Friday, September 22, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three' FrIlidayII III September 22, 1.. TH.I H GA A L-P g h e SOLDIER-STATESMAN HELD OVER AGAIN! WdeoAMOW, DIAL 8-6416 Idi Amin: Impetuous dictator " . an inspired blend of fact and fantasy. It leaps backwards and forwards in space and time with utter abandon . . from the grimness of a German P.O.W. camp in winter to the lush- ness of a geodesic dream house-complete with pneumatic dream girl. FOR THIS TRIP, ONE MUST FASTEN HIS SEAT BELT AND HOLD ON TIGHT!" -Arthur Knight, Saturday Review WINNER 1972 CANNES FILM FESTIVAL JURY PRIZE AWARD Only American Film to be so Honored KURT VONNEGUT JR'S SLAUGHTERHOUSE-FIVE ,one of the mo t darflg, origrn , -ictures ever made Rex Reed. r otr Adult Guarr LONDON (P) - Israeli and Brit- ish diplomats tell a surprising story about the tempestuous ruler of Uganda, Maj. Gen. Idi Amin. The onetime national boxing champion who has become a dictator asked each of those two countries for the planes, tanks and guns he needed to conquer neigh- boring Tanzania. Both the Israelis and the British - who were among his best friends when he ousted Milton Obote as president 27 months ago - refused what they considered to be a wild request. And so, in his own good time, he turned on them, diplomats say. That incident illustrates the un- predictability of the 47-year-old soldier-politician at the center of the stormy East African scene to- day. Controversy and a burning ambi- tion have surrounded Amin ever since he rose to prominence after joining the King's African Rifles, a British colonial regiment at 17. Amin was one of the two Ugand- ans com-issioned as officers by the time his country won independ- ence in 1962. From then on Amin was on the spot almost every time trouble flared in Uganda. Amin, a Kakwa tribesman from the west Nile, always had up-and- down relations with the man he toppled, Obote. These relations be- came increasingly strained in late 1970. Obote was away at a Common- wealth summit meeting on the is- sue in January 1971, when Amin staged his coup. Obote was given sanctuary by President J u 1 i u s Nyerere of Tanzania. Amin h a s seemingly never forgiven the Tan- zanians for that. The specter of a comeback by Obote always haunted him. He de- veloped grandiose ideas for Ugan- da's future, cherishing the thought of an escape route to the Indian Ocean from his landlocked country. He thought he could get one by tak- ing out the Tanzanians in an ac- tion that also would remove his rival Obote for good. It was then that Amin turned first to Israel, then to Britain for arms. The Israelis had developed a close alignment with Uganda pro- viding them with extensive econ- omic and military aid. Among his requests to them was one for the American-built Phan- tom jet fighter, which no Ugand- an is trained to fly. From Brit- ain he wanted combat jet aircraft to enable him to bomb Dar "es Sa- laam, capital of Tanzania. The Israeli and British rejec- tions early this year enraged Amin. He ordered the 500-strong Israeli economic, military and diplomatic missions to leave Uganda. He said recently Hitler's Ger- many did right to exterminate six million Jews. And in the recent fighting in Uganda he. has accused Israelis and British - as well as his country's departing Asians - of plotting what he called an invas- oin from Tanzania. Idi' Amin UFW THREATENED? 341 South Main E Ann Arbor 769 5 O ......-........ Proposed law seen as Qs new attack on ANN ARBOR'S NEWEST, EXCITING FUN SPOT OPEN 11a m forLUNCH DANCING 8 p.m.-2 a.m. featuring VISUAL SOUND H3 SACRAMENTO, Calif. (A') - Op- ponents are using a new tactic to fight Cesar Chavez' United Farm j Workers Union and California vot- ers are set to decide the outcome of the latest round in November. The method is legislation. In' California it's a ballot supporters say would formally establish thej right of farm laborers to organize and bring peace to the troubled agriculture industry. Chavez and his followers, how- .: ever,acall it a fraud generatedby the wealthy growers to crush the movement that began in the grape yards of Delano seven years ago. It would, they say, put an end to boycotts and harvest strikes that have thrust the Chicano labor lead-, er into the national limelight. Chavez people claim the drive is being backed by conservative farm organizations and growers. Supporters of the legislation reject the claim, asserting such mea- surescare a fair compromise be- tween worker and grower de- mands. Both sides agree the outcome will have national impact.t The key disputes involve:t -Right-to-strike - Leroy Chat-I field, leader of the Chavez forces,c Chavez