d Soturdcay, October 27, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Special prosecutor to be (Continued from Page 1) become towards the end that many reporters thought the President walked out without waiting for the traditional "thank you" from the senior correspondent. THE PRESIDENT unexpectedly launched into his harsh and un- fettered criticism of commentators in response to a question on what went through his mind when he heard people demand his impeach- ment. It was as if the President had decided the time had come to cut whatever superficial bonds of friendship he might have had with press personalities and to make the break complete. Nixon at first appeared to bej taken aback by the question but then hit back hard saying he felt the same as he had when he or- dered the invasion of Cambodia in 1970 and the bombing of Hanoi last Christmas and people said he was a tyrant, a dictator-ne badE lost his mind, and should resign or be impeached. "But I could stick it out," he said defiantly. such outrageous, vicious, distorted reports," and terming much of the network commentary of recent days "hysterical." CBS reporter Robert PierpG it asked Nixon why he was so ingry with reporters when he claimed he could take their heat. With a note of contempt, the President replied: "Don't get the impression that you have aroused my anger. One can only be angry, with those he respects." LATER HE broke off in the mid- dle of an answer to suddenly turn to Plerpont-wliom he called "my good friend from CBS' -to say he didn't want to leave the impression he didn't respect re- porters. "What I am saying is simply this-when a commentator takes' a bit of news and distort3 and uses it viciously, I have no respect for that individual." The President also had a bitter exchange with Clark Mollenhoff- a former White House consultant who is now an investigative re-' porter and a bitter Nixon critic. Nixon studiously ignored Mollen- 1 "You're so loud I have to take you." Mollenhoff shot back, "I have to be noisy because you hap- pen to dodge my questions all the time." THE MEETING with newsmen was Nixon's first news conference since Vice President Spiro Agnew resigned, the Middle East war erupted, Cox was fired, Attorney General Elliot Richardson resigned, and the clamor for the President's impeachment grew in Congress. Nixon promised his new prose- cutor "will have a permanent re- sponsibiilty to bring this matter which has so long concerneJ the American people, to bring it to an expeditious conclusion." A reporter recalled Bork's state- ment that he would have taken Nixon to court, if necessary, to obtain any further tape recordings or documents needed for the Watergate prosecution. Bork hinted he might resign if the federal prosecutor's efforts are impeded. But Nixon, referring to Cox's successor to be appointed by Bork next week, said: "I don't antici- pate we would come to the time when he would feel it necensary to take the President to court." NIXON'S PLAN to name a new named special prosecutor was broadly de- nounced last night by Democrtic Congressmen, who charged there is no assurance the prosecwtor would have a free hand. "The people need to be assured that he (Nixon) will not use his powers toblock the truth," Sen. Edmund Muskie (D-Maine) said. "He did not give us that assur- ance last tonight." Sen. Birch Bayh (D-Ind.), chief sponsor of a resolution co-spon- sored by 52 Senators to establish an independent special prosecutor appointed by the courts, called Nixon's plan "unbelievable." "This new prosecutor has no charter of independence at all," Bayh said. "All he has is the President's word." In his news conference last night, Nixon also defended his friend Charles "Bebe" Rebozo - under investigation for numerous financial acts - as "a totally hon- est man." DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page I tient must be interviewed by the doctor to make sure he is awaretof the permanence of his decision. He gets liter: tore on every aspect of the operation. DOCTORS will discourage young men in their teens or twenties from having the operation, or just refuse to perform it. "I'm not sure that a man who is of age should be re- fused a vasectomy, Kose said. "But young men must be educated in other forms of birth control, and they should have the rightdto con- trol of their bodies," hie added. One man who recently had a vasectomy managed to defycthe usual sanctions applied to child- less couples. The man, a grad stu- dent, explained his case. "This is my second marriage. I've already had kids, and I was the oldest of eight children, so I know what raising kids is like, he said. And my fiancee and I decid- ed we didn't want to have any. We went down to the clinic and con- vinced the doctor that we were sincere. If you get turned down, you can always go back and ar- ge. " "It was painful for about two weeks afterward, and I felt like I was recuperating from a mild ill- ness. But