Page; Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesdoy, November 28; -1,972 Poge Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, November 28, 1972 Romney resigns from HUD, plans to begin privat By UPI and Reuters WASHINGTON - George Rom- ney yesterday announced his re- signation as secretary of the De- partment of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) to create a non-governmental "body of truth- seekers and communicators" who could help enlighten the public on real political issues. Romney became the first maj- or member of Nixon's official family to have his resignation ac- cepted by Nixon since the Presi- dent's Nov. 7 re-election victory. Romney said he would leave as soon as his successor is ,con- firmed. At a news conference, Rom- ney said the "real issues" were e not ces car Den Ge do Ri said not pai citi con ers cor to stre (be ni Russians expose housing fraud in Soviet Georgia AP Photo SECRETARY GEORGE ROMNEY announces yesterday his plans to leave the Department of Housing and Urban Development as soon as a successor is approved by Congress. MacSTIOFAIN RELOCATED: IRA leader's fast continues; anti-subversive law proposed ana MOSCOW (P) - The state set jobs and expelled from the Com- los aside a tract of land in the moun- munist party. E s tains of sun-kissed Soviet Georgia Among them were R. Yenukidze, det where pipeline workers could build coordinator of the cooperative, S. ga modest weekend cottages, grow a Mikadze, first secretary of t h e sai few vegetables and relax. Communist party in the Leninsky scr Before long the cooperative tract district of Tbilisi, where the wheel- sev was swarming with imposters who ing-dealing took place, and his de- wh had never been near a pipeline, puty S. Sarishvili.H and 989 of the cooperative's 1,499 Pravda's exposure of the man- tur members "had built or were build- sion builders was the latest of a org ing not small cottages /but huge series of critical press reports on mansions," Pravda reported yester- Georgia that have concided with uila day widespread political shakeups in wil The biggest mansion of all was the Caucasian republic, w h e r e Con occupied by K. Montselidze, chief illicit free enterprise is a way of par of the repair trust for the Trans- life. eff caucasian Gas Pipeline. The Central Committee of t h e According to Pravda, the house national party looked into the sit-: cha was "of fantastic dimensions and uation early this year and in March ne beauty." It had a large marble ter- issued a scathing decree calling for Co race, private use of a forest area reform and accusing Georgia of for and was surrounded by a high wall. being a hotbed of embezzlement, tio It was "like a Georgian f a i r y profiteering, bribery and idleness. Ga tale," the Communist party daily "Numerous other workers of the OPENINwr TrH RSI trust followed the example of their chief," Pravda continued. Many people got into the cooper- UNIVERSITY PLA YE ative -by bribing officials to get PRESENT them jobs with the gas line trust and then quit the jobs after get- ting a building plot. " L I The private building was done by "0 LD I commandeered labor brigades with "the most modern materials and by HAROLD P equipment" diverted from state (An Experiment in New projects. After an exhaustive investigation, Pravda said, Montselidze and sev- Nov: 30, Dec. 3, 4 en other mansion builders w e r e 8:00 p.m. dismissed from their prestigious PERFORMED AT THE Community Center DIAL ~ 6656290Project 6o a 502 E. Washington 1-3-5-7-9 P.M. *ALL SEATING UNRESERVED. (Beco 13 79PM this theatrical event, most of the aud floorD. n" A -DEPT. OF SPEECH COMMUNIC lobbying discussed during Nixon's suc- sful race for re-election be- use both the President and hisj .mocratic challenger, S e n . orge McGovern, feared that to so would cost them votes. ' Romney, in a letter to Nixon, id that among the vital issues discussed in the election cam- gn were the problems of the es, U.S. industry in world mpetition and the growing pow- of trade unions and business porates and their relationship anti-trust laws.f Unless