Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, July 6, n? Military seizes power in Pakistan ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (P', - The Pakistan Army, seizing power in an apparently blood- less coup, imposed martial law yesterday and promised new elections next October. "The Bhutto regime is end- ed," army chief of staff Gen. Muhammed Ziaul Hai said in a nationwide broadcast after the army acted in an effort to end four months of political violence that took more than 3011 lives. A MILITARY spokesnan'said Prime Minister Zulfikar All Bhu- tto, his cabinet ministers and leaders of the opposition Pakis- stan National Alliance had been sraelEgpt Iountinuet frosm Page 1) BEGIN HAS said he does not want to negotiate with the United States, and feels Wash- inglton should limit its role to that of a mediator bringing all sides together for direct talks. Carter and Begin could clash over the President's proposal that Israel make territorial concessions in the occupied West Bank of the Jordan River' where a Palestinian homeland might be cieated in the frame- work of the peace talks. The right wingliegIn government claiiissIsranel lhay a biblical claim to the West Blank, and opposes creaftin oh a l1alestin- ian state in the region, calling it a direct threat to Israel. But Javits said le believed Begiii was sincere in sayingo atit subject could be put on the taken into "temporary protec- vinces had agreed to act as gov- UNOFFICIAL reports said the ity for any political ambitions tine custody." ernors of their provinces. coup began with a round of he said. "The step has nst be Ziaul said he was taking over Speaking in Urdu, Pakistan's arrests at 2 a.m., and Radio taken at the pi~m_)pting at(an as chief martial law administra- national language, Ziaul announ- Pakistan said the takeover was interested person." Nr, but President Fazal Elahi ced a ban on all political activity completed by 7:30 a.m. He assured the Moslem nation Choudhry would remain head of and suspension of some pmtvi- Ziaul said he would adminis- of 75 million that Pakiotant wunsd state and the 1973 constitution sions of the constitution. He said ter the martial law with a coon- remain an "Islamic state" and remained in force. these will be restored in time cil composed of the chiefs of the that government would be re- Ziaul, a 52-year-old career of- for elections. other military branches. turned to the peoples' ietceu ficer installed by Bhutto as ar- The broadcast was low-key, "I want to make it clear that tatives immediatets''itr, th my chief of staff last year, said and throughout the day Radio I have not assumed responsibil- October elections the Bhutto's cabinet and the Pakistan maintained its normal - governments of the four prow- broadcasting. There was no evi- inces had been dismissed and dence of disturbances or resis-tiU the National Assembly dissoly- tance to the apparently well-co- triu s Unresolve ed. ordinated army action, and in- IE SAID the chief justices of ternational flights were reported the high courts in the four pro- operating in and out of Karachi. (Contiltue iinfromPget four other lawyer h.ev Sallade is - quoted in the De- sent four relatives ni hh troit Free Press as saying, "I poisoned victims. t'edlrtem aallege that (the bcething fail- they areconl ide neege t re t n w ea e aml re)were definitely c'aused by joint claim agn 1th i o employes of the United States charging negligence It , overnment The whole thing pectin wrongdoin ;, bargaining table in Geneva, in- cluding the West Bank. BEGIN'S WASHINGTON visit was to be followed by another Mideast fact - finding tour by Secretary of State Cyrus Vance, that could set the stage for re- sumption of the Geneva talks. Vance first toured the region last February. Several problems remain to be solved before the conference can be recalled, chief among them was Palestinian repre- sentlation at the talks. Both Israel and the Arabs agree the Palestinians must play a role in reaching a settle- ment, but they disagreed over a framework. ISRAELI POLITICAL ana- pears to have dropped a de- lysts say Egypt's president ap- mand that Palestinians be seat- ed as a separate delegation, and they say this could be a major step toward eliminating the problem.- Jerusalem has said only those invited to the original peace talks - Israel, Egypt, Jordan, Syriam- should return for the next round, a formula designed to exclude the Pales- tine Liberation Organization (PLO). Syria declined the orig- inal invitation. Israel has said it would not negotiate directly with the PLO as long as the organization con- tinues to advocate the dissolu tion of the Jewish state. was caused by negligence of the Veterans lospital." BLAINE SURVIVED for 13 days after his breathing failure of August 15, before dying of un- successful operation. His death has not been proven medically related to any of his breathing failures. ALso filing u suit against the VA hhspital is Helen Stout, wi- dow of VA patient Glenn Stout. Patient Stout was once listed as a murder count against defen- dant Perez, but the charge was later dropped. Ms. Stout's attorney, Walter Federlein of Troy, Michigan, said that he is conferring with THE HOSPiTAl. t k10 ledged that two st. sently pending igot i More however tre e