i I I SWINGING EDUCATION (by the tail) with STUDENTS FOR EDUCATIONAL INNOVATION at an INFORMATIONAL MEETING " new challenges to the Educational Establishment " creative roles for students in Ed School " nominations for SEI executive council Tuesday, December 1, 7:30 p.m. Schorling Auditorium, School of Education Bldg. Convertible Tops and Repairs Auto Interior Repairs Custom-Interiors PERFECT FIT SEAT COVERS 2270 W. STADIUM ANN ARBOR 662-5860 page three 94P Sicrtg3n NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: ~aif 11764-0554t Sunday, November 22, 1970 news briefs By The Associated Press Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three i i Wi sF1 0 UNIVERSITY ACTIVITIES CENTER & STUDENTS INTERNATIONAL Present FREEPORT $186 WINDSOR-FREEPORT-WINDSOR VIA AIR CANADA JET DEPART Dec. 27 Jan. 1 RETURN Jan. 1 Jan. 7 ACCOMMODATIONS 6 days, 5 nights 7 days, 6 nights PRICE $186 $196 includes ground transportation between airport and hotel AN ALL WOMEN local government was elected during Brazil's ne s In Miguel Pereira, the mayor, judge and public attorney are all women. Meanwhile, the military government's Arena party swept the elections except in Rio, where an opposition candidate running on a pro-Voodoo platform ran second among the candidates for state deputy. * * * THE CHIEF LAWYER of the U.S. anti-poverty agency was fired Friday along with his deputy in an apparently political ' move.$ Terry F. Lenzer and his deputy, Frank Jones, were fired by a Donald Rumsfeld, head of the Office of Economic Opportunity. Rumsfeld claims that Lenzer and Jones "violated the law and ' condoned actions not in the best interest of the poor." Lenzer told a news conference that "The administration ap parently believes in bargain-basement justice for the poor." Jones called for Rumsfeld's resignation, labelling his former office, the Legal Service Program, as "being run by Southern bigots and right-wing politicians across the country." -Associated Press A CORONER'S INQUEST Friday in Montreal revealed that a prime kidnaping suspect was caught because he mistakenly Shortageo sustenance entered a closet with no secret compartment in which to hide. An elderly man begs for food while squatting on a roadside near Three others suspects found the niche and hid for almost 24 Bhola East Pakistan. Widespread hunger has set into the Bay hours before escaping. of Bengal region of East Pakistan following a devastating cyclone Separate cells of the Quebec Liberation Front kidnaped British last week. Trade Commissioner James Richard Cross and Laporte on Oct. 5 and week. 10 to press demands for the release of 23 political prisoners. Laporte was found strangled a week after his abduction but Cross is believed ADMINISTRATION RESISTS: "HAPPY HOUR" every evening-2 hours of live music, dancing, and unlimited free drinks I SIGN UP: UAC Travel Office 2nd Floor, Michigan Union PHONE: 163-2141 OPEN ONLY TO UNIV. MICHIGAN STUDENTS, FACULTY, STAFF, & THEIR IMMEDIATE FAMILIES still alive. INDIANS OCCUPYING ALCATRAZ ISLAND marked their first anniversary there by announcing plans for a $6 million Indian University. The University would teach, tuition-free, Indian laws, arts and crafts, ecology and tribal languages. Sales of Indian art objects would support the school. Although the federal government insists the Indian occupiers arer Israel asks U.S. for longy-termarms aid WASHINGTON (,,P) - Israel is ( zation is needed for any "f i r m Chiletakes over U.S. industries SANTIAGO, Chile, () - The Chile an government has tak- en over the administration of two local companies controll ed by U.S. interests, charging t h e y intentionally deprived Chileans of jobs. Although the action was based on a 1945 Chilean labor law, it was the first open move h e r e against foreign businessmen since Marxist-Socialist President Sal- vador Allende took office Nov. 3 Oscar Garreton, undersecretary of economy, announced Friday night that Allende had ordered the "intervention" of NIBSA, a plumbing and heating fittings manufacturer, and Alimentos Pur- ina de Chile S. A., which raises chickens and makes animal feed Both companies had stopped or reduced production and laid off workers. Northern Indiana Brass Co. of Elkhart, Ind., owns 50 per cent of NIBSA, which at one time sup- plied about a third of all the brass valves and fittings in Chile. Ade- la, a European consortium owns 25 per cent, and the rest is Chil- ean-owned. Ralston Purina de Panama, a subsidiary of t h e U.S. Ralston food firm, owns 80 per cent of Alimentos Purina. Augustin Ed- wards, one of the richest men in South America, who currently lives in the United States, owns the remaining 20 per cent. The Chilean government may intervene in any private company to protect the interests of Chilean workers. A federal "interventor" becomes the general manager of the company and takes over the firm'shadministration,rregardless of whether the regular manager cooperates with him. In announcing the intervention of Alimentos Purina, Garreton said that ever since the Allende administration took office, small farmers had been complaining about "irregularities in supply and in the means of payment demand- ed by producers of feed for chick- en and hogs, especially Alimentos Purina." "This situation has led small chicken farmers and peasants to suffer a ruinous and arbitrary de- pendence on the big feed manu- facturers," he charged, Allende's signed th e interven- tion order against NIBSA "to nor- malize the labor situation and so that company would continue giv- ing work and production to Chil- eans." The official reason for the or- der against Alimentos Purina was: "To renew work within the firm and to solve the problems of the company's workers and of all peasants or farmers who depend on the firm." 