page three T4r Sfr~tgi!3n 43a' 1y NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Here's the Old Heidelberg menu Look at the prices. Friday, November 13, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three ne ws briefs By The Associated Press MORE MONEY may be requested of Congress by the Nixon administration for military assistance to Cambodia and Israel, a State Department spokesman said yesterday. Press officer Robert J. McCloskey said the Cambodian aid con- templated would be over the $40 million made available last July. Estimates for this new aid range up to $10 million. Military aid to Israel was approved by Congress before the elec- tion recess. DISCOUNT RATES have now been reduced at 11 of the 12 Federal Reserve Binks. Five banks were added to the Reserve Board's list yesterday and can now loan money to other banks at a 5% percent interest rate instead of the former 6 percent rate. While many of these secondary banks have correspondingly low- ered their rates, economists doubt any immediate effect on the con- sumer. NINE PERSONS were wounded yesterday, including four po- licemen, during a series of shootings and a gun battle with blacks in Carbondale, Ill. A security guard at Southern Illinois University was the first wounded when he was shot attempting to stop a truck for a traffic violatioon near the college campus, police said. The assailant then fled to a black neighborhood and police pur- suing the man became engaged in a gun battle with blacks firing from a house and two other areas of the community. Police say those in the house identified themselves as Black Pan- thers, and three surrendered when tear gas was fired at them. EIGHT PERSONS who stripped before a crowd of 80 at Iowa's Grinnell College have taken their conviction of "open and gross lewdness" to the Supreme Court. The Grinnell 8 were fined $200 apiece after their disrobing Feb. 5, 1969 to protest a campus visit of a Playboy Magazine representa- tive. Subsequent appeals in Iowa were rejected. They claim freedom of speech means freedom to strip. JUSTICE THOMAS KAVANAGH of Lansing has been named as the next Chief Justice of the Michigan Supreme Court by mem- bers of that body. Democrat Kavanagh replaces the Court's only Republican, Tho- mas Brennan, in that post. Brennan declined to run. * * * * A PRIVATE CORPORATION has launched a court battle to fight television violence. The Foundation to Improve Television has asked the U.S. Dis-{ trict Court in Washington, D.C., to rule that "fictionalized violence and brutality" on a local TV program cause "irreparable damage" to children and violate their rights under the Fifth Amendment. BURIED IN VILLAGE France mourns De Gaulle PARIS (M - Charles de Gaulle was buried in a village churchyard yesterday, and later hundreds of thousands of Frenchmen, in a great outpouring of grief, marched through darkness and rain to the Arch of Triumph. The day of requiem was in three stages. First 100 world leaders gathered at Notre Dame Cathedral to hear Mass. Four hours later the funeral itself began at Colombey les Deux Eglises, 160 miles away. Then, after nightfall, came the flood of emotion of Parisians drawn as if by command into a march along the Champs Elysees ending at the nation's cherished shrine of liberty. There were estimates that theq Paris crowd reached nearly a half million. ChileCuba Outside the church, more than -Associated Press YVONNE CHARLOTTE DE GAULLE, widow of Charles de Gaulle, and her son, Philippe, attend the general's funeral. s __ , VOTE UPCOMING: 30,000 pressed into the streets be- hind steel barriers and lined the routes that took the leaders to and from the cathedral. Between .10,000 and 15,000 po- licemen had been mobilized to deal with the massive security prob- lems. A truck near the church marked "electrical repairs" had a stock of police submachine guns inside it. Bells tolled throughout France as the Notre Dame service began at 11 a.m. and then again at 3 p.m., when 50,000 church steep- les around the nation slowly toll- ed. That was the hour of the Colombey service. It was declared a national day of mourning. Banks and niost shops remained open but govern- ment employes had the day off. Both church services were broadcast to the nation and to 25 other countries, including the United States. The burial procession began at De Gaulle's country manor, La Boisserie, and moved slowly down Gen. de Gaulle Street past cot- tages and barnyards and weeping people. In 58 minutes the ceremony was over. The young pallbearers car- ried the coffin past a military guard of honor to the graveyard, which has room for 40 tombs. President Georges Pompidou was not in Colombey in accord with De Gaulle's wish that' no government official be there. renew.iles SANTIAGO, Chile (MP)-Chile's new leftist government estab- lished diplomatic relations yes- terday with Cuba, breaking the South American boycott of the Fidel Castro Communist regime. Marxist President Salvador Allende, a friend and admirer of Castro, made the announcement in a six-minute address on ra- dio and television. Chile severed relations with the Castro government m o r e than six years. ago as did all other Latin and-. North Ameri- can countries except Mexico and Canada. Allende said the action was part of a policy of "free deter- mination of peoples" and was implemented with power grant- ed him by Chile's constitution. Allende, the first popularly elected Marxist president in the Western Hemisphere, took of- fice Nov. 3. Since his election, Allende has stated he would es- tablish relations with Commun- ist countries including China, North Korea, North Vietnam and East Germany - in addi- tion to Cuba - "when it is convenient for Chile." Chile broke relations with Cuba on Aug. 11, 1964 follow- ing a resolution taken by the Organization of American States. Try the food. It's excellent. U.S. renews drive to block Peking UNseat UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (A') - The United States yesterday ap- pealed to the U.N. General Assembly to stand firm against expelling Nationalist China and giving its seat to Communist China. U.S. Ambassador Christopher Phillips said it would be unwise and unjust to make the price of seating Communist China the expulsion of the Chinese Nationalists. It was a mild speech, and appeared aimed at stemming the grow- ing support in the U.N. for opening the door at long last to the Chi- nese Communists. Italy, Canada and Equatorial Guinea have all re- cently recognized Peking. Most diplomats expected the assembly would again reject the 211 N. Main 663-7758 serving dinner until 2 a.m. { "Prokofieff and Pop THE HEBRAIC ARTS E IN A CONCERT OF MI BLOCK, BRUCH, PROKOFIEFF, HAYD on SAT. EVE., NOV. 14,c at HILLEL-1429 The group says that violence on programs after 9 p.m.. when usual prop-Peking resolution call-,; adults are viewers, will not be affected by the case. ing for admission of the Com- munists and expelling the Nation- alists. But they conceded Peking would get more votes than last year, perhaps even a simple ma- ll~ jority.a corn Phillips urged t h e 127-nation assembly to decide once more that (WELL ALMOST. . .) .the China representation issue was an important question requiring qN= EMBLE aw-tIhrds majority. In contrast to U.S. speeches of past years denouncing the Chi- nese Communists, Phillips assert- SC ed the United States was con- stantly seeking an easing of rela- d dBtions with Peking. Last year the assembly approv- at 8:00 P.M. ed as usual the U.S. request that: a two-thirds majority be required,: but the safeguard was not needed.: btHill Ste The vote was 56 to 48 against the expulsion - admission resolution. F_ RE / Twen tyone abstained. -F-E- - - DESEGREGATION DISPUTED Nixon, NISA differ on schools* WASHINGTON (R) --The Nixon administration and the National Education Association (NEA) yesterday took sharply divergent views as to the pro- gress of school desegregation in the South. One high administration of- ficial closely associated with civil rights enforcement, s a i d school desegregation in the South is sufficiently complete to shift government enforcement officers from that area to the North. His comments came in the face of charges by civil rights groups that President Nixon does not intend to press the is- sue of in-school discrimination in the South. The NEA said a task force study of 70 school districts in Mississippi and Louisiana "cast serious doubt on the supposed progress made in deep South school desegregation in the past year." The NEA report cited the in- creasing trend toward private schools to be a "most serious threat to public education" in the two states. It noted, that of 421 private schools in Louis- iana, only 32 have been accred- ited by the Southern Associa- tion of Colleges and Schools. While the report dealt only with Louisiana and Mississippi, it said the task force members "h a v e sufficient familiarity with the desegregation process in other states to conclude that t h e desperately serious prob- lems they have encountered during this two-week survey are by no means unique to Louis- iana and Mississippi. DONUTS & C I DER FOLLOWING I Not WI:3 POLL WORKERS NEEDED FOR SGC ELECTIONS NOV. 17, 18, & 19 | SIGN-UPS: 1546 SAB Thru MON., NOV. 16 Q I THE PILOT PEOPLE present THE SAN FRANCISCO MIME TROOP POLITICAL CLOWNS UNITING THEATRE AND REVOLUTION MnnrIdv NovAmhAr 1 LIECDIE1 TICKETS $1:50at COME 122 E. WAS I SAS STORE HINGTON Thurs-Fri.-Nov. 12-13 STRI KE dir. SERGE EISENSTEIN 1924 The first film of one of the greatest directors I