Pae Two. t l (E MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, October 17, 1972 ,4 iiI IHGNDIYTesaOtbr1,11 U Ulster Protestants enlist U.S. veterans I 1 BELFAST ( P) - Northern Ire- land's P r o t e s t a'n t paramili- tary Ulster Defense Association (UDA) said Sunday it has recruit- ed American Vietnam veterans as guerrilla warfare instructors. UDA officers refused to disclose how many American mercenaries money and weapons from Ameri- can sympathizers for its opera- tions in the province. The UDA claim followed guer- rilla violence that left three civi- lians dead and three others ser- iously wounded. IAll thrP f thn chi i e FOREST FIRES BURN MORE THAN TREES had joined the organization or go i iose siain were into details of their involvement. Roman Catholics and their deaths But they said the men were re- raised to 606 the toll in three years cruited after offering to share with of sectarian warfare. Security the UDA their experience of Viet forces expressed belief they were thn guerrilla techniques. victims either of sectarian killers Conglgimriwaste nges e or rivalry between the IRA's Pro- British army sources said the visional and Official wings. UDA claims was "not being taken- very seriously." They said the Americans "would have no local knowledge and it is local knowledge that stops you W from getting shot in Northern Ire- DIAL 668-6416 land." The Roman Catholic-based Irish An ALL T H RI L L Republican Army (IRA) is al- Double Bill Now ready known to get supplies of AP Photo Preschool chess champ Five-year-old Kevin McCrea studies the chessboard as he prepares to make a move during a recent game against his teacher at the Singer Learning Center in Worthington, Ohio. Young Kevin says he is as good as Bobby Fischer and his teacher doesn't argue the point as he beat her, four of the five games they played. NAZI PRISON CAMP: Thousands honor saint Chie's strike strengthens SANTIAGO OP) - Shop keepers, striking in sympathy with truck- ers, kept their shutters closed yes- terday in defiance of Chile's left- ist government. Riot police saturated Santiago's commercial district and used tear gas to break up hundreds of per- sons shouting: "Chile is and will be a country in liberty!" on Calle Ahumada, the main business street. The capital province of Santia- go and 16 other provinces of the -- 25 total have been under a state of emergency, a form of martial law, since Thursday. Army Gen. Hector Bravo Mun- oz, chief of the Santiago Eiher- gency Zone, warned shopkeepers Sunday to open for business or face requisitioning. FROM THE MASTER OF SHOCK A SHOCKING MASTERPIECE . ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S "FRENZY" / A UNIVERSAL RELEASE IKt TONIGHT AT 9:00 -AND- MICHAