Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, October 10, 1972 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY POOR HARVEST: USSR faces potato, Ivegetable shortages Gandhi refuses CIA proof NEW DELHI (P)-Prime Minis- Rogers was understood to have ter Indira Gandhi refused yester- asked Indian Foreign Minister day to give Secretary of State Swaran Singh last Thursday for William Rogers the proof he is proof of allegations that the CIA reported to have requested to sub- was interferring in India's internal stantiate her charges that the U.S. affairs-a charge denied by the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) State Department. has interfered with Indian affairs. The charges of CIA infiltration "Everyone knows that CIA has were first made three weeks ago been active in India and there is by Congress party President Shan- no question of proving it," the kar Dayal Shama. Gandhi person- prime minister told a national ally entered the controversy last Tuesday, warning party members convention of her Congress Party in eastern Bhar State to be vigilant in Central Ahmdabad city. against the spy agency. MOSCOW (A') - Already strug-C gling to cope with a bad grain har- vest, Soviet authorities have re- vealed potato and vegetable crop failures caused by drought con- ditions. The lead editorial in Pravda, the voice of the Communist party, urg- ed farmers on Monday to prepare now for a maximum effort next year to "compensate for losses of production in the current year." major index of agricultural suc- cess, but also a need to increase potato and vegetable production. It had been reported earlier that searing heat in the Moscow re- gion had nearly wrecked the crop Iof potatoes-a staple of the Rus- It mentioned not only grain, Busing ban a * f tlS4 UIUL* M allf W1 V 11*.* 7 I . But Pravda's reference to the ; "" "" potato and vegetable problem in DAY FF IC dicated crop failures went beyond DAI Y VI I the Moscow area. Even in the best of years there are not enough I ..............:':" " s"-" " vegetables for the Russian table TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10 although potatoes have been in DAY CALENDAR adequate supply the last few Music School: Wind Instrument Stu- IAL BULLETIN definitely interested in Michigan stu- dents!! Students interested in Grad & Pro- fessional Schoolst: A rep. vill be in the UAC presents ADE L L E DAVIS leading nutrionist and author of best-selling LET'S EAT RIGHT TO KEEP FIT, LET'S COOK IT RIGHT Speaking on "THE NUTRITION AWAKENING" POWER CENTER TUES., OCT. 17-8 P.M. TICKETS AVAILABLE AT: Power Center Box Office Eden Foods Michigan Union Soybean Cellar The Fishbowl Your Health & Nutrition Applerose Natural Foods 152312 N. Main) (404 W. Liberty) Salvation Records A BENEFIT FOR THE MICH. FEDERATION OF FOOD CO-OPS DONATION $1.75 SPECIAL EVENINGS- SHE Sunday and.Monday: Qvarlcr Nights (BEER AND WINE) Tuesday: All drinks 2 Price Wednesday: Singles Night free admission and all drinks 2 price for women 341 So. Main, Ann Arbor 769-5960 The perfect gift for At Dallas' Neiman-Marcus department st size robots of yourself and your spouse t laugh at jokes and say yes in any lang button. Edward Marcus, who heads the sti remote controls of two dummies. CHOU COMMENTS:. on heir ti SHANGHAI (A') - A spate of re- presents ports on who may succeed Mao of succe Tse-tung as China's leader leaves by a cor waters muddied and raises the the topl possibility that the Peking leader- lead to ship wants it that way. Mao. Th years. dent Recital, Sch. of Mus. Recital Hall, Yesterday, the U. S. Depart- 1230 pm. votlotuesterday, LSA Coffee Hour: Psychology Dept., cioture ment of Agriculture in Washing- 2549 LSA Bldg., 3 pm. ton reported a serious food sit- E Extension Service. & EnglishLang.j uatin inthe ovie Unin, ctin Lit.: Walter Clark, poetry reading. sv, UGLI Multipurpose Rm., 4:10 pm. set in Senate "various sources." It said Mos- Music School: Flue Student Recital,f cow may be planning to import Sch. of Mus. Recital Hall, 4:30 pm. more food from satellite countries Women's Studies film Series: "Re- WASHINGTON () - A Sen- in addition to the massive ur- member Me When This You See" (On ate vote will be taken today on chase of 20 million tans of wheat Gertrude Stein), UGLI Multipurpose cuttng of th fiibuser o anRm., 7 pm. cutting-businthe