MORGAN Alice's Restaurant Alice Lloyd Hall 7 & 9:30 +LSATURDAY, FEBRUARY 17+" NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 (ZIP S11tidotin a iI,44l page three Ann Arbor, Michigan Friday, February 18, 1972 ' iiY? '}:j;i ;Y'.,.:"Q'f'{ti: :;t :,i\\y:.ku".M1;"f,.":::.;.?.'..::?v::.i'",-:":"v.;?j+is ,4l:i:::t'n4:::.p}f}:}:?v' n..' iihv: _ . :}$'v ;:}\,Q"(' }ji. k;+:?^' . : i ':t;;'.ti:gtiF,.j it;"'.\+:ii}f: '<:k .iljq ::\: iJivJ :. . h.. 'ri ' ,:jv': \ :;:; }ti: :Y: ......:. . i"...v. {"hv:. v.:::4nv:f...........4.n..v.:...}:.4.vr......:..T:i:v...........A. N:..... n.v...r - STUDENT SERVICES POLICY BOARD open discussion on Health Service '72 Budget FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 18 1:00 p.m. Third Floor-Michigan Union I news briefs THE CENSUS BUREAU has reported that the nation is rapid- ly approaching zero population growth rates among younger couples. In a study, the bureau claimed that the average number of childen expected by wives aged 18 to 24 dropped from 2.9 to 2.4 between 1967 and 1971. This is the sharpest decrease since 1955, when the birth expectation statistics were first published. Applied to all women in this age group, this could mean a fertility rate of 2.2 child- ren. Demographers cannot say whether lower fertility rates will con- tinue until the year 2000. They warn that a population "bomb" re- mains, since the trend could turn up again as quickly as it has turned down. A 1969 GRADUATE of the University of Pennsylvania has been elected a trustee of that school. Charles Krause, currently a graduate student at Princeton Uni- versity is the first alumnus of Penn's undergraduate schools to be elected a trustee. Krause's election was made possible by provisions of a resolution passed by the trustees last May. * * * FUNDAMENTALIST PREACHER CARL McINTIRE announc- ed he will lead rallies and demonstrations in protest of President Nixon's trip to China. McIntire said Nixon "will sip tea with bandits, partake of the dainties of mass murderers and exchange compliments with the slave masters. He will contribute to the deception of millions." McIntire said he plans to travel to 18 cities between Feb, 19 and 26. GENERAL MOTORS was accused Wednesday of restraining evidence of sofety defects in its Corvair automobiles during a hearing of the Senate Commerce Committee. The attorney for. a man allegedly injured due to carbon mon- oxide fumes emanating from the car, testified that his client was forced to turn over incriminating evidence as a condition of an out- of-court settlement to a suit resulting from the injury. This latest development is another in a long history of controversy surrounding the rear-engined Corvair, manufactured between 19601 and 1969. INDUSTRY ECONOMI Furtherrice nseE -T&T.TYrbnm DIAL 8-6416 2 FUN FESTS Nixon begins first rpinto People's China WASHINGTON () - President Nixon yesterday began his "jour- ney for peace" to China - a mission he said he was undertaking for all mankind in search of a common ground with the long-isolated Asian Communist power. Before he boarded the helicopter for the trip to Andrews Air Force base and the waiting presidential jetliner, the Spirit of '76, the President made a short speech. JIe stepped onto the South Lawn of the White House, where spokesmen said 8,000 persons ringed the area. Newsmen said the crowd was much smaller, estimating it "The funniest movie I've seen this year! Just go, run to see it!" - New York Post lOVERS AND THY SHOOT TODAY ___SHOWN AT 9 P.M. 7 P.M. PRESIDENT AND MRS. NIXON wave farewell yesterday as they board a Marine helicopter enroute to Andrews Air Force Base, the first leg of their trip to China. ARTILLERY HIT: U.6,S0 ends rai ds on N. Vet air defense SAIGON (4') - U.S. warplanes ended two days of heavy raids' yesterday against Soviet-supplied long-range artillery and antiaircraft air defenses inside North Vietnam. The command's preliminary reports indicated that five artillery guns were destroyed or damaged in the raids and that the strikes on the missile and antiaircraft sites also were successful. The fear of American officials is that the big guns might be used to furnish an artillery screen for large scale North Vietnamese attacks across