A PERSONAL GIFT ' The monogrammed .k - CIRCLE PIN ts a C6'mpus traditione I- k <. choose from STERLING or GOLD FILLED fieu ''No charge for engraving from $3.75 to $8.00 o a ~ O arcade jewelry shop 16 Nickels Arcade for beautiful jewelry STOP IN AND BROWSE a We, tx f MONDAY,' DECEMBER 7TH .+ .7:00 P.M.-10:00 P.M. An evening reserved 'for the male-* wonderful opportunity to shop in * a relaxed atmnosphere, unhampered, by th e f aire r sex: Our em ployees will assist in filling your list of gift ne eds. Eve ry purch ase - glamino r-w ra ppe d, re ady to p ut un d er th e Ch ristm as tre e.- - g -I -. -- 1 , C 'i,%. ; page three a4c mtr~t~t4 ti NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Thursday, December 3, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three news briefs By The Associated Press TWO TOP LEADERS from the Soviet Union met in East Berlin yesterday with six partners in the East European bloc's Warsaw Pact to demonstrate solidarity behind the East German regime. Presiding was Walter Ulbricht, the 77-year-old East German leader. His guests were Soviet Communist Party Chief Leonid Brez- hnev, Premier Alexei Kosygin and Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko. Communist sources said the secret discussions of the top govern- ment and party leaders were expected to last until today. A CONSUMER PROTECTION AGENCY proposal was vir- tually killed on a tie 7-7 House committee vote yesterday just over 24 hours after the Senate passed it 74 to 4. The House Rules Committee vote was against sending the bill to the floor for full House action. The proposed new agency planned to represent consumers' interests in federal government and court proceedings, test pro- ducts for safety and gather and disseminate consumer information for shoppers. PREMIER MARCELLO COSTANO proposed constitutional revisions yesterday that would grant a measure of independence to Portugal's African territories, where the government has been battling guerrillas for nearly 10 years. He told a joint session of Parliament that the African territories' of Angola, Portuguese Guinea and Mozambique would get their own laws, elected governments, finances and budgets under his plan. OPPONENTS OF THE supersonic air transport won a pre-j liminary bout in the Senate yesterday with passage of a bill to bar all civilian flights producing sonic booms over the United States and order a reduction in SST noise levels. The measure, sponsored by Sen. Warren Magnuson (D-Wash.), was passed 77 to 0 as the Senate neared a vote on the central issue- an administration request for $290 million for further development of the SST. PALESTINIAN COMMANDOS blew up a Jerusalem-Haifa train, killing or wounding a number of Israelis, an Al Fatah guer- rilla communique said last night. Israeli officials in Tel Aviv said they knew only of a train collision with a bread truck. The-Fatah communique said the train was derailed and several cars were destroyed in the explosion, which occurred Monday. -Associated Press COLLEGE STUDENT PETER MALLERMAN foreshadowed the increasing need for an Environ- mental Protection Agency-which came into existence yesterday-when he donned a gas mask as a symbolic protest against pollution in New York during an Earth Day demonstration last April. _ BASQUE SEPARATISTS Spanish group kidnaps consul, demands release of prisoners Pollution unit clears Senate By The Associated Press The Environmental Protec- tion Agency came into formal existence yesterday while i t s first chief was receiving Sen- ate committee endorsement. It marked completion of a year of restructuring of fed- eral environment functions. EPA is mandated to estab- lish and enforce antipollution standards, administer financ- ial grants and technical a i d, conduct research, and help de- velop a national environment policy. The Senate Public Works Com- mittee gave unanimous approval to William D. Ruckelshaus as di- rector of EPA. Early Senate con- firmation is expected for Ruckel- ashaus, an Indianan who now is an assistant attorney general. He has promised maximum pressure on the auto industry to eliminate 90 per cent of harmful exhaust fumes within four years. Buckelshaus vowed to "view with the most jaundiced eye" any claim that the auto industry could not produce an adequate emission- control device by 1975. The administration is known to be considering further changes - particularly in the management of federal land and of energy resouc- es. The reorganization began on the first day of the year, when Pres- ident Nixon signed into law the 1969 Environmental Policy Act, setting up a three-member Coun- cil on Environmental Quality as advisors to the President. On July 9, Nixon proposed exe- cutive reorganization plans for the creation of EPA. EPA assembles from the Inter- for Department, Agriculture D e - partment, Department of Health, Education and Welfare, and t hie Atomic Energy Commission the federal efforts to control air- and water-pollution, pesticides, solid wastes and radiation. John Whittaker, a top W h i t e House aide on environmental mat- ters, told a newsman, "The big thing this reorganization leaves out is land use." Control of federal land - one- third of the nation - is now divi- ded among the Departments of Interior, Agriculture, and Defense, and other agencies. Nixon stressed, last August, the need to develop land-use policy. 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 maF Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5. by carrier, $5 by mail. By The Associated Press The Franco government went ahead with plans yesterday to try 15 young Basque separatists des- pite demands for their freedom by the terrorist kidnaper, of a West German consul. T h e secret terrorist organiza- tion called Basque Land and Lib- erty, known by its Basque initials as ETA, sent a communique to a Basque group in Bayonne, France, saying it had abducted Eugene - ~ ~---- -- --- WORKING WITH YOUTH City center broadens focus to include entire community Beihl, honorary West German consul at San Sebastian. The defendants are charged with banditryand terrorism, and 12 of them a r e expected to be linked with the ETA. The prose- cution is expected to ask the death penalty for six of the men. Police said if the ETA kidnaped Beihl, the kidnapers probably lie low until the trial begins or sentence is passed. In Madrid, the cabinet of Gen. Francisco Franco met, reportedly to discuss the situation. In Bonn German Foreign Minister Walter Scheel discussed the case with his visiting Spanish counterpart, Gregerio Lopez Bravo, who was expected to fly back to Madrid yesterday. Police in Madrid arrested 19 students for holding an unauthor- ized meeting allegedly to protest the court-martial in B u r g o s. Twenty-five other students ar- rested six days a g o on similar charges were turned over to the national c o u r t of public order, which deals with political crimes. Baton-wielding riot police in Barcelona dispersed several hun- d r e d demonstrating university students. Witnesses told police the con- sul drove into his garage Tuesday night, then drove out again with other men in his car. Police said a red car w i t h French license plates followed Beihl's sedan. Police found t h e 59-year-old diplomat's car' abandoned in the village of Oyarzun, 10 miles southeast of San Sebastian. The ETA was formed in 1953. Sources in the organization say it has 40 to 50 full-time guerrillas and 500 part-time members. The Spanish government launched a campaign last August to wipe out the ETA after t h e murder of a police chief who was an old enemy of the organization. Hundreds of Basques have been arrested since then. Five w e r e sentenced in Madrid yesterday to prison terms ranging f r o m six months to nine years. Interracial sex jails 21 S. Africans The small South African town of Excelsior is stunned because seven white farmers have been arrested along with 14 black women under the Immorality Act, which prohibits interracial sex. The accused included town councilor and several of the weal- thiest men in the town. Rather than face trial, one man shot and killed himself while free on bail. The accused black women range in age from 18 to 40. Seven of them appeared in court with light- skinned babies in their arms. Some of the charges date back five years. All the accused are free on bail. In the last 20 years more than 7,600 convictions have been ob- tained under the law. By AARON HOSTYK "I want to see a fish in here!" shriek the two tots who are now peering into a fishbowl. "Are two babies there?" they ask a young woman nearby. The young women is program director of the Ann Arbor City Center. The children are parti- cipants in the center's after- school program for children aged five to twelve. The center, located on 625 North Main, offers programs for all ages including a pre-school program in the morning. Besides recreation facilities, it also provides a place where com- munity action groups meet. Walter Hill, the center's direc- tor has supervised the organi- zation of adult block clubs by graduate students of the Uni- versity's social work school. These groups now meet at the center to discuss community problems ranging from adequate street lights for their neighbor- hoods to the implications of newly proposed zoning laws. A parental group meeting there now, for example, was formed after the Pioneer High incident to look into black student de- mands. Other groups include the NAACP, the League of Wo- men Voters, and the Model Cit- ies Policy Board. The activities for teens a n d young adults include hobby * clubs, discussion groups and soc- ial nights. Any one may organ- ize a group at the center. Under a program sponsored by the city and the center a "de- tached worker" is sent to work with youth on the streets. The center, founded in 1923 and named the Dunbar C o m- munity Center, was originally at a different location. Its bylaws stipulated that it was for "col- ored citizens" of Ann Arbor. This was changed to read "cit- izens" of Ann Arbor and then "people" regardless of t h e i r place of residence. It was moved four times pre- vious to its present building, called the Ann Arbor Commun- ity Center. It has been there since 1959. -- I Used Equipment Sale 1. RECEIVERS-AMPS-TUNERS 1 Fisher 500C-$100 1 Eico 3566-$100 1 Harman Kardon 720-$150. 1 Lafayette LR 500 TA-$125 1 Scott LT-112 Tuner-$70 1 Olson Tuner-$30. 1 Dyna 120-$125 (factory wired) 2. SPEAKERS 2 PR Marantz IMPII--$130 each 3. TAPE RECORDERS AND DECKS 1 Ampex 761--$215 1 Ampex 1200 Wal & Portable Case-$185 1 Ampex 1100 Auto Reverse Deck-$225 1 Ampex 900 Auto Reverse Portable-$190 1 Concord MK ilDemo-$199 1 Viking 77 Portable-$70 4. TURNTABLES AND CHANGERS 1 Empire Troubadour without arm-$90 2 Garrard SLX-2's Demo-$59.50 1 Garrard X-11 Demo-$27.95 1 Garrard 40BDemo-$37.50 1 Garrard 30-$30 1 Garrard 50-$30 The place to meet INTERESTING people Bach Club! Live Performance! SUZANNE WILSON, pianist, performing the Beetho- ven "Pathetique" Sonata and works by Scarlatti, Schumann, and Granados. Refreshments Afterwards Thurs., Dec. 3, 8 p.m. S. Quad W. Lounge Everyone Welcome! No musical knowledge needed! Really!! further info 764-7638, 769-2003 I COME TO TOWN and COUNTRY RESTAURANT Fine Food Chops, Steaks, &t Shrimp Soul Food Home Cooked Open Pit Barbeque -Open- 6 a.m. till 9 p.m.-Mon.-Thurs. 6 a.m. till 3 a.m.---Fri.-Sat. 8 a.m. till 7:30 p.m.-Sunday 730 NORTH MAIN Delivery and Catering 769-2330 I 1. FOR UNIVERSITY PEOPLE WHO CARE WE NOW HAVE 4 SHOPS TO SERVE YOU s ARBORLAND 0 MAPLE VILLAGE * LIBERTY OFF STATE * EAST UNIV. OFF SO. UNIV. THE DASCOLA BARBERS R Thurs.-Fri., Dec. 3-4 LITTLE CAESAR dir. MERVYN LE ROY (1930) The first talking gangster film and the movie that catapulted Edward G. Robinson ( ALSO-Sale on all Demo Portable and Table Radios at I I i# III if vvinq rlignr ro Bourn ,America: I