I Michigan Union Billiards n s..briefs By The Associated Press I' Reduced Rates 10 a.m.-noon Mon.-Sat. 1-6 p.m. Sunday ACU- l Billiards Tournament Sign up now! COMING NOV. 4-JIMMY CARAS, 5 time champion Free Billiard Exhibition Union Ballroom I- - Wednesday & Thursday-October 13 & 14 Department of Speech Student Laboratory Theatre pre.sents THE FLIES (Act III) by Jean-Paul Sartre and THE ROOM- by Harold Pinter} ARENA THEATRE, Frieze Building, Promptly at 4:10 P. or earlier if the theatre is filled. ADMISSION FREE 0 - GRAD COFFEE HOUR Wed., Oct. 13 CIDER and DOUGHNUTS 4-6 p.m.I RACKHAM 4th Floor A FORMER BLACK PANTHER was shot and killed by police Saturday night in Denver after he reportedly stabbed threej women, knocked down one officer with a panel truck and fired on the officers. He was identified as James Young. In Houston on Saturday a Black Panther member was also shot by police. Two policemen reported that they saw John Coward walking down the street with a rifle under his coat. Coward opened fire on them they said and they shot him while he was trying to reload.I THE CHILEAN GOVERNMENT ruled yesterday that Cerro Corp. will receive $18.3 million compensation for it nationalized copper holdings, but that the two other American copper com- panies operating here owe the state more than their property { is worth. The ruling by Comptroller General Hector Humeres claimed Ana- conda Co. and Kennecott Copper Corp. have a net liability to the government $378.5 million because of "excess profits" and allegedr damage to mine installations and equipment. President Salvador Allende's leftist government acknowledged' earlier that, since Cerro's Rio Blanco mine in central Chile began producing only this year, no question of excess profits was involved. Chile nationalized the copper industry in July. PRESIDENT Anwar Sadat of Egypt flew into Moscow yes- terday to decide - with the Kremlin's help - on a response to a new U.S. Middle East Peace proposal. It; has been believed that Sadat is shopping for more military hardware to counter a possible U.S. decision to resume arms ship- ments to Israel. THE NIXON ADMINISTRATION wants to overhaul the na- tion's $750 million school-lunch program which one Agriculture Department official says is threatening to become a nationalized meal service for all children, regardless of need. Approximately eight per cent of the 7.3 million children getting reduced-price lunches last year-some 584,000 children-were from families above the poverty line. All lunches, including those served the needy, get a federal con- tribution of five cents plus seven or eight cents in the form of do- nated commodities. AN ENGLISH CLERK from the British Embassy was arrested in Aeilgrs and charged with passing on secrets. Leonard Hinchliffe, 39, was seized by Special Branch security agents in London shortly before midnight Sunday. Hinchliffe was the fourth person charged under Britians Official Secrets Acts since Britian expellod 105 alleged Soviet spies. NEARLY 10,000 MOSCOW JEWS jammed the street in front of the central synagogue last night to sing, dance and gossip as they celebrated the Jewish holiday Simchat Torah. The people crammed into Arkhipov Street from one end to the other said this was the biggest holiday gathering of Soviet Jews they could remember. Discussion centered around emigration to Israel and some of the young people were bold enough to wear pins with Israeli flags on, them. Area church By DANIEL JACOBS as in a W: Stressing the need for church groups to Nov. 15, ir involve themselves in society's political ling of the and social problems, the Ann Arbor Inter Further, faith Council for Peace (ICP) has actively withhold p sought to help end U.S. military involve- a more in ment in Indochina and shift government In an att priorities to domestic issues. ly affectin "Politics is the way in which we organize verting sor our corporate lives," says genetics Prof. problems. Donald Rucknagel - one of six ICP co- ICP will chairmen. "If religion is to play a rele- Thomas, w vant role in society, it must not be aloof with racism from concern about politics." matize his Established in 1966, ICP now boasts a While r mailing list of 2,200. The panel of co- might feel1 chairmen - composed of both ministers a part of t and University professors - meets twice members a a month to re-examine the group's policy ligion mus and discuss coming activities. Near Eas Though their efforts are church-affiliat- John Baily ed, the co-chairmen do not consider con- one of the gregational membership to be necessary