The Michigan Daily-Sunday, March 16, 1980-Page 3 Nationalist Puerto Ricans raid Bush, arter headquarters (Continued from Page 1) *STR. BAR * ~ 09 N. MaIn St.-769-0109 * ST. PATRICK'S DAY APPEARING MONDAY* DICK SIEGEL & HIS MINISTERS OF MELODY * All drinks 2 for 1 between 8:30 and 10:00 P.M. what I think. We're not going to be intimidated." Bush said he might fly to New York Sunday to visit the people taken hostage. Both of the groups identified themselves as members of the Puerto ican national group FALN. HE FALN, WELL known to the FBI and police agencies across the country, has for years been waging a campaign for Puerto Rican independence, marked by bombings in New York,' Chicago and elsewhere. Although the FALN is not active in Puerto Rico, other terrorist independence groups have opposed the primary elections of both mainland parties which are being held in Puerto Rico for the first time this year. heir reasoning is that by voting in h primaries Puerto Ricans will become more involved in mainland politics and thus more willing to vote for eventual statehood status for Puerto Rico. THE THREE terrorists ordered campaign workers to lie on the floor. The two men-one with a rifle and the other with a shotgun-kept watch while the woman, brandishing a .38 caliber pistol, bound them and taped their mouths. The three then ransacked the office, ripped out the telephones, spray- painted slogans on the walls and lelft, annoucning they intended to take aover the entire building-which also houses the campaign offices of- Republican presidential contender John Anderson. The terrorists then fled and the workers freed themselves. In New York, Bush's campaign . coordinator John Steele said the four men who burst into the office were apparently angered by Bush's stand in favor of statehood for Puerto Rico. The men bound workers' hands with masking tape and spray painted "Statehood Means Death" and "Free Puerto Rico" on the walls. e Clipse ...MIrLQQ AP Photo VICE-PRESIDENT Walter Mondale learns of the attack on the Carter- Mondale campaign headquarters by three Puerto Rican nationalists upon arriving in Chicago yesterday. The terrorists staged a simultaneous attack on George Bush's headquarters in New York. Kennedy, Chicago, machine fight Carter Johnny Crlf With iv: in Ronnie Mathews Ray Drummond SUNDAY FILMS Cinema Two-Our Daily Bread, Aud. A, Angell, 7, 9p.m. Cinema Guild-18th Ann Arbor 16mm Film Fest, Mich. Theatre, 7, 9, 11 p.m. SPEAKERS ACLU-Ramsey Clark, talk on death penalty, 2:15 p.m., Lawyer's Club Lounge. Wesley Foundation=Panel on General Conference Issues, 7:30 p.m., 602 E. Huron.1 MEETINGS Ann Arbor Committee for a New Jewish Agenda-Brunch, 11 a.m., 851 Tappan. Guild House-Gay Discussion group, potluck dinner, 6 p.m., 802 Monroe. Hiking Club-Rackham N.W. entry on E.iuron, 1:30 p.m. a PERFORMANCES Res. College Music Prog.-Original music, theatre, and dance by Julie Fink and Lu Bjorkland, Res. Col. Aud., E. Quad, 2 p.m. Pendleton Arts Ctr.-A Tempo Concert, 2nd fl., Union, 2 p.m. School of Music-Piano Recital, Charles High, Stearns, 2 p.m.; Piano Recital, Douglas Van Den Berg, Recital Hall, 4 p.m.; Euphonium Recital, Roger Oyster, Stearns, 8p.m. Canterbury Loft-"Homegrown Women's Music Series," 332 S. State, 7:30 p.m. Eclipse Jazz-Dave Brubeck Quartet, Hill, 8p.m. PTP/Dance Co.-"Carmina Burana," "Seven Deadly Sins," Power Ctr., 3 p.m. MISCELLANEOUS Hillel-Israeli dancing, 1-3 p.m.; Deli, 6 p.m., 1429 Hill. Rec. Sports-Family Sunday Funday, "Family Olympics Day," North Campus Rec. Bldg., 2:30 p.m. Museum of Art-Ceramics from U-M Collections, through March 16. Slusser Gallery-Sculptural ceramics and pottery, through March 16. ACLU-Wine and cheese fundraiser, Dominicks, 812 Monroe, 8 p.m. Washtenaw Audubon Soc.-Trip to Ottawa Wildlife Refugee and Crane Creek, Ohio, Pittsfield School parking lot, 8 a.m. Bring lunch. Info: 663- 2223. MONDAY. FILMS Cinema Guild-Sisters, Old Arch. Aud., 7,9:05 p.m. AAFC-Fort Apache, 7 p.m., She Wore a Yellow Ribbon, 9:15 p.m., Aud. SA, Angell. Arbor Alliance-Better Active Today than Radioactive Tomorrow, 2235 Angell, 7:30 p.m. SPEAKERS Center for Near Eastern & N. African Stud.-Andrew S. Ehrenkreutz, "The Mysterious Dinars from Zawila,"'Lane Hall Commons Rm., noon. Office of Minority Student Affairs-Sara Goddard Power, James Waters, Leon Atchinson, Millie Jeffry, "Affirmative Action, Retention of Students, and Access of Women and Minorities to Higher Education," Whitney Aud., Schl. of Ed., lp.m. Career Planning & Placement-Dorothy Bestor, "Careers Unlimited: Options for Graduate Students in Humanities," W. Conf. Rm., Rackham, 4 p.m. Education-Elizabeth Cohen, "The Multiple Ability Classroom: An Application of Expectation States Theory,"1322 Schl. of Ed., 4 p.m. St. Mary's Chapel-Panel discussion by inmates from Milan Fed. Correctional Inst., "Life Inside," Chapel Lounge, 7 p.m. Asian American Assoc.