LAST WEEK Shows at ends ' ~miq~i~ 1,3, 5, Thursday 7, 9:05 "The funniest movie I've seen this year! Just go, run to see it. - New York Post IUERS AN1D COLOR? --NEXT "The Baby Maker" Sat.-Sun., Dec. 5-6 THIRTY-NINE STEPS dir. ALFRED HITCHCOCK (1935) Vintage Hitchcock. This one will scare the hell out of you ! with ROBERT DONAT, MADELEINE CARROLL 76 9:05 75C ARCHITECTURE 662-88]1 AUDITORIUM ionge thure C14C tr4tgttn 3atly NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Saturday, December 5, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three news briefs By The Associated Press JAMES FARMER, the prominent civil rights leader, will resign from the Nixon administration, government sources dis- closed yesterday. President Nixon is scheduled to announce personally MondayG the departure of Farmer as assistant secretary of administration in the Department of Health, Education and Welfare. The White House ceremony is unusual because Farmer is not a direct presidential appointee. The gesture is designed to squelch any speculation that the former head of the Congress of Racial Equality was fired or resigned in protest over racial policies, ad- ministration sources said. * * ' * A UN SECURITY COUNCIL on-the-spot mission reported Friday that Portugese armed forces carried out the invasion of Guinea Nov. 22-23 along with Guinea rebels. Portugal re- jected the mission's findings. The 15-nation council was summoned into an afternoon session to consider the report. An African diplomat said the council would be asked to approve a resolution condemning Portugal and demand- ing reparations for loss of life and property. In advance of the meeting, Portugal sent a letter to Soviet Ambassador Jacob A. Malik, the council president, challenging the report. * * * . THE DEFENSE DEPARTMENT announced yesterday that 13,000 tons of nerve gas stored on Okinawa will be moved shortly to Johnston Island in the mid-Pacific to comply with a Japanese government request. The chemical weapons - bombs, rockets, grenades and other devices filled with mustard, GB and VX nerve gas that are now stored on Okinawa - have long been a thorn in Japanese-U.S. rela- tions. The announcement came after months of delay while the Army looked for a suitable storage site. President- Nixon, in response to public protest, cancelled a plan last May to ship them to a military depot in Oregon. At that time, Japan asked the United States to remove the weapons as soon as possible. " s * THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA FACULTY is voting on whether the school should sever its ties with the two laboratories responsible for America's nuclear weapons research and develop- ment. The poll of the 7,500 faculty members is to advise the Univer- sity's regents, who must decide whether to renew an operating con- tract with the Atomic Energy Commission for the facilities at Liver- more and Los Alamos, N.M. FIRE FIGHTERS began pumping sea water on a cluster of flaming oil wells in the Gulf of Mexico yesterday, hoping to cool the blaze down enough so experts can move in to try to put the fires out. An explosion touched off the fire Tuesday as a crew was trying to pipe in a new well. Two men were killed immediately and a third died yesterday of burns. Nixon sets oil price guidelines; unemployment, inflation spiral 7 Jobless rate at 7 year high WASHINGTON (A) - Unem- ployment rose to 5.8 per cent of the nation's work force last month, t h e highest level in 71/2 years, the government re- ported yesterday. At the same time, average week- ly earnings of so me 45 million rank and file workers dropped 66 cents to $121.07 per week because of shorter working hours, said the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). Although the average paycheck was more than 5 per cent larger than a year ago, the nation's con- tinuing worst inflation in more than 20 years cut purchasing pow- er 2 per cent below a year ago, the bureau said. Total employment dropped 165,- 000 during the month to 78.7 mil- lion compared with a normally expected rise in November. The report blamed in part the recent General Motors strike a n d de- clines in transportation and oth- er industries. The rise in unemployment was two-tenths of one per cent, from 5.6 to 5.8 per cent, highest since May of 1963, the bureau said. The number of jobless Ameri- cans rose 350,000 during the. month to 4.6 million, it said. White House press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said the Presi- dent's Council of Economic Ad- visers had calculated roughly that the November unemployment rate would have declined to 5.3-5.5 per cent had it not been