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January 25, 1972 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1972-01-25

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

"NEVER GIVE A INCH" was the motto
of the Stampers of Oregon...and live it they didI
Paul# "n .pan "HENRM vonoa
LE REILK- EIcH8LSaRR&n

NEWS PHONE: 764-0552
BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554

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Sfrlitlan

aitll

page three

Ann Arbor, Michigan Tuesday, January 25, 1972

I'I

I

news briefs
by The Associated Press

a

11 .

. _ '.

ISRAELI AIR FORCE JETS raided 25 miles inside Syria yes-
terday, striking at Arab guerillas living in tents near the city of
Dera, the military command announced.

I

Nixon's budget includes deficit
asks for a curb on spending
g~ssWASHINGTON 0~ - President Nixon rolled out a $246.3-
billion fiscal 1973 budget yesterday, unveiling two massive
F deficits totaling $64.3 billion, no new tax proposals, and a re-
.. :.> --- - : r.;h quest tat Congress limit spending to "stop raids on the
Treasury"
The President urged Congress to boost the level of de-
": fense spending and to vote more money for research and de-
velopment in both military and civilian programs.
As the big document reached -
Capitol Hill, Nixon issued a state-
ment asking Congress to impose a
. rigid ceiling on the $246.3-billioni

tr+s~ _.

The air strikes followed "increased terrorist activity from Syrian
TODAY AT DIAL territory aimed at Israeli citizens", a command spokesman said. The
1-3-5 - 665-6290 air strike was the first Israeli attack on Syria since June, 1970.
7-9 P.M. Guerrillas began stepping up raids from inside Syria last fall.
S Israel has protested the raids to the United Nations. There were no
casualties reported in yesterday's raid.
LEONID BREZHNIV AND PREMIER ALEXI KOSYGIN led I
THIS WEEK Communist officials yesterday in a summit in Prague on chang-
ing East-West relations.
ru~u 'i u Officials from Bulgaria, Rumania, Hungary, Poland, and Czech-
oslovakia are participating in the conference. A call for a European
security conference that would recognize the East-West division is
49,,expected.
e The USSR also announced that it had recognized the new nation
of Bangladesh thus becoming the largest nation to do so.
Fine Food, Cockta ilsDinner * * *
LEONARD WOODCOCK, president of the United Auto
. Workers (UAW), opened the door yesterday to union locals that
want to endorse political candidates.
He also said in his speech opening the first National UAW Com-
munity Action Program Conference that the United States should
recognize Bangladesh as soon as Indian troops are withdrawn.
On the labor front, Woodcock insisted that employers pay double
* time for overtime, and suggested that the ceiling on Social Security
Open Seven Days taxes be raised. Woodcock also called for more federal spending for
Monday-Friday mass transit and health care.
11 a.m. to 2 a.m.
Saturday and Sunday 319 S. FOURTH AVE. THE SUPREME COURT yesterday cleared the way for the
5 P.m. to 2 am-t 761-3548 Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to set-up guidelines
a 48for paid advertisements by political parties and others wishing to
tt air their views.

-Associated Press
TREASURY SECRETARY JOHN CONNALY goves over his notes
while budget director George Shultz discusses President Nixon's
proposed budget.

LOYALTY PLEDGED:

Guerrilla chief returns
arms to Bangladesh head

Human Rights Party Fund-Raiser
Dalton Trumbo's
Johnny Got His Gun
Thursday, Jan. 21
7 and 9 p.m.
Fifth Fou Theate
/f 8e

I

A delay had been requested until appeals on suits brought last
summer by the Democratic party National Committee and the Busi-
ness Executive's Move for Peace are decided. The FCC and various
Washington broadcast stations were also opposed to the Supreme
Court decision.
SECRETARY OF COMMERCE MAURICE STANS will re-
sign his post and is expected to take the job as an active fund
raiser in the Nixon campaign, an administration spokesman an-
nounced yesterday.
Nixon's international economic advisor, Peter Peterson, is in
line for the Commerce post.
Stans served as an active fund raiser for Nixon during the 1968
election.
PARTICIPATE
IN STUDENT GOVERNMENT
L.S.A. Student Government
is interviewing now for:
2 seats executive council
4 seats judiciary
1 Administrative Vice President
Sign up 3M Michigan Union
by 5:00, Friday, January 28th

