals to remove two spectators who he said were laughing during the trial of seven persons charged witht the conspiring to damage the federal courthouse and federal office building during a Feb. 17 dsmonstration in Seattle. A QUEBEC LIBERATION FRONT member who was to be questioned about the kidnapping of British diplomat James Cross was found hung in a cell in a London police station yesterday, Scotland Yard reported. He was identified as Richard Pierre Bross, a French-born resi- dent of Quebec who had lately been living in a London suburb. A police spokesman said inquiries in Paris and Quebec had es- tablished that Bross was a member of the FLQ. He added that during questioning police hoped to find a new lead in/the kidnaping of Cross, the British trade official who was seized in Quebec seven weeks ago. * TO HELP CURB INFLATION, the Committee for Economic Development (CED) called yesterday for a return to voluntary wage and price guideposts, an approach which President Nixon and his economic advisers have rejected. The CED report held that both labor and management could be influenced to greater restraint "once they clearly understand that this will avoid a continuing wage-price spiral from which neither would gain." The report coincided with official hints that the administra- tion will press an expansionist program of increased money supply, easy credit and stimulative spending, while relying on general ap- peals to management and labor to avoid a fresh upsurge of inflation. Nixon's campaign stands WASHINGTONR) - The S e n a t e sustained President Nixon's veto of a bill to limit campaign spending for radio and television broadcasts yes- terday, after a Republican leader called t h e measure a step backwards in the quest for broad political reform. The roll call vote was 58 in favor of overriding the President, 34 against, a margin of 4 votes short of the necessary two-thirds. Nine Republicans joined 49 Democrats in voting to override but six Democrats joined 28 Re- publicans in making the veto bind- ing. Since the Senate has sus- tained the President there is no need for the House to vote. The bill would have limited spending on campaign radio and television broadcasts to seven cents for each vote cast for the office involved in the previous election, or $20,000, whichever is higher. It would cover candidates for president, vice-president, Senate, House; governor, and lieutenant governor. Under terms of the bill, each party would have been limited to about $5.1 million worth of broad- casting time in the 1972 presiden- tial election campaign. In vetoing the bill on Oct. 12, Nixon said it discriminates against broadcasters, favors incumbent officeholders, and threatens free- dom of political discussion. Sen. John Pastore (D-RI), chief sponsor of the broadcast limit measure, said in advance that to sustain the veto would deal a probably fatal setback to reform. Republican Leader Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania pledged an effort at comprehensive campaign re- form next year, and Nixon said the administration would work with him. But Pastore said the President and the Republicans said nothing about that when the bill was being drafted-or vetoed. -Associated Press Gift-wrapped heroin A U.S. Customs officer spreads out more than 93 pounds of heroin, some in Christmas wrappings, seized earlier this year and estimated to have a street value of $10 to $10 million. Three men from Paraguay and one from Paris were indicted today in the case by a grand jury in the Southern Dis- trict of New York. SUPREME COURT RULING: Legal tacitic held constitutional 615 6.0. fIMARsbr- 66235903 "'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 l r. HELDI OVE R Sof course . .........L WASHINGTON (')-A man who says he is really innocent but is pleading guilty only because he fears a jury might return a stiffer sentence should be permitted to do so, the Supreme Court held yes- terday in a 6-3 ruling. fhe Court also ruled on two ob- scenity cases and upheld the rights of District of Columbia tenants to rent strike. The first decision, in a North Carolinaimurder case, found such guilty pleas voluntary in a con- stitutional sense and said they preserve very human values by allowing defendants to avoid a death sentence or other grim al- ternatives. Most people who plead guilty ly BOUNDARY TREAT Mexico, U.S. draw the line admit also they are guilty, said Justice Byron White for the ma- jority. But even if they argue they are innocent and are motivated by only a desire to escape a tougher sentence, continued White, trial judges should accept their pleas. The ruling swept aside as "an exercise in arid logic" the conten- tion of three dissenting justices and of some federal and state judges that these pleas are enter- ed under duress and are therefore invalid. "The Constitution," said White, "does not bar imposition of a prison sentence upoon an accused who is unwilling expressly to ad- mit his guilt but who, faced with grim alternatives, is willing to waive his trial and accept the sentence." The decision indicates a hard- ening stand by the court in crim- inal cases. Significant, also, is that Blackmun cast his vote along con- servative lines. ' In two obscenity cases, mean- while, the court rejected efforts by California and Massachusetts, to suppress films and magazines in suggestive poses. But the voting indicated here, too, that the court is growing more conservative. In the California case, a 4-4 af- firmed a decision by the U.S. Cir- The Michigan Daily,tedited and man- a~ec, by students at the Universitv 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- Aity 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. cuit Court in San Francisco that a stag film of a woman feigning self-induced sexual satisfaction is protected by the constitution. In the Massachusetts case a 5-3 vote rejected the state's appeal from a decision by the U.S. circuit court in Boston that no photo- graph of the female anatomy is obscene as long as sexual activity is not depicted. Tn other action the court: -Let stand unanimously a rul- ing that tenants in the District of Columbia have a right to with- hold rents if landlords failed to keep their apartments in decent condition. Students seek changes at. Computing Center MEXICO CITY UP) - Mexico and the United States signed a treaty yesterday designed to solve the old problem of just where the United States ends and Mexico begins. Presidents Nixon and Gusta- vo Diaz Ordaz have referred to the treaty as one of the most significant agreements between their two governments in this century. The treaty, which still must be approved by the Senate of both nations, was worked out after Nixon met with Diaz Or- daz in Puerto Vallarta last Aug. 20. At that time, they agreed in general terms to a solution of boundary problems. These problems, which go back almost to colonial times, have led to war, to invasion and, most of- ten, to injured pride in Mexico which made warm relations al- most impossible. The basic aim of the docu- ment is to establish forever a formula for determining just where the boundary is, e v e n though the rivers which form most of it - the Rio Grande and the Colorado - may shift their courses. Until now each shift in the river bed - and there have been many - led to a dispute over what was Mexican and w h a t was American. Each case had to be dealt with individually and negotiations sometimes t o o k years. One small tract, where the R i o Grande separates Ojinaga, Mexico, from Presidio, Tex., has been in dispute since 1904. The countries have not been able to agree on the name of the riverawhich separates Texas f r o m Mexico. In the United States it is known as the Rio Grande; in Mexico it is the Rio Bravo. The names stay that way un- der the treaty, one name in the English version and the other in the Spanish, but the United States cedes to Mexico 1,606 ac- res along the river while Mex- ico turns over 1,290 acres. The treaty also determines the sov- ereignty of several hundred tiny islands and establishes that the center of the river's main chan- nel will always be the border. By ANDY ZACK The computer system' at t h e University's computer center is grossly inadequate according to the students who use it. T h e y maintain that the center is over- crowded, that there is insufficient seating and study space, and that there is a need for more comput- er counselors. As a means of channeling stu- dent feedback to those in charge of operating the computer cen- ter, the Computer Center User's' Group (CCUG) has been formed. The group hopes- to make the Uni- versity's Computing Center a n d its MTS computer system more responsive to the needs of its us- ers, according to Mark Barnett, recording secretary of CCUG. . The purpose of the group is to s e r v e the interests of all MTS computer users - students, pro- grammers, instructors, and ad- ministrators - by influencing the policies and activities of the Uni- versity Computing Center, s a y s Barnett. "Often the naivehuser of University computers at the com- puting center has difficulty find- ing out what he needs to know about the computing center's fa- cilities," he adds. Membership is open to all com- puter center users. CCUG mem- bers discuss their problems and experiences in working at the computing center. They are ask- ed to contribute their ideas on group policy and such considera- tions as the distribution of Uni- versity' computer resources and structured presentations of in- formation regarding MTS c o m- puter facilities. ! ! TUES.; WEO.--1, 9 COLOR A CANNON IBEASE J) 'FRI OOWNTOWN ANN Ammoft LIUIINFORMATION 7011+070 1 WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 25th Department of Speech Student Laboratory Theatre PRESENTS THE ONLY JEALOUSY OF EMIR by W.B. YEATS, and MISS JULIE by AUGUST STRINDBERG Trueblood Theatre, Frieze Building CORRECTION Due to an oversight, we neglect- ed to mention the people re- sponsible for the advertising in Sunday's magazine. We regret the error. Craig Wolson-Retail Advertis- ing Manager Jim Storey-Sales and Promo- tions Mgr. Salesmen-Debbie Boros, Janie Chow, Cheryl F a x, Joanne Gierz, Bob Kirby, Stu Lockman, Debbie Moore, Cheryl Rad- cliffe, Rich RadclifferBonnie Solowitch, George Strong, An- drew Thorburn I 603 E. Liberty DIAL 5-6290 SALE th. country sport suit $73 ...too good looking to be reserved just for- weekends. Rich all-wool fabrics styled with back belt, two inverted "ONE OF THE BEST AMERICAN FILMS OF THE YEAR I -- News day Promptly at 4:10 p.m. Admission Free Phoenix Eye View of Revolution THE NATURAL HISTORY OF REVOLUTION Lyford P. Edwards With a Foreword by Morris Janowitz The repression of legitimate aspirations, sym- bolic leadership, deprivation, and the partici- pation of the upper class are among the recurring features of revolutions discussed in this study. First published in 1927, it uses evi- dence from a variety of national and historical settings. $2.25 HISTORY OF THE FRENCH REVOLUTION Jules Michelet Edited and with an Introduction by Gordon Wright II "THE FUNNIEST MOVIE I'VE SEEN THIS YEARI THIS KIND OF MOVIE A REVIEWER SHOULD PAY TO SEE! JUST GO, RUN, TO SEE IT!" -New York Post back pleats, flop button pockets, flared trousers. Brown or block .:{:... diagonal solids, blue donegal 9 tweed, olive herringbone. 1 2' ::::'> ...}f " 'f " ii :?y:'::-: A historical work of literary excellence remark- able for its vivid nortravRal of the nprsnnlities of the revnition "Ranks eneoi1 I I .~ I