Wednesday, June 25, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven GEC defense calls arrests improper (Continued from Page 3) ANOTHER point which the defense has argued was estab- lished with the presentation of a video-tape of the arrests made February 27th. Witnesses for the defense and the prosecution have disagreed on whether trucks leaving the plant department were blocked by the pickets or stopped by the police. The video tape showed trucks proceeding forward be- ing stopped by police officers just prior to the arrests. Judge S. J. Eldon is expect- ed to return a decision on the motion to. dismiss the charges next month. Mozambique now independent nation AP Photo BRITAIN'S FOREIGN Secretary, left, talks with two envoys from Uganda, Lt. General Sir Chandos Blair and Major Ian Grahame, at the Royal Air Force Base in Northholt, England, yesterday. The envoys flew back to Britain earlier in the day from Uganda, carrying a letter from President Amin to Britain's Queen Elizabeth. B iders rescue of NAIROBI, Kenya (W) - Brit- ain considered yesterday the possible rescue of 700 Britons living in Nganda as a row inten- sified with President Idi Amin over his threatened execution of a British teacher. Reports from London and Kampala, the Ugandan capital, said the missionaries, business- men, teachers and technologists who form the dwindling British community in Uganda have been quietly warned that perils lie ahead of them. THE IMPLICATION in t h e warning circulated by acting High Commissioner James Hen- nessey is that all who could do so would be well advised to pack their bags and go. Uganda radio, monitored here, said Amin "doesn't care if all the British leave Uganda. Ugan- da is flourishing anyway and can develop faster without them." On Monday, Amin was quotad as saying: "The 700 British citi- zens in Uganda are now in jeo- pardy. Your missionaries, your schoolteachers, your profession- al people, we regard them as spies. They will be watched." AMIN'S latest quarrel with the British is ostensible over the fate of a 61-year-old teacher, Denis Hills, a Briton condemn- ed to be shot July 4 for calling Amin a "village tryant" in an unpublished manuscript. Pleas for mercy have been made for him by Queen Eliza- beth II, Prime Minister Harold Wilson and Foreign Secretary James Callaghan. But Amin, a onle-time corporal in the Brit- ish army, has met all these ap- peals with an ultimatum. Hills, he said, will be s o t unless Callaghan comes to Kam- pala to discuss political and eco- nomic problems. The latest deadline given Callaghan w a s "within 10 days" of yesterday. Callaghan has refused to travel unless Amin first removes the death sentence from Hills. IN HIS latest anti-British out- burst, Uganda radio said Amin wired Queen Elizabeth that "if Callaghan had come, his mis- sion would have been successful and he would possibly have gone back to Britain with Denis Hills." The five-page telegram to the queen was delivered in a 40-min- ute meeting with the acting high commissioner, Hennessey, at Amin's command post in Kam- pala, the radio said. The radio broadcast the text of the wire but did not report any response from Hennessey. The telegram also said Hills could have been saved ai*a mili- tary messenger sent by the British on Saturday had n o t been "rude and arrogant." The radio quoted Amin saying that U. Gen. Sir Chandos Blair, his battalion commander when Uganda was a British colony, failed because of personal dif- ferences between the two men and because Blair appeared not to recognize that colaial times had ended. AMIN SAID Blair threatened military action against Uganda )y British troops in Kenya. "Had he not been a hot-tempered per- son, his mission could h a v e been successful," Amin wired the queen. Blair and Maj. Grahame trav- eled to Uganda with a clemency plea from the queen and were given a warm reception by Amin at his tribal home. But soon after they left radio announce- ments began to denounce their visits as "undiplomatic, hot 1 - tempered and disrespec ful." (Continued from Page 1) ceremonies and made up pos- sibly the largest gathering of diplomats ever seen in Africa. Major Western nations, in- cluding the U. S., were not of- ficially invited to attend the festivities. However, among several Americans privately in- vited were U. S. Reps. Charles Diggs, (D-Mich.), and Cardiss Collins, (D-Ill.). The U. S. consulate, in opera- tion since 1852, quietly closed at midnight leaving Washington with no official representation in this country twice the size of California. U. S. officials say they assume that formal diplo- matic relations at ambassa- dorial level will eventually be established but add they have no idea when. DIGGS told a news confer- ence Mozambique's indepen- dence was the "most import- ant development" s i n c e Ghana's independence in 1957 and said he though diplomatic relations with the U. S. would eventually be established. "It's just a matter of normal pro- cesses being worked out," he said. The congressman criticized U. S. policy in Africa and main- tained failure to support black liberation movements has dam- aged American standing at the United Nations and could be harmful economically. Machel's arrival Monday marked his first return to this seaport capital on the Indian Ocean since 1963 when he fled to join the Tanzania - based Front for the Liberation of Mozambique, known as Fre- limo. He led its first attack in 1964. MACHEL will rule through Frelimo, a militantly Marxist movement with a Maoist philos- ophy strongly supported by both China and the Soviet Un- ion. The Frelimo army of 10,000 g'terrillas fought a hit-and-run war with some 60,000 Portu- gtese troops and in the end con- tributed to the collanse of the Portuguese empire in Africa. The former Portuguese ter- ritory of Guinea-Bissau in West Africa was granted indepen- dence late last year and Ango- la, Portugal's biggest and rich- est colony, will be freed Nov. 11. Lou Brock of the St. Louis Cardinals stole four bases in one game against the San Francisco Giants last season. TALK TO THE RELIABLES We will be here regular hours during study, exams & break. UM STYLISTS at the UNION Fth6annrsrbr Rlm nnasw",ivU -- A 1111 JLA 5 k~mammonU I $5 A DAY 10c A MILE New VW Super Beetles Pickup and Delivery Available RENTABEETLE 2016 PACKARD RD. ANN ARBOR 994-9300 PRESENTS THURSDAY, JUNE 26 Joseph Tosey's production of Ibsen's A DOLL'S HOUSE starring JANE FONDA as NORA Ths film is besed upon the play by Henrik Ibsen, which proved to be a radical shocker in its day for its ideas about women. Nora is trapped in a marriage and woefully naive of the world and society. She is contained within. Set in Norway, the film portrass in seethinq and pointed dramo how Nora comes to deal with the oppressive life situation she finds herself in. This version $mde in 1973, is still a strikingly modern liberation story. 7 and 9 p.m. AUD. A ANGELL HALL, $1,25. FRIDAY, JUNE 27 CHARLES CHAPLIN in MODERN TIMES 11936, silent) Chaplin was charged with being a Communist Sympathizer after he made this famous satire on the machine age. The Little Tramp sets a iob in a factory and becomes a v'ctim of Modern Times," the times we now are all so familiar with. America's last silent film and Chaplin's last film using the character of the Tramp. With Paulette Godard. in MLB, 3 at 7:15 and 9:15. THE GREAT DICTATOR 11940). Great political comedv. Chaplin superbly mimics the mincin mannerisms and over- blown oratory of an infamous demogoque, "Adenod Hynkel," alias Adolph Hitler. He's also Hvnkels double, a kind little Jewish barber who takes over for the dictator at the en See Hvnkel's famous ballet scene-bubbledance with a Globe, in MLB 4 at 7 and 9:30 p.m. 1.25 each, $2.00 for both shows.