Wednesday, February 11, 1976 THE MirC HEC3P.N DAILY Page 't'hree Wednesday, February 11, 1976 THE M!U-I!UAN EJAILY Page Three Scandal rocks Italian govt. Woodcock appeals for Debs' citizenship ROME OP) - Premier - desig- nate Aldo Moro brought Italy's 34 - day - old government crisis to an end yesterday, deciding on a stopgap cabinet in a move to stave off elections and pos- ible gains by the Communist party. But the Lockheed scan- dal threatened to delay his choice of ministers. The 59 - year - old Christian Democrat, a four - time pre- mier given a mandate by his party in an effort to tackle Italy's pressing economic and monetary problems, told Presi- dent Giovanni Leone he would name his cabinet ministers, made up only of members of his party, with 48 hours. It will be Italy's 38th government since the fall of fascism in 1943. within two percentage points of the Christian Democrats in nationwide regional elections last June, getting 33 per cent of the vote. They have been pushing for a share of power after being locked out of gov- ernment since 1947. But, they have made clear they prefer to remain in opposition unless ask- ed into a coalition with the Ro- man Catholic Church - backed Christian Democrats, a formu- la called "the historic compro- mise" by Communist leader Enrico Berlinguer. The new government will have a slim voting majority in the Chamber of Deputies be- cause the Democratic Socialists announced they would support it while the Socialists and Re- publicans sai dthey would ab- By MICHAEL YELLIN The United Auto Workers (UAW) union has asked Con- gress to restore the citizenship of Socialist labor leader Eu- gene Debs lost as a result of his conviction in 1918 under a fed- eral espionage law banning pub- lic speeches against U. S. in- volvement in World War I. UAW President Leonard Woodcock has mailed letters to every Senator urging them to honor Debs' memory by restor- ing his citizenship. "DEBS REPRESENTED t h e best in American life" Wood- cock said in the letter, "He fought with courage and prin- ciple for the poor, the oppress- ed, and the underdog. Many of the reforms and programs he advocated have become part of the fabric of American democ- racy," he added. The UAW action was prompt- ed by a recent Congressional act that restored the -citizenship of Robert E. Lee, the leader of the Confederate army during the American Civil War. UAWI representative Simon Alpert re- marked, "Debs was one of the great heroes of the American Labor movement, if they -can give citizenship to someone who led an army against the U. S. they can surely give citizenship to an American hero." Debs ran for president five times on the Socialist ticket and established the American Rail- way Union, the first industrial union in the country covering all the workers in an indus- try. He was convicted under the Espionage Act of 1917 for making public speeches against World War I. The law called for not only a harsh prisoni sen- tence but the loss of citizenship as well. Debs served two years of a ten-year sentence before being pardoned by President Warren Harding for political and health reasons, but his citi- zenship was never restored. Sen. Birch Bayh (D-Indiana) and Sen. Vance Hartke (D-In- diana) have introduced a bill to restore Debs' citizenship. Refurbished YanJkee Stadium in New York reopens April 15 with the home club facing the Minnesota Twins. North Carolina State expects big figures in basketball from sophomore Kenny. Carr*., of Hyattsville, Md., this . season. As a freshman he averaged 13.8 points a game. MORO CAME under increas- stain on votes of confidence so ing pressure to drop Luigi Gui, Moro's administration can sur- interior minister in Moro's care- vive. taker government. He was nam- Moro's government must tac- ed by several Italian newspan- kle unemplayment estimated at ers as a recipient of payoffs 7 per cent of the work force of from the Lockheed Corp. 20 million. Italy's currency, the Gui, defense minister in 1970, lira, has fallen 11 per cent in filed a statement with the state unofficial trading in the three prosecutor Tuesday and asked weeks since the government him to conduct a probe regard- closed the foreign exchange less of "the judicial conse- market because of heavy spec- quences." ulation stemming from econom- According t 1970 Lockheed ic and political uncertainty. memorandum released in Wash- Moro has proposed an auster- ington last week by a U. S. Sen- ity plan calling for a wage ate subcommittee, the company freeze on yearly incomes over five million lire, or $8,000, a laid out $1.6 million to promote Icurb ongoen ntsndg the sale of 14 C130 cargo planes government spending to Italy. The memo did not iden- and promises to track down cur- tify Italian officials, referring rencv black marketers and tax only to "the minister," but evaders._ newspapers here named Gui. TEMPLE NAMES He previously denied any con- COMMISSION ADVISER ection. TT T T f . k .i ; : .t Taking care of business Apparently it's not all text-book drudgery at the Harvard Graduate School of Business Administration. Nevertheless, this scene is more innocuous than it looks. The belly dancer