Friday, June 22; 1973 THE SUMMER DAILY Page Five Massive strikes hit M Chile; SANTIAGO, Chile () - Strik- es in favor and against the poli- cies of President Salvador Al- lende's leftist government left half of Chile's 10 million people without some vital services yes- terday. More than 100,000 strikers ral- lied outside Government House in downtown Santiago to voice their support of the Marxist president. THE STRIKES in support of Allende were called by the Cen- tral Labor Federation, dominated by the Socialist and Communist parties which make up part of the government. Those striking against the gov- ernment were doctors, engineers, other professional groups, some students and agricultural work- ers. Four bombs exploded in San- tiago, but no one was reported hurt. One blast was outside a Socialist party office, a second outside a government office and services cut a third near a government tele- vision installation. The fourth bomb wrecked two cars outside the home of a Cuban embassy of- ficial. THE ONE-DAY strikes and a build up of tensions in Chile grew out of a walkout by 12,000 work- ers nearly two months ago at El Teniente, the world's largest copper mine, to enforce demands for a 41 per cent pay increase. The miners have taken an anti- Allende stand because the gov- ernment refuses to meet the pay demands. In the crowd that gathered outside Allende's residence were both men and women. Most wore plastic hardhats and many car- ried short staves and pitchforks. Others had hastily made bamboo lances. Columns of about 1,000 persons each marched in orderly fashion from all over Santiago toward the plaza outside La Moneda, as the execueive mansion is called. REGISTERED NURSES: This coupon can lift you out of ordinary , Inursing and into.. . SULEIRIU SING Fill in the coupon and, mail it today. I IWe'll send you a free, no-obligation, illustrated brochure! (Plus information about our special fringe benefits.) Fill in and mail to: Mrs. Alice Miller, RN, Director of Nursing Graduate Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania 19th & Lombard Sts., Philadelphia, Pa. 19146 YOUR NAME PHONE ADDRESS CITY STATE Z1P THE DEMONSTRATORS ried signs saying 'Long Live Popular Unity government," "Long live the government of people." Some chanted "Down with Fascists" and "To hell with right-wingers." Santiago city buses ran about two hours in the e morning so people could att the rally, but the rest of pu transportation stopped throt out the country. This inclu LAN, the national airline, the state owned railroads. SOME SUPERMARKETS bakery shops opened for at three hours, and then clo Shopkeepers throughout the tion kept their shutters locke anticipation of possible violet Telephone service, - electri and other public utilities fi tioned normally, but with sk ton crews. All are governm owned. The Central Labor Federa said it called its members on otrike "to stop facism to prevent civil wars" THE PROFESSIONAL gro students and agricultural wor announced their strikes to test what they called Allenm attempt to make Chile a Soc ist country. Allende's foes protested staying at home. Leaders of four opposition parties called anti-Marxists "to avoid all vocations, and avoid any reac to leftist attempts to provoke orders." New & Important WAR and POLITICS available at Bork Sa S 316 S. State St. car- the and the the the for arly tend Iblic ugh- ided and and bout sed. na- d in nce. city 'unc- ele- ent- tion out and Law may ban fixing tups lers pro- ' of foreign elections ial- WASHINGTON (IP) - A Senate Foreign Relations subcommittee by proposed yesterday to make it a criminal offense for American the citizens or government agencies to conspire to influence foreign on elections. pro- The legislation is aimed at preventing a recurrence of the situation tion in 1970 when, according to testimony before the subcommittee, the dis- International Telephone - Telegraph Corp. sought to block the election -- of leftist Salvador Allende as president of Chile. IN ANNOUNCING the measure at a news conoference, Sen. Frank Church (D-Idaho), chairman of the subcommittee on multinational corporations, said he did not know whether ITT officials had violated any existing laws in 1970 in their efforts to protect their multi-million dollar investments in Chile. Church said a full report on the sub- committee's March-April hearings will be forwarded to the Justice Department. According to testimony at the hearings, ITT on two occasions offered funds to the Central Intelligence Agency in 1970 to be used in support of a conservative opponent of Allende, Jorge Alessandri. The testimony indicated that the first plan was rejected and the second ignored. Later, however, the testimony disclosed that William Broe, chief of CIA clandestine services in the Western Hemisphere, proposed to ITT officials a plan to accelerate economic chaos in Chile. This was designed to rally anti-Allende sentiment in the Chilean Congress, which had yet to ratify Allende's minority victory in the popular election. ITT, the subcommittee was told, turned down the plan as "un- workable." AS OUTLINED by Church, the subcommittee legislation would make it a "criminal offense for American citizens or residents to offer or provide funds to U.S. government agencies for the purpose of interfering in foreign elections, or for U.S. government employes or r agents to accept such funds." WHAT'S A STEAK 4 SEN. CHURCH talks about the proposed law, designed to prevent corporations such as ITT from interfering in foreign elections. CINEMA WHO presents THE FROM ANOTHER WORLD (1951, Christian Nyby, dir.) A genuinely scary science fiction thriller produced by the di- rector of SCARFACE, TO HAVE AND HAVE NOT, and THE BIG SLEEP. Screenplay by Charles Lederer based on the story "WHO GOES WHERE?" by Charles Campbell, Jr. Electronic score by Dmitri Tiompkin. "A FILM WHOSE TIME HAS COME" -Sammy Thirdworld, COSMIC FINANCE FRIDAY June 22 AUDITORIUM A ANGELL HALL ad 7:30 & 9:30 p.m. --FRIENDS OF Imission $1 CINEMA ALSO