BEST STEAK HOUSE STEAK DINNERS NOW SERVING At Reasonable Prices FILET-1.59 SIRLOIN-1.53 Above includes Baked Potato, Salad, and Texas Toast STEAKBURGER-.79 includes Baked Potato and Texas Toast 217 S. STATE ST. Next to State Theater iage three S P Szctlii4rn ttii NEWS PHONE: 7640552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Saturday, November 7, 1970 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN Page Three COLIESATE WINTER & SPRING he lnder aine VACATIONS Eastours' Collegiate Vacations give you a great deal toAll Inclusive enjoy now , much more to treasure throughout the years ahead. Travel with those of your own age. Meet $4 8 Israeli collegiates and Kibbutzniks. With Eastours youa p 8 feel like a native - never a tourist. '1, Choose from-10, 15, 22 and EASTOURS INC. 28-day vacations (including ii west 42nd St one credit-earnings program); 1wstJ03 with departures. via EL A New York 10036 throughout December, Jan- Please rush Free Collegiate vacations folder to uary and March. Complete details available in Free,.Nm' 6-page full color brochure. Address Mallcoupon today. City, State, Zip -newsbrief s By The Associated Press THE GOVERNMENT yesterday filed suit against General Motors Corp. for allegedly refusing to notify purchasers of three- quarter ton pick-up trucks manufactured between 1960 and 1965 that the wheel structure is "subject to sudden and catastrophic failure." The suit, first ever to be filed under the National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act of 1966, seeks a court order requiring GM to warn purchasers of the approximately 200,000 pick-up trucks, and seeks civil penalties of $400,000. A TERRORIST BOMBING struck the Rochester area for the third time in less than a month yesterday, this time damaging a Jewish temple in the suburb of Henrietta. No one was injured and authorities declined to comment on the similarities between the latest explosion and the earlier ones. Previous explosions have damaged the federal and Monroe County office buildings, two black churches, two synagogues, and a union leader's home. Several of the explosions were triggered simultaneously. Jobless rate at _ x seven-year high WASHINGTON 0A-Spreading effects of the General Mo- tors strike caused more job layoffs last month 'and pushed the nation's unemployment rate up slightly to the highest point in nearly seven years, the government said yesterday. The total number of unemployed remained almost un- changed from September's 4.3 million but seasonal factors resulted in a one-tenth of one per cent rise in the unemploy- ment rate to 5.6 per cent of the work force. The increase was considerably less than some Demo- cratic officials had claimed in accusing the Labor Depart- NOW A SPECIA MIDW at State & Liberty Sts. PREMI E Program information 662-6264, -OPEN 12:45-SHOWS AT 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 1' PRESIDENT NIXON named Asst. Atty. Gen. William D. Ruckelshaus to head the federal government's battle against pollution yesterday. Ruckelshaus will administer a new Environmental Protection -Associw Agency that will pull together employes in 15 separate governmental osap st agencies and start prosecuting antipollution law violators. Government official points to unemployme Vt EST RE! P.M. *The Sidelong a . Glances of a Pigeon Kicker Meet Jonathan. heryday he graduated Princeton he became a New York taxi driver. (Then, he met Jentnifer.) ______ The new agency will work mainly in enforcing the law and Ruck elshaus told reporters: "We're going after the polluters." THE REQUEST by U.S. consular officials for a third visit with three American officers held in the Soviet Union has been turned down, a State Department spokesman said yesterday. The officers, along with a Turkish general, have been held by the Soviets since Oct. 21, when their plane crossed into Soviet Armenia1 from Turkey. Even though plans have been completed for the release of the Turkish general, the State Department would not confirm reports from Moscow that the three Americans will be released. * s *I SCIENTISTS AT the University of California yesterday re-1 ported the discovery of a method to detect whether a baby will be born with an often fatal lung disease. The procedure involves measuring the ratio between two fatty compounds sloughed off by an infant into the amniotic fluid that surrounds and protects him before birth. A doctor at the school said control of the illness known as hyaline membrane disease, could save thousands of lives yearly. CLUE NEEDED: , Police continue hi for FLQ terrorist~ ment during the political campaign of holding back the figures until after last Tues- day's election, a charge the government denied. A slightly shorter work week also resulted in a drop of 33 cents to a $121.03 average weekly pay- check for some 45 million rank- and-file workers, the report said. "The effects of the automobile strike really dominated the -em- ployment situation over the month and really obscure . .. underlyingj ted Press economic changes," said HaroldI nt hike Goldstein, asst. commissioner of _ ~the Bureau of Labor Statistics. j In another report heavily af- fected by auto industry develop- m es athe bureau said lnasti mettebra adidsrawholesale prices took the biggest jump in more than 14 years, i t eight-tenths of one per cent, large- ly because of a 5.9 per cent hike in new model 1971 auto, prices. Goldstein said the strike of some 325,000 United Auto Workers had a "substantial" effect on the total decline of 610,000 manufac- Minister turing jobs during the month, but ght. that the exact number of layoffs Oct. 5 by from the strike was not possible )porte was to calculate. and found Strikers are not counted in the unemployment figures but neither has b e e n do they show up on payrolls, thus ,h fr,-.. taffecting the drop in employment. Arabs bomb Israeli 1itY By The Associated Press A bombing