for synagogues participation In ICPsaccording to staff a clear sta member David Houseman. - In a mc ICP plans to participate actively in the adds, "On Vietnam moratorium on Oct. 13, as well moral ques Vhite House vigil and sit-in on n protest against Nixon's hand- war. ICP is urging local citizens to ayment of their phone taxes as direct form of dissent. tempt to deal with issues direct- g the church itself, ICP is di- me of its attention to localized It is likely, for instance, that support the cause of Charles rho has charged local churches m and disrupted services to dra- view. more traditional church-goers that the realm of politics is not he church's proper domain, ICP re firm in their belief that re- t not remain static. stern Prof. and ICP co-chairman asserts, "I have always felt that great failures of churches and has been their refusal to take and on government issues." ore specific context, Rucknagel ce you envision Vietnam as a stion, there's no more debate." ICP's most ambitious project thus far has been a three-man excursion to the Paris peace negotiations in the spring of this year. The ICP group met with all four negotiating parties. The ICP trio talked with ambassadors from North Vietnam and the National Liberation Front for several days and re- ceived a cordial reception, according to Bailey. Onthe other hand, Bailey remarks that the South Vietnamese representatives were reluctant to discuss the war in depth, and that the American delegation was the "most dispiriting" of all - consisting of "seasoned diplomats" who held little com- passion for peasantry and who advised the visitors to go to Washington if they were interested in changing U.S. foreign pol- icy. In another political action, the ICP helped organize the first national Clergy and Laity Concerned (CALC) conference held here this summer. CALC is a 37,000 member national organization working in conjunction with regional groups such as ICP, to help organize political and social actions. urges social role $ £frigtan Iati Tuesday, October 12, 1971 Page Three Schedule for October Wednesday, Oct. 13° Thursday, Oct. 21 Tuesday, Oct. 26 CLIP AND SAVE Labor to debate freeze packagen WASHINGTON (IP} The Executive Council of the 13 million BE THERE! NONE" Soc. R / member AFL-CIO and the heads of the two largestv independent unions, the Teamsters and the United Auto Workers, will meet today to decide whether to participate in President Nixon's Phase 2 eco- nomic plan. A spokesman for the AFL-CIO said there had been no efforts by administration officials to contact federation President George Meany to patch up a dispute over how the post-freeze program will operate. At the White House, spokesmen said Nixon worked in his office at the nearby Executive Office Building, but refused to say on what. ' .. ti t. J Issho yi Geng Tuesday 4'~a 41 / r !j Sadat, Kosygin meet President Anwar Sadat of Egypt (left) stands with Premier A: Kosygin (right) on arriving in Moscow yesterday. Sadat c for a series of meetings on the Middle East crisis. (See N Briefs.) Sen Jacob Javits (R-N.Y.) sent telegrams to Meany and other top union officials Sunday, trying to resolve their reported doubts on whether the Cost of Living Coun- cil would have veto power over lexei wage decisions that would be ;ame made by a newly created tripar- ewse tite Pay Board. r TONIGHT Oct. 12 a color, cinemascope film by Nagisa Oshima, "Japan's es- thetically and politically most. radical filmmaker."-Variety -BOY- Ar expressionist mystery thriller that explores a child's fantasy in conflict with reality. "A study of an outlaw family that recalls Truffaut's 400 Blows, but really goes much further in penetrat- ing individual psychology and in portraying a society."-News- week. Plus a short film Ritual of Love and Death written and directed by, and starring Yukio Mishima, the mili- tarist-artist who publicly committed hari-kari in November. 1 TAFT-HARTLEY INVOKED Dock, coal strikes continue across nation By The Associated Press Los Angeles area piers re- mained shut down yesterday, while the rest of the W e s t Coist throbbed with activity af- ter a 14-week longshoremen's strike was interrupted over the weekend as a result of a Taft Hartley back-to-work order. Cargo remained piled up three times higher than a, man's head, while efforts were made to set- tle a fresh dispute involving 11 striking members of the 15,000 man International Longshore- men's and Warehousemen's Un- ion (ILWU). They refused to accept dock assignments f or which they were singled out by name. On the East and Gulf coast, a walkout of 45,000 dockers con- tinued for an 11th day, with no negotiations scheduled. The striking AFL-CIO International Longshoremen's Association con- tinued to be plagued by a re- volt of Texas dockers, as most of them ignored strike orders and continued to work the West Gulf piers. 