"Roadsides on a Merry-Go-Round" deals with the philosophies of Dietrich Bonhoef- fer, Teilhard de Chardin and Martin Buber Sunday at 6:45 NEWMAN CENTER 331 Thompson page three T4r irl 't ttn iluity NEWS PHONE: 764.055' BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Saturday, February 13, 1971 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three briefs n e W SBy The Asocaed Pess I w CINEMA II A VALENTINE SPECIAL "KING OF HEARTS" with Alan Bates, Genevieve Bujold FRIDAY & SATURDAY 7 & 9:05 p.m. PLUS "A' TASTE OF HONEY" with Rita Tushingham FRIDAY & SATURDAY-11 p.m. SUNDAY-1 & 3 p.m. February 12, 13, 14 Auditorium A, Angell Hall-75c SEPARATE ADMISSION FOR EACH SHOWING NEXT WEEK: "Birthday Party" Screenplay by Harold Pinter SEN. EDMUND MUSKIE (D-Maine) said yesterday he plans hearings on threats of plant closings and worker layoffs by in- dustries trying to avoid expensive antipollution controls. Muskie made his announcement after being assured the Union Carbide Corp., which is under a federal antipollution order, will "nev- er engage in any economic or environmental blackmail." Union Carbide has said it might have to lay off 625 workers at its Marietta, Ohio plant to meet an order from the Environmental Protection Agency to reduce fly ash and sulphur oxide emissions by April 1972. * * * BLACK PANTHER DEFENSE MINISTER Huey P. Newton is living in Oakland, California under an assumed name in an ex- clusive top-floor $650 a month apartment overlooking a lake, the San Francisco Examiner said yesterday. The black militant's Lakeshore Drive apartment is lavishly furn- ished and the one-year lease includes such services as a full-timej do or man, sauna, gymnasium and putting green, the newspaper said.' Newton and other Panther leaders could not be reached for com- ment yesterday. U.S. rep. blasts appointments to ;new mine panel WASHINGTON (A) - Rep. Ken Hechler (D-W. Va.) urged yesterday the firing of Undersecretary of the Interior Fred J. Russell for making what Hechler termed illegal appoint- ments of unqualified "political hacks" to a mine safety tech- nical panel. Hechler asked President Nixon to request the immediate resignation of Russell and of some members of the new Ad- visory Committee on Coal Mine Safety Research who, he said, do not meet the legal requirement that they be "knowledge- able in the field of coal mine --- - - safety research." - -, A move is also underway to rally J v ~ congressmen in a bipartisan law-a uf suit to sue the executive branch because of the appointments. -Associated Press "Some of the congressmen, Re retu rnpr a Huey i posh apartment? speechless at these appointments," d AL ' ? c.niA /'Snv. > CfnTTawc. n. nnc..- nin+.. ..f I I "A JACK THE RIPPER TYPE STORY. . with a twist! -William Wolf, Cue THE FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION proposed new labeling rules yesterday to encourage the use of iodized salt which helps combat throat disfiguring goiters. The administration also took steps toward requiring manufac- turers to indicate prominently on salt labels whether the product contains iodide, a component necessary for the human diet. The Salt Institute. representing nearly all manufacturers, said through a spokesman that its members oppose the labeling change. * * * THE AFL-CIO Maritime Trades Department released a report yesterday that says a rising glut of imported foreign goods is worsening this country's highest unemployment in 14 years. Heavy imports of textiles, leather goods, rubber, electronic com- ponents, and a host of other products have eliminated hundreds of thousands of jobs in the United States, the report said. * * * Black Panther Defense Minister Huey Newton leaves the plush Oakland apartment where he reportedly lives under an assumed name. The San Francisco Examiner said yesterday Newton goes under the name Don Penn in the $650 a month apartment. See News Briefs, at left. SALES DOWN- Detergent makers remnoving enzymes said uary Sellers, an associate oI public interest lawyer Ralph Na- der. However, Russell could not be reached yesterday for comment. Among those Russell appointed as "knowledgeable in the field of coal mine safety research" were:C -Jo Ann Gray, of Denver, a former airline stewardess whose mother's family included s o m e miners. -Sara Abernathy of Altus, Okla., a onetime fine arts student whose late husband was a doctor specializing in eye, ear, nose and throat ailments. -Robert Ziems, a Washington, PALE1TINE GUERRILLA chief Yasir Arafat announced Detergent makers are reportedly gun producing an enzyme f r e e patent tradtemark antitrust yesterday what he labeled as a new plot by the Jordanian gov- removing enzymes from some of Tide. lawyer. ernment to wipe out the commando movement. their laundry products due to a Spokesmen insisted there is no -Ben Chastian of Birmingham, Arafat appealed to the Arab world "to shoulder your responsibil- loss of sales. evidence that enzyme detergents a chemistry professor with no re- ities toward our people." Industry officials blame the are any more hazardous than reg- ported experience with mining. * lower sales volume on consumer ular detergents. -William Carlson, Wyoming THE APOLLO ASTRONAUTS began talking with experts confusion over the safety of en- The move comes as the Federal University president specializing yesterday in Houston about their lunar excursions. zyie stain removers. Trade Commission continues a in radiation and veterinary medi- Industry spokesmen confirmed year-long investigation of enzyme cine, whose Senate sponsor has Astronauts Alan Shepard, Stuart Roosa and Edgar Mitchell went the cutback on enzymes after a !aety. The FT onside stated in writing th'at he has no into the isolation of the Lunar Receiving Laboratory yesterday New York official had disclosed a petition that would outlaw en- experience in coal mining. morning, that Procter & Gamble has be- zymes in detergents.i -H. Lynne Barber of Cincin- ~Remember 'PSYCHO'? There are scenes with that kind of impact! Worth see- -ABC-TV LANSING ACTION Students draft antiSST *bills Definitely in The Hitchcock Traditem COLOR M STARTS WEDNESDAY: ANDY WARHOL'S "TRASH" ao F IFTHForuJm _ PTH AVENUO At LIU. T DOWNTOWN' ANN ARBOR NIORMATION 761-6700 SNEAK PREVIEW TONIGHT AT 9:00 ONLY! A complete showing of a new movie by Louis Bunuel featuring his star in Belle du Jour, Catherine Deneuve. SAT. Bird-3 :06 Bird-5:00 Bird-7:00 Sneak-9:00 Bird-10:45 SUN. Bird only at 3:00, 5:00, 7:00, 9:00 A bill that would prohibit the supersonic transport (S S T) from flying or landing in the state is being drafted by a group of four University law students and one engineering student. A second bill being drafted by the group, all members of the Environmental L a w Society (ELS), would establish noise limits at all non-military air- ports in the state, which could in effect ban the SST f r o -m Michigan. Both bills are expected to be introduced to the state legisla- ture early next week by Rep. David Serotkin (R-Mount Cle- mens). The controversial bill prohib- iting overflights by supersonic jets stands less chance of pass- ing than the bill setting noise limits, according to John Watts, a second year law student who heads the ELS. Watts suggests t h a t airline companies, who stand to lose the business SST flights in Michigan would supply, are like- ly to contest the b i1 in the courts, should it pass the legis- lature, on the grounds that it interferes with interstate com- merce. Serotkin says he hopes to cre- ate a test case for the U.S. Su- preme Court based on the claim that noise and atmosphere pol- lution by the planes would be harmful to the health of the state's citizens and property. The second bill would set a noise limit of 108 decibels on planes at the state's commer- cial airports. Watts notes that most conventional jets are able to meet this limit. Although it is a matter of speculation how much noise the SST would generate, environ- mentalists say the SST's noise level would go far above the proposed limit. Similar noise controls have al- ready been established in Cali- fornia and are under consider- ation in New York, despite op- position from the Federal Avia- tion Administration. Another group of students, ac- tive in Fly America's Super Son- ic Transport (FASST), is seek- ing to appear before the legis- lature to oppose the new bills and "set the record straight" on the SST controversy. FASST charges that most of the criticism of the SST has been based on "fuzzy thinking, exaggeration and out-and-out misrepresentation." The American Academy of Al- lergy, which recently declared de- tergent enzymes a "potential dan- ger to public health" has present- ed to industry and government of- ficials a blueprint for a proposed study to determine the safety of' enzymes. Enzymes are chemicals which are present in all living things and speed up chemical reactions, such as the digestion of food. In detergents, the enzymes, which speed up chemical reac- tions, break down certain stains so the regular washing process can remove them. Scientists in England and the United States have discovered that workers in the enzyme in- dustry have developed respiratory illness from the enzymes. Both government agencies and detergent makers have received complaints from consumers who said they developed skin rashes from immersing their hands in laundry water or wearing clothes washed in enzyme detergents. The FTC alone reported receiv- ing over 200 complaints of aller- gic reactions. nati, a "retired mining executive" whose business was actually sand, gravel and retail coal. The former stewardess, the doc- tor's widow and the patent lawyer were involved in Republican party politics, and the stewardness and her husband are close friends of Russell. Interior Department spokesmen said they do not know whether the others were politically active. Two other appointees certified as knowledgeable about mine saf- ety were a vice president of Con- solidation Coal Co., whose No. 9 mine at Farmington, W. Va., ex- ploded in November 1968, killing 78 men; and a representative of Cargill, Inc., owner of a Louis- iana salt mine where fire killed 21 men in March 1968. 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 St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier, $10 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5 by carrier, $5 by mail. quake site LOS ANGELES (MP)-Thousand. of families received word yester- day that they can return to homes evacuated after Tuesday's earth- quake cracked the dam of t h e city's largest reservoir, creating fears of a rupture. Mayor Sam Yorty said four days of pumping had lowered the wa- ter level to just slightly above the safety level, and an estimated 80,- 000 persons ordered out of a 20 square-mile area could return at 4 p.m. The death toll from the devas- tating shock stood at 61 yesterday. Forty-two victims were pulled from the rubble of a collapsed vet- erans hospital, where two patients and two employes were still miss- ing last night and feared dead. One man was pulled alive from the ruins late Thursday, a day af- ter workers had given up on find- ing more survivors. A strong aftershock did not fur- ther weaken the dam at Van Nor- man Lakes before the water drop- ped to a safe level. T h e initial shock crumpled the concrete fac- ing and created, fissures in the main bulwark of packed earth. By yesterday morning 'pumping had reduced the level of the up- per reservoir by 18 feet and the lower reservoir by 12. There were four billion gallons of drinking water in the lower reservoir when the quake struck. Scores had been rescued from the wreckage of the hospital in the first two days after the quake but hope had been abandoned for others when Frank Carbonera, a kitchen worker, was found under a huge concrete slab, orotected by a metal tub. In the hard hit west end of the San Fernando Valley, close to the quake's center, m a n y neighbor- hoods in the communities of Syl- mar, Granada Hills, Mission Hills and Porter Ranch continued with- out water due to broken mains or wrecked wells. With temperatures around 90 degrees, residents lined up at tank trucks parked in strategic loca- tions with signs saying "One Gal- lon of Water Per Family Please." t - --- ------ --- I r RC PLAYERS presents- THE FROGS an original play for children SAT., Feb. 13-10 A.M. & 2 P.M. SUN., Feb. 14-2 P.M. i 11 East Quad Aud. Admission 50c !GINMA Sat., Sun.-Feb. 13, 14 GREED dir. ERICH VON STROHEIM (1925) Zosu Pitts and her husband dentist fall from finan- cial heights because of their GREED. A movie with a message. "GREED unquestionably contains the fullest depic- tion of Stroheimian underworld and the most intense contrast between extremes of innocence and de- generacy. Stroheim, Joel Finler 7 & 9:05 ARCHITECTURE 662-8871 75c AUDITORIUM WITH