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March 14, 1973 - Image 12

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1973-03-14

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Page Twelve

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Wednesday, March 14, 1973

Page Twelve THE MICHIGAN DAILY

FUNDING CITED:
Harris reports grim
future for agencies

(Continued from Page 1)
gram and its legal services clinic
are scheduled to be axed if the
President is successful in passing
his budget requests.
While the city may be able to
fund some of the programs, Hiar-
ris sees little chance that the lost'
money will be restored by Con-
gress. "The Democrats are fur-
ious at the President. The Repub-
licans seem happy with him.
Indians
Still hold
illage
(Continued from Page 1)

Generally, the Congressional lead-
ership seems impotent.
"They can't get themselves to-
gether on anything; they can't act
swiftly; they can't attract popular
attention and they can't develop
political allies the way the Presi-
dent can."
According to Harris, future fed-
eral funding for cities will be in
the form of "bloc grants," large
sums of money that the city can
spend as it sees fit.
The ''bloc grants"~ concept is
now being pushed by Nixon,.and
appears to have an excellent
chance of passage.
Liberals both in the Congress
and in city halls across the coun-
try are leery of this funding sys-
tem because it does not directly
replace funds for specific pro-
grams cut in the 1974 fiscal year.
For example, a City Council
could decide to use 75 per cent of
n nmd";c lPPnmn bln

Lecture hall
is scene of
disturbance
(Continued from Page 1)
A scuffle ensued as the caucus
speaker refused to relinquish the
mike. Meadows broke in and asked
for a show of hands as to whether
or not to allow the speaker to con-
tinue. Meadows allowedthim three
more minutes. During the fracas,
a large part of the audience walked
out, in obvious disgust.
Meadows answered the charges,
stating the Caucus' theories support
"the simple minded, technological,
optimistic approach that got us
into this bind in the first place."
This was not the last to be heard
from the labor caucus. Two more
speakers verbally assaulted Mead-
ows, each speaker causing another
mass exodus from the auditorium.
After many complicated theories
were bandied about, Meadows'
brought the lecture to a close.

The Indians were continuing to ; aJom
set up a provisional government to grant ti
run the sovereign state which they while i
declared around the area on Sun- socialv
day.
U.S. Marshall Colburn repeated
his objective to maintain a tighter
blockade than before, telling news- I
men he expected to changethe Y
Indians' lifestyle in order to "bring
their leaders to the negotiating
table." M
He said he was not considering
cutting off water supplies to
Wounded Knee, but added that Fri
technicians were checking electri-
cal circuits affecting the area. Sa
Most of Wounded Knee's pumps
are run by electricity. Su
No food is being allowed into
the area, which is on the Pine
Ridge reservation in the southern
South Dakota hills.
Residents who originally occupied
the fifty or so homes in Wounded
Knee are being allowed to leave if
they want to, but they are being
told they will not be permitted to
go backwhile the present situation
continues.
It was also announced yesterday
that 87 people have been arrested E
since Wounded Knee was occupied'
and arraigned on a variety of fed-
eral charges.
In Sioux Falls a federal grand
jury also returned an undeter-
mined number of indictments
against Indians who took part in
the takeover of the historic hamlet
February 27.
Wounded Knee was the scene of
an 1890 massacre of 146 Indians
by the U.S. Army.

imunity eveiopment ooc
o buy new garbage trucks
gnoring previously funded
welfare programs.

