4' page three 121 W. Wai __ $ Sictgitan a- at'lu NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Hi-Fi Studio Thursday, October 8, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three shington 668-7942 features soNv the most respected name in HIGH FIDELITY.COMPONENTS nBeTws briefs By The Associated Press Leftist military officers sweep to power in Bolivian conflict i 1 I 9 - BEST STEAK HOUSE STEAK DINNERS NOW SERVING At Reasonable Prices FILET--1.59 SIRLOIN-1.53 Above Includes Baked. Potato, Salad, and Texas Toast STEAKBURGER-.79 includes baked potato and Texas Toast 217 S. STATE ST. Next to State Theater wmmmmmmmmm NON=" SINGLE SHOWS NOW ON SALE! I A NEW NARCOTICS BILL, hailed as a keystone in Presi- dent Nixon's anticrime program, was passed by the Senate yesterday. The bill gives the Justice Department broad new powers to combat illegal narcotic trafficking and clamps new restrictions on' the import, export, manufacture and sale of drugs. The Senate refused for the second time to approve an amend- ment by Sam Ervin (D-N.C.) removing the authority for the "no- knock no warning" narcotics raids from the bill. THE SENATE began debate yesterday on a proposed equal rights amendment to the Constitution. The amendment, approved in the House by a 350 to 15 vote in August, provides that equal rights shall not be denied or abridged under state or federal law because of sex. Supporters of the bill say it is designed to end the treatment of women as second class citizens. The proposal has been before Con- gress for 47 years. LEGISLATION TO CONTROL waste dumping in the oceans will be sought by President Nixon from the next Congress it was announced yesterday. The Council on Environmental Quality, which recommended this policy to the President, told newsmen it is being announced now to "put industry and municipalities on notice that this is the policy to- ward which we are heading." The council recommended a ban on ocean dumping of material known to be harmful and said that dumping of potentially harmful materials at sea should be phased out. * * * THE AFL-CIO CLAIMED yesterday that a "potential con- flict of interest" will occur if Sidney P. Marland becomes U.S. commissioner of education, launching an all-out attack on hisE nomination. Marland is presently president of the Institute for Educational Development. The AFL-CIO said this job is aimed at securing major school contracts for expensive educational materials. THE DEADLINE for the ransom of a British diplomat kidnapped by French separatists has been extended to noon today.a James Cross, British trade commissioner in Montreal, was kid- napped Monday by the Quebec Liberation Front (FLQ). The FLQ is demanding $500,000 in gold bullion and the release of 21 men they term political prisoners. A note from Cross saying he is in good health accompanied the deadline extension. His fate had been unknown since yesterday noon, when the previous deadline expired. BOSTON'S NEW ARCHBISHOP, the Most Reverend Hum- berto S. Medeiros, was installed yesterday in a tradition-filled Mass. The new archbishop replaces Richard Cardinal Cushing, who retired from the post after 26 years. Cushing, 75 and ailing, and three other cardinals were among thethousands of participants and spectators who filled Holy Cross Cathedral. Archbishop Medeiros, the son of a Portuguese immigrant, is particularly well-known for his work among the poor and Mexican- Americans in the Southwest. LA PAZ, Bolivia (R) - Leftist Gen. Juan Jose Torres swept to power yesterday with a show of force that toppled his rightist opponents. He promised cheering crowds that as president he would give Bolivia "a popular nationalist govern- ment." Gen. Rogelio Miranda, the conservative army chief of staff who forced President Alfredo Ovando Candia to resign Tuesday, was said to have taken refuge in a foreign embassy along with two members of his junta. Torres' government appeared to have solid support from students, farmers, workers and powerful segments of the armed forces. Bolivia thus followed the pattern of a leftist military regime that took over in Peru .in 1968. Chile's president-elect -Associated Press Frank Jones, former Black Panther, testifies House committee tol Panthers' new aims is Salvador Allende, the f i r s t Marxist to be elected in Latin America. Bolivia, Peru a n d Chile are bounded by Argen- tina, Paraguay and Brazil, where military rightist re- gimes are in power. Ten leftist demonstrators were reported killed in a mining town by military officers in the only known bloodshed of the two-day conflict. Ebullient Torres' supporters, in- cluding students and workers, raced through La Paz, sacking the homes of military men and civi- lians suspected of being rightist and occupied the buildings of three leading newspapers. In a speech to cheering crowds, from the balcony of the govern- mental palace after taking t h e oath, Torres declared his was "the revolution of the people, w h o manifest their unwavering will to take the route of national libera- tion." Torres said his government would rest on four pillars, the peasant farmers, the workers, the students and the armed forces. All will be invited into the new regime, he added. "We have won and the people have overcome their executioners," Torres said. Students and workers occupying the three important daily news- papers, proclaimed their decision to convert them into "cooperative newspapers in defense of popular aspirations." The Calendap Every MONDAY: Football Night, color TV happy hour prices Every TUESDAY- Apple Wine Night-reduced prices THURSDAY, OCT. 8: MERLIN 9:30-1 :30-Women half prices FRIDAY, OCT. 9: LEAVES OF GRASS 