the DMZ, as they were for the invasion and capture of the plain of Jars in Laos last December. --- -One Air Force Phantom was shot l s down and its two-man crew TS reportedmissing during the strike. Radio Hanoi claimed North Viet- namese forces shot down s e v e n p ec ted U.S. planes, capturing and killing a number of pilots. The U.S. com- mand refused to comment on the NA ' Box Offices Open at 6:30 Show Starts at 7:00 PAUL HENL NEWMAN FON ... at 2,000 to 2,500. In his brief remarks, Nixon cal- led his statement of last July 15, when he announced that a secret summer mission to Peking by his foreign affairs adviser, Henry Kis- singer, had set up the unprece- dented summit. "That statement was, as you will recall, that this would be a: journey for peace," he said. Nixon noted, too, a toast offer ed by Chinese Premiere Chou En Lai when Kissinger was in China. "'The American people are aE great people,' " he quoted Chou1 as saying. " 'The Chinese people' are a great people. The fact that1 they arenseparated by a v a s t ocean and great difference's in philosophy should not prevent them from . finding common ground.'"l Nixon said if his talks with Com- munist leaders bring progress to- ward finding that common ground "the world will be a much safer world." Motioning to the hun- dreds of school children on the lawn, Nixon added that he hoped1 "all those young children there" would have a chance "to grow up in a world of peace.- Before turning to walk across a1 red carpet between a military honor guard to the helicopter, the chief executive said: "If there was a postscript I hope might be writ-, ten in regard to this trip, it would1 be the words on the plaque left, on the moon by our first astro- nauts when they landed there: " 'We came in peace for a11 mankind.'" A sizable crowd l7hed the fence encirclingtherWhite House on the south side and some were hold- ing up large signs. One of thera read: "Nixon's war is ;scalating;" In a related development. Na- tionalist China yesterday declar- ed it will consider null and void any agreement involving its rights and interests that may be, reach- ed as a result of President Nix- on's visit to Peking. The Michigap Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan.sNews phone: 764-0552. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich-1 igan, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor,; Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- ~sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier, $11 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday; through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5 by carrier, $6 by mail. RY DA LEE REMICK Laird shifts stand on sub Construetion WASHINGTON (R) - Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird depart- ed from an earlier statement yes- terday and said the United States will abide by any limitations Im- posed by arms negotiators on new missile-firing submarines. Previously he said the United States intends to build the sub- marines regardless of an arms limitation agreement with Mos- cow. In an early-morning television interview, Laird divorced the strategic arms limitation t a l k s (SALT) from the Pentagon's re- quest for crash development of the new undersea-launched mis- sile system (ULMS). "I do not assicoate the ULMS request with the SALT talks or the arms limitation agreement," the secretary said on the NBC Today Show. "This is a replace- ment submarine, a follow-on sub- marine, that's absolutely Essen- tial if we are going to stay up with the momentum of the Joviet Union." But later, meeting with report- ers on Capitol Hill, Laird sai, "If there are limitations. . . ar- rivedsat through the negotiating process, those limitations will, be abided by." Laird shifted his position after speaking briefly with President Nixon on the White House lawn as the President was leaving on his China trip. What they dis- cussed was not determined, but shortly afterward Laird qualified his earlier remarks on ULMS. Nixon's position has been that he would not hesitate to order a new round of U.S. strategic wea- pons into production if the SALT talks are protracted while t h e Soviets continue to expand their land-and-sea-based missile forces. Defense officials have a'so indi- cated that the decision to push ahead faster on ULMS was a signal to the Soviets to come to an agreement at SALT. "SOMETIMES A GREAT NOTION" GP NIGHTLY AT 7:05 & 11:10 PLUS CLINT EASTWOOD ELIZABETH HARTMAN "THE REGUILED" R ~WWE~1.