Tuesday, November 26, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Tuesday, November 26, 'I 968 THE MlCHlGAI~4 DAILY Page Three PRIZE OF CRUDE OIL: Soviet Union bids for influence the news today ley; The Assoc ia/ed V;(,, til ICullr P c Pu Sicc in Nigeria By ARNOLD ZEITLIN KwameT LAGOS, Nigeria P) - Back- ianTcup ing up its military aid with of- minder fers of postwar economic help, ago, you the Soviet Union is bidding to Soviet-b become a major influence in ers mad tack on Nigerian affairs. ing strip The prize is alluring. Nigeria, iala. Th with more than 50 million peo- occasion ple, is by far Africa's most pop- against1 ulous land. Extricated from a lift; the draining civil war, it could pro- "Behin duce a buoyant economy float- the Sovi ing on crude oil. apprecia Nigeria's ports provide a ha- ness tod ven for Soviet vessels forced to done," reach the Far East around Af- Nigeria's rica because the Suez Canal is ternal a closed. It could be the West Af- His re rican base of operations the So- obvious. viet Union lost when its for- refuseda tunes fell with President tling ins with military supplies Nkrumah in the Ghana- of February 1966. war is an insistent re- of Soviet aid. A week ung Nigerians in o 1 d, uilt MIG 17 jet fight- .e their first pight at- Biafra's lifeline land- p between Uli and Ih- .e Nigerians hailed the as a great victory the Biafran arms air- e Soviets basked. nd our attitude toward et Union is a feeling of ation for this willing- do what others have not said Dr. Okei Arikpo, s commissioner for ex- ffairs, ference was oblique but The Americans have arms aid to Nigeria, set-, stead for $15 million for civilian relief work. The Brit- ish obliged only after the Rus- sians produced 16 MIGS for Nigeria in July, 1967. From his office overlooking Lagos harbor, Arikpo could see the Soviet freighter Pula,. car- rying vehicles for the military. The Soviet Union, a country whose propaganda once was barred by law from Nigeria, has come a long way in a short time. Arikpo, who visited Moscow in July, says: "I think now people feel genuine friendship for the Russians. Of course, we have no desire to change our system." Besides planes and vehicles the Russians have provided bombs and more than 200 technicians. Credit to buy more war mater- ial was supposedly a subject of discussion with the economic delegation. Nigeria's foreign currentcy reserves are virtually depleted. Since 1965 the Soviets have had a standing loan offer of about $56 million for a steel mill. Relations between the Rus- sians and the Nigerians reflect some wariness, but business be- twhen Nigeria and Russia is up. 3020 Washtenow, Ph. 434-1782 between Ypsilanti & Ann Arbor - rp RfNfWmrTEETW 4"TlU IEOCAN SINANN NEFNNIENI "AN ICE-COLD WARNING OF INSIDIOUS YOUNG EVIL TRIUMPHANT...,, EMPHATICALLY JOLTING!" - Howard Thompson, N. Y. Tim "POWERF:UL! IT SHOULD PROBABLY BE LIMITED TO A MATURE, SERIOUS-MINDED AUDIENCE!" -ArcherWinsfen, N. Y. Yos "SHOCKING! A VIOLENT AND ADMITTEDLY SHOCKING FILM;WE GO BEYOND HOMOSEXUALITY INTO I PERVERSION AND SADISM!" - Judith Crid, Heald tribune ABOUTTHE 49r- I r Trade soared sevenfold to more than $14 million between 1966 and 1967 - the balance shifting from $700,000 in favor of Russia to a nearly $8.4 mil- lion surplus for Nigeria a year later. The difference was in $11.2 million in cocoa beans Russia bought in 1967. The year before they had bought not a bean, partly because they still were committeed to buy from Ghana. The Soviet Union backs a monthly magazine edited by a Nigerian awarded a Lenin Peace Prize in 1966. Nigeriati newspapers are running more photos purchased from Russian agencies. Aeroflot, the Soviet airline, is expected to start a Lagos-Mos- cow route. From its experience with a Moscow-Accra run, the weekly plane is more likely to produce prestige than profit. However, 75' students on Rus- sian scholarships were flown to the Soviet Union to begin stud- ies in August. They joined about 700 other Nigerians at school there. Not all improve with Russian education. Officials at Lagos University Teaching ,Hospital said only one was qualified out of six medical students return- ing from Russia to do their in- ternship. In general, ideology appears to play a small role in Soviet- Nigerian relations. Russians tend to be aghast at African ideas of socialism. Half the Ni- gerians profess Islam and most yearn for a chance to be capi- talists. They are suspicious of communism. The Soviet Union's main riv- als for influence in Nigeriasthe British and the Americans, voice unconcern over the Rus- sian intrusion. "I think it might be a good idea if the RussiansI spent a little of their money here," said an American diplo- mat. But the Soviet activity embar- rasses Britain's Labor govern- ment, which