Page Eight THE MICHIGAN, DAILY Thursday, May 18, 1 972 ANTI-BUSING RIDER: Now 231 sou s Open 12:45 I hIn.d c 1,a3,i5,n7,94dprm. ,)UWI. , Feature 2 har hn iue later I u a lon bi~ dr fe It's good for' your system. Sony Model 127 Stereo Cassette Deck $159.95 H-F1 ABUYS Ann Arbor-East Lansinq 618 S. Main, 769-4700 Comprehensive Repair Service Available WASHINGTON (It) - Sen- ate-House conferees reached final agreement early yesterday on a landmark $18.5 - billion higher - education bill which may be rejected because it is entangled in the dispute over school busing. In breaking the deadlock on the bill early yesterday morning, the conferees watered down three antibusing riders added to the bill in the House, and the compromise measure could be in trouble in that Branch as a result. Nevertheless, the sponsors predicted it would clear both branches. They emphasized that they are counting on the great bene- fits it will mean for all of the nation's colleges and universi- ties as well as the 8 million U. S. college students to generate enough support to win final passage. But they concede that they will face opposition from die- hard civil-rights advocates on the left and from all-out oppo- nents of any busing on the right. One of the busing riders adopted would prevent any court busing orders from tak- ing effect before Dec. 31, 1973, unless all appeals had been ex- hausted. The measure would establish a new comprehensive plan to aid college students which would make every student eligi- ble for a basic annual $1,400 stipend minus what his expect- ed contribution from his fami- ly would be. (University . officials have ex- pressed hopes that monies from the bill will be a significant factor in next year's budget.) Other provisions would: -authorize $2 billion to be used to help schools with deseg- regation problems; Police could reduce arrests, study says -provide $390 million to im- prove Indian education; -extend current federal vo- cational education programs at a cost of $385 million; -create a National Institute of Education to conduct re- search on how to spend school funds more wisely; and -establish a new program of occupational education f o r young persons who have com- pleted high school. { +i Use Daily Cassi fieds+ NIETZSCHE THE THINKER. by W + William M. Salter. One of the SI best critical commentaries on Tc Nietzsche's work. With a new gl & Introduction. Pub. at 9.00. be NOW 3.98 P LETTERS OF THE BROWNINGS C toGeorge Barrett. Elizabeth's T brother and an intimate friend o !+ of the Brownings over a period b' of '50 years. Pub. at 6.50. si NOW 3.75 Pt MODERN ART in the to Great Art and art of the C World Series. With 55 o short biographies a n c 3 hundreds of illustrations Very handy as a refer- T ence. Pub. at 12.95. B NOW 5.95 si i1I Also in this Series: ti FLEMISH AND DUTCH t ART GERMAN AND SPANISH H ART TO 1900 Io FRENCH ART from 1350 to 1850 T IRITISH AND NORTH B AMERICAN ART TELLIAMED or Conversations between an Indian Philosopher and a French Missionary on the Diminution of the Sea. ed. by A. Carozzi. Pub. at 10.00. NOW 5.00 NAPOLEON AND THE BIRTH OF MODERN SPAIN. 2 vol- umes. by Gabriel Lovett. Anal- ysis of Spain's resistance to Na- l~poleon that caused Napoleor to keep needed troops in Spain. Published at 20.00. NOW 8.95 FAR EASTERN COOKING. By 50' Nina Froud. Hundreds of re- cipes and numerous full-page illustrations. 3.95 Visit our Booth 518 E OEN 10 AM flLLIAM MORRIS AS DE- OPPENHEIMER. R. Serber et GNER. by Ray Watkinson. al. Pub. at 5.95. NOW 1.00 apestries, furniture, stained DEAR BERTRAND RUSSELL: lass. Morris did everything Selected correspondence with '1 etter than anyone. Color illus. the Public. Pub. at 5.95. ub. at 15.00 NOW 5.95 NOW 1.00j omplete Poetry of JOHN MIL- COLLECTED STORIES OF PET- ON. Arranged in chronological ER TAYLOR. 21 of Taylor's rder, with notes and variants stories written over the last y John Shawcross. Fine fac- quarter century. Pub. at 10.00.f mile of 13 steel engravings NOW 1.00 '4 ub. at $7.50. NOW 2.98 BERNARD BUFFET: LITHO-1 VORLD TAPESTRY. Madeline GRAPHS 1952-1966. Pref. by, arry. Cover the panorama of Georges Simenon. Compiled by pestry from Egyptian, Pre- Fernand Mourlot. Catalogue olumbian, to the Middle Ages raisonne and 66 color litho- . nd the Renaissance. Pub. at graphs (plus 11 drawn speci- 0.00. NOW 16.95 ally for this limited edition) . l His famous Paris and New York he TWENTIETH CENTURY scenes, portraits and still lifes OOK: its illustration and de- are reproduced in the original ' gn. by John Lewis. Over 460 colors, with all of his uncom- lus. of title pages, illustra- promising intensity and grace- ons. 30 in color. A must for ful delicate geometrism. 