'HILLEL TGIF FRIDAY, OCT. 24 4-5:30 P.M. Grads and Undergrads Welcome AT THE HOUSE 1429 HILL ST. Africian group to widen 3rd WEEK - ° 0 °__ se a BARBRA OMAR o Risa' *OTRIOAND- B A O O O II )M o o I Matinee Today Tonih t $1.50 $1.75 - By LYNN WEINER An interruption of the an- nual convention of the African Studies Association (ASA) of the United States last week will lead to the establishment of a new black academic organi- zation on college campuses. The African Heritage Studies Association (AHSA), a splinter group of the ASA, presented- a list of demands to the National convention, including e q u a 1 black - white representation on the ASA Board of Directors. When the proposals were re- jected the group walked out of a meeting in protest. According to University an- thropology Prof. Gloria Mar- shall, a member of the AHSA and fellow of the ASA, the AHSA is the first all-black academic association concerned with African studies. Miss Mar- shall says "at the moment our group would be intended for black scholars. The ASA does not deal with the particular problems and needs of black scholars concerned with Africa, but the AHSA would fill this need." The AHSA proposal calls for the seating of six whites and six blacks on the ASA board. The board offered three seats, which AHSA members rejected. Later the ASA agreed to study restructuring the organization. "There is discrimination with respect to the fellows elected by the association and with respect to those elected to the board of directors." Miss Marshall ex- plained. Miss Marshall said the AHSA can provide the "linking up of Africans in Africa and Africans in diaspora. We deny the Eu- ropean view that African peo- ples outside of Africa have no historical, cultural, or contem- porary links with Africa.' She said "the ASA has not taken a stand on current poli- tical and social issues such as South Africa, but we feel that as the academic community is involved in the issues of Viet- nam and classified research, so we should be involved, as scho- lars, on the problem of South Africa and similar states." AHSA President John Clarke and Prof. Eliot Skinner, former ambassador from the U.S. to U p p e r Volta, presented the statement which condemned the ASA as "irrelevant to the in- terests and needs of black people." It specifically stated that "African peoples will no longer permit our people to be raped culturally, economically, politi- cally and intellectually merely to provide European scholars with intellectual status symbols of African artifacts hanging in their living rooms and irrele- vant and injurious lectures for their classrooms." Last year black ASA mem- bers informally declared their discontent with the structure of the organization, which is pri- marily white, and its "racist bias,' and formed the AHSA, which also constitutes the black caucus of the ASA. Brandt elected W. German head BONN iP- The Bundestag elected Willy Brandt chan- cellor of West Germany yesterday, ending two decades of Christian Democratic rule and giving West Germany its first Socialist chancellor in the nation's 20-year history. The vote in the lower house of Parliament was 251-235 in Brandt's favor with five deputies abstaining, four ballots in- valid and one deputy absent. Brandt's victory, which gives him a mandate to govern for the next four years, was made possible by a coalition with the tiny Free Democratic party. In the Sept. 28 general elec- tion, Brandt's'Social Democrats won only 244 seats to the Christian Democrats 242, but the Free Democrats control 30 seats and -gave Brandt the necessary majority. Brandt, 55, succeeds Chancellor. Sitiri!3an Baaty Kurt Georg 'Kiesinger of the' Christian Democrats under w h o Brandt served as foreign minister. They had formed a Christian Democratic-Socialist coalition in December 1966. Brandt earlier w a s mayor of West Berlin, a Socialist strong- hold. Shows Today only at 1 :30 and 8:00 P.M.I SecOnud f I'Q[)l t pads I Wednesday, October 22, 1969 Ann Arbor, Michigan University of Michigan School of Music Presents 1969-1910 FESTIVAL OF CONTEMPORARY MUSIC Tonight-Wednesday, October 22, 8:00 P.M. Rackham Lecture Hall STRAVINSKY-"Fanfare for a New Theatre" KURTZ--"Animations" William Albright, piano CASTIGLIONI - "A Solemn Music II" Michigan Contemporary Directions Ensemble with guest soprano, Lynda Weston the newstoday BERG-"Chamber Concerto" for piano and with thirteen winds, Joseph Banowetz, Reyes soloists, Theo Alcantara, Conductor violin Angel WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 29 Music by Bassett, Schafer, Stockhausen and Lutoslowski WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 5 Music by Webern, Shifrin and Berry NO ADMISSION CHARGE Space provided by Pi Kappa Lambda T ATL HELD OVER EC - 3rd Big Week! Program Information 662-6264 where the heads of all nations meet SHOWS TODAY at LICE'S 9 P.M. ETA RA r r THE CHILEAN GOVERNMENT imposed a state of siege in Santiago in the wake of an army revolt. After two units of a Chilean army division rebelled yesterday the government issued a decree proclaiming the state of siege, which is a modified form of martial law. The rebellion leader. Brigadier General Roberto Viaux Marambo, said the purpose of the rebellion was to gain a hearing for army offic- ers Who complain of low pay and lack