Tuesday, April 12, 19717 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Tuesday, Aprt 12, 1977 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three _ . DAILY DIGEST APRIL 12, 1977 From Wire Service Reports International Rhodesian peace talks stalled DAR ES SALAAM, Tanzania -A new Anglo-American peace initiative on Rhodesia received an early setback yesterday when nationalist leader Robert Mugabe said British Foreign Secretary David Owen "failed to convince" him Britain is capable of achieving a solution. Owen met with Mugabe, joint leader of the Rhodesian nation- alist Patriotic Front, shortly aft- er his arrival in Dar es Salaam at the start of a southern Africa tour which he said is aimed at achieving a Rhodesian settle- ment through "the use of the ballot rather than the gun." THE RECENTLY appointed British foreign secretary told an airport press conference that Anglo-American proposals he carries are designed to create a situation where Rhodesians of "various racial origins" can live in peace together. He did not elaborate on the proposals ex- cept to say that reconvening the stalled Geneva conference is one of the options. But Mugabe said in a state- ment after meeting Owen: "He has failed to convince us that Britain is in a position to ef- fect the transfer of power to the people of Zimbabwe the na- tionalist name for Rhodesia." In Cape Town, South Africa, Rhodesian Prime Minister Ian Smith said little progress should be expected from his scheduled talks there Wednesday with Owen. "IN THE FIRST PLACE, Dr. Owen is a new man to his posi- tion, and secondly, he has abso- lutely no practical experience of the Rhoaesian problems," Smith said. In an apparent reference to Owen's refusal to visit Rhodesia for his talks with Smith, the Rhodesian Leader added: "If people are not to take the most elementary steps of ex- amining the problems where the problem lies, I must in all honesty say I don't believe a great deal is going to come out of these talks." National Ray suggests cons pirac y WASHINGTON - Former House assassinations counsel Richard Sprague yesterday quo- ted James Earl Ray as saying other people were involved in a conspiracy in which Martin Luther King was assassinated. Sprague also said he has con- cluded from Ray's statements that "Raoul," a man Ray has claimed enlisted him in a gun- running operation that put him in Memphis when King was kill- 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. Tuesday, April 12, 1977 DAY CALENDAR WUOM: Travel, call in program dealing with all aspects of travel, guests, Jeff Axelrod, The Bivouac, George Cantor, travel editor, The Detroit Free Press, David MacTavish, Boersma Travel Agency, and Marcia Shelton, Opportunities Advisor U-M International Center, host, Evans Mirageas. Physic/Astronomy: L. Sulak, Har- vard U., "Status Report: Neutrino Oscillations at Brookhaven and Acoustic Detection of Neutrino In- teractions Beyong 10 Tev," 2038 Ran- dall Lab.; W. L; Williams, "Parity Experiments at Microwave Frequen- cies," 1041 Randall Lab., 4 p.m. Music School: Phllharmonia, Hill Aud., 8 p.m. GENERAL NOTICE STUDENT ACCOUNTS: Your at- tention is called to the following rules passed by the Regents at their meeting on February 28, 1936: "Stu- dents shall pay all accounts due the University not later than the last day of classes of each semester or summer session. Student loans which are not paid or renewed are sub- ject to this regulation; however, student loans not yet due are exempt. Any unpaid accounts at the close of business on the last day of classes will be reported to the Cashier of the University and "(a) All academic credits will; be with- held, the grades for the semester or summer session just completed will not be released, and no tran- script of credits will be issued. "(b) All students owing such accounts will not be allowed to register in any subsequent semester or summer session until payment has been ~::" .. : K rr .atf ......... ~ ~ ~ .... .....,..................a ..ff..... :1: a......:'"..'f . , i~~~ J{~ .4 +ti .?:' 'N'' .{ AP Photo Red herring t fishing vessel crewmen watch as their trawler, Taras Shevchenko, steams toward Boston Harbor rday where the U.S. attorney's office took pos- bn of the ship for violating U.S. fishing boun- s. The Coast Guard enforced the new 200-mile fish- imit for the first time after more than 90 viola- by Soviet ships. The ship had 50 tons of River " ings on board, far exceeding their U.S. coastal l rs fishing license permit limit of 7% tons. { i V J.} f 4 iti ti'f: 1l 'i 'i Sovie the yeste sessi darie ing l tions Herri water tion, and that other people help- ed him to escape to Canada, where he traveled before he went to Great Britain, where he was arrested. Ray has not yet describV1 the other people except to say they are not his brothers, Sprague said. The investigator said it has become clear partly through Ray's own comments and part- ly through what the investiga- tors could perceive themselves that the name "Raoul" is made up. McGovern returns from Cuba WASHINGTON- Sen. George McGovern says U. S. - Cuban relations cannot improve until~the United States ends its trade embargo against Fidel Castro's regime, but that a partial lifting might open the way to preserving an anti-sky jacking agreement. The South Dakota Democrat, who returned over the weekend from a visit to Cuba, told a news conference yesterday he will ask President Carter to consider a partial lifting of the embargo to permit trade in food and medicine, andpush legisla- tion himself for the same pur- pose. But he said he doubts action can be taken before the U. S.- Cuban skyjacking agreement expires on Friday. The agree- ment provides that Cuba will not cooperate with terrorists or others who hijack airplanes to the Caribbean nation. CASTRO, charging CIA com- plicity in the terrorist bombing of a Cuban airliner by anti-Cas- tro elements in Venezuela, an- nounced six months ago he was cancelling the anti-sky jacking pact. The Cuban plane crashed off the coast of Barbados, kill- ing all 73 abroad. McGovern said he argued at length with Castro and his brother Raul that the U. S. gov- ernment had no role in the inci- dent even though some of the alleged terrorists reportedly had a CIA connection at one time. He said Castro considered this "a distinction without a differ- ence," taking the position that "if we have the capacity to train people, we have the re- sponsibility to control them." EVEN SHOULD the hijack agreement expire as expected, McGovern said, Castro assured him there would be no change in Cuban policy toward hijack- ers, who are kept in govern- ment custody, put to work and paid a subsistence. "The problem with that is that the hijackers themselves might not understand it," Mc- Govern said. State Carter's energy, plans blasted DETROIT - The Carter ad- ministration's upcoming energy proposals probably will cause the most financial hardship for middle income taxpayers, the chairman of American Natural Resources Co. said yesterday. Arthur Seder Jr., speaking to the Detroit Economic Club, said he has become skeptical of President Carter's energy pro- posals scheduled to be revealed April 20. Seder said his concern was based mostly on official state- ments that the energy program will not cause more inflation and will not penalize or put an extreme burden on the poor. "THESE STATEMENTS, to me, represent contradictions in terms, with the clear implica- tion, additionally, that the major impact of. the program will be visited on the long suf- fering middle income tax- payer," Seder said. McGovern // "lt :. " i:'it.:.iVV::.:'.:1":"")": bi'ti1\: Vi 1:' "'" 'S: ":: .ti":s . q.. .: ::ti:V}f : :J: : . .Y.L:": LV. 'J:}::::"tt:P d 1}I :1.}Y ..":::"}:"}:V "I,{:'tY:: r'.Q4tit{.".'Vf Y.}L::':":"::: .' . :!::":",i0::'::a:'J:"::.{{L ::':S:}::: :'CJ.':":" ::SA{ T {rt ". . "i:Sdi::i': :YiJ k:-?: S}:'".{{"}?i$:vi'.°f::fir:,".:}.":";".'r,":%.}' :'r:: }: Si ed, is a fictitious name. RAY, WHO PLEADED guilty' to King's murder and is serving a 99-year sentence, has contend- ed that the operation directed by "Raoul" had nothing to do with King, so far as he kneW. Ray contends he purchased the rifle that police believe was used to kill King but handed it to "Raoul" and left the area shortly before the assassina- tion. Sprague also said some fed- eral investigators believe the man the CIA recorded contact- ing Soviet and Cuban embassies in Mexico City before President John F. Kennedy was assassina- ted was not Lee Harvey Os- wald. SPRAGUE SAID he does not believe the House assassinations committee can conduct a proper investigation of the two assassi- nations and said he doubts it even wants to. He said a special prosecutor should be set up with an inde- pendent staff to 'investigate the assassinations, without the pres sure he said the House commit- tee staff was under to produce something sensational. Sprague said he believes the committee was set up before the election to appeal to black voters unhappy with inadequate investigation of the King assas- sination. He said the