9 4"x nyone who collects 20th Cen- 12' " slip-cased. Pub. at .. . ury books. Pub. at 25.00. $37.50. SALE 14.95 C NOW 14.95 BAROQUE & ROCOCO. By ISTORY AS MYTH. W. Tay- SACHEVERELL SITWELL. $ r Stevenson. Pub. at 6.95. CAPTURES WITH VERVE THE uSI NOW 1.00 SPIRIT OF THE ROCOCO AS DISPLAYED IN CHURCHES, HEATRE AT WORK: Play- PAINTING, SCULPTURE, and rights and Productions in the FURNITURE. 96 ILLUS., 16 IN '1 ritish Theatre. Pub, at 5.00 COLOR. NOW 1.00 Pub. at $12.95. NOW $3.95 DRAWINGS OF THE MASTERS SERIES Published at 5.95: NOW ONLY 1.98 FRENCH DRAWINGS: 15th thru Gericault FRENCH IMPRESSIONISTS: French 19th Century GERMAN DRAWINGS: 16th Century to Expressionists PERSIAN DRAWINGS: 14th thru 19th Century FLEMISH AND DUTCH DRAWINGS: 15th to 18th Century JAPANESE DRAWINGS: 17th thru 19th Century AMERICAN DRAWINGS: Modern 20th CENTURY DRAWINGS: Part I 20th CENTURY DRAWINGS: Part II Each of these books contains over 100 illustrations, many in color, and come in a slip case at the Women's City Club Antique Show William 668-7653 TO 10P.M.MONDAY-SATURDAY L ".a..g. .. .. .. .. a. a. a ., a, o. a. 0. . " 4± 4± .iM 4! .4' . WASHINGTON IP) - An American Bar Association ABA committee recommends that po- lice departments make fewer arrests and hire legal advisers to help share law-enforcement policy. The committee in a report re- leased yesterday endorses col- lective bargaining by police but not the right to strike. Compul- sory arbitration is suggested as an alternative to striking. "The assumption that the use of an arrest and the criminal process is the primary or even the exclusive method available to police should be recognized as causing unnecessary distortion of both the criminal law and the system of criminal justice," says the 12-member panel's report to the ABA. The panel's report calls for an "in-house" legal adviser, pos- sibly a young lawyer, who would help develop the department's position in such areas as hand- ling drunks and drug addicts, in- tervening in domestic quarrels H UMAN RIGH TS PARTY BENEFIT -only advance ticket sales help us- - "ON E DAY IN THE LIFE OF IVAN DENISOVICH'' Thursday, May 18th at the Fifth Forum 7 and 9 p.m. $2.00 advance tickets for either show at: Centicore on S. University On the Diag Discount Records Interfaith Council-for Peace McGovern for Pres. H.Q. Chisholm for Pres. H.Q. HRP Office, 304 S. Thayer 761-6650 NOTE: The pot-luck dinner- discussion on "National Poli- tics" will be Sat. at 6 p.m.-- HRP Office. or landlord-tenant disputes, and controlling demonstrations. Some 75 police departments currently have advisors, and the ABA committee, headed by Prof. Frank Remington of the Univer- sity of Wisconsin, says the need for expansion is urgent. In proposing collective bar- gaining, the committee says policemen have a right to imple- ment their interests in s u c h aspects of their jobs as wages, hours, pensions and fringe bene- fits, but "due to the critical na- ture of the police function with- in government, there should be no right to strike.'' The committee also recom- mends against formation of'a na- tional policeman's union, stat- ing that law enforcement must be locally controlled. As for the role of police, the committee says only a sma'l percentage of an officer's work involves situations in which an arrest is sensible. Most of the time he is dealing with a per- son's troubles, such as drunken- ness, or with nuisances, family fights, rallies and parades. Therefore, the committee re- commends legislators should give policemen limited but clear au- thority to deal with the variety of problems they confront - without making the probiem, it- self, a crime. This would include power to remove drunks from the stree, to disperse crowds and to com- bat self-destructive conduct by the mentally ill and those in- capacitated by alcohol or drugs, all without making arrests. COPIES 3c 3 to 100 of each original 101 to200-2c * Top quality bond copies * Two machines-no waiting SPEED-A-PRINT 619 E. William at State 44 ONCE UPON PRESENTED BY Ann Arbor Civic Theatre May 17, 18, 19, 20; and May 21 motinee and evening Mendelssohn Theatre A MUSICAL COMEDY BA>ED ON THE FAIRY ALE "THE PRINCESS AND THE.PEA" Directed and choreographed hy John Reid Klein Tickets available at Mendelssohn Box Office 7 -+- -+- -+- -+- -+, -+, A+, T, A% Al-% A1% M-.-, r.T.s e.% eMs e.T., e.7;% 6T; GTZ d,'I ~e ~ - U K. ~ IG1ICIt~ll..