of adequate equipment. He claimed to have the support of "85 per cent" of the army. Although this figure could not be confirmed, there were contin- ued reports of other army units joining the approximately 50 rebels. There were no reported injuries. The rebellion may assume significance for the United States, since the U.S. has approximately $1 billion in copper mines in Chile. THE SOMALIAN GOVERNMENT was overthrown by the first military coup in the nation's nine-year existence. A self-styled revolutionary council seized power yesterday, ap- parently without bloodshed and less than 24 hours after the funeral of assassinated President Abdirashid Ali Shermarke. The Texas-size country on the tip of East Africa was sealed off from the outside world as airports, seaports and all frontiers were ordered closed with international communications interrupted. The council also clamped a curfew on the capital city of Mogad- ishu and said it would remain in effect until 10 a.m. today. SENATE MINORITY LEADER Hugh Scott criticized the Nix- on Administration's reaction to the moratorium. The Pennsylvania Republican said yesterday "the Administra- tion must accept the sincere intent of this debate and demonstra- tions" as a phenomenon of freedom and a product of anguish over the war." Such protests, he added, will not be stifled or talked down. Scott said the American people have heard "enough of invective against Americans who feel a different way." Scott's remarks were seen as a response to Vice President Spiro Agnew's charge Sunday that the leaders of the war protest are "hard core dissidents and professional anarachists." NGUYEN V'AN TIEU, South Vietnamese President, said he opposes aniy unilateral ('ease-fire. Thieu said yesterday he is willing to negotiate a cease-fire with the enemy but would oppose any unilateral cease-fire, even if proposed by President Nixon. A government spokesman gave Thieu's views in response to reports from the United States that Nixon is considering some kind of cease- fire proposal in his Nov. 3 speech to the nation. IIURRICANE LAURI streamed through the Gulf of Mexico, threatening parts of Louisiana and Mississippi, The growing storm, its highest winds whipping over open water at 100 miles per hour, drifted nearly 50 miles eastward during the early morning hours yesterday. CZECII AND SOVIET LEADERS initiated eight days of talks with a closed meeting in the Kremlin. Czechoslovak Conmmunist Party First Secretary Gustav Husak, Premier Oldrich Cernik and President Ludvik Svoboda met yesterday with Soviet Communist Party General Secretary Leonid Brezhnev, Premier Alexei Kosygin and President Nicolai Podgorny. The official announcement gave no indication of the subjects discussed, though it was earlier announced that the talks would lead to decisions of "basic political importance," Vandals broke into the Selective Service office in early yesterday, dumping the contents of unlocked floor and getting them afire. The records were pi and a half deep. 1970 FETE: (iN phi t global 8DA UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (,- Trying to bolsteri United Nations is shaping up an elaborate 25th anniv including a global sununit meeting. Details of the 1970 celebration still must be al 126-nation General Assembly, but there is wide agre highlight will be a commemorative session attende government. These points are stressed in a report by a 25-nat commnittee which has been study-- ing possible ways of observing the anni versary."5... . Meanwhile, in Washington, U.S. officials said t h e y expect little immediate change in West Ger- Page Three man-U.S. policy in the wake of Brandt's election as chancellor. Whether there wvill be changes in the long run centers on how the U.S. extricates itself f r o m the Vietnam war and whether the So- viet Union mellows its attitude to- ward West Germany. The U.S. officials said the main reason for not expecting any im- mediate foreign policy change is that the new chancellor is t h e same man who h as shaped his country's foreign affairs since De- cember, 1966, when he and fellow . Social Democrats joined the con-: servative Christian Democrats in a grand coalition. Brandt acquired an internation- al name as mayor of West Berlin from 1957 to 1966, but the So- cialists under his leadership were unable to control the government in the 1961 and 1965 elections. . Brandt and the leader of the Free Democrats, Walter Scheel, have been working out the form-' ula under which their parties will share power. Scheel is expected to be foreign minister and vice -A~socate Pr'S$ chancellor. One of the new coalition's first moves may be to sign the nuclear Lorain, Ohio nonproliferation treaty, a in o v e files oilthe long blocked by Kiesinger. Brandt led up a foot doesn't think th e treaty would have much international effect; he has called it "nothing but a useless sheet of paper" and has compared it with "a group of al- coholics getting together and, t drawing up a pact to s t o p the, spread of alcoholism." /it lI' Other early moves of the new government might be the setting its prestige, the up of a European security con- ,ersary programn ference, with the United States as a participant, and the operation pproved by the of workable contacts with East ement that the Germany. The partners in