SUNDAY, JAN. 31-7:30 Father Bill Cunningha of Detroit's "Focus Hope" will speak on "University reso and the role of students in ac NEWMAN (ENTER 331 Thor P.M. 'In p.age three C14C Sfr'igatn 43-aiti NEWS PHONE: 76-1-0552 USINESS 1PHONE: 764-0554 Friday, January 29, 1971 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three urces lion" mpson news briefs By The Associated Press M f r . iii Th e 0bnlPr90X Weather Too Cold? WARM UP BY THE FIRESIDE COMPLIMENTED BY FINE FOOD AND WINES THE UNITED AUTO WORKERS (UAW) has authorized 10,000 union-represented salaried workers to strike Chrysler Corporation Tuesday, if a new contract agreement is not reached before then. The 110,000 production and maintenance workers are expected to keep the plants running if the walkout develops. Chrysler and the UAW have recently reached contract agreement covering these non- salaried workers. The UAW also charges that Chysler has failed to meet the 13 per cent salary increases granted nonunion employes at General Motors and Fordafollowing settlements covering hourly rated work- ers in those companies. SEN. WILLIAM PROXMIRE (D-Wis.) asked the Food and Drug Administration yesterday to investigate charges that cereals manufactured by the Kellogg Co. may be contaminated by mercury or other toxic agents. The firm denied the charge. Proxmire relayed to the FDA accusations that hundreds of mink have died after being fed Kellogg's products. He said he was especially alarmed because of information that one-fifty of the content of Kellogg's mink cereals is made up of discarded Kellogg's breakfast cereals, originally manufactured for human consumption. EAST GERMAN border guards increased their interference with traffic to West Berlin yesterday. Hernan Stein, a leader of the Free Democratic party, was refused entry at Wartha, a remote crossing point. West German Chancellor Willy Brandt, in a speech before parlia- -Associated Press Uganda's new leader A heavily armed bodyguard surrounds Major General Idi Amin during his first public appearance since seizing power from Uganda's President Milton Obotse Monday. In the background are some of the 55 political prisoners freed by Amin during yesterday's ceremony at Uganda's Kololo Airport. HUNDREDS BEGIN WORK: Nixon asks draft end in mid '73 WASHINGTON - Presi- dent Nixon pledged yesterday to make every effort to end t h e draft by midsummer of 1973 as he urged Congress to enact reforms to bring the na- tion closer to an all volunteer Army. Nixon asked Congress to extend induction authority only for two years to July, 1973. The normal extension period is for four years. "We shall make every endeav- or to reduce draftcalls to zero by that time, carefully and contin- ually reexamining ,ur position as we proceed toward that goal," he said. In addition Nixon called for leg- islation to change the present draft law to make it "as equitable as possible." He urged - as he did a year ago - that undergraduate stu- dent deferments be phased o u t and divinity student exemptions be eliminated. He also called for a uniform na- tional draft call by lottery num- bers to ensure relatively equal li- ability by the lottery numbers throughout the nation. "I urge favorable congressional action on these proposals to re- form the draft and make it as nearly fair as we can for the time it is needed," he said. "No one knows precisely when we can end conscription," Nixon said in a special message to Con- gress. But, he said "The objective of this administration is to reduce draft calls to zero, subject to the overriding considerations of t n e national security." Nixon u r g e d Congress to in- crease the pay of servicemen by $1.5 billion, especially in the lower enlisted grades, initiate a test pro- gram of special p a y incentives, and expand recruiting, medical scholarships and ROTC programs to make military life more desir- able. T h e s e legislative proposals, Nixon said, "would move the U.S. substantially closer to the goal of an all volunteer force." The current induction law ex- pires July 1, 1971. Open from 1 1 A.M.-2 P.M. 21 miles from 4 P.M.