WEDNESDAY Shows TODAY t~h~~j~t!C1 At 1-3-5-7-9 "It is a trip much worth taking.'Not since '2001' has a movie so cannily inverted consciousness and altered audience percep- tion." -Time Magazine NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 aloe *fr'titan tti1 page three Ann Arbor, Michigan Sunday, November 21, 1971 'r.. m a F:. S. IHELLSTROM CHRONICLE)I 70 news briefs By The Associated Press THE NIXON ADMINISTRATION'S inflation-fighting pro- gram has been seriously jeopardized by approval of the coal miners' wage hike, some members of the House-Senate Economic Committee said yesterday. The Pay Board's approval Friday of the raise "puts the whole stabilization program into the greatest possible jeopardy,' said the committee chairman, Sen. William Proxmire (D-Wis.}. "If you have 9, 10 and 15 per cent settlements, we're better off without a Pay Board," Proxmire added. ELLIOT RICHARDSON, secretary of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, announced yesterday a plan to phase out the 5,500 member commisioned-officer corps of the Public Health Service and the post of U.S. surgeon general. Richardson also endorsed the recommendation that federal doc- tors and other health profesionals be absorbed into the regular civil service system. According to Richardson, the changeover will be made gradually, and he added that a vigorous and positive recruitment effort must be developed to attract physicians, dentists and other health per- sonnel. The commisioned corps draws 96 per cent of its staff from young doctors and dentists fulfilling their draft requirements outside the armed services. SEN. GAYLORD NELSON's (D-Wis.) two proposals to slash the business benefits in the $27million tax cut bill yesterday were easily defeated in the Senate. Similar Democratic efforts had been made earlier in the debate, but were defeated by much narrower margins. There were indications that some Democrats switched to favor the business booms in an effort to make it less likely that President Nixon would veto the bill if a Democratic-sponsored presidential campaign fund financing were attached to it. The Senate will vote tomorrow on whether to add the tax-cut bill to the controversial presidential campaign financing plan. near Cambodia Vietnamese ops gather SAIGON ) - At least 15,000 South Vietnamese troops, massed on both sides of Cambodia's border yesterday for pos- sible offensive thrusts aimed at relieving North Vietnamese pressure on hard pressed Cambodian forces. Informants returning from border regions said they saw large-scale movement of infantry and armor at three differ- ent locations 30 to 55 miles northwest of Saigon. Field reports added that some South Vietnamese troops had moved up from the Mekong Delta in the South. tro -Associated Press JUDGE GEORGE BOLDT, Pay Board chairman, being quizzed yesterday by the Joint Economic Committee of Congress. Phase2 plan faces hostile labor, Senate WASHINGTON (A)- - Phase 2, the first American venture into peacetime wage and price control, ended its first week knee-deep in troubles. It is confronted with hostility from labor, intervention by Congress, uncertainty in industry, and widespread confus- ion and skepticism among the general public. President Nixon was virtually snubbed at the convention of the AFL-CIO, whose president George Meany had laid down an ultimatum: "If the President doesn't want our mem- bership on the Pay Board on our terms, he knows what he can do." Nixon flew to Bal Harbor, Fla., 1w^a 41- unin uiaolrrf 'ie ani±- Any major South Vietnamese thrust into Cambodia would un- doubtedly receive heavy U.S. a I r support. American planes and heli- copter gunships already are fly- ing more strikes across the bord- er because of what, official U.S. sources called a deteriorating mili- tary situation in Cambodia. North Vietnamese forces, w h o have fought their way within rock- et-shelling distance of Phnom Pneh and are attacking on the northeast front, are known to be resupplied from hidden bases in the border region. The Cambodian command feels a South Vietnamese offensive against these supply lines would relieve enemy pressure on Phnom Penh and divert Communist-led forces battling 20,000 Cambodian troops on the northeastern front. "It would certainly help us," said Cambodia's chief military spokes- man, Lt. Col. Am Rong, in Phnom Penh. Cambodia has asked Saigon for two artillery battalions, an en- gineer battalian and heavy equip- ment to rebuild bridges destroyed in the fighting northeast of Phnom Penh. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan48104. 