Fridav. February 4, 1977 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Poge Three ,.--i - - r N From Wire Service Reports International Police strike ends MONTREAL - Montreal's po- lice yesterday ended their three- day-long work slowfdown after the city was plagued, by 125 holdups, five murders and nu- merous other violations. The decision by the city's 2,500 policemen to rsume nor- mal working was so sudden that thousands of motorists faced traffic tickets for parking and other offenses. Montreal's streets have been clogged with illegally parked cars, and pedestrians have been in fear of their lives as drivers ignored speeding limits and stop signs. The city of Montreal estimates that it has lost 50,000 dollars in fines for traffic violations. Parking lot companies say busi- ness was off 15 to 25 per cent. "The go-slow shows how quick- ly a civilized city can revert to' jungle law," said a Chamber of Commerce spokesperson aft- er advising store owners to cur- tail their shopping hours. ' Banks had already put extra security measures into effect, limiting their hours, allowing only customers they knew into branches and employing armed guards. Student war ANKARA, Turkey - A stu- dent war between militant young rightists and left-wingers is es- calating - with 21 killed in Jan- uary - and moving off the uni- versity campuses. Five of January's victims were high school stdents, and two were blue-collar workers allegedly shot to death by right- wingers. 'lroops in full battle dress pa- trolled the streets around Anka- ra University's campuses when it reopened this week after a six-week suspension of classes. Everyone entering classrooms was searched for weapons. Daily Official Bulletin The Daily official Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN FORM to 409 E. Jefferson, before 2 p.m. of the day preceding publication and by 2 p.m Friday for.Saturday and Sunday. Items appear once only. Student organization notices are not accepted for publication. For more information, phone 764-9270. Friday, February 4, 1977 DAY CALENDAR WUOM: Technology Assessment: PaneI discussion "Solar Energy," panelists Jim Benson, ERDA, John Willis, and Bill Harmon, Center for the Study of Social Policy at Stan- ford Research Institute, 9:55 a.m. Music School: Chamber Choir, Hill Aud., 8 p.m. SUMMER PLACEMENT 3200 SAB -763-4117 Opening for student with typing and office skills in law office, small town east of Bay City/Saginaw area. Further details available. YCC CAMPS, Dept. of Agriculture, Forest Service, Cadillac, MI. Resi- dential camp counselors needed - also non-residential openings. Good salaries. Deadline: Feb. 15. Further details available. Qamp Maplehurst, MI. Coed. Will interview Thurs., Feb. 10 from 1:30 to 5. All fields open at this time - sports, arts/crafts, swimming (WSI), nature, dance, etc. You must have a skill. Register in person or by phone. Camp Becket/Chimney Corners, YMCA, Mass. Will interview here Fri., Feb. 11 from 9 to 5. Openings include Admin. bir., cabin counse- lors, music, tripping, waterfront (WSI), riding, dance, gymnastics. Register by phone or in person. DIGEST I FEBRUARY 4, 1977 The same day a student was shot and killed in Istanbul. The next day a woman student was seriously wounded at Ankara's Hacettepe University Most of those killed in recent months have been shot or stab- bed in ambushes, the victims apparently marked for execu- tion outside campus grounds, on the streets, or in cafes. An at- tack by one side brings retalia- tion from the other. University officials say the rightists are organized in para- military fashion, with ranks as high as colonel. One rightist or- ganization, the Idealist Clubs, is affiliated with the National Action party, a member of Pre- mier Suleyman Demirel four- party coalition government. Leftist militants range from Moscow-liners to far-left Maoists and are split into at least half a dozen groups which turn out a score of separate publications. Young arrives. ZANZIBAR - U.S. Envoy An- drew Young arrived on this In- dian Ocean spice island yester- day to talk with African lead- ers about an American role in spreading majority rule through- out southern Africa. The conversations on whether it is possible to ward off a bloody war in Rhodesia take place against a festive back- ground on this palm-fringed, scented isle where the political parties of Tanzania and Zanzi- bar, one country since 1964, will be united to form a new "Par- ty of Revolution" Saturday. The island is decked with flags and bunting and groups of schoolchildren in brightly colored uniforms are encamped beneath the towering coconut palms and mango trees which grow throughout the island. Young, th'e first black Ameri- can to be appointed ambassador to the United Nations, will be principally talking with Presi- dent Julius Nyerere of Tanza- nia, spokesman for the five Af- rican states most closely in- volved in the growing black- white confrontation in southern Africa. These so-called "front- line" states are hardening their stand against the Rhodesian white minority government since it rejected a new set of British1 proposals -for negotiations lasti month. National Assassinations WASHINGTON - The chair- man of the House Assassinations Committee, given two months to prove his panel should stay in business, says he has new evi- dence that indicates th killers of John Kennedy and Martin Luther King Jr. did not act alone. After the House voted Wed- nesday night to continue the panel through March 31, Rep. Henry Gonzales, (D-Tex.), told