0 4 **i ' & 0 I 4 0 #; F Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, July 1,8, 1970 Saturday, July 18' 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY LAST DAYS! DON'T MISS IT! II "'AIR PORT' is a great film all the way!" -Chicago Daily Nays A ROSS HUNTER Production BURT LANCASTER 'DEAN MARTIN JEAN SEBERG JACQUELINE BISSET - GEORGE KENNEDY IELEN HAYES - VAN HEFLIN - MAUREEN STAPLETON 3ARRY NELSON - LLOYD NOLAN A- Pdcrn 70MM 100 DANA WYNTER - BARBARA HALE DIAL t1:05-3.45 5-6290 Id6:0-9:05 Join The Daily Today! SATURDAY and SUNDAY MATINEES WEEKEND CLASSICS each weekend tht Fifth Forum brings back a fine film for those who missed it the first time or wish to see i again. "TRUFFAUT IS SPECIAL AND ONE OF THE FEW DIRECTORS WHO MAKES S I M P L E, PERSONAL, GREAT FILMS. THE BRIDE WORE BLACK' IS SO CAREFULLY AND PER- FECTFULLY MADE, SO ALIVE THAT ONE KEEPS BEING SUR- PRISED AT EVERY STEP. THE MOVIE IS A SUSPENSE AND } HORROR FILM IN WHICH JEANNE MOREAUNMURDERS A NUMBER OF GENTLEMEN. EVERY ONE OF THEM IS A GEM OF CHARACTERIZA- OSARLEENTE fr OOE~t IL ' T ION." --N.Y. Times . EUONLY $1.50 Sat., Sun.-1 :45, 3:30 not continuous with " "Female Animal" FRANCOIS TRUFFAUT Fo H ou FRANCOS IRUFAUT PTH AVENUS AT LIBERTY A<7apfh-? n I: ,p. ,by OWNTOWN AN As fRMCvo, I^ d ~4 oUSRICHARD INUU FORMATIO a 5-fl7~D COLOR by0eluxe :"urORPORAfION NEXT WEEKEND "All Around The Mulberry Bush" thurmond hits Nixon. s school policy WASHINGTON i - S e n. Strom Thurmond, (R-S.C. yesterday attacked Nixon ad- ministration school desegrega- tion policies. He said President Nixon has allowed himself to be misled by liberal advisers, and declared that Nixon rx a y face defeat in 1972 if he does not reverse course. IThurmond, widely credited with helping Nixon win his party's 1968 nomination and getting him Southern votes, denounced major administration decisions on desegregation policy which he said "cast grave doubt upon the Nixon administration's commitment to treat all sec- tions of the country with an even hand." 1OURB PRESENTS PETER BOWEN and MIKE SMITH 'the rights and loves of man brought home to us all on voice and guitar' TONIGHT AND TOMORROW 8 P.M. $1.50 per Subscribe to The Michigan Daily By. The Associated Press EGYPT AND THE SOVIET UNION wound up 19 days of top level talks yesterday with a communique which blamed the Middle East crisis on "unceasing armed attacks" by Israel, but ignored a U.S. proposal for a new peace approach. Issued a few hours after President Gamal Abdel Nasser left the Soviet Union for home, the communique described the situation in the Middle East as "very dangerous." It said Egypt and the Soviet Union would strengthen their cooperation in the political, economic and defense fields. * * * THE JUSTICE DEPARTMENT, beginning what it said will be a full and vigorous defense of the 18-year-old voting age law, filed its initial response Friday in a suit calculated to bring a swift Supreme Court ruling on the new Voting Rights Act. Justice Department sources said they hope the case will be ready for the high court when it opens its fall term Oct. 5. BRITAIN'S MAJOR DOCKS stood idle and nearly deserted yesterday, the second day of a nationwide longshoremen's strike, but troops were on alert-ready to go into action this-weekend to move vital cargo. There appeared to be little'progress in the government's intensive efforts to 47,000 striking longshoremen and management back to work. * * * THE UNITED AUTO WORKERS (UAW) opened new con- tract bargaining with Chrysler Corp. yesterday and told the na- tion's No. 3 automaker they wanted the firm to support a UAW plan for a national health insurance program. The proposed plan would be supported by a 2.2 per cent federal tax on corporations' gross payrolls and a 1.8 per cent levy on individ- ual's pay. - - - - - - - --___ ___ --i- Regents adopt low-cost housing Board appoints