ilibuster on a from the United States. Residential College Renaissance Dra- at-buig bl passed by th The ma Film: "Anthony & Cleopatra,"! House. e grain harvest, planned for Italy, silent, and "Macbeth," Britain, The legislation would make bus- an average of 195 million tons a Residential Col. Aud., 7 pm. ing for school desegregation a last year during the current five-year Musical Society:, Beryoska Dance Co., resort and prohibit it altogether period, may fall well below the Power Center, 8 pm. resot ad pohiit t atogthe 170miliontonmar ths yar. Rive Gauche: Italian Language Night to a school other than the one 70-million ton mark this year. 1024 Hill St., 9 pm. next nearest to a student's home. Harvesters in Siberia and north- ORGANIZATION NOTICES The bill also would permit the ern Kazakhstan are trying to CAREER PLANNING & PLACEMENT reopening of court orders in school bring in crops damaged by rain Ac0tion / Peace Corps / Vista wili be desegregation cases to bring them and snow with time running out. on Campus Oct. 17. 18, 19, in 3529 SAB in line with the bill's, restrictions. to talk with interested students. Since AP Photo A two-thirds majority of sena- The Michigan Daily, edited and man- 1961, The U of M has supplied fourth Cstors voting is required to put the ged by students at the University of largest number of volunteers. They are ZllS t~xStos vtig s eqire t pt heMichigan. News phone: 764-0562. Second - Senate's anti-filibuster rule into Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- ore you can order life- effect. igan 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, hat, when programmed, The. first attempt to cut off de- Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- YOUR LAST DATE urge at the touch of a bate is expected to fail but, in case day through Sunday morning Univer- ore, center, operates the it does, more tries will be made carrier (campus area); $1 local mail later this week. sin Mich. or Ohio): $13 non-local mail (I twas for a lot of others, too!) - If a two-thirds majority cannot (other states and foreign). be obtained in three attempts the Summer Session published Tuesday MASTER-DATE matches you in be heled or histhrough Saturday morning. Subscrip- i ,proaltitrss bill is likely to be shelved for this tion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus I o o k s, personality, interests. year. area); $6.50 local mail (in Mich. or Free questionnaire. In advance of this initial test tatesand; $ reig .-local mal (other P.O. Box 1912, Ann Arbor 48106 d vote, senators argued yesterday M ix Iover the use of busing as a way - - to achieve school desegregation. Forced busing was denounced as disruptive and contrary to the aO popular will and defended as an THE TELEPHONE essential tool, in some cases, toTHTE EO N wipeoutracial segregation. Lb ~~~Leaders of opposing sides in theIS R NN G. the idea that the question battle over the bill expect to ii- " " ssion in Peking is clouded tial attempt to invoke the Sen- ntinuing and deep split in ate's antifilibuster rule to fall And that's the way we like it. But some of you have been calling leadership that likely will short. us in the morning when we're not at the Health Service Input a power struggle after - phone to help answer your questions, cut red tape, and stand up is view is held by a num- for your rights. Our hours are from noon-three, weekdays. Please uil.U mr om.way ne4 a teu niv. aw School on Oct. 10, The University of Toledo-College of Bus. Ad., Oct. 11, and Duke Univ. Law School, Oct. 12. Career Minded Students: A rep will be at the Office from American Mo- tors, Oct. 13, seeking Journalism Ma- jors. Visits Postponed: C. R. Bard, Inc. scheduled to be on Campus on Oct. 10, has postponed visit until Nov. 30. Yale Law School scheduled to be on cam- epus Oct. 11, has postponed visit, will reschedule at laterdate. The Best of the First Annual N.Y. Erotic Film Festival .E Did OUI sell out to the Establishmtent'?, Frankly, we don't know. All we know is 800,000 copies of the premiere issue disappeared from the newsstands within 36 hours after publication. So either OUI is a very heavy magazine, or we've got a very heavy Establishment. Find out for yourself in the November issue, oh sale now. +I ,i Oddly, all the reports could be ber of Western China watchers as correct to some