W IN N E R! ACADEMY AWARDS INCLUDI G BEST ACTRESS KATHARINE HEPBURN NOW SHOWING AT REGULAR PRICES PETER O'TOO[EKATHARINE HEPBURN 'MARTIN PMlL LION IN Front pallg T14r. £fffrI~gau 43aiju NEWS PHlONE: 7614-0552 BUtSINESS rPHONE: 76.4-055-1 Saturday, September 1 3, 1 969 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three the/ n e w torday bi The "I so iai yi / Ii ii / (l-c S e i f Chains don 't bintd bike thieves I t - t !f . i I ~ I -,c 1 4'-~----..- NOW SHOWING Ir SHOWS AT 1 :15-3:40 6:20-8:50 Saturday and Sunday FIRE ON THE PLAIN Dir. KOW ICHIKANA (1959)4 BANZAI' --RchardiLee4 75&9 - ARCHITECTURE 662-8871 i75C AUDITORIUM4 -IL . kk i 1 LI 'I I h" I I I1 ICI F', 4 AFniu a 0 Er OBSERVERS believe the Thursday meeting of Chinese Premier Chou and Soviet Premier Kosygin (id little to ease tension between the two nations. The wording of the two sides' statements on the talk suggested that recent border clashes were high on the agenda for discussion but ideological issus were avoided. The Soviet news agency Tass saidi both then "openly explaied their positions" and the talks were "useful. The Chinese news Sagency Hsinhua said the men "had a frank conversation". But Hsinhua denounced Kosygin as "chieftan of Soviet revisionism." SENATORS4 HUGH SCOTT AND 1hOW4ARD BAKER an- nounced their candidacies for Senate Minority Leader yester- day. Scott (R-Pa.), the minority whip, is considered one of the more liberal Republican Senators, while Baker (R-Tenn.) is considered a moderate conservative. The two are likely to face another conserva- tive candidate, probably Roman Hruska R I-Neb), in the showdown vote to decide who fills the post left vacant by the death of Everett sDirksen last week. A statement from Hruska is expected today. Senator Margaret Chase Smith (R-M., chairman of the Senate Republican Conference, said yesterday she would call a meeting on the leadership question "as soon as practical- FIGHTING IN THlE MIDEAST continued yesterday as Israeli warplanes hit Egyptian targets for the fourth straight day and while Lebanese and Jordanian forces launched rocket attacks against Israeli border settlements. In other action, eight Arab guerrillas wre repored kiled by an Israeli patrol operating 25 miles north of the Dead Sea. And, as the Jewish New Year began, Israeli leaders expressed hope for peace but warned of the likelihood of more trouble aead. "Arab leaders must be beginning to realize that should thy embark on a further war they will again suffer defeat, said Israeli 1Prime Minister Golda Meir. A CONFERENCE of black elected officials ii Washington told Administration representatives yesterday that blacks and the poor must be given a higher priority in the government's pro- grams. "Tell the President that people are losing confidence in their tomorrow", said one southern woman. "tell him I believe hie can do as good a job as anybody else-if he only wants to." Secretary of Transportation John Volpe told the conference that future highway projects which involve dislocating people will (not be approved until adequate replacement housing has already {been provided for' and built. ' Herbert Stein, of the President's Council of Economic Advisers, noted the end of the Vietnam war would still poe "hard decisions" about the use of the new funds thus made availabe THlE SENATE voted yesterday for a study of the role of j aircraft carriers in the age of nuclear missiles, after decisively defeating a move to defer construction of a new carrier. The original amendment, which would have cut more than $377 million from the Defense Department's $20 billion military procure-, ment authorization bill, was sponsored by Senators Walter Mondale (D-Minn.) and Clifford Case (R-NJ). The study represented a minor victory for Senators trying to lower the level of Pentagon spending after a series of major defeats, as the Senate prepares to conclude its deliberations on the military authorization bill. THlE NIXON AD)MINISTIRATION modified yesterday its proposal for a cut In funds for federally financed medical re- search. The Administration, which had previously urged a 20 per cent cut in the research programs as part of a government-wide effort to reduce inflation through budget pruning, will instead recommend cuts of only 5 to 10 pci' cent, said Dr. Roger Egeberg. "We can't go ahead as a cotuntry unless we put all the money we can into basic research" said Egeberg. an assistant secretary of Ihealth, education and welfare. CYCLAMATE, the most widely used form of artificial sweetener, may be a cancer hazard, the FDA reported yesterday. Dr. Marvin Legator, leader of the research team investigating the product, said chromosome breaks were produced in both bone marrow cells and reproductive cells of male rats receiving injections of one of the metabolic breakdown products of cyclamate. "Unless you can show differences between how animals handle a given material-" said Legator, "and how it wotld be handled in man, you must allow the animal results to stand unless and until refuted." a ITALY IS TRYING to establish diplomatic relations with Communist China, Foreign Minister Aldo Moro said yesterday. However, said Mor, in a session of the Italian Parliament's Foreign Affairs Committee, Italy has no intention of withdrawing from NATO. Observers attribute the new emplhasis on relations with the Peking regne to the economic benefits which would accrte to Italy from trade with China. By MICHIAEL TI'IORI*' One of 'larg, 'et Sohni's dutties ii the Office of Sttmcleiit,Comnnunl-1 'ittrV Rlat t ;:v':' to thzr l ul'iv&l- sit y tfigulres on stolen bicycles. In the at w ,eeks she has been overwhelmed iith work. "'I stropnziy beliI~ve Ithe're is an organized grotup'n tin' area doing much o1 th;, stealing." she said. Since Sept . 1. seventy licenced bikes with an esitima ted value of $3.700 have been ralported stolen to the office. And since a la rge percentiiage o1 student bikes do not have Ann Arbor' license stickers, heir th-ft s ti 4e not w porl ed toa either the of- fice or the police. Miss Sohni est mated there are 4000 studient-owxned bikes on cam- pus this fall. She added that the fig tre was as high as 70'?0 before mno orcycle s Pecan I looa ar. 15i- .'e.r veter~an if t he A A'bor go tee departme nt. said'the thiev- 'ry was done by "kids who steal emt r md strip 'em.- Wh tkerotlined three steps lia~ cr~u'd aid students in avoid- nn; the loss ofA heir pedal power. Fl st,.t ek bicyc'e owner should lpurmchase a city license and retain the record of the license in a safe pulay~ To get a license, you must find the, serial number which is imprint 'd somewhere on the bike frame. Secoi ic. lock thle bike. prefer- ab'3' to srnethine, sturdy like a rack. v nci. Third, don't leave the bike in a public place for a long period of time. Decent.. he ts hve involved 11' lre L0h e y had s& conidently pa-ked their bike to find nothing at all, a neatly cut chain, just the front wheel, or an older bike left in exchange for he $10)j ten-speed mc del. "'The five and ten s ,eed racing bikes go very fast." MIs s Sohni said. She noted that the police have b, en busier lately and that the University no longer enforces reg- ulations concerning bicycles. F. D. Plotner, owner of Campus Bike and Toy for 26 years, ack- nowledged that t h e police have been deluged with reports of -D,,ii--Jerry XWehsler Camps bicycles face II uzard mis aeistence FEDRICO FELLINI'S NIGHTS OF CABRIA "FELLINI'S FINEST FILM .. Pauline Kael SEPTEMBER 12-13 RobeiiWiItianL turns homeI stolen bikes. He tasked tar- coin- :muni. y assistance. "If you s ee a person fooling around with a bike with a wrench "or. ho ' st'eet, gldr tp ard int~r- t're " he said. Plot ner~ adde ci that favorite places for bike thieves are the Union, the UGLI. and the YMCA Police h a v e recovered 2000 Likes since 1962. Those that are not. claimed are sold at auction following a 35 to 50 day waiting period. Since 1962, 4200 reports of stolen licensed bikes have been recor'ded. Bike lic-nses 1 o r 1969exiie S?pt. 30. New ones can be pu- chased in the ity clerk's office in city hall. On S -pt. 24-26. they will be sold in Sttdent Activities Bldg. S WASHINGTON 0_ '- The US. Commission on Civil Rights ac- cused the Nixon administration yest.erday of making a major re- treat. on school desemer'ationi en- forcemeat in the South. Ini an unusual public' stat ement, the independent fact-f i n d i n g agency acctused Attv, Geni. John N. Mitcherl and Secretary of Welfare Robert HI. Finch of usinm "a mis- lPadinmr numbers geroe" to imply that full ine~rat ion is "just TIn f-ei. ill, 'i~imi-iomt said, '''tP'Phn ontinuers a; the r"'tte-r'n and lint t' e eentio, of education in many statns.- l\iroreoveP I the a e ny a'serted. "eCPF"'t, adminisration a ct io0ns Cotuld futher retard the slow pro- 'ress in civil rv~its since the Sn- "')'fle Court's 1V4A decision out- 1a«-'inn see'e'at~d schools. Sneoificallyc' ited ?w"e: --Htotuse massage of a proposal_ ieoos-~d at tha tme by the ad- t)ninistration---by Ronr. Jamie Whit- ten