-GRAND OPENING- 1962 U. of M. Groduate introduces Snoopy's Restaurant 1211 S. UNIVERSITY across from Campus Theater 10%OFF WHEN YOU BRING IN THIS AD. Expires January 30th l NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 a$ 4 r Sfr~igatn 'wtill page three Ann Arbor, Michigan Wednesday, January 26, 1972 I 'IU, Chase the January Blues Away JOIN US for the Grad Coffee Hour Wed., Jan. 26 4-6 PM.. 4th Floor Rackhom Hot chocolate and cake for all. ne-w-s briefs by The Associated Press THE BANGLADESH GOVERNMENT, jubilant after gaining Soviet bloc diplomatic recognition, turned to the West yesterday in its search for acceptance as an independent nation. The Soviet announcement of recognition early yesterday was followed by a broadcast from Prague that Czechoslovakia also hadE recognized the new government, with only Romania and Hungary among the Soviet bloc nations yet to follow. Bangladesh Foreign Minister Abdus Samud Azad in Dacca ap- pealed to the United States, the Western Allies and The People's Re-r public of China to hasten recognition of his government. The most recent word from U.S. officials in Washington, how- ever, was that recognition was not even under consideration. * * * HOUSE REPUBLICAN LEADER GERALD FORD of Michi- gan said yesterday that he supports a proposed constitutional amendment to outlaw busing to achieve school desegregation. The amendment, which states that no student shall be as-j signed or required to attend a school because of his race, is before the House Judiciary Committee. Ford signed a discharge petition that will bring the amendment to a vote in the House if it is signed by a majority of the member- ship. It now has 134 of the needed 218 signatures. U.S. DISTRICT COURT JUDGE R. Dixon Herman said yesterday in Harrisburg, Pa., that the jury will be sequestered for the duration of the trial of the Rev. Philip Berrigan and six other anti-war activists, to shield the jurors from publicity and insure a "fair and impartial hearing." Father Berrigan and the other defendants are accused of conspiring while Berrigan was imprisoned at the Lewisburg federal penitentiary.. They allegedly planned to kidnap presidential adviser Henry Kissinger, bomb heating tunnels of certain buildings in Washington, D.C., and raid draft board offices around the country. * * * A DEMOCRATIC LEGISLATOR who was present when armed police stormed the Attica Correctional Facility last Sep-a tember called yesterday in Albany for the impeachment of Gov. Nelson Rockefeller for the way he handled the inmate up- rising in which 43 persons 'died. In an emotional 20-minute speech to the Assembly, Arthur Eve, a member of a committee which tried to negotiate a settlement of the dispute, said, "My governor devised the most diabolical plot, the most diabolical scheme, that has ever been told in the annals of government anywhere." When asked to comment on the accusation, Rockefeller replied, "I don't think it calls for a comment." * * * deficit reported worst on record WASHINGTON (A -- The United States closed 1971 with its worst trade deficit on record, and its first in 83 years, the Commerce Department said yesterday in a final report of last year's exports and imports. The trade deficit swelled to $2.046 billion as exports ex- panded by only 2 per cent and imports jumped 14 per cent. A trade deficit results when the value of imports from foreign companies exceeds that of U.S. exports. This adds to the U.S. balance-of-payments problems and puts American businesses into stiffer competition with foreign firms. The deficit was the first calen-? U S. '71 trade -Associated Press REP. SHIRLEY CHISHOLM (D-N.Y.) yesterday officially became the third woman in United States history to seek the presidential nomination. Chishoim officially confirms candidacy, i I, 1 . Box Offices Open at 6:30 Show Starts at 7:00 N I The Call of the Hills Was Y'All Come Now! "SOUTHERN COMFORTS" 1x1 AT 7:05 & 10:10. plus "TOBACCO ROODY" D AT 8:40 LATE SHOWING FRIDAY & SATURDAY NIGHT Come in as Late as 10 P.M. See Both Features ~'~'A I" I By The Associated Press Rep. Shirley Chisholm yester- day officially became a Demo- cratic presidential candidate, formally announcing her candi- dacy in a church in the Bed- ford-Stuyvesant slum of Brook- lyn where she grew up and once was a school teacher. Chisholm, 47, the first black woman in Congress. said she would enter primaries in Flori- da, and North Carolina while keeping a close watch on the New York primary. She also said she \would run delegates in Pennsylvania, Illi- nois and Massachusetts. Chisholm omitted mention of other Democratic candidates in her formal announcement of candidacy, although she told newsmen afterwards she ex- pected her campaign to hurt the chances of New York Mayor John Lindsay because "Lindsay ... .. ST Of YPSIL+ uiruv±wu At FRIDAY-SATURDAY-SUN DAY DEAN MARTIN * BRIAN KEITH IN "SOMETHING BIG" GP JOHN WAYNE 0 RICHARD BOONE "BIG JAKE" G will be getting votes from the same area that I am." President Nixon she said, "has broken his promises to us and therefore lost his claim to our trust and confidence to him. I. cannot believe that this admin- istration would have been elect- ed four years ago if we had known what we know today." In related political action, Pennsylvania Gov. M i I t o n Schapp cast aside his previous neutrality and declared his backing of Sen. Edmund Muskie (D-Me.) for the Democratic nomina.tion. The announcement in Harris- burg, Pa., was seen by many ob- servers as a setback to the can- didacy of Sen. Hubert Hum- phrey, (D-Minn.), who report- edly had been hoping for a strong showing in Pennsylvania. Schapp's endorsement came on the day that Pennsylvania allows candidates to begin cir- culating petitions for slates of convention