TRY OUR STYLING 24 HOUR SERVICE OUR FALLS ARE GREAT 14-25 inches long STARTING AT $39.00 La Viva Wig Salon 109 E. LIBERTY Phone 761-0642 page three ( P ti1 NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Sunday, January 18, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three 11 ' .the newS today by The Associated Press and College Press Service THE THREAT of guerrilla warfare in Nigeria faded as vanquished soldiers of Biafra turned in their guns for food. Lt. Col. Philip Effiong, the last leader of the former Biafran state, said there would be no resistance to reuniting with Nigeria. Officials asked Ibos to trust other Nigerians and other Nigerians to embrace Ibos. State authorities moved to return jobs to Ibo civil servants. Meanwhile, a four nation international observer team went back to the front yesterday, after reporting Friday it had found no evidence of misconduct. U.N. Secretary-General U Thant arrives today for talks with Nigerian head of state, Maj. Gen. Yaubu Gowon. CONGRESS RETURNS tomorrow to start an election-year session and faces immediate confrontation with President Nixon over federal spending in education programs.... Nixon has threatened to veto a $19.7-billion appropriations bill passed in the House last session for the Department of Health, Educa- tion, and Welfare and Department of Labor. Senate passage of the bill is expected this week. The promised veto and an attempt by the Democratic-controlled Congress to override it will mark the start of a session-long struggle between Congress and the White House leading up to the November congressional elections. Crime, welfare reform, farm legislation, electoral reform, voting rights, and postal reform are other major items on the agenda. FEDERAL INDIAN POLICY is in need of a total revamping, a Senate-House Economic subcommittee reported yesterday. Government paternalism, show-piece programs,confinement to the reservation, assimilation in mainstream society all have had one thing in common the subcommittee reported: they have not worked. According to statistics available, the Indian's life is relatively short, his infants are more likely to die, his own bad health contri- butes to his unemployability, and suicide and suicide attempts are a major concern of the Indian Health Agency. The Indian unemployment rate is an average 50 per cent, soaring to 80 per cent on some reservations. Average family income is put at $1,500 a year. U.S.-CHINESE AMBASSADORIAL TALKS will reopen in Warsaw on Tuesday after a two-year lapse. Secretary of State WilliamP. Rogers said yesterday that he hoped the talks will Lead to an easing of tensions and deals for exchange of visitors and trade. "We have been in what has been described as a cold war period for about 25 years, and I believe we are leaving that period," he said. Rogers said it has been made clear to both Peking and Moscow that the United States intends to go ahead with discussions with both, with the aim of improving U.S. relations with each and not with the idea of causing trouble between them. * * * THE GOVERNMENT announced it will tell the nation's 43 commercial airlines they must end pollution of the skies with jet-engine smoke by 1972. The Department of Health, Education, and Welfare estimates .all existing Boeing 727, Boeing 737 and Douglas DC9 jetliners can be converted to smoke-free operation at a cost of $3.5 million by that. date. The airline industry, however, says it will take until 1974 and will cost $30 million. PRESENTS ichigras, (April, 1970) PETITION NOW FOR CENTRAL COMMITTEE ( No UAC Experience Necessary)' . CARN IVAL-booths, rides, promotions * CO-ORDINATING ARTIST. 1 AWARDS and JUDGES " PUBLICITY-PROMOTIONS * ENTERTAINMENT * TICKETS and USHERS ! SPECIAL EVENTS * SECRETARIES * TREASURER PETITIONS AVAILABLE IN UAC OFFICE 2nd FLOOR, MICHIGAN UNION 763-1107-763-1256 PETITIONS ARE DUE WED., JAN 21 -Associated Press Modern Gold Rush Crowds jam the street outside a New York City office building, hoping millionaire James Brody Jr. is inside and that he will want to share his fortune with them. Brody, 21-year-old heir to an oleo- margarine fortune, had promised the world he would give away $25 million. Last week he report- edly gave $100 bills to Harlem children, and $2,504 to a man with mortgage problems, among others. At last report, however, Brody had left the country._ PRiVATE SCHOOLS: sla dea SC 00 S C .VOI eS r R 1011 Agnew returns JACKSON, Miss. (A') - Two for immediate desegregation of 30 weeks of intensified school deseg- regation in Mississippi have pro- duced this general pattern: ac- ceptance by whites where they are the majority and mass pullouts by whites where they are not. Integration, where it took place, was peaceful. Reluctant whites apparently accepted Gov. J o h n Bell Williams' advice to "make the best of a bad situation." One U.S. Justice Department of- ficial said that, over-all whites had taken "pretty well" the U.S. Supreme Court's order, .put into effect during the past two weeks, Mississippi school districts. But in at least five districts the order has only produced a new kind of segregation. Canton public schools wound up with 99-per cent-plus black en- rollment as whites fled to a new- ly ,formed private academy to avoid a 3-1 black majority. In rural Wilkinson County, on- ly two of the district's 799 white students enrolled in public schools where 2,757 blacks attend. The two were there, their father said, because he could n o t afford to send them to a private school. Four of Kemper County's five I. ""' LI UNION-LEAGUE Proposal demands increase lin minority-group admissions BR H (Continued from Page 1) Marcus added that "The facul- ty has been negligent and delin- quent in terms of assuming its responsibility for catalyzing Uni- versity change in the area of minority affairs." In addition Marcus emphasized that the expanded admissions pro- gram must not be at the expense of blacks. "The University might try to play minority against minority, and we definitely don't want this," says Bernardo Euereste, a CAM organizer. "If there are currently 200 scholarship places open, for instance, we don't want to reduce the number of blacks taking those places, but rather to extend the number of scholarships available." BSU member Walter Lewis says he recognizes that the University might pit the blacks against the Chicanos, but believes "that we will be able to work together." BSU Executive Secretary Henry Ber- nard Clay also issued