reporters that he has new, un- corroborated evidence of con- spiracies in each assassination. "We have threshold evidence, not yet completely corroborated and cross-checked, that indicate the strong possibility that Jam- es Earl Ray did not act alone in the King slaying and that Lee Harvey Oswald was not alone in killing Kennedy," said Gon- zalez. The assassinations panel was established last September, but a controversy developed over its request for a budget of $6.5 million a year and its chief cpunsel, Richard Sprague. The two-month extension was a com- promise, and Gonzalez wil1 have to work with $84,000 a month. Gonzalez said the new evidence had developed since the com- mittee issued its preliminary re- port in December. He declined to elaborate, saying it might jeopardize the investigation, and he stressed that the leads still have to be checked out close- ly. His remarks conflicted direct- ly with a Justice Department report leaked earlier Wednes- day that concluded Ray alone killed King.' After a 10-month investigation, a team of Justice Department lawyers rejected theories , that Ray was only a cog in a con- spiracy to assassinate the civil rights leader. Warn'ke defended WASHINGTON - Liberal sen- ators rallied yesterday to the defense of President Carter's nomination of Paul Warnke to head the U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency and con- duct strategic arms talks with the Soviet Union. At the same time, rumblings of discontent continued among more conservative members who fear that Warnke, a for- mer assistant secretary of de- fense, may be too lenient in ne- gotiating arms cuts with the Soviet Union. Democratic Senators George McGovern of South Dakota and Gary Hart of Colorado express- ed concern at the way an anony- mous memo was being distribu-, ted around the Capitol, criticiz- ing Warnke's lack of faith in strategic weapons. They said the opposition to Warnke resembled the pressure that forced former Kennedy aide Theodore Sorensen to with- draw from contention last month for the post of director of the Central Intelligence Agency. Jobs program WASHINGTON - Commerce Secretary Juanita Kreps said yesterday the $4 billion proposed by President Carter for the pub- lic works jobs program should be focused exclusively on com- munities most in distress. She told the House public works subcommittee considering an extension of the jobs pro- gram that a revision -is needed in the existing formula which allocates 30 per cent of the money to ereas with unemploy- ment less than the national av- erage. "The program should be fo- cused on communities experi- encing the most severe levels of distress, in terms of unem- ployment and income," Kreps said. Representatives of the Nation- al League of Cities, the United States Conference of Mayors and individual cities had told the subcommittee Wednesday that the aid-distribution formu- la awards job-creating money to affluent suburbs at the expense of needy inner cities. Congress allocated $2 billion to the Economic Development Administration last Dec. 23 for; the jobs program, with a start-' up date for most projects to take effect in April. Carter pro- posed a $4 billion addition to extend the program for two years. There is a backlog of near- ly $24 billion worth of project retluests for the grants. Kreps said the next $2 billion of funds should go to the most worthy projecf's in this backlog with only the most essential changes being made in the formula. Nuclear limits WASHINGTON - Secretary. of State Cyrus Vance said yes- terday he intends to explorei with the Russians a mutual cut-. ,back in conventional weapons and arms sales as well as low- ering the limit, that the two superpowers have tentatively placed on their nuclear arsenals. In his first interview since as- suming office, Vance said a re-< duction of non-nuclear arms "isi of critical importance" and "is the area where the largest amount of money is spent." d Therefore, he said, while both the United States and the Soviet1 Union must "try to block the logjam" that has stalled com- pletion of a new treaty restrict- ing strategic nuclear weapons, his agenda for his mission to7 Moscow in late March also will include "the broad subject of disarmament or arms reduction in the conventional arms area." One possible approach, he said, is to target areas such as southern Africa and the Mid- dle East for pilot efforts to roll back arms shipments from the two world powers. At the same time, he said, he hopes with Soviet leaders to find a way "out 'of the dold- rums" that have plagued nego- tiations to mutually reduce mil- itary forces in central Europe. "I don't anticipate making any breakthrough at that time," Vance told reporters. "I think this will be the first discussions on a very difficult and very com- plex set of subjects. I would not predict any breakthrough at all." However, he said, approaeh- ing weapons problems "with flexibility" the two sides might be able to "come up with some new ideas" to deal with the complex weapons problem.. Pot lawi WASHINGTON - Three mem- bers of Congress yesterday ask- ed President Carter to support the decriminalization of mari- juana possession and its non- profit transfer in small quanti- ties. lens. Jacob Javits (R-N.Y.), Alan Cranston (D-Calif.), and Edward Koch (D-N.Y.), wrote Carter suggesting early action on the reform of federal mari- juana laws and the development of a comprehensive policy on drug abuse. They expresseu concern for a "fundamental unfairness" un- derlying existing