has justified its supply of arms to the federal government on the basis that this would keep out the Rus- sians and would enable Britain to maintain its influence with the Nigerians. i 0B ONE UNDER 16 YARS of AG WILL DE ADMTTED drected by igot Soman "* oueenplay by Lars GortinL "hoed in association with P0murcorn-Wormser, Inc. " prints by Moveab LAST 2 DAYS 7:00 & 9:00 l & PFWE!' COLOR by Delxe ninadatists L . FEIE IAMBR -Associated Press i Treasury Secretary Henry Fowler UJ.S. stalls call for inoney conference BRUSSELS PiV - The United' Johnson would not want to be States and France are fighting a ' blamed for even a slight devalua- quiet battle over whether to hold tion. If and w h e n the United a major international conference States disengages from Vietnam, that would revise the values of the the dollar is expected to grow world's currencies for t h e first stronger, and maybe no devalua- time in almost a quarter of, a cen- tion would be needed. tury. Sone experts say eagerness to T h e purpose of a conference delay a conference may have been would be to halt the crises that a major reason for Johnson's have b e e n shaking the world's strong pledge of support to France Imoney markets every few months, after the decision not to devalue Henry H. Fowler, U.S. secretary the franc. If the French decision of the Treasury, has come out is a failure and a new crisis blows strongly against a conference. He' saysngynaroingst h nesituaions Hup in the next few weeks, it might says improving t h e situations make a conference inevitable. should be an "evolutionary pro- cess." President Charles de Gaulle has President Johnson's administra- long urged a conference. Foreign tion, with less than two months Minister Michel Debre has asked to go. does not want to get into for one repeatedly over the past an enterprise of this kind or to year. commit President-elect Richard Some experts think t h a t De M. Nixon. A conference now could Gaulle in refusing to devalue the bring an increase in the price of franc was determined to show that gold and a decrease in the value if support from other countries of the dollar - though probably failed to save it, the international only a small one. monetary system would be in such disarray that only a major con- ference could settle matters and give world business the peace it needs. IIUlm o? ii "THE TWO OF US"-begins Thursday ............. .o i THE CZECH GOVERNMENT yesterday announced new restrictions on private travel to the West by Czech- oslovakians. Deputy Interior Minister Jaraslav Rybar said such trips to the West would be judged against "state interest" and for- bidden if they were for employment or study or if the traveler indicated he intended to stay abroad with permission. Although Ryber called the restrictions temporary, they virtually end the relatively unrestricted travel td the West Czechs had enjoyed last year. Ryber said trips abroad were possible, but the traveler must get the approval of his em- ployer and must have a certificate from the state bank ver- ifying foreign currency to finance the trip. EGYPTIAN PROTESTERS threw the city of Alexan- dria into turmoil yesterday during an outburst of rioting. Thousands of students and workers from the university area spilled into the city's main squares and thoroughfares where demonstrators attacked streetcars, smashed shop win- dows and hurled stones at police cars. Travelers returning from Egypt said several persons perished in the riot and scores were injured. The demonstrations began Thursday in the Nile River delta town of Mansoura when students demanded a loosening of new university regulations. The outbursts took on political overtones however, when workers and non-students joined the protests, demanding political liberties, freedom of ex- pression and an end to press censorship. Some Egyptian sources said non-student elements par- ticipating in the demonstrations were probably members of the outlawed Moslem Brotherhood and former wealthy land- owners whose property has been confiscated by Nasser's re- gime. ITALIAN POLITICIANS yesterday moved closer to establishing a new center-left majority government. After the Socialist Party gave one of its members a man- date to find out if a majority coalition could be set up, the center-left Christian Democrats gave a vote of confidence to their leader, Mariane Rumor, the probable choice for pre- mier of the new government. Italy has had no government since Giovanni Leone resigned last Tuesday as president. The Christian Democrats also issued a communique say- ing it was ready to join in a coalition which "should be form- ed without delay." The Socialists, however, are not expected to decide until today if they will return to the center-left. * . . THE WARSAW PACT MEMBERS