Do You Still PHEEL PHOREIGN at the BIG U? You probably heard about RIVE GAUCHE, but not about the International Students Assoc. We created Rive Gauche. OUR INTEREST IS PEOFLE, and we plan a variety of activities to bring PEOPLE TOGETHER. Come and find out what we have done and can do TUES., JAN. 18, 7:30 P.M. MULTIPURPOSE RM. (UGLI) College Course 336 Asian American Experience * HISTORY " COMMUNITY 6 IDENTITY MONDAY, Jan. 24; 2408 Mason Hall NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PRONE.: 764-051 Ann Arbor, Michigan Q Sictiig~an Baitt page three Tuesday, January 1 8, 1972 FOR MORE INFORMATION PHONE: JOYCE WONG-76 1-6784 DAN OKIMOTO-769-8293 KEN ONG-668-5906 INTERESTED IN RELIGION AND THE UNIVERSITY?, The University Council on Religious Affairs has two openings for undergraduates. This is a student-fac- ulty-community council which considers religious and ethical matters as they affect the life of the University. The council also advises the University's Office of Religious Affairs, If you are interested, call 764-7442 8-5 p.m. sometime this week J i n e-ws briefs { by The Associated Press I THE NIXON ADMINISTRATION, under intense pressure fromTCongress, big cities, and governors announced anrabrupt change in its food stamp policy. Congress originally appropriated $2.2 billion for food stamps last year but the administration had planned to limit the spending to $2 billion. The cut would have deprived the low income families on the border of federal poverty limits of food stamps. Now the entire appropria- tion will be spent. The decision was made to prevent hardship, according to admin- istration spokesmen. Nationally, 10.9 million people are receiving the stamps. The stamps are bought for $4.50 and can buy $10 of groceries. POLICE BATTLED STUDENTS at Madrid University yester- day in the worst rioting on campus in three years. Scores of students were injured as police smashed them to the' ground. University directors were planning to meet today to discuss whether to close the university. The violence erupted when medical students, many of them suspended in an academic disagreement with the university admin- istration, attempted to stage a demonstration. Students have declared the strikes nonpolitical but leaflets calling for an "end to dictatorship" were being distributed. * * WEST COAST LONGSHOREMEN went out on strike again yesterday morning on the order of Harry Bridges, their 70-year-old leader who acted in the face of threatened federal intervention. The White House responded by declaring that it would press Con- gress for legislation to end the strike. The strike has been particularly harmful to farmers who cannot sell their products in foreign markets. Agriculture Secretary Earl Butz said "millions of dollars" have been lost by farmers since the, strike began last July 1. * * , PAKISTANI PRESIDENT ALI BHUTTO said yesterday he would make Sheik Mujibur Rahman "president, prime minister or whatever he wants" to bring Bangladesh back and "preserve Pakistan's oneness." The offer came after Sheik Mujib, Bangladesh's prime minister, had accused West Pakistan troops of slaughtering three million people: during his country's fight for independence. The Sheik has vowed he will never reunite the two countries. s s THE WOMEN'S VOTE was the decisive factor yesterday in the defeat of Marxist tandidates in the special congressional election in Chile. The cabinet of President Salvador Allende met in conference to discuss the implications of their party's defeat. Rumors of a cabinet shakeup were denied by the government. High . , .,.y., _,__ aX::i::::: :%':2?':: 'f 5'?'i: I -AssociateaPress Sheik talks to Frost Sheik Mujibur Rahman talks recently with David Frost in Bangladesh. In the interview for British television, the Sheik claimed three million of his people were killed by West Pakistan soldiers. (See News Briefs). Court to take case; considers deat on school h penalty IWASHINGTON (M --The Supreme Court agreed yester- day to hear for the first time a case concerning school seg- {r regation in an area outside the South. CONFIDENCE LOW: The Department of Romance Languages presents JEAN ANOU/LH'S ' La Valse des Toreadors in French Devalued dollar continues to plummet in European nations i i' i I LONDON (A) - The dollar slumped to new lows in Europe yesterday amid signs that, de- valuation a month ago had failed to restore confidence in U.S. currency. The dollar hit its lowest levels since devaluation in Britain, West Germany and Switzer- land during the day. It was be- low parity in Germanyvbut still above the danger level that could threaten another devalua- tion. Dealers here and on the Con- tinent said the dollar decline was evidence that the Washing- ton international monetary agreement of Dec. 18, which in- cluded devaluation, had been only partly successful in re- solving the international mone- tary crisis. Jan. 18-2 p.m. Jan. 19-8 P.m. Trueblood Aud. Tickets $1, 1.50, 2 Trueblood Box Office Jan. 17-19 "There is just not enough con- fidence in the dollar to keep it from falling," a German source said. Last month's agreement in Washington, he