Wednesday, November 3, 1976, THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Wednesday, November 3, 1976.' THE MiCHIGAN DAILY Page Seven HUNDREDS KILLED IN RAIDS: THURSDAY NIGHT Is Rhodesia backs up GREEK NIGHT border positions - BEER SPECIALS." SALISBURY, Rhodesia (AP)- of guerrillas who had been at the Rhodesian settlement talks Downtown White-ruled Rhodesia reinforced tacking positions in Rhodesia in Geneva that the white gov- military border positions yesterI NO OFFICIAL details have ernment's counterinsurgency op day in anticipation of retalia-| been released here of the raids, erations have not ebbed be- tion for commando raids into but unofficial sources said Rho- cause of the conference.15EWashington Mozambique. Several hundred desian forces suffered some "The black leaders have been 1_5_E._Wshng15n black nationalist guerrillas casualties. threatening to step up the war, were reported killed and sev- "It was a bloody good show. while they're supposed to be GI eral of their camps destroyed It's about time we hammered talking peace in Switzerland," GROUP RATES AVAILABLE: 665,3231 in the raids. these blokes and showed them one source said. "This will show In the mountains surrounding that we mean business," said: them that we are not weakening the frontier town of Umtali, in- a government official. our military position." creased numbers of government It was the first Rhodesian_ - troops manned mortars and operation into Mozambique since field guns trained on bases in an August raid in which com- I the neighboring black Marxist mandos reported killing 340 per-i X -- - state. Mozambique has been re- sons. The Mozambique govern-A ported setting up new rocket ment claimed at least 618 per- and mortar positions opposite sons were killed. Umtali. THE SOURCES said hand- 1rectorL0, SECURITY FORCES said a picked commandos slipped into white soldier and eight guerril- Mozambique at several points las had been killed in clashes along the 800-mile-long frontier in the past 24 hours, They also before daybreak Sunday. They ttr said guerrillas burst into a bar said attacks were made on IN in the northwestern mining camps in the Tete district and town of Wankie late Monday Gaza Province, all within 50 WASHINGTON (AP) - Rich-'j and . sprayed it with bullets, miles of the border. They said ard Helms, former director of! wounding two blacks in the bar. six of the sites were guerrilla the Central Intelligence Agency THE PRODUCTION SPLENDIDLY INTRODUCES THIS GREAT WORK Informed sources said at least camps and the seventh, Changa- (CIA), has decided to retire as: o T rTS YOUNG AND ENTHUSIASTIC AUDIENCES." seven camps used by black ra, was used by both guerrillas ambassador to Iran, U.S. of- London Evening standard guerrillas trying to bring down and Mozambique troops. ficials said yesterday. Nov. 5&6 8:30pm Rhodesia's white regime were Mozambique said Monday that The 64-year-old Helms was attacked in 36 hours from ear- its own troops had engaged the named to the Tehran post in ly Sunday by black and white Rhodesians, but the Rhodesian 1973 and is considered one of! '3t... %ami M54A.LheSL. Rhodesian government troops. security sources said nothing the most influential ambassa- Mozambique accused Prime about action involving Mozam- dors to have served in Iran. A PRODUCTION THAT IS FREE AND IMAGINATIVE... VERY FUNNY." Minister Ian Smith's govern- bique troops beyond mentioning New Yorker ment of a "major military as- the camp "at Changara. HELMS NOTIFIED President sualt on an independent sovere- Sources close to the Salisbury Ford of his intention to retire ; Nou. 7 2& 8pm ign state." Rlodesia denied it government said the strikes several days ago, the sources was an invasion and said its would serve to show black na-i said, but the chief executive! oTer ckets availableat PTP Ticket Office forces struck in "hot pursuit" tionalist leaders taking part in decided to hold back an an- Mendelssohn Theatre Lobby, Mon.-Fri. 10-1, 2-5 --nouncement until after the Tues- For Information call: 764-0450 day election. Helms will remain Tckets also available at all Hudsons 121 L L 7 ..,. f in office until the end of the f I 99 , ' a . Iii - TAX j bbd !t W e tit Thuri7{F. . Im 335 T ATE 7614Z0( I rwjtctwott, rteis SALEM, ORE. (A') - First graders at Schirle Elementary School didn't waffle when teach- er Terry Snyder asked, "What should a president do for the people?" Among their replies: Help ducks. SIgn papers., Tell people where to go. Give poor people money. Give people clothes. Keep people from stealing. Feed birds. Help a lost puppy. Help us not die. Help the plants live. Work in the White House. I vertible arriving with Nobody' on it. Our leader says there's too much pollution anyway." "Who is your leader?" Gravy was asked, "Nobody,"' came the reply. BILLINGS (A)) - President{ Ford's Montana chairman, Ed Eck, admits it was not a mas- terpiece of planning. The