NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 im4c 4bp 2Utr4t.g n Ditll page three -9 Ann Arbor, Michigan UNANIMOUSLY news briefs ACCLAIMED AS + "ONE OF THE ALL TIME By The Associated Press GREAT FILMS I" WINNER OF 7 ACADEMY AWARDS WHILE SECRETARY OF DEFENSE Melvin Laird was warn- ing Congress of a serious military manpower crisis unless the ; that made greatin Co Tetionsto.; draftwas renewed, the Army was telling its recruiters to turn PETER OTOO( I .ndORnA sta'SAT.f&U Aaway veterans wanting to re-enlist. an MRSAF£~ik1~~ A.&SUN. AT away 1 P.M., 4:1 5 ". . . current re-enlistments of individuals on active duty are: Fr Man.,Tues. & 7:30 sufficient to maintain the career-content of the Army under its at 7:3ONLY ON WASHTENAW AVE ~ Creduced structure. Thus, there is no present need for the enlistment 1 t mles east of A eear of prior service personnel from the civilian community," said a Sept. Arborland-U.S. 23 ON SUNDAY 14 letter from the Army's personnel office.i Four days earlier, Laird wrote Senate Armed Services CommitteeI - - Chairman John Stennis, (D-Miss.), urging immediate passage of the draft bill "in the interest of national security." 'ADULTSONY* * X A .LTS ONLY troitAN ALLEGED HIJACKING was foiled yesterday, when De- trait police arrested a woman carrying dynamite and a pistol E :DIRECTOR HOB8S i 'aboard a Jetliner at Metropolitan Airport Saturday, September 25, 1971 PROTECTIVE REACTION' U.S. raids hit storage sites From Wire Service Reports The U.S. command has acknowledged that, in massive strikes earlier this week termed as protective reaction raids, U.S. planes bombed military oil storage areas in North Viet- nam as well as anti-aircraft gun and missile sites. The Tuesday raids, constituting one of the heaviest bombing attacks in three years, were described by the com- { mand as "protective reaction strikes against military targets constituting a threat to the safety of U.S. forces." According to The New York Times, however, officials have acknowledged privately that the administration is using the occasional heavy strikes to keep North Vietnam off bal- ance and prevent a build-up for an enemy offensive. IT IS OUT OF SIGHT Sw OU o: r Role IS A BLEND OF GOYA & FELLINI Barbara Pliskow, authorities said, sought to gain control of the plane and demand the release of Michael Hill, 26, and Ronald Irwin, 19, two members of the Black Panther party. Both men are current-j ly being held in. Detroit's Wayne County jail on murder charges. M Announces A SOVIET AGENT who defected in London and blew the lid Sen. Fred Harris (D-Okla.) ann off a Russian spy network in Britain touched off yesterday the Democratic presidential nominati biggest mass expulsion of diplomats in modern times. story below. The British Foreign Office confirmed reports that the unnamed -- - defector had disclosed documents concerning the network, and an- RESULT UNSURE: nounced that as a result 105 Russians bearing diplomatic passports * are being ordered to quit Britain. -Associated Press candidacy nounces his candidacy for the on as his children look on. See . I 7 r COLORW:. PLUSINITIATION ir1LZ eM482-3300 FREE LIGHTED - PA RK INS BLACK LEADERS are meeting in Chicago this weekend to discuss proposals for solidifying the black vote in 1972 and nom- inating Negro candidates for president and vice president on a "fourth party" ticket. The meeting was called by The National Assembly for a Black Tiwo-China policy closer to UN vote I Sign -ups for Interviews for students interested in serving as members of: * LSA Student Government Executive Council . LSA Student Gov. Administrative Vice-President . LSA Complaint Service " University-wide Judiciary " Joint Student-Faculty Committees including: Library Committee RC Evaluation Curriculum Committee Political Strategy '72. About 60 black political and civil rights lead- UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (P)- ers were reported invited. The United States won another test yesterday on its two-Chinas U.S.