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 mai Summer Session published Tueday through Saturday morning. Subacrip- tion rates: $5. by carrier, $5 by mail. trespassing, the Indians have claimed the island as their natural reportedly pressing the United right under a Sioux treaty of 1869. reote ressingte mied States for a new long-term mili- tary aid pledge as a condition for THE MAYFLOWER COMPACT'S 350th anniversary cele- entering peace negotiations with brations in Plymouth, Massachusetts, have caused a storm of . protest in nearby Provincetown.I Egypt''... proestvinearby roiewn r pehmBut Nixon administration offi- Provincetown residents are upset that the commemorative stamp cials strongly resist any such com- marking the anniversary is being issued first at Plymouth since the mitment as unconstitutional. They compact was signed in Provincetown. claim that congressional authori- FACES DOMESTIC UNREST Nationalst China may quit UN TAIPEI, Formosa (A) - Na- tionalist China may withdraw from t h e United Nations be- cause of Friday's General As- sembly vote which favored ad- miting Communist China. The vote appears to have shaken the faith of Chaing Kai- shek's government in the organ- ization it helped to form after World War II. It could lead to major changes in the govern- ment's foreign and domestic policies. For the first time in its his- tory, a majority of t h e U.N. General Assembly voted to expel the Nationalist government and seat the Communist government of China in its place. The vote was 51-49 with 25 abstentions. U.N. membership and the in- ternational support for the Na- tionalists government which it implies play a large role in the government's local ideology. For 21 years they have helped justify a government in which the island's 12 million native- born Formosans have little au- thority. The government, t h e military and a vast secret po- lice network remain in control of some of the two million main- landers who fled to Formosa with President Ghaing Kai-shek in 1949. Without U.N. membership to help support this structure the government could feel forced to strengthen its hand even more against native Formosa dissi- dents who object to it. The Nationalists were not ex- pelled, however, because of the prior passage of a joint Japan- ese-American resolution that re- quired the motion to seat Pe- king to be approved by a two- thirds majority before it could be implemented. There is nonetheless an ap- parently significant tendency to regard the seating vote itself as a U.N. v o t e of confidence concerning the Nationalist gov- ernment, and to withdraw un- ilaterally from the 'world body now that a majority has voted for Peking. The government's fear is that the vote will start a move to- ward recognition of Peking by such nations as the Philippines, Malaysia and Japan.- All have left the possibility of a shift op- en in recent statements by their leaders. Even more, officials fear the landslide could wash away with it U.S. support of t h e two- thirds majority requirements. The U.S. State Department said after Friday's vote that the United States will "examine all implications of this new situa- tion in full consultation w i t h friends and allies." It is considered here to be im- possible that any such consulta- tions with the Nationalist gov- ernment could change Chiang's traditional stance. program pledge." Israel's request, according to U.S. authorities, is for an as- sistance program covering at least two years, which would take it -to the end of President Nixon's present term or beyond. The new agreement would be in addition to the $500 million Israeli a i d program which Nixon presented to Congress last Wednesday. Despite t h e evident disagree- ment over this issue, State De- partment policymakers now esti- Imate th e re is an encouraging prospect for starting peace talks between Israel and Egypt and with Jordan participating s o o n after the first of the year. Israeli's demand for new arms pledges projected into the next several years was argued to Rog- ers last Wednesday by Israeli For- eign Minister Abba Eban. State Department authorities said they believe an agreement on opening peace talks can be reach- ed without long-term aid promis- es from Nixon. One reason for optimism among officials here about starting peace talks is, they said, that both Is- rael and the Arab states now are eager to avoid a return to hostili- ties. They both wish to continue the cease-fire beyond the present ter- minal date of Feb. 5 and they both .recognize, U.S. officials claim, that the best chance for getting an extension is to have p e a ce talks underway before the expira- tion. . - -- - I' . ' FUN and GAMES MADMAZE.. .a real mind stretcher for the whole family, and an art object as interesting as the puzzle itself for it's made of durable clear crystaline plastic with chrome legs and shiny stainless steel ball. Object: to move the ball .....,................*........... ..... .... ... .......:...........*............ ARTS CHORALE PRESENTS FAURE REQUIEM AND Works by Mozart and Brahms MAYNARD KLEIN-Conductor MON. NOV. 23-8:00 P.M. HILL AUDITORIUM ADMISSION COMPLIMENTARY NOW! dRmm DEAL 8-6416 GYRATIONS.. .a combination of labyrinth and skittles to challenge your skill and dexterity. Object: to direct a spinning gyro at targets on pedestals, to manipulate surface-tilting side and front controls to guide the metal gyro. PHI LOSOPHERS KNOT. . .the puzzle puzzles to challenge your ingenuity, based on a legend dating back to King Arthur's court. Object: to remove center glass ball without removing sticks from guide cord. By shrewdly TWIN FEATURE PROGRAM Emanuel LWolf presents AN ALLED ARTISTS FIM Cloae Chaos 4 =' A PSYCHO-SEXUAL~ STUDY IN MURDER! COLOR BY DELUXE Shown Today at 2:35, 5:50, 9:05 * PLUS*