-I EASTERN MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY PLAYERS SERIES presents YOU CAN'T TAKE IT WITH YOU QUIRK AUDITORIUM n e -wrs briefs By The Associated Press Siciiiab.iin at1y Wednesday, December 8, 1971 Page Three thru Sun., Dec. 7-12 $2 For reservations dial QUIRK BOX OFFICE 487-1221 between 12:45 and 4:30 p.m. 2.00 ALL SEATS RESERVED <; 7ij FL Pr Ge OPEN 12:45 "Always the Finest in Screen Entertainment'' rogram Information 662-6264 Corner State & Liberty Streets et i with Wilson Pickett Ike & Tina Turner Santana ENDS WEDNESDAY! G7 SHOWS AT 1,3, 5,7, &9P.M. * STARTS THURSDAY! * e "It's a joy ...the jokes and gags are nonstop." -rAmran Internationale COL.OR CHIEF JUSTICE WARREN BURGER, said last night the lack of educational opportunities is one of the greatest failures of the American penal system. Burger, in a speech before the National Conference on Correc- tions, called for new sentencing techniques which would allow in- mates to "learn their way" out of prison. Burger criticized the inadequate educational programs of most prisons, citing the high percentage of prisoners who cannot read or write. SEN. JOIkN TUNNEY (D-Calif.), one of the state's most powerful politicians, plans to make a public endorsement of Sen. Edmund Muskie (D-Maine), for President in a news conference today, according to an announcement by aides. Tunney, as a close friend and ally of Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.), may indicate by his decision that Kennedy is definite about his plans not to run in the 1972 presidential campaign. THE SUPREME COURT, at the government's urging, agreed I yesterday to decide the constitutionality of the Gun Control Act of 1968. A U.S. Circuit Court in Denver had previously ruled that the act's inspection provisions violate the Fourth Amendment because they allow Internal Revenue Service agents to inspect the shops ofI gun dealers without having first obtained a search warrant. TEN EUROPEAN NATO ALLIES announced a billion-dollar increase, nearly six per cent, in military spending for 1972 to help ease the U.S. burden of defense. The allies are attempting by their action to help the U.S. in times of economic problems and to help President Nixon resist Congressional pressure for a reduction of US. troop strength in Europe. The allies this year have been spending about $18 billion on defense compared with a total U.S. military budget of around $80 billion. *, * ** Senate limits powers on war -Associated Press AN EMPLOYE surveys the damage yesterday to equipment at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center in California. Two early morn- ing bomb blasts caused over $100,000 worth of damage. The ac- celerator machine, a device to study particles, was not harmed. Center for nuclear proposal executive WASHINGTON (M - The Senate Foreign Relations Com- mittee unanimously approved yesterday a compromise bill to put limits on presidential power to commit U.S. armed forces to any war overseas without Congressional approval. Furthermore, the bill restricts the conditions to attacks on the United States or on its armed forces or to forestall the 'direct and imminent' threat of such an attack. The bill also allows for the evacuation of American citizens for pro- tection against a direct and imminent threat on their lives. Though Sen. J. W. Fulbright (D-Ark.) the committee chairman, said he is concerned - that the provision relating to forestalling threat of an attack could authorize a pre-emptive U.S. strike, Sen. Jacob Javits (R-N.Y.) said the "direct and imminent" pi language provides sufficient pro- str~ie tcapital tection. en (R-Vt.), said he expected the bill to cause considerable legal controversy and added, "I am pes- CAMBODIA (R) - Communist simistic about its becoming law." forces bombarded the Cambodia Fulbright added that he plans capital Phnom Penh, with rockets to propose a number of amend- yesterday, and continued besieging ments on the Senate floor when government troops northwest of the bill comes up for action next the city. spring. The rockets destroyed a key The bill is a compromise highway bridge and smashed sev- worked out by the sponsors of eral houses on the western edge of similarbut differing measures in- the city, wounding three civilians. troduced earlier this year.BohteUSanSuhVi- The sponsors include Sen. Ja- Both the U.S. and South Viet- vits, John Stennis (D-Miss.) nam have been providing air sup- Thomas Eagleton (D-Mo.) and port to the Cambodians, but have William Spong (D-Va.). been unable to reverse the rout of The committee also approved forces northeast of the capital or a bill by Sen. Clifford Case, (R- break the siege of towns on the N.J.) requiring the executive northeastern outskirts. branch to submit all executive South Vietnamese forays mean- agreements to Congress within 60 while, met little resistance in the days after they have been signed. eastern part of the country. I "WA NT TO SEE A FASCINATING VAMPIRE SHOCKER? THEN CATCH THE PENTAGON INTELLIGENCE OPERATION, caught in a money and manpower squeeze, is pruning its payroll down to 134,000 persons, a cut of several