___________________________________________ -d NOON BOOK DISCUSSION T HURSDAY 3545 Student Activities Bldg. W HOLE EARTH CATALOG reviewed by Bob Houert Next Week T HE GR EET ING OF AM E RICA reviewed by Vice Pres. Krouss OFFICE OF RELIGIOUS AFFAIRS Michigan Union, 3rd floor BIG DOUBL E FEATUR E! By The Associated Press A FEDERAL GRAND JURY yesterday indicted Standard Oil Co. of California and a subsidiary, Chevron Shipping Co., on carges ofa rpolluting San Francisco Bay in a massive oil spill The indictment was brought under the 1899 Refuse Act, which carries a fine of not more than $2,500 for corporate defendants. Two Standard Oil Tankers collided near the Golden Gate Bridge Jan. 18, spililng 840,000 gallons of fuel oil into the bay. The oil slick blackened beaches over a 50-mile area and killed thousands of waterbirds. THE S'TOCK MARKET yesterday dropped for the 11th straight session, falling 8.98 points to 836.38, its lowest level in over nine months. Analysts said investors were showing their uncertainty over Phase 2 of President Nixon's economic program, the international monetary problem, and the possibility of foreign reaction to Amer- ican trade policies. PRESIDENT TITO of Yugoslavia yesterday arrived in the United States for a six-day state visit and talks with President Nixon. Tito will be officially greeted this morning by Nixon at the White House Meanwhile, he is a "distinguished private visitor'" at Camp*David CUBA ACCUSED the United States yesterday of "arbitrary and discriminatory action" in prohibiting a Cuban delegation from participating in an international sugar conference in Louisiana. The Cuban pilot who flewv the uninvited delegation to New Or- leans has refused to fly the plane back to Cuba. Havana radio called the refusal of the United States to issue visas to the 19 Cuban technicians a "new manifestation of the arbitrary arid imperialistic policy of the Yankee government." , - AN EXPLOSION early yesterday damaged a headquarters of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization eight miles wvest of Lisbon, the U.S. Embassy announced. A spokesman said the cause of the explosion in the war room of Iberlant - The Iberian Atlantic Command - had not been determined. It occurred at 3:10 a.m. Idia II in NEW DELHI (P) - The Soviet Union yesterday appeared to be moving closer to intervening in the potentially explo- sive crisis situation between India and Pakistan. A joint communique issued after five days of consulta- tions indicated that Russia might be approaching a decision to invoke the India-Soviet defense treaty signed last August. An article of the treaty provides that if either country is subjected to a threat by a third party, the other country shall immediately "take appropriate effective measures to ensure the peace and the se- - ---__ ---- £fri~i&~an Thursday, October 28, 971 Page Three .Soviets may aid 0 crisis -Associated Press ritishi army post bomibed Soldiers explore the wreckage of a British army observation post in Londonderry after it was hit by a terrorist bomb yesterday, killing two soldiers who were inside. (See related story). AMCHITKA ISLAND: WASHINGTON (/) - The Nixon administration announced yes- terday plans to proeed with a huge~ underground atomic blast in t-he curity of their countries." The Soviet delegation to the talks was led by Nikolai Firyubin a deputy foreign minister, who ar- consultations on bilateral mat- ters. The Foreign Ministry .spokes- man admitted that Firyubin's visit was "motivated by Article 9 of the Indian - Soviet treaty" signed last August. The spokesman refused to dis- cuss what measures the two sides had agreed upon or whether any additional Soviet military aid would be forthcoming. It was pointed ouit, however, that Firyubin has also met with Indian .defense officials. Firyubin's visit was the third by a senior Soviet official to In- dia since the August treaty, and Prime Minister Indira Gandhi was in Moscow last month. Peking expressed support for the Pakistanis early in the crisis. In New York, the United Na- tions made public the text of a message Secretary - General U Thant sent to Gandhi and Presi- dent Agha Mohammed Yahya Khan offering help to relieve ten- sion on the Indian-Pakistan bor- T~hant noted that there was a U. N. military observer group on the cease-fire line in Jammu and ALSO 2nd BIG H IT!J "E LEGA NT !" Newswees "B E AU TI F U L!" N.Y. Times "Superb! A picture to savor, ponder, and probably view a second time! A Fascinat- ;ng sex story!