I Wednesday, January 15, 1975 THE MfGHIGAN DAILY Wage Three Wednesday,~~~~~ Jaur-5 95TEMCIA AL Earth tremors Second crash leads Navy to ground 334 new jet fighters arouse fears in California SAN DIEGO (P) -All of the A, F-14 jet off the Enterprisef Navy's 334 new F14 Tomcat jet was lost Jan. 2 before the car- fighters were grounded yester- rier left Philippine waters for day after the second crash of the Indian Ocean. That was the. the $14 million plane, the Navy first operational crash for the announced. aircraft. The navy said the crew The two crew members appar- members ejected from the plane ently escaped serious injury in that day and suffered no ir'jur- the latest crash, which occur- ies. red earlier in the day in the - Indian Ocean, a Navy spokes- j " person said. } lna Faisal v On Monday, a Navy pilot was killed and another was serious- ly injured when their EB-68 Prowler jet crashed in the Ind- ian Ocean after take off from the Enterprise. A SPOKESPERSON said the cause of the crashes was being investigated. LOS ANGELES - Earth- luakes have rattled disnes in outhern California homes for :hree straight days, but are the eople here shaken? Most say 0. Earthquakes are part of iiv- ng in California and most peo- le take them in stride. And hose who don't, treat them the ay most Southern Californians eact to movie stars - trying ard to act as though they don't atice. AS A California housewife uts it, "I try not to think ,bout The latest tremor strucx at o minutes to midnight Mon- ay near the Orange and Los ngeles county lines. A slightly arger quake was felt in the ame area at 3:22 a.in. Monday, nd a moderate quake was re- orded Sunday offshore near an Diego. Another .veekend uake, largest of all, ratrled indows' Sunday in Northern alifornia's Humboldt County. Most people were tieher asleep r too far away to feel the uakes. "There's realy nothing you an do," says Ronald G)dinan, 42-year-old coin laundry oper- torr. II feel like the people on he Mississippi when it over- ows every year. Good or bad, guess I'm here." "I JUST take it as it comes," ays -John Dickson, 76, who is etired. Dr. Clarence Allen of the Cali- ornia Institute of Technology as asked about the connection nd replied, "We don't think tween the weekend quakes here is any. They don't involve he same fault." ALTHOUGH small success :as been made recently in pre- icting quakes, Allen thinks "it ill be a long time before we an systematically and routine- y predict large quakes. "And almost all seismologists d geologists agree that strains re continuing to build up in the an Andreas fault and that a big uake is inevitable. None of us is willing to stick our neck out and say when that will happen. It could happen almost a n y time" Some Californians actuallyX welcome little quakes, thinking. they relieve pressure in t h e4 ground that might otherwise cause big ones. But Allen thinks that theory is naive. "IT WOULD take an inordin- ate number of small shocks to relieve stresses that are build- ing up for a big one,' he said. "There are too many faults." Dr. Mal Braberman, a psy- chiatrists who studied Ihe ef- fect on people of the earthquake that left 64 persons daad inb he San Fernando Valley on Feb .9, 1971, feels the cumulative ef- fect of small shocks is consider- able. "Experiencing several small shocks is worse than one large A YOUNG CAMB( shock," he said. "Individuals soup dispensed by are developing a sort of prepara- and their families tory vulnerability." tween government U.S. VIOLATIONS DENIED: plansto THE PACIFIC Fleet Naval I Air Force spokesperson said all routine training and test flights bankroll A rab forces of the Tomcat were suspended but commanders could "conduct missions as required" in an DAMASCUS (A - King Faisal of Saudi Arabia, launching a tour emergency. of Arab countries he bankrolls, declared yesterday he will put "This does not mean that our all his oil-rich nation's resources at their disposal in the readiness is reduced," t h e struggle against Israel. But he gave no figures. spokesperson added. "Arab unity is realized," a Syrian radio announcer shouted He said most of the Navy's 113 over and over as Faisal made a triumphant entrance into swing-wing Tomcats are station Damascus through hundreds of thousands of cheering Syrians. ed in Sa Di g .Hetdecined to estimate how long the ground- ing of the planes might last. SYRIAN PRESIDENT Hafez Assad told Faisal their meeting A helicopter crew from the will strengthen Arab solidarity, which he called "the only way carrier Enterprise, from which to get whlt we want, liberation of the occupied lands and res- the plane that crashed in the