marijuana laws. They also said the en- forcement of those laws re- quires a diversion of scarce law enforcement resources. The congressmen' said mari- juana policy should be primari- ly a function of state govern- ment, but that it is difficult for states to change their poli- cies unless the federal law is changed. Carter has said he supports de- criminalization for possession of marijuana in small amounts. The congressmen said they' would introduce legislation in the House and Senate to set a maximum civil fine of $100 for possession and not-for-profit transfer of one ounce or less of marijuana. The current penalty for mari- juana possession is imprison- ment for up to one year and a fine of up to $5,000. This feder- al penalty could be superseded by any more stringent state laws. Burns bugged WASHINGTON - Federal Re- serve Board Chairman Arthur Burns said Thursday he will co- operate with President Carter and- Congress in encouraging faster economic growth and re- duced unemployment this year. However, Burns to the House Banking Comiittee he doesn't think Carter's $31 billion eco- nomic program will make much stration as he did with the ad- ministration of former Presi-1 dent Gerald Ford.c He said the board's money3 growth targets for 1977 are for an increase in the basic money supply of 4.5 to 6.5 per cent.3 Treasury Secretary Michael Blumenthal told the committee Wednesday that money growth, in that range should help en- sure the success of Carter's eco- nomic program. Burns said he agrees with Car- ter's goals of a 6 per cent eco- nomic growth rate and a 6.5 per cent unemployment rate by the end of 1977. The jobless rate in December was 7.8 per cent. "Our nation needs to make progress during 1977 in creating more jobs and in expanding our industrial capacity," Burns said. "We at the Federal Reserve ful- ly recognize this fact, as our recent policy actions have made clear." State Lemon law LANSING - Rep. Perry Bul- lard, (D-Ann Arbor), today re- introduced legislation allowing car buyers to stop payments on lemons. The bill easily passed the House but fell one vote short of approval in the state Senate last year. The measure repeals what is legally known as the holder in due course doctrine, which now requires a car owner to con- tinue making insta lment pay- ments even if the car dealer refuses to repair defects in the car. A companion measure intro- duced by Bullard would pro- hibit repossession of an auto- mobile unless a show cause hearing is held in court. Bullard Scottish Highlanders settled around Fayetteville, N.C., after Bonnie Prince Charles was de- feated in Scotland in 1745. Buyts difference- to thb economy, which he contended should grow quite well without it. And he termed Carter's plan to give a $50 rebate to most Americans "ai inefficient way to stimu- late the economy." Burns, 72, who was appoint- ed to his position by former President Richard Nixon, said he has had the same close con- tacts with 'the Carter admini- ORIENTAL RUGS AT P~e" ian House We buy, sell, appraise, clean new & used Oriental rugs * Sheepskin Coats 0 Jewelry "Pipes * Tapestries * More! 320 E. Liberty. 769-8555 -MEDIACTRICSW. WEEKEND SCHEDULE htSA T. FEB. 5 WEST SIDE STORY 7:00 and 9 45 $1.25 SUN. FEB. 6 1st and 2nd NEW YORK EROTIC FILM FESTIVAL 1tshow 6:00 and 9:45 2nd show 8:00 and 11:45 1 show-$1.50 both shows $2.50 Natural Science Auditorium Young i THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXVII, No. 103 Friday, February 4, 1977 is edited and managed by students the at the University of Michigan. News Moe phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Published d a ii y Tuesday through Sunday morning during the Univer- 10:15 sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann 12:15 p Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription 2:15 rates: $12 Sept. thru April (2 semes- 4:15 ters); $13 by mail outside Ann 6:45 Arbor. 00 Summer session published Tues- day through Saturday morning. Subscriptiont rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.50 by mail outside Ann Arbor. ANN A~IPCU [BLMt CC-Cl>, TONIGHT in the MODERN LANGUAGES BUILDING FRIDAY, FEB. 4 PLAY IT AGAIN, SAM (Herbert Ross, 1972) 7, 8:45 6' 10:30-MLB 4 Newly divorced film critic Woody Allen fumbles his way through the politics of "scoring" with Humphrey Bogart as his campaign manager until he falls in love with his good friend's wife, Diane Keaton-and has to make a choice between honor and love that only the films of the forties can help him make. Tony Roberts, Susan Anspach, Jerry Lacey. TAKE THE MONEY AND RUN (Woody Allen, 1969) 7, 8:45 & 10:30-MLB 3 in his, directing debut, Allen plays Virgil, product/result of an unfortunate childhood: broken glasses, neighborhood bully, bicker-' ing parents, acute cello playing, and a neurotic tendency to win a girl by stealing money. His downfall comes when he -misspells "gun" on his holdup note. Janet Margolin. "Woody Allen is, I'm convinced, the premier comic intelligence at work in America today and probably even tomorrow."-Vincent Canby. SINGLE FEATURE-$1.25 DOUBLE FEATURE-$2.00 w SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 5 A r 9 till 1 MARKLEY---NOR.TH PIT SASS. 6A SS."6A ss. 8"ASS. 6 ASS. SASS "13A SS a The oe. Lone... rThe only"" Theoriginal The innovative and now famous casuals, created by Bass with tough leather uppers and boupny sole of natural gum rubber that wears the Bass name proudly and leaves a fashion footprint wherever you go. 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