Tuesday, December 11, 1973 THE /MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Kissing French cr of U.S. ac rejects Givetheextraordinary *to " from 1iicism baobab co rd contemporary folk art and desgn orically that nothing in the b m [ ariss and c[aftspeople d should affect or impair tions undertaken by either ($3-$300) toward its allies. singer added that we would Mon.-Thurs. 11-9 Fri. 11-10f Sat. 11-8 be prepared to stand by misinterpretation of t h e 328 S. Main (Upstairs), Ann Arbor, 662-3681 -Brezhenev accord, as stat- Jbertn ersisted. He did AP Photo U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger talks Sunday in Brussels with West-German Foreign Minister Walter Scheel, left, and French Foreign Minister Michel Jobert before a dinner at the home of the West German ambassador. Present but not pictured was British Secretary Sir Alec Douglas-Home. The diplomats were in Brussels for the current me eting of NATO foreign ministers. NEW GUIDELINES POSSIBLE: Supreme Court agrees to hear Georgia obscenity case BRUSSELS (Reuter) - Secre- tary of State Henry Kissinger yesterday strongly rejected French criticisms of the June 22 agreement between President Nixon and Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev on the prevention of nuclear war. French foreign minister Michel Jobert told the NATO council here that the U.S.-Soviet accord could limit detente to top-level consultations between the super powers, according to informcd sources. KISSINGER, attending his first NATO foreign ministers meeting, hit back by describing Jobert's assessment of the agreement as "misinterpretation of fact." Jobert said in his prepared statement to the two-day meeting that the Soviet-American acc,)rd, although aimed at preventing a war, threatened to limit the role of the NATO alliance. Kissinger had already told the 14 alliance countries that NATO must decide if its members could continue as allies or would drft into competition. He had de- manded the right of reply to the jFrench minister, conference sources said. THE AMERICAN secretary of state said he could not stand by while "misinterpretations" c o n- cerning the June 22 agreement continued, both by public opin- ion and inside the NATO council meeting. He said he could not see why some of the NATO allies inter- preted the agreement in a way that not even the Russians did, the sources added. Kissinger said he wanted t> set the record straight, stressing that NATO envoys had been in- formed about the contents of the agreement immediately after it was signed. HE REFERRED to article Fix of the agreement which states C y JU ,p PCJJC. r I not elaborate. The June 22 agreement calls for consulattions in the event of nuclear war between tha Unit- ed States and the Soviet Union, or between either of the two super powers and another coun- try. JOBERT SAID that Soviet- American cooperation posed problems for consultations with- in the Atlantic alliance. His remark came after Kis- singer had made what was gen- erally interpreted here as a con- ciliatory speech, whe'e he re- affirmed the U.S. commitment to the alliance. Relations between the United States and its European allies were placed under severa strain because of disagreements over U.S. policy during the Middle East war. FRANCE HAS been one of America's most persistent critics. Today, Jobert was quoted as say- ing of the Soviet-American agree- ment "this process could ;imi. de- tente to top level consultations between super powers, while there are many bilateral and multilateral channels towards de- tente." We Style Hair... We Don't Just Cut It! appointments available Dascola Barbers Arborland-971-9975 Maple Village-761-2733 East Liberty-668-9329 East University-662-0354 Tues. Dec. 11 BENEFIT FOR THE CHICAGO CONSPIRACY ATTORNEYS BILL KUNSTLER & LENNY WEINGLASS also HOMEGROWN RABBITS $1.00 Wed.-Thurs. Dec. 12-13 $3.25 categ( accor obliga party Kiss not b if the Nixon ed by WASHINGTON (R') - The Su- preme Court may be ready to of- fer more definite guidelines to states and local officials on what is punishably obscene. The court issued a routine or- der Monday agreeing to hear ar- guments in a case from Georgia involving a theater operator found guilty of violating state ob- scenity law for showing the cri- tically praised movie "Carnal Knowledge." THE ACTION comes only a few months after the court re- wrote obscenity law in a series of 5 to 4 decisions last term. While those decisions streng- thened the hand of prosecutors, Chief Justice Warren E. Bur- ger said only material depicting "hard - core sexual conduct" should be subject to prosecution. Beyond the question of whether the 1971 movie was punishably obscene, another issue raised by the latest appeal might have caught the justices' attention: the question of what community standards are to be applied in determining obscenity. ONE OF THE KEY elements in the obscenity decisions last June was the removal of a re- quirement that a national stan- dard be used in determining ob- scenity. Opinion has been divided, how- ever, over whether the court intended for statewide standards or those of individual communi- ties to apply. "C a r n a 1 Knowledge was shown successfully in Georgia before police in 1972 arrested Billy Jenkins, owner of the Broad Avenue Cinema in Albany, Ga. JENKINS WAS FINED $750 and given 12 months' probation. He then launched the appeals that will bring him a Supreme Court hearing sometime later this term. Jenkins' lawyers argued that the Georgia obscenity law, as approved by a 4 to 3 decision of the Georgia Supreme Court, squates sex with obscenity. Georgia law also applies the standard of indecent exposure laws to the showing of motion pictures, they said. WHILE THE SUPREME Court never directly confronted the sit- uation, past decisions would pro- hibit applying indecent expos- ure laws to motion pictures, they argued. Finally, the lawyers asked the Supreme Court to make its own ,irin in of whethr 1'r nu-rew.rr "wrrz'rr.rx .rrt..tT c n2 Z tG .