- Archer Winsten, N.Y. Post I 'Lu 13 Tunue/S c(Masterpiece of'Erotica! aII~rrn £OTIflTCI Unconfirmed reports said windows, doors and masonry were Aleutian Islands. damaged. Although Sen. Mike Gravel (D-Ala.), told newsmen the blast, * testing a 5-megaton antimissile warhead, is scheduled for Nov. 4, AN AMERICAN AIRLINES spokesman said that passengers James Schlesinger, chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission aboard a .747 jet hijacked to Cuba Monday would be brought (AEC) told reporters a test date has not yet been established. to San Juan last night. Schlesinger said, however, that preparations would be completed The company was to send two smaller planes to Havana during within a week, making the test possible by the Nov. 4 date. the day. Meanwhile, seven environment groups headed by the Committee The spokesman explained that the 747 jet, with more than for Nuclear Responsibility, are seeking to halt the test through court 200 persons aboard, could not safely take off from Jose Marti Air- action, contending it might cause earthquakes, tidal waves, radiation port in Havana, the apparent reason for the plane's delay in Cuba. leakage or other environmental damage, GEORGIA ARMY BASE MPs stop inmates' stockade revolt Alasa Gv. illim Ean of East Pakistan and on the in- said President Nixon and the AEC ternational frontier between India "in making this decision have tak- and West Pakistan. en-and must assume-full re- -~-- ----- - sponsibility for the safety of th E'so v t people who would suffer the con- ng FORT GORDON, Ga. (IP) - MilitaryupPolicede usitr tar gas which stockade inmates at this Army base burned an empty barracks. Nine inmates were re- ported injured. Lr,. Col. Richard Lamb, the base During the disturbance the in- ad bued avooden barracks to the ground, Lamb said. He placed the loss at $3 0.000. The injured inmates suffered rmnor cuts and bruises during the skirmish with MPs, Lamb added. Another 200 prisoners in the stockade did1not taked dar in th ing temporarily housed in other buildings in the stockade corn- plex. Lamb said it had not been de- sequences if an accident occurs." Congress had passed legislation last Sept. 22 barring the test be- fore mid-1972 unless the President authorized it. Canada and Japan have both daalAGENEVIEVE PAGE -JEAN SUREE Produced By ROBERI and RAYMiUNU VAKIM Uietled By L UIS BUNL daato and Dialogue LOUIS BUNUEL and JEAN-CLAUDE CARIR - EASI MANCOLOR Released by ALUED APT - O 0 F'F'TH FOruM IORMTNo 761-700 "Befle de Jour" 7 p.m. "Marat Sade" 9 p.m. U public information of ficer, said They were treated at the base termined what action might be opposed the test, in which a hy- the disturbance beg an as a sym- hospital. taken against the inmates in- drogen warhead with a force pathy demonstration for Pvt. Jes- The colonel also denied re- ove.qualent to 5 milio ton of TN sie Simmons of Memphis, Tenn., ports of gunfire. "I checked this vle.euv iinoso who had been denied home pa- very carefully, and I 'can find no TT would be exploded some 6,000 role. Lamb gave no reason for record of any shots being fired," The Michigan Daily, edited and man- feet underground in remote Am- Simmon's request, he said.aged by students at the University of chitka Island ithe nrhnPa Simmon's request, he said. Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second ai otenP- glas pstage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- cific Ocean. It would be the big- Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- gest U.S. underground test al- coopeativ preentsday through Sunday morning Univer- though the Russians have had c,..arrieri $1 bsy r mai rae:-0b some in this range. r Dali's surrealistic classic Summer Session published Tuesday I through Saturday morning. Subscrip- U (An Andalusian Doa) (1928) tion rates: $5 by carrier, $6 by mail. Join The Da ily Sta f f LONDON ( P) - Prime Minis- ter Edward Heath's Conserva- tives, helped by some opposi- tion laborites, seem headed to- ward an uneasy Parliament vic- tory today for leading Britain into the European Common Market. In Westminister Parliament there were signs of an imminent intraparty split after the La- bor party's deputy Parliament leader, Roy Jenkins, and its vet- eran chairman, Douglas Hough- ton, announced they will vote with the Heath government. The crucial decision is due tonight on a motion approving th principle of British entry on BELFAST, Northern Ireland (IP) - The British army served notice yesterday its troops here will shoot to kill children who fire on them in the war against; Irish Re- publican Army (IRA) guerrillas. The warning was issued after two youths, described as being 12 to 14 years old, sprayed a British patrol in Belfast with sub-ma- chine-gun fire and two more sol- diers died in a bomb blast in Lon- donderry "The troops will shoot to kill any man or child or woman who happens to shoot at them," said Maj. Peter Johnson, Scots Guard company commander. Army head- quarters said he spoke with full authority. The two boys fired nine shots at Johnson's patrol Tuesday ?iight anmd th majorsaid his vehicle "If children fire guns at sol- diers, then they will be shot," Johnson said. He added that the boys wore the black berets of the IRA. "We did not fire at them be- cause they were such small chil- dren but if we wanted to, we could have shot them dead," John, son said. were bony uinLdonderyb hurled asuitcase of gehie over the 12-foot wall of sandbags around an army observation post. Their deaths brought the toll of two years of violence to 137. Thirty soldiers have been killed so far this' year, 22 of them since Aug. 9 when guerrilla suspects were rounded up and £nterned without trial. The wave of violence triggered by internment also claimed the lives of 50 civilians and three policemen. In other outbreaks of violence in Belfast, British troops fought a pitched battle with mourners around the coffin of a guerrilla leader and the IRA launched what bob-and-gun attacks onta he homes of individual policemen. Ten houses came under fire In Ate leas t trwodhomes were set afire and the wife and daughter of one policeman were injured. Oy~ne attace cwaselievedhit his home with a pistol and shot- gun. erFightingarokn outat the fun- old IRA section leader, when mourners whipped out pistols and fire inthe air o dhonor their police after he had planted a bomb in a night club, the ann arbor film Luis Bunuel's and Salvado UN CHIEN ANDA LOI / "Deliberately designed to create a scandal, the film became a prototype for all anti - bourgeois films. Its opening sequence is aggressively Bunuelian. A young man, Bunuel himself, stands on SHOP TONIGHT UNTIL 9:00 P.M. a balcony sharpening a razor"... -A Concise History of the Cinema, Vol. 1, Peter Cowie, ed., 1 971 Gild Robert Wiene's THE CABI NET OF: DR. CALEGARE (1920) "The peak of expressionist cinema" (Op. cit.). With new original piano music played by Mr. Don- ald Sosin, whose performances for our presentations of "The Phantom of the Opera" and "Intol- erance" were so well received. TON IGH T-T H URSDAY-October 28th-ON LY! auditorium a-angell hail -- ~ .1 :' ~ ,d~ *.51-' A' 'N 4,' COMPLETE SHOWS AT 7 & 9:30 P.M. STILL ONLY 75c I Coming Tuesday-GREETINGS! Next Thursday-THE WILD CHILD nylon ski jacket warmed by no'ther" goose down fl ..lightweight, w arm, waterproof and comfortable in action. Navy, brown or tan. S,M,L,XI. sizes. $55.A 2 PERFORMANCES! TH'S WEEK ONLY! tonite 8:30 j :ow I PETER blues, contemporary fol go'