predicted, "may just turn out to have been a reprieve before the next crisis." The Washington package "was not the final answer to the dollar's problems," a wviss banking source said. In London, where dollar sell- ing was particularly heavy, foreign exchange dealers pre- dicted the dollar would remain weak until the U.S. Congress passes the necessary bill to de- value the dollar against gold. They said doubts about the bill's prospects, because of re- cent statements by Treasury Secretary Connally, had added td the dollar's weakness. Con- nally has stated that the bill would not be given to Congress until trade agreements have been reached. Other reasons cited for the dol- lar's weakness were the lack of dollars being sold by specu- lators. the low interest rates in the United States, the pur- chasing of foreign currencies by the Federal Reserve as repay- ment for a defend-the-dollar swap agreement and the less than anticipated sales of ex- port goods since the devaluation. In economic news at home, industrial production scored a solid gain in December, signal- ling a possible quickening of the nation's economic pulse, the Federal Reserve Board said yes- terday. The board said its Industrial Production Index, one of the major economic indicators, rose by 0.7 per cent last month, with almost half of the increase re- flecting a recovery in coal pro- duction from an industrywide strike. The report, however, still showed that the economy is suf- fering from considerable slack and that output of the nation"s factories, mines and utilities is rising less than would be ex- pected during a strong economic recovery. It also began to hear a consti- tutional challenge to capital pun- ishment on the grounds that it is cruel and unusual punishment. The decision, expected before June, may decide the fate of 694 men and women awaiting execu- tion in 34 states. The school segregation action was brought by the NAACP Legal Defence and Educational Fund in a controversy concerning the Den- ver school system. The city has a large number of blacks and Span- ish-speaking minorities. Lower federal courts have granted the two minority groups some desegregation action, but the fund,: speaking for them, con- tends it is not enough. They want about a dozen more of the city's 117 public schools deeply inte- grated, The Supreme Court's desegrega- tion decisions have come against a background of Southern laws separating the races in the pub- lic schools. Denver and Colorado never have hadesuch laws, but the fund and the minority families it represents will argue that Denver school of- ficials pursued segregation policies in the way they built the schools, arranged attendance zones and bused white children. The civil rights organization takes the position this is just as unconstitutional as the way Southern. school officials acted out old segregation laws. Similar arguments have been used by advocates of school de- segregation in Detroit and Rich- mond. In Detroit, Judge Stephen Roth has ruled that housing pat- terns and school construction pol- icies constitute de facto segrega- tion., Denver has about 97,000 public school children. About 20,000 have Spanish last names and about 14,000 are Negroes. The court will set a date for an oral argument later, with a ruling expected by the _ end of June. Yesterday's announcemert said nothing about the issues in- volved. In the cVhath penalty case, it was the first time the court has heard arguments on A constitu- tional challenge to capital pun- ishment. "The death penalty is virtually repudiated and condemned by the conscience of contemporary so- ciety," attorney Anthony Amster- dam argued in one bf the four cases that served as F vehicle to bring the issue before the court. Amsterdam represents a man con- demned for murder in California. 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. El ----I "ONE OF THE YEAR'S BEST I" -Bella Abzug -Shirley Chisholm -Tom O'Horgan -John Simon "MO ING" NEW YORK TIMES Coi PLAI a MICHIGAN UNION LANES SIGN UP NOW! "TRIUMPHANT" It will fascinate and pain you." -Judith Crist, NEW YORK MAGAZINE What you DON'T know about the Sac- co and Vanzetti murders will stun you. The anatomy of the most infamous trial of the century. Leagues forming Mon.-Thurs. I ACU-! Tournament . . . missing out on some of the DAILIES because of delivery mistakes? I I OPEN NOON MON.-SAT., 1 P.M. SUN. I ' I 1 IIF 1 9 I A Conference ... STOP RAPE i a 11 'U OR 0 0 * disagree with a bill we sent you for THE DAILY? WE'D LIKE TO TRY TO STRAIGHT- EN OUT THAT PROBLEM, BUT WE 0 8, -1' J', , ,\ / ' j> li STOP RAPE ! Saturday, Jan. 22 10:00 A.M.-3:00 P.M. St. Andrew's Church N. Division at Catherine SOUP, BREAD & BEVERAGE PROVIDED for 50c Sponsored by: Ann Arbor Women's Crisis Center Conducted by: Detroit Women Against Rape All WOMEN Welcome " Admission Free * WOMEN ONLY!! " DISCUSSION: RAPE AS AN INSTITUTION Who Are Rapists? What Sort of Women Get Raped? Where? When? Why? What Happens Afterwards? With Police? In Court? In Our Heads? Why Are Few Rapists Prosecuted and Fewer Convicted? .it I CAN'T IF YOU DON'T LET US KNOW ABOUT IT. k<~i.V~ - U. I I -1