'Friday, March 25 1977 THE MICHIGAN DAILY rage Three Friday, March 25, 1977 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three DAILY DIGEST MARCH 25, 1977 International I'ndia changes Russia policy NEW DELHI, India - India's new prime minister, 81-year-old Morarji Desai, took office yes- terday and promptly announced a major policy shift away from the country's traditional special relations with the Soviet Union. "We won't have any special relations with any country," Desai said in a press confer- ence minutes after he was sworn in as India's fourth prime minister since independence. DESAI, long considered pro- Western, said India would adopt a foreign policy of "proper non- alignment" and would seek changesin the 1971 Indo-Soviet friendship treaty if necessary. "If the Indo-Soviet friendship treaty involves any want of friendship with others, then it will have to change," Desai said. American officials in Washing- tion of Desai. Despite his com- mitment to India's traditional nonalignment they expected him to seek better relations with the United States. U.S., Cuba negotiate HAVANA - Informed suc es said yesterday the United States and Cuba have begun talks on their overlapping fish- ing limits, believed to be the first direct negotiations since the two countries broke rela- tions 16 years ago. Both Cuba and the United States extended their fishing limits to 200 nautical miles ear- lier this month. Large areas of the fishing zones are overlap- ping as Cuba lies only 90 miles south of Florida. TALKS FOR the 1973 bilater- al anti - hijacking agreement were carried out through the Swiss Embassy, which handles American interests here. President Carter has served notice, however, that a resump- tion of ties depends on Cuba's removal of troops from Angola and an end to "their aggravat- ing influence" in this hemi- sphere. The American negotiating team was headed by Terence Todman, the assistant secre- tary of state for inter-Ameri- can affairs, and the Cuban group by vice foreign minister Pelegrin Torres. Each coun- try had eight ' man teams at the table. EARLIER in the day, at 'a, news conference, Carter said he would like to see relations established with all 14 coun- tries with whom the United States currently has no diploma- tic ties. Carter's remarks were addressed particularly to Viet- nam where the administration is also taking steps toward es- tablishing relations. Cuba, for most Americans, is in a special category. Only 90 miles from Florida it at- tracted American tourists, pro- vided sugar for American tables and a solid succession of Amer- ican baseball stars. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXVI, No. 138 Friday, March 25, 1977 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan.News phone 764-0562. second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Published d a i l y Tuesday through Sunday morning during the Univer- sity year at 42 Maynard Street. Ann Arbor, Michigan 4109. Subscription rates: $12 Sept. thru April (2 semes- ters); $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tues- day through Saturday morning. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor;- $7.50 by mail outside Ann Arbor. National Ford's return visit to D.C. WASHINGTON - It was justI like the old days yesterday forl Gerald Ford. Police escort. Secret Service cars in front 1 and back of his limousine. Sit- ting in front of a fire in the Oval Office. Only this time it was Jim- my Carter,'s Oval Office and Ford was a guest.j "YOU GOT me off to a good, start," said 'Carter as he greet- ed his predecessor in the White House driveway. "You look so healthy and tanned, I'm en- vious." Ford replied, "You're looking' good yourself." It was Ford's first visit to the capital and the White House since he left office two months and four days ago. He was in Washington to see his new of-' fice at the American Enter- prise Institutefor Public Poli- cy, a conservative think tank that has named him a Distin- guished Fellow. THE VISIT with Carter was cordial but Ford was so solemn that he almost looked grim. In the presence of photog- raphers and reporters the two men chatted about foreign af- fairs, the President commenting that British Prime Minister James Callaghan had "appar- ently a tight squeeze" in win- ning a vote of confidence in par- liament. Carter started to tell Ford that the United States was working on international air- line negotiations with the Bri- tish but Ford, an old hand at that kind of thing, interjected, "I'm familiar with it." Carter told his predecessor that he had had' "good visits" with Callaghan, Japan's Prime Minister Takeo Fukuda and Canada's Pierre Trudeau. Minimum wage WASHINGTON - Organized labor, outmaneuvered in its first congressional test this year, faces even more difficul- ty with other legislative goals such as repeal of state right-to- work laws, Democratic congres- sional leaders said yesterday. "Labor is going to have to make an awfully convincing case to get anything else through, both with Congress and the public," said House Majority Leader James Wright. THE SURPRISING defeat in the House on Wednesday night of a bill authorizing unrestrict- ed picketing at construction sites dimmed chances for most major labor legislation in this session - and no one knew it better than labor's own lobby- ists. "We got caught with our pants down," said Victor Kam- ber, top lobbyist for the AFL- CIO Building and Construction Trades Department. But, by the same token, Kam- ber and his fellow lobbyists predicted the sting of defeat would also work to stiffen la- bor's resolve.1 "WE MAY suffer for it initi- ally, but we're not dead," het said. "Sure we're going to have to fight, and 14B repeal is going to be more difficult, but it al- ways has." Fourteen-B, the section in the Taft-Hartley Act authorizing states to ban union shop agree- ments, is part of a broad leg- islative package being pushed by the AFL-CIO, along with the common situs picketing bill, an increase in the minimum wage and sweeping changes in fed- eral law to make it easier for unions to organize and negotiate contracts. Labor losses posed that beginning in July 1978 and in future years, the minimum wage be set at 50 per cent of the average straight- time, hourly wage of manufac- turing workers. The proposed 20-cent hike was a disappointment to organ- ized labor and many congres- sional Democrats who want an immediate 70-cent increase, with future increases pegged at 60 per cent of average hourly manufacturing wages. State Another boy _ _.- reported lost HOLLY - Authorities in this northern Oakland County com- munity were searching today for a boy reported missing ear- ly in the day. Police refused to identify the boy or disclose further details of the case or the search, con- firming only that a youngster had been reported missing and the case was under investiga- tion. WASHINGTON - The Carter "HE'S NOT where he's sup- administration proposed on posed to me," a police spokes- Thursday that the minimum man said. "But I can't give out wage be increased from $2.30 to any information." $2.50 starting in July, compared Police refused to speculate on to a $3 minimum sought by' or- whether the youngster's disap- ganized labor. pearance could be related to a The administration also pro -series of child kidnap-killings in I THE 13th CENTURY SERIES I Detroit's northern suburbs over the last 14 months. All seven previous child dis- appearances and slayings took place in the southern part of the county. House puts off Seafarer vote LANSING - Members of the House Policy Committee have put off taking a stand on Pro- ject Seafarer until next Thurs- day - by which time Congress may have taken them off the hook. Rep. John Maynard, a Sea- farer supporter, asked the com- mittee yesterday to support a resolution setting up a legisla- Have a flair for artisticari ting? ed in reviewu e or writing feature stories about the drama, dance, film arts: Contact Arts Editor,'c/o The Mihgan aily 1 HAVE A CHECKUP? rr CAN SAVE YOUR LUFE. l -i: T John& nch AmericanI Cancer Society. VHS1 SPACE CCNRIBUTED BY NE* "UBLISHE0 tive study of the project - a study he believes would prove Seafarer is medically and en- vironmentally safe and neces- sary for the national defense. COMMOTTEE mem- bers were told, however, that a Congressional panel is sched- uled to vote on Seafarer next week and may well kill the pro- ject. Saying they needed more time to study the matter, the committee voted 7-2 to delay action on Maynard's resolution and one offered by Rep. John Hertel (D-Detroit) which would reaffirm the legislature's oppo- sition to Seafarer. SCIENCE FICTION- FANTASY FESTIVAL March 21-April Only Thousands of books by all the greatest ( authors. ALL YOU NEED odIS LOVE .. . .. of kids, the outdoors, lotsa energy and patience. If you have these qualities, we'd like you to share the summer with us at Camp Tamarack, a summer camp operated by the Jewish Fresh Air Society. We have openings for counselors, supervisors, social workers. counselor specialists, and drivers. Our recruit- ers will be interviewing for these jobs on Wednesday, March 30 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Register in person for :. an appointment at 3200 SAB, or send for an applica- tion in care of the FRESH AIR SOCIETY 6600 W. Maple, W. Bloomfield, MI 48033 6-y --ytOC' - !(O<--.' --y -- t<:-:C<--' -:Y'JC POWERFUL PEOPLE NEEDED Because of graduation and term expiration, Student Government has student openings on all of the: UNIVERSITY COMMITTEES S.A.C.U.A. COMMITTEES M.S.A. COMMITTEES POWERFUL PEOPLE are needed to fill these vacancies and deal with the ad- ministration and faculty members. If you feel that you can handle the challenge and the responsibility, apply now at the M.S.A. Offices, 3rd floor, Michigan Union. DEADLINE MARCH 30 x .;kLQ IaS'i FAM S STORES, INC. 2O7IAST USERTY From New York-One Day Only APRIL 16-8:00 p.m. MENDELSSOHN THEATRE TICKETS AVAILABLE: Liberty Music Shop, Jacobson's, MARC Office, Law Quad N (morn- ings), Mendelssohn Box Office (week of per- formance) - Science of the Soul Surat Shabd Yoga (Meditation on Inner Liqht and Sound) TEACHER OF THE LIVING MASTER SANT DARSHAN SINGH JI SPECIAL GUEST SPEAKER: T.S. 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