thousand. STANFORD, Calif. (AP) - Two The Pentagon told Congress that the cut may leave parts of bombs caused extensive damage{ the world uncovered by military spies. yesterday to the Stanford LinearI The action comes as a result of President Nixon's order to re- world'sagesC enters for atomic organize the entire U.S. intelligence operation with increased effi- particle research. ciency as a major goal. The center contains the Stan- ford accelerator, or 'atom smash- THE PRICE COMMISSION yesterday approved U.S. Steel er', a device for studying protons, Corp.'s request for an across-the-board average price increase electrons and other atom particles. of 3.6 per cent for all steel mill products, a figure five per cent According to officials, there less than the original request, were no injuries or radiation leaks.a The move indicated that the commission intends to move away The $100 million center, which tional research facility operated by Stanford University for the A t o m i c Energy Commission, (AEC)., A spokesman for the AEC, however, said that preliminary in- formation from the scene indicat- ed there was no damage to the atom smasher machine itself but was limited to "auxiliary elec- trical equipment." The FBI was called to investi- gate the incident. The center is surrounded by a I 1f IT WILL GLUE YOU TO YOUR SEAT!" NEW YORK TIMES Film: Artistic Vampires rom piecemeal price regulation of individual products, does no, classified work, is a na- barbed wire fence and guards were on duty, but doors to the structure -^were not locked. It was not immediately deter- GILBERT AND SULLIVAN'S mined what types of bombs were used, but they were exploded at j w the injection end of the two- b ( I1 , KA LmiTe lngaccelerator. a'ensu ielnaceeracererad been shut down since last Wednesday for TODAY THROUGH SATURDAY routine maintenance. Workmen discovered the dam- GOOD SEATS REMAINING FOR age yesterday on reporting for TONIGHT AND TOMORROW NIGHT for duty. SATURDAY NIGHT SOLD OUT The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of i Michigan.,espoe:7405.Second Tickets: $2.50 Evenings; $2.00 Sat. Matinee Classposta paid at Ann Arbor,Mich- igan, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, MENDELSSOHN BOX OFFICE Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- H RS: 10 A.M.-7 P.M. sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier, $11 by mail. Phone: 668-6300 Summer Session published Tuesday Phone through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5 by carrier, $6 by mail. 01971 The New York Times Co. Want to see a fascinatingj vampire movie? Then catch' the Belgian - made, English- language "Daughters of Dark- ness," which arrived yesterday. S u b t 1 e, stately, stunningly colored and exquisitely direct- ed by Belgium's young Harry Kumel, the co-scenarist, this is far and away the. most ar- tistic vampire shocker since the Franco-Italian "Blood and Roses" 10 years ago. The cen- sors-on this side of the water anyway-almost crippled that one by yanking out the homo- sexuality. The new picture is stronger and better-rounded, with the same double theme intact. Like a poisonous flow- er, it wafts through the main premises, a huge coastal hotel off-season, housing a honey- moon couple, two strange wo- men guests and a quaking porter. That is the set-up, and we guarantee that the picture, gliding silkenly into horror, will glue you to your seat. John Karlen, Daniels Quimet, and Andrea Rau do well, but it is the honey-voiced evil conveyed by Delphine Seyrig, from "Last Year at Marien- bad," that dominates the foot- age. If she ever checks into a Hilton Hotel, with the bril- liant Mr. Kumel again pilot- ing, that should be quite a picture, too. -HOWARD THOMPSON "EXQU ISITE !" -Judith Crist UNMANNED CAPSULE Russia lands Mars craft MOSCOW (P)-An unmanned Soviet space capsule parachut- ed last week onto Mars sending television and radio signals to earth, Tass, the Soviet news agency, revealed yesterday. The landing marks the first time that a functioning man- made object has soft landed on the planet's surface. However, no information was released on the type of data the capsule collected. With this landing on Mars, the U.S.S.R. has'accomplished a feat the U S. cannot hope to duplicate before 1976 The capsule was dispatched to Mars last Thursday from the probe Mars 3, which continued to circle the planet in an orbit more than 930 miles high, Tass announced No details were. given on the shape or weight of the capsule or the next step in its mission. But whether the Russians have achieved a dramatic first in space exploration will depend upon what type instruments are aboard the capsule and how much data the capsule returns. "A soft landing on Mars is not a simple engineering prob- lem," one of the designers of the Soviet craft said. "Unfor- tunately, little is still known about the nature of the planet, its surface and atmosphere." SHOP TONIGHT UNTIL 5:30 P.M. THURSDAY AND FRIDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M. A 12 44 - HOWARD J. ZUKER P....ts GEMINI PICTURES INTERNATIONAL n. 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