my sex life is unimpair- ed. In fact, my wife and I had been using condoms, and she found the sensation to be far more satis- fying. I'd say the operation was a bargain," the patient said. THE USUAL patient at the clinic, however, is what Kose called, "Middle -- middle age, middle in- come, and middle-sized family." Most of the patients come from the Detroit metropolitan area, and the Ann Arbor region. The over- age patient is around 35 years old, but Kose feels that this is falling. "The number was pushed up a little by the number of older men who had been waiting to have a va- sectomy," he said. Operations have been performed on men as old as 64 and as young as 20. The average patient has had three children, is married, and has a job. Only a small percentage are students, childless, or unem- ployed, Kose added. Business booming LUIS BUNUEL'S Diary of a Chambermaid This modern French master uses the anarchist classic of octave mirreau to launch yet another attack on Bourgeois. "Rife with old - fashioned quirks and persions."-Eugene Archer. It s t a r s Jeanne Moreau and Michel Piccoli. SHORT: KRAZY KAT REEL 2 SUN.: BUNUEL'S L'AGE D'OR MON.: BERGMAN'S THE SEVENTH SEAL CINEMA GUILD ARCHITECTURE AUD. Tonight atnd95 Adm. $ 7land 9:05 Am$ TON IGHT Last Night for THE PRESIDENT launched what hoff's attempts to be recognized was considered by many a thinly until the reporter finally stood up veiled attack on the Columbia and shouted "Mr. President, Mr. Broadcasting Service (CBS) say- President." ing, "I have never seen or heard Nixon recognized him saying, Israelis claim victory in Suez (Coutinued from Page1) The United States rejected the Egyptian request after President Anwar Sadat made it last Wednes-i day. SINCE the Soviet Union appar- ently is sending only a group of truce observers, it appears Sadat's, request also was rejected by the Kremlin. Brezhnev's announcement came1 in a long speech in which he ac-. cused Israel of "adventurism" and violations of the cease-fire. But in speaking about world af- fairs in general, he said the dang-t er of nuclear war has eased and that the chances for world peacet are better. WHILE BREZHNEV did not fur- ther describe the "representa- tives," diplomats in the Soviet cap-1 ital with close Kremlin connections said they understood that about 1004 men in civilian clothes were dis- patched to Egypt and that their mission was to observe. None was sent to the Syrian sector, which iss calm, the informants added. McCloskey said the Soviet "rep- resentatives" were not combat per-t sonnel and their dispatch to thel Middle East does not represent the, kind of unilateral action that Sec- retary: of State Henry Kissinger deplored on Thursday, when the United States put key military' bases around the world on precau- tionary alert. McCloskey stressed that the United States and the Soviet Union are barred from assigning troops to an international peacekeeping" force that was established through a U. N. Security Council resolu- tion on Thursday. DEFENSE SECRETARY James Schlesinger ordered the phasing down of the U.S. military alert but kept most units at the ready. "We do not know at this stage whether the Soviets have reduced their alert status," Schlesinger told a news conference in Wash- ington. "We are carefully watching their status . . . We will begin to make selective reductions of our readi- ness as conditions warrant." SCHLESINGER SAID President Nixon ordered the American alert after receiving information that about 50,000 Soviet paratroopers were placed on alert status last week in Eastern Europe. He said another reason was that the size of A little calculator will get you t h r o u g h times of a lot of figuring better than a lot of figur- ing will get you through times of little calculators. Come to U-CELLAR AND SEE the Soviet fleet in the Mediter- ranean had doubled to an all-time high of 85 'vessels. There also was the possibility, Schlesinger added, that some Soviet troops were actu- ally en route by air to Cairo. from Eastern Europe. The State Department leveled criticism of U.S. allies in Europe for having "separated themselves publicly from us" during the past few days of tension over the Mid- dle East. The fighting in the Middle East centered on the southern sector of the Suez Canal. The Israeli mili- tary command said the trapped Egyptian 3rd Army had mounted a tank and artillery attack in hopes of breaking out. But the command said the assault was turned back. THE CEASE-FIRE appeared to have taken hold on other fronts. The Israeli state radio said the estimated 20,000-man Egyptian 3rd Army is surrounded and running out of food and water north of the port of Suez at the southern end of the 103-mile Suez Canal. The Israeli command said the Egyptians were trying to transfer the trapped troops across the canal back into Egypt proper from the Sinai Desert, which has been in Israeli hands since 1967. The mili- tary command in Tel