Wednesday, November IT, 1976, THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three IensaNvme 7 96TH iHGNDIYPg he ARGENTINE GUERRILLAS SUSPECTED: Police station attacked Cana dians concerned over possibility of Quebec break R.C. PLAYERS present BUENOS AIRES, Argentinai (M)-About 40 suspected left-wing] guerrillas stormed a police sta-1 tion near La Plata before dawni yesterday and nine of them died, in the ensuing battle with police+ and army tr oop s, security sources said. Four policemen were reported wounded. The reported assault, launch- ed in the face of a deTermined; effort by the miiltary govern-, ment to wipe out leftist guer- rillas, indicates the guerrillas are still far from liquidated. THE SOURCES said the at- tackers drove in an auto cara-' van to the station in the Arana community 30 miles south of Buenos Aires, shot and wounded two police guards, then storm- ed inside. A dozen or so men there held off the attackers un til about 100 reinforcements ar- rived and killed nine suspected guerrillas, they said. Two police were wounded in the fighting in- side, they said. The surviving attackers fled. In a separate incident in Quilmes, a Buenos Aires suburb, police said theyshotrand killed two persons who fired upon them after being stopped for an ident- ity check. On Monday, 12 guerrila sus-, pects were reported killed in various clashes with secuirity forces, and anArgentine textile' executive was reported slain by left-wing terrorists. THE LATEST killings brought to 1,252 the reported death toll so far this year in Argentina's continuing political violence. Security officials sav more than half of the dead were sus- pected of being guerrillas of two extreme leftist groups-the Peo- ple's Revolutionary Army, a Marxist band known by its Span- ish initials ERP; or the Mon- toneros, supporters of former strongman Juan Peron, who died of a heart attack h 1974, while president. Tht armed forces .usted Pres- ident Isabel Peron, h s widow, With the exception of Ties- last March 24. Argentina was day's reported police station MONTREAL (A') - Speculation becois, or Pequistes, had won then i nthe throes of unchecked attack, the extreme left has and concern about the future 66 of the 110 seats in the Na- violence and spiraling inflation been forced to concentrate on of Canada swept the country tional Assembly - the Quebec which had caused shortages of small-scale hit-and-run tactics yesterday after the election vic- I legislature-and was leading for c o n s u m e r goods and black as secuirty forces have thinned tory of the pro-separatist Parti three' others. The Liberals had marketeering of food and cur- out their ranks. Quebecois in Quebec prdvincial 27 seats and were leading for rency. Mrs. Peron had been vice But this return to terror tac- elections. , one more. In the last assembly president under her husband. i tics instead of set-piece mili- A number of politicians and there were 102 Liberals and six THE VIOLENCE escalated' tary operations, say diplomatic business .leaders called for a: Pequistes. rapidly following the coup as observers, has demonstrated the quick referendum on independ- The Union National party, security forces began hunting infiltration of the extreme "left ence for the French-speaking which ruled Quebec from 1944 down the extreme left, which in into the ranks of the security province to get the question to 1970, staged a resurgence and turn, retaliated. forces themselves. settled. Others said the Quebec won 11 seats. The Creditiste In the first three months of LAST MONTH, Videla narrow- electorate had merely been and Popular National parties' In thefirstthreeofwoti noeseat teach. orn t t "We shall have the Quebec of which our ancestors dreamed," declared one jubilant rally speaker, re f e r r i n g to'New France's defeat 'by the British some 200 years ago. Levesque, a former broadcast journalist who quit the Liberal party in 1967 to campaign for Quebec independence, said he: hoped Quebec would become an' "adult society" by voting for independence. Rod Bilodeau, president of the , :< y. - , ,: ', y Pi randel lo's (IF YOU THINK SO) Directed by Jack McLaughlin NOV. 18, 19 20 8 P.M. EAST QUAD AUDITORIUM Admission $1 .00 the year, while Mrs. Peron was: still in power, 196 persons were reported killed in the violence here. The more than 1,000 other deaths have occurred in the less than eight months since the coup. 