-- page three C4P Stici !3a ~ai-.. NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 The Atmosphere and the People THAT'S WHAT MAKES IT Saturday, February 27, 1971 NIGHT EDITOR: DAVE CHUDWIN Page Three Albert 1700 Geddes Terrace 761-1717 - H YH HaveYouHead the Latest ? 4 Precision Heads Hysteresis Motor Pop-up Cassette Headphone Jack TEAC Quality TEAC A-23 IIl-FI BUYS Ann Arbor-East Lansing news briefs By The Associated Press FIGHTING BROKE OUT between striking students and govern- ment troops yesterday in Cali, Colombia, and rioting quickly spread to other parts of the city. At least 15 persons were reported killed on the University of Dela Valle campus in Cali. The government imposed a curfew on the city of nearly 1 million, the first daytime curfew declared in Colombia for many years. Students have occupied university buildings and disrupted campus activities for several days in an attempt to oust the university president, Alfonso Londono. A NARCOTICS CONTROL protecol was signed yesterday by France and the United States, in what could be the first of several agreements among countries cracking down on drug use. U.S. Atty. Gen. John Mitchell told newsmen he hoped the protecol, which provides for agent exchange and training, would be the guide- light "for additional agreements" with countries where drugs originate or are processed. The Marseille area of France has long been the center where rawe materials from Turkey, Pakistan and other Eastern countries are trans- formed into heroin for smuggling into the United States. * * * THE ROTC BUILDING at the University of Hawaii was de- stroyed yesterday by what authorities suspect as arson. The building was one of several occupied during a five-day sit-in fast spring by students andafaculty opposed to the ROTC program on compus and the Vietnam war. THE CREATION of a National Institute for Consumer Justice was announced yesterday by government officials. The institute, to study what can be done to alleviate the procedure for the buyer with a complaint, was set up as an incorporated body with a board of directors of 13 persons, most of them outside of the govern- 1ment. In his consumer message to Congress earlier this week, President Nixon called for such a group to study the adequacy of existing proce- dures for resolving disputes arising out of consumer transactions. THREE CUBAN fishing boat captains were slapped with federal warrants charging violation of American territorial waters after the White House stepped into a feud yesterday between Florida and federal officials. A fourth Cuban skipper was charged earlier in the day and orderedj held under $10,000 cash bond in Monroe County Jail.{ Federal officials gave no reason for reversing their stand and serv- ing warrants on the three taken into custody by the state. '' E t('" I ,:{:j !;?;. < 'I I ,i j s r I i f x l C. ' }] 1 ^-ssociatec Press U.N. ambassador nalsctres President Nixon applauds and congratulates his new ambassador to the United Nations, former Texas Congressman George Bush, yesterday, at ceremonies in the White House. EDU(ATION OFFICIAL'S REPORT: Gov't inancial aid for school desegregation called effective 618 S. Main Phone 769-4700 WASHINGTON (A') - The Nix- on administration's top education official said yesterday the assist- ance program for school districts faced with racial desegregation re- quirements has been generally ef- fective and worthwhile despite some violations of the plan's in- tent. "Quality Sound Through Quality Eauioment" ; ___ Read and Use Daily Class ijeds 4m BUSINESS STAFF announces new Assistant Managers DISPLAY ADVERTISING AMY BUCKSTEI N CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING JUDY CASSEL * GEORGE STRONG NATIONAL ADVERTISING f HAROLD HUMPHRIES SALES AND PROMOTIONS Qf a JIM MITCHELL LAYOUT HARRY H I RSCH 4 JANET GONYEAU LL CIRCULATION GAIL COWLING 40 PAUL WENZLOFF CATHY GOFRANK STEVE EVSEEFF A TTEMPT RECONCILIA TION Guerilla leaders meet in Cairo ny The Associated Press Palestinian guerrilla leaders began pouring into Cairo yesterday on the eve of a conference aimed at patching together their differences, and one top commando expressed confidence that unification is possible. Hamid Abu Sitta, a member of the 27-man execu- tive committee of the commando movement, said in an interview that he had had several meetings with guerrilla "fighters" including George Habash's extremist outfit, the Popular Front for the Libera- tion of Palestine, which has specialized in plane hijackings. Sitta said the commando leaders he talked with "all sincerely hope the Palestinian leaders can find an acceptable formula" to merge the 11 main guerrilla organizations under a unified command. In an effort to avert collapse of the movement, guerrilla leader Yasir Araft and Brig. Abdelrzzak Yahya, commander of the Palestine Liberation Army, agreed this week to the proposed merger. They also agreed to curb extremist elements bent on toppling King Hussein of Jordan. f In Tel Aviv, Premier Golda Meir praised the Paraphernalia's Targ Special of the We 60% OFF United States for its military and financial aid to Israel, but declared that Washington is aware that it cannot pressure her government into giving up three pieces of territory. "The Americans know very well how much we can concede," Mrs. Meir told a meeting, "and know we cannot concede the Golan Heights, East Jeru- salem or Sharm el Sheikh." "The Americans know well that pressure, in- cluding financial, will not work, and they know that financial pressure will not force us to give up what we consider vital to our security." Two Israeli leaders said in Tel Aviv their govern- ment is not yet ready to reveal precise details of the borders it wants in a peace settlement. Finance minister Pinhas Sapir and. Transporta- tion Minister Shimon Peres, in speeches, said it was too premature in the negotiators with Egypt to dis- close maps. The Jerusalem Post reporting from Washington said the United States expects Israel to spell out its conditions for peace with Egypt, including issues such as frontiers, refugees and navigation. Subscribe to I The