RADICAL FILM SERIES Charlie Chaplin's THE GOLD RUSH IS BACK TUES.-Alice's Restaurant-Alice Lloyd Hall Wed.-FRIENDS' CENTER-1416 HILL 75c 7-9-11 P.M. Eastern Michigan University presents THE FIFTH DIMENSION Bowen Field House Saturday, February 13-8:30 P.M. TICKETS: $5.50, $5.00, $4.50, $3.50 Tickets are available at: Discount Records of Ann Arbor, Richardson's Pharmacy & McKenny Union in Ypsilanti, and all J.L. Hudson Stores. page three im4c Sfr~iigan Itaity AEWS PHONE: 764-05352 Ht SIlNESS PHONE: 764-0554 Tuesday, February 2, 1971 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Thr IU news briefs -ROW By The Associated Press JOHN CONNALLY, President Nixon's nominee for Secretary of the Treasury, will have an opportunity today to rebut before a Senate hearing charges that he received at least $225,000 in fees while governor of Texas, a possible breach of that state's constitution. A New York Times story reported yesterday that the Texan re- ceived the money from the estate of a millionaire oilman, for which Connally served as executor before his election to the governorship in 1961. Connally, though receiving fees for his services during his eight- year tenure in the statehouse, contended that the constitutional sta- tute would be violated only if the outside employment had actually occurred during his term of office. EGYPTIAN WARPLANES have violated Israeli air space for the second time in three days, according to Israeli accusations made yesterday before the U.N. Truce Supervision Organization. Israeli officials believe the Egyptian government is permitting the alleged flights in an attept to keep Israel guessing about whether Cairo intends to resume fighting when the current cease-fire ends this Friday. ** * SEN. EDMUND MUSKIE (D-Me.), leads President Nixon, 43 per cent to 40, as the choice for President if the 1972 election were held now, the Harris poll reported yesterday. Gov. George Wallace of Alabama was preferred by 11 per cent of the voters polled by Harris in the week before Nixon's State of the Union address. THE END OF East German harrassment of West German access route returned traffic volume to normal yesterday, but economic losses to trucking companies could reach $1.6 million. West Berlin Mayor Klaus Schuetz requested that Chancellor1 Willy Brandt press for reimbursement of revenue lost during the semi-' blockade, an action stemming from a meeting of West German leaders held last week in West.Berlin. ATTY. GEN. JOHN MITCHELL, at ceremonies marking the implementation of new anti-crime laws for Washington, D.C., pre- dicted the nation's crime rate would soon decline. Noting that crime had dropped by 5.3 per cent in the capital during 1970, Mitchell said the "national wave of crime" would similar- ly decrease. "Our great federal city now sets an example for justice and law enforcement everywhere in the land," Mitchell said. Among the provisions of the new law are a "no knock" clause that allows police, with court permission, to enter a residence with- out announcing their presence and one that permits court-determined "dangerous offenders" to be held up to 60 days without bail prior to trial. * * * THE ORGANIZATION OF AMERICAN STATES gave pre-I liminary approval last night to a hemispheric convention aimed at deterring the wave of diplomatic kidnapings which have swept Latin America over the past months.I The action was taken on the eighth day of a bitterly divided OAS foreign ministers' meeting marked by the abrupt walkout of six dis- sident delegations which pressed unsuccessfully for a more compre- hensive anti-terrorist convention. still o0n FISH FOWL &OTHER CREATURES THIS WEEK!! ............. . I- TH COUPON.m. -- m--- m- - I HOT CORNED BEEF ONLY * or I HOT HAM & CHEESE69 69 c, Offer good Feb. 2-Feb. 5 .'l m mm................ m mm m mm mm m mm m m mm m COUPON GOOD AT BOTH LOCATIONS 2 LOCATIONS -Associated Press Starting anew Georgia Governor Jimmy Carter, right, appears with David Gambrell, his choice for the U.S. Senate seat left vacant by the death of Richard Russell.. OTHER HAZARDS POSSIBLE: U.S. says martiuana does not cause cancer or birthdefects Apollo lan ding WASHINGTON (RP) -- The gov- the National Institute of Mental ernment reported yesterday there Health, its director, Dr. Bertram is no current evidence to 1 ink S. Brown, said. marijuana with cancer and birth "Based on our current know- defects, saying individual conse- ledge, we cannot declare marijua- quences from using the drug na to be devoid of significant range from no effects to a psy- health hazards." lchotic experience. It said more study is needed to Brown said the question of how determine whether general use of marijuana affects health is de- the drug would pose a threat to ceptively complex. the American public. The effects of its use, he said, "This needed information is be- depend on the psychology a n d ing sought through an accelerated physiology of the user, the envir- marijuana research program" at onment in w h i c h marijuana is r Scientists find antimatter smoked, the user's experience with smoking the drug, the frequency with which it is smoked and the drug's potency. Up to now the government's of- ficial position on the drug has been the same as that which was given in a statement by Assistant Surgeon General Sherman Kieffer last summer: "The research published to date on marijuana clearly indicates that marijuana can be dangerous for some people. However, accu- rate scientific data on the extent and nature of these dangers is not yet evident and is being vigorous- ly sought. Until such information is avail- able it is the position of the Na- tional Institute of Mental Health that marijuana must be consid- ered a risk to the mental a n d physical health of users." A preliminary report on t h e government's research on the health consequences of marijuana use - issued last September - declared that: "It is clear that several years will be required before prelimin- ary findings can be interpreted with confidence and the relation between marijuana and health can be adequately defined." SPACE CENTER. Houston64)- A docking problem which threat- ened to prevent Apollo 14's sched- uled moon landing apparently cleared itself up and officials said yesterday the astronauts can make the landing attempt. Space officials made the an- nouncement while astronauts Alan Shepard Jr.. Edgar Mitchell and Stuart Roosa were asleep in the space cabin and speeding toward the moon. Chester Lee, the mission direc- tor, told newsmen that extensive analysis could uncover no prob- lem now with the docking mecha- nism which initially failed to oper- ate properly. It took six attempts at docking Sunday before the docking mechanism was secured. "We're proceeding with every intention of making a full lunar landing mission," said Lee. "We can find nothing wrong with the docking probe. We are confident now that the docking probe is good." The statement was made at a news conference yesterday after- noon after engineers on the ground had spent all night examining mod- els of the docking mechanism to try to find out why it failed to op- I erate properly in the first five docking attempts Sunday. Astronaut James McDivitt, man- ager of thenApollo Spacecraft Pro- gram told newsmen, "I can't help but feel there was some foreign object that got into the system. Where the foreign object came from and where it went, we don't know." Once the spacecraft had been launched, had orbited earth 11/ times and was then fired off in space toward the moon, Roosa pulled the command ship out from the lunar module and spent third stage rocket Sunday night. Scientists hope Apollo 14 will complete the vital second link in a science station network covering the moon. Apollo 13 was to have completed the link last April, but an oxygen tank explosion cancelled the moon landing and cut short the mission. Now Apollo 14 hopes to land its lunar module in the same Fra Mauro area of the lunar highlands to erect instruments similar to those Apollo 13 carried. Apollo 14's scientific mission is even more crucial now because of cancellation for budgetary reasons of the final three moon landings. * SERVING ANN ARBOR 1315 S. University 769-8240 Sun.-Thurs. 10 a.m.-10 p.m. Fri.-Sat. 10 a.m.-1 a.m. ! SERVING YPSILANTI (1 bik west of K-mart) 4910 Washtenaw 434-1545 Sun.-Thurs. I11 a.m.-10 p.m. Fri.-Sat. 11 a.m.-12 p.m. U NEW YORK () - Physicists from the University of Califor- nia reported yesterday they have discovered the rarest and most elusive of the nuclear particles within the atom. They found the particle's track in a photograph of a nuclear in- teraction - an inch long "foot- print" it left during its brief lifetime of 15 billionths of a sec- ond. The particle is called the an- tiomega-minus baryon - an an- tiparticle the mirror image of matter as we know it on earth. The discovery is related to the idea that somewhere in space there are galaxies made up of antimatter, just as galaxies or star clusters are made of mat- ter. If galaxies of matter and an- timatter were to collide, they would annihilate each other in a cataclysmic flash. A report of the discovery was made to the annual meeting of the American Physical Society by Dr. Gerson Goldhaber of the University of California Law- rence Radiation Laboratory at Berkeley. " GWis business f'survival Open Only to U of M Students, Faculty, Staff & Alumni & immediate families NASSAU ~ SPRING VACATION STUDENTS AND YOUTH CONFERENCE ON A PEOPLE'S PEACE FEBRUARY 5, 6 & 7 2500 PEOPLE (with sleeping bags) FROM ALL OVER THE COUNTRY -NEED PLACES TO SLEEP $9900 Jet Transportation from Detroit Metro (including transfers and taxes) GOT ANY FLOOR SPACE? CALL 763-1107, 8, 9 Under the incentives of national survival, the aerospace industry, utilizing advanced technologies, has developed into a permanent, flexible and highly diversified industry. The need to apply the aerospace systems approach to pollution control, mineral explora- tion, environmental planning, agriculture, forest management, desalting of sea water, modern transportation, air transport and control has greatly added to this diversification. Since the aero- space industry is not directly geared to the consumer, its benefits are social ... national survival on one hand ... a better life on the other. The new Ecosystems endeavor at Grumman is ideally suited to the task of giving man greater control over his environ- ment because of the Life-support Systems experience gained from the Lunar Module and undersea submersibles. Positioned in the forefront- of this remarkable industry and fed by the ideas emanating from its own advanced planning, scientific disciplines and industrial skills, Grumman pushes the aerospace art forward in deep submergence vessels, hydrofoil seacraft, advanced aircraft including business transport, lunar landing vehicles and space stations. It's only natuial, in a company that has quintupled in size in the lasts decade, that professional and management re- sponsibilities would proceed apace. Wide Open is the word at Grumman, and the message for Engineering, Math, and Business Administration majors. Problem solving is the way of life in Engineering, Research, Environmental Management and various business oriented areas. Can you provide cogent solutions? Grumman is situated in Long Island, 30 miles from N.Y.C. The white sand beaches of the Atlantic are 12 minutes away .. . the famed sailing reaches of Long Island Sound, an eleven-mile drive ... five beautiful public golf courses right in Bethpage-2 minutes from Grumman. Grumman representatives will be on campus Fahrarv 12 1971 FEB. 26-MAR. 5 8 DAYS AND 7 NIGHTS TOTAL PACKAGE, COMPLETE WITH DELUXE ACCOMMODA- TIONS AT THE MONTEAGU BEACH HOTEL, ONLY $169 + $10 tax & tips. OPTIONS-Complete breakfast & 7 course dinner daily for $45; scuba, sailing, fishing, water skiing, car & motor- cycle rental, at additional savings to you. I qmmpoqlwqqmFm .... _ _ . Ending Wednesday I DIAL 8-6416 Another fine double bill GENE WILDER UAC Travel 2nd Floor, Mich. Union 763-2147 administrative services by students international I A WEEK OF BLACK CULTURE u i and JEAN PAUL BELMONDO in "MAN FROM RIO" Thursday: "FELLINI SATYRICON" Roberta Flack IN CONCERT with Music Incorporated Mongo Santamaria with The Presidents and I -TL '. 11 t4 NW %W w 1-4-W-44