Sussrnan LSA' acting dean - By ROB BIER Alfred Sussman was named by the Regents yesterday to serve as acting dean of the literary college for the com- ing year. He will serve until a permanent dean is selected for the college sometime next year. Dean William Hays announced in May that he would leave the post and departed on July 1 for a year's sabbatical at the University of California at Santa Bar- bara. Upon his return, Hays will become associate vice president for academic de- velopment. Since Hays' departure, Sussman has been informally handling the dean's duties. He has been an associate dean of the college for the past two years, and served as chairman of the botany de- partment from 1963 to 1968. His appoint- ment is effective immediately. Richard Kennedy was named to take over as secretary to the Regents and assistant to the president, succeeding Her- bert Hildebrandt who has held the post since 1966. Kennedy, currently director of state and community relations, will take over on Aug. 1, while Hildebrandt will return to teaching. The Regents also approved the ap- pointment of Robert Vinter as acting dean of the school of social work. Vinter will take over the post on Aug. 1 when the present dean, Fedele Fauri, becomes vice president for state relations and plan- ning, filling the post left vicant by the death of Arthur Ross. Vinter came to the University in 1954 and became a full professor in 1961. He has been an associate dean of the school since 1964. Three center directors were also ap- pointed by the Regents. They are Prof. Elliot Berg as director of the Center for Research on Economic Development, Prof. James Doi as director of the Center for the Study of Higher Education, and Prof. Kenneth Luther as director of the Center for Near Eastern and North African Stu- dies. Prof. James Richards was named as- sitant dean of the pharmacy school. He joined the faculty in 1959 and became an associate professor in 1965. -Associated Press NATIONAL GUARD CHIEF WINSTON WILSON, center, faces members of the President's Commission on Campus Unrest yesterday and defended the actions of guardsmen during demonstrations. He is accompanied by Dr. Theodore Marrs, assistant Secretary of Defense, left, Lt. Col. James Elliot of the National Guard and a number of articles which he said had been used against his men during demonstrations. Scranton says panel '1to tell i't like it is' Heavy Duty Steering and Suspension Parts " BALL JOINTS " IDLER ARMS " TIE ROD ENDS The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor. Mich- tgan, 420 Maynard St.. Ann Arbor. Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier, $10 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5. by carrier, $5 by mail. FREE INSTRUCTIONS BILLIARDS 2-4 P.M. SUNDAY Michigan Union NOW SHOWING NCTHEATRE CORPORATION A NA TIONAL GENERAL COMPANY FOX VILLI6E 375 No. MAPLE RD.-7694300 MON.-FRI. 8:15 ONLY SATURDAY-SUNDAY 1:45-5:00-8:30 WASHINGTON (UP) - The President's Commission on Campus Unrest ended its first week of hearings Friday with its chairman saying the commission "is going to tell it like it is." William Scranton said the panel will not back away from any recommendation it thinks applies to the campus issues, in- cluding the possibility of telling Vice President Spiro Agnew to "lower his voice" or suggesting ways to end the Vietnam war. POPULAR PRICES! DIRECT FROM ITS SENSATIONAL RESERVED SEAT ENGAGEMENT AT E NOW SHOWING!! NOTE SPECIAL SHOW TIMES 2-5 AND 8 P.M. ONLY ... Nothing hasbeen left out of "The Adventurers" . } "But until the commission finishes its work, I shouldn't be telling anybody how to behave," Scranton said. Scranton, former governor of Penn- sylvania and several other commissioners criticized the testimony of National Guard Chief Winston Wilson, who generally sidestepped questions over the Kent State University tragedy in which four