"A MASTERPIECE!" -PAUL D. ZIMMERMAN, Newsweek WINNER OF 2 ACADEMY AWARDS! Plus Oscar-Winning Cartoon "The Crunch Bird" 231 S. State St. 7 m FEATURE AT ,3, 5 7 & 9P.M. Dial 662-6264 SHOW F:- R __ NEWS PHONE: 764-0542 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 C14 r Sfri i n a t 14 page three Ann Arbor, Michigan Wednesday, April 19, 1972 TODAY Residential College Open Hearing to discuss the RC Review Report neWs brief s by The Associated Press THE ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY, (EPA) in its first test of a tough new antipollution provision, has ordered an electric power plant to switch to low-sulfur fuel within 12 days. William Ruckelshaus, an EPA administrator, issued the order Monday, requiring the Delmarva Power and Light Co. at Delaware; City, Del., to comply with federal air-quality standards as set down in the 1970 Clean Air Act. Heavily affected by the order is the large Getty Oil Co., which both supplies the high-sulfur fuel now used by the plant and uses its electricity and process steam for a nearby Getty refinery. A Delmarva spokesman said compliance with the order would cost about $2.5 million a year, which would be passed along auto-; matically in charges to customers. Getty has estimated the switch would cost it some $10,000 a. day.{ COMMUNIST-CONTROLLED UNIONS, representing over halfI the labor force in Uruguay, yesterday began a two-day general strike, as the party buried seven of its members killed in a Sbattle with police. A gun fight at a Communist Party district headquarters broke PresidentrNixon yesterda out Monday when the government claimed Tupamaro guerrillas, Rose Garden. against whom it is waging war, took refuge in the building._ Congress Saturday suspended all civil rights and declared a state' 4-3 DECIS ON: of "internal war" after the Tupamaros assassinated two policemen, ! a navy captain and a former undersecretary of the interior Friday t morning. * * uprem Flanganto testif in ITT study WASHINGTON 1P) - White House aide Peter Flanigan agreed yesterday to testify be- fore the Senate Judiciary Committee and cleared away a major roadblock holding up the confirmation of Richard G. Kleindienst as attorney general. Flanigan said he would testify only in limited fashion on what he knows about the out-of-court settlement last summer of three antitrust suits filed by the govern- ment against Intrenational Tele- phone & Telegraph Corp. In a letter to Sen. Sam J. Er- vin (D-N.C.), Flanigan said he would talk willingly about how he, arranged for eparation of a key financial analysis which Justice Department officials say played a major role in their decision not to carry the ITT cases to the Su-, preme Court. Former Asst. Atty. Gen. Richard. McLaren testified the study FRani- gan arranged for, written by New York investment banker Richard Ramsden, played a central role in what until last July had been a determined effort to carry the ITT cases to the Supreme Court. According to Executive privilege Flanigan cannot be forced to tes- tify. Conversations and letters be- tween the President and his aides 2553 LSA Bldg. (Regents Room) 3-5 p.m. -Associated Press Presidential greeting ay welcomes members of China's table tennis team in the White 'House All members of LSA and RC are invited! I A POLITICAL CLASH RESULTED yesterday from the leak[ of secret papers dealing with Chancellor Willy Brandt's treaty negotiations with the Soviet Union. The alleged excerpts from the papers concern the Bonn-Moscow talks that led to Brandt's 1970 treaty with the Russians renouncing he use of force and recognizing German territorial losses in World War II. Lawmakers who oppose Brandt in an upcoming election have seized the issue and claim the papers create the impression Brandt gave away too many bargaining points and hurt the chances for eventual German reunification. Brandt's nonagression treaties with Moscow and Warsaw are a key issue in the state election Sunday, and the winning party will loyalty ie Court rules Mass. pledge constitutional WASHINGTON 0P) - The Su- preme Court, led by Chief Justice Warren Burger, has approved a Massachusetts loyalty oath that requires public employes to pledge to oppose the overthrow of the4 government. "We are not charged with cor- recting grammar but with enforc- be able to influence the treaties' chances of ratification in early May. ing a Constitution," Burger said * 4yesterday in delivering a 4-3 deci- THE IRISH REPUBLICAN ARMY (IRA) yesterday buried a so htteot~snttovge slain commander in one of the biggest funeral marches ever seenItormionhebks About 10,000 mourners lined the two-mile funeral march route, The decision reverses a panel of paying their last respects to Joseph McCann, commander of the 1st threefderaljudges ineBstonw Belfast Brigade of the IRA'a Marxist-oriented Official wing. literalistic approach" and declared The fatal shooting of McCann by British paratroopers Saturday the oath invalid in 1969. touched off a wave of gun battles in which four people died and 26 others were wounded. Justices William Douglas, Wil- -*liam Brennan Jr. and Thurgood Marshall found the oath in con- MICHIGAN'S SUPREME COURT has granted leave to appeal flict with the free-speech guaran-! in the