open their annual meeting today in Bucharest, Rumania. The news agency Agerpress reported the main topic of this year's talks will be an analysis of the "problems of com- bat readiness." Soviet Marshall Ivan Yakuoovsky, supreme commander of pact forces will preside over the meeting which includes representatives from the Soviet Union, Bulgaria, Czechoslo- vakia, Poland and Rumania. Albania was a member, but re- cently dropped out of the organization. ANTI-GOVERNMENT demonstrations rocked Pak- istan yesterday, aiming heavy criticism at President Ayub Khan. Opposition parties earlier had called for a national day of protest mainly to demand political reforms and condemn the arrests of opposition leaders. Demonstrations subsequent- ly were reported in at l'east 19 cities where supporters of the opposition, the Pakistan Democratic Movement, paraded and shouted anti-government slogans. More than 5,000 persons paraded in Lahore in one of the largest public processions since Pakistan's independence in 1947. During the demonstrations there students set two buses on fire and smashed the windows of more than 50 others. HOPES OF RESCUING t h e 78 trapped miners in Manninston, W. Va., were severely crippled yesterday af- ter another mine explosion. A small blast, the 13th in five days to rock the Mountain- err Coal Co. mines hampered rescue workers from going into the shafts and indicated the heart of the mine is still ablaze. Mine officials said no rescue workers can be sent into the shafts "as long as we have no assurance the fire is out." The explosions began last Wednesday as the 99-man midnight shift was about to quit work. Although 21 men either escaped or were rescued, 78 miners are still trapped somewhere in the mine, and little hope remains that they are still alive. PRESIDENT-ELECT RICHARD NIXON yesterday ap- pointed Herbert G. Klein to the newly created post of "director of communications for the executive branch." Klein, Nixon's longtime press secretary and former editor of the San Diego Union, will coordinate public information activities throughout the federal government, excluding only the White House. Nixon aides said the new job will aid the President-elect's objectives of dispensing to the public all possible information except that which would endanger national security. MEXICAN STUDENTS yesterday made their first move in four months toward renewed violence. About 150 students comandeered a city bus near the In- terior Ministry, evacuated all aboard, and drove it to an unknown destination. Although one shot was heard, no in- juries were reported. Several demonstrations, all peaceful, have, taken place since the October rioting, and earlier yesterday some students of the National University returned to classes in response to a request by university authorities. Students of prep, normal and technical schools, however, remained on strike in Mexico City, Puebla and Oaxaca. Students have been striking in demand of a bigger say in educational policies and to protest police invasion of their campuses. C ENJOY A DELICIOUS THANKSGIVING 0 DINNER WITH US. WE WILL BE O SERVING FROM 3 P.M. to 1 A.M., A --T West Germany, now the most powerful economic force in Eur- ope, does not want a conference either - at least not at this time. Elections are coming up next Oc- tober and a change in the value of the mark would hurt Chancellor Kurt Kiesinger's government with the voters. He has vowed that he will not revalue the mark upward, as oth- er countries are urging him to do, as long as he remains chancellor. 11 ! ' OX EASTERN THATRE - FOR VILLda6hE 375 No. MAPLE RD. "769.13OO LAST TIME TODAY "WEST SIDE STORY" 8:00 ONLY STARTS TOMORROW Andy Warhol'sI THE NUDEREBSTAURANT In Color! Starring Viva & Taylot Mead (from Grosse Pointe) "We were trying to make an anti-war movie and made it into a nudie because we thought more people would be able to see it. .,. ALSO: Chapter One in the continuing story of: "BUCK ROGERS" with Buster Crabbe Mad Marvin presents: Underground Films at the Vth Forum 5th Avenue at Liberty 761-9700 Thursday, Friday, Saturday, & Sunday: 1 1 P.M. Separate Admission Required. I *O H u MON.-FRI.-7:20, 9:30 SAT.-3:00, 5:15, 7:25, 9:30 SUN.-1 :00, 3:00, 5:15, 7:20, 9:30 D- uo 11 EMMINGs OGNA, O~~~tlf~ yrics and Music by Bob Crewe and Charles fox.° Performed by fRCM ThE ES om T E RRY OAOA EUA RIERB ,l () (D WIt U .Nit th4I TheBob Crewe Generation Orchestra Available on Dynovoice Records R rRIN IIIII M-ftf°M I II INt" Ohll1i'( 10,tIINI KI MMTURE AUDIEMCES HANDEL'S presented by the UNIVERSITY MUSICAL SOCIETY IN HILL AUDITORIUM, ANN ARBOR FRIDAY, DECEMBER 6, 8:30 P.M. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 7, 8:30 P.M. SUNDAY, DECEMBER 8, 2:30 P.M. A OW " Y wai INIVERSITY CHORAL UNION-SOLOISTS ii