-SOVIET TALKS to limit strategic weapons formally plan, but the vote in the U.N. Ended after their fifth round yesterday, with a communique re- General Assembly appeared to in- porting progress toward an agreement. dicate trouble ahead. Conference sources expressed satisfaction with the Helsinki talks The test was on an Albanian and expected further progress when the negotiations meet again move to bar inscription on theI in Vienna on Nov. 15. agenda of an item intended as a A BETTER IDEA Non-polluting engine expected The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced yes- terday the development of an experimental auto engine which, they claim, proves that their 1976 antipollution standards can be met. Last June 30, the EPA adopt- ed standards requiring a 90 per cent reduction in auto engine emissions of carbon monoxide and hydrocarbons by 1975 and of nitrogen oxides by 1976. Both EPA and the Ford Motor Co., the engine's developer, agreed the experimental engine is far from commercial produc- tion. But EPA Administrator William Ruckelshaus said t h e test showed "that the truly clean car is not as far away as many people thought." Another high-ranking E P A official said privately the Ruck- elshaus' statement should coun- terbalance more pessimistic in- dustry views in the public mind and encourage public demand for early development of t h e clean engine. He said Ford officials indi- cated a passenger car version of the experimental e n g i n e might be ready "maybe by 1977." "I don't like the word 'pres- sure'," this official said, "but we have to make sure the com- panies are operating in a poli- tical and social context t h a t makes them be responsive to all these responsibilities." President Nixon mentioned Thursday night in Detroit that the Ruckelshaus statement was coming, and a Ford spokesman said yesterday the company was "upset" at the publicity for its new engine. He said the engine, h a n d- made and operated by skilled technicians, still had a tendency to break down after 5.000 or 6,000 miles and there was no assurance yet that versions suit- able for passenger cars could be successfully mass-produced. A report by EPA technicians agreed: "The test results should be interpreted as reason for in- creased confidence that the 1976 emission standards can be at- tained although not necesarily by the 1976 model year but not as a demonstration that they are feasible with technology that has now become available," the report said. Since 1962, the Army Tank- Automotive Command had been funding research of five differ- ent engine designs based on the "stratified charge" principle. Such engines mix fuel with air inside their combustion cylind- ers, p instead of mixing them in an ,outside carburetor as in the conventional engine. Engines offered by Ford and by Texaco, Inc., were selected in 1967 for further development. vehicle for the so-called "dual representation" formula to seat the People's Republic of China while permitting the Chinese Na- tionalists to remain. The United States won by a vote of 65 to 47 with 16 abstain- ing. This was a substantial mar- gin by normal U.V. standards, but actually it was unusually close for a procedural question of putting an item on the agenda of the as- sembly. After the vote U.S. Ambassa- dor George Bush said he was "tre- mendously pleased," but he added that "we are not taking anything for granted." An analysis of the roll call and the statements made by a number of delegates in the 130-nation as- sembly made it clear that many of them who voted for the U.S. items were opponents or potential opponents of the two-Chinas plan. The mood of the assembly was reflected in part by the fact that no member asked for a recorded vote on the question of inscrib- ing a rival item - backed by Albania and 17 other countries- which would give Peking its "law- ful rights" by expelling the Tai- wan delegation. The United States made no ef- fort to have the assembly re- verse a 12-9 vote in the steering committee Wednesday rejecting a U. S. request for a simultaneous debate on the two rival plans. Bush acknowledged that the