delegates and Mus- kie, Chiisholm, Humphrey, and Sen. George McGovern (D-S.D.) are expected to run such slates. dar-year trade deficit since 1888, when the red ink was $33 million, the department said. The department added that the deficit in December was $273.7 million marking the third straight month of uifavorable balances and the eighth month for all of 1971. The government blamed the worsening picture on dock strikes, the threat of strikes in the steel industry which expanded imports, and an economic slowdown in the major industrialized nations over- Exports in 1971 were valued at $43.555 billion while imports were X45.602 billion. The 1971 deficit represented a massive turnaround from a year ago, when the nation recorded a $2,7-billion surplus.. The Commerce Department con- ceded that the 1971 rise in imports was greater than had been ex- pected even if the world economy was out of kilter. "This suggests that transitory influences - anticipations of im- port restrictions and exchange rate uncertainties - may have been contributing factors," the de- partment said. It was in mid-1971 that Presi- dent Nixon imposed the 10 per cent surcharge and announced the United States would no longer re- deem dollars for gold. The sur- charge was removed in late De- cember when a new agreement on money - exchange rates was reached. But the uncertainty during late 1971 may have retarded trade, the department indicated. It also of- fered another reason: American consumers are expanding their taste for imported goods. SHEIK KHALID, the ruler of the little Persian Gulf emirate of Sharjah, was shot to death early yesterday ,in an attempted coup led by a cousin. The Sheik's brother, Sheik Sakr bin Mohammed, was named his successor. He led a countercharge of police and troops of the new Union of Arab Emirates in repulsing the coup. DAILY ADS BRING RESULTS Steve McQueen "LE MANS" G Nixon asks for higher U. S. debt WASHINGTON (4P) - President Nixon asked Congress yesterday for a $50-billion raise in the na- tional debt ceiling, the biggest single increase since World War II, to accommodate record red-ink spending. The oral request from the Treasury to the House Ways and Means Committee is for a borrow- ing limit of $480 billion through June 30, 1973. The committee has scheduled a hearing on the legislation for Monday, with Treasury Secretary John Connally and George Shultz, director of the Office of Manage- ment and Budget,~ expected to be the first witnesses. The present ceiling of $430 bil- lion, $400 billion designated as permanent, $30 billion as tempor- ary, has been in effect since July 1, 1971. Officials have long known an increase would be needed, but the amount was not, arrived at until the budget made public Monday showed deficits estimated at $38.8 billion for the following year. While a majority of Democrats in Congress are expected to criti- cize Nixon financial policies, leg- islation for a borrowing authority increase will almnost certainly be approved. Congress has never re- fused such an extension. The Treasury has estimated that the present $430 billion ceil- ing will be exceeded about March 1 as the government is forced to 'borrow during a time of slack re- ceipts before the income tax dead- line. The debt on Jan. 2 was less than $3.5 billion below the ceiling. Meanwhile, the Treasury dis- closed that the nation's total re- serve assets suffered the deepest yearly decline in history, $2.3 bil- lion, during- 1971. 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: $10 by carrier, $11 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5 by carrier, $6 by mail. OfhEOAi CINRMA CORi00ATION HI-F BUYS TRANSCENDENTAL L. MEDITATION as taught by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi LAST COURSE OF SEMESTER Senate deadlocked over equal employment ruling Transcendental meditation is a natural spontaneous tech- nique which allows each individual to expand his mind and improve his life-FIRST INTRODUCTORY LECTURE THURS., JAN. 27-8 P.M. UGLI-Multipurpose Room for further info, call 761 -8255 WASHINGTON (P)-Leaders on opposing sides of a seesaw Senate fight over _ enforcement of equal employment legislation yesterday ruled out any compromise. Republican Leader Hugh Scott (R-Pa.) told newsmen he hoped a sensible compromise could be reached, saying he understood talks were underway. He referred specifically to Sens. Peter Dominick (R-Colo.) and Ja- cob Javits, (R-N.Y.), but they both said there would be no com- promise. Dominick is chief sponsor of an amendment to require the Equal Employment Opportunity Com- mission (EEOC) to bring suits in the federal district courts to en- force its findings of job discrimi- nation based on race, religion, sex, or national origin. The amendment would erase from the bill authority for the EEOC to issue cease-and-desist orders. The commission now is limited to persuasion and concilia- tion in trying to prevent discrimi- nation. The Senate rejected Dominick's amendment Monday by a 43-41 vote but voted to reconsider. A second, decisive vote will take place this morning. Civil rights and labor leaders are pushing for cease-and-desist powers for the EEOC, while Pres- ident Nixon and major business organizations have advocated en- forcement through the courts. One change in Dominick's amendment, offered by Sen. J. Glenn Beall, (R-Md.), with Domi- nick's concurrence, was adopted by a 73-0 vote. It would provide that any court award in a dis- crimination case could not exceed two years' back pay. SALE Miss J Skiwear 1 Save /3 Now $20 - $30 Our entire stock of ski jackets and pants for Miss J is reduced substantially so you save during the peak ski season. We have a fine selection of colors in comfortable pants and solid-color nylon jackets, .A' ' >1