attack by Arab ter- rorists in Tel Aviv yesterday shat- tered the calm in the Middle East where a cease-fire has recently been extended. Two bombs exploded in the crowded bus-station-area of cen- tral Tel Aviv, killing one person and wounding 34. Palestinian guerrillasinbroad- casts from Iraq claimed respon- sibility for the acts, calling them "part of a guerrilla drive to sabot- age the newly extended cease-fire in the Middle East." Meanwhile, all was quiet along the cease-fire lines, with Egypt, Jordan and Israel heeding the U.N. regest that there be a 90- day cease-fire extension. Jordan and Israel appear will- ing to extend the cease-fire in- definitely, but Egypt has warned it will agree to no further exten- tions. The bombing was the first ter- rorist explosion in an Israeli city since October, 1969. OTTAWA W) - The head of the ers of Quebec Labor Royal Canadian Mounted Police said yesterday police have "taken most of the leadership" of the ter- rorist Quebec' Liberation Front (FLQ) "out of circulation." Commissioner W. L. Higgitt of the RCMP said it is only "a matter of time" before the kidnapers of British Trade Commissioner, Pierre Laporte are caug Cross was kidnapedC members of the front. La kidnaped five days latera murdered Oct. 17, Higgitt denied there h any letup in the searc. kidnapers and killers. "One phone call cou ;ii forte e Id be the .MMMO, ENLISTMENTS DOW End of draft to hur Drugs, and Ethics DR. EDMUND ANDERSON, Pharmacologist University of Illinois, Medical Center Lecture & Discussion-6:30 P.M. 10:30 A.M.-"The Holy Spirt and Drug Experience" Calvin Malefyt 1001 E. HURON WASHINGTON (R) - A Na- tional Guard drive to sign up Vietnam and other war veterans has fallen short of its goal, foreshadowing serious prob- lems for the Guard when the draft ends. In a report to the National Governors Conference yester- day, the- guard warned of in- creasing difficulties in sustain- ing "Acceptable manning and readiness levels as the draft is diluted." "It appears probable that Guard strength soon will com- mence to sag, perhaps to dan- gerous levels, unless steps are taken very quickly to make Guard Service more attractive on a voluntary basis," the re- port said. Guard units in the first six months of the recruiting drive enlisted an average of only 900 veterans a month, about 30 per cent of the 3,000-man-a-month goal. Waiting lists of applicants have dwindled and the attrition rate among guardsmen as of August was running at 70 per- cent. "The zero draft will nave a major impact," said Maj. Gen. Francis S. Greenlief, the Guard's deputy commander, in an inter- view. There's a lot of c o n e r n being expressed by the National Guard Association and the Army itself over whether the Guard will be able to make its strength." James R. Cross and the murder- answer," he said in an interview. ------'"One lead is all we want and it will fold like a deck of cards." N The police commissioner said that progress may have been im- peded by a widespread fear of the FLQ, but he declined to confirm uthat so-called assassination lists seized by police over the past two Greenlief said new induce- years originated with the terrorist ments will have to be found to organizati00 names have been replace the draft. And on various lists, and poice Proposals under discussion in- and theirifamilieshaveobe elude higher pay, re-enlistment ae w ath n lete bonuses, added pay for duty In a the t state emergencies, improved re- twoan lephone cas over pas tirement benefits and exemption Thirty-eight Canadians and one of Guard pay from income American were arraigned through- taxes, out Quebec Province Thursday More important, says Green- night on charges ranging from lief, belonging to the Guard will seditious conspiracy to common have to become socially ac- assault. ceptable. The America, Richard Hudson, "The guardsman's boss, his 24, was charged in Quebec City wife, his neighbors and his with advocating the acts, designs, friends will have to demonstrate principles or lines of conduct of to him that belonging to the an illegal organization - presum- Guard is a fine thing. But if ably the FLQ. the antimilitary attitude still Hudson, who said he was born in exists in the nation, then mak- Alabama. denied the charger A ing the Guard's strength will be preliminary hearing was set for damn difficult." Nov..13. LANSING (R) - A three-judge panel of the State Appeals Court yesterday proposed new standards for deciding whether obscenity and pornography cases violate state and federal constitutional guarantees of the freedom of- speech.r The court said it was proposing "a new test" that would judge whether the intent of the dis- tributor was to pander or appeal to prurient sexual interests of the receiving audience. The Court said henceforth it might decide ar- bitrarily that the material in- volved might be Qbscene. The court, in an opinion by re- siding Judge John Gillis of Grosse Pointe, proposed a legal test whereby "the publisher of the material loses any claim to pro- tection under the First and Four- teenth Amendments if his primary intent in publishing the material is to appeal to the recipient's prurient interest in sex." The new proposals were ad- vanced, the three-judge panel said, because of failures of the U.S. Supreme Court over the past "13 years" to reach agreement on doctrines that could "be consid- ered a decision of the court bind- ing upon all lower federal and state courts." The state court made the an- nouncement in an opinion uphold- ing conviction of two Grand Rap- ids men on charges of selling or dispensing pornography at the Capri theater and Capri book store there. It is the right of the defendant to publish, rather than the right of the material to be published, which should have been examined by the Supreme Court, the judge said. State court revises ohbseenity guidelines I ! i Tne oesT nmerican TlIMS or Tne aecaae.