9:30-1 :30 DIAL 5-6290 rc-.! MICHIGAN ENDS TONIGHT "TOO LATE THE HERO" WASHINGTON (P)-The Black) Panther party has changed itsI emphasis from fighting racism to fighting capitalism, a former edit- or of the Panthers' newspaper testified yesterday. The target shift occurred, Frank B. Jones told a House subcommit- tee investigating the Panthers, "because they came to feel capital- ism is the over-all problem thatl causes racism.". Jones, 31, operator of a book- store in Richmond, Calif., joined the party in May 1968 after con- versations with Huey Newton, hej said, "because I felt it was doing something that needed to be done -combatting racism." He left the party in May 1969, Jones related, "because it was no longer emphasizing racism; it started opposing capitalism." s Whe then Panthers changedj "from a paramilitary, self-defense organization to a political party," he said, "there was a party purge7 to remove anyone who didn't make an attempt to understand the political motives." Asked by Rep. John M. Ash- brook (R-Ohio), about cartoons in the paper depicting police - drawn -as pigs - being knifed in the back, Jones said: "I consider cartoons political satire. For instance, you might have one saying, 'Stamp out lit- terbugs' and showing a giant foot1 ready to come down one. That] doesn't mean go out and stampi the next litterbug you see." Ashbrook also brought up a slogan which appeared in the paper: "The only good pig is a dead pig." "A pig being a policeman who conducts h i ms e l f improperly," Jones replied, "that's like saying 'the only good polio germ is a dead polio germ.'" Jones acknowledged that al- though no longer a member of the party he remains sympathetic to- ward the Panthers. Tougher Egyptian stand seen, By The Associated Press Egypt's National Assembly nom- inated Acting President Anwar Sadat for a full six-year term as president yesterday and pledged the new leadership would follow the policies of Gamal Abdel Nas- ser. However, there were indications in Cairo and elsewhere that Nas- ser's successors w e r e taking a tougher 'line toward the United States and Israel than the late Egyptian president took. In Beirutnnewspapers oftboth the right and the left noted a tougher Egyptian stance. Diplomats there expressed the belief that it may be too early to assess the first acts and state- ments of the new Egyptian lead- ership, and that the new leaders could be reacting to internal pressures in taking an initial stance that appears more militant than Nasser's. The semiofficialaCairo newspa- per Al Ahram said Sadat told U.S. Secretary of Health, Educa- tion and Welfare Elliot L. Rich- ardson that Egypt is prepared to consider a limited renewal of the cease-fire if U.N. mediator Gun- nar V. Jarring of Sweden "re-ac- tivates his mission." The current 90-day truce ex- pires Nov. 5. Jarring has flown to Moscow to resume his normal dip- lomatic duties there, but has said he would return to New Y o r k about the middle of this month. The Egyptian paper said Sadat told Richardson that Egypt re- jects all claims of missile move-, ments in the truce zone in viola- tion of the agreement. It quoted the Egyptian leader: "The first and foremost thing is that no- body asks us to withdraw a single missile f r o m the front because that is completely unacceptable. At the United Nations in New Y o r k, a British spokesman ex- pressed concern over the U.S. de- cision to pull out of deputy-level talks to establish guidelines for a Middle East peace. The talks among the United States, Britain, France and the Soviet Union should continue "and be seen to do so," a British spokesman said. DOORS OPEN DAILY AT 12:45 * STARTING FRIDAY * LEE "MONTE A Real Westem A CINEMA CENTER ILMS PRESENTATION A NATIONAL GENERAL PICTURES RELEASE PANAVSION'and TECHNICOLOR. GP Ride Switchboard finds transportation for students By CHUCK WILBUR In an effort to provide rides for students in the Ann Arbor area lacking transportation, the Han- nan Vaakuna League, an Ann Ar- bor commune, is operating t h e Ride Switchboard. T h e switchboard serves as a cost-free clearing house for ride information. Students n e e d i n g rides or riders may call the switch- board, where information is co- ordinated and rides are set up. Those offering rides may stipu- late if they want rides to share expenses or driving. League members decided to es- tablish t h e switchboard after hearing the idea of a telephone ride service discussed at a meeting of the Ann Arbor Tribal Council, a coalition of local radical groups. The goal of the switchboard, ac- nording to league member Andy Perl, is to "eliminate the other ride boards around t h e campus which have become too cluttered to be useful." According to another League member, the switchboard has. set; up over 150 rides of both long and short distances since it began op- erating September 18. T h e switchboard is, especially concerned with providing ride service to Ypsilanti, says Perl. Ef- forts are being made to contact commuters between Ann Arbor, Ypsilanti, and Detroit in order to set up rides on a permanent b'asis. The Ride Switchboard's num- ber is 769-5290. It is open from 12 noon to 8 p.m. weekdays and from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Satur- day and Sunday. t SATUR DAY, LEAVES OF 9:30-1 :30 OCT. GRASS 10: i TONIGHT AT 6:45-9 P.M. CAMPUS DIAL 8-6416 Doors Open Tonight 6:35 CWe'r'e T ogetker. ' IEIDSKAO Nobody Chops Prices Like Checkmate 1/ FALL SALE * Jackets " C.P.O.'s " All-Weather Coats '/2OFF I -/-; ,.: ~4.,. I for stadium warm-up. . BE GlEAT IE ' f;i1 4 l I V THE REAT STNEFACE the Cruiser Pak-A-Robe unfolds from its handy vinyl carrying case that I v