-Amy Uno Ishii, "America's Concentration Camps," slide presentation, Gold Rm., Martha Cook, 7:30 p.m. Career Planning & Placement-Dorothy Bestor, "The Humanities Dilemma: What Can I Do With a Major in ...?", Aud. D., Angell, 7:30 p.m. Southern Africa: The Year of the Child-Panel discussion, "Growing Up 4 lack in Southern Africa," League, 8 p.m. Center for Western European Studies-Danilo Dolci, "Educational Experiments and the People of Sicily," Anderson Rm., Union, 3 p.m.; $ "Organizing Peasants for Sicilian Development," Assembly Hall, Rackham, 8 p.m. Undergraduate Political Science Assoc.-Carl Pursell, Conf. Rms. 1, 2, 3, Union, 7:30 p.m. Law Schl. Placement Comm.-Rick Wiener, "A Career in Politics Using a Law Degree," Lawyer's Club Lounge, 4 p.m. American Friends Service Comm.-"Perilous New Directions: U.S.- Soviet Confrontation in the Middle East," 1414 Hill, 7:30 p.m. By KEITH RICHBURG Special to the Daily CHICAGO-When Vice-President Walter Mondale visited the Lincoln Memorial Church of Christ on Chicago's south side, the congregationalists nodded in a collective "Amen" as the reacher, Illinois State Senator Charles Chew, delivered unto them the gospel of Chicago politics. "Some people in this city have gotten power drunk," Chew told the Saturday morning gathering. "There was an article in the paper with the mayor of this city saying 'Maybe I'll let Jimmy Carter march in the (St. Patrick's Day) parade 'Nobody 'lets' the President do anything, "The idea of a power drunk woman who got into office through false promises who would make a statement that we would 'let' the president march in the St-Patrick's Day Parade!" THE "POWER DRUNK woman" to whom Chew referred is Chicago's combative and controversial mayor, Jane Byrne. Byrne, who is supporting Democratic Sen. Edwvard Kennedy in his challenge to unseat President Carter, has thrown the weight of the Cook County organization behind Kennedy's lagging campaign. But in the black communities on Chicago's south side, if the message is anti-Jane Byrne and anti-machine, they love it. It was state controller Roland Burris, during his term at the pulpit, who put the message in its simplest terms : "The Carter-Mondale ticket is doing well downstate. What we have to do is deliver the votes here in Chicago." UNDER THE LATE Mayor Richard Daley, only the machine could deliver the votes. But the Carter campaign, headed here by Mondale ampaigning in Jimmy Carter's absence, has made Jane Byrne and the Chicago machine the principal opponent in the March 18 primary. Since her much-publicized defection to the Kennedy campaign last November, Byrne has worked tirelessly for Kennedy and for her hand-picked candidate for the state's attorney's office. Byrne has told Kennedy she will deliver the delegates on election day, though most polls here show the Senator trailing by as much as three to one. IN ILLINOIS' Democratic primary there are actually two elections-"beauty contest" to measure popular vote, and the selection of delegates committed to the candidate for the New York nominating convention this summer. THREE WARD leaders have announced their support of-President Carter, and in many ways, Byrne's support of Kennedy has helped drive more supporters into the Cartercamp. The mayor's threatened reprisals against city workers not supporting Kennedy have come across as heavy- handed. But while Mondale took his anti-Jane Byrne road show to Chicago's black communites, Kennedy has been doing well among Jewish organizations. In fact, Kennedy has been making as many inroads in the Jewish community as Mondale has been making with blacks. Of the botched U.N. vote, Kennedy asked, "Was it a communictions gap or Of the botched U.N. vote, Kennedy asked, "Was it a communications gap or a credibility gap?" His speech, which was interrupted a dozen times with applause at references to Israel's security, went over well with the Jewish leaders present. That same group practically booed and hooted Carter campaign manager Robert Strauss and Commerce Secretary Philip Klutznick right off the stage when they came the day before to explain the U.N. "mistake." Kennedy has far from conceded the black vote to Carter. Campaigning at Reverend Jesse Jackson's Operation PUSH headquarters in Chicago, Kennedy told the predominantly black audience that under the Carter administration, "You are nobody.". and Special Guest Idris Muhammed Richie, ~Keeper of the Flame" Cole Saturday April" 12th 8pm Michigan Theatre TICKETS: $6.50 reserved go on sale Tuesday, March 18 at the Mich.Union Brix Office.Tickets also available at School ki d's and Discount Records in Ann Arbor. More info - 763-2071. Mondale, headquarters speaking yesterday at PUSH disagreed. TICKETS FOR TiHE JOHN DENVER CONCERT FRIDAY. APRIL 11, 1980 are available only at, Metro Hudson Stores at this time The Daily regrets any inconvenience caused by this error. I I dil I WW"NWA% Ui~ \ r~ X -..