Thursday, October 25, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY . Page Three Nixon seeks emergency power in face of Arab oil embargo s WASHINGTON (Reuter) -Pre- sident Nixon is seeking emer- gency powers to prevent a fuel shortage in the face of an Arab embargo of oil deliveries -here, Sen. Henry Jackson said yescer- day. Jackson, a Washington Demo- crat who strongly supports Israel, told reporters that his powerful Senate Interior Committee ex- pected to complete action on a bill prepared by the Nixon Ad- ministration some time ni e x t week. THE PROPOSED legislation would: -Allow the president to d'e- clare a shortage emergency when the United States loses five per cent or more of its supply. Jackson said the delivery re- strictions imposed by several Arab states because of U.S. aid to Israel threaten the loss of 10 per cent of U.S. daily needs; -Grant the president unusual authority to force the country to produce substitute fuels equi- valent to up to 3.3 million barrels of oil a day; - Increase U.S. domestic pro- duction; -Permit the exploitation of the Naval oil reserve at Elk Hills, California, where an estimated 1.1 billion barrels is in t h e ground; and -Allow the President to order electric utilities to use coal in- stead of oil or natural gas to run their generators, even though this would increase air pollution. THE TWO BIGGEST Arab oil suppliers to the United States, Libya and Saudi Arabia, have curtailed production and ship- ments of oil to this country in re- taliation for the Nixon admin- istrations support for Israel. In adition, pipelines through Iraq have ceased functioning be- cause of the Arab-Israeli fight- ing. UNIVERSITY PLAYERS presents A SHOWCASE PRODUCTION THE MARRIAGE OF MR. MISSISSIPPI by FRIEDRICH DURRENMATT Thursday-Saturday, Oct. 25-27 Arena Theatre, Frieze Bldg.-8:00 P.M. TICKETS: $1.00 THURS.; $1.50 FRI. AND SAT. ON SALE AT TRUEBLOOD BOX OFFICE OCT. 23-27-12 NOON-5 P.M. 11 die on N.J. road , I Chemin De Fer Tonight ! I KEARNEY, N.J. (om) - At least 11 persons were killed yesterday as heavy fog and smoke engulfed the New Jersey Turnpike, re- ducing visibility to near zero and causing scores of separate accidents. More than 40 other persons were injured, and police feared the death toll could go higher - once the wreckage was cleared in the areas of three major pile- ups and dozens of minor acci- dents. STATE POLICE said at least seven persons died in the larg- est crash, involving 22 vehicles, just north of the Kearny inter- change in Rutherford, where the roadway passes between New- ark and New York. Four other persons were killed in two separate accidehts in the Secaucus area, about two miles northeast of here. "We just can't say how many are dead at this time," state po- lice Sgt. Joseph Kobus said on Wednesday afternoon. iHENEWPHOENIX' EPERTORYWCa MY T. Edward Hambieton, Michael Montel Managing Directors .Hordd Prince. Stephen Porter Arisic Dedors Surprise meetig Fired Deputy Atty. Gen. William Ruckelshaus, left, turns to talk with assistant Atty. Gen. Henry Petersen as acting Atty. Gen. Robert Bork works on some notes. Petersen and Bork walked into an office in the Justice Dept. to see Ruckelshaus after he was interviewed. I OBJECTS SEEN COAST-TO-COAST: Strange sightings give rise to recent rash of UFO reports Thurs., Oct. 25-8 p.m. Fri., Oct. 26-8 p.m. Sat., Oct. 27-3 p.m. RACHEL JOHN ROBERTS WMARTIN b GEORGES FEYDEAU adopted by SUZANNEEadPAXTON GROSSMANN WHITEHEAD dirE Oted by STEPHEN PORTER Sat., Oct. 27-8 p.m. Sun., Oct. Sun., Oct. 28-3 p.m. 28-8 p.m. By The Associated Press The whatzits seemed to be spreading yesterday. From New York to the Mid- west, there "wqe fresh reports that unidentified flying objects- UFOs - had been sighted in the sky. THERE WAS no proof that any of the objects was really from outer space. The rash of recent UFO re- ports started with the claim of two Mississippi men who s a i d