TANGAIL, BANGLADESH UP)
- Bangladesh's most flamboy-
ant guerilla leader surrendered
his men's arms to Prime Minis-
ter Mujibur Rahman yesterday
in a ceremony to dramatize gov
ernment control over the coun-
tryside.
"I took up arms when called
by my leader," said Abdul Ka-
der Siddique - called the "Tig-
er of Tangail." "Now I give up
my arms as my leader orders."
Disarming the guerillas, who
at the height of the secession-
ist movement were believed to
number about 100,000, has been
one of the major problems fac-
ing the sheik's government.
Siddique who claims 16,000
followers in the Tangail area,
earned brief international no-
toriety for ordering the public

torture and lynching of four
suspected collaborators in Dacca
on Dec. 18.
The incident appeared almost
forgotten as the sheik embraced
the guerilla leader and praised
him for his fight against the
Pakistan army.
But the sheik warned Siddi-
que's men against taking the
law into their own hands when
dealing with collaborators.
Recent reports have reached
Dacca of guerillas settling blood
feuds with persons suspected of
collaboration with the Pakistani
army. Now with Siddique's sup-
port this problem may' end.
When the ceremonyy ended,
Sheik Mujib hugged Siddique
and then embraced in turn some
15 guerillas who shared the
platform with him. Some were
boys no more than ten years old.

escape hatches whatever."
The big dose of deficits - $38.8
billion for fiscal 1972 and $25.5 for
fiscal 1973 - are designed to stim-
ulate the economy. Deficit spend-
ing, he said, "is strong but neces-
sary medicine" for the sluggish
economy. Nevertheless, top offi-
cials said, the jobless rate is ex-
pected to decline to only about
five per cent at the end of 1971.1
It is now six per cent.
Spending beyond the limit not
only would trigger inflation, Nixon
said, but would amount to raids
on the Treasury.
"Those who increase spending
beyond that amount will be re-
sponsible for causing more infla-
tion," Nixon asserted.
"It is vital," Nixon said, "that
the executive and the Congress act
together to stop raids on the
Treasury which would trigger an-
other inflationary spiral.
The President said that he is
"therefore urging the Congress,
before it considers any appropria-
tions bills to enact a rigid ceiling
on outlays that will prevent the
government spending more than
the $246 billion requested in this
budget."
"That ceiling on expenditures,"
he said, "should apply equally to
the Congress and the executive
branch."
Shultz said the ceiling is being
sought because Nixon believes it is
"important to have strong disci-
pline on spending so it won't get
out of hand"
The problem, he said, is that
once the budget reaches Capitol
Hill, Congress works on it piece
by piece and loses track of the
overall total. A rigid ceiling, he
said, would be one way to keep
the total budget picture in focus.
The budget chief said several
congressional leaders, whom he
did not identify, had called him in
recent days to suggest it would be
helpful to have some sort of
agreed-upon ceiling on spending.
Although there was little imme-
diate response from Capitol Hill,
Nixon's move seemed certain to be
challenged by Democrats as an
election-year maneuver to shift
the responsibility for the whopping
fiscal 1972 and 1973 deficits -_
now calculated at more than $64
billion.