the time the cooling off period end- ed; -Boycotts - Chatfield says the measure has so many conditions on boycotts, which have become Chavez' main weapon, that it "simply is outlawing them," and -Penalties - Anti-Chavez forc- es call the act a fair balance, but Chatfield asserts all the criminal sanctions are aimed at workers while most employer violations are "vague infractions." The issue at stake for Chavez is the future of union contracts in five California crops - table grapes, w i n e grapes, lettuce, peaches and plums - and his drive to organize farm workers in Cali- fornia and seven other states - Texas, Florida, Colorado, Arizona, Washington, Oregon and Idaho. "If we can win, it's a tremen- AP Photo Going down? An empty barge, adrift on the stormy Chesapeake Bay, rammed the Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel early yesterday and tore out a 60-foot section close to the bridge's southern end. 'BUREA UCRA TIC FOOT-DRAGGING': Congressmen say government Cesar Chavez dous boost for the Farm Workers 1LUx11',1 t I-L-IL VL Union, not only in the state, but contends a provision for 60-day in the United States," Chatfield WASHINGTON (W) - A con- cooling off periods "is an out and otbn on pharvst "isn t n said. "It would be a big boost to gressionel committee says foot- out ban on harvest strikes . . .the national organizing and state dragging by secrecy-minded bu- making the union powerless" be- ,, reaucrats has kept Americans cause crops would be harvested by organizing." from fully enjoying the freedom "Now if we lose, then if the un- of information intended under a ion is to stay in the state, Cesar five-year-old right-to-know law. and other officers would have to While some agencies have go to jail. tried to implement the Freedom TONIGHT UNTIL 9:00g ta of Information Act "the over-all G:picture which emerges was en- READ AND USE THE crusted with bureaucratic dust DAILY CLASSIFIEDS and grime which need to be '_l l1 1 1 11 it 1zJ.. . v o T ,s . ar t t vigorously scrubbed away," says the House Government Opera- tions Committee. The law, which went into effect July 4, 1967, provides that any citizen may see a government document in the files but lists specific categories of material that are exempt. In a report released yesterday, the committee said the efficient operation of the law "has been hindered by five years of foot- \ " , B I SHOP' ; A 0 Miss J layers it! that's the word from Danskin. . .nylon and nylon blend knit body suits and turtle tops get together effectively and the total look is smashing. Body suits, sizes S.ML. Turtle tops, sizes 34 to 40. A. Green/persimmon/white or navy/green/white flutter sleeve body suit. 11.50 White, banananavy, brown, black, forest green or wild grape turtle top. $11. B. Black/red/banana, navy/green/turquoise, brown/black/off-white, or grape/red/pink body suit. $11. dragging by the federal bureau- cracy." The committee said it found these major problem areas: -"Bureaucratic delay in re- sponding to an individual's re- quest for information; -"Abuses in fee schedules by some agencies for searching and copying of documents or records requested by individuals; -"Cumbersome and costly leg- al remedy under the act when persons denied information by an agency choose to invoke the in- junctive procedures to obtain ac- cess; -"Relative lack of utilization of the act by the news media, which had been among the strongest backers of the freedom of information legislation. The committee said, however, it did receive testimony from several reporters and editors who have taken cases to court and eventually won out over the "secrecy - minded government bureaucracy." The report stated that infor- mation is often "withheld, over- classified, or otherwise hidden from the public to avoid adminis- trative mistakes, waste of funds, or political embarrassment." BRIDGE UAC fall classes SEE DETAILS IN PERSONAL COLUMN The leader of the "Nouveau Roman" literary movement transfers aesthetics to film recurring motifs, examination of surfaces, fascination with surfaces of the environment. L'IMMORTELLE Dir, by Alain Robbe-Brillet 1963-French with Subtitles Peter Sellers as Albert T. Hopfnagel, Hospital Administrator, in ] 81V wh " B / Iau, MIS8TIUCTED Undcr t1? requwres dcompnr^Slyf Parent or AduiltGruartlran HEMDALE presents A JOSEF SHAFTEL PRODUCTION, "WHERE DOES IT HURT?" starring PETER SELLERS * JO ANN PFLUG * RICK LENZ * HAROLD GOULD, saeen;*y by ROD AMATEAU & UDD ROBiNSON ~ . .e music by KEITH ALLISON, executive producer JOSEF SHAFTEL, produced by BILL SCHWARTZ & ROD AMATEAU, directed by ROD AMATEAU IN EASTMANCOLOR - FROM CINERAMA RELEASING -- /- ell r2') /-. -- I