"I , page three' Q Sii 1an 3atl# NEWS PRONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 ONE'S EXPERIENCE Is THE OBJECTIFICATION OF HIS THOUGHTS Come to the Christian Science Organization meetings held ev ry Thursday evening from 7:30 to 8:30 in Room 3545 SAB to learn how students are examining mental attitudes under the microscope of Soul. Wednesday, September 16, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three n ews briefs Egyptian minister declares By The Associated Press end to U.S. peace initiative ,I I. , THREE MAJOR RAILROADS were picketed yesterday as a court order barring a strike filtered down to union members. Picketing of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway and the Southern Pacific ended after several hours. Conditions generally had returned to normal by yesterday after- noon. Union leaders apparently had no plans to defy the federal in- junction, which delays a strike for at least eight days. Assistant Secretary of Labor *. J. Usery moved to resume ne- gotiations as soon as possible to take advantage of the strike delay. Talks are planned for today. SOUTH VIETNAMESE FORCES withdrew yesterday from two mountaintop bases near the Laotian border. South Vietnamese troops were lifted by helicopter from Barnett and Fire Base O'Reilly. Although both bases and nearby positions have been under North Vietnamese shelling and ground attacks, South Vietnamese com- manders said the two bases were being evacuated because of the ap- proaching monsoon season. A HIJACKER was critically wounded by a fellow passenger yesterday after a tense hour on a San Francisco airport runway. The hijacker, identified as Donald Irwin of Reseda, Calif., said he wanted to take a Trans World Airlines 70l7 jetliner to North Korea. He was shot by Robert D. De Nisco, a Brink's Inc. guard escorting a shipment of negotiable securities on the same flight. De Nisco shot the hijacker, after conferring with the pilot of the plane and airport officials. Irwin had been recently released from a mental hospital. Irwin later was charged by the U.S. attorney with air piracy, which carries a penalty of 20 years to death. The flight was originally scheduled to go from New York to San Francisco, with stops in Chicago and Los Angeles, where Irwin got on. S* * * FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION OFFICIALS recom - mended yesterday that mercury used as a preservative in some cosmetics should be replaced with less toxic 'substances. There are as yet no reported cases of mercury poisoning linked" to cosmetics. However, the symptoms are hard to diagnose. The poison is capable of doing particular damage to the brain and central nervous system. The FDA was prompted to look for mercury in cosmetics after: findings earlier this year that it was responsible for environmental: pollution.r Officials estimate that about 40 out of several thousand cosmetic products use mercury compounds to prevent the growth of bacteria. SENATE MAJORITY LEADER Mike Mansfield (D-Mont.) l acted yesterday to cut off debate on a constitutional amendment1 dealing" with elections. Mansfield's petition will be voted on tomorrow, bringing a crucial1 test to the amendment to provide for election of the President by di-j rect poplular vote. Mansfield acted after Sen. Sam J. Ervin, D-N.C., objected to a series of unanimous consent requests to limit debate. The requestsj came from Sen. Birch Bayh, D-Ind., chief Senate sponsor of the direction election plan. A group of southern senators earlier organized for a fight against the amendment, eliminating any chance of agreement for a Senate vote this week. The House has approved the amendment. Vows to observe cease-fire as long as Israeli forces do By The Associated Press Egypt officially declared yesterday that the U.S. peace initiative In the Middle East is ended, but promised to con- tinue observing the temporary cease-fire as long as Israel does. Foreign Minister Mahmoud Riad told fa news conference the Egyptian decision came because the United States had failed to act as an impartial mediator and was supporting what he termed "Israeli aggression." "I can now say," Riad said, "that the United States has Wednsday, Septemher 16 THE KISS dir. JACQUES FEYDER, 1929 Melodrama of murder and love - Garbo's last silent film. Co-starring the future Dr. Kildare, Lew Ayres. SNORT: James Dean-Uniighted Road 7,& 9:05 Architecture, 662-8871 75c Auditorium -Associated Press Coffee break? A secretary takes time out for coffee outside the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad building in Pittsburgh, where union members stayed off the job yesterday despite a federal court injunction. The workers returned to their jobs a few hours later when they were served with the injunction, SECURITY PLAN: Foreign aidreform proposed .y Nixon brought its initiative to an end." The minister began the confer- ence with a prepared statement in which Egypt blamed the Unit- ed States and Israel for blocking efforts by U.N. envoy Gunnar V. Jarring to promote substantial negotiations. Israel persistently refused to cooperate with the Jarring mis- sion, he said, while new Ameri- can arms shipments to Israel en- couraged the Israelis' "obstruc- tionist policy." Before Riad addressed news- men, the official Cairo radio charged that further U.S. aid to Israel would trigger "grave con- sequences, more serious than the mere collapse of the Mideast peace efforts. "By opening its arsenal wide to Israel, Washington is taking 'a very serious step counter to ef- forts for a peaceful settlement and will have to shoulder the grave consequences arising from it," the broadcast said. Riad was asked if Egypt now felt free to move additional troops and equipment into the military standstill zone behind the Suez front, but he declined to give a direct reply. "I am not going to enter Into military details," he said. In response to the Egyptian an- nouncement, a White House spokesman said in Washington the United States still hopes the ini- tiative put forth in the cease-fire "will proceed and we're hopeful it will be successful." The United States is "working along this line," presidential press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said. Riad conceded the cease-fire was an outgrowth of the Amer- ican initiative but said Egypt would observe it in order to aid the Jarring mission-as long as the other side did likewise. N 1.0 I Guerrilas press for demand . By The Associated Press Arab guerrillas laid dowi their terms for freeing Israeli and American hijack hostages yester- day and warned Western govern- ments they "cannot wait forever" for their demands to be met. The statement coincided with a disclosure that the guerrillas may have found a fortune on one of the planes hijacked last week. In Zurich, a freed stewardess from the Swissair jetliner blown up by the guerrillas said the Arabs took from the plane $690,000 in currency being ,sent from Swiss banks to New York. The Popular Front, which ear- lier demanded Britain free hi- packer Leila Khaled, added ano- ther requirement for London that the body of her Oompanlon, Pat- riek Joseph Auguello, killed in an abortive hijack attempt be re- turned. Anguello, identified by British authorities - as a 27-year-old American whose parents live in Nicaragua, was slain by Israeli se- curity agents who-prevented th e seizure of the El Al plane Sept. 6. Kanafani also reiterated a de- mand that West Germany free three Arab terrorists held in Mun- ich and that Switzerland release three others jailed in Zurich. Meanwhile, Israel has proposed urgent international action.to combat air piracy in the' wake of the hijackings.. WASHINGTON (A') - President Nixon called yesterday for a top- to-bottom overhaul of the U.S. foreign-aid system, including cre- ation.of a new security-assistance program which he said would help reduce the American military' presence abroad.j In sending his long-awaited re- form plan to Congress, Nixon pro- posed also abolishing the aid- handling Agency for International Development (AID).' The agency, whose functions would be handed to nevw institu- tions, has come under increasingly hostile criticism recently for its al- leged involvement in the political affairs of the countries it serves. The President gave no over-all figures for future U.S. aid levels in his blueprint for the 1670s. But he made plain he wants Congress to reverse its past practice of cutting ever more deeply into the polit- ically unpopular assistance. His six-point reform, he said, "would turn over assistance pro- grams into a far more successful investment in the future of man- kind." The President said U.S. aid should be grouped into three dif- ferent parts-security assistance, humanitarian assistance and econ- omic assistance - and handled under separate organizations to "overcome the confusion inherent in our present approach" of lump- ing all together. U I DOUBLE FEATURE - THROUGH SATURDAY "ONE OF THE TEN BEST PICTURES OF THE YEAR-" -N.Y. Times, L.A. Times, Holiday Magazine, N.Y. Post, Cue Magazine "FEWFILMS HAVE BEEN BETTER" -L.A. Times "ONE OF THE BEST AMERICAN MOVIES! The four principal actors are wonderful! -Roger Grtenspun .. N.Y. Times 3 GRIPPING NOW PLAYS! 1 7 I I I I TONIGHT POCKET BILLIARD EXHIBITION Jimmy Caras 5 TIME. W/ORLD CHAMPION Union Ballroom I[- ROBERT REDFORD KATHARINE ROSS ROBERT BLAKE tSUSAN CRAK tTILL ELLTE WILLIE BOY IS HERE'' A 4 SAL PICTURE :° ____ I MARCEL BLI TONIGH 7-9-11 PIA RADICAL FILM SERIES PRESENTS CAMUS LCK ORPHEUS T vA. 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