Page Two THE MICHIGAN [DAILY Tuesday, November 14, 1972 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, November 14, 1972 No peace date in sight as Haig returns to U.S. & AP Photo HENRY KISSINGER, right, and Gen. Alexander Haig leave a helicopter as they head for a meeting with President Nixon yesterday at his smountain retreat, Camp David. Haig has just returned from talks with South Vietnamese President Thieu. 79 NATIONS TO SIGN: Anti-upn pact set By AP and Reuters WASHINGTON - The White House said yesterday there may be a need for additional con- sultations with the North Viet- namese beyond the "one more" negotiating session outlined last month by presidential adviser Henry Kissinger. Presidential press secretary Ronald Ziegler told newsmen he could not confirm nor deny that Kissinger and chief North Viet- namese negotiator Le Duc Tho would meet this week in Paris. But if and when such a session takes place, Ziegler said, "there will be further consultations re- quired" with South Vietnam and perhaps Hanoi. Ziegler told reporters also that Gen. Alexander Haig, Kissing- er's deputy, brought a letter to President Nixon from S o u t-h Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu when he returned from Saigon yesterday. Ziegler confirmed also that Haig went to Saigon last week carrying a Nixon letter addressed to Thieu. The spokesman would not dis- close the contents of either mes- sage, but American officials in Saigon indicated Haig's four days in the South Vietnamese capital apparently cleared the way for a resumption of the Kissinger-Tho meetings. The main purpose of Haig's mis- sion was believed to be to offer reassurances to Thieu that the United States would maintain diplomatic and material support for him after the ceasefire went into effect. President Thieu has been insist- ing that North Vietnam explicit- ly or implicitly agree to remove its troops from South Vietnam and also wants iron-clad assur- ances that the proposed national council for reconciliation a n d concord - set up under the cease- fire draft to prepare elections in South Vietnam - is not viewed as a coalition government, with communist participation, in Sai- gon. General Haig also talked with President Lon Nol in Cambodia and President Chung Hee Park in South Korea. President Nixon will remain at Camp David for more than a week to review Vietnam develop- ments and also to continue his work to reorganize the govern- ment in preparation for his se- cond White House term, which begins in January, a spokesman said. \ CONSIGLIERE NABBED Mafia figures indicted ll l i NEW YORK (Reuters) - Three underworld figures who played key roles at a Mafia headquarters in a Brooklyn junkyard have been ar- rested in a major crackdown on New York's organized crime, Brooklyn District Attorney Eugene Gold said yesterday. The men, tracked down by a young detective who pretended to cooperate with them, face charges of bribery, relony, and conspiracy which could put each one of them in jail for a total of 129 years, if convicted on all counts. All the indictments announced yesterday were said to be a direct result of Gold's probe into organ- ized crime revealed last month when police began a massive oper- ation to serve subpoena notices on 677 underworld figures compelling them to appear before a grand jury. Meanwhile Mafia leaders were maneuvering to escape the drag- net by using a young detective whom they thought they "owned," today's press conference was told. The detective, Douglas Levien, had made contact with key men at the junkyard Mafia headquarters by pretending to cooperate in a stolen cars racket. He became friendly with the three men arrested yesterday - Paul Vario, an alleged consigliere (counselor) to the Carmine Tra-: munti Mafia "family", C 1 y d e' Brooks, and Norris Rubin, both alleged close associates of Vario. TN4FU T4E By AP and Reuters LONDON - Representatives of 79 countries pledged yesterday not to dump oil, mercury and cad- mium compounds, germ warfare material, or highly radioactive wastes into the ocean. The convention takes effect next year on ratification of the signatory countries. The meth- ods of policing the treaty will be decided then. It is expected, however, that a supervisory com- mission will be set up. A "Grey list" requiring special permits for dumping includes ar- senic, lead, copper, zinc and their compounds: cyanides, fluor- ides and other pesticides not on the black list; bulky metal ob- jects or containers likely to pre- sent fishing or navigation obsta- cles; and radioactive materials not blacklisted. Many delegates viewed the agreement as a compromise and not the ultimate answer to ma- rine pollution. A Belgian dele- gate called it "a step in the right direction." An escape clause allows the bans to be disregarded in "an Indian government to investigate rich guru NEW DELHI ( P) - Prime Min- Guru Maharaj Ji's Divine L i g h t ister Indira Gandhi's government Mission operates - including the1 is investigating a religious move- United States and Britain - havej ment headed by a guru claiming been asked to investigate finan- to be 14 years old who is India's cial aspects of the movement. latest spiritual export to the West, The government, he added, authoritative sources said yester- wants to determine whether the day. mission is violating Indian Law, One senior member of the gov- particularly regarding restrictions ernment said Indian diplomatic on Indian nationals having b a n k missions in countries where the accounts and capital assets abroad. The controversy began when the guru returned to India last Tues- Police quiet day in a jumbo jet filled with 350 American disciples - and a suit- case containing $65,000 in money, outbreak at watches and jewels, including dia' o~thr ak at mond rings and a pearl necklace. Customs impounded the suitcase. 