A

.._ -

)UR WORLD! WELCOME TO IT!
arch 16.18 Burns Park
i.: 7-12 p.m. School
t.: 12-12 1414 Wells
in.: 12-6 p.mni. [6 [Ann Arbor
U of M FOREIGN STUDENTS
PRESENT

Drug ring
broken by
Fed agents
(Continued from Page 1)
tion involved seizure ofsa 100,0001
dollar villa in San Luis, Sonora,
where agents seized drugs includ-
ing nine and a half tons of mari-
juana and a ranch near Sonora
where workers living along an ap-
proach road acted as lookouts.
The operation brought into play
new technology acquired recently
by the government agencies and
involved the use of detector dogs,
radio equipped vehicles, aircraft
and helicopters.
PALMA DE MALLORCA, Bale-
aric Is. (P) - The government an-
nounced that 31 million tourists
spent more than $2.6 billion in
Spain during 1972.
I am trying
to bribe you
with
uncertainty,
with
danger,
with
defeat.
jorge
u s
borges
That's mostly what you'll
find if you commit your
life to the millions in the
Third World who cry out
in the hunger of their
hearts. That...and fulfill-
ment too..'with the
ICOLUMBAN
FATHERS
Over 1,000 Catholic mission-
ary priests at work mainly in
the developing nations.
We've been called by many
names - "foreign dogs" .
"hope-makers" . .. "c pital-
ist criminals"..."hard-nosed
realists"...
Read the whole story in our
new
16-PAGE
FREE BOOKLET
Tells it
like
itse
Columban Fathers
St. Columbans, Neb. 68056
Please send me a copy of your
booklet. No strings.
Name
II
I Address
ctty
State Zip

College Class

WHY the H.R.P. Challenge?
Democrats and Republicans have continuously promised to represent the interests of their constituency. The
record, however, has shown that the needs of the community are secondary to the interests of business and
those already established in power.
The Democrats and Republicans have recently:
* blocked adoption of consumer protection legislation such as unit pricing and label-
ing of nutritional content
" united to defeat an HRP proposal for a public hearing on police practices
e continued to delay the establishment of a women-controlled abortion clinic
0 refused to commit the city to rent control. The Republicans actively oppose rent
control, while the Democrats, with Republican backing, have merely appointed a
landlord-dominated "study commission."
HRP has initiated, researched, and supported leg-
islation and action directly responding to the needs
and interests of the Community:
0 forbidding discrimination on the basis of sexual preference, educational, or marital
status
* HRP took a leading role in blocking business developers' schemes such as the Pack-
ard-Beakes bypass
9 anti-strike-breaker legislation
0 establishment of $5 fine for possession or use of marijuana.
The record reflects the fundamental differences between the HRP and the other two parties. While other parties'
candidates often ignore platform and promises made before election, HRP candidates, held to candidate disci-
pline, run pledged to support the platform and decisions adopted by open HRP mass meetings. Thus, they
continue to be responsive to their constituency following their election to public office.

f.

WORLD'S FAIR

'73

Andrei
Phil

Joseph
1st ward city council

Benita
Kaimowitz
Mayor

Frank
Shoicket
2nd ward city coun

ternatilonal Varilety Show
XHIBITS OF INTERNATIONAL ARTS & CRAFTS
DELICIOUS, EXOTIC MEALS AND SNACKS
ADMISSION TO FAIR: Adults $1.00
Children: .50
VARIETY SHOW: $.50
GROUP RATES (25 or more)
CALL 764-9310 for information

John

Carroll%
4th ward city council

Minock
5th ward city council

I

VOTE HUMAN RIGHTS PARTY APRIL 2

.f-

RASPAFARIANS IN JAMAICA
Religious Community and Political Action
A discussion of Millenarian Movements and
Religions of the Oppressed
by
Sylvia Wynter
TODAY, 3:00 p.m., MLB AUD. I II
Dimensions of Religious Experience
Sponsored by: Office of Religious Affairs
NEXT WEDNESDAY: "COINCIDENCE; RELIGION AND ART
IN BALI" by DR. ALTON BECKER

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WORLD CERAMICS: An Illustrated His-
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with brilliant text-a complete history of non keyboard instru- throughout the world-prehistoric, me -f
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'< a THE DEFINITIVE HISTORY OF AMERI-
CAN PAINTING, this 2 vol. slipcased THIS COUPON ENTITLES YOU TO AN ADDITIONAL DISCOUNT
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Colonial beginnings to the Armory
Show and Barbara Rose's depiction of
the emergence of Cubism, Surrealism,

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