GUILD HOUSE -802 Monroe- Friday, Oct. 9-NOON LUNCHEON 35c page three ZtiI P Sfirtgitn al"I'llatly NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Friday, October 9, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three PROF. JOHN WATERBURRY, Dept. of Political Science: "Un-answerable Questions About the Middle East" news briefs By The Associated Press i I Milt ! LAST 2 PERFS. AT 8 SHARP! brecht CHALK CIRCLE TONIGHT and TOMORROW at 8! Trueblood-Box Office Opens 12:30 SEASON TIX ON SALE THRU SAT. I 1 Thurs.-Fri.--Oct. 8-9 SANSHO 'THE BALIFF dir. KENJI MIZOGUCHI (1954) Abduction and revenge in medieval Japan as de- picted by one of Japan's trio of Masters. The movie approaches the pity and terror of a Greek tragedy. SAT.-SUN: Kurosawa's Ikiru 7 & 9:30 Architecture (not 9:05) 75c 662-88Auditorium . 662-887 SLEEPING BEAR DUNES National Lakeshore was finally approved by Congress Wednesday night. and now needs only President Nixon's signature to become a reality. The bill, which pended in Congress for 10 years, will bring 61,000 acres of Lake Michigan dunes country into the national park system. Most of the property is to be bought by the government, but the Michigan legislature will be required to donate 8,373 acres of state- owned land. VICE PRESIDENT AGNEW said yesterday that polarization on political issues is inevitable and that certain extremists and law violators should be "separated for the good of the majority." Speaking to a group of newspaper editors, Agnew said that in a nation of 200 million people not everyone can become a pro- ductive member of society, and that "we must recognize that it is important to separate some of the people from our society so theyI don't impair and impede our progress." NORTH KOREAN "volunteers" are reportedly fighting in Cambodia on the Communist side, apparently in response to the 50,000 troops sent by the South Korean government to fight alongside the Allies. The report came from Taing Kauk; where Cambodian field of- ficers say at least one North Korean batallion was involved in the fighting. Meanwhile, the American command reports that 43,775 Ameri- cans have been killed in Vietnam since 1961. *' * * 'Quebec group continuehold, on British aide. MONTREAL (R) - The fate of a kidnaped B r i t i s h diplo- mat was uncertain last night as various deadlines for his release passed without indication of agreement between his abductors, the Quebec Liberation Front and the Canadian government. A communique found Thursday afternoon in a telephone booth said James Richard Cross, 49, British senior trade commissioner who was seized Monday, was in no danger at the moment. It set a new deadline - Thursday midnight - for his release and also asked the government to specify which of the abductors' ransom demands were considered unreasonable. Foreign Secretary Mitchell Sharp on Tuesday rejected seven ransom demands as "wholly unreasonable." The kidnapers, members of and = -Associated Press Protest in South Africa Some 3,000 South African students demonstrated in Johannesburg yesterday in protest of their government's policies. Police who escorted the marchers said that the procession was generally THE AIR FORCE said yesterday that "very stringent rules" peaceful. prevent indiscriminate air attacks on Laotian civilian centers by -- -- ---------- -- ----- -- -- - U.S. pilots. DL't'T1M/rNTmT IN REVOLT: The statement was made after publication of a series of news REGIMENT I R VT stories reporting that U.S. pilots have been bombing Laotian villages for more than two years. The Air Force said no strikes are made in Laos without approval C O lO n el th rec of the royal Laotian government and that "no reports of indiscriminate ..vr.,avas frwo bv.ava waaJ tens MAKE HER ACCEPTANCE OFFICIAL WITH AN ENGAGEMENT DIAMOND Your proposal was brilliant. Her acceptance sweet. And now it's time to publicize the pledge with a diamond on her finger. Our selection is wide and brilliant. We'll help you choose the right ring. To announce your honorable intentions to the world. bombing have been received. SDS IS DEAD, a victim of its own success, the House In- ternal Security Committee said yesterday. The committee said Students for a Democratic Society began as a reformist student movement intent on working within the system, but found its greatest success beginning in the mid-1960s as it turned more and more militant and radical. "As the ranks swelled, both the direction and objectives of SDS changed radically - moving from dissent