to reconsider
job bias issue
WASHINGTON (A) - The Sen-
ate rejected enforcement of equal
employment opportunity legisla-
tion through the courts yesterday
in favor of administrative action
but, two hours later, voted to re-
consider.
The, vote to reopen the issue
was 39-37 and could lead to adop-
tion of an amendment by Sen.
Peter Dominick (R-Colo.) requir-
ing court suits to enforce a ban
on discrimination in employment.
Dominick's amendment, sup-
ported by the Nixon administra-
tion but opposed by civil rights
leaders, was defeated earlier in
the day by a 43-41 vote.
The initial vote was considered
a victory for civil rights leaders
who long have urged arming the
Equal.. Opportunity Commission
(EEOC) with authority to issue
cease-and-desist orders.
Dominick's amendment, as re-
commended by President Nixon,
would have required the EHOC
to seek court orders to enforce its
findings of job discrimination
based on race, religion, sex, or
national origin.
This has been a key issue in
the dispute over strengthening the
enforcement powers of the EEOC.
The House voted last Septem-
ber in favor of the court enforce-
ment procedure rather than
granting the EEOC cease-and-de-
sist powers.
The issue must be resolved by
a Senate-House conference com-
mittee before final action by Con-
gress.
Dominick and other opponents
of the cease - and-desist powers
argued that an investigatory agen-
cy should not sft in judgment on
the cases it investigates.
"Administrative adjudication
threatens our traditional system
of separation of powers,"' Domi-
nick said.
But Sen. Harrison Williams Jr.
(D.-N.J.), 'chief sponsor of the
bill, said there was nothing novel
about granting administrative ag-
encies cease-and-desist authority.
He and Sens. Jacob Javits (R-
N.Y.), and Walter Mondale (D-
minn.), listed other federal ag-
encies with similar power and
maintained this is indispensible to
effective enforcement.
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-
igan, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor,
Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues-
day through Sunday morning Univer-
sity year. Subscription rates: $30 by
carrier, $11 by mail.
Summer Session published Tuesday
through Saturday morning. Subscrip-
tion rates: $5 by carrier, $6 by mail.

Advance Admission (door purchases won't
$2
on sale at
FISHBOWL 10-4
U CELLAR 9-2:30
or
CALL: 761-6621

help us)

EVOLUTION NOW
A LECTURE ON HUMAN POTENTIAL DEVELOPMENT
BY
DR. JEAN HOUSTON
author of Varieties of Psychedelic Experience
director of the Foundation for Mind Research, N.Y.
FREE TO THE PUBLIC
THURSDAY, JANUARY 27, 4 P.M.
Angell Hall, Auditorium A
SPONSORED BY ANN ARBOR COALITION, University Activities
Center, Student Services Counseling Office, & Office of Religious
Affairs

- - - ------- -

A GREAT- PLA CE TO LIVE
Come and See
THE MARTHA COOK BUILDING
A Residence for Undergraduate
and Graduate Women
is NOW taking applications for
Fall and Winter Terms 1972-1973
ENJOY: 21 Meals a Week
Maid and Linen Service
A Convenient Location-near Libraries,
Museums and Shopping
CALL 769-3290

Ceremonies
In Dark
Old Men

Mendelssohn Theatre
January 26-20

Box Office

open 12:30

. I A

THE BERLIN PHILHARMONIC OCTET

the ann arbor film co-operative
PRESENTING 25 FINE FILMS THIS TERM
TONIGHT ! TUESDAY-JANUARY 25th ONLY!

On Friday, January 28, the Berlin Philharmonic Octet will
present a program of chember music in Rackhamn Audi-
torium. Comprised of members of the famous Berlin Phil-
harmonic Orchestra, this ensemble has been paid many
tributes, including the dedication of compositions to them

by many contemporary composers. Included in their pro-
gram Friday night is Rossini's Sonata No. 3 in D major;
Septet byKonrad Kreutzsr; and the Octet in F major, Op
166, by Schubert.

TH E

NIGHT

OF'

THE

LIVING

DEAD

DIRECTED BY GEORGE A. ROMERO. A cult low-budget "sleeper." Absolutely -the scariest movie
ever. Beyond horror! Racial conflict and the meanina of "human."

i

nrt rmn~i~ t: - Q. t1 r., 1>, .. ? CA ,A - A ,aii..

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