-10 P.M. NORTH CAMPUS U.S. trains agents to cope with activist bomb threats 668-9387 5400 PLYMOUTH RD. I Located in Scenic Northern Ann Arbor Area (Dixboro) IUILD THURSDAY, FRIDAY, JAN. 28, 29 Johnny Guitar Dir. NICHOLAS RAY (1954) STARRING: Joan Crawford, Sterling Hayden, Scott Brady, Mercedes McCombridge, Ward Bond, Ernest Borgnine, and John Carradine. Joan Crawford plays Vienna, the saloon owner who sits at the grand piano in a white evening dress, telling old recollections to Mr. Guitar while he waits for the lynching party. "Offbeat western" "Baroque, pure baroque" "Straight sulfuric acid" 7 & 9:05 ARCHITECTURE 662-8871 75c AUDITORIUM DOUBLE FEATURE-Fri. and Sat. only "ONE OF THE YEAR'S 10 BEST! A funny, straight, compassionate, domestic comedy, beautifully acted by Eva Marie Saint and George Segal" -Vincent Canby, N.Y. Times "May be a turning point in films!" -The New Yorker ment, blamed East Germany for deliberately aggravating the Berlin | situation.in rse The current Communist harassment of autobahn traffic is in in creased protest of the Free Democratic party's West Berlin meeting that open offcialy FrdayFT. RUCKER, ALA. V'? - Hun- opens officially Friday. dreds of federal agents have com- pleted training at Southern mili- ISRAELI FOREIGN MINISTER Abba Eban indicated yes- tary installations where they weree terday that renewed Egyptian fighting on the Suez Canal would taught how to investigate bamb- halt U.N. talks between Israel and the Arabs. ings and handle explosives, the "We are ready to extend the cease-fire" beyond Feb. 5. he government announced yesterday. told a television interviewer. "Opening of fire is not a circumstance The new training program, un- that will enable fruitful continuance of peace talks," he added. Reenue Service oIRSe isn ean Israel, he said, favors extending the U.S.-initiated cease fire | to cope with stepped up b .imbings because "it is mutually advantageous to both Israel and Egypt." C by radical groups. REP. GIVES SPACE Peace group uses gout. office WASHINGTON ) '- It looks like dozens of other rooms in dozens of other cities staffed by casually dressed long-haired youths. But this particular antiwar nerve center is in an office building of the House of Repre- sentatives. Posters display photographs of maimed Vietnamese children, wounded American GIs and burned fields-all in stark black and white. One picture shows a half dozen U.S. soldiers stand- ing over four Oriental heads that have been severed from their bodies. Half empty coffee cups and ashtrays litter the tables in the room. Rep. Ronald V. Dellums, (D- Calif.) has turned over the small room on the fourth floor of the Longworth Office Building to a group of Vietnam veterans called The Citizens' Commission of In- quiry ,on U.S. War Crimes in Vietnam. The room doesn't even have a number. It's between 1419 and 1421. It is part of the new con- gressman's suite of offices. Dellums, a black activist from Oakland who ran as a peace candidate, turned the room over to the group in an attempt to add a little power to its efforts to get congressional hearings on alleged U.S. war atrocities. "I'm committed to making the war the number one issue of the 92nd Congress," Dellums told a news conference in the room Friday. "We prosecuted people in World War II for much less than is being done in Vietnam," he said, calling war "a totally ab- surd instrument for solving in- ternational differences." Mike Uhl, a 26 year old veter- an who was in an Army intelli- gence unit in Vietnam said the group considers the much pub- licized My Lai massacre not an aberration but "the kind of thing that happens all the time, except to a greater degree." "These atrocities result in the total distrust and hate the Viet- namese have for the Ameri- cans," he said. Uhl, Bob Johnson, a West Point graduate and former Army captain, and others work- ing out of the Longworth Build- ing office say they will use the space as a base for seeking con- gressional support. They have already met with 40 different congressmen or their assistants. A.L. Posey of Tampa, Fla., spe- cial investigator for the Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms division of the IRS, said, "It's no secret that bombings have gotten out of hand. We don't know why. I guess it is a sign of the times. "The Ku Klux Klan had been doing it (bombing) for a long time," he said. "Then other radi- cal groups picked it up and it has now mushroomed