on behalf of reform to open resistance and finally to revolutionary violence and virtual anarchy," the report said. THE SOVIET UNION agreed Thursday to fliscuss an inter- national space rescue system with the U.S. and ten other coun- tries. If space rescue agreement is reached, it would be the first major effort at space cooperation by two major powers. The agreement came at the 21st Congress of the International Astronautical Federation, where the week-long theme was interna- tional space cooperation. GENERAL MOTORS and the United Auto Workers go back to economic bargaining today, in the 25-day-old strike that has{ idled approximately 400,000 workers. The new round of talks was requested by UAW President'Leonard Woodcock Wednesday. Local-level settlements between GM and the UAW have been re- ported at plants in Kalamazoo, Michigan, and in Syracuse, New York. new Bolivian regime extremist French-Canadian move- ment that seeks independence for Quebec Province, have asked for $500,000 in gold bars and the re- lease of 21 imprisoned terrorists along with a plane to take them to Cuba in exchange for Cross. The communique rejected an of- fer of the government to appoint a Cabinet minister to negotiate with the kidnapers. It -called the offer a trap., An earlier communication be- tween the abductors and the Canadian government, delivered to a French-language radio station yesterday, indicated that the ter- rorists might be willing to scale down their monetary demands, police officials suggested. The communication ended with the sentence : "Be assured that we, for our part, will not put the life of diplomat T. Cross in danger over questions of dollars." The government won an ex- tension of the terrorists' deadline until noon yesterday by agreeing to broadcast a "manifesto" pre- sented by the front. The document, calling for a Quebec revolution to "replace an enslaved society by a free society," was broadcast by a Montreal French language sta- tion Wednesday night. Foreign Secretary Mitchell Sharp said the government would arrange to have it broadcast over Radio Canada's radio and television facilities. "We are fed tip, and so are more and more Quebecois, with a spine- less government which makes one thousand and one somersaults to charm American millionaires while begging them to come and invest in Quebec," the 1,400-word mani- festo said. Congress to reorganize WASHINGTON (W) - Congress gave final approval yesterday to a reorganization bill that dilutes some of the powers of committee chairmen, ends secret House vot- ing, opens House committee to television coverage but leaves the senority system intact. The House, by voice vote, com,- pleted action on the measure, climaxing a five-year fight by younger members against a re- luctant leadership. Other changes, will permit. elec- tronic voting in the. House, give Congress a summer vacation, pro- vide free tours of Capitol for visit- ors and build a dormitory and school for Congressional pages. Another change in the House section of the bill calls for sealing off the visitors' galleries from the House chamber with transparent, bullet-proof barriers. In other congressional action yesterday, a proposed $15 billion ceiling on the Vietnam war and forced withdrawal of all U.S. troops by next June were quickly and soundly defeated by the House. An amendment by Rep. Donald W. Riegle Jr. (R-Mich.), to put a $15 billion Vietnam war ceiling on the $66.7 billion defense ap- propriation-which he said would "lock in President Nixon's efforts to end the war"-was defeated by voice vote. LA PAZ, Bolivia (om) - The one-' day-old leftist-civilian regime of Gen. J u a n Jose Torres was threatened with military revolt last night by a regimental com- mander who claimed broad army support. Earlier, Torres' military-civil- ian regime received the backing of the powerful Bolivian Workers Federation. Col. Miguel Ayoroa, commander of t h e important La Paz-based Ingavi regiment, announced his opposition to Torres' infant gov- ernment last night, posing t h e latest confrontation between Bo- livia's military chieftains. He demanded a government that would be "truly nationalis- tic" and said the 317 officers who voted Monday to oust Presidents Alfredo Ovando were in agree- ment with him. Torres took over the presidency Wednesday aifter toppling a con- servative, three-man military ta that held power for only 12 hours after replacing Ovando, al- so a general. The quick shuffle of power be- tween opposing leftist and right- ist generals is commonplace for Bolivia, one of the world's most politically unstable countries. It has averaged more than one gov- ernment upset per year since gaining independence in the 1820s. 