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.

September 18, 1977 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1977-09-18

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

a.

-Sunday, September 18, 1977-The Michigan Daily

elpse
MASS

y

Carter says P.R.

will have choict

MEETING

FOR USEERS

MICHIGAN UNION ASSEMBLY HALL
THURSDAY, SEPT. 22
7:00 p.m.

WASHINGTON (AP) - President
Carter says he will support the
Puerto Rican people if they want to
have the territory become a com-
monwealth, a state or an independent
nation.
But he would object to a United
Nationsteam investigating charges
that the island is treated as a U.S.
colony, he told a group of editors in a
closed meeting at the White House
Friday.
CARTER SAID that he did not
think the United Nations had juris-
diction for such an investigation, sug-
gested by Cuban President Fidel
Castro, according to a transcript
AHA YOGA
Classes Starting Sept. 26
Call KAMALA at
994-5625

released Saturday. He added that for
Cuba, "a government that has no
respect for individual freedom and
permits no vote of any kind in their
own country, to accuse us of trying to
subjugate the people of Puerto Rico,
is absolutely and patently ridicu-
lous."
"I don't have any objection to any
analysis of the question, but I think
my own statement and the; statement
of all the leaders of our country is
that whatever Puerto Rico's people
want to do is acceptable to me,"
he said.
THE MICHIGAN DAILY
Volume LXXXVIII, No.10
Sunday, September 18,1S7T
is edited and managed by students at the University
of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class
postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Pub-
lished daily Tuesday through Sunday morning dur-
ing the University year at 420 Maynard Street,
Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates:
$12 September through April (2 semesters); $13 by
mail outside Ann Arbor.
Summer session published Tuesday through Satur-
day morning. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor;
$7.50 by mail outside Ann Arbor.

"If the Puerto Rican people want to
be a commonwealth, I will support it.
If the Puerto Rican people want to be
a state, I will support it. If the Puerto

Students bury selves
to protest gym at Kent

Rican people want to be an independ
ent nation, I will support it," he told
Andrew Viglucci, editor of the San
Juan Star.

KENT, Ohio (AP)-Two demon-
strators buried themselves in dirt near
the construction site of a Kent State
University gymasium annex yesterday,
but were dug up and carted off to jail
along with two other demonstrators
protesting the removal of trees from
the area.
University police said workers had
transplanted a tree from the construc-
tion site to a nearby area and dug a hole
for another tree to be transplanted in
before taking a break.
A UNIVERSITY spokesperson said a
crowd of demonstrators gathered
around the hole, protesting work on the
site near the spot where four students
were shot to death and nine others were
wounded by Ohio National Guardsmen
during a May 4, 1970, campus anti-wasr
protest.

A witness said two women got into the
hole and covered themselves with dirt
to their necks. Police reportedly asked
the demonstrators to move away, but
the two women remained in the hole.
Two others remained seated on the
edge with their feet hanging in.
Police idenfified the women who were
later pulled from the hole as Julia
Cochrane and Karen Gordon of
Cleveland. A university spokesperson
said Cochrane passed out from the
pressure of the dirt on her chest and
was treated and released from the
university health center before being
taken away by police.
The two, and the two others who
refused to move, Gregg Currie and a
female juvenile, were charged with
resisting arrest and disorderly conduct,:
police said.

7ptp-41

The University of Michigan
Professional Theatre

Program
Ann Arbor

fo

Sept.
23.2
Pow(
Centi

r
r G
"
'S
r
or
lergo
Nk)

CALL 764-0450
or more information
The New Smash Hit
Musical Revue
with music by
BILLIE HOLIDAY
EARL HINES
ANDY RAZAF
EUBIE BLAKE
J.C. JOHNSON
CAB CALLOWAY
DUKE ELLINGTON

Featuring the finest in men's and
women's har styling, care and
hair care products.
1ke
1610 Jackson Road
Ann Arbor, Michigan 48103
663-6837
WHERE THE PACE IS SET IN HAIRSTYLING
TUESDAY NIGHT IS MEN'S NIGHT
D A T ST We Recommend
OF HURON ST.

Five Week Course
MEETING ON WEDNESDAYS AT 8 p.m.
In itial Lecture: WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 21
MICHIGAN LEAGUE, CONFERENCE RM. A
Fee:Initial Lecture $3 Information: 994-6657, 761-3352
Entire Course $15
Sponsored by Dharma Study Group.

SEATS NOW ON SALEI
PTP Ticket Office-Michigan League
Mon.-Fri.: 10-1, 2-5
TICKETS ALSO AT HUDSONS
HUDSON'S OPEN SUNDAY TI TILL 6.

.. ir e _. _..

THOUSANDS OF

4r

TECHNICAL

BOOKS

AT

.C

EASY

TO

UNDERSTAND

SAVIN.GS.

SALE-

990

TO 3.99

i a

Great resource and research material for

students, business

persons

and profes-

sionals. Choose from math, science, hum-

,.
;;;
.

a nities,

psychology,

business,
books

law, medi-
in Hudson's

cine and teaching
Books, at Briarwood.

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

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan