UM Tae Kwon Do Club 4 KOREAN KARATE DEMONSTRATION and 1st MEETING TUES., JAN. 12 at 7:00 P.M. in BARBOUR GYM (Next to Waterman Gym) Beginners Welcome a { page three ZIP £.dic IA& i!&341 4b, AML NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 w.+ 4 Satruray, January 9, 1'971 Ann Arbor, Michigan Pnnt± Thrpo - ' '.... ~P .C 1 6 f . } .~. IIl1 I y briefs n e wsBy The Associated Press THIS WEEKEND-STEAK DINNERS ot BEST STEAK.HOUSE SIRLOIN-1.53 FILET-1.59' PORK CHOP--1.39* *with Baked Potato, Salad, & Texas Toast STEAKB U RGER-.79 with Baked Potato & Texas Toast 217 S. STATE ST. (NEXT TO STATE THEATRE) atbleties b.a.mn. creativity diag enact folly gridiron homeeoming instructors damming knowledge lectures MCHIGANENSIAN news organizations parties. quizzes registration students t.g.'s ugli voices women's lib YEARBOOK Z.p.g. NOW is the time to buy your MICHIGANENSIAN The University of Michigan Yearbook Just return this coupon with $7.00 {check or money order payable to the MICHIGANENSIAN) to the Student Publications Building, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Mich. 48104. A receipt will be sent within 3 weeks after your order is received. NAME ANN ARBOR ADDRESS it THE UNITED STATES is continuing to lose almost as many " helicopters in Indochina - about three a day - as it did in pre- vious years despite a lower level of fighting and American troop withdrawals, Pentagon statistics showed yesterday. Last year more than seven million sorties - one flight by each $230,000 helicopter - were flown. Pentagon spokesmen say that even x though the war has been winding down, the United States still has been flying almost the same number of helicopter runs, NEVADA HAS DROPPED 22 per cent of its welfare recipi- ents - about 3,000 men, women and children - on grounds they've been cheating the state to the tune of about $1 million a year, the Nevada welfare director said yesterday. George Miller blamed the cheating mainly on a federal rule that allows applicants to get aid merely by declaring they meet all quali- fications. Most of those cut off failed to report other income sources, unemployment benefits or that there was a man living in the home. FORMER WEST GERMAN STUDENT leader Rudi Dutschke lost his appeal yesterday against a British government order ex- pelling him from the country. The tribunal stated that Dutschke, who was admitted to Britain to recuperate from gunshot wounds he suffered in an attempt on his life in Berlin in 1968, had not kept his promise to abstain from politi- cal activities. It said that "there must without doubt be risk in his: continued presence or a longer term stay." THE AVERAGE JAPANESE has ten times as much mercury Though computer dating in his body as the average European or American, say Tokyo of fraud levelled against municipal authorities who are launching a war on pollution in the ness (right) testifies befo world's most populous city. ject. The presence of cadmium, a toxic metallic element found in some~ ores, also has been discovered in rice, and in some areas has caused NO INJURIES: a crippling disease that resulted in a number of deaths. NOI__JURIES:_ POLISH SHIPYARD CREWS continuously interrupted their li? work last night at the Baltic seaport of Gdansk, scene of bloodyat clashes last month. The action was an effort to make Communist authorities bow to three demands, which call for the release of crewmates seized by the: names of those who ordered the militia to shoot at demonstrators, and' a visit by Poland's new party chief, Edward Gierek. WASHINGTON (P) -- Th * * * eral government moved Fri THE ARMY dismissed a murder charge yesterday against a bolster protection around Green Beret captain whose court martial conviction in the 1967 embassy buildings after a pr slaying of a Cambodian agent in South Vietnam was thrown out explosion yesterday rocke by an appeals court last October. embassy's cultural center. The Army Court of Military Review last Oct. 29 set aside Captain No one was injured in the John J. McCarthy Jr.'s conviction basically because a key prosecu- police said, although windc tion witness recanted his testimony after the court martial, but ruled the first and second floor the Army could try McCarthy again if it chose, shattered and a 50-to-60- Diplomat seized in Uruguay MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay (T - British Ambassador Geof- frey Jackson was kidnaped yesterday by Tupamaro ter- rorists who beat his guards with clubs. They carried the envoy off in his own car, which later was found in flames. There was no immediate com- munication from the guerrillas on what demands, if any, they are making for the release of Jack- son, 55, who has been ambassador to Uruguay since June 1969. The Tupamaros have been hold- ing two other kidnap victims for more than five months and they executed a third, U.S. police ex- pert Dan Mitrione, last August. Police said the terrorists sent their own car crashing into the ambassador's vehicle as it ap- proached the British Embassy in downtown Montevideo on his way to work shortly before 10 a.m. Witnesses said the kidnapers leaped into the ambassador's black limousine and overpowered t h e driver and t w o guards, beating them severely. All three were hos- pitalized, but were n o t injured critically. A spray can was found in the abandoned car a few blocks away. There was speculation it con- tained a chemical used to put the ambassador to sleep. T h e Uruguayan government promptly relayed its "profound sorrow and great concern" to the British government and assured that all steps were being taken to find Jackson. Police erected road b lo ck s on all highways out of Montevideo and at key intersec- tions. The frontier with Brazil was closed. Police have been carrying on a running fight for more than six years with the Tupamaros, who seek to overthrow Uruguay's elect- ed government and replace it with a Socialist regime. Organized by dissident Social- ists in 1963, the Tupamaros were once hailed by some as a Robin Hood band. But recent actions of the guerrillas have cost them much of their popular support. -Associated Press Comrpute unfit as cupid services are booming, they seem to be going haywire. In response to charges these services, New York state is considering licensing or legislation. A wit- ore the New York Attorney General (center) in a public hearing on the sub- )C S oviet embassy, engt hens protection he fed- day to Soviet edawn d the e blast, ows in r were -pound CLERICS VS. GOVERNMENTS Activist Roman Catholic clergy clash with secular authorities VATICAN CITY (k)-Roman Catholic clergymen around the world -- in the United States, in Africa, in Latin America and in Spain - are getting in trou- ble more and more with civil authorities. The latest is the Most Rev. Albert Ndongme, a black bishop in the West African country of Cameroon who was sentenced to death Wednesday on conviction of plotting to assassinate the country's president. Bishop Ndongme admitted giving arms to rebels as a "sym- bol" but denied taking any ac- tive role in plans for armed re- bellion. He said he expected a (AFTER DEC. 31 1970-THE PRICE WILL BE $8.00) MAILING INSTRUCTIONS: $1 additional charge: if you wish the book mailed anywhere in the world., "spiritual coup d'etat in which only the angels would act." Last month the Vatican re- ported the arrest in Conakry, Guinea, of Archbishop Raymond Maria Tchidimbo. Reports from neighboring Togo said the pre- late refused to m a k e a radio statement supporting the gov- ernment's claim that Portuguese mercenaries invaded Guinea in late November. In the United States, Fathers Daniel and Philip Berrigan are serving prison terms f o r de- stroying draft records in Balti- more, Md. Many other Ameri- can priests have taken part in various forms of civil dissent. Reports continue to trickle out of Brazil about tortures of priests in prison. Catholic cler- gymen have often been in the forefront of civil dissent in Mex- ico. And in Spain two priests were among the Basques sen- tenced to long prison terms last month for political terrorism, and a number of other Basque priests have been arrested. Countless other examples of civil dissent by Catholic clergy- men have occurred over the past year. And the tide seems to b on the rise. Throughout the Church's his- tory, clerics have defied kings, led armies and often risen to high political office.' In these times of political ferment it seems natural for some church- men to be swept up in activist movements. iron door was hurled to a rooftop 250 feet away.. The State Department imme- diately apologized for the inci- dent. In Moscow, Foreign Minis- ter Andrei A. Gromyko delivered a strong protest to U.S. Ambas- sadorJacob Beam during a prev- iously scheduled meeting to dis- cuss the mounting series of inci- dents in b o t h Russia and the United States over American Jew- ish reaction to the treatment of Soviet Jews. And in Washington, the embas- sy itself asked the State Depart- ment for added protection, for quick apprehension of the bombers and for compensation to repair damage done to the building. The bomb went off about 4:30 a.m. About a half hour later a woman called the Washington bureau of The Associated Press to report the bombing and to warn it was only "a sample of things to come.'' "Let our people go," the caller said. "Never again." "Never again" is the motto of the militant Jewish Defense Lea- gue, which has conducted several anti-Soviet demonstrations in this country the past year. The State Department quickly assured Soviet officials additional protection would be given. It also said every effort would be made to arrest those responsible for the bombing. "We have been making and will make a very strong effort to pro- tect Soviet installations," a de- partment spokesman said. "It is quite clear we will review WASHINGTON (P) - The Food and Drug Administration says there is not enough mercury in most types of tuna to worry about, but contamination probably will eliminate swordfish from t h e American diet. The FDA, reporting on a survey still under way, said Thursday the nation's food supply appears free of significant mercury pollution, except for swordfish and s o m e types of large size tuna. "We've done a market basket survey on a broad variety, of foods and supplemented this with spot checks," Virgil O. Wodicka, head of the FDA Bureau of Foods re- ported. "So far the only problem we've found is fish," he t o 1 d a news briefing, but added that even there the pollution is not "criti- cal enough for the housewife to worry about." The FDA reported last month that 89 per c e n t of all frozen swordfish samples contained mer- cury in excess of the federal lim- its, 1/2 part pollutant per million parts of flesh. The agency has found o n 1 y large varieties of tuna - such as yellow fin and big eye - accum- ulate appreciable -amounts of the metallic pollutant, which in large doses can damage the central ner- vous system and kidneys. "Ways are becoming apparent for tuna to remain a part of the American diet," said Richard L. Ronk, head of the FDA's mercury team. He mentioned the possi- bility of packaging only smaller varieties of the fish, such as some albacore and all skipjack. FDA reports mercury in tuna below danger level our security measures to see how they can be improved." The target building, near Du- Pont Circle, houses the embassy's press relations department a n d the information office for Soviet Life magazine. Several families also live there. The bombing was the latest in a series of anti-Soviet demonstra- tions and violent incidents in sev- eral U.S. cities. All the recent pro- tests have been over the trials of Soviet Jews in Leningrad accused of planning to hijack an airplane. School (e.g. LSA, etc.) I I IF | Coming Mon. & Tues.J EKCIIUSIVE- moN AREA SHOWING' 482-?3-. You will find our store specially equipped to supply " y " WOODSTOCK STARTS TOMORROW: LAST NIGHT you with LAW case books and supplies. Our LAW section is staffed by law students to assist you. TN The a s s \ /MVAN MI(HAf L gLAINk KfMOYAN ( JOSEPH STON WHOWRT "FIDDLER on the WROOF '.u .c JOHN KANDER f Revolutionary III U N - i - mE N II I r O nM~ k~ i re l ngby tla I E rra ! !!n!s r1 Apha t