into a sizeable problem. "They're blowing up draft board offices, recruiting stations, college buildings. That's what uwe're up against. You can't stop it unless you know how to investigate it." Posey said the new training pro- gram was made necessary by the Organized Crime Act of 1970 which gave the IRS division the job of investigating bombings and con- trolling explosives. Posey disclosed the program in connection with the completion of courses by agents at four army posts in the Southeast. "What we are trying to communicate is that we're ready to go to work against the bombers now," he said. Joseph Kelly of Jackson, Miss., chief special investigator for the division, said each agent has re- ceived about 40 hours of training and 500 of them have been trained to serve in the seven Southeastern states. Since the program began Jan. 4,' an IRS spokesman in Washington said 1,350 agents have been or are being trained at centers across the country. The rash of bombings over the past two years caught the gov- ernment unprepared, said Kelly. He added that only FBI agents had received any specialized train- ing that would tell them what kind of evidence they must collect in bombings. "An agent who has gone through this training," Kelly said, "has a good idea of what he must look for after an explosion. He knows how to tell what kind of explo- sive caused a blast. He also knows what kind of bomb causes certain types of damage." Posey, an agent for 15 years and one of the division's top explo- sives experts, watched as a soldier participating in a training demon- stration observed by newsmen threw a fire bomb against a wooden target. "You can tell it's a ire bomb now," he said, "but would you know if you came around two or three days later? This is what it is all about." Fifteen explosive devices were detonated in a wooded area dur- ing the demonstration. Kelly said many of them could be manufac- tured from "items you buy in the grocery store." Gov.adds to rail plan WASHINGTON (P) - The Nixon administration signifi- cantly expanded yesterday the number of cities to be served by a new quasi-government corpor- ation beginning May 1. The new National Drail Pas- senger Corp., commonly known as Railpax, must operate daily passenger trains between des- ignated major U.S.cities in the system until 1974, when it can drop any unprofitable runs. The, decision to enlarge the basic network came after criti- cism of t h e original proposal from groups ranging from the Interstate Commerce Commis- sion to a lobbying group f o r railway passengers. The new routes link principal West Coast cities, provide ser- vice from New Orleans through the Southwest to Los Angeles, and link the Atlantic Seaboard and the Middle West. Railroads that buy into Rail- pax with cash, rolling stock or service are free to drop on 30- day notice any passenger runs not included in the mandatory system. Railroads not joining Railpax must continue all pres- ent rail passenger service until 1975. Congress h a s appropriated $40million as the initial cap- italization for the rail corpora- tion. Other capital would be supplied by participating rail- roads and the private market. Transportation Secretary John Volpe.said, "The rail passenger story is destined to become the all-time comeback in the history of American transportation." "By providing improved ser- vice, clean and reliable equip- ment and more efficient utiliza- tion of facilities, the corpora- tion has the opportunity to re- verse the long-term decline in rail ridership," he added. "A FRIGHTENINGLY ACCURATE PORTRAYAL OF THE LOVE LIFE OF A SUBURBANITE" -Show Magazine "88 minutes that go like 60!" --Look "ONE OF THE YEAR'S 10 BEST!" -Russell Barker, 'The Observer'-N.Y. Times -Red Reed in N.Y. Times TONIGHT AT 8:00! SPECIAL STUDENT DISCOUNT! C From Columbia Pictures COLOR starring EVA MARIE SAINT and GEORGE SEGAL (star of 'The Owl and the Pussycat') "ONE OF THE YEAR'S 10 BEST!" -Judith Crist, New York Magazine -Bob Salmaggi, Group W Radio -John Simon The New Leader "EXHILARATING!" Perceptive, unsentimental por- trait of a young athlete on the m a k e! Electrifying camera work." -Time Magazine "THE B E S T ACTION - FIC- TION SPORTS FILM. ONE OF TUE YE A D'S RET Ei kAS" TECHIVICOLOR*AARAMoNTPCCTUR 9=