we take steps to engthen collective bargaining etween unions and employers) d free enterprise, we m i g h t e both," he said. Romney provided no specific ails of the private citizens or- nizations he was planning. He d he could start it from atch or could build on one of veral existing organizations ich have sought his services. He said it would be "prema- e" to name any of the existing ganizations. "I do want to correct one spec- tion," Romney said. "What I 1 organize is not a 'Republican )mmon Cause.' It will not be a rtisan effort or just a lobbying ort." One report. published last week aracterized Romney's plan- d group as a GOP-oriented mmon Cause, the citizen lobby med by former Health, Educa- n and Welfare Secretary John rdner. DAY, N OV. 30 RS SHOWCASE TS MES" PINTER Theatre Forms) all seats $1.00 Trueblood Box Office Open 12:30-5:90 p.m. Box Office 764-5387 Ouse of the special nature of iience will be seated on the ATION AND THEATRE THURSDAY, NOV. 30-6:30 r G I I Ea $1.00 donation COME TO A JAMAICAN DINNER AND TALK ON POLITICS IN JAMAICA TODAY for reservations call: DAYS-6625-7146 Ecumencial Campus Center--921 Church asst 0 ENDS WED. DIAL 8-6416 HOLIDAY SPECIAL Double Bill! The Show YOU ASKED FOR Nov. 30-Dec. 1, 2 Zuod Auditorium-8:00 P.M. DONATION $1.00 RESIDENTIAL COLLEGE PLAYERS PRESENTS PINTER'S THE DUMBWAITER and STRINDBERG'S MISS JULIE r %v a a 4G __. dI 1 DUBLIN (Reuters) - Ailing Myles Shevlin, said the IRA leader guerrilla leader Sean MacStiofain might die before today. was airlifted to a military prison The proposed bill reverses rules hospital outside Dublin for secur- of evidenceby allowing a judge to ity reasons last night, only hours convict if a senior police officer after thesIrish government t o o kswears under oathrthat an accused new steps to crack down on the person is a member of an illegal' Irish Republican Army '(Iorganization. A talnnntt" fl n 'RnnC'in~i jority of one in the Dail (Parlia- ment), the law is likely to be sup- ported by many members of the op- position Fine Gael and Labor Par- ty groups. The Dail will debate the measures tomorrow and may vote on them the same day. A nencote ewractoin aW The law would also allow a n y Meanwhile, shooting in Belfast fro Dbli'sMater Hsialt h fstatement or action "implying or and demonstrations in Dublin and Curragh Army Camp, 20 miles out- leading to a reasonable inference" London continued yesterday and side the city. that an accused is a member of a British officials feared the I R A' Justice Minister Desmond O'Mal- banned group to be used in evi- might stage a hijacking in protest ley said the action was taken "for dence against him. of MacStiofain's sentencing. carU ri L aenne ad nAI rvdsifi thtth a ilreo -Newsweek Eivira D.GH.La re'tces irgrLC!',the ~bsy secre easns na speuicny n It provides that the failure of order to safeguard both the pa- any person to deny published re- tients and staff of the Mater Hos- prsta ewsamme fa nita" where anght otie efftnt illegal organization can also be ac- night made an abortive effort to cepted as evidence that he was. The free the jailed MacStiofain. maximum penalty on conviction The move came as small groups under the law would be five years of demonstrators picketed the hos- in jail, a $2,600 fine, or both. pital where MacStiofain, under po- These measures are specifically lice guard, was on the ninth day of aimed at giving the government of a hunger-and-thirst strike. Premier Jack Lynch powers to get The government ordered police to around legal difficulties which have keep a close watch on government kept most Republican guerrillas officials and foreign diplomats s out of prison. fears mounted that the, IRA might AlthuhLnhsFan stage a kidnap attempt to gain a though Lynch's Fianna F a i hostage for the release of Mac- Party has a precarious over-all ma- Stiofain. At the same time, the govern- aThe Michigan Daily, edited and man- At th sametimeged by students at the University of ment announced its proposals for: Michigan. News phone: 764-0562. Second new Iegislation under which it Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- could