Michigan Daily Sidney P. Marland Jr., Commis- enough safeguards and guidelines stoner of Education, told a con- to insure school districts comply gressional subcommittee racial iso- with the intent of the legislation. lation in schools is a stubbornlyI Marland also said that u n d e r persistent condition "which is as last fall's program a's under the inimical to the education of white proposed Nixon legislation the Of- children as it is to the education fice of Education is monitoring as' of minority children." closely as possible school districts But, he said, "in the south, that receive aid under the pro- the picture has improved markedly gram. over the past few years" due to He said of the 891 districts thatI the breakup of the dual school have already received a total of sytem. , $62 million, under the old legisla- Marland cautioned, however, tion, 20 school districts failed or that "the national trend does not refused to meet compliance re- allow for much optimism" and quirements and "have been noti- urged an education subcommittee fied that their grants were subject of the Senate to support the Nix- to termination." on administration bill providing - $1.5 billion over the next year and one-half to help schools m e e t B Ua e it problems associated with desegre- gation. Last summer Congress approved expenditure of $75 million for this Hsl urdr ,N same purpose under the Emer- gency School Assistance Program. SAN FRANCISCO (k' -B 1 a c k Marland said that expenditure, the first of its specific kind, "help-: Panther leader Eldridge Cleaver ed to bring about the calm and yesterday demanded the dismissal: smooth transition from dual to or resignation of David Hilliard unitary school systems." as Panther chief of staff. Ano- "In general, activities funded the' leader, Huey Newton, dis-1 under the program have proven agreed. their worth," Marland told Sen. Cleaver, the Panther minister Claiborne Pell, tD-R.I.), chairman of information, now in exile in? of the subcommittee. Marland Algeria, blamed Hilliard for the{ praised what he termed the flex- recent purge of numerous partyl ibility which allows for amending members and said he was causing+ and redesigning the program "as the party to fall "apart at the1 required to meet local problems seams." arising on a day-to-day basis."m «Newtton, the party's defense+ Thursday civil rights group minister, said the purge was ne-1 workers who oppose the bill told cessary. "I'don't think the chiefI Pell and Sen. Walter Walter F. of staff is responsible. I'm respon-1 Mondale, (D-Minn.), author of an sible for it. I take that respon- opposition aid bill, that the Nixon sibility," Newton said. measure does not incorporate The open break between the two+ Dr. claims Calley sane at My Lai FT. BENNING, Ga. k -- The last of three prosecution psy- chiatrists described Lt. Wil- Liam L. Calley Jr. yesterday as mentally unimpaired at My Lai nearly three years ago, and fully capable of premediating the murder of 102 Vietnamese civilians as charged by t h e government in his court-mar- tial. "In my opinion, I could find no condition that impaired him to premediate," said Col. Arnold W. Johnson Jr., chief of the Depart- ment of Psychiatry and Neurology at Walter Reed Hospital in Wash- ington. Nor, he added, was there any evidence of transient impair- ment - a sort of temporary mal- function of the mind. Johnson, a veteran of combat in both Korea and Vietnam, head- ed a three-man Walter Reed san- ity board which examined the 27- year-old Calley in January a nd February. All three gave the opin- ion that he is fully accountable on government charges that he di- rected a mass execution of unre- sisting men, women and small children during, an infantry as- sault on My La March 16, 196. The court-martial was'inter- rupted in mid-afternoon by a tornado threat, which led to the dismissal of all civilian employes on this huge infantry post. The trial judge, Col. Reid Ken- nedy, said a morning session is planned this morning to make up for time lost, Just before the recess, the pros- ecutor, Capt. Aubrey Daniel are gued in the absence of the court- martial jury that the defense had spread Calley's entire life in evi- dence before the jury. He main- tained that entitled him to sub- mit varied types of rebuttal evi- dence and he added that "I have evidence of other acts of miscon- duct both prior and after t h i s event - referring to the My Lai incident in which the government charges the defendant w a s re- sponsible for the premeditated murder of 102 Vietnamese civil- ians. es ouster of wton objects took place during KGO-TV's "Jim Dtnbar Show." Newton appeared in person and Cleaver was on the telephone from Algeria. Cleaver called the purge of Pan- ther Elmer G. "Geronimo" for bomb conspiracy - "regrettable" "It took place without p r o p e r consultation with other members of the Central Committee and we lay the responsibility at the feet of David Hilliard and we demand that David Hilliard be dismissed or resign from the position of chief of staff of the Black Pan- ther party so that we can go about the work of putting the party back together again," Cleaver said. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University o Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan. 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- ity year. Subscription rates: $10 by arrier, $10 by mail. Summer Session Published Tuesday through Saturday morning.Subscrip- tion rates: $5 by carrer $5 by mai. Lek Baby & Pediatrics Clinic SAT., MARCH 6 & 20 1-3:30 pm. Free Peoples Clinic 302 E. Liberty 761-8952 "A master- piece. A brilliant, movinh tilms.t -oln Sfl 1214 S. UNIVERSITY DIAL 8-6416 HOLDING OVER ... Two of your most often requested encores! r a r t t 1 CERTIFIED ABORTION REFERRAL ABORTION patient handled with greatest care and personal warmth af- forded by medical professionals (212) TR 7-8562 MRS. SAUL ALL INQUIRIES CONFIDENTIAL I I AND NOMINATED FOR ACADEMY AWARDS Glenda Jackson AS BEST ACTRESS AND Ken Russell AS BEST DIRECTOR For the student body: FLARES by A Levi A Farah U Wright "Ell 1 ) 1 %L U I I i