Thursday, September 21, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY DIAL 5-6290 i SHOWS AT' :10-3:10-5:00- 7:05-9 ,p.m. An Irreverenf Comedy Spoof of Doctors and Hospitals! with THE SEXIEST NURSE in Military History! Their bedside manner will bring a quick re- covery to anyone looking for fun and enter- tainment. ti .: Peter Sellers as Albert T. Hop iiagel HospitalAdmIflistrator in Does It 0l '1YWher Vsuaugh N EASTMANCOLOR -FRO IERAMA RELEASING COMING "BUTTERFLIES ARE FREE" n ews briefs. by The Assoite Pes THE SENATE FINANCE COMMITTEE yesterday approved $6 billion in new Social Security benefits as part of a massive wel- fare reform bill. Money for the benefits will come from a $6 billion Social Security tax increase; also approved by the committee. Under present law, a person working after retirement can earn $1,680 a year without loss of benefits. The new bill would allow such a person to earn up to $2,400 a year. The committee, in its decision, rejected the request of the Nixon administration to drop some of the benefits as being too costly. * * * THE MICHIGAN HOUSE INSURANCE COMMITTEE is sched- uled to vote today on a compromise bill setting up a modified, no- fault auto insurance system in Michigan. Rep. Matthew McNeely (D-Detroit), committee chairman, predicted favorable committee action immediately and final passage by the legislature sometime this fall. McNeely cautioned that there is little likelihood of decreased in- surance premiums saying, "I don't think anyone can guarantee that." The proposed compromise bill, he said, will not attempt to extend the no-fault concept to property damage. This issue had been a sticking point with major insurance carriers. Definition of medical coverage is still being worked out McNeely said, but would not likely be unlimited, as some versions of the proposal have called for. DR. JOHN ONCLAY of the University .of Michigan has been named by the Vernon Stouffer Foundation as one of four scientists who will receive the, $50,000 Stouffer Prize for work in combatting heart disease. The four were honored for their research in finding the answer to how hot fat and cholesterol are transported in the blood. Dr. John Gefman of the University of Calfornia at Berkeley, Dr. Vincent Dole of-the Rockefeller Institute in New York, and Dr. Robert Corcon Jr. of the National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Md., are the other recipients. THE QUESTION OF who fired the shotgun blast in the hallway of a Black Panther party apartment during a 1969 police raid in Chicago remained unanswered yesterday, even after the court heard expert testimony on the matter. Herbert MacDonell, professor of criminology at Elmira, N.Y. Col- lege, said Tuesday that the blast did not come from any of the guns police used in the raid, which resulted in the killings of Panther leaders Fred Hampton and Mark Clark. MacDonell, however, did say that the shot was fired in the hall- way where the police were huddled, and not from the living room of the apartment. * * THE ILLINOIS SUPREME Court ruled yesterday that Richard Speck cannot be executed for the 1966 murder of eight nurses in! Chicago, and ordered a hearing to help determine a new sentence. In a two-page opinion, the justices cited the June. 29 ruling of the U.S. Supreme Court that the death penalty is unconstitutional in most cases. "The death penalty cannot be reimposed on the defendant and the only remaining question is the procedure to be followed in re- sentencing him to a sentence other than death," said the opinion, signed by Justice Walter Schaefer. UGANDA'S AIR WAR against Tanzania suffered a setback earlier this week when Sudan refused to allow Lybian troops that had come to aid the Ugandans, to fly over Sudanese territory. Ugandan President, Idi Amin, has said that he would "instruct the Uganda air force and the seaborne regiment to destroy Tanzanian camps where the enemy is planning to launch another invasion of Uganda.' Tanzanian army sources said Tuesday that the Tanzanian invaders of Uganda were in reality Ugandan exiles; and the Tanzanian president,: Julius Nyerere, said that he might be compelled to take his forces off a defensive