toration of usurped Palestinian rights." Indian Ocean was flying, res- cued the crew. The two leaders exchanged their countries' highest decorations THE CRASH yesterday was after meeting at Damascus airport, where doves of peace re- the second of a Tomcat is 12 leased in the ceremonies flew through puffs of white smoke days andhfroe third etfir from a 21-gun salute. They then drove into Damascus along that period. a 20-mile route lined with wildly cheering Syrians. hr rnoto ODIAN GIRL discovered she had a leak in her bowl after waiting in line for y a relief organization north west of Phnom Penh, Cambodia. The children pictured fled their homes in the Phnom Baseth area following fighting be- and Khmer Rouge forces. .I I i i G I s E 26 die in Cam bodian PHNOM PENH (M) - Com-1 tary official said, "Hostile acts: BUT WALDHEIM avoided munist-led rebel gunners un- leashed a deadly barrage on a Mekong River convoy yesterday, kiling 26 refugees and wound- ing 42, Cambodian navy sourc- es reported. Government forces immediately launched counter- attacks north and east of Phnom Penh. In South Vietnam, heavy fighting flared along the Cam- bodian border five miles west of Saigon and along the central coastal plain 300 miles farther north. Several attacks also were reported in the Saigon region. ONE SOUTH Vietnamese mili- between the opposing forces! have reached what is believed to be the highest intensity since the cease-fire nearly two years ago ..." In New York, U.N. Secretary- General Kurt Waldheim expres- sed "gravest concern" at "the increased scale of the fighting in recent weeks" in Indochina. "It is essential for all parties involved to abide by the terms of the Paris agreement and to make progress toward the re- quired political settlement of this lengthy and tragic war," he told a news conference. singling out North Vietnam or the Provisional Revolutionary Government (PRG) and said he was still studying "very care- fully" a U.S. note he got Mon- day asking that he appeal to North Vietnam and the PRG to stop the fighting and work out, a peaceful settlement. The note accused the Hanoi government of grave violations of the cease-fire and both North Vietnam and the PRG reacted sharply yesterday. They turned the charge back on the United States and accused it of increas- ing its military involvement in: Indochina. iattack,~ counterattack, directly across the Meking River from Phnom Penh, met heavy resistance. Propeller-driven T28 fighters bombed and strafed insurgent positions along the east bank of the Mekong River and the planes pulled out of their dives over the city. Scores of persons lined the city's river front to watch the action. Along the Meking River southeast of Phnom Penh, in- surgent troops stepped up 'heirI pressure on besieged Neak Luong on the river traffic be- tween the town and Phnom Penh, navy sources said. UAC Concert Co-op Presents LINDA RONSTADT Tues., Jan. 21 Hill Auditorium 8 P.M. Reserved Seats $6, $5.50, $5, $4 Tickets Go On Sale TODAY Available U M Union 11- 5:30 d a i l y (763-4553); Ann Arbor Music Mart on State St.; Recordland at Briarwood. Sorry, No Per- sonal Checks. Smoking is strictly pro- hibited, YOUR coopera- tion is necessary. Ford to seek delay of clean In Washington yesterday, a State Department spokesperson EARLIER yesterday, rebel renewed the U.S. accusations, gunners blasted a navy convoy saving Hanoi committed "mas- i--rr ~ +a t -nf-appc inm sive violations" of the agree- ir standards in power plantsment carrying the ruiugees rurn I .1 WASHINGTON (M?-President rord plans to seek postpone-' ient of clean-air standards for ower plants to help them con- ert quickly from oil to coal- >urning boilers, administration ources said yesterday. Interior Secretary R o g e r s dorton, declining to disclose pecific policies, told a reporter he President's State of the Jnion address Wednesday would nclude proposals to speed power lant conversions to coal. BUT ANOTHER administra- ion source said the proposal vould seek to amend the Clean ir Act, postponing for several ears the power plant standards tow scheduled to take effect in nid-1975. Morton, addressing the Manu-' acturing Chemists' Association, tinted a postponement by say-; ng that "the policies for de- relopment of coal are now bal- anced, in terms of the time e've got to buy on the en-, tironmental problems." Coal was barely mentioned y Ford in a broadcast preview f his energy and economic Ford policies Monday night. Morton assigned it the central role in achieving energy independence by 1985 as promised by the President. "IF WE FAIL on coal, we can't get from here to there. It's the Big Casino," Morton said, "Coal is the key." "We're going to have to en- courage the use of coal as fast' as possible . . . To get to 1985 with oil import levels we can live with, we are going to have to double the use of coal," he said.3 Morton, chairman of the cab- inet-level Energy Resources Council which prepared policy options for the President, ex-I pressed his own strong opposi- tion to government fuel ration- ing or similar efforts to control directly the public's rse of energy. "I AM totally opposed to the proposition that we should put on volumetric controls and ra- tion energy for the next ten years," Morton said. "it is much better to incline the mar- ket toward conservation." In the push to encourage the! use of coal by power plants in place of oil or natural gase, -he administration nas stood by the insistence of the Environmental IProtection Agency on the use of either low-sulfur coalthr ex- haust-scrubbers to prevent pol- lution, sources said. But it was expected to pro- pose postponement for three or four years, or even longer, of the air pollution standards that would require these measures. EPA has already been grant- ing power plants permission to miss the 1975 deadline under consent agreements setting schedules for compliance over the next several years. HE WAS asked about reports of American planes flying re- connaissance flights over North Vietnam in violation of the pact. While not directly acknowledg- ing the flights, he said "selec- tive violations" of the cease-fire "cannot take place on only one side." When asked if the United States was living up to all the protocols, he replied, "I have nothing further to add." ! The Cambodian counterattacks were aimed at pushing rebel forces back from positions they have occupied for the past two weeks, the Phnom Penh com- mand said. Neak Luong to Phnom Penh. Navy sources said all the cas- ualties were in one boat hit by five 75mm shells. The convoyj was carrying more than 250 civilians, mostly women and children, and ran through a 15- mile corridor of fire. Neak Luong, 32 miles south- east of Phnom Penh, straddles the Mekong River and control tof the area is the key to keeping the shipping channel to Phnom Penh open. A resupply convoy for Phnom Penh h a s been unable to travel upriver for the past 25 days. IT SAID in one of the drives, less than 10 miles north of theI capital, 74 rebels were killed. Field reports said another 11 DR. PAUL USLAN Optometrist Full Contact Lens Service Visual Examinations 548 Church 663-2476 I DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Ii..""."" . w.". ." :...".Jr...."'.?:.{"M!?P.!..:"::a. Y"t:...... .....:ti".::?::r;?i.: Wednesday, January 14 Botany: Richard Schultes, Har- ay alendar yard. "New World Hallucinogens: UO Panel discussion, "The Botany, Chemistry and the Role of ate Great Planet Earth," with Dr. Primitive Societies," Rm. 1, MLB, ussel Peterson, Federal Council 4 pm. n Environmental Quality, Dr. Mos- Ctr. for Japanese Studies: Rich- afa Tolba, U. N. Environment Pro- ard Pearson, U. of British Columbia, rami, Dr. Rene Dubos, Citizens "Japanese Pre-History in World Per- ~ommittee on Environmental Qual-; spective," Commons Rm., Lane Hall, ty, & moderator, Harrison Salis- 4 pm. ry, 10 am. rtPhysics: T. M. Sanders, "The Sur- Pendleton Arts Information Ctr.: face of Liquid Helium," P&A Col- )pen Hearth Extra Feature, Joseph loq.Rm., 4 pm. jeller, spkr., Pendleton Ctr., Un- on, noon. Computing Ctr.: Tutorial lecture, Career Planning & Placemexit: MISTIC2, John Forsyth, MSU, Lec. Eegistration meetings, Conf. Rm. 4, Rm. 2, MLB, 7-9:30 pm; Brice Car- i, League, noon, 1, 2, 3, 4 pm. nahan, "An Introduction to Digital Fliud Mechanics: 'Howard Bren- Computers and Computing Langu- aer, Carnegie-Mellon, "Mass Trans- ages," Nat. Sci. Aud., 7:30, 9:30 pm. >ort Fluxes by Shear," 325 W. Eng., Music School: Bryan-Keys Duo, pm. Rackham Aud., 8 pm. "THE MOST MARVELOUS PARTY IN TOWN!" T. E. KALEM. Time Mag. PATRICIA MORISON **. in Iq.I~2 MINI COURSE 311 INTERDISCIPLINARY PERSPECTIVES OF VIRGINIA WOOLF MARGARET A. LOURIE Assistant Professor of English THURSDAYS January 16, 23, 30 and February 6 7-9 P.M. 2413 MH This minicourse will look at Woolf's participation in the Bloomington Group, her critical theory, and her concepts of feminism and androgvny'. Dr. Sally Ruddick, Professor of Philosophy from the New Institute of Social Research will give a guest lecture. REGISTER AT 1058 LS&A FOR 1 CREDIT ATTENTION* INotice of open Art courses PLACE: School of Art, North Campus and Art & Architecture Bldg. ART 261- 2 credits-INTRO TO PAINTING-Kamiowski Mon.-Wed.-Fri. 10:30-12:30, Rm. 2062A A A