100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

October 24, 1972 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1972-10-24

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Page Two

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Tuesday, October 24, 1972

Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAiLY

Chile strike spreads as

Russians waive tax;
36 Jews to leave

=

ATTENTION! TEMPORARILY CHANGED

DIAL 668-6416
A man went looking for America.
And couldn't find it anywhere...

food

~11 fi1 1 0

dwindle

N.I

SANTIAGO (P) - A shortage ofl
food and fuel in Santiago became
more acute yesterday as doctors,
dentists and private schoolteach-
ers joined a nationwide strike
movement against Chile's leftist
government.
The country's anti-Marxist op-;
position called for a "day of si-

.m.- . .J XJ -AL T T .-J. . .. 1- MOSCOW (A) -36 Soviet Jews -
- including a man separated from
lence" today in which all opposed office demarding guarantees of job his American bride - were told
to President Salvador Allende's security and unhampered labor ac- yesterday they can leave Russia
program's to "lead Chile down tivity, an end to expropriations and without paying the disputed di-
the road to socialism" would stay the right of organizations not spon- ploma tax, Jewish sources report-
home. sored by the government to oper- ed.
Truck drivers, small business- ate. This brought to 175 the number
men, doctors, dentists, engineers The Interior Ministry said 34 per- of families for whom the tax has
and architects delivered a petition sons were arrested Sunday after been waived since the U n i t e d
to President Salvador Allende's r .n.ie r n States and the Soviet Union sign-

DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN
0 . ;-{}. ='' ir :. i. ' "° '': >"4: s'" :i; '::?te;:; }4 }? v

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24 CAREER PLANNING & PLACEM
DAY CALENDAR 3200 SAB
Music School: Wind instrument stu- ON CAMPUS INTERVIEWS: O
dents, SM Recital Hall, 12:30 pnm. Carnegie Mellon Univ. - Grad
Biophysics Seminar: G. Summerfield, of Indust. Admin.; Office of
"Inelastic Neutron Scattering from ment & Budget, Exec. Office
Polymers," 618 Physics~ - Astronomy President; & Montgomery Ward
Bldg., 1 pm. On Oct. 26, Northwestern Univ.t
Ctr. for Coord. of Ancient & Modern ate School of Mgt. & Emory
Studies: J. H. D'Arms, "Urban Prob- School of Law. On Oct. 27, Sear;
lems & Pressures in Ancient Rome," buck & Co. & Emory Univ. Scb
2009 Angell Hall, 2:10 pm. Law.
LSA Coffee Hour: Chemistry Dept.,
3003 Chem. Bldg., 3 pm. ORGANIZATIONAL MEETINGS
Physics Seminer: D. N. Williams, "In- Uo ahntnSme
finite Wave Function Renormalization U of M Washington Summer
in the Scalar Field Model," P & A Col- Program Mass Meeting, Oct.2E
loq. Rm., 4 pm. PM, UGLI Multi purpose room.
Extension Service & English Dept:
Uoetry reading by Thomas Transtro--
mer, Swedish poet & psychologist,
UGLI, Multipurpose Rm., 4:10 pm.
Computing Center: L. Flanigan & J.
Henriksen, "GASP-I," Seminar Rn.,
Comp. Ctr., 7:30 pm.
WUOM: "Symposium 72," live ques-
tions & answers with E. Connors, dir.,
U. Hosp.; R. Anderson, Dir., HealthTO
Serv.; & B. Stulberg, chairman, Med. Totdn Cucl al-nnmbr,74
Studnt ounil;call-in numbers, 764-
1550, WUOM-FM, 91.7, 8 pm.
Music School: University Baroque
Trio, Rackham Aud., 8 pm./1/
University Players: Beckett's "End-j
game," Arena Theatre, Frieze Bldg., 8
p.m.
'Rive Gauch: German. Language night,
1024 Hill St., 9 pm.

terroris s atcs sin several parts
of Chile, where 20 of 25 provinces
are under a state of emergency, a!
form of martial law.
This capital of three million resi-'
dents was feeling the pinch of a
trucking strike which began Oct.j
10 and a shopkeepers strike more
than a week old.
Gen. Hector Munoz, who heads
the Santiago emergency zone where
a midnight-to-dawn curfew is in ef-
fect, banned sale of gasoline to
private motorists through t h e
weekend.'
Neighborhood deliveries of fresh
milk were sharply reduced over the
weekend and families were limited1
to two bottles each in one subur-
ban neighborhood.