fron relatives of tte tims. The jury is currenti;l I the fate of the two iti tire ed with the psi. n - d Philip Pratt iirdet vi. tc, to spend tn ouiiir, 1 t deliberatinos, Ith l u e lip for Mondas l 'he spent a half due de celebrate the hid t birthday of tine joe Chicago is 11 from Riie de Joit-i:'. HEW orders desegregation of Southern state colleges Carter prepares gas rationing plan (Continledrom Pag" i) (ongress. OFFICIALS SAID the system would be invoked in case of an emergency, such as disruption of the sea lanes in a Mideast or other kind of war, so there would be no danmaging delay. They said should an emergen- cy occur now, the administra- tion would not know what to do l umme~rHour : m n..fot pm- f 6114hurch A2 948.5955 and would have no plan. Schlesinger, they said, is in the process of assessing what Car- ter can do Carter believes he can get a good energy program from Congress this year and if he does not, he plans to make an assessment and offer new pro- posals next year. Although Italian navigator John Cabot first sighted New- foundland in 1497, French ex- plorer Jacques Cartier, who ex- plored the Gulf of St. Lawrence 37 years later, is generally re- garded as the founder of Can- ada. NEW ARRIVALS in Philosophy, Mathematics System Theory AT Cha ring Cross Book Shop 316 S. STATE-994-4041 MENTAL HEALTH RESEARCH INSTITUTE SEMINAR SERIES JAMES E. DIEZ DEPARTMENT OF BIOCHEMISTRY SCHOOL OF MEDICINE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA "WINDOWS TO THE BRAIN: HOW CLEAR IS THE VIEW OF SEROTONIN METABOLISM?" WEDNESDAY, JULY 6, 1977 SEMINAR: 3:45 P.M., Room 1057 MHRI WASHINGTON M) - The fed- eral government yesterday an- nounced a set of guidelines re- quiring colleges in six Southern states to increase enrollment of blacks within five years. lThe Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW) submitted the goals and time- tables for desegregation to U.S. District Court Judge John Pratt in response to a court order. THE NEW desegregation plan affects Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Arkansas and Virginia., Pratt had ordered the guide- lines in April in response to a suit filed in the District of Co- ltmbia by civil rights groups charging that HEW failed to en- force part of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 which bars racial discrimination by institutions re- ceiving federal money. HEW Secretary Joseph Cali- fano, Jr., blamed the failureof HEW to press for desegregation on the Nixon administration and said he hoped that similar law- suits would not be needed in the future. GIVEN THE previous admin- istration's record on civil rights, I can understand why such suits have been brought." In 1972, Judge Pratt initially RACKHAM GRADUATE STUDENTS ?f you intend to graduate this tressi wills either a master's ,degree or an intermediate de- gree awarded by the Rackham Graduate S chool, you must submint a Diploma Application to the Records Office, Room 1014 Racknam Graduate Schooi. no later than Friday, July 8. 197 in order to be placed on the August degree list. Diploma appicatiorw are aval- able in the Rackham Graduate Schoo, Room 1014, as well as in your department or program office had found that HEW failed to order adequate desegregation in 10 states that had legally man- dated segregated higher educa- The other four states-Louisi- ana, Mississippi, Maryland and Pennsylvania-are involved in civil rights lawsuits on the prob- lem elsewhere and were not in- cluded in Pratt's latest order. THE HEW guidelines will re- quire evidence of progress to- ward desegregation. However, Califano emphasized that the new goals and timetables were guidelines ro quotas. "The department is opposed to the use of arbitrary quotas in ci- vil rights enforcement," Call- fano said. "Failure to achieve a goal set forth in the criteria will not be sufficient evidence, stand- ing alone, to establish a viola- tion - - - "The goals do, however, set out specific benchmarks which will help us measure progress towards elimination of unconsti- tutional de jure set by law racial segregation." THE REQUIREMENTS apply to state-supported educational systems, not private . schools, HEW said, Major goals listed in the new guidelines include the following: 0 First, at the end of five years, there should be an in- crease in the total number of blacks attending all public col- leges, both predominantly black as well as white institutions. This goal requires that efforts be made to insure that equal percentages of black and white high school graduates enter col- lege. * Second, there should be in- creased black enrollment at four-year white colleges at the end of five years, with each in- stitution showinag an annual in- . crease in blacks. Under this goal the disparity between the relative low percen- tage of blacks enrolling and the higher white pereen be cut in halt iv tite sis within fine t ea An example ttEW 'i a that if 20 per ccti : hic sclsts graduates Cilnttlt iOt 10 per cent of httih g, four-year college. K i y tthi five years the figitte (a ht.c should rise to 1 me esnl * Third, state, t action to reduce the m parity in college grtduttti rates. HEW said black dopo rates are 8 per cent i 15 p cent higher than those i o and states should take tel ures, such as comupetat i