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. Torres, trying to keep his gov- ernment afloat, said it was based on workers, farmers, students and the military. His backing by the workers federation was expected but also was the probable trigger of the new opposition to Torres by more conservative military leaders. The federation's members in- clude former Vice President Juan Lechin, the fiery tin mine work- ers' leader once banished to Chile and .Paraguay for organizing re- volts. He was elected vice presi- dent in 1960. Under the slogan "workers to the power," the federation agreed to 'participate in the government and, to give an austere image, re-, quested a reduction in Cabinet ministers' salaries. T h e salaries are about $800 a month. Congressional witnesses claim. radical plot against policemen 9 I BAITS TG TONIGHT! s GRAD MIXER 9-I Stanley Lounge Baits I $1 .00 Guys-25c Chicks 2 ID's required WASHINGTON (1P) - Thou- sands of young revolutionaries in inner cities a n d campuses are learning to make and use antipolice weapons in a loosely knit but nationwide "kill the pigs" movement, police witness- es told Congress yesterday. Several told the Senate in- ternal security subcommittee that from "storefront colleges" in Buffalo, N.Y., to Santa Bar- bara, Calif., to Seattle, Wash., radical students, black militants and other groups are inciting their followers to k ill police officers and firemen. Shop Mon. & Fri. 'til 8:25 Main at Washington I J K 02 L Ilb- -d6mmW Contemporary Directions 1970-71 presents h Ther Michigan Contemporary Directions Ensemble FIRST CONCERT, RACKHAM LECTURE HALL 8:00 P.M.-SATURDAY, OCTOBER 10,1970 PHYLLIS MAILING, Guest Soprano SYDNEY HODKINSON, Conductor PROGRAM' Peter Phillips,.................... Divertimento Loren Rush ........................Nexus 16 INTERMISSION- "INDIVIDUAL RESPONSIBILITY IN TIME OF WAR" RICHARD WASSERSTROM Professor of Philosophy and Law, UCLA 4:15 P.M., FRIDAY, OCT. 9 ROOM 150, HUTCHINS HALL, LAW SCHOOL JOINTLY SPONSORED BY THE PHILOSOPHY DEPARTMENT AND THE LAWYER'S CLUB "The groups we are dealing with today are not innocent, misinformed students," Sheriff Michael A. Amico of Erie Coun- ty, New York, told the panel. "They know precisely what they are doing. Their ultimate goal is not reform, but revolution. They preach peace . . . but practice violence on an ever in- creasing level." Edward J. Kiernan, president of the Patrolmen's Benevolent Association of New York City, spoke of a "calculated, nation- wide attack on police . . . an assault on the very foundation e of our society." "It appears that local or state courts are unable to cope with the senseless murder of police officers," said Royce L. Givens, executive director of the International Conference of Po- lice Associations. He urged a strong federal law to curb the alleged assaults. About two dozen witnesses have urged the subcommittee to approve tough new laws against. assaulting policemen and fire- men or inciting others to do so. One witness who said he was a former -New York undercover agent testified that he attend- ed classes and workshops where "off the pigs" - kill the police - rhetoric was prevalent and instructions were given on mak- ing molotov cocktails, explosive mines and other weapons. "I only wish I could put across to you what it feels like to be trained to kill a police officer," said the witness, bearded Kevin Caffery, 23. Caffery, whose value as an undercover agent ended w i t h his appearance at t h e public hearing, and Sheriff Amico said groups in the forefront of rad- ical activity in Buffalo are the League Against War and Fasc- ism and the local Niagra Liber- ation Front. Caffery said as many as 50 assistant professors and gradu- ate instructors at the State University of New York at Buf- falo - University of Buffalo - are sympathizers and partici- pants in activities of radical groups. Amico urged enactment -of new federal legislation aimed at protecting police. DOORS OPEN AT 12:45 D Monte Walsh is what the West was all about. LEE MARVIN U IAL 5-6290 SHOWS AT 1, 3,5 7 and 9 NOW WORLD WIDE ! THE MAIL BOX SUPER DISCOUNT SOUNDS Lowest overall prices anywhere on 8-track tapes, cas- settes, and provocative and groovy posters at super-low discount prices. 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