mi M" I page three ip Sitt4'i!3An NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: Sunday, September 13, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three news briefs By The Associated Press THE UNITED AUTO WORKERS said last night they were lowering their first-year wage demands in contract bargaining with the auto industry, but Leonard Woodcock, UAW president, said he is "not at all hopeful" for a settlement before a midnight Monday strike deadline. After meeting with bargainers for General Motors and Chrysler yesterday, Woodcock said the union was asking increases which would raise the average hourly wage in the industry from $4.02 to $4.65 in the first year of a three-year contract, down from the original wage demand calling for about a $1 an hour average increase in the first year. * SECRETARY OF STATE William P. Rogers said yesterday that the Nixon administration is considering economic aid to Israel, whose finances have, been hard hit in her long struggle with the Arabs. Sources said the amount of aid being discussed is in the $400 million-to-$500 million range, though an exact amount has not been decided pending fuither talks and the outcome of related legislation in Congress. SOUTH VIETNAMESE Vice President Nguyan Cao Ky dis- closed yesterday that he will most likely address a "March for Victory" rally in Washington next month. The decision appeared likely to evoke dismay in the U.S. embassy in Saigon and the Nixon administration in Washington as U.S. of- ficials and some South Vietnamese leaders fear Ky's appearance could touch'off antiwar demonstrations. They also felt the address might prove politically embarrassing occurring only a month before U.S. congressional elections. U.S. financing of S. Korean combat troops nears $1 billion WASHINGTON (P) - The Unit- ed States has paid nearly $1 bil- lion to finance South Korean com- bat troops in Vietnam, including special allowances to some sold- iers twenty times their normal homefront pay. The outlay since 1965, which was outlined by the State De- partment ands Pentagon dfficials beford the Senate's Foreign rela- tions subcommittee on security and agreements and commit- ments abroad, totals more than three times wnat the United States has paid other allied na- tions for help in Vietnam. But it was still only part of a tough bargain driven by t h e South Koreans before fielding a Vietnam force:now numbering some 50 men. Other terms, as outlined in se- cret senate testimony made public yesterday, included statements by U.S. officials that appeared ' to' imply this nation might go be- yond its treaty obligations in de- fense of South Korea. The United States also pledged to maintain "powerful" forces in South Korea, promising not ,to withdraw any troops without prior consultation with Seoul. It agreed also to suspend a de-{ cision to switch billions in mili- tary assistance programs funded? with other allied countries in In- dochina. The subcommittee went out of its way to: say it was not being critical of S. Korea or Any other ,nations they had looked at, only critical of the United States and its policies. Most of this criticism ceritered on the practice of paying big special allowances to South Kor- ean. troops. A table accompany- ing the heavily censored trans- cript showed that a South Kor- ean private normally earns $1.60 a month. The same private sent to Vietnam, however, is , aid an a'd- ditional $37.50 a month. William J. Porter, U.S. ambas- sador to South Korea, insisted under questioning that Korean troops were fighting in South Vietnam out of a sense of grat- itude 'for U.S. help two decades ago and not because of the allow- ances. Previous testmony before t h e subcommittee, headed by Sen. Stuart Symington (D-Mo) showed the United States had paid some 240 million to Thailand and 40 million to the Phillipines. The. Koreans, however, h a-v e had far more combat troops in Vietnam that any other ally in- cluding Australia which pays its own way. - Sen. Symington from the purchase of consumable items such as oil and clothing for the South Korean Army, to the purchase of hardware -a decis- ion that has set back moderni- zation of the South Korean Army while being profitable for t h e country's businessmen. In some respects, especially the payment of combat allowances, the arrangements were similar to agreements the United States has NADER CONSUMER WARNING I Wake up and watch that cherry SIGMA ClI Contrary to popular belief the days of physical and mental hazing as a part of the fraternity system are past. Sigma Chi s, unique atmosphere serves as a foundation on which the individual can develop his' own attitudes, beliefs, and convictions. We are not a political organization. Many have WASHINGTON 0) had been inspecting all through the meal. - Ralph Nader his food closely Ix Now he scooped the two red cherries from atop his fruit salad. "I want you to notice that I'm taking out the mar- aschino cherries," he said. "They should ban those things. That dye is dangerous, really bad." Nader has long urged - so far unsuc- cessfully - that red dye used in the cherries be banned because experiments show the chemical causes cancer in test animals. Maraschino cherries are a typical Nad- er target. They may seem tivial in a world fractured by war, revolution and balanc of terror politics, but to Nader, all these things are a test of who's in charge here. "It's all part of citizenship issues," said Nader. "If you can't get people in- terested in things that affect t h e m most closely, how can you get them in- terested in things that are more re- mote?" dents, Nader sees student involvement as the biggest dividend from his work. "It can all be done by the students. The power is there," he says. Nader is a man without title in a town where nearly everybody has one. He usually is dubbed "consumer ad- vocate," but to him the job goes by- yond blowing the whistle on unsafe cars, exploding pipelines. contaminated meat or cancerous additives in food. "I define consumer almost the same as citizen," he says.' "The science of citizenship is in about' the state of physics in the age of Archi-. medes. The citizen has got to learn to make societ work for him. People don't look at citizenship as a science. It should be the one study above all. "I used to ask myself: what motivates people to look out for their interests?, Why don't they take a r e a 1 interest? They weren't getting facts on who's re- sponsible for what." In the past years, Nader has set up the center for the Study of Responsive Law, a loosely organized staff of young law- yers and students which has studied the Food and Drug Administration, Inter- state Commerce Commission; Federal Aviation. Agency and other government departments. More recently, Nader set up the Public Interest Research Group to pick up where the Center leaves off. The Group will initiate lawsuits, both on its own and in cooperation with citizens. "I notice some opening up," he says. "It's much easier now to get facts out of the government. "But there's so much left to be done. The government has no capability for self reform, a great capability for cover- ing up. "It's a manpower problem. With our limited manpower we've done some amaz- ing things. But' we need at least 20 per cent of the lawyers and professional peo- ple working in the public interest." Nader considers students to be the best bet 'for getting that 20 per cent, com- pared with the 1 per cent or so of law- yers he says are doing what they call pro bono publico work. I accused us of being apathetic, but this is far from the truth. We are not politically active as a group because group pressures tend to limit and restrict the individ- ual. We feel it is far better for the individual to reach out and experience on his own rather than be bound by certain written or unwritten regulations of a par- ticular group. U U As a result of this attitude, Sigma Chi attracts a unique cross section of people. It is extremely impor- tant in life to be able to communicate with all people, and Sigma Chi serves its members and the community by encouraging this environment to exist. All we ask is that you take a look for yourself. SIGMA CHii 548 S. STATE (Next to the Union) Ralph Nader ,Dealing extensively w Sot.-Sun., Sept. 12-13 Lonesome Cowboy dir. ANDY WARHOL (1967) Real modern art from the modern West- with all your favorites-Machismo- Joe D'Allesandro, Viva Superstar and Rav- ing Taylor Mead. Sept. 14-MANDABI 7 & 9:05 Architecture 662-8871 75c Auditorium The last time Virgil Tibbs had aday like this was "InThe Heat Of The Night"9 ith college stu- SALE 10 GAL. 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