STUDENT COUNCIL FOR EXCEPTIONAL CHiLDREN meeting Tonight, October 15, 1910-1:00 Room 2016-School of Education* for information call Carolyn Roppy, 769-2214 (eve. 5-8) I page three C14C t l i ttn Bat1 NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Thursday, October 15, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michgan Page Three -5 rl MICHIGAN ENDING TONIGHT LEE MARVIN in "MONTE WALSH" DIAL 5-6290 FII FRIDAY Jojseph E. Levine presents An Avco Embassy Film A Carlo Ponti Production starring in Vittorio DeSica's Produced by Carlo Ponti and Arthur Cohn Technicolor-Prints by Movielab AN AVCO EMBASSY RELEASE . AW news briefs By The Associated Press PALESTINIANS will be able to decide their own destiny in a national referendum, announced King Hussein of Jordan yes- terday. , Palestinians in both the east and west banks of the kingdom will be invited to choose the regime' and governmental system they want as well as the relationship between their chosen regime and the Hashemite kingdom, he said. Hussein revealed his intention in reporting on the new agree- ment he signed Tuesday with guerrilla leader Yasir Arafat. The date for the referendum has not been set. COMMUNIST CHINA set off a large nuclear explosion yes- terday to end a year long lapse in nuclear testing, according to the United States Atomic Energy Commission. The Commission also announced that the Soviet Union had set off its largest nuclear detonation' since the limited test ban treaty went into effect in 1963. At the same time the AEC reported that the United States had also detonated a nuclear device yesterday, marking the first time that three nations had conducted nuclear tests on the same day. * * * A SUBSTITUTE AMENDMENT applying expressly to dis- crimination on account of sex replaced the original equal rights amendment proposed by two senators. Sens. Birch Bayh (D-Ind.), and Marlow Cook (R-Kent.) gave up on their original proposal, saying the revision was designed to meet the objections of its critics while providing most of the affirmative;benefits. Senate debate over the proposed amendment has been long and$ vehement, although the House had passed the proposal last August by a 350-15 vote. EPISCOPAL CHURCH representatives, meeting in a nation- wide conference, yesterday debated in fiery session the church's t most controversial program. The multimillion dollar program, designed to empower the poor f and needy, was alternatively called the saviour of the church and itsc death warrant. Representatives heard pleas to retain the' program because oft its keeping with the ministry of Jesus Christ, and to discard it andf place top priority on gospel teaching.t A telephone caller with a female voice police to have the building evacuated before The bombing claim was made in3 Women's group takes credit for blast' at Harvard CAMBRIDGE, Mass. () - Harvard University's Center for International Affairs was bombed yesterday and a women's radical group claimed credit for the attack, dedicating it to Angela Davis. Davis, sought since August on murder and kidnap charg- es, was arrested in New York Tuesday night - several hours before the Harvard bombing. No one was 'injured in the explosion on the top floor of the ivy covered brick building that has .been the target of past radical student attacks. State police estimated damage at $40,000. warned campus the bombing. Workers clear Harvard bomb blast d POLICE RALLY:, Poltitcal terror worries authoril WASHINGTON (P) - Thous- officers and Congress nh rrlo r.f r nl3nam or inmmn.7 i k n I anus w. policemn ijammiied t h e Capitol yesterday in a demonstra- tion for stiffer laws against at- tacks on police, while federal of- ficials worried o v e r rapidly in- creasing political terrorism. The rally was called by the Fra- ternal Order of Police "to show the people of this country we are fed up," John J. Harrington, na- tional president, told some 3,500 ...GK NOW 1 DIAL 8-6416 Govt. says saoe four millionel cars haveufe fronty weels THEACADEMYAWARD WINNER I "BEST PICTURE" "BEST DIRECTOR" "BEST'SCRMENPLAY" "BEST MUSIC SCORE" 7A ROARING ENTERTAINMENT!'n-y '"°Croe "THE BEST COMEDV EVER MADE... AN ABSO- LUTE TRIUMPH!" -e.sw..k "BRILLIANTLY ENTERTAINING. IT LEAVES AN AUDIENCE STUNNED WITH JOY.'".Y. woria;.,...r Sm " * **(HIGHEST RATING!) DELECTABLE." Kor. Ca.mern. N.Y. Doilythews "ABSOLUTELY MAGNIFICENT!" -Time Mogoim. AND WASHINGTON (M)-The Department of Trans- portation warned yesterday that the front wheels of four million Ford and Mercury autos, model years 1965 through 1969, could crumple without warning after severe stress. The department's unprecedented "consumer protection bulletin" followed last month's govern- ment-initiated recall of 85,000 Ford police-pursuit cars equipped with the potentially defective front wheels. The National Highway Safety Bureau, a unit of' the Transportation Department, said it was not demanding recall of the four million non- police cars "because the cycle of extreme abuse and high-speed wheel impacts required to initiate control arm failure does not occur-except in spe-, cial and rare instances-in nonpursuit yehicles." Under suspicion are the lower control arms in the cars, which hold the front wheels upright. The government has verified some 37 cases of control arm failure which caused front wheels to play outward in nonpolice cars. The bureau said testing has shown that high-, speed impacts such as striking a curb or median strip are necessary to cause the wheel failures. Involved in the warning were these 1965-1969 Ford models: Custom, Custom 500, Galaxy 500, Galaxi 500 Xl, Galaxy 500LTD, Country Sedan, Country Squire, XL, LTD, Custom Ranch Wagon. Also involved were 1968 and 1969 model Thunder- birds and these 1965-1969 Mercury models: Mon- terey, Montclair, Parklard, Commuter, Colony Park, Brougham and Marquis. the Capitol steps. "It's time the peo country face up to i a revolution taking Harrington. He called for pass lation making it a f to cross state lines policeman and pro death penalty or li ment for killing a p fireman. Meanvhile, Federal seriously studying he homegro radicalg try to copy their La and Canadian counte tempting political ki With threats of po nations and terrorist ready made good, ' w afford to do nothin Department official day. The official said plans to kidnap forei or campaigning U.S.o come to the FBI th mants in the radical u "If we had said a ye even six months ago- ical groups were pla on a bombing ramp would have thought w ing a scare issue," h body is saying that n( The spectre of poli ings by terrorist gro visiting foreign offici paigning government raised earlier this wee FBI official. a letter from "The Proud Es sociated Press Tribe, a group of revolution debris women." A carbon copy was ni ed special delivery to the Associ - -wed Press office in Boston. The letter was typewritten, printed in block letters at t bottom was the reference toI vis, a b 1 a c k former philoso I ~teacher charged in connect with a courtroom shootout San Rafael, Calif. The printing read: "We ies heard that Angela Davis was c tured. We dedicated this act members on to her becauseheractions - example have inspired us. F pall political prisoners." ple of th is The letter said "the fall of f place," said sive .as just begun" and "our fensi e will be carried on in streets and the schools all over age of legis- especially here in Boston. federal crime "We want to build a militl to attack a women's movement that coma viding t h e itself to the destruction'of Amc fe imprison- kan imperialism," it said. policeman or The group s a i d the strate officials are hamlet program in Vietnam, eports t h a t attempt to destroy the entire groups mn a y ture and lifestyle of the Viett tin American mese people," was created at1 rparts by at- Harvard center. dnapings. "This, our tribe's first actior olice assassi- part of a national fall offeas bombings al- by tribes of kids all over to att we just can't the enemy everywhere he -shc g," a Justice his ugly face. This coincides w said yester-offensives being waged by t saidyeser-Viet, Cong in Southeast Asiaa by our brothers in the prisons reports of New York City," the letter said gn diplomats Archibald Cox, officials have AciadCox former L Trough infor- solicitor general and now a H, d drgrond. vard law professor, said the bor undeigound ing "appears to be part of a cc ear ago - or tinuing harassment against t - that rad- center." Court ask eda to reconsider i " integration., WASHINGTON (M) - The gov- ernment advised the Supreme Court yesterday to consider re- segregation and black separatism as it decides on the steps school systems must take to accomplish integration. "One ofnthe problems is not to require too much," U.S. Solicitor General Erwin N. Griswold told the ?court toward the end of the three-day hearing. At the same time, he said chil- dren should not be able to "opt out" of a system that has been de- segregated. The government's top spokes- man in the high court has steered a course somewhere between civil rights attorneys and Southern school' boards. For example, Griswold said black children do not have a con- stitutional right to attend schools that are not identifiable racially, but he accused the boards in Mo- bile, Ala., and Charlotte, N.C;, of pepetuating segregation. riswold said Washington, D.C., is t'e clearest example f4 reseg- regation '- where whites le a v e th e schools to . avoid attending classes against their w ill with blacks. In the capital the public school population is more than 90 per cent black, Looking across the counsel ta- ble in the courtroom to lawyers from the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, the solici- tor said: "It is far f r o m clear whether all the people they rep- resent want to have what they seek for them. It isn't clear to me that black children should be forced to go to schools they don't want to attend. "It remains a problem how far black people should be forced in these cases." I nning to go page, people ue were rais- e said. "No- iow." tical kidnap- oups against ials or cam- officials was ek by a high 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, Mi1ch- igan, 420, Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Pubiished 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. --tons Read and Use DailyClassifieds FROLIC BEST STEAK HOUSE STEAK DINNERS NOW SERVING At Reasonable Prices HALF PRICES FOR WOMEN EVERY THURSDAY I BI(OBU1'YI;OUSB PRESENTS THE OVERLAND STAGE 4 -Pinter's-A Slight Ache .-Premiere-The Ldove Pickle THURSDAY, OCTOBER 15 330 Maynard 8 P.M. $1.00 1 II I KILLER SALE! U DO YOU LIVE IN A DORMITORY???? STUDGNT BOOK SQRVICG 1215 S. University 20% OFF LIST ON NEW BOOKS 50% OFF LIST ON USED BOOKS STARTS MONDAY, OCTOBER 12 Daily Classifieds Get Results THURS.-FRI., Oct. 15-16 The Scarlet Empress dir. JOSEPH VON STERNBERG (1934) II -".,A r. PC^D . erA C A as-C. t ts..