Thursday, December 12, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY :f.::.~'--...::::r:::::.:.::. . CITES NATIONAL INTEREST: .......Juntas' expropriaes IT Page Three stock SANTIAGO, Chile (A) - Cit- ing national interest, the mili- tary junta expropriated ITT's controlling stock in Chile's tele- phone company yesterday, add- ing another chapter to the U.S.- based conglomerate's tangled involvement here. The International Telephone and Telegraph Corp. valued tne holdings at $153 million three years ago. An ITT spokesman in New York said the expropria- tion yesterday was a "legal, technical step" to reacik agree- ment on compensation and tIat it stemmed from a decision "favorable to the comoany which upheld ITT's $95 million insurance claim." IN A decree, the junta author- ized the economy minister to negotiate compensation for the expropriated ITT stock in the Compania de Telefonos, a mono- poly controlling Chile's 400,01)0 telephones. Sources here said the 3ecree legally defined the status of ITT's 71 per cent majority share in the company because "some- thing must be expropriatai be. fore there can be any co-open sation." ITT was accused of trying to block the 1970 election of the late President Salvador Allende, the only freely elected Marxist chief of state in the Western Hemisphere, including offering the CIA $1 million in funds ITT denied it. ALLENDE, who was toppled by the military in a bloody coup on Sept. 11, 1973 and died the same day, had pledged to build a Socialist state in Chile through democratic means.I But he dredged up long-forg)t- ten laws to take over vast areas of private enterprise without re- sorting to actual expropriation and nationalization, with the ex- ception of nationalizing h u g e U.S.-operated copper mines for which he paid no compensation. Rather he "intervened" in pri- vate firms after alleged com- plaints of workers about labor conditions or other disputes. Us- ually, left-wing unions started the legal status of the stozks had the trouble. to be made more clear. IN SEPTEMBER 1171, he " In the decree, the government tervened in the teleuhone --con- said it considers 'dig the; pany charging it was providing phone company to be in the na-? "bad service." This meant that I tional interest, so it exnropriat- state-appointed administrators ed the stocks. When varioll ac- were sent in to dire-t the day tivities, such as copper rninw.g to-day operations of the firm are said to be in the interest of until the alleged proolem was the state, the government does resolved. not turn them back to their own- But Allende kept these"ninter- ers. ventors" on the job )n a per- manent basis and that was th. ; ITT WAS a prime target of. situation that the military frnd the Allende regime 'ith con- when they took power stant attacks against the con- The junta set abomit to retarn glomerate appearing in the lo- hundreds of private industries cal press. to their owners and dismantled However, even during the Allende's mammoth agrarian re- height of the propaganda cam- form program, which had con- paign, the corporation's invest- solidated farms into state hold- ments in two ITT-Sheraton ho- ings. tels and a cable office were IT PAID compensation to 'he not touched. three nationalized U.S. copper The accusations against ITT companies - Anacond ), Keane- were based on confidenfial in- cott and Cerro - andl has been teroffice memos first leaked to; in informal negotiati )Z with columnist Jack Anderson. ITT over its holdings in the phone company. IT WAS suspected at the time But since the compan jwa s that Chilean officials had passed never actually naronaliz-e'1 or the papers to Anderson after expropriated, sources here :rd finding them in the phone com- PEACE ON EARTH Comes from Peace Inside Meditation Brings Peace A free public program on meditation will be held with Mahatma Prakesh Bai i at the Friends Meeting House 1420 Hill St., Ann Arbor. Sun., Dec. 15-8 p.m. She will speak on the med- itation revealed by Shri Guru Maharaj Ji. I i +t{ I 1 4 I i DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN :{.i;}i:i: ' :v }{j:S ?: Er,.?:4? : E Ei! ':;::f:?s'::vEt : ":v,.ยข: . vr{s{ . i4:Yiii;:;":5:"":% U r.i":i":":::: :< *:i*." AP Photo POLICE ARREST a youth after an incident outside of South Boston High School yesterday. White students, who left the school after a black stabbed a white, waited outside for school buses to come for the black students. South Boston erupts in violence; youth stabbed Day Calendar Thursday, December 12 Study Day. WUOM: Keith Hopkins, Brunel U., "From High to Low Roman Em- pire: The Consequences of Infla- tion," 10:05 am. Black Faculty-Staff Assoc. Meet- ing: Regents' Admin. Bldg., noon. Physics: David Politzer, Harvard, "Test of Asymptotic Freedom," 2038 Randall Lab., 4 pm. MARC: Sine Nomine Players, "Music from the Time of Richard. II," Main Lounge, Lawyers Club, 4:30 pm. Int'l Night: Scandinavian food, League Cafeteria, 5-7:15 pm. UM-Dearborn: Geo. Carlin, Ford Community College Athletic Me- morial Ctr., 8 pm. Women's Studies Films: Women's Liberation, Aud C, Angell, 8pm. Dance: "Solstice: A Celebration of Dance, Concert II," Schorling Aud., SEB, 8 pm. Macromolecular Research Ctr.: M. Weinshenker, "Polymeric Reagents," 1300 Chemistry, 8 pm. Career Planning and Placement 3200 SAB, 764-7460 Job Interviews for Seniors: Spe- cific information about conferences in Chicago, Grand Rapids, Canton, Toledo, Ohio, and Philadelphia, PA. now available at CP&P. Check also for late announcements of oth- er scheduled conferences. Full tuition for graduate study in Marketing at the U. of Cincinnati plus training on the job Is offered by Burke Marketing Research. Write: Sanford Cooper, Pres., 1529 Madison Road, Cincinnati, OH. 45206. - One - year Master's degree in Journalism, Columbia U. for hu- manities & sciences majors. Write Asst. Dean, Graduate School of' Journalism, Columbia U., NYC,1 10027. Master of Public Admin. Penn] St. U. new program. Prerequisites: acctg., econ, statistics, GRE (apti- tude test only) must be taken inE Dec. or Jan. for June admission.} This 11 mo. program is preparatory for .City Mngt., Urban Planning,, Pub. Policy Analysis, Health Care] Planning, & general gov't. admin.I positions. Grad Program in Urban Studies, some financial aid available, Wash-1 ington U., St. Louis - to prepare for urban planning & admin., social policy development, and ethnic poli- cies Contact: Glen Hold, 252 Mc- Millan Hall, Washington U. Special Program in Alcohol and Drug Addiction Community Educa- tion at Western Mich. U. Contact Dr. Thos. Williams, 857 Buckhout; St., WMU, Kalamazoo 49008. International Relations Graduate Fellowships, U. of Denver. Joint programs available in Law, ,Admin., Econ., & Soci. Deadline: Feb. 15. Write: Dean, Graduate School, U.t of Denver, Denver, 80210. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXV, No. 81 Thursday, December 12, 1914 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106 Published d a i l y Tuesday through Sunday morning during the Univer- sity year at 420 Maynard Street. Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (campus area); $11 local mail (Michigan and Ohio); $12 non-local mail other states and foreign). Summer session published Tues- day through Saturday morning. Subscription rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus area ); $6.00 local mail (Michigan and Ohio); $6.50 non- Women's Community Center announces a FEMINIST HOLiDAY BAZAAR SAT., DEC. 14 9 a m.-5 p.m. GUILD HOUSE-802 Monroe FREE DAY CARE pay ffces herew n!teA- lende regime intervened. There has been a grownl g trend in recant years in Latin America to take over ior gn holdings in orders to ext.i'd more national control over the economies of the Latin :cou- tries. The Venezuelan government if President Carlos Andres Perez has announced it will take oxr the U.S.-dominated iron )ro in- dustry in the country Jan. 1.I For hifi bargain hunters, this is the holiday stereo sale worthy of note. te chihi1 QaiyComponents at the RighptPie 122 East Washington St. Ann Arbor t BOSTON (A) - Decoy buses and lines of charging policemen were used yesterday to spirit black students out of South Boston High School as about 1,000 angry whites hurled mis- siles. Several police officers were injured by bricks, stones, cans and other flying objects as they led the police charge in front of the school, which was closed earlier in the day after a 17- year-old pupil was knifed. A NUMBER of civilians in the area also were injured, wit- nesses said. An undisclosed number of white youths and adults were arrested, police said. After police cleared whites from in front of the school, four school buses rolled up to the front door. But the 132 black pupils who had been inside were led out a side door to other buses. THE MOVING of the black students climaxed a day of ten- sion that started when a white student was stabbed at the school. A black youth was ar- rested in connection with the incident, police said. The School Department order- ed all South Boston schools in- volved in court-ordered busing for desegregation closed for the rest of the week, hoping for a cooling-off period to relieve ten- sions. Whites outside of South Bos- Boston was reported in ton High smashed windows in condition at Boston City the decoy buses and vandalized pital after surgery for a several police cars. wound in the abdomen. AN ESTIMATED 300 state Charged with assault an and city police were in and tery with a dangerous w around the school as the jeering was James White, 18, o crowd refused to leave the area. Roxbury section. School City Councilwoman Louise ials said they had no reco Day Hicks, a staunch busing White as a student at opponent, pleaded with the Boston High. crowd to let the buses take The Irish, working - black students back to Rox- South Boston section has bury, the mostly black part of the center of tension since the city where they live. ing began in September. Her pleas were met with violence that included bus shouts of, "Bus them back to ings and gang beatings i Africa" and a barrage of ob- first weeks of busing, ge scenities. order was restored. 'ELSEWHERE IN Boston, at But antibusing sentimei Roslindale High School, nearly mained strong with opp all of the white student body staging weekly rallies. walked out of class. The move have been continued sp by the 600 students came after incidents of violence in a reported slapping incident be- al schools. tween a black and a white stu- dent Tuesday. Extra police were called to Hyde Park High, previously the scene of racial outbreaks, when officials noted what they called a tense atmosphere and threats of white student walkouts. The city's other 200 schools J R were relatively calm. School of- ficials reported over-all attend- LO ance at 75.6 per cent, slightly below average. ;IN THE South Boston stab- bing, Michael Faith, 17, of South .H , good Hos- stab d bat- eapon f the offic- ord of South class been e bus- After .ston- n the eneral nt re- onents There oradic sever- - -- - ------ Poetry Reading WITH Robert Hayden and Ke rry Thomas SHORT or LONG I READING FROM HAIRSTYLES TO PLEASET DASCLA I Thursday, Dec. DASCOLA BARBERS a t GU IL D H OUS THEIR WORKS 12-7:30 p.m. SE, 802 Monroe ARBORLAND-971-9975 MAPLE VILLAGE-761-2733 E. LIBERTY-668-9329 E. UNIVERSITY-662-0354 Ij !. ii 1 .C 1 + I Lowest U.S. Bookstore Prices for New (unused) Books Also-Used & Rare Books (unique gifts) 9 A.M.-12 MIDNIGHT 7 DAYS A WEEK 529 E. 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[- -- - -- - " -" -" -"" -~ -" -" "" DRUNK DRIVER, DEPT. Y* I BOX 2345 I ROCKVILLE, MARYLAND 20852 I want to save a friend's life. Tell me what else I can do. I