they'd been taken aboard a spacecraft from an alien society. Tales of strange sightings pop- ped up across the nation. Some turned out to be pranksters; oth- ers were natural phenomena like stars or planets; a few remain- ed unexplained. AT LEAST one enterprising young man is trying to cash in on the latest fad. Bob O'Dell, a 21-year-old student at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in T r o y , N.Y., said yesterday he's in- vented a UFO detector. "You could put it under- your bed, or wherever you feel safest,' said O'Dell., "When the detector buzzes, go look for the UFO." O'Dell, an environmental en- gineering student from Bethesda, Md., said his gadget is design- ed to pick up electromagnetc waves he thinks a UFO gives off. IT'S MADE from a battery, a metal washer, a relay switch and buzer. O'Dell admits he's "just taking advantage of the panic right now. I figured I could pick up some cash.". O'Dell might find a market close to home. Four Troy residents said they saw a strange, greenish, buzzaig object late Tuesday night. "IT WAS GREENISH and mov- ed fast and when it stopped it became white," said Francis Sousin. "We watched it in front of our home and the UFO made a buzzing noise and sent cold chills throughout our bodies." Dallas, Tex., police actually chased a UFO = only to find out they'd been trying to catch a planet. POLICE IN Portage, Wis., got three phone calls about UFOs Tuesday night. Twice the object turned out to be the planet Mars. Authorities spent a little more time on the third report since it came from a 22-year-old woman who police said was an aircrafz observer trained by the Civil Air Patrol. Kathy Rapa s a i d she saw red, white and green lights blinking in the sky at 7:40 p.m. But the Federal Aviation Ad- ministration said even trained observers can be foed. A spokesman at the FAA control tower at Madison, Wis., said at- mospheric conditions -can make the planets Mars and Venus seem to blink - even when view- ed through binoculars. RACHEL JOHN ROBERTS McMARTIN by FRIEDRICH DUERRENMATT adapted by MAURICE VALENCY dHrcted byRN HAROLD PRINCE :::U>oo> <;;;;>ot). )_-onococa:) t>< ARTISTS 0~0 SUBMIT YOUR WORK TO THE UNION GALLERY JURY by Oct. 31 for November showing 1st floor Michigan UnionQ GALLERY HOURS: Tues.-Sat. 10-5 C ->b G<- > {<- >'<->{<->0<=->}<-0<- 0 < >}-OO Eastern Michigan University HOMECOMING WEEKEND EMU and WWWW Present ARLO GUTHRIE OCT. 27-8:00 P.M. BOWEN FIELDHOUSE TICKETS: $2.50, $3.50, $4.50 AVAILABLE AT: Ann Arbor 'Music Mart, J.L Hdson's, Huckleberry Party Store, McKenny Union CHICAGO SOLD OUT ____ ONE PERFORMANCE ONLY Wed.,.Nov. 14-8:30 p.m. _ at the POWER CENTER $2.50-all seats reserved * MENDELSSOHNTHEATRE:ANN ARBOR Advance Tickets: MICHIGAN UNION M-F 11-5:30; also, at 7 Discount Records on S.U. and in YPSI at NED'S Bookstore. sorry, no checks UAC-DAYSTAR Nor Tickets on sale at PTP Box Office Mendelssohn Lobby, Mon.-Fri. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. For further information call 764-0450 Ann Arbor's Festival Chorus joins with The Legingrad Philharmonic 18th Century Revisited On Sunday afternoon, November 4, Prokofieff's heroic cantata, "Alexander Nevsky," will be performed by the Leningrad Philharmonic and sung in Russian by the 100-voice Festival Chorus of the University Choral Union. Joy Davidson, brilliant young American mezzo-sporano, is the soloist, and Neeme Jarvi, known for his powerful interpretations and penetrating insights, is the conductor. After intermission, concert-goers will hear Rachmaninoff's Symphony No. 3, commemorating the 100th anniversary of the composer's birth. Performance in Hill Auditorium, November 4, at 2:30; tickets available from $3.50 to $8.50. Since 1968, THE BAROQUE ENSEMBLE USSR has concertized throughout Russia and Eastern and Western Europe, now comes to North America. Their debut this weekend includes French, i f .7m I T!T ITT T 1I" T/'! iT T