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. Egypt troops readied for Israel war CAIRO (P) - President Anwar Sadat told frontline troops yes- terday "that there is no longer any hope at all in peaceful solutions" in the Middle East and Egypt has decided to go to war, the official Middle East news agency reported. "Perhaps this is Allah's will that I should get this chance for meet- ing with you now to tell you that our decision is fighting . . ." the agency quoted Sadat as saying. "We were convinced that the battle was coming ... and now it has become certain to us that hope has died and there is no longer any discussion around it." The agency said the decision was taken after what Sadat termed "a period of elusiveness and Israeli stubborness." He added: "I have come to tell you that the time for battle has come, that there is no more hope... Meanwhile Tunisia is disturbed by President Habib Bourguiba's suggestiofi of a future federation between Israel and its Arab neigh- bors. SENATE DEBATE Govt. opposes troop cuts in Europe WASHINGTON (VP) -Striving to defeat a move in the Sen- ate to cut back U.S. troops in Europe, high administration of- ficials say that the Atlantic al- lies now shoulder a larger share of the West's common defense burden and that bringing GIs home would not save much money. The central administration ar- gument - disputed by Senate Majority leader Mike Mansfield (D-Mont.)-is that a onesided U.S. troop pullout now would torpedo NATO's current effort to negotiate a mutual force re- duction with the East European Soviet bloc. The issue is headed for a Sen- ate floor fight soon in the wake of the Senate Appropriation Committee's 14-13 approval Thursday of a Mansfield amend- ment to the $70-billion defense money bill. The amendment would reduce U.S. troop strength in Europe from 310,000 to 250,000 by June 15. Backers of the Mansfield pro- viso say that large scale U.S. troop deployment in West Eu- rope no longer can be afforded by a financially troubled Uncle Sam, and that the allies are fail- ing to carry their share of the load. However, the Administration argues that NATO members are upping their defense outlays by an average 11.1 per cent this year. told the union delegates nis anti- inflation plans would succeed with or without them, and added: "I know exactly what I can do. And I am going to do it." Only the Price Commission ap- peared to have made a strong start. It forced Nixon's Cost of Living Council to back down on liberal rules for new-car price in- creases. Then it announced it may refuse to approve price boosts pas- sing on to consumers the full, amount of pay increases approved by its sister agency, the P a y Board. Leary of inflation, Pay Board Chairman, C. Jackson Grayson said, "What I do not want to do, and none of the commission wants to do, is to create a permanent re- gulatory control body over the en- tire economy." A I I' F ® I 4c ***cp**********i *4 *4 TODAY ONLY! sponsored by Orson Welles Film Society CALIFORNIA PANTS WOMEN-Harvard Law A woman student from Harvard Law School will be at Career Placement Monday, Nov. 22 to answer your ques- tions about Harvard. F I p. OMNI E A T U R E I S 100/o STUDENT NAT. SC . AUD. at 2:15-4:30-6:45-9:00-1 1:15 p.m. Daily Classif ieds.Get Results r I r , r , r , r , !o ~with every' j LARGE PIZZA r , *r r r , r r r , r , I ; * r r r r r r r r Good only Sun,Nov. 21 #I r , r , Lm....... ..... .......ins- ea------------------ - - - J DISCOUNT A 10% Discount for All Students with an ID Card. Offer through Nov. 30 and Applies to Everything in the Store Except Special Sale Items. OVER 10,000 PANTS OF ALL KINDS PLUS! * DRESS SHIRTS " TOM JONES SHIRTS * CAR COATS i e f We want to talk to you about a career in law .. . without law school. When you become a Lawyer's Assistant, you'll be doing work traditionally done by lawyers-work we think you'll find challenging and responsible. And Lawyer's Assistants are now so critically needed that The Institute for Paralegal Training can offer you a position in the city of your choice and a higher salary than you'd expect as a recent college graduate. You'll work with lawyers on interesting legal problems-and the rewards will grow as you do. A representative of The Institute for Paralegal Train- ing will conduct interviews on: THURSDAY, DECEMBER 2 Inquire at Placement Office ' -- &VOW "One of the most exciting' films you'll see this year." Det. News "IF YOU LOVE TO BE SCARED, MAKE IT A POINT TO SEE 'PLAY MISTY FOR ME'!" Owen Eshenroder, Ann Arbor News CLINHOTE0 nnii jl R r~kA U '"'^ ' ' I ® ii