Regents case against the Michigan Relations Commission tees of ,the First Amendment and EN d nnAh Uh i it I t nd R sidents Association. dissented. Burger recalled the observation recently departed colleague, stice John Harlan, that "almost y word or phrase may be ren- red vague and ambiguous by ;section with a semantic scal- ,1 The decision represents success Burger in swinging the court ound on the subject. During the st decade the court more often an not has struck down loyalty hs. And two years ago, when a assachusetts oath was before the urt in a preliminary case, only irger and Harlan spoke up for it. Justice Harry Blackmun, not iexpectedly, sided with Burger in sterday's decision. What made e difference was that they were ned by Justices Potter Stewart d Byron White, the court's piddle men." Justices Lewis Powell Jr., and illiam Rehnquist, recent ap- intments of President Nixon, did t participate because the case s argued before they joined the urt. The Massachusetts oath was allenged by Lucretia Richard- n. She was fired from her job a sociologist at a Boston mental spital in 1968 because she re- sed to take the oath.' Concerning the thrust of the th, Burger maintains it only re- ires that government workers BOX OFFICE OPEN AT 7:00 SHOW STARTS AT DUSK fore the court. can be kept from the public under All public employes in the state the constitution'al separation of are - automatically discharged if powers among the three branches they refuse to take the oath. of government. Guidance problem solved; Apollo 16 still moonbound commit themselves not to use il- legal force. In this respect, he said, the oath is like the ones taken by Presidents, members of Congress, and even lawyers who practice be- (I uv Cx) ana oeuniversit yinterns ana neaie mnbual. The action allows both MERC and the Interns and Residents Association to have their case heard by the state Supreme Court. F, ,1 and WCBN PRESEN T poi The Michigan Daily, edited and man- no aged by students at the University ofa wa Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- coU igan. 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor,j Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- cha day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates:1 by son carrier, $11 by mail. as: Summer Session published Tuesday ho through Saturday morning. Subscrip- fuS tion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus area); $6.50 local mail (in Mich. or C Oh.o); $7.50 non-local mail (other states oa and foreign). qu: SPACE CENTER, Houston (W) - Apollo 16 astronauts heading toward a moon landing worked with ground controllers yester- day and overcame a guidance problem that briefly froze their spaceship in one position. Systems worked out at Mis- sion Control were promptly put into effect by the spacemen to correct the deficiency. Officials attributed the guid- ance problem to an errant elec- trical surge, which confused a spaceship computer early yes- terday and caused it to send commands which locked the guidance system. This, in ef- fect, wiped out the basic refer- ence needed by the spacecraft to locate and steer itself in space. Flight Controller Phil Shaffer said a computer program w a s being developed which would instruct the on board computer to ignore such electronic signals in the future. - The astronauts were in no danger from the guidance prob- lem because the spatecraft has a, backup system. However, if the primary system could nat have been repaired the m oGo n landing would have been can- celed. With the guidance problem sol ved, the command ship Casper and its lunar lander Orion, will hurtle around the moon this af- ternoon and the astronauts will fire a long rocket burst to settle the spacecraft into lunar orbit. Astronauts John Young and Charles Duke Jr. will guide Or- ion to a landing on a plateau, high in the southern mountains of the moon tomorrow. I A WEEKEND OF GOLDEN MEMORIES 8 p.m. Friday, April 21 to 8 p.m. Saturday, April 22 Solid Gold on WCBN AM & FM AND THEN 8 p.m.-SATURDAY, April 22 II Campus Sock Hop UNION BALLROOM WITH & The Javelins Chastity & The Belts I. m". F This program not recommended for pre-teens NOW! Shown 7:30 & 10:55 Plus at 9:20 SHELLY WINTERS "WHO SLEW AUNTIE ROOT P ---sea HILLEL STUDENT ELECTIONS OII $2.50 PER CARLOAD 3 HORRORIFIC HITS "BEWARE OF 1. "I Drink Your Blood" THE BRETHREN" 2. "I Eat Your Skin" 3. "Sweet Baby PLUS Charlie" "WILLARD" Program Rated R .~ .. -CANDIDATES- PRESIDENT: Ben Romer, Howard Lederman VICE-PRESIDENTS: Brad Londy, Gary Huber ALLINTERESTED STUDENTS ARE ELIGIBLE TOs VOTE Ballots may be obtained at Hillel, 1429 Hill before Monday, April 24, 5 p.m. r Prizes-FREE Admission NIGHTLY AT 7:00-9:15 -S.. MATINEES Wed., Sat., Sun. 1:00-3:15 They used every passion in their incredible duel! The Last Grad Coffee Hour of the semester Could Be A Beginning For You Come On WED.,.APRIL 10 8-10 P.M. 4th Floor Rackham LEMONADE AND COOKIES FOR ALL Students and University Community Summer Study/Travel Abroad EARN UP TO 12 HOURS CREDIT I GRAD STUDENTS-SPECIAL INTENSIVEI " LONDON 0 PARIS " VIENNA 0 ISRAEL LANGUAGE COURSES * SPAIN t ITALY U E~- -.'---.- - - - - -------* - I lI nrr. A R I ..." "A w...... w . 1 1, 1,040 2 A 04 r- ln-r - - sA_--