footing unless Uganda halted air strikes against Tanzanian territory. Both countries are members of the Organization'of African Unity whose members pledge to refrain from interference in each others internal affairs. in UN over Page Three L'ast-West clash U.S. troops in orea UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (A) - The committee that screens the General Assembly agenda turned down a Chinese- Soviet move for debate on U. S. troops in Korea yesterday, and heard a plea from Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim for action to stop terrorism. The 25-nation committee voted 16 to 7 with one ab- stention. to recommend postponement until next year of the proposal by Communist and some nonaligned countries for the ouster of American troops from Korea. Ambassador Huang Hua of.China told the committee that the American troops and the U.N. commission set up to re- unify the country are "the root cause for the prolonged divi- sion of Korea," and he called for the ouster of American troops from South Korea. The British ambassador, Sir Colin Crowe, asserted that U. N. members could best encourage current contacts betweenthe two Koreas by keeping quiet. He for- mally asked postponement of any debate on a proposal by China, the Soviet Union and 26 other Communist and nonaligned coun- tries for the General Assembly to order the U. S. troops out of the country and suspend its reunifica- tion commission. "Our U. N. debrtes have con- tributed little to the situation in Korea except -acrimony and theI violent language of the cold war . Let us allow the Koreans to1 conduct the debate onf Korea FDA head says laws restrictive WASHINGTON {P) - Expansion of food-safety laws to prohibit ad- ditives blamed for birth defects "would essentially ban all food ingredients and most foods," Com- missioner Charles Edwards, head of the Food and Drug Administra- tion said yesterday. AP Photo WILLY BRANDT, West German Chancellor (foreground) ad- dresses Parliament in Bonn, yesterday. Brandt asked for a vote of confidence. In the background, (left to right) are Justice Minis- ter Gerhard Jahn, Inner Aff irs Minister Hans Genscher and Foreign Minister Walter Scheel. Irandt sets staoe for genleral elections BONN, Germany (A) - Chan- cellor Willy Brandt set the stage yesterday for a parliamentary maneuver to prematurely end the term of office which brought him the Nobel Peace Prize. Brandt is clearing the way for general elections that he hopes will restore his majority. In the only device permitted by Bonn's rigid constitution to dis- solve the Bundestag before the end of its four-year term, Brandt asked the lower house for a vote of confidence which he knows he cannot win when its takes place tomorrow. Brandt told the 496 Bundestage lawmakers the self-contradictory move was forced on him by the loss of his ruling majority four months ago, when defecting gov- ernment legislators left the low- er house split 248 to 248 in an unprecedented stalemate. Bitterly criticizing the defect- ors, Brandt said they vetoed the September 1969 election r e s u 1 t which originally gave his Socal Democrats and their Free Demo- cratic coaliti<9n partners a 12 vote majority.- In a preview of perhaps tho toghest, closest-run election campnign in West Germany > 23- xear history, onposition Chrstian Democrat leader Rainer s'3arzel accused Brandt of trying to cov- er up the ."decisive wreckage"' of his policies in "belittling col- leagues who acted in loyalty to their convictions." The absence of Schiller, who rockednBrandt's government 'ast resigning his Cabinet post last July, upset the four-month par- liamentary stalemate and left Brandt's men with only 247 votes to the opposition's 248. However, the chancellor's cal- culated parliamentary defeat was balanced by one consolation. The Bundestag passed without debate a pioneering treaty relaxing sur- face traffic between West and Communist East Germany which forms the cornerstone of Brandt's efforts to reconcile the rival Ger- manies. themselves," said Crowe. The law banning food additives The steering committee, select- that cause cancer in man or ani- ed by the 27th assembly after the mals led to the