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February 17, 1976 - Image 10

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Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1976-02-17

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Page Ten

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Tuesday, February 17, 1976

Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, February 17, 1976

FRI

TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY

CROWD VIOLENCE:
Assembly

debates free

"ALL

YOU CAN EAT"

speech

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By MAUREEN NOLAN
Incidents of near violence at
speeches, such as the one last
year when Israeli President
Ephraim Katzir spoke at the
University, were the topic at
yesterday's Senate Assembly
meeting.
The University's policy of free
speech came under close scru-
tiny as Prof. Bruce Friedman,
a member of the Civil Liberties
Board (CLB), presented a docu-
ment expressing the Univer-
sity's "deep and lasting com-
mitment to freedom of speech."
USED HIS FEET
AND IMAGINATION
LOS ANGELES (P) - Accord-
ing to at least one police officer
in Los Angeles, jaywalkers must
be the most imaginative offend-
ers of the law. When the officer
arrested one man for jaywalk-
ing, the straightfaced offender
insisted he thought the "Don't
Walk" sign was an advertise-
ment for the bus company.

THE DOCUMENT was cre- also be considered, but Prof.
ated because of the "erosion of Shaw Livermore, who worked
freedom of speech at the Uni- with the CLB on the statement,
versity in recent years," accord- said the CLB wanted "some
ing to Friedman. latitude of protest."
Friedman sees it as "the first As a whole the Assembly
correcting came out strongly in favor of
and easiest step" inth oetdnt the statement and it will be sub-
the attitude that some students mitted for action at the next
have developed of shoutingi __ _
down speakers that are dis-N
liked. NATIVE SONS
He also mentioned an "in- WASHINGTON (P) - Of all
sidious trend to dis-invite con- Americans who have lived since
troversial speakers," adding, the Revolution, more than half
"we (the CLB) felt that this are still around.
constitutes intellectual black- John Warner, administrator
mail." of the American Revolution Bi-
The document, if adopted, centennial Administration, notes
would prevent the 'U' from bar- that a decade after the country's
ring invited speakers, and would birth, the United States' popula-
protect a guest speaker's free- tion-from the Atlantic to the
dom of speech by removing the Spanish settlement on San Fran-
protestors from the area. cisco Bay-was a bit more than
four million.
DISCUSSION of the statement Census figures reveal that
focused on the wording used to about 400 million persons either
define what constitutes unrea- were born here or have immi-
sonable protest and how it grated since then, compared
should be dealt with. with a current U.S. population
The protestor's rights would of about 215 million.

meeting.

He did not see the long term
budget outlook as being as

eBst

THE UNIVERSITY'S budget bleak and also said the Univer-
was also discussed at the meet- sity is in better shape than most
ing by Frank Rhodes, vice pres- public universities.
ident for academic affairs. He But he warned against hoping
painted a stark picture for the for easy answers to the crisis.
next academic year, saying that "It is dangerously easy to
budget cuts, a no-growth enroll- over-estimate the effects of ad-
ment, and $2.5 million of the ministrative action," he said,
budget being consumed by fixed stressing that central planning
commitments as some of the alone is not enough and the co-
reasons for next year's financial operation of all concerned is a
woes. necessity.
Zair airlifts arms
to forces in Angola
By The Associated Press 1 est condemnation of the mer-
Western - backed troops were cenary issue so far:
reported yesterday harassing
Cuban soldiers in newly launch:- "It's time this dangerous non-
e'd guerrilla action in Angola sense stopped ... The presence
and sources said a shipment of of those who sell their killing
arms from Zaire was airlifted power for money is more likely
to the anti-Marxist forces deep to prolong the conflict than to
in the bush. end it."

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Meanwhile, Britain blastedl
mercenary intervention in thel
embattled southwest A f r i c a n'
state, and South African shares
fell on the London stock ex-
change amid mounting concern
over gains by Communist-back-
ed troops in Angola.
TWO PLANES from Kinshasa,
Zaire, loaded with arms, defied
patrolling MIG17 fighters to
bolster between 15,000 and 20,000,
National Union-UNITA-troops
deep in eastern Angola's bush'
country, UNITA sources said in
Lusaka, Zambia.
The informants said the latest
arms consignment included an-
titank weapons capable of pierc-
ing the armor of Soviet T34 and
T54 tanks.-
UNITA leader Jonas Savimbi,l
in a statement recorded in east-
ern Angola and flown to Lusaka,:
said his soldiers have alreadyt
begun to nip at the flanks ofi
Cuban troops assisting the So- I
viet-backed Popular Movementt
-MPLA.
"WE ARE to continue our c
struggle because we think that1
we cannot accept a minority +
regime imposed on our people
by Cuban troops and Russian
tanks," Savimbi said. "So long
as injustice continues, we willc
continue the struggle until ourz
people have a democratic gov-i
ernment."
About 200 British mercenaries
are fighting against the MPLA
in Angola. Britain's deputy for-
eign secretary, David Ennals,c
said in his government's strong-

Ennals statement came a day
after 100 mercenaries flew from
London to Kinshasa, Zaire, en
route to join the fighting in
Angola.
The passage of pro-Western
mercenaries t h r. o u g h Zaire
prompted Zaire President Mo-
butu Sese Seko to issue strength-
ened orders yesterday to all air-
ports and border posts, as well
as Zaire embassies abroad, to
prevent passage of the soldiers
of fortune through his country.
MORE COAL;
RAILROADS READY
WASHINGTON (I)-A doubl-
ing of U.S. coal producton with-
in the next 10 years is forecast
by the National Coal Assn., the
Department of Transportation
and other government agencies,
and will provide a major step
to national energy independ-
ence.
Within the railroad industry,
there is no question about
"transportation capacity" to
meet the coal industry's in-
creasing demands for hauling
large additional quantities of
coal each year. According to the
Association of American Rail-
roads, U.S. railroads carried
more than 390 million tons of
coal in 1974 and all the principal
coal-hauling railroads are now
investing heavily in new equip-
ment to handle the anticipated
increase. New railroad equip-
ment outlays over the next 10
years-to meet the needs of the
coal industry alone-are sched-
uled at more than $1 billion.

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