steering committee vote had been a setback but he called it a "very minor one. This would indicate an expan- sion of the policy of "protective reaction." Underthe original policy, ex- plained Oct. 9, 1969 by Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird, Ameri- can field instructors were in- structed to seek out and attack enemy troops that threatened the South Vietnamese or themselves. Some months later, the policy was extended to cover U.S. air- craft which flew reconnaissance, missions over North Vietnam al- most daily since full-scale bomb- ing was suspended Nov. 1, 1968. IPilots were authorized to at- tack whenever their radar indi- cated they were about to be at- tacked. A number of massive raids - Tuesday's was the fifth - have been included as "reinforced pro- tective reaction strikes." The North Vietnamese consider the massive raids a violation of the U.S. pledge to cease bombing the North, and cancelled Thurs- day's sessions of the Paris peace talks in protest. White House Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler, however, has said the action was taken for the pur- pose of protecting American for- ces, "is consistent With what the Presidenthas previously indicated would be done, and should not be associated with the Paris talks as such." In related developments, U.S. intelligence has indicated North Vietnam is diverting a substantial labor force to repair the badly damaged Ho Chi Minh supply trail network. U.S. bombers are maintaining heavy pressure on the supply sys- tem. Harris enters Dem. contest WASHINGTON (P) - Sen. Fred Harris of Oklahoma announced yesterday his long-shot candidacy for the Democratic presidential nomination, saying seven years in the Senate have not given him the kind of national impact he wants. "I intend to try to turn this country around before it's t o o late," the 40-year-old senator said. "I believe that a president c a n call this country back to the greatness that is in us." Entering a Democratic f i e 1 d that is certain to be crowded with candidates, Harris said he thinks Maine Sen. Edmund Muskie is "way out front" at this point. Dems split over High Court seat WASHINGTON (A) - S e n a t e Democratic liberals are steering clear of the endorsement House civil rights leaders have given, to Rep. Richard Poff, (R-Va.), for the. Supreme Court. Remarks President Nixon made in Detroit Thursday night were interpreted as boosting Poff's prospects of being nominated to fill one of the two court vacancies created by the retirement of Jus- tice Hugo Black and John Har-f lan. But comments of Democratic senators like Philip Hart of Mich- igan, Hubert Humphrey of Minne- sota, George McGovern of South Dakota and Fred Harris of Okla- homa indicated Poff's selection could touch off a fight in t h e Senate;' Two-earlier attempts by Nixon to place southern conservatives on the court, Judges Clement Hayns- worth Jr., and G. Harrold Cars- well, were rebuffed by the Senate. However, his nominations of Chief Justice Warren Burger and Justice Harry Blackmun, b o t h strict constitutional construction- Cists of the type favored by t h e President, were confirmed by the Senate without opposition. Nixon said in Detroit that he is looking for justices with a judi- cial philosophy similar to Burger's and Blackmun's and he Mention- ed as possible nominees- legislators "with great experience on t h e House and Senate Judiciary Com- mittees." Poff, 47, a 10-term memberof the House and the second-ranking Republican on its Judiciary Com- mittee, fits that description. Re- garded as a "law and order" con- servative, he helped steer Nixon's crime control legislation through , the House last year. Rep. Emanuel Celler, (D .Y. chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, and Rep. William Mc- Culloch, (R-Ohio), the senior GOP member, sent Nixon a tele- gram calling Poff exceptionally well qualified for the Supreme Court. This brought dismay to some civil rights groups who already have begunt attacking votes against all the civilkrights bills passed in the 1960s. Celler and McCullough were the chief House sponsors of the measures. Their endorsement of Poff for will be held room 3M Mon.