Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, November 11, 1970 Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY GM, UAW continue to bargain (Continued from Page 1) concessions of "major signifi- cance" in the talks. The resumption of auto pro- duction by GM by Dec. 1 or the. possibility that the strike would run into the New Year hung in the balance of the stepped-up bargain- ingefforts. / GM says it must have a new contract by Wednesday if it is to get back into production by Dec. 1.' Several sources say the strike CORRECTION In Sunday's paper, The Daily reported that Claire Rumel- hart, women's advocate in the office of student organizations, is a member of Probe. Rumel- hart is not a member of that organization. could run into the New Year if a new contract is not wrapped up this week. A news blackout was imposed last week when negotiations be- came more intense, and no offi- cial statements have been made regarding the talks. Most reports of concessions made by the company and the union involve the union's demand for a return to an unlimited cost-of-liv- ing wage escalator and for a sub- stantial pay increase in the first year of a three-year contract. One recurring report is that GM has agreed to move toward restor- ing the unlimited formula under which wages rise upward with the Consumer Price Index and that the union has agreed to abandon its demand for a company-paid dental care program. GM also is reported to be mov- ing upward by between 10 or 13 cents in its last, prestrike offer to raise wages in the first year by 38 cents hourly. The union w a s asking a wage increase starting at 61.5 cents.' The current average hourly wage in the industry is $4.02 and the automakers estimate they spend an additional $1.75 an hour in wages and fringe benefits. The strike, which began Sept. 15, has idled 400,000 GM workers and thousands more in industries which supply the auto giant. VIORPHINE, HEROIN: Physicians. discuss narcotics, explore history of drug abuse -Associated Press Charles de Gaulle, 1890-1970 Rites for De Gaulle to e held tomorrow (Continued from Page 1) service. The participants will also include Prime Minister Edward Heath of Britain, President Gus- tav Heinemann and Chancellor Willy Brandt of West Germany, and the kings of Jordan, Belgium: and Ethiopia. Several leaders from! African states which once were under French rule will be there. Pompidou is traveling to Col- ombey today to pay his respects privately. It will be his first visit there - De Gaulle never invited, him - since he became president in June 1969. De Gaulle was b o r n in Lille Nov. 22, 1890. He was graduated ed division. Refusing to accept the French Cabinet's decision to surrender, he w e n t to England and organized the French Resis- tance movement. De Gaulle returned to Paris af- ter its liberation and became pre- mier of a provisional government. Weary at the wrangling of poli- ticians, he resigned in 1946. Called back to power in 1958 because of the crisis brought on by the Algerian uprising, De- Gaulle emerged in 1959 as presi- dent with strong powers. He put down a French officers' uprising in Algeria and eventually granted Algerian independence. He gave (Continued from Page 1) taken orally, according to Elliott, they have to be consumed in large quantities to quell the desire for narcotics. Since these drugs are in limited supply, the economic feasibility of such use is doubtful. Also, Elliott pointed out, the drugs are only crutches and mere- ly serve as a substitute for the real thing. They do not really, solve the problem of addiction. He expressed doubt that the majority of heroin and morphine addicts would accept the antagon- ists. The drugs do not create a feeling of euphoria, but merely lift the patient out of his present state of disphoria. Many addicts would rather be addicted to a drug that gives them joy and excite- ment than to a drug which has little or no effect upon them, Elliott believed. In a press conference, Elliott spoke briefly about marijuana. He said that he was, for the most part, undecided about whether it should be legalized. "I think what would happen if we legalized marijuana at least for a generation is that we would' have a double drug problem, mari- juana and alcohol," he said. He also expressed his fearsthat marijuana users might turn to hashish or other derivatives of the plant, but indicated he did not feel punishment was the answer. TU1 submits 'plan to HEW (Continued from Page 1) temporary hold was placed Oct. 28 on a $350,000 contract with the University's Center for Population Planning. HEW's Contract Com- pliance Division notified the Agency for International Devel- opment (AID) that the University was "not awardable" and that contracts must be held up pend- ing an agreement with the Uni- versity on hiring practices. Eleven other universities have had federal construction or re- search contracts held up until action plans are negotiated which will eliminate* discrimination in hiring practices. The HEW action will hold up al new federal contracts and con- tract- renewals of the University until negotiations are completed The University annually conducts about $66 million worth of feder- ally-sponsored research. The action stems from an in- vestigation conducted last August by HEW in response to allega- tions of sex discrimination by the University which were filed by the Ann Arbor FOCUS on Equal . Employment for Women. SAN RAFAEL, Calif. (W) - The Marin County Grand Jury yesterday indicted black mili- tant Angela Davis on charges of murder and multiple counts of kidnaping and conspiracy stem- ming from a courthouse shoot- out that left four dead. Davis, 26, was indicted along with Ruchell Magee, a San Quentin convict already under indictment for the murder of Superior Court Judge H a r o 1 d Haley, 65, in the shootout last Aug. 7 during an attempted escape. Prior to the indictment, Davis was charged locally only in a murder warrant issued by a Municipal Court on information from local authorities. The former UCLA philosophy teacher is jailed in New Y o r k, fighting extradition to Califor- nia. She was arrested Oct. 13 in a Manhattan hotel on a fed- eral warrant charging unlawful flight to avoid prosecution. At I the time she was on the FBI's 10-most wanted list. 1/ l l t Yesterday's indictment charg- es both Davis and Magee with kidnaping, attempting to hold hostages for ransom, and con- spiring to kidnap, commit mur- der if it failed, effect the escape of Magee and two other con- victs, and .conspiracy to effect the "rescue" of the Soledad Brothers. The Soledad Brothers are three black convicts in San Quentin, awaiting trial on charges of killing a white guard at Soledad State Prison. The indictment was returned after a day~long session. It charges that Mageeandt w o other convicts, James McClain and William Christmas, joined in a plot with Davis and Jona- than Jackson, a 17-year-old Los Angeles youth who is a brother of . George Jackson, one of the Soledad trio. It said the plot resulted in the kidnaping attempt, which led to the murder of Judge Haley, the kidnaping and wounding of Asst. Dist . Atty. Gary W. Thomas and three women jurors. ONLY $3 Dr. Havelock F. Fraser, from ginally scheduled, to give a speech the Lilly Research Laboratories in on sedative-hypnotic drug abuse Indianapolis, gave a historical among adults, was ill and unable view of patterns of drug abuse. He! to attend the symposium. H i s said that the first recorded use of paper was read by Dr. Harris Is- poppy derivatives as intovicants bell, of the University of Ken- began about 5000 years ago in tucky College of Medicine. Sumeria. University Philosophy P r o f . He traced the development of Abraham Kaplan, attempted to drugs up to the invention of hero- explain the rise of drug abuse in in as a substitute drug for mor- sociological terms. He said that phine. today's youth had established a Dr. William R. Martin, in a "cult of feeling," which "sets it- press conference, cited experiments self against human thought as a which gave evidence of a syn- significant experience, for t h i s drome present in rats recently thought is irrelevant." withdrawn from morphine. Dr. The drug symposium is sched- Martin is from the National In- uled to continue until Friday. Dis- stitute of Health in Lexington, cussions today. will center around Kentucky. the topics of stimulants, hallucino- Dr. Carl-Magnus Idestrori, ori- gens and marijuana. Inic Davis in Calif. 4 Now you can mount your peace emblem anywhere. Anyplace you can drill a %" hole; on your VW, your Honda or your helmet. Peace emblem: 3" diameter heavy polished chrome. Only three bucks, postage pd. Send now. I VALLEY DIE CAST INC.,a I 1791 Bellevue, Detroit, Mich. 48207 Q Here's 3 bucks, send my emblem to: I Q Here's 6 bucks, my bird wants one too. I 1 l Name Address I City State Zip L-- -- -- -- -- -- -- ----- ---- -. SEND FOR PEACE *1 4 O b 3 e from the elite military school of French colonies the option of in- St. Cyr, fought in World War I, dependence or continuing associa- was wounded three times, decorat- tion with France. Most chose in- ed for gallantry and was captur- dependence. #1 ed. The outbreak of World War II found him a colonel. After the German break-through he was promoted to general of an armor- ORGANIZATION NOTICES r . S v"r":....:-:""",v'rv"'n:."vS r:.iF DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN. f I i << . ; s R . (Continued from Page 2) pean Studies, D. Schenker, Teaching Fellow, eSoviet Youth Today," 2 00 Lane Hall, 4:10 p.m. Speech Student Lab Theatre: "Char- li" sni"Tlr ",Aao Thr r The Ann Arbor Chapter of Z e r o Population Growth will host Guy Lar- Scom, City Administrator and William Bott, of the Chamber of Commerce for a program questioning "No-growth policy for Ann Arbor?" The meeting will be Tuesday, Nov. 17. at 7:30 p.m., in aCnterbury House. 330 May- nard St. Ann Arbor area residents are 'rged to attend. '{ t R 1 t . In these tense years he was sev- eral times the target of assassi- nation attempts. As president, De Gaulle ofter drove his allies to despair, order- ing French military forces to with- draw f r o m the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and telling NATO headquarters to move out of France. He also vetoed British entry into the European Common Market. De Gaulle survived a riotous student-worker strike in t h E spring of 1968. He had pledged to retire if voters rejected a refer- endum for government centrali- zation, however, and quit the presidency in 1969 when they did 4i lie and jyian, arenal Teatre, * * * Frieze Bldg., 4:10 p.m. I UM Circle-K Club meeting. November! The Stanley Quartet: E. Grzesnikow- 15, 7:30 p.m., 3B Union. ski, violin; 'Rosseels, violin; R. Courte, * * * viola; J. Jelinek, cello: Rackham Lec- Meeting of Students of Objectivism on ture Hall, 8 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 17, at 8:00 p.m. in the Department of English Lang. and SAB, Room 3516. Lit. and Univ. Players of Dept. of Speech present Poculi Ludique Societas Zeta Phi Beta - Phi Beta S i g m a of the U. of Toronto in Mankynde, one Weekend, "Always Together," Friday, of the most important morality plays. Nov. 13, 9:00 - 1:00 a.m., Benefit Dance. No other production is known to the 50c or 25c and 1 can of canned goods. sponsor, so it provides a rare opportun- Saturday, Nov. 14, Markley Hall, 75c. ity to see Morality play, Performances --- in Trueblood Theatre, Nov. 13 & 14, 8 p.m. Reserved seats will go on sale. Thurs., 12:30 in Trueblood Box Of- Tic, amisio $150For the student body. SOCIETY OF AUTOMOTIVE ENGINEERS presents NOVEMBER NONSENSE ROAD RALLYE SUNDAY, NOV. 15 PRIZES- Monroe Auto Equipment Co. 3 sets of Monromotic shock absorbers THE A Genuine * Authentic Navy PEA COATS $25 Sizes'34 to 46 CHECKMA TE State Street at Liberty Howard Cooper VW m TROPH IES etric tools tire gauges EUROPE Round-trip DC-8 JET from New York For only $210* round trip, Icelandic Airlines flies you di- rect to Luxembourg in the heart of Europe for best connections to everywhere. Daily jets. No groups to join. Stay one day or up to 45. Fly Icelandic-for low- est fares to Iceland, Luxem- bourg, England, Scotland, Nor- way, Sweden and Denmark. Special fares for students and groups remaining overseas more than 45 days. Major credit cards -or Pay Later Plan. Mail coupon; then call your travel agent. *Add $20 one way on Fri and Sat. To: Icelandic Airlines_ 630 Fifth Ave., N.Y. 10020 (212) PL 7-8585 i Send folderCN cn Lowest Jet Fares to Europe Q Student Faresfj Name Street city i State Zi MEMBERS Pre-Registered ................2:50 Others ......................3.00 NON-MEMBERS 3.00 3.50 eet one of your distant cousins! It makes you stop and think. The concept that lower life forms Evolve into higher and higher life forms. It makes you wonder. How far we've come Since man first climbed down a tree.; And how far we have to go. Sure the world needs change. It's easy to see the flaws. It's harder to make things better. That's where you come in. It's on your shoulders now. The whole promise of man .... You are the next link in his continual evolution. You must summon up All the excellence you can muster. We hope you're up to it. You are our life insurance. FOR INFO AND PRE-REGISTRATION CALL RICH 761-9646 DRIVER'S MEETING-11:00 A.M. First Car Off 12:01 P.M. North Campus Auto Lab There is a time for love. 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