for the GM strike. BLS assistant Commissioner Harold Goldstein - by tradition a neutral party - said the strikej Oil price hike prompts action NEW YORK () - President Nixon, stung by a recent .25- cent a barrel boost in the price of crude oil, announced- yesterday two steps aimed at increasing oil supplies and pushing down the retail cost of gasoline and jet fuel. It was Nixon's strongest action yet in challenging industry in the continuing battle to halt infla- tion. Moreover, Nixon did not ignore organized labor's contribution to the wage-price push in a major economic address, speaking at a dinner of the National Associa- tion of Manufacturers. The chief executive declared that "something is basically wrong" with the bargainfig pro- cess in the massive construction industry, where wage settlements are more than double those na- tionally in manufacturing, and declared: "The structure of bar- gaining must be changed." The President, overriding pres- ent state curbs on oil production on federal offshore leases, directed the Interior Department to "as- sume complete regulating respon- sibility" on all federal offshore lands - a move he said "means that more oil will be produced on those lands, while maintaining strict environmental standards. Nixon announced another di- rective "that companies import- ing Canadian oil be permitted to use their overseas allocation for the purchase of more crude oil from Canada." The chief executive s a i d his twin moves "will increase the sup- ply of oil and can be expected to help restrain the increase of oil and gasoline prices." Nixon said he has directed the federally sponsored Construction Industry Collective Bargaining Commission "to take the initiative in working out these changes with leaders of management and a- bor." He went on: "If the com- mission determines that legisla- TONITE & TOMORROW NITE ONLY, Unlike other classicsWest Side Story'grows younger. ;: <; . :. .; <;, f,.. : .;,s4. ::;F . .z.. . - ^>. ;, E 33 ';+ :,;: -Associated Pressj NEGOTIATORS who secured the release of kidnaped James Cross discuss details of the operation. Cross was kidnaped from his Montreal home by French separatists Oct. 5. Cross healthy after 60 days of captivity MONTREAL () - Doctors gave British diplomat James RirhnAOrca rla hill of hlth vatata d d ita tha far PICTURE!" Winner of 10 Academy Awardel-m. PANAVISION* TECHNICOLOR* Re-released thru United Artists had an undetermined but sub- ±bL±4. .uU 2 ACIL~±U ~~~~IVLJU.y~~IJ~~I~IA hadan ndeermnedbutsub' ricrard cross a clean o oh eain yesteraay aespn tie eact stantial effect, and, added, "we al- he lost 22 pounds in the 60 harrowing days he spent as a so had a lot of other factors in captive of Quebec separatists. t h e economy inpinging on em- The British trade commissioner to Montreal was taken ployment and unemployment." t .e A spokesman for the AFL-CIO to Jewish General Hospital early yesterday after word was called the situation "awful" and received from Havanna that his terrorist abductors and said it bore out president George their relatives had arrived there in an exchange deal. rary ta eclonymenasppear, The Cuban government published a short statement in ed headed toward the 6 per cent its official newspaper indicating it had agreed to accept the level. terrorists to help free Cross. It said the flight to Havana "was AUDITORIUM A-ANGELL HALL SHOWN AT 6:45 & 9:30 p.m. Admission 90c FORMER A MBAS SADOR SPEA KS U.S. may lose technology lea 0 TOP ARTISTS ON MAJOR, LABELS STEREO FOR A LIMITEL -rA Air a kr i r MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - The So- viet Union is accelerating its space program as a means of achieving world leadership in science and technology, accord- ing to Foy Kohler, former am- bassador to Moscow, who is conducting an intensive study of U.S. and Russian space pro- grams. Kohler says the United States is still the leading technological power but is in danger of losing t h i s position if it continues drastic cuts in its space and de- fense research programs while the Soviets pour more and more money each year into similar efforts. He said in an interview the United States gained the space exploration lead when the Apol- lo 11 astronauts landed on the moon in July 1969. Since then, he claimed, the American pro- gram has gone down a hill while the Russians h a v e moved up rapidly. Right now, he said, it is diffi- cult to deternine which nation is ahead. The Soviets, he said, lead in planetary exploration and have at least a two-year edge in the next big step into space-devel- opment of a large manned orb- iting station. He also warned the Russian program