Salome was merely participating in a lecture on marketing promotion poli- cies of the automobile industry. She was parodying the Madison Avenue approach to show that consumer sophistication has made this advertising style obsolete. FOREIGN POLICY CRITICIZED: Reagan slams Ford T H E COMMUNISTS, Italv's second largest party after the still dominant but slining Christian Democrats, said: "We will learn from the men Moro will choose to form a gov- ernment whether the Christian Democrats want to follow old patterns or want to take sens forward toward efficiency, ser-, iousness and recovery. "It would be unforgivable if i today ... Moro would pick men subjected to criticism from several points of view," said an editorial in the party newspa-. per Unita. The Communists, who cam- paigned on the theme "our hands are clean," moved to r AI I ELJ L P H I T 1) --Sergiu Comissiona, conductor of the Baltimore Symphony, has been appointed musical ad- viser for the Temple University Music Festival. Comissiona already has taken an active role in advising on the selection of artists and pro- grams being developed for the 19'6 season. He also will con- duct the resident Pittsburgh Symphony on several occasions next summer. . EXETER, N. H. (,P) - Ron- are made public. aid Reagan sharply criticized Reviewing American foreign the Ford administration's han- policy around the world, Reagan dling of foreign policy yester- said the United States handled day, attacking detente and de- the Cyprus problem in such a claring "it is impossible to de- way that both Greece and Tur- tect a coherent global view." key now distrust Washington "One wonders if we even and "the southern flank of NA- have a foreign policy," Reagan TO is weakened as a conse- told students at Phillips Exeter quence." Academy as he continued a campaign swing through New In Lebanon, where Moslems Hampshire where he faces Pres- and Christians had fought for ident Ford in the nation's first months until a recent truce, presidential primary on Feb. Reagan said the United States 24. missed an opportunity to servej s .. « .. .. ,...... W .T -- ." In Lebanon, where MoslemsI while, Secretary of Commerce Elliot Richardson said yester- day Reagan was confusing vot- ters with "ill defined and vary- ing campaign positions. Richardson, campaigning for Ford, said Reagan's recent sug- gestion to invest Social Security trust funds was "denounced in Britain as "wild - eyed Social- ism" when a similar plan was introduced there. Richardson MERCY KILLINGS NEW YORK (UPI) - In a recent survey, reported in The National Enquirer, nurses re- vealed that one of five "knowingly hastened the death of a terminally ill patient." An overwhelming majority of the TO The LIVE MUSIC Of 15,430 nurses who responded to the questionnaire said that dying patients should have the right to refuse treatment. About half went so far as to favor active mercy killing. INTRODUCTION TO ONLY AT KUINDALINI YOGA as tauaht byO Swami Rudrananda and ON Michael Shoemaker ( Beginners' Classes Every 516 E. LIBERTY 994-5350 MWF at 5:30 p.m. RUDRANANDA ASHRAM (Cominq Soon, SAM and DAVE) 640 Oxford, 995-5483 was until recently U. S. am- bassador to Britain. 1 .DAILY OFFICI The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the Uni-I versity of Michigan. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRIT- TEN FORM to 409 F. Jefferson. before 2 p.m. of the day pre- ceding publication and by 2 p.m. Friday for Saturday and Sunday. Items appear only once. Student organization notices are not accepted for publication. For more information, phone a 764-9270. Wednesday, February 11 Day Calendar WUOM: Live coverage, Nat'l Town: Meeting -- panel discussion, "is Full Employment a Realistic Goal?' 10:30 am. Commission for Women: Report from Assertion Training CommitteeI Regents' Conf. Rm., Admin. Bldg., noon. Group on Latin American Issues: lunch meeting, Int'l. Ctr., noon. 1 Library Values Seminar: "Re- sources Concerning the Problems of Minority and Foreign Students in US Higher Educ." Multipurpose Rm., UGLI, 1:30 pm. CRLT: Panel, "the Use of Media in Language Teaching," 2549 LSA, 3:15 pm. Environ., Industrial Health; GreatI Lakes Research Sea Grant: A.F. Latif, dir., Marine Science, Egyp-! tian Academy of Scientific Research I and Technology, Cairo, "The En-: vironmental Impact of the Aswan High Dam," Aud., Vaughan, Bldg. I, 3:30 pm. Statistics: Louis Pensen, "SomeI Models for Selection and Probabili- ties of Fixation in Finite Popula- tions," 3227 Angell, 4 pm. Industrial, Operations Eng.: Rich-, ard J. Kaplan, HSRI, ,Psychomotor{ Tests of Driving Impairment Due to; Alcohol," 229 W. Eng., 4 pm. University Players Studio Theatre: "The Creation, Disobedience, and, Fall of Man and the Deluge," Arena Theater, Frieze, 4:10 pm. Marxist Forum / Young W9rkers1 Liberation League: "A Tribute to! Paul Robeson," presented byI Charles wright, founder, Afro- American Museum of Detroit, Trot- Trained as a violinist in his REAGAN, although not men-: native Bucharest, Comissiona tioning Ford by name, said was in the Romanian State En- American policy in recent years semble when, at age 19, he! "seems to be a matter