A4 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, February 6, 1973 1 BRITISH PLAN STUDY Lynch calls for surprise By AP and Reuters forthcoming talks with the British.| desirable at a time when Ireland! DUBLIN - Prime Minister Jack A British government policy is starting to experience the pangs Lynch yesterday ordered a sur- document on the future of North- of entry into the European Com- price national election for Feb. 28, ern Ireland is due out in March. mon Market. apparently to strengthen his gov- The British have promised to con- A public vote of confidence ernment's hand for the bargain- sult Lynch in advance on these would help Lynch's efforts toI ing with Britain on the future of proposals and the Irish leader ap- crack down on terrorism and keep Northern Ireland. 1 peared to have this in mind when I the violence in Northern Ireland Lynch could have waited out the 1 he called the snap election. from spreading across the border. remaining 16 monthe of his current Lynch said he was now asking The election, Lynch declared, is term of office before going to the the electorate to provide him with "essential if a protracted per- voters. But he is riding a wave of a "clear and decisive mandate." iod of political uncertainty and popularity and clearly hopes a re- Several factors combine to make instability is to be avoided." inforced mandate will help in his ; such a firm grip on government His government majority in the Dail (the lower house of Parlia- ment) has been gradually eroded New twist e eO s since his party, the Fianna Fail, His party holds only 70 of the 144 seats in the Dail and relies on iS 8 dhalf a dozen independents to give in Eberg defnse him the balance of power over the main opposition party, Fine Gael, with 51 seats. LOS ANGELES (P) - The judge gon papers volumes evaluated by Lynch's action came as North- in the Pentagon papers trial refus- a government analyst as having ern Ireland was ravaged by a ed yesterday to let the defense tell no relation -to national security. bloody surge of sectarian fighting jurors about the government's al- Elimination of those volumes that has claimed at least 20 lives, leged "suppression of evidence, 'would, in efect, eliminate t h r e e:with nearly 50 persons wounded, in but said he would consider allow- counts of the 15-count indictment the last week. ing additional defense remarks lat- against Ellsberg and Russo. The The savagery of this feuding be- er. judge took the motion under .ub- tween rival Protestant and Roman U.S. District Court Judge M a t t mission for a later ruling. Byrne said that at the end of the The government has been seek- The Michigan Daily, edited and man- The grnovetrn et ha s~bense k-aged by students at the University of eoverments cae. hewoul re-Ing to- show, that-thee Aefenaa..s en- election Catholic extremists spurred fears in Belfast that the violence would escalate. In Dublin it was felt that the bloodletting would spill ov- er the border on a wider scale than ever before. Lynch has won general support for his policies, including a crack- down on the outlawed Irish Repub- lican Army and a major revamp- ing of Ireland's constitution. Lynch declared his government has "pursued the only sane policy which could bring about a true reconciliation of the communities and a lasting peace with justice for all." Domestic economic issues may be even more important. The price of butter, milk, meat and eggs have been rising sharply in recent months. Discontent about this has been matched by worries over climbing unemployment in the textile and shoe-making trades. Some of Lynch's opponents sug- gest that he may be anxious to squeeze in an election before pro- posed new electoral reforms which would re-draw constituency boun- daries in a way unhelpful to Fian- na Fail. UAC-DAYSTAR PRESENTS 2 JAZZ GREATS IN ONE CONCERT herbie hancock and special guest star freddie hubbard SAT., FEB. 24 8 P.M.--LAIUD. 4.50-4-3.50-2.50 reserved seats on sale MICH. UNION 11 -5:30 Mon.