the coalition are eager to end a stale- d by heads of mate in Bonn's relations with the Soviet Union and the rest of East- ion preparatory ern Europe. Japanese students Arrested TOKYO UP)--A major left-wing antiwar demonstration, aimed at the government of Japanese Prime Minister Eisaku Sato and the United States, failed to material- ize yesterday, although Tokyo and major' Japanese cities wei'e grip- ped for six houi's with fear' and near paralysis. Some 5,000 militant pro-Peking Zengakuren students staged spo- radic guerrilla assaults in the streets of Tokyo, wrecking police call boxes and stopping train service. But they never got near the main targets of their self-pro- claimed International Antiwar Day: the prime minister's official residence, government offices, the U.S. Embassy and major railway stations. The leftists ran into a phalanx of a 25,000 riot police who repeatedly turned them back. By midnight, police said, they had a r r e s t e d 1,393 students throughout the country, most of them in Tokyo. Informed sources said about 60 persons were injured, including 28 policemen. Most of the injurees came fiom burns caused by flam- ing gasoline bombs. Two police were in critical condition. An estimated 500,000 leftists-- sponsorstclaimed5amillion-pa'- ticipated in noisy but orderly ral- lies, demonstrations and parades throughout the country to observe antiwar day. The left wing and its sympa- thizers were protesting the Viet- nam war, demanding immediate return of Okinawa and the scrap- ping of the U.S.-Japan security treaty which comes up for review in 1970. They also oppose Sato's visit to Washington next month for talks with President Nixon on a timetable for Okinawa's rever- sion to'Japan. Friday and Saturday at 1, 3, 5,1 7, 9 P.M. AND 11 P.M. Soon "EASY RIDER" r1 ine : I i}j 4 Tentative plans call for the summit meeting to take place at U.N. headquarters just before the official birthday. Tihe assembly is expected to approve the plans and set the dates before the current session adjourns in December. If the plans are adopted it will be the fi'st time since 1960 that a large number of heads of gov- ernment have taken part in an as- sembly session. The 1960 session was attended by 21 prime minis- ters and presidents including Niki- ta Khrushchev, Dwight D. Eisen- hower. Jawaharlal Nehru and Fidel Castr-o. Few of those present in 1960 will be around for the proposed meet- ing next year. The United States, Britain, France and the Soviet Union all have new leaders as do many smaller countries. 110Wh nsworth vote uncertain WASHINGTON (P If Presi- dent Nixon swayed any undecided' senators with his strongly worded; defense of Judge Clement F. Haynsworth Jr., they are keeping it to themselves. The more than 20 senators who hold the key to confirmation of Haynsworth's nomination to the Supreme Court didn't show any signs that Nixon's statement Mon-I day would start a stampede to back the administration. Such senior Republicans as George D. Aiken of Vermont and John J. Williams of Delaware still' are listed as undecided with an expected vote on confirmation about two weeks off. Nixon said at a surprise news conference Monday Haynsworth character assassination.' The Pres- ident said he would not withdraw his nomination even if Hayns- worth requested him to do so. Aiken said later he still hasn't decided how he will vote on Hanysworth's confirmation. "I doubt if the President made any votes by his statement," Aik- en commented. But Sen. Roman L. Hruska of Nebraska, r a n k i n g Republican member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, said he is more confi- dent than ever the Senate will confirm Haynsworth, now chief' judge of the 4th U.S. Court of Appeals. Sen. Birch Bayh (D-nd), a leader of the opposition, said con- flict-of-interest charges he has the adnunistration "and make an eloquent case against confirmation of Judge Haynsworth." "It is unfortunate that the Pres- ident appears to be leveling his guns at me personally in an effort to distort the true issue and make the nomination of Judge Hayns- worth a partisan matter," Bayh said. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University ot Michigan, News phone: 764-0552. Second Class p« stage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan. 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor. Michigan 48104. 'Pubished daily Tues- day hrug Sunday morning Univerv- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by Carrier. $10 by man1. Summer ssion published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $3.00 by carrier, $3.00 by mail. 1%I6/GR "ALICE'S RESTAURANT" ARLO GUTHRIE PAT01 'JAMES BRODERICK PETE SER "LEE WAYS M CWI WIILAW iA- TW ~ AHiN "WR N APV Fr " t s#W~AQAIi ~TS .-VENABLE HERNDON .ARTHUR PENN .HILLARD ELKINSJOE MANDIJKE ARTHUR PENN COLOR by DeLuxe ,V4~1e"1ON4 NT ART qS COI) II"iUited Aptists has been subjected to "vicious made have not been refuted by , Homecoming '69 r C Ip C1 presents Blood, Sweat and Tears INDIVIDUAL SALES ; BEGIN TODAY AA AA &hA L ~ A AA % WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 22 DR. CHICAGO Directed by Ann Arbor's Own George Manupelli Starring ALVIN LUCIER MARY ASHLEY WORLD PREMIERE MON., NOS SATNOV.S Daily Classifieds Get Results AUDRA LINDLEY JAMES WHITMORE Tfl) CATHERINE BURNS I I