ann arbor film cooperative general meeting tonight wed nesday, oct. 7th 8:00 p.m., union room 3-d all those interested are urged to attend page three 4Q "trl igttn 3aty NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Wednesday, October 7, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three I 1 ANNOUNCING Cold Beer and Wine NOW AVAILABLE at convenient Food, Mart ON NORTH CAMPUS (next to Lums) OPEN EVERY NIGHT 'TIL MIDNIGHT * I If you want to have a baby that's your business. If you don't, that's ours. We're a nonprofit family planning agency with physician super- * vhsion and we offer contraceptives by mail. We hoave effective S methods for both men and women. Nationally known products a which are completely. safe and require no prescription. We offer them to you at great savings. Arid we send them to you in a plain u package so that Xur private life stays that way-private. Send for full details. POPULATION SERVICES, INC. 105,N. Columbia St., Dept. D-1 CHAPEL HILL, N.C. 27514 * Gentlemen: Please send me full details without obligation: ADDRESS a NAME * CITY STATE ZIP _ 'm ummm m m m m" m m m m m'""""" m mmmmmm "" mm mm news briefs By The Associated Press THE BLACK PANTHER PARTY has established ties with "foreign revolutionary groups such as Al Fatah," the Palestinian guerrillas, according to a House committee investigator. A study of the Panther's official newspaper indicates the party's ties with Al Fatah "have gone beyond the talking stage," investi- gator Stewart Pott told a subcommittee of the House Committee on Internal Security. A most important recent trend, according to Pott, is that the Panthers "are'reaching out more and more for support and assistance to anti-U.S. forces overseas." KNOCKING $2 BILLION out of the Pentagon's annual money bill, the House Appropriations Committee approved $66.7 billion yesterday and said the country has every right to expect "formidable military forces" for that. It approved all $1.1 billion authorized for the Safeguard anti- missile system and an extra $415 million for Navy ships but trimmed $1.5 billion off development and purchase of other military weapons systems.t It approved all $358 million asked by the administration to boost the combat readiness of South Vietnam forces. House action on the billl, trimmed from President Nixon's re-j quest for $68.7 billion, is scheduled to start Thursday morning and a vote is expected before the end of the week. Criticizing Pentagon money management for the second year{ running, the committee said "the critical times ahead" require the Defense Department to tighten its operations.r FOREIGN MINISTER MAHMOUD RIAD of Egypt expressed willingness yesterday to extend the Middle East cease-fire by 90 days after it expires Nov. 5 but he ruled out any withdrawal of missiles from the Suez Canal truce zone as the United States and Israel demand. At the same time, Egypt's ruling political party declared that the struggle against Israel "must be escalated in all fields" and called for a strengthening of relations with the Soviet Union. The party, the Arab Socialist Union founded by Gamal Abdel Nasser, met in Cairo to ratify Anwar Sadat as Nasser's successor as president. In New York, the United States told the other three big powers at the United Nations it is pointless to talk about guidelines for a Middle East peace until Egypt pulls back the anti-aircraft missiles. But Riad, talking on television in Cairo, declared the missiles were placed in the canal zone before the cease-fire went into effect Aug. 7 and that none would be withdrawn. Filbert nut board prie: $204d5,339 I Tr I Fighting erupts t In Bolivia LA PAZ, Bolivia (1?) - Civil war broke out between leftist and rightist military forces yesterday in Bolivia where Latin America's master insurrectionist, Ernesto "Che" Guevara, was slain three years ago. Leftists bombed the presidential palace and raked armed forces headquarters with machinegun fire. The battle was triggered by the resignation of leftist President Alfredo Ovan- do Candia. The air force, supporting leftist Gen. Juan Jose Torres, launched six planes in a 15-minute attack on the presidential palace, and the small military, -Associated Press GEN. ALFREDO OVANDO CANDIA, accompanied by armed guards, leaves his home in La Paz, Bolivia yesterday to seek asylum in the Argentine Embassy. Gen. Ovando quit as Bolivian president yesterday triggering a civil war between right and leftwing groups. STEADILY RISING COSTS: Strike against GMI enters fourth week DETROIT (/P) - The strike of the GM strike has been mx against General Motors entered mal, limited many cases to sh its fourth week yesterday with its ages of new cars at the GM d costs - already in the millions of erships. dollars daily - mounting stead- Louis Corsi, tax administr ily and with layoffs spreading to in Cleveland, estimated the si supplier firms, trucking com- will cost the city $35,000 to $4( panies and others. a month in lost income taxel Effects of the strike were being The strike could create see felt over much of the Midwest, problems in Indiana, James M with the greatest impact in Michi- is, the state's revenue com gan, where GM facilities are con- sioner, said yesterday. centrated. The Indiana Employment An illustration of the effects is urity Division reports unemp the demand among families of the ment compensation is being striking United Auto Workers to 36,533 this week, compare (UAW) for food stamps. 11,970 during the comparable Reed Thrift, head of the Wayne a year ago. County federal food stamp pro- - ---- gram, says he had to add 100 ad- ditional employes and create two special offices to dispense theiRan stamps to strikersinthe Detroit e l area. There are an estimated 80,- 000 strikers in Detroit alone, and WASHINGTON (P)-Wit he estimated 7,000 persons were ing by and with a stack receiving the stamps by yester- in byadwtasac day guns and grenades on the w Under the plan, a striker with panel was told yesterday a a family of five can pay $23 for threatens the lives of all law stamps that will purchase food "I don't think there is a worth $58 every two weeks. Weatherman faction of S The union has instructed mem- Panthers are engaged in; bers to apply for food stamps and Charles O'Brien, Californi welfare benefits to supplement general, told the Senate Ii their strike benefits which range committee. from $30 to $40 a week. O'Brien, holding up what About $105 million remains ly confiscated 45-caliber s from the $120 million that was in police in his state are incr the strike fund when the strike recent large scale thefts of began at midnight Sept. 14. A to- tal of 403,141 GM employes were from the arsenals of military idled by, yesterday, 343,121 of "The quantity of these, them on strike and the rest laid unknown private hands r off. spectre of a situation inS N o n e of the nonunion white literally outgunned," O'Brier collar workers at GM has been a mortar could do to a p+ laid off, the company said, but O'Brien and other policf nini- nort- deal- ator trike 0,000 s. rious ath- mis- Sec- ploy- paid d to week garrison occupying it replied with antiaircraft fire. Rightist Gen. Rogelio Miranda, who led the revolt against Ovan- do on Sunday, arrived atthe pal- ace after the attack and castig- ated Ovando for "permitting ex- tremism." He denounced recent guerrilla activity in the northeast - which all but ceased after Bolivian troops killed Guevara in October 1967 - and pledged to p ut it ~down.Guevara, Fidel Castro's right hand man in the Cuban rev- olution, had embarked on a cam- paign of revolutionizing Latin America. Leftist troops followed up the palace bombing with a machine- gun attack on armed forces gen- eral headquarters, Miranda's com- mand post, Torres' forces claimed to have taken Bolivia's second largest city, Cochabamba. Groups of university students in the capital declared themselves' for Torres and a government that would be ",nationalist, of the left and with participation of workers and students." Miranda named a military triu- mvirate loyal to him. He decided to remain in the background with- out an official title. Ovando sought asylum in the Argentine Embassy. A group of a ir force officers loyal to Ovando answered Miran- da immediately by declaring Tor- res, who was eased out as com- mander of the armed forces 2%/ months ago "president of the rev- olutionary committee." BAM hits high school officials Black Action Movement (BAM) issued a statement Monday night sharply attacking the administra- tion of Ann Arbor's Pioneer High School for its alleged failure-to implement demands made by black students at the school for increased hiring of black faculty., Two years ago, the statement says, black students at the school first presented the demands, and last year, it continues, the school's principal committed himself to their implementation. But, the statement claims, "to date, the principal has failed to implement the demands, but in- stead summoned heavily armed police to stifle and intimidate the students who were gathered in peaceful assembly." This refers to events leading up to the disrup- tion which occurred at the school last Tuesday, in which classes were dismissed early and some parts of the school were damaged b'y black students. BAM, the statement concludes, "strongly supports the Pioneer High School students in their just demands for securing quality and relevant education." WASHINGTON (A)-Rest easy. taxpayer, your federal Filbert Control Board is hard at work. In these times of emphasis on law and order, the nuts must be controlled. And filberts are nuts. So - you have a Filbert Con- trol Board. The board ; has a part-time manager, a secretary a n d nine members who, in the words of one government official "meet when they need to." The Filbert Control Board's budget for this fiscal year is