jail suspected members of igan 420 Maynard street, Ann Arbor, illegal organizations for five years. Iday through Sunday morning Univer- On Saturday, the London-b o r n sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by MacStiofain was jailed for six carrier (campus area); $11 local mail monts th minmum entece'(in Mich. or Ohio); $13 non-local mail monts -theminium entnce(other states and foreign). possible - but he has sworn to Summer Session published Tuesday fast until he is freed or dead. through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus The Mater Hospital said yester. area); $6.50 local mall (in Mich. or day that MacStiofain's condition Ohio); $7.50 non-local mail (other' ,, - states and foreign). ENDS THURSDAY IMOMM"M w oil ~iq TURN IN YOUR YOUTH CARD FOR TWAs. YOU'LL GET A TOP LP ALBUM AND A WHOLE LOT OF THE WORLD FOR FREE. I It may sound funny to turn in your card for a free TWA card, but it's worth it. If you turn in your American or United or whatever other airline's youth card you have to your campus representative or any wa quite goo.n'butis attorney, TWA counter (or pay $3 for a new one, if you don't have one to turn in), you'll get more than any other airline offers you. Maximum discounts on TWA and all other airlines, more free things and, on top of all that, a free album. }X f , 1 FREE ALBUM-FIRST 10,000. First, you'll get a Record Club of America coupon ' Plus a free lifetime membership in Record good for your choice of a free top album worth up to Club of America, with no obligation to buy any $6.98. From a list of over 100 incredibles. Like Three record. The offer's limited to the first 10,000, so Dog Night, Neil Diamond, Roberta Flack, Elton John. you've got to do it soon. FREE MONEY-SAVING COUPONS. When you land in any of six cities (London, Boston, Paris, Los Angeles, San Francisco or Denver) with your TWA card, you'll get a brochure full of hundreds of dollars' worth of deals. And we mean deals. Like absolutely free or 50% off. What we did was to talk to students in those cities and ask where they'd take their friends-not BOSTON FREEBEES. FREE A spaghetti dinner at the "Spaghetti Emporium, Inc." just off Harvard Square. FREE Breakfast in the "Pewter Pot Muffin House" (14 locations) where many Harvard students stop first in the morning. FREE Admission to the "Prudential Center Skywalk," the first place to go to get your bearings'in Boston. FREE Combination health food platter from "Corners of the Mouth" restaurant. A healthy buffet of hot and cold dishes. FREE Quiche lorraine and cup of coffee at "La Crepe' FREE Indian soup and vegetable curry at the "India Sweet House" restaurant in Cambridge. FREE Pair of earrings or pendant (and watch it being made) just the "in"!places, but the spots that only the knowing would know about. And those are the ones we give you free dinners, drinks, club memberships or discounts in. Here are just some of the absolutely free things you'll get in London and Boston, as an example of what TWA has arranged for you in all the cities. LONDON FREEBEES. FREE Admission to any of ten Greyhound Racing Tracks. A great English sport. FREE Membership and drink at "La Valbonne," one of the toughest clubs to get a membership in, even for Londoners. FREE A full breakfast at your choice of 10 Quality Inns, famous for their hearty fare. FREE A pint of "Watney's Red Barrel" in "The Prospect of Whitby," or your choice of over 40 London pubs. pa"oSSIQfi HANDEL'S MAGNIFICENT ORATORIO The Christmas season begins in Ann Arbor with the traditional performances of this favorite work which the University Choral Union has presented for over 90 years. Donald Bryant conducts the chorus, members of the Interlochen Arts Academy Orchestra, and soloists, in three performances in Hill Auditorium. Soloists are Louise Russell, soprano, Sofia Steffan, contralto,. Waldie Anderson, tenor, and Benjamin Matthews, bass. Performances on Friday and Saturday, December 1 and 2, at 8:30, and on Sunday, December 3, at 2:30. Ticketsj available at $1.50, $2, $2.50, $3, and $4. a ME 'I