ed their landmark trade agreement
last week. However, there was still
no indication the authorities h a d
repealed the tax.
The tax was imposed by a secret
The Michigan Daily, edited and man-
aged by students at the University of
Michigan. News phone: 764-0562. SecondP
class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich-t
igan 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor,t
Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues-
day through Sunday morning Univer-
sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by1
carrier (campus area); $11 local mail
(in Mich. or Ohio); $13 non-local mail
(other states and foreign).
Summer Session published Tuesday
through Saturday morning. Subscrip-
tion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus
area); $6.50 local mall (in Mich. or
Ohio); $7.50 non-local mail (other
states and foreign).I

decree last Aug. 3. Although it has
not been published, it has b e e n
justified in the Soviet press as a
measure to collect from emigrants
the public expense for their high-
er education.
Among the 36 told yesterday they
could leave without paying was
Gabriel Shapiro. Shapiro married
Judy Silver of Cincinnati, Ohio, in
a private religious seremony in
Moscow last June.
His bride was forced to leave the
country and soon afterward Sha-,
piro was convicted for failing to
meet a military obligation.
Although pleased about the re-
cent waivers, Jewish sources in
Moscow saw the loosening-up as a
temporary step to blunt criticism in
the American Congress, where con-
sent is needed for the Soviet-Amer-
ican trade pact.
Ir

PETER FONDA
DENNIS HOPPER

Everyone

Welcome !
GRAD
COFFEE
H OU R
ednesday, Oct. 25
8-10 p.m.
Vandenburg Room
2nd Floor
Michigan Union

easy
RkieR,
COLOR
Released by COLUMBIAPICTURES _
CANNES FILM FESTIVAL WINNER!
'Best Film By a New Director"
ALSO
Elliott Gould
in
"Getting Straight"

1

Fun, Food, People
NEW PEOPLE WELCOME!
Subscribe to The Daily

It

DIAL 5-6290
"**** 4 STARS,
HIGHEST RATING1"
N.Y. Daily News

I

I

I

YOU'RE INVITED
ORVILLE'S "COMING-OUT" PNRTY..
Be 4 Scem: 10V

CLAUDE LELOUCH'S beautiful many-award winning
A',MAN AND A WOMAN
(FRENCH LANGUAGE-ENGLISH SUBTITLES)
with ANOUK AIMEE " JEAN LOUIS TRINTIGNANT " PIERRE BAROUGH
" Winner of 2 ACADEMY AWARDS
-BEST FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM
-BEST STORY AND SCREENPLAY (written directly for the screen)
" Winner CANNES FESTIVAL Award
" Winner GOLDEN GLOBE Awards
" Grand Prix of the INTERNATIONAL CATHOLIC FILM GUILD
One of the most superbly beautiful films ever made
TONIGHT! October 24th-ONLY 35mm COLOR 7 & 9:30
TOMORROW EVENING-Jean Cocteau's gothic fantasy BEAUTY & THE BEAST
COMING THURSDAY-Francois Truffaut's delightful STOLEN KISSES
NEXT TUESDAY-For Halloween, Romero's THE NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD
ALL SHOWINGS IN AUDITORIUM "A," ANGELL HALL-$1
Tickets for all of each evening's shows on sale outside the auditorium at 6 p.m.

BUTTERFLIEf
ARE FREE
GhOLs -pWN
Shosaf At ---90 pm.

OPEN 12:45
"FIDDLER" AT
I P.M.-4:30-8 P.M.
CHILDREN $1.00
ADULTS:
MON.-SAT. MAT.-$2.00
EVE. & ALL DAY SUN.-$2.50

AnnArbor's Finest
Selection of Literature:
Charles Dickens: 35 titles
Lawrence Durrell: 13 titles
T. S. Eliot: 15 titles
Wm. Faulkner: 34 titles
F. Scott Fitzgerald: 20 titles
Ernest Hemingway: 22 titles
Herman Hesse: 15 titles
D. H. Lawrence: 34 titles
Henry Miller: 16 titles
Vladmir Nabakov: 13 titles
Anais Nin: 9 titles, 1 poster
Kenneth Patchen: 11 titles
Ezra Pound: 8 titles
Rainer Marie Rilke: 14 titles
William Butler Yeats: 19 titles
discount on
5 all new
books
BORDERS BOOK SHOP
316 S. State
668-7653
OPEN TILL 10:00 7 NIGHTS
._ .. . _ . ..I

Y'

UAC DAYSTAR presents . . .
r- a - - -- - - -- - - - --

Been Zapped!
.. .by not gaining enough
information from what
you read?
... by a lot of anxiety at
exam time?
. . . with lousy grades
when you really thought
you were doing well?
. .. by some kind of study
or reading problem?
If so, call the Reading
Improvement Service for
information. Registration
for a 6 week reading ef-
ficiency and Study Skills

....... . ...
...........
..... ....

I

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan