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April 13, 1973 - Image 2

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Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1973-04-13

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TW{

FHE MICHIGAN-DAILY

1-ridgy, April 1 3., 1973

Pag e TWO IHE MICH1GAN~ DAILY briday, April 13, 1973

POLLUTION CONTROL STALL:

Auto

makers seek solutions

DETROIT (,P) - U.S. auto makers who have won a one year
extension on meeting the 1975 exhaust emissions requirement still face
a question prompted by their Japanese competitors.
Why can't Detroit with all its technological muscle cut down on
auto pollution as quickly as Japanese auto makers?
Basically, all four American companies contend the technology
does not exist to enable them to meet the controversial standards
on a full production basis over the period of durability testing - 50,-
000 miles. And if the technology was developed in time, it would cost
the car buyer an exorbitant amount - hundreds of dollars extra
fpr a new car and more hundreds on later maintenance, according
to American Motors Board Chairman Roy Chapin Jr.
Ford officials have said costs would rise $300 a car, with
no profits.
But Toyo Kogyo - the maker of the Wankel-powered Mazda -
and Honda, both of Japan, say they can meet the standards, even
by 1975. A Honda official said his company's engine could be mass-

produced by any auto-maker and "would prove to be applicable to !
large engines in the near future."
American companies dispute the idea that meeting the standards
with their big V8s is as easy as with the little rotary and Honda
engines. And producing emission-free engines in the quantity de-
manded by the American consumer is another problem.
"It might appear that we can meet the standard for 1975," said
General Motors Corp. Board Chairman Richard Gerstenberg. "But
meeting them on just a 'few cars and meeting them on every one
of the 25,000 cars we build in a day is quite a different thing."
While some critics have blasted the industry for not coming closer
to the emission standards, company reports indicate a huge amount
of money and manpower spent on meeting the requirements.
GM has reported spending or planning to spend $2-billion to meett
the standards - in engineering, tooling, research and development,
not including the price of devices or parts for cars.
A Pontiac spokesman said half his engineering staff is tied up on
emissions.
The Michigan Daily, edited and man-
aged by students at the University of
x Michigan. News phone: 764-0562. Second
CMass postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich-
igan. 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor,i
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-
lion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus
area); $6.50 local mail (in Mich. or'
states and foreign).

MARLON
BR ANDOwDC
VIVENy hE4l 8
LEIGH
ELIA x r x
KAZAN
TENNESSEE
THESE ARE
THE GREATS!
THIS WAS
THEIR
GREATEST!

4

Vilgot Sjbmrn's complete and uncut / Am
Curious (Yellow) is a "remarkable film
(which) has been playing for a long time
to droves of Swedes, and to several mil
lion people almost everywhere. It is the
story of a young girl who is,' or was,
curious about politics, nonviolence, Zen
commitment, socialism, other Swedes
and, to be sure, sex It is a serious fim
with a noble theme, and, in dramat"c
terms, it is original," says Look maga-
zine. The Evergreen Film presented by
Grove Press ta,-rs Lena Nyman. A San-
drews Produci n.
ADMISSION ESVRICTED TO ADULTS.

xa

.l

MENDELSSOHN THEATRE
Tuesday & Wednesday
7:30 & 9:45 P.M.
NEW WORLD FILM COOP

I

"VIVIEN LEIGH gives one of those rare performances that can
truly be said to evoke pity and terror. When MARLON BRANDO as
the realist, Kowalski, shatters her system of illusions, she disinte-
grates."

.f 73

a

F. ,

Sound System
Problems?
IN THE MARKET FOR NEW
SOUND EQUIPMENT? OUR AD-
VICE IS UNBIASED, PROFES-
SIONAL AND FREE
We KNOW what
CAN'T Be Repaired
TAPE RECORDER
SPECIALISTS INC.
is the finest equipped Audio
Service Company in Washtenaw
County and we're located right
here in Ann Arbor. Be it a tape
recorder, amplifier, or a high
quality FM tuner, you can ex-
pect the best from TRS. For es-
tablished quality repair service,
backed by a full 90-day war-
ranty, see us at 300 S. Thay-
er St. in the Bell Tower Hotel
across from the side of Hill
Auditorium.
OR CALL
663-4152

I

AR co TONIC
--Friends of Newsreel-

AP Photo
Incriminating info
Police load 4 tons of books and 4ocuments they say were stolen from the Bureau of Indian Affairs of-
fice in Washington, D.C. during Indian occupation of the building last year. Two North Carolina men
were charged yesterday with concealing the documents.
Pentagon Papers trial delayed.
LOS ANGELES (Reuter) - The Byrne agreed the trial should be Iments, conspiracy and espionage
long, drawn-out Pentagon Papers ! delayed until today while Boudin ' and face possible long-term prison
trial was put off a day yesterday, got a check-up from his cardiolo- sentences.
because of possible heart problems gist. The trial began last July but had
suffered by the lawyer for prin- The defense has said it expects to to start over again with a second
cipal defendant, Dr. Daniel Ells- wind up its case early next week. jury in January because lengthy.
berg. Ellsberg and a co-researcher at the delays over a wiretapping i s s u e
The lawyer, Leonard Boudin, a Rand Corp., Anthony Russo, are might have exposed the first jury to
60-year-old defender of dissident charged with stealing the docu- prejudicial publicity.
causes who lives with a heart pace- -----
maker, asked for the delay after !_ _____
complaining of feeling dizzy while
questioning Ellsberg on the stand
Wednesday. asGUITAR LESSONS
The delay cameas Ellsberg was
dcide to tcpy thn wt mdsere stud Class or private instruction-all styles. Our studios {
of the Vietnam war in 1969 and; also accommodate banjo, flute, piano, drums and l
leak it to Congress. Moog. Call
Boudin, one of the defense team
on t!e Father Daniel Berrigan trial
in Harisburg, Pennsylvania, toldAr ric
the court he failed to bring one
of his medicines to court Wednes-93090MO SA
day and felt dizzy. * 769-4980 336 S. State St.
Federal District Judge Matthew:I
t mediatrics
ONE DAY IN THE LIFE
OF IVAN DENISOVICH
7 and 9:30 P.M.
Saturday & Sunday
Nat. Sci. Auditorium
ONLY 75c Tickets on sale at 6 p.m.

Mod. Lang. Auds.

7:15-8:20-9:30

$1.25

DANCE CONCERT
APRIL
13-8:00
14--8:00
15-2:30
ADULTS-$2
STUDENTS-$1
R.C. AUD.
E. UNIV. and MONROE
AADT

and the FUTURE WORLDS PROGRAM present
FRITZ LANG'S
A young man breaks from his authoritarian father and tries to
ease the burdens of those who run the underground machinery
of Metropolis, a city of the future. A stunning melodrama with
huge, highly stylized sets.
This 1925 silent film will have live piano music by DONALD
SOSIN, his positively last appearance in Ann Arbor.
TONIGHT-APRIL 13
SATURDAY: FORBIDDEN PLANET SUNDAY: ALPHAVILLE
MONDAY: THE TIME MACHINE
7 and 9:05 Architecture Auditorium $1

HOW THE WEST
WAS CIVILIZED!

I

0 THE TRUE FACTS!
*THE STORY THE
OLD-TIMERS TOLD LATER!
* THE MYTHS LATER
GENERATIONS MADE UP!

BRUNO
(The Watch Bear)

ALL ROLLED INTO TWO HOURS
OF PURE ENJOYMENT!
Enjoy It When You See It-Discuss it Afterwards if You Wish
IN THE LIFE AND TIMES OF
4TH #NO SHORTS!
H' T=JDGEEAN
EI PROMPTLY AT
WEEK thisd 1 P.M.-.3 P.M.-

4

Mogazi
"A WILD, WILD, ALL STAR EPIC. NEWMAN BRILLIANT!"
-James Bacon, L A. Herald-Examiner

f

1% gel I" "'e.

Pl

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