7:30 and 9:30 NAT. SCIL*AUD. note change of location $1.25 benefit contribution s More than 10,000 soft coal miners remained idle in 20 states in another 11 day o I d walkout. They were seeking an increase in the top daily wage from $37 to $50, plus a doub- ling of a 40 per cent per ton royalty paid by the industry to the United Mine Workers pen- sion fund. "They're not close to agree- ing on money and several other matters," a high union source reported of negotiations. Roving bands of pickets over- turned two loaded coal trucks at a mine near Petersburg, about 15 miles southeast of Youngstown, Ohio. Other pick- ets shut down about 10 non- union mines in West Virginia. The- latest Los Angeles pier TV & Air Conditioner RENTALS Hi Fi Studio 121 W. Washington NO 8-7942 deadlock involved the refusal of 11 key men, known as "steady men," to prepare fork lifts, cranes and other pier equip- ment which must function pro- perly before 'longshoremen can handle ships. The Pacific Maritime Associa- tion on Saturday requested the 11 by name, and their right to specify whom they wanted was upheld by an arbitrator. The ILWU said the 11 refused to accept the jobs because they felt available work should be shared equitably among quali- fied dockers. Ship sailings were resumed from the San Francisco-Oak- land area, where 1,000 long- shoremen - about 10 times the normal number - worked through the weekend on 26 ves- sels. Prior to last week's applica- tion of Taft-Hartley with its 80 day cooling off provision, t h e MLWU was deadlocked with West Coast shipping firms over jurisdiction of off-dock contain- ers, a guaranteed work week and wages and benefits. The walk- out began July 1 and losses were estimated at $1.7 billion. The White House has said that the Pay Board, as well as a seven member Price Commission, would be semiautonomous bodies. While their individual pay and price de- cisions would be final, the Cost of Living Council could step in if the wage-price criteria they de- veloped got out of line with the administration's goals. Meany, who has been critical of the wage - price freeze, has urged an autonomous Pay Board. As the labor leaders pondered their decision,- consumer advo- cate Ralp Nader, who was ex- cluded from White House consum- er consultations on Phase 2. told a Senate subcommittee Nixon's post freeze program undermines the Constitution. "Any strict constructionist judge wouldn't take any more than 14 minutes to dispose of these pro- grams on a constitutional basis," Nader said. "This all wraps up as a rape that makes the executive expansion under the New Deal look like a picnic," he said. 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, Michigan48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Ujniver- 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. ; ]bombs Mairk beginning .,of Agnew's visit ANKARA (A)M Bombs hurled at twoAmerican targets marked the beginning yesterday of Vice President Spiro Agnew's 1I3-day mission to Turkey, ; Iran_ and Greece. The tombs exploded in Istanbul, 20 miles northwest of here, a few hours before Agnew's plane landed. U.S. officials in Istanbul said an attempt was made to throw a bomb over the fence of the U.S. Consulate General grounds, but the device fell short and exploded, causing no damage. The second bomb blew up the car of Kenton Keith, a U.S. cultural attache. The Consulate was closed for Columbus Day. Turkey's martial law government ordered the na- tion's press to print no stories of the explosions. The vice president said in an arrival statement that the U.S. commitment to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization - of which Turkey is a- member -"Stands on a foundation of bedrock." Agnew was met at the airport by Premier Nihat Erim. They rode the 20 miles into the city along a highway cleared of other traffic and lined by clusters of Turks. Agnew told Erim that "the link our two countries have shared in Nato for more than a decade re- mains vital, not-only to our mu- tual security but also to the peace of the world." On the flight from Washington, the vice president voiced opposi- tion to any congressional ban on military aid to Greece, the last and longest stop on his current trip. 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