removal of the opening of a 13-week assembly artificial sweetener cyclamate and session Tuesday, began meeting the cattle-growth drug diethylstil- to recommend the items the as- bestrol (DES) and threatens sac- sembly should place on its agenda charm and the widely used so- from among 101 proposed topics. dium nitrite and sodium nitrate Huang used basically the same preservatives. argument for asking that the mat- "Carried to its logical extreme," ter be debated as Crowe used for Edwards said, the Delaney Clause asking that it be postponed: There would ban "all food containing should be no foreign interference such carcinogenic environmental while the Koreas talk. contaminants as traces of radio- China and it supporters argued active material." the troops constitute interference, A professor of environmental while Crowe said that a U. N. de- health, Samuel Epstein, said he is bate constitutes interference. 1 unaware of any food additive that "The Chinese government and 'is carcinogenic, teratogenic or people have always held that the mutagenic and cannot be safely re- affairs ofaa country should be moved. managed by the people them- Mutagens and teratogens are selves, and there is no justifica- substances which promote genetic tion for any foreign interference," said Huang. changes associated, with birth de-- 'fects and carcinogens are sub- stainces that promotegrowth of L d }. cancer cells. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of I Edwards said the present law Michigan. News phone: 764-0562. Second could result in a ban on the es- Iclass postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- Snilntin eeu naia Igan 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor;snilntin eeu naia Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- feeds. The proposed additional test day through Sunday morning Univer- for teratogenesis "would lead to sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by serious immediate difficukies carrier (campus area); $11 local mail' (in Mich. or Ohio); $13 non-local mail since many essential nutrients and (other states and foreign). other compounds would be ban- Summer Session published Tuesday ned," he said. through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus Edwards said the all-or-nothing area); $6.50 local mail (in Mich. or law should be made more flexible, Ohio); $7.50 non-local mail (other allowing safe levels for use of ad- t a editives in human foods. ARE YOU POLISH? Interested in Polish language and culture? Want to meet other students of Polish descent at the University? COME TO THE 1 UM POLISH STUDENTS CLUB Thurs., Sept. 21; 7 p.m.-3540 S.A.B. REFRESHMENTS! For more info call: 764-0074 SHOP TONIGHT UNTIL 9:00 the wide leg! the big cuff! the A-1 baggy! Flared in a b-i-g way. ..3-inch cuffs on 26-inch bottoms. That's the only way to go now. In blue indigo pre-shrunk 14-oz. cotton denim., Worn with a ribbed knit turtleneck. 29-36 waist sizes. $11. 0 S Now that you've bought j 3 : J/l your TEXTBOOKS Why not check out our PLEASU RE-BOOKS OPEN FOR BROWSING ffh~l~I MONDAY THRU SATURDAY COLLECTIVE EYE FILM SERIES presents SUNDAY 10:00-3:00 THE SELLING BOOK CENTR Maple Village Shopping CenterOF T EN AG (next to Fox Village Theatre) OF THE PENTAGON EMMY AWARD WINNER - BEST NEWS DOCUMENTARY -______-__--_-----------TONIGHT, THURSDAY 8 AND 10 P.M. Q in the PEOPLE'S BALLROOM, 502 E. Washington TON IGHT'Sr, T Donation 50c-Munchies by Food Committee of the Tribal Council, HELD DIAL (Sponsored by UM Fraternities and Sororities) OVER 8-6416 AGAIN! at1". . . an inspired blend of fact and fantasy. It leaps backwards and forwards in space and time with utter abandon . from the grimness of a German P.O.W. camp in winter to the lush- ness of n~ geodesic dream house--complete with pneumatic dream B MBO'Sgirl. FOR THIS TRIP, ONE MUST FASTEN 1144 E. WASHINGTON HIS SEAT BELT AND HOLD ON TIGHT!" --Arthur Knight, Saturday Review Tonight from 8:00 p.m. until closing, we will charge a WINNER 1972 CANNES FILM 50c cover charge with all proceeds going to the FESTIVAL JURY PRIZE AWARD ED CE : ryn C Ci c r l k IIC Only American Film to be so Honored 4.. .4* ...........9*. - ....Y.~ ........