extent. Two of well. them are in fact, differing ver- If a collective emerged there is sions of what Premier Chou En- a good chance that eventually itj lai said to a group of visiting would go the way of "collectives"" American editors. in other Communist-ruled nations. One has Chou predicting a col- After Joseph Stalin died the So- lective leadership after Mao, now viet Union - with European nearing 79, passes from the scene. Communists obediently following The other, referring to the same suit - proclaimed a collective interview, has Chou indicating the leadership. It seemed a clumsy likely successor to be Yao Wen- arrangement for a dictatorship, yuan, a youngish Politboro mem- and before, long Nikita Krushchev ber and author, who is a protege decollectivized it. of Mao's wife, Chiang Ching. The way matters look from a Yao is in his fifties, and a lit- distance, Chou is at present the1 erary firebrand of the revolution. single most powerful man in China He writes skillfully in a polemic after Mao. In all probability he manner which appeals to Mao, will wield power after Mao, but it himself a poet and essayist. could be that Chou, the diplomat Yao in November 1965 wrote a and fence-mender, -would arrange slashing criticism of a play by the to have the succeeding regime deputy mayor of Peking, Wu Han, take on the look of a collective. called "Hai Jui's Dismissal from Still, Chou may be intentionally Office." Mao saw the play as an throwing sand in the world's eyes. attack on his 1959 dismissal of De- The fact of the matter may be! fense Minister Peng Teh-huai. that the Russians are close to the Yao's criticism touched off the answer: that there remain deep Cultural Revolution. divisions brought about by the Yet another report, this from political upheavals of the cultural' Shanghai, says speculation there revolution and these make risky, is that surely Chou himself will any speculation about the future succeed to Mao's power. But since top leadership. Chou is 74, this speculation is projected beyond him. It names Yao and another Politburo mem- ber from Shanghai, Chang Chun- chiao, as probable successors not to Mao but to Chou. Chang was a deputy chief of the Cultural Revolution Committee and, like Yao, closely associated with Ms. Mao in the turbulent days of the nationwide purge. The Soviet Union repeatedly TUES./WED. NOTICE Jobs are available . .! For FREE information on student assistance. a n d placement program send' self-addressed STAMPED envelope to the National Placement Registry, 1001 East Idaho St., Kalispelle, Mt. 59901. -NO GIMMICKS- call us then at..-- 763-4384 - FRI.-SAT. Oct. 13-14 I I "I Health Service Weekdays Noon to Three 763-4384 7 ari ahd 7:30-9-10:30 p.m. i* Not. Sci. Aud. $1 25 cont. FRIENDS OF NEWSREEL oui for the man of the world 11 I Z4 T U U . .r. I1 ENDS WEDNESDAY! ,UIIi BEST-SELLER BECOMES MOVIE SPY-THRILLER! THE SALZBURG ialmuaWrmiArU I g a l ur -.-- Single Tickets OnSale Now I COLORBY ELUEt OPEN 12:45 SHOWS AT 1:15, 3:10-5 p.m.-7 p.m.-9 p.m. STUDENTS-Help organize the SOC Grocery Co-op You voted for it, now work STARTS THURSDAY for it. All positions open, I __u ORCHID WALLY ' 217'ASH 2PM-2AM Two Short Features: Immortal Story from Board of Directors down. Assume power. All interested call SOC, 763-3241 on I I Dir. ORSON WELLES, 1968 Welles acts out a story of an old man who pays a sailor to sleep with his wife so he can have a son before he dies. With JEANNE MOREAU -AND- Simon of the Desert Dir. LUIS BUNUEL, 1966 A saintly man, living on a pillar in the desert, is tempted by the devil in the form of a woman (Silvia Pinal). ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM 7 & 9 p.m.--75c 3 SHOWS DAILY 1 p.m.-4:30-8 p.m. PRICE POLICY ADULTS MAT. $2.00 EVE. $2.50 CHILDREN $1.00 ' ' I ____ _ i, M-21 -T DOUBLE-FEATURE HORROR SHOW! Two by ROGER CORMAN LITTLE SHOP - OF HORRORS A new member of the vegetable kindom says, "Give, me to eat!"-A florist's helper de- velops a hybrid plant which demands BLOOD. SHOWN AT 7 & 9:30 P.M. CREATURE FROM THE} HAUNTED SEA Underseas monsters are jealous creatures. They don't relish having their domain invaded by "phony" monsters. SHOWN AT 8:15 & 10:45 P.M. A FRANKOVICH PRODUCTION R IC RITAI.J _ I aw .. ku..r a :r#.., v ..., .. Js.. .r u~_ .,,... .. .. ==ot~ t*;. , k ~ '- .a; *' ... ,.1 , ,-. - u. '^r- .:r 1.1