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