a statement saying that the admissions pro- posal was vital and that "The BSU supports the admission of all op- pressed groups." Also included in the strategy to improve the condition of minority students will be a drive to involve all student groups in the issue of minority admissions. schools wound up all-black as all but 53 of the system's 793 whites abandoned the public system. Amite County officials felt a system segregated by sex would help ease the transition by shel, tering females from males of a different race, but only 166 of the county's 1,461 whites reported for classes. Noxubee county 'officials faced a two-pronged problem - neither whites nor blacks wanted to go to public schools. Fewer than half the county's 872 white pupils accepted inte- gration in the system where blacks hold better than a 4-1 majority. Blacks boycotted the system al- most entirely in protest of a de- segregation plan they said did not go far enough. For those who could not accept integration in any form, it meant dipping into their pockets to send their children to the estimated 100 "instant" private schools that appeared following the court or- der. Most districts fell somewhere in between the extremes. Justice De- partment figures indicated the white exbdus over-all was 1 e s s than expected. Enrollment figures showed attendance at about 80 per cent of the preintegration fig- ure, but the count did not take into consideration normal absence teeism. Exceptions to the pattern came at areas where adult leaders in the communities organized either to support public schools or f o r m private ones. One such was Yazoo C i t y, a town of 13,000 which borders the heavily black Delta region. Whites there held numerous town meet- ings to express support for public schools, and their efforts proved successful. Five more Mississippi districts are under order to open under to- tal integration by Feb. 1, includ- ing the Jackson municipal dis- trict, the state's largest with more than 40,000 pupils. from A. sia U.S. determined .not to 'bail out' small countries HONOLULU ( - Vice Pre- ' sident Spiro T. Agnew, head- ing homeward from his Asia- Pacific tour, said yesterday the United States is determin- ed to avoid being called on "to bail out" small countries when there are flareups with- in their borders. He said he thinks he succeeded in making Asian leaders under- stand and accept that aspect and the rest of President Nixon's poli- cy, which stresses regional coopera. tion in defense. Agnew said Asian leaders made it clear to him they want "a con- tinuing U.S. presence in the Paci- fic" and he declared he doubts "there will be any appreciable diminution of American ability to maintain its commitments." Agnew agreed with the propo- sition thatthere are "great simi- larities" between the Nixon ad- ministration's desire to avoid in- volvement in the internal difficul- ties of Asian countries and the position of many U.S. senators who fear another Vietnam-type-In- volvement. He called most of the dispute between the Senate and administration "merely political differences." The highlight of his trip, Ag- new said, was "a personal impres- sion of Vietnam and to see how good the morale is there, and seeing how well the members of the Vietnamese government are getting along, not only with each other but how well they are get- ting along with their efforts to improve the pacification program and secure better communications with the villages and hamlets." He said he is returning from Vietnam "very much more op- timistic than when I left." But he added that "nearly every leader irho ever returned from Vietnam was more optimistic than the si- tuation justified him to be, so I'm very cautious about my optimism." Asked whether his optimism meant U.S. troop withdrawals could continue at the present pace or possibly accelerate, Agnew said: "I don't think we should even 'continue to discuss the rate of withdrawals." He is sympathetic, he said, to a view expressed to him by Prime Minister Lee Iuan Yew of Sing- Spore. that "it is playing into the- hands of the enemy to forecast for him exactly what's going to happen and when it's going to happen." Agnew said that maintaining U.S. commitments, a point he stressed at every stop on his tour, is consistent with prior U.S. policy but that the Nixon doctrine differs In "the general stimulation of re- gional cooperation." He hedged on the possibility of future U.S. military assistance to the five-power arrangement in- volving Britain, Australia, New zealand, Malaysia and Singapore that is being developed to fill the void left by the British with- drawal from Southeast Asia next year. "I don't think we can specifical- ly expect any military involvement in that situation at the moment," he said. ' The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University, of Michigan, News phone: 764-0552. SecAon lass postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mic- igan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published dily 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: $3.00 by carrier. $3.00 by mail. Is JOIN THE DAILY SPORTS STAFF V " "' / CO I GI BRING US UP TO DATE "Hopefully student groups will try to engender the interests of the white students to completely sup- port the demands of the black and Chicano groups on campus to increase admissions for the min- ority students," says Marcus. "The vast majority of students will not tolerate token responses of t h i s elitist and racist institution." "The University shouldn't take the stand of an apologist," he adds, "but it should aggressively pursue the problem." U. Come In Any Afternoon 420 MAYNARD Single Shows Now on Sale ! SENATOR ABRAHAM RIBICOFF THE UNIVERSITY ______ LAST 3 DAYS "FANNY HILL1" staorts Wednesday OF MICHIGAN ___ PROFESSIONAL THEATRE PROGRAM * Liberal Senator from Connecticut * Former Governor of Connecticut IS t 1 111iZ Impassioned and impressive! Signals perhaps a new boldness in American cinema! Extraordinary!" -Timt NOW 4TH WEEK dames Bond iiiback! j * Nominated Sen. McGovern, 1968 Democratic Convention * Former Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare JANUARY 26- 31 I. aer. leali. remiere-Is FEBRUARY 2 -14 " Authored 1967 Highway Safety Act iOS TRIANA'S r i HELEN JAMES HAYES STE WART Tickets on Sale at Union, Fishbowl, and Door i ' "I stronglyrecommend 'Me- dium Cool.' Needless to say, - .. . .....------. (. Pcrtmw* P ure prarts i i Paranocxrt PKCures txaents i ':