panel was established with the idea that THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume Lxxxvn1, No. 153 Tuesday, April 12, 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 il y Tuesday through Sunday morning during the Univer- sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 Sept. thru April (2 semes- tls); $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. it might be scrapped after the election. SPRAGUE RESIGNED as staff director and chief counsel of the committee two weeks ago when it appeared the House would kill the investigation if he remained on the job. After his departure, the House voted 230 to 181 to continue the panel's probe. Sprague had become an issue because many congressmen re- sented what they saw as his winning in a feud that forced former Chairman Henry Gonza- lez, D-Tex., to resign. Sprague quoted Ray as saying in the two interviews conducted by committee investigators that people other than members of Ray's family helped him obtain a weapon to escape from a Missouri prison before the as- sassination. RAY SAYS he contacted oth- er people after the assassina- He said that while Raul de- manded tougher U. S. control of terrorist activities by anti- Castro elements in this country, the revolutionary leader him- self considered the economic embargo the most important ob- stacle to U.S.-Cuban relations. "THE EMBARGO is the big sticking point and I don't think much is going to happen until that is lifted, at least partially," said McGovern, adding that he personally favors a total lifting and believes a majority of the American people also do. Ten night games are listed this season for San Diego State. The only day game is at Bowl- ing Green, Ohio. MINORITY STUDENTS still looking for fall housing? Checkout the Coops!! " Member owned. * Member controlled and - member run at low cost. For o short, informed pres- entation with slides and re- freshments on coop life and the affirmative actions pro- aram. For more info: call ICC offices 662-4414 or DOUG, 761-1058 ! r r INTRODUCING JUNIOR PROFESSIONAL HAIRSTYLIST for men & women appts. 668-9329 Dascolo. Barbers Liberty off State -June 11 and 12 -WashtenawFarm J Council Grounds -$15.00 for both days -to rent 8' by 6' booths -Overnight Security -Sponsored by Saline Jaycee Aux. -Call for further information 429-4266 or 429-4343 AN AIQUIW [HIA4 CC=Cl) .. @ e....@@@... ..* . Se S . @5CC Tonight in Auditorium A of Angell Hall DEATH IN VENICE (Luchino Visconti, 1972) 7 &s 9:15-AUD. A The late Luchino visconti was famous for his lush, beautiful films, and he never made a more gorgeous film that this adap- tation of Thomas Mann's novel. An aging composer falls in love with a Beautiful boy in venice during a plague. Sensitively handled, the film chronicles the last days of the man's love and life. "A masterpiece! A film of rare beauty, a work of pure en- chantment! Dirk Bogarde is brilliant."-New York Daily News. Marisa Berenson, Bjorn Andresen. Showtimes are 7 & 9:15 Admission $1.25 " Wednesday, April 13 in Aud. A "LETTER FROM AN UNKNOWN WOMAN" and "LA RON DE" S Thursdary, April 14 in Aud. A "OBSESSION" Friday, April 15 in MLB "SHOCK CORRIDOR" and "THE NAKED KISS" MAJQR EVENTS OFFICE presents Bonni e with special guest SI PPI E WALLACE SAT., MAY 7 HILL AU D.-8 P.M. RESERVED SEATS $6-$5-$4 Tickets go on sale on Thursday, April 14 at Hill Aud. Box Office at 11:30 a.m. Beginning Friday, April 15 tickets available at the Michigan Union Box Office (763-2071) only 11:30-5:30 Mon.-Sat. Sorry, no personal checks. Smoking and beverages strictly prohibited in Auditorium. Presented in Association with UAC I STEVE'S LUNCH 1313 SO. UNIVERSITY HOME COOKING IS OUR SPECIALTY I Breakfast All Day 3 Eggs, Hash Browns, Toast Ci Jelly-$1.45 Home or Bacon or Sousaqe with 3 Eqqs, Hash Browns, Toast i Jelly-$2.05 3 Eqqs, Ribe Eye Steak, Hash Browns, Toast & Jelly-$2.45 We make Three Eqq Omlets -Western Omlet -Bean Sprout Omlet s EVERYDAY SPECIALS Beef Stroganoff Chinese Pepper Steak Eaq Rolls Home-made Soups, Beef, Barley. Clam Chowder, etc. Home-made Chili Vegetable Tempuro (served after'2 m.)' Hamburqer Steak Dinner- Spaghetti in Wine Sauce Beef Curry Rice Baked Flounder Dinner Delicious Korean Bar-b-q Beef (Bul-ko-gee) on Kaiser Roll Fried Fresh Bean Sprouts Kim-Chee Monday-Friday 8-7 Saturday 9-7 Sunday 10-7 .69-2288 1313 So. University rig I TAKING UNDUE SAFETY MEASURES,? University Towers offers you 24 hour security and we are only two blnIr frnm main enmnue 7..4-month nrinn-Summer and R-mnth EI i I I II I I