+e T ewer. .e.[2 wKGXrtCZi+tCZ re.'7G .^ C ltt l' ; r ,'L SY' ': " iTt' determnalon ol wi er e nal Knowledge" is obscene. State Supreme Court reverses decision on local school fundin LANSING (UPI) - The state Supreme Court set aside yester- day a 1972 decision that said Michigan's system of distributing state education funds in 1970 and 1971 was unequal. The court's action was taken briefly for technical reasons and a spokesman said it would have no immediate impact upon the state's method of financing its schools. LEGALLY, T H E ACTION means that no precedents were established in the 1972 ruling al- though the opinion remains on the books. The court said that requests by Gov. William Milliken and Attorney General Frank Kelley that led to the earlier decision were "improvidently granted"- that is, did not provide for the future. Justices voted unanimous Monday to set aside - or vacat in the language of the court their earlier decision, but ji tices did not explain their late decision in detail. IN ITS EARLIER decision, t court ruled that the forma used for allocating state educ tion funds, based on a scho district's property taxes, a' millage levy, tended to benel rich districts at the expense poorer districts. Although the court did not ru out the use of property tax as source of school financing, did say that whatever system tl legislature devised must be ma equitable than the past formula ar + aem .. ." 'i'° meS v ; ~ 3 'e I ei+ s Looking for unique gifts for Christmas? VISIT THE F Union Gallery ly located on the 1 st floor of te, - ' THE MICHIGAN UNION st prints-pots-paintings-sculpture photography-weaving be# GALLERY HOURS: TUES.-SAT. 10-5I ala All shows are juried. Work by UM students, :)ol alumni and other local artists.t RESEARCH GROUP CLAIMS: Governmnent forecast of fuel crisis 'excessive' coming Sun.-Mon. Dec. 16-17 JAMES COTTON -fit of Ale a it :he ire as. THE ANSWERSI to THOUSANDS of QUESTIONS NEW YORK WA) - A major pe- troleum economics research group estimates this country's fuel shortage due to the Arab embargo in the first quarter of 1974 willebe somewhat less se- vere than the government's fore- cast. The Petroleum Industry Re- search Foundation, Inc., said yesterday it estimates the Arab shortage at up to 2.8 million bar- rels a day while the govern- ment's figure for the total short- age is 3.5 million barrels a day. LAWRENCE Goldstein, the foundation's senior economist, noted the total shortage of crude oil and refined products is sig- nificant even at the lower figure. And he added, "From a public relations point of view, I would prefer the government to some- what overstate t h e problem rather than understate it." One government source said that if its shortage estimate were being prepared today it would probably come down "a little bit"' because some factors have changed since the original calculation. GOLDSTEIN gave this break- down of the foundation's estimate of the possible loss from the Arab embargo: Need Something Professionally Typed? Time Running Out! " Thesis e Dissertations -Loss of 1.3 million barrels of Arab crude oil a day that is no longeravailable to U. S. refiner- ies. -Loss of up to 500,000 barrels a day in products from refiner- ies in the Caribbean area that used Arab oil. -LOSS OF 400,000 to 500,000 barrels a day in products re- fined from Arab oil in Europe that the United States would have imported. -Loss of up to 200,000 barrels a dayin refined products from Canada, if that nation were to embargo shipments to the Unit- ed States because of the loss of Arab crude oil at its East Coast refineries. -Loss of from 200,000 to 300,- 000 barrels a day of refined pro- ducts needed by the U. S. mili- tary. The total would come to 2.8 million barrels a day at most, Goldstein noted. THE MICHIGAN PAILY Volume LXXXIV, Number 79 Tuesday, December 11, 1973 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor. Michigan 48106. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morning during the University year at 420 May- nard Street, Ann Arbor. Michigan 48104.. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (cam- pus area); $11 local mail (Michigan and Ohio); $12 non-local mail (other states; and foreign). ' Summer session publishes Tuesday', through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus, area); $6.50 local mail (Michigan and! Ohio); $7.00 non-local mail ;other states and foreign). GOOD LUCK ON EXAMS! DAVE, HAROLD, CHET and JAY V-M Barbers and Stylists MICHIGAN UNION Rock & Roll Da neing? j ~217 S Ashley-Ann Arbor ,Fzr. '~yh';n :.:r ":,, r;:.."}$::;}+v...... .. . . .. . . 1 r. Sc; .,... ...... ;x?";nt.,:. :;"1. .T. {: " :4 :"t":i,$${ :":>; v+ :.i:{::..,{""4 !! vn ,v:;r::"}4$:h}:{'.:}:":.}:i:":};T:}:}j"}:;:t::}:?i$is.Y:ti;$'v'}Li:{;}':i: ij~:!n':i$:i}":$'+::}:~tii:::: i$$::;{ rfy:: v. tT n".v :.. ............... ... :":.:::..:.: . .:.....:.:v .:.:.n~v:: '.:rr'.."i4:n 'w:i:4 }.:"...... ....: x :. 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