-Sat. and Salvation Records t .1 Y I i s 11 { s I -I Daily Photo by STEVE KAGAN Reefer madness hits dorm Alice Lloyd residents held their first publicized Bong Festival Sunday night. Three judges determined the winner on the basis of style, how long the contestant could hold his toke and the amount of smoke exhaled. INJUNCTION GRANTED: f 4 gvvciiiuaat vac ic wu ue i ng to show that the defendants en- consider attorney Leonard Boudin's dangered national security b; re- motion to reopen his opening state- n ee hna r4p.tS xl i FAAdelays ruling for airline guards WASHINGTON (A')-Under a temporary restraining order, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) yesterday delayed a regulation which would have gone into effect at midnight requiring airports to provide guards at each passenger boarding gate. The FAA said, however, the new rule would still go into effect immediately at the two airports it operates, Washington National and Dulles International near the capital. The agency urged other airports to provide such officers also, if possible. The FAA had ordered that all airports comply with the new rule as of Feb. 6. The new FAA regulations require each airport to station at least one law enforcement officer at each passenger boarding gate. The airport group petitioned Jan. 26 for a six-month postponement, claiming many airports could not hire and train the required officers immediately. The FAA denied the Airport Operators' Council International (AOCI) petition for a six-month postponement in the deadline yesterday morning. The airport operators thereupon went to court and won a temporary injunction. It prohibited the FAA from putting the new rule into effect before Feb. 16, and ordered a Feb. 13 hearing to resolve the legal questions that had been raised. Some airports already have hired the additional officers required to man boarding gates where passengers are screened for hidden; weapons and their hand luggage is inspected. AOCI complained that the FAA was trying to coerce 531 local governments to take over the federal government's obligations to the public at airline airports. meat to jurors. The seemingly unprecedented procedure of a defense openingj statement in the midst of the gov- ernment's case was first raised by Byrne on Friday as a possibleI "sanction" against the government for withholding until now docu- ments which could help prove Daniel Ellsberg and Anthony Rus- so innocent. Ellsberg and Russo are charged with espionage, conspira,y a n d theft in connection with the leak to news media in 1971 of the top secret Pentagon history of the Vietnam war. Hearings outside the jury'-, pre- sence in the past two weeks have revealed that some of the govern- ment's own analysts concluded in 1971 that the papers were worth- less to an enemy when released. The judge denied defense mo- tions for dismissal and mistrial on Friday but said he would consider future "sanctions" against the gov- ernment for withholding the docu- ments. In that connection, Boudin also moved yesterday for the judge to forbid the prosecutor to introduce evidence from two of the Penta- Byrne ordered testimony before the jury to resume for the first time since Jan. 26 with defense cross-examination of Brig. G e n . Paul Gorman; an intelligence ex- pert who said earlier that release of the Pentagon history would have helped enemy countries. Michigan. News phone: 764-0562. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan. 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (campus area); $11 local mail (in Mich. or Ohio); $13 non-local mail (other states and foreign). Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus area) ; $6.50 local mail (in Mich. or Ohio); $7.50 non-local mail (other states and foreign). I i F - I II I (( MICHIMERS present Woody Allen's play Play It Again, Sam 8 P.M.-THURS.-FRI. FEB. 8-10 MENDELSOHN THEATRE TICKETS $2 & $2.50 in the Fishbowl and at Mendelssohn Box Office :I 'Y 1. I 71 "SWIRLS WITH ACTI ON" -Sat. Review "TENSE, GRIPPING! "FUN" -Cue -Time "RAQUEL WELCH HAS GOTTEN IT ALL TOGETHER!"_L.A. Times "A SWEATY, GOODTIME MOVIE!"-Stork, Det. Free Press SAS, BOMBER .. UAC-DAYSTAR presents John denver sat. feb. 17 hill aud. 8 p.m. $4.50-4.00-3.50-2.50 reserved seats MICHIGAN UNION 11-5:30 Mon.-Sat. SORRY NO PERSONAL CHECKS starts thursday - LAST 2 DAYS - "THE YALACHI PAPERS" Tues., Wed.: "Sobr"-6 :30 rH ru "Bomber"-10:00 ..?o0rg. ® I I NEW MORNING presents Dennis Hopper's film The Last Movie Starring Dennis Hopper and Peter Fonda, Sylvia Miles, Julie Adams, Samuel Fuller and featuring KRIS KRISTOFFERSON Get to know the tw0of youbefore you become the threeofyou Get to know what you both really like. What you both really want out of life. Get to enjoy your freedom together until you both decide you want to let go of a little bit of it. But make it your choice. Research statistics show that more than half of all the pregnancies each year are accidental. Too many of them, to couples who thought they knew all about family planning methods. Get to know how the two of you don't have to become the three of you. Or the four of you. Or... FEBRUARY 7 WEDNESDAY 7:30 & 9:30 ; "a frenzied, brilliant, love-hate attack on contemporary movies, including his own, and our assumptions about them. The story is about what happens after director Samuel Fuller finishes shooting his I