0 Arthur Brigham, a devotee fromI B oston allDenver, Colo., director of the movement's large public relations division, said the money was to be BOSTON (Reuters) - A b o u t used for meeting the local travel 100 police officers, along with can- and food expenses of about 3,000 ine squads and tear gas yesterday Western devotees, mostly from the quelled a riot by about 200 inmates United States, who came to India at the Suffolk County Jail in down- in seven chartered Boeing 747s to town Boston. meditate in the Himalayas for a At least four inmates were in- month. jured. The watches and jewelry, he add- Authorities said the riot began ed, were gifts for the guru, his " during the lunch hour. Inmates mother and brothers and for about roamed through the 21-year-o 1 d 2,000 mahatmas, the priests of the jail, smashing windows and break- Divine Light Mission. ing furniture and plumbing fix- "This was supposed to be like a tures. birthday party," said Brigham, ex- Damage was reported heavy. plaining that the devotees h a d During the riot, the inmates de- come here mainly to celebrate the manded to talk with Massachusetts birth anniversary of the guru's late Corrections Commissioner J o h n father, who founded the Divine Boone about a list of grievances. Light Mission in India in 1960. Boone had not appeared, however, The guru exported the movement by the time the outbreak was put to the West in the Spring of 1971, down. . going first to England and t h e Recently inmates have protested United States. conditions at the jail, including the In an interview, the guru denied quality of food, medical care and any personal connection with the living conditions in general. impounded suitcase. _ . _ _ .... . emergency." However, other na- tions particularly affected m u s t be consulted in such cases be- fore the dumping is carried out. The pact was signed after 15. days of tough bargaining by 250 delegates from the 79 signatory countries and observers from 12 others.I The United States was repre- sented by a 20-man delegation led by Russell Train, President Nixon's adviser on environmental quality. "It is a historic step toward the control of global pollution," Train said, adding that the Unit- ed States "will continue to lend its full support to efforts at in- ternational cooperation to pro- tect the environment." The meeting was separ ate from the U.N. Intergovernmental Maritime Consultative Organiza- tion, which already has in force a world pact to guard the seas from oil pollution by tankers. The conference almost found- ered on Friday over attempts by Canada and some Latin Ameri- can countries to include soecific references to the extent of na- tional jurisdiction offshore. The United States and other major shipping countries charged this would prejudice their posi- tion at the forthcoming U.N. Law of the Sea conference, at which fishing limits are likely to be the major topic. Under the agreement, dumping permits will be issued by special authorities to be set up in each member state. Prime responsibil- ity falls on the state for control- ling dumping by its own flag ships. But a state may take action to prevent or punish illegal dumping by ships or aircraft within its jurisdiction. U I The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michiaan News phone: 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan 420 Maynard Street. Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (campus area); $11 local maill 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 mail (in Mich, or Ohio); $7.50 non-local mail (other states and foreign). Ci nema Guild TUE. WED. Goda rd's WEEKEND The last of Godard's films in- tended for a broad audience, this is a reflection of the rad- ical issues in the late sixties: violence in bourgeois society and as a revolutionary medium. The film is in color and full of action. It wil be followed on Thurs. by one of Godard's more esoteric discourses on f o r m (image/vs. sound) and theo- retical problems: Le Gai Savoir Architecture Auditorium 7 & 9 p.m. 75c y / CITY' COUSIN 217S.ASzH , 2PM-2AM FEDERICO FELLINI'S ADVANCE SALES AND INFO PTP TICKET OFFICE-MENDELSSOHN LOBBY 764-0450 AutTHE CLOWNS (Italian language-English subtitles) Aboutgreat contemporary European clowns. "Fellini is exactly the right person to undertake so esthetic a task, for his publicity alleges he ran away from home to work in a circus and in some notes written to promote the present film he says: 'The circus is congenial to me. A traumatizing, total adhesion to that noise, that music, those monstrous apparitions, those threats of death based on miracle, fantasy, jest, nonsense, fable, the lack of coldly intellectual meanings-is pre- cisely the kind of show that pleases me.' "DO NOTMISS THE CLOWNS .. ."-FILMS IN REVIEW, p ublication of the National Board of Review of Motion Pictures. TONIGHT - November 14th - ONLY! - 35mm COLOR -7 & 8:45 pA. TOMORROW EVENING-Ingmar Bergman's PERSONA COMING THURSDAY-John Schlesinger's SUNDAY, BLOODY SUNDAY ALL SHOWINGS IN AUDITORIUM "A," ANGELL HALL-$1 Tickets for all of each evening's shows on saie outside the auditorium at 6 p.m. IF SHOP THURSDAY AND FRIDAY UNTIL 9:00 P.M. x +. ~ a: i+/ . /. warm, light and lovely Leonora sleepwear... of softly brushed acetate/nylon in pastel pink, blue or yellow. Delicate embroidered flowers and white lace adorn front and cuffs, lace trimrmed collar and shoulders. 4- i UAC-DAYSTAR PRESENTS THE ALLMAN BROTHERS .R also: Dr. John, Rockets F $4 gen. adm. i i