students were slain. Wilson said yesterday that guardsmen were justified in carrying loaded wea- pons in the May confrontation at Kent State University. "but I don't know if the order was given to open fire." Wilson said guardsmen have a right "to protect their own lives" in a mob scene. He brought along a bagful of rocks and ballbats which he said had been used against his men in demonstrations. Commissioner Revius Ortique, former president of the National Bar Association. called the exhibit "an insult to the in- telligence of' this commission," "The fact that a rock was hurled is not sufficient evidence for having people ex- ecuted," he said. Scranton added that "When Wilson got down to the nitty-gritty he was not re- sponsive." Commissioner Joseph Rhodes Jr. noted the morning testimony of Harvard Presi- dent Nathan Pusey, who said that stu- dents "denigrate the role of reason and sometimes show contempt for reason." Rhodes, a graduate student at Harvard and the only student member of the com- mission, said "I was concerned that he did not seem to be attuned to some things happening on campus." Granville Sawyer, president of Texas Southern University, told the commission that predominantly black campuses face all the same issues which provoke unrest at white schools, plus added difficulties "directly related to matters of race." Harold Sponberg, president of Eastern Michigan University, said that student concern over the war and military service "is readily understandable," but added "we must not be so naive as to believe that withdrawal from Southeast Asia will eliminate campus unrest." "We have seen too frequently that the concession or agreement on one demand merely leads to another," he said. ANl 25-a Caii I The first s ing for Unive made by the tentative app acre site on N er. The develo Credit Union mittee, will b and will repr sity Hospital Employes cr sity Cooperat Glacier Way The Housir 600-unit hous ing and Urbai which provide for low and Occupancy w of those grou ing Committe Several of I they would lik sale in more aproval. "I want to private housi not be in," $1 lander D-Bir Regent Law bridge) said, see an outsid to take over willing to let t tors." He ask line which re approval. "It's a ques egg, said B president for s deadline as fa eral governme is a need for1 started until It was final information o immediately ti study. If none placed on the two weeks afte approval will Se con WASHINGT of both partie terday against tional capital ponents conte tional rights. The anti-cri trict of Colurr sage of any o: control bills 1 been prodding more than a y A distilatior by both cham House two day a score of senr block its pass They are fig permit pre-tri if judges find endanger the would allow p warrants to r protect their destruction of Opponents a that would re sentence for a crime of violer would lower f: which juvenile forcible rape, a gree burglary r a t N Af A PARAMOL 1T PC$M JOSEPH E. LEVINE PRESENTS THE LEWIS GILBERT FILM THE ADVENTURERS _ Based oa the Novel ThE ADVENTURERS" by HAROLD ROBBINS CHARLES AZNAVOUR - ALAN BADEL - CANDICE BERGEN THOMMY BERGGREN - DELIA BOCCARDO - ERNEST BORGNINE ROSSANO BRAZZI- OLIVIA do HAVILLAND-BEKIM FEHMIU - ANNA MOPPO - LEIGH TAYLOR-YOUNG PAruvG'or* MIGASTWJSandLEWN1SGUER0T jL EWNGBERT 'I ANT OSao1Um jA PMn&mT 20th Century-Fox Presents '__- A, (--n~.1 bG e'. S P.11- As C(,tcr .10,',. y O yN B r AFRANK~cAITHYORNU1SHAF PRODUCTION.FRAIIII cCATNY*"FRNKUtNJiCNAITNER FRANCIS FORD CIPPOLA & EMUND N. ORTh .PATTONORDEAL AND TREIU" ADISLAS FAAGO . A SOLDIER'S STORY"".OMAR NMIADLEY " JERRY 1GOLDSMITH -COLOR IDELUXE"P C -Associated Press The Spiro and Arnie Show Vice President Spiro Agnew gets a few pointers from golf pro, Arnold Palmer, right, during a taping of the NBC-TV program "The Tonight Show." Palmer was guest host on the show whkct was scheduled to be broadcast last night.