is mili- tary-dominated a n d Moscow could have a great advantage in developing military space capability. Kohler said the United States to date has spent about $33 bil- lion on civilian and $23 billion on military space programs. The Russians, he estimated, have spent approximately as much, although in terms of per cent of gross national product the So- viet percentage is far greater. Kohler discussed his work as the Soviets bask in a series of recent space successes: t h e wresting of the manned space endurance record from t h e United States; the gathering of moon soil by an unmanned spaceship; a robot rolling across the lunar surface; a spacecraft approaching Venus to arrive Dec. 15, and development of a substantial military program of reconnaissance satellites, orbit- ing bombs and satellite inter- ceptors. Russia has a 3-1 lead over the United States in space launch- ings in 1970. America's effort, meanwhile, is suffering from the aft fects of the near-disa Apollo 13 moon mission la ril. In addition Congress a Nixon administration funds for space and divert money to earthly causes. Kohler deplores the fac the United States invest billion to develop a space portation system in the. program and, in effect, is to scrap it after a fewi flights. "The immediate questi us is whether we can t fashion a rational progr science and technology fa selves for the future, or v er we are again to wait some new spectacular break-through forces usi crash program not of ou choosing," Kohler says. Kohler was ambassador U.S.S.R. from 1962 to 196 observed much of the ear velopment of the Soviet program. He was deputyt secretary of state for p affairs from 1966 to 1968 Since then he has been ; fessor at the Center for A ed International Studies< University of Miami. - & the result of a formal appli- cation by the Canadian gov- ernment to which the Cuban government acceded in order to facilitate the release of the 'British official." Cross reportedly left the hos- ter-ef- pital during the day for a brief estrous trip to his Montreal office to st Ap- speak to friends before preparing nd the to leave for London and a re- slicing union with his wife. She had been ed the staying with friends in Switzer- land during the two-month ordeal. t that Cross suffers from high blood d $21 pressure, but doctors reported it trans- normal, indicating his captors Apollo provided him with medication. m o r e heIn a taped interview, Cross said he may not return to Montreal. on for He put it this way: "I've enjoyed o d a y enormously my three years here am in and it's a bit sad that we ended r our- up on this note. It may be dif- vheth- ficult for me to return to Mon- until treal." Soviet The terrorists, who want to make into a Quebec Province independent, r own threatened to kill Cross unless the government freed 23 jailed front to the members and paid a ransom of 6 and $500,000 in gold. ly de- The government had offered safe space conduct to Algeria or Cuba to under- the kidnapers if they released olitical Cross unharmed. This was the . r-offer the kidnapers finally ac- a pro- cepted, apparently tired of hav- at the ing to hold Cross in close captiv- ity for so long. ON A&M LAAM STEREO REO ALBUMS " FREE-FIRE & WATER " CARPENTERS-CLOSE TO YOU $ 99 9STER EO FOR A LIMITED : TIME ONLY!! I !Mt UNLY!! tion is required, it will be pro- posed." "Government has done its part to hold the line. This is the criti- cal moment, then, f or business and labor to make a special effort to exercise more restraint in price and wage decisions. Nixon said it is time for man- agement and labor to "look be- yond our immediate concerns to the deeper strengths and longer range goals of the American econ- ony." T h e presidential policy state- ment amounted to a generalized return to wage-price guideposts, leaving the determination of spe- cific amounts to business and la- bor, at least for the time being. On Atlantic Stereo LPs . Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young-Deja Vu r Led Zeppelin Ill C TONIGHT Treat Yourself, and Maybe a Friend, to a DELICIOUS DINNER served in our Distinctive Atmospherev and then DANCE to the music of CHARISMAv featuring Kathy Lindsay Open DIAL 8-6416 limited engagement of this Academy Award Winner "A fantastic movie about man's future! An unprecedented psychedelic roller coaster of an experience!" -Life Magazine SALE ALSO INCLUDES: IRON BUTTERFLY-Metamorphosis JAMES TAYLOR GRAND FUNK-Closer to Home SANTANA-Abraxas BOB DYLAN-New Morning NEIL YOUNG-After the Goldrush NEIL DIAMOND-Gold NEIL DIAMOND-Taproot Manuscript Ili II I RECORD DEPARTMENT br m.. - -- A---- - - _ the ultimate trip