Aviv held that this was a violation of the cease-fire that first went into effect Monday and reinforced by another U.N. Security Council resolution on Tuesday. "THE SITUATION of the 3rd Army is desperate," one Israeli, battle correspondent said in a broadcast. An Israeli helicopter carrying blood plasma for the surrounded Egyptians left Tel Aviv early in the day for delivery to the Inter- national Red Cross on the scene. In Tel Aviv, Israeli officials said a Liberian-registered tanker, be- lieved to be heading for Israeli occupied oil fields in the Sinai peninsula hit an Egyptian mine and was in danger of sinking at the mouth of the Gulf of Suez, about' 175 miles south of Suez city. saturday, October 27 DAY CALENDAR WUOM - Football: Michigan vs Minnesota. WUOM-FM (91.7 Mhz), live broadcast. 1:15 pm. P.T.P.: Feydea"'s "Chemin de Fer" Mendelssohn Theatre, 3 p.m. University Players: Durrenmatt's "'The Marriage of Mr. Mississippi" Arena Theatre. Frieze Bldg.. 8 p.m. Musical Society: Kipnis Mime Thea- ter, Power. 8 p.m. Music School: Contemporary Music Festival. Jan De Gaetani, guest artist. David Robbins, conductor, Rackhanm Aud.. 8 p.m P.TsP.: Rurrenniatt's "The Visit" Mendelsohn Theatre. 8 p.m. CAREER PLANNING AND PLACEMENT 3200 SAB, 764-7456 Recruiting on Campus: Oct. 30: Cor- nell Sch, of Bus. Pub. Ad.; Connecti- cut Mutual Life Ins.; Univ. of Santa Clara, Law; Oct. 31: Zayre Corp.; Cor- nell Sch. Bus. & Pub. Adm.; Nov. 1; Abraham & Straus. Nov. 2: Upjohn; Sears Roebuck & Co.; Kurt Salmon; Georgetown Univ, Law; Nov. 3: Manuf. Nat'l. Bank; Univ. of Notre Dame; Nov. 6: Stanford Univ Grad. Sch. Bus.; North Western Univ., Law; Wayne State Univ. Personnel Office; Pennsyl- vania Univ., Law; Nov. 7: Mass, Inst. of Tech. Sch. of Arch. & Planning; Univ. of Chicago Grad. Sch's: Burger King Corp; Nov. 8: Dunn & Brad- street, Inc.; HEW Mgt. Intern Pro- gram: George Washington Univ., Law; Aetna Life & Casualty: Nov. 9: Colun- bia Univ. Grad. Sch. of Bus.; Villanova, Univ., Law; N. Y. Univ., Law; Univ. of Penn. Wharton Grad. Div.; N. Y. Life Ins. Co. 3. e s c' z C OES The Academy Award Winner You MUST See Again NOW RATED I PLUS The picture you should NEVER have missed! I LLISO I GEORGE SEGAL: The son in the ape suit! Thur. & Fri. open 7 p.u-m. "Poppa" at 7:30 only "Cowboy" at 9 p.m. only -Sot. & Sun. open 1 p.m.- "Cowboy" at 1 :30-5:20-9:05' "Poppa" at 3:45 & 7:25 1214I~ s:uiveam I A 49 A Cam -==a '4r, UNIVERSITY PLAYERS presents A SHOWCASE PRODUCTION THE MARRIAGE OF MR. MISSISSIPPI by FRIEDRICH DURRENMATT Thursday-Saturday, Oct. 25-27 Arena Theatre, Frieze Bldg.-8:OO 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. OPEN DAILY AT 12:45 SHOWS AT 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 P.M. HELD OVER-3rd HIT WEEK DON'T MISS IT! Rated G JESUS CHRIS SUJPERSAR" NEW WORLD FILM COOP presents A HALLO WEEN DREAM Alice In W onderland * This bizarre rendition of the * 4 Lewis Carroll classic, patterned after the Tenniel drawings, . features such intriguing cast- inq as Gar y Cooper as the *a PIroducd b * White Knight, Cary Grant as W*-MYSTERIES the Mock Turtle, Edward Ev- OF THE ORGANISM@ erett Horton as the Mad Hat- .* * ter, and Jack Ookie and Ros- * Brilliantly original co- Krns as Tweedledum and * with gleeful Tweedledee. W.C. Fields plays . irroverance. -NF Humpty-Dumpty, dnd delivers some s u p e r b in - character * Satanically n"y- readings of the author's non- ^iMAI AZINE A picture of sense verse. * blazing originality. Must be seen. * WED. & THURS., Oct. 31, Nov. 1 TUES. only, Oct. 30 * * * ALSO THURS.: Vanessa Redgrave in Chekov's THE SEAGULL ********l************ ************ *************** 2333 E. STADIUM BLVD. (near Washfenaw) Ann Arbor AMPE FREE PARKING Call 663-9165 for information beneath Frontier's Restaurant AAMusical Oasis - - TONIGHT - Woody Allen X.2 . . NOW SHOWING! Fri., 7, 8:45, 10:30; Sat. 7:15, 9 "Totally delightful There is much nudity and simu- lated sex in this film, but if your wife, or husband has never seen an X-rated movie, 'Le Sex Shop' is the one to take her, or him to. It is whoesome, refreshing and deliciously funny satire." Stewart Klein, WNEW-TV "This charming French comedy is the first really sophisticated X-rated movie shown, and proves that sex is not just fun but that it also can be very funny." Kevin Sanders, WABCTV I 9 1 A FUN COMEDY ABOUT A MASTER PICKPOCKET! JAMES COBURN Assisted by MICHAEL SARRAZIN and TRISH VAN DEVERE in r . / o .. >.: l' Michigan Men s Glee Club INFORMAL SONGFEST "BRAVO for his most sophisticated, entertaining and delight- fully satirical comedy about changing sexual mores and the efforts of couples to keep pace., William Wolf, Cue Magazine "LAUGHS all over the place. 'Le Sex Shop' is not for children but is for adults who can smile through a nude, but woody alle's ALOUISE LASSER - CHARLES HJOFFE - JACK GROSSBERG -AND- Everything You Always Wanted To SEX e cr I A a 0" .9 i I e i B I I_._ An C I.J-- .- \1 --I a