es- timated at $25,339. The govern- ment says they expect this ex- pense to be covered by an as- sessment rate of two-tenthsbof a cent per pound of assessable fil- berts, according to a notice pub- lished in the Federal Register last weekend. Assessable filberts are defined as those with shells. The board isn't much worried about filberts without shells. Most of them come from Turkey. American filberts - mostly as- sessable - come from Washing- ton and Oregon, which produce about 8,000 pounds of them year- ly. "We try to allocate the supply to meet the domestic demand for use of filberts in bags of mixed nuts," s a y s George Eastman, specialty corps branch chief at the Department of Agriculture. The price of filberts, Eastman says, is about 55 cents a pound. And the board, made up of growers and processors who are reimbursed for expenses but no salary, works in Portland, Ore., to keep prices constant. That is what the Filbert Control Board does. Eastman has a little difficulty explaining exactly what a filbert is. "Well, they're brown and kind of round," he begins. ". . . They- 're a little meatier than almonds. They're closer to peacans, b u t still not exactly like pecans. I'd say filberts have a little sturdier taste than almonds or pecans and, oh, I'm a little at a loss for words right now." But he h a s no difficulty ex- S ' 1 n r I J , t J t 7 { t iC {3 f bold of conspiracy h armed police stand- of mortars, machine itness table, a Senate national conspiracy officers. any question that the DS and the Black a conspiracy today," a's deputy attorney nternal Security sub- he said was a recent- ;bmachine gun, said easingly worried over arms and explosives posts. weapons and guns in aises the continuing which the police are n said. "Imagine what olice station." e witnesses said they ech protected by the stitution can no long- reaching of the over- the giving of detailed bombs or assassinate general of Maryland and head of the National Association of Attorneys General, testified that instructions on how to am- bush police officers printed in a Black Panther newspaper were almost identical in detail to an actual attack in Baltimore in which one policeman was killed and one wounded. O'Brien said there has been a 100 per cent rise in the number of police killings in California in 1970, with 15 law officers murdered in the first 7% months of the year. Assault on police have increased 350 per cent from 1967 when there were 362 prosecutions for such attacks of 1969 when there were 1,215 such cases. O'Brien said the political coloring of terrorisms has changed from the far right in the early 1960s to the far left presently. "While . much of this problem is politically motivated I should note that there are indications that violence against police is also a result of an increasingly violent atmosphere, and growing dis- respect for life which seems to affect our nation," O'Brien said. He said the violence and the resulting public terror is intended to provoke repression as the seed bed for successful revolution. As an example, he said attacks have spread from the police to firemen who he said some California militants now call "firepigs." plaining why there is a demand employes who quit or retire are for filberts, and thus a demand not being replaced while the strike for the Filbert Control Board. continues. "I like 'em personally," he says. In many other states the effect believe the freedom of spee First Amendment to the Con er be used to justify the pr throw of the government or1 instructions on how to make police officers. Francis Burch, attorney w Shop Jacobson's Mon.-Tues.-Wed.-Sat. 9:30 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. Thurs. and Fri. 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. the intriguing stitch of India imported in terrific tote to swing your shoulder. It's a young-idea multi-col ± cotton bag decorate embroidery and tiny reflecting circles. 10x102 inches. $8. ~Co Ou 00 0 0 9(d -Flsoor) _____ (pastry (OE THEREj 4> ENDS TODAY Open 12:45 p.m. Shows at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 p.m. at State & Liberty Sts. ®t ~J COLOR by Deli eUn - -rtst LADIES 75c FROM 1-6 P.M,. WEDNESDAYS hery n a from bgred ed with I STARTS TOMORROW! "AT LAST AN HONEST FILM" -Detroit Free Press 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 St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier, $10 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5. by carrier, $5 by mail. DIAL 8-64 16 ENDING TONIGHT Today at 1, 3, 5,7, 9 P.M. "IF IT DOESN'T GRAB YOU WHERE YOU LIVE, YOU AREN'T ALIVE." -Van Nuys News I I "Likely to Strike You as Truthfully Done and Satisfying! An intelligent piece of work, There are scenes one doesn't forget!" -PENELOPE GILLIAT, New Yorker GD.GH.GLawreice's THE VIRGIN AND THE GYPSY S A. movie as, American as Mom's apple pie, Daddy's Scotch- on-the- rocks and little Maxie's I I I I .. - - ' .