-Fri., 4-5 p.m. Michigan Union U' 11 I WORSHIP REMARKABLE ! A STUNNING VISUAL RECREATION ! -New York "A MASTERWORK OF POWER AND BEAUTY!A remarkable achievement!" ---Cue Magazine l But he said he considers h i s the Supreme Court failed to stir a chances of winning good, "or I similar response from leaders of wouldn't be running." the civil rights bloc in the Senate. BETHLEHEM UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST' 423 S. Fourth Ave. Telephone 665-6149 Ministers: T. L. Trost, Jr., R. E. Simonson 9:00 a.m.-Morning Prayer. 10:00 a.m. - Worship Service and Church School. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 1833 Washtenaw Ave. SUNDAY 10:30 a.m.-Worship Services. Sunday School (2-20 years) . Infants room available Sunday and Wednesday. Public Reading Room, 306 E. Liberty St. - Mon., 10-9; Tues.-Sat., 10-5. Closed Sun- days and Holidays. For transportation call 668-6427. LUTHERAN STUDENT CHAPEL AND CENTER 801 South Forest at HillI Donald G. Zill, Pastor Sunday Worship, Holy Communion at 9:30 and 11:00 a.m. and 1:00 p.m. 6:00 p.m.-Supper. 7:00 p.m.-Program. Wednesday, 7:30 -p.m.-Worship, St. Michael and All Angels. ------------- PACKARD ROAD BAPTIST CHURCH 25R0 Pnckard Rond-971 -0773 FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH AND WESLEY FOUNDATION State at Huron and Washington Church-662-4536 Wesley-668-6881 Dr. Hoover Rupert, Minister Bartlett Beavin, Campus Minister R. Edward McCracken, Campus Minister 9:30 and 11:00 a.m.-Sermon by Dr. Hoover Rupert: "Christ Alone Delivers Freedom." WESLEY FOUNDATION ITEMS: Sunday, Sept. 26: 5:30 p.m.-Celebration, Wesley Lounge. 6:15 p.m.-Supper, Pine Room, 50c. 7:00-8:30 p.m.-Program with Rev. Richard Cheatham, "The Christian Revolution - New Models for the Church." Monday, Sept. 27: 8:00-9:30 p.m.-"Christian Concepts in the 70's," with Ed McCracken, Wesley Lounge. Wednesday, Sept. 29: Noon-Luncheon Discussion: "Why Situation Ethics?" with Bartlett C. Beavin, Pine Room. Lunch 25c. Out in time for 1 o'clocks. Thursday, Sept. 30: Noon-Luncheon Discussion: "The Christian and Militarism" with Bartlett C. Beavin, Pine Room. Lunch 25c. Out in time for 1 o'clocks. 6:00 p.m.-Wesley Grads (a community of single grad students)-Dinner and meet- ing, Pine Room. Please call in reservations, 668-6881. Friday, Oct. 1: 6:00 p.m.-Young Marrieds-- Dinner and UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL (The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod) 1511 Washtenaw Ave. Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor Sunday at 9:15 and at 10:30 a.m.-Services. Sunday at 9:15 a.m.-Bible Study. Sunday at 6:00 p.m.-Supper-Program. Wednesday at 10:00 p.m.-Midweek Vespers. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1432 Washtenaw Ave. Sermon: "Fear Not." THE FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH 1917 Washtenaw Ave. Erwin A. Gaede, Minister Church School and Service at 10:30 a.m.- Sermor topic: "The Moral Monkey on Our Back" I -- - - CAMPUS CHAPEL 1236 Washtenaw Donald Postema, Minister 10:00 a.m.--Morning Worship. 1 NORTHSIDE PRESBYTERIAN ST. AIDAN'S EPISCOPAL NORTH CAMPUS 1679 Broadway, opposite Baits Dr. Holy Eucharist (Episcopal)-8:30 and 10:00 a.m. Mornina Worshin (Presbhvterion) -10.00 a.m "Stunning, Richly Romantic!" -Playboy I "EXTRAORDINARILY BEAUTIFUL!" --Rex Reed "A MASTERPIECE!" ---McCall's -TONIGHT- Saturday, Sept. 25 See You at Mao --and- PRAVDA the first, and the latest, films by the Dziga- Vertox collective: Jean-Luc Godard and Jean-Pierre Gusin. See You at Mao (1968) originally British Sounds, a fiction-documentary for British ITV, never shown. PRAVDA (1969) "Godard's best and clearest film to date." (Village Voice) shot underground in Czechoslovakia during the Soviet occupation, at- tacks both Soviet imperialism and Czechoslovak liberalism. -BOTH FILMS IN ENGLISH- ARM/Michigan Film Society at I WINNER GRAND PRIX CANNES 25th ANNIVERSARY AWARD 11 I