state Ford committee's election night party was sched- Iled f the Carter Room at Billi Northern Hotel. The j room was named after a hotel, founder, not Ford's opponent. year. Helms was CIA director from 1966 to 1973, a period covering some of the most controversial activities of the agency. Critics have charged that' Helms supervisedhactivities which included torture and as- sassination in Vietnam, direct interference in the domestic ac- tivities of such countries as Chile and the training of secret police for other nations, includ- ing Iran. A major criticism against Helms concerned allegations Special Mtmctio i ;4 that the agency was involved in the Watergate scandal and subsequent cover-up. Help us build houses. : Keep bees safe. s. DdlYOFICIA BLLTI Save eagles.............1AL ::::;::L:ULLTI Help boaters not crash into--- rocks. Wednesday, November 3, 1976 NEW YORK W - "We're rallying for the only candidate that keeps all promises - No-I body." And so it was at the victory celebration for the Nobody For President" campai "Forty-three per cen of all eligible voters in the las elec-: tion voted fQr Nobody. S, No- body has been in office for quite< some time." said Nobody; spokesman Wavy Gravy.< "Nobody lowered their tax- es last year. Nobody balanced the budget, Nobody stonned the wars, Nobody is feedinĀ¢ the; hinerv and destitute, and No- body loves von when you are down and out," he said. There w.ere nobordy sores, no-, body biwttonr a nonbod"bibs and nobodi 1lanners. A nolice nffio- er asked who waq in chnrge. "Nnhody." thev valled back. Advance nromotion had nro- rnied an annearance by "No- bonv" wyho was slated to arrive in the back of -an onen convert- ibl. Rott Nobodv did not show. "This is incredible." said Gravv. "We want nobody on our backs. There'll be no con- Day Calendar . Ext. Serv: Margaret Mead Lecture Celebration & Festival of the Arts; Rackham, Hill Aud. Cont Med Educat: Conference on Sleep Disorders: Towsley Ctr, 8 am. Ext Serv: Michigan Scholars Con- ference; Rackham, 9 am. WUOM: Speaking of American Music "Early American Music (Mu-' sic for the American Revolution)," with S. Anderson, H. W. Hitchcock & 1. Lowens; 10:50 am. Returning Students Lounge, Com- mission for Women: Potluck lun- cheon. 3205 Union, noon. Statistics Seminar: Prof Wm: DuMouchel & Prof Greg Duncan1 speakk on "What You Can Do with Weighted Regression," 3227 Angeli, 4 pm. Studio Theatre Series: Bradford's' "Rendezzvous," Arena Theatre,I Frieze. 3 pm. Ctr Near Eastern, N African Stu- dies: Have - Lazarus-Yafeh "Some Contemporary 'Fatwas' Illustrating Religious Problems of Islam in Modern Times," 200 Lane, 4 pm. Ethics, Religion / Anthropology: Ganzalo Castillo - Cardenas, "Wes- tern Missionary Contact with In- digenous Latin American Cultures, Aud. A. Angell. 4 pm. WCBN / Women's Studies: Broad- cast, panel "women's Hour: Gov- ernment Intervention in Women's Communities." 6 pmm. Soccer: UM vs Oakkland, Ferry Field, 7:30 pm. LSA Student Government: 3410 Union, 7:30 pm. Gerontology, Ext Serv: Margaret Mead (anthropologist, author, so- cial philosopher) "Youth & Ag- ing: A Sharing of Values Through the Arts," Hill Aud, 8 pm. Jacobson's Open Thursday and Friday Evenings Campus AMC Jeep SERVICE & SALES HEADQUARTERS FOR: / M CA\P s Gremlin Hornet JEI 4ASWTENAW COUNTY 2448 WASHTENAW (Ypsi ) THIS BOOK IS BEING USED AS A TEXTBOOK BY MANY COLLEGES & UNIVERSITIES. THIS BOOK IS THE MOST COMPREHENSIVE PHOTOG- RAPHY BOOK AVAILABLE. THIS BOOK IS BY ONE OF OUR OWN, PHIL DAVIS- PROFESSOR OF ART, UNIVERSITY OF MICH IGAN. THIS BOOK IS SUPERB ! N A Photog raphy Phil Davis Second Edibon h~q )jfr 90 A -4,' i THIS BOOK IS AVAILABLE NOW AT .. . I. Pacer Matador EP 434-2424 First Ann Arbor Conference deriving from Rudolf Steiner's Life and Work NOVEMBER 5, 6 and 7, 1976 PROGRAM , . ;a' 8r r FRIDAY, NOV. 5 a. 12:00 noon PENDLETON ROOM Michigan Union b. 8:00 p.m. RACKHAM AMPHITHEATRE *) SATURDAY, NOV. 6 c. 9:15 to 11:00 a.m. R. STEINER HOUSE 1923 Geddes Ave. *) d. 8:00 TRUEBLOOD THEATRE t} Frieze Bldg. E"#h r tv LIfP- EURYTHMY LECTURE-DEMONSTRATION (free) by eurythmists of the London School of Eurythmy. LECTURE by Dr. H. Biesontz, the Free Academy of Spiritual Science, Dornach, Switzerland: THE CHANGING CONSCIOUSNESS OF MAN THROUGH THE AGES, Achievements and Dangers. AN ART CLASS in one of four arts by methods inaugurated by R. Steiner: Eurythmy Gail Faude Painting Robert Logsdon Sculpture Michael Howard - Speech Gerald Juhr EURYTHMY PERFORMANCE by artists of the London Schools of Eurythmy and Speech and artists of the Midwest. The program includes selections from Bach, Bartok, Shostakovich; Shakespeare., T.S. Eliot, and others. 'N Ir .' LEVI'S pile-lined corduroy jacket turns the heat on winter's cold, western style Navy, light blue or beige weather-resistant cotton corduroy, white acrylic pile lining and collar, snap closure. Young men's sizes S M L $29 I I I I - ,'-',--. - - I I