- WIL.V 47 0l WjA FRI.-SAT.4Ut4. DUSTIN HOFFMAN JON VOIGHT "MIDNIGHT COWBOY" R PLUS "THE CHRISTINE JORGENSEN STORY" ALSO ALLEN FUNT'S "What Do You Say to a Naked Lady?" WASHINGTON (A') - Business economists predict that big fed- eral deficits and easy money will thwart President Nixon's effort to reduce inflation to a 2 to 3 per cent rate this year. A consensus report from. 20 economists representingrmajor industries was delivered yester- day to nearly 100 top industrial- ists at a closed meeting of the Business Council with Phase 2 officials. A summary of the panel's forecast, released to newsmen, said a majority of the econo- mists "voice strong concern about the continued stimulation of the economy resulting from monetary and fiscal policy and the effect this may have in the form of more rapid inflation this year and in 1973." The industry experts foresaw "a strong economy through 1972 and into 1973" but anticipated a growth of inflation across the economy averaging 3 to 4 per cent. That matched the 3.5 per cent inflation forecast issued W e d - nesday by economists of the Na- tional Planning Association, ex- cept that NPA said inflation could not be held even to that rate unless "the administration succeeds in making the Phase 2 price and wage controls more effective." The NPA report went on: "This will require marked im- provements in the performance of the Price Commission, whose lunch non-profit cooperative conspiracy coffeehouse-theoter 330 Maynard Street UM Film Society actions to date have certainly not been consistent with its an- nounced target of 2.5 per cent or even the 3.5 per cent infla- tion rate projected here." } The NPA is a privately sup- portedmresearch organization with . members from industry, la-I bor and education. Price Commission chairman C. Jackson Grayson and Pay Board chairman George Boldt addres- sed the Business Council session at which the report of the panel of economists was presented. A Pay Board spokesman said Boldt told the industry group he remains highly optimistic that the controls will bring the infla- tion rate down to the target range. Boldt said the economy needs "a substantial and continuing increase in productivity," ac- cording to the spokesman, and predicted that this alone would "go a long way toward stem- ming inflation and speeding the day when controls are not need- ed." report. The massive, air strikes came as President Nixon prepared to de- part on his journey to China "for peace," and were the heaviest since last December. The U.S. command maintained the air strikes were "in accord- ance with our repeatedly announc- ed determination to protect Amer- ican lives as thousands of addi- tional U.S. forces are being with- drawn from Vietnam." Many observers, however, saw the air campaign as an attempt to squash any possible N o r t h (Vietnamese offensive which, if successful could prove embarras- sing to the President in his talks with Chinese leaders. In a related development, the Navy announced in San Diego that the carrier Kitty Hawk with 80, planes was heading for Vietnam a month ahead of schedule. The 7th Fleet already has three car- riers in Vietnamese waters. ............-...._... TONIGHT! at Public Health Auditorium DOUBLE FEA TURE SPECIAL i Up Madison Ave "The .year's es , comegyr -SATURDAY REVIEW AiceT A FRANKOVICH PRODUCTION IS THIS WHAT YOU SAID? "IT'S ABOUT TIME SOMETHING. LIKE THIS WAS SHOWN!" "IT'S A BIG COME-ON! NOT WHAT IT PRETENDS TO BE." "SHOWS THAT MAKING LOVE IS NOT LIKE SHAKING HANDS." "IT'S TERRIBLE THAT THEY SHOW MOVIES LIKE THIS- I CAN'T BELIEVE IT!" "I THOUGHT IT WAS TERRIFIC -HAD A REAL MEANING!" '_L e "A LOT OF FANCY WORDS TO SHOW WHAT IS REALLY AN EROTIC MOVIE!" Couzens Film Co-op Presents THE PROFESSIONALS Starring Burt Lancaster, Lee Marvin, and Claudia Cardinale FEB. 18 & 19-7,9, & 11 p.m. at COUZENS HALL 75c a person $1.00 per couple "PUTNEY SWOPE" The Truth and Soul Movie I I - .., : r -.:: err