'The government of Gen. Jorge Videla has claimed that police and soldiers have nearly vped1 out the top leadership of the3 ERP and that the Montoneros have also been hurt badly. SECURITY forces have also uncovered clandestine arsenals, of modern automatic weapons, secret workshops where simple but effective submachine guns and grenades were being manu- factured, and even sophisticated printing plants for extremist propaganda. But these discoveries his un- derlined the extent and depth of these underground organizations, say diplomatic sources.. I According to security sources, there were at least 5,000 armed guerrillas operating in Argen- tina two years ago. This is con- sidered a gargantuan lumber for the nation's population of 25 million in an area half the size of the United States. ALSO, THE security sources say, the guerrillas built up ar- senals and underground net- works with the millions Uf dol- lars they exacted as ransom for foreign executives kidnaped in the first half of the decade. 1y escaped an apparent a.,sas-L sination attempt after a bomb went off beneath a reviewing stand where he had just fin- ished presiding over a military1 ceremony. It occurred on tht grounds of the Campo de Mayo army base outside of Buenos Aires, the biggest and p r ob ably most: tightly-guarded military instal- . lation in the country. Videla, as army chief, lives on base. In July, a bomb was planted j inside the dining room at fed-I eral police headquarters here,,, killing 23 policemen and wound-; ing nearly 50. LAST WEEK in La Plata, an-. other bomb was detonated in- side provincial police headquar- ters, killing one police agent and wounding 10. Since the La Plata blast, se- curity sources say policemen and soldiers have killed nearly 50 guerrilla suspects in various clashes there. Only a handful of security. forces were reported slightly wounded. Most news about c l as h e s comes from unofficial sourcess since almost all newspapers here publish only official com- muniques issued by authorities. As a rule, newsmen and pho-' tographers are not allowed near clash scenes. Many times, the atuhorities choose to say nothing at all about clashes. t1111g 1 tgUVr11C1 y }'I didn't like rather than voting for independence.t PRIME MINISTER P i e r r e{ Elliott Trudeau told the Parlia- ment in Ottawa that the federalt government will not negotiate any form of separation witht Quebec or any other province but offered to have an early meeting with Rene Levesque, the 54-year-old Parti Quebecois: leader and future premier. "We have only one mandate," I Trudeau declared. "That is to: govern the whole country." The Parti Quebecois received Canadian Manufacturers' Asso- about 41 per cent of the popular ciation, urged the new premier vote; the Liberals got 34 per not to seek the "very narrow cent; Union Nationale took 18 objective of taking Quebec out per cent; and minor parties got of Confederation (the national the rest. government), with all the harm- THIS MEANT 59 per cent o ful economic results that would the popular vote went to anti- separatist parties, and opinion ensue. polls before the election ind- cated only about 2 per cent of k the voters were diehard sepa- ;. i rests. wif lu em a Many observers interpreted this to mean that secession willCa die I be voted down whenever a ref-' from a cold. Levesque has promised a ref- erendum is held. erendum on secession within two But to the crowds of Pequistes years. Though once considered who celebrated in the Montreal a radical, Levesque assured streets and mobbed Levesque Canadians that there will be at party headquarters early "no Berlin Wall on the Ottawa Tuesday, their victory seemed River" and generally campaign- complete. ed on the alleged economic*;"FROM TODAY, tomorrow failures of Premier Robert Bou- belongs to us," they chanted be- rassa's Liberal government. tween announcements of victory WHEN COUNTING stopped after victory in the races for Monday night the Parti Que- assembly seats. ri G i 7+t I { 1 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Wensa.'y1.1 .l{:.; 1r.... "% lr .i. .........1.... .. . .. . Wednesday, November 17, 1976 CAAS: I. Z. Osayimwese (econom- DAY CALENDAR ist, Univ. of Ibadan) "Africa & the ISMRRD: Learning Disabilities New World Economic Order," 1100 Public School Programs (17-19); S. University, noon. Chrysler Ctr., 8:30 a.m. Ctr. Russian, E. European Stud- Psychiatry: E. James Anthony (di- .es: Helen Desfosses "Contemporary rector, Eliot Division of Child Psy- Soviet nlicy Towards Black Africa," chiatry, ,Washington Univ.) "From Commc is Rm., Lane, noon. Birth to Breakdown: A Prospective Latin American Teach-In: Panel Study of Vulnerable Children Chil- - ,The U.S. & Repression in Cen- dren at High' Risk for Psychosis," ta mrc, .Cn.R. ak M3330 Med. Sci. I, 9:30 a.m. ham; "The Status of Labor Unions Prog, for Ed. Opportunity: Abe in Latin America," W. Conf. Rm., Citron (Wayne State), Loretta Webb!Rackham, 2 p.m. "Cultural Pluralism: Curriculum Assessment, Development & Imple- Arch, Urban Planning: Nathan Le- mentation," League, 10 am. m s vine, AIA "Designing for an Extend- WUOM: Speaking of Amer. Music ed Care Facility: Application of Be- - "Composer & Critic," Harold havioral Criteria for Design," 2104 Blumfield, Elliot Galkin & Andrew Art & 'Arch, 1:30 p.m. Porter With moderator HugoWes- Latin American Teach-In: Panel gall, 11 a.m. - "Women Political Prisoners," E Int'l. Qtr./Int'1. Law Society: Bag Conf. Rm., Rackham, 2 p.m. lunch, Lawrence Pezzullo "Negotiat- Latin American Teach-In: Frank ing Process & Treaty Making," Fac- Newman (Prof. of Law, Univ. of ulty Dining Em., Law Club, noon. Minn.): "Latin America & the In- ternational Legal Community," 100 Hutchins, 3:30 p.m. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Latin American Teach-In: Pahel Vol. LXXXVII, No. 60 - "The Church in Latin America," Wednesday, November 17, 1976 Aud. A, Angell, 4 p.m. is edited and managed by students Industrial, Operations Eng.: Lyn at the University of Michigan. News M. Jones "Jay W. Forrester & the phone 764-0562. Second class postage Road to Hell: Why Bad Philosophy paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Means Bad Modelling," 229 W. Eng., Published d a iil y Tuesday through 4 p.m. Sunday morning during the Univer- , Statistics: Bruce M. Hill: "Infer- sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann ence About the Effectiveness of Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription Radiation Therapy for Cancer," 3227 rates: $12 Sept. thru April (2 semes- Angell, 4 p.m. ters); $13 by mail outside Ann LSA Student Gov't.: 3410 Union, Arbor. 7 p.m. Summer session published Tues- Latin American Teach-In: Panel day through Saturday morning. - "The Coup in Chile & its After- Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann math: What Americans Can Do To Arbor; $7.50 by mail outside Ann Help," Rackham Aud., 7:30 p.m. Arbor. Campus Orchestra: Hill Aud., 8 p.m. f 1 Be sure. tocdrown all fires. Chi Psi Fraternity PRESENTS A Special Midnight Concert WITH THE David Bromberg Band 5 + FRIDAY, NOV. 1,9 of Midnight MICHIGAN THEATER 603 E. LIBERTY, ANN ARBOR Advance Tickets $5.50. Day of.Show $6.50 TICKETS NOw AVAILABLE at Discount Records (both stores), Aura Sounde & Schoolkids Records and in Ypsilanti at Where House Records. (DOORS OPEN 11:30) Smoking or Beverages Prohibited I An infection that means a day in bed for a normal child is a threat to the life of a child with leukemia. Once, leuke- mia victims lived only a few months. Now, in some cases, we can pro- long lives a few years. But leukemia is still a major cause of disease and death in children between the ages of 3 and 14. We want to save every leukemia victim. We can't without a healthy contribution from you. We want to wipe out cancer ir: your lifetime, Give to the American Cancer Society. Amerkia I Cancer Society j TMsSPACECONvIUTEO BY R*PtBUS FRI.-SAT. $2.50 mLOU and SALLY KILLEN Regarded by authorities and afi- cionados of the subject as one of the best performers of British songs and ballads, alive today. THE NEW YORK TIMES: "a master of the traditional Eng- lish ballad, . . of the chantey ... of the Irish song-a master in fact of almost any kind of fine singing;" . . . "a superb performer with an extraordinary . repertoire. "-John S. Wilson WED.-HOOT 75c THURS.: An Ann Arbor Ceilidh Group presenting music from the British Isles: Ballads, Chanties, Jigs, Reels and Hornpipes played on traditional instruments $1.50 Please: help prevent forest fires. 1421 HILL 8:30 761-1451 ---------- -m ea( I nII 0h o igs Y s! 0 SHARE THE RIDE4 WITH US THIS Jose Cuervo, (as excerpted from Chapter27of The Book.) Yes, Chapter 27, wherein it says that Jose Cuervo is not only the- original, since 1795, supreme, premium, ultimate white tequila* But, goes on to say that Jose Cuervo, as the ultimate, is also the ultimate mixer. As a true test, simply pick one from Column A and one from Column B. Thanksgiving GTO AND GET ON TO A.GOODTHING. Us means Greyhound, and a lot of your fellow students who are already on to a good thing. You leave when you like. Travel comfortably. Arrive refreshed and on time. You'll save money, too, over the increased air fares. Share the ride with us on weekends. Holidays. Anytime. Go Greyhound. GREYHOUND SERVICE TO Detroit Jackson Battle Creek Kalamazoo Chicago ONE- ROUND- YOU CAN WAY TRIP LEAVE 2.75 5.25 3:30 p.m. 2.35 4.50 4:05 p.m. 4.45 8.50 2:05 p.m. 5.75 10.95 4:05 p.m. 17.70 33.65 10:35 a.m. YOU ARRIVE 4:45 p.m. 5:00 p.m. 4:10 p.m. 7:05 p.m. 4:20 p.m. 3 ~ ~ ~ ~ ls APX0' xl1'.. 4,J ' L cou x o . 5 5t C \ W ' y2 tW'c'j I MS MR. STANFIELD M. WELLS I d