of pla-' SteDced in for an ailing con- cating potential adversaries." dtctor and was so imnressive He said foreign' - policy set- that it laimched his career on backs range from the Soviet: the podium. Union, Mediterranean and Mid- : :: dIe East to Angola. AL BULEETT1:In his first major foreign pol- icy speech since announcing:I his candidacy for the Republi- ter House, 1443 Washtenaw, 7:30 can presidential nomination last pm. N ov em b er, Reagan said~ Music School: Leo Najar, viola, Recital Hall, 8 pm. the balance of forcesbetween General Notices East and West has shifted grad- Course Mart Deadline: Pronosals ually toward the Soviet Union for Fall 1976 Course Mart offerings since 1970. He added that shift must be submitted to 2501 LSA by9 . Feb. 20; proposals welcome from has continued since the advent faculty, staff, gta's, community of detente. leaders, anyone with expertise n "Opening the Chinese door academic area not now covered ofeebnyxelntopru i LSA curriculum. offered an excellent opportunity Career Planning & Placement for us to blunt the expansionism 3200 sAB, 764-7460 of the Soviet Union," he said. The Institute for Administrative "But we have lost the momen- Research has announced the avail- . . ability of research proposal awards tum we gained by actig as if for study in the field of admin. in we expected the Soviets to in- health care. For further information herit the earth." contact CP&P or write: Dr. George C. Sawyer, 50 Windsor Place, Nut- ey, N.J. 07110. REAGAN SAID the United Yale University offers a two-year States compromised its techno- program in management leading to logical advantage over the So- a Master's degree in Public and Private Management (MPPM). Ap- viet Union in the SALT I agree-, plication deadline March 1, 1976. ment and he declared any fu- Write to Admissions Office, School tureragreements on arms should of Organization & Mgt., Yale U., not be finalized until details New Haven CT. 06520. as peace maker. Now the Palestine Liberation Army . .. seems to be the principal gain- er," he said. THE F O R M E R CALI-G FORNIA GOVERNOR said the Angolan situation "was allowed to generate into a war between the administration and Con-t gress," and that the importance of Angola to U. S. national se- curity was never fully explain- ed. R E A G A N SUGGESTED SATURDAY in Florida that in- vesting Social Security money in the stock market would be a, possible solution to a deficit he said is growing in the Social Security system. Richardson said such invest-; ments would place the fedesl government in a controlling po- sition in "every private enter- prise in the UnitedrStates." ___ Recruiting on campus for the;;;;;; week of February 16, 1976 through U February 20, 1976. Feb. 16: St. _ Mary's Hospital, Henry Ford Hos- pital, U. S. Navy Nurse Corps, Swed- ish - American Hospital and Hutzel Feb. 17: St. Joe Mercy Hospital, FINE FLOWERS U. S. Army Nurse Corps, Columbia- Presbyterian Medical Center, Univ. 225 E. Libertv-663-4261 of Chicago Hospitals & Clinics, T Sinai Hospital, and Bell Systems. ir Feb. 18: V. A. Hospital, U. S. AirT Force, Univ. Hospitals of Cleveland, t Rehab. Institute of Chicago, Dept. of Corrections, and Office of Man- I agement and Budget. Feb. 20: Market Opinion Research V Day... Summer PlacementI 3200 SAB, 763-4117+ Oak Ridge National LaboratoryFlowers Tenesse.Excellent summer pro- gram open to graduate students in the fields of engr., math., environ- mental, and physical science. Appli- V cations and details available. Dead- C line to aply Mar. 1.D! oo= - y < -yo 1 o iWI GED Membership Meeting THURS., FEB. 12-8 P.M. RACKHAM AMPHITHEATRE AFFILIATION? Do you want GEO to stay independent? Do you want GEO to join AFT? Come and start the refren- dum to vote your preference. Only a membership meeting can start a ref- erendum. Should GEO require a minimum turnout on this referendum? At the present a majority of those voting may decide the affiliation question. Should we retain the present system? BARGAINING-Shall we bargain for: tuition waiver; benefits for GSA's under 1/4 time; % increase in wages; limit on class size; stronger affirmative action program. We cannot bargain for what YOU want until you say what your needs are. The nature of the package will be defined at THIS meeting. Come and make sure that your preferences are heard. ii I i BEST CHEESE CAKE IN TOWN Longevity Cookery 314 E. Liberty GREAT LUNCHES and DINNERS I I I s I I I ) Ann Arbor, Mich. (313) 662-2019 GOURMET NATURAL FOOD RESTAURANT I Now OPEN ON MONDAYS i 4" - - -lo--w - - ! - - I You Can Afford 2 Pairs of Pants ~ " with the ra Sale Price at SAM'S **A - - " t 1 * . I~* I' - e0 r DC A A I w nn IU Irv% wAmEtw&I/C 20-50% OFF Huge selection ! r -~ Over 300 skiing, camping and backpacking parkas to a, choose from. i i FIINANLIAL AILV 1Ar-LILAI U FOR SPRING-SUMMER TERM, 1976 Materials are now available at 2011 SAB. Funding is limited, so consideration will be given ONLY to studentes who plan to grad- uate in August, or who can demonstrate either a program re- quirement for summer study or other compelling reasons why attendance during this period is necessary. i /. \ i m I I