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November 08, 1972 - Image 17

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1972-11-08

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

Wednesday, Novembor 8, 1972

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Page Seven

Wednesday, November 8, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY 'age Seven\

INDIA ART SHOP
New shipments arrive every day
Recent kppenings: ESKIMO ART, CALENDARS,
PERSIAN SPREADS, End BELLS
NOW IS THE TIME TO ORDER PUZZLE RINGS!
330 MAYNARD
TODAY at 4 p.m.
"NEW COMMUNES AND THE
RELIGIOUS COMMUNITY"
a dialogue with
PROFESSOR MAX H IERICH,
sociology department
and
MR SARTHUR GREEN,
founding member of Hovurat Shalom in-Cambridge, Mass.
A. THEODORE KACHEL, moderator
PRESENTED BY:
THE OFFICEOF RELIGIOUS AFFAIRS AND
THE B'NAI B'RITH HILLEL FOUNDATION
ALSO LECTURE TONIGHT at 8 p.m. at HILLEL
by Mr. Arthur Green

East, West Germany approve
accord to normalize relations
By the AP and Reuters today, a government spokesman inet yesterday, and later by t h e A spokesman said the treaty also
BONN, West Germany - E a s t said. East German ministerial council. covered further agreement on
and West Germany yesterday ap- Months of negotiations on the ac- The treaty is expected to boost sport, culture, legal relations and
proved an historic treaty to norm- cord were concluded in East Berlin West German Chancellor W i 1 1 y other questions, and allowed closer
alize their long-embittered rela- Monday night. The text was ap- Brandt's re-election fight in the contacts between people living in
tions, and agreed to initial it here proved by the West German Cab- general elections Nov. 19. the immediate border area.
The treaty acknowledges the Informed sources said the. still-
" s existence of two Germanies and secret treaty provides for an ex-
opens the way for them to enter' change between Bonn and East
the United Nations. hBerlin of vaguely defined "plenipo-
NEW ORK P) -TheColumbia locations, using management The pact still has to be ratified tentiaries" -fully empowered gov-
NEW YORK (sP) - TheCd mbeter-cws, m ig a u nact by the parliaments in Bonn and erment ministers but not ambassa-
Brodcstig.ystm aidye ter- u crews .,might lea - u-n-ctviyEast Berlin before it comes into dors.

day it would confine its on-the- whicnwould seriously interfere
scene election night coverage to with election night coverage on
the two major presidential candi- ABC and NBC if not CBS," a net-
dates and omit coverage of other work statement said.
races because of pressure f r o m The CBS announcement c a m e
striking technicians. hours after a federal court order
The network said it would not was issued barring the striking
transmit "remotes" or participate technicians from interfering with
in pool coverage of races other CBS's presidential election cover-
than the presidential election. age.
11ha tanhnirae i nn as

Sforce.
The treaty preamble covered the,
unity of the German nation, W e s t
German formula for keeping t h e
question of possible reunification
of Germany open until a World
War II peace treaty is signed.
This was one of the most dis-
puted issues in the treaty negotia-
tions. The East Germans feared
it. Pndnrcn, ant wmild dintnrrna i

West German Chancellor Willy
Brandt yesterday hailed the treaty
as a significant event that would
break the ice that had frozen re-
lations between the two German
states since their foundation 23
years ago.
U.S. officials yesterday welcom-
ed the agreement between East
and West Germany as an impor-
tant step towards improving rela-
tions between the two German stat-
es.
But they declined substantive
comment on the agreement until
the treaty was signed by the four'
big powers later this week.

Thne technicans union naa
sought to prevent CBS from usinig
NBC and ABC facilities in its
election-return broadcasts.
"The decision has been made out
of concern that carrying out re-
mote pickups from a number of
~~~-----~--------

U.S. District Court Judge Mur- its enursemem woumu
ray Gurfein also barred union pick- their sovereignty.
ets from setting up lines at NBC Among the improvements t h e
gAw s ep- treaty provides are better facili-
and ABC, which share election-re- ties for Western reporters in East
'sult transmission facilities with Germany and an exchange of tech-
CBS. nological and scientific information.

AP Photo
Soviet rocket carriers rumble across Moscow's Red Square yester-
day in the military parade marking the 551h anniversary of the
Bolshevik Revolution. Poster in the background says "Power
to the Soviets."

VIOLENCE CONTINUES:
Bomb damages town
hall in Irish Republic
By Reuters
A bomb exploded early yesterday in the town hall of
Claremorris, 90 miles south of the border with Northern
Ireland in the Irish Republic. A telephone caller claimed
responsibility for a protestant group from the North.
The caller, who gave warning of the blast, said the bomb
had been planted by the Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF), an
organization banned in Northern Ireland. The town hall suf-
fered extensive damage.
Across the border from the Northern Ireland town of
Strabane, Irish police fought with over 100 demonstrators
during the night following the ----
seizure of arms and explosives
there.
there.Housewives'
Youths from Strabane crossed
the border bridge to join the dem-
onstrators in an attack on the Lif-
ford police station, but later British h
troops arrived and blocked off the
bridge,.yHe t
Prime Minister Edward Heath'by0Heath
will visit Northern Ireland . Nov.
16 and 17 for the first time since
Britain took overdirect rule in LONDON (Reuter)-Pr m
Britain took overdirewas ru n Minister Edward Heath yesterday
the province, it was announced pinned his faith on British house-
yesterday. wives in the battle against infla-
He will make an assessment of tion.
the latest situation and meet as
many people as possible, the an- He urged shoppers to challenge
nouncement said. storekeepers when price boosts
In Belfast hard line Protestant ;looked unjustified and said he was
leader William Craig said yester- stuaton could deal with any
day loyalists would make Northern
Ireland ungovernable if a strong Heath was replying in the House
parliament was not restored to the 'of Commons to questions a b o u t
province. the 90-day wage-price freeze he an
Craig who said recently that his nounced Monday, the first stage in
supporters would shoot and kill the governments new anti-infla-
to protect their British heritage, tionary program.
said that if Northern Ireland was The prime minister's call to
given the assembly now being pre- housewives came as special price-
dicted "loyalists would make the checking units newly set up in two
country unworkable and ungovern- government offices were overt
able.", whelmed with telephone complains
He said the "crunch" would about retail charges.
come when the British government One woman member of the gov-
presented its legislation for the erning Conservative Party, Sally
future of Northern Ireland to the Oppenheim, asked whether house-
Parliament early next year. wives could reverse the telephone
-- -costs of complaining calls. Heath
said they should first challenge the
Read and Use merchants who were raising pric-
DaiIyClassifiedses
Daily CThe freeze is expected to become
.___ law within a month, after it is
approved by Parliament and given
M the Royal Assent by Queen Eliza-
S tbeth II.
S 3 The government's bill was in-
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r
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t
a'
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if
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IFlhIetts F

[rOaucea in rart[aizieu[ YUSLUfUdy.

The legislation includes a pro-
vision for a further 60-day freeze
for Paperback Books if necessary. Tnebi'ef ro
ment clauses set no limit on fines
for serious offenders.
A CHILEAN
CULTURAL NIGHT
Food, Music, Spanish,
and Amigos
FRIDAY, Nov. 10-8:30
RIVE GAUCHE
:,.

SPECIAL! HOT

Everyone

f CHOCOLATE
Welcome
GRAD
COFFEE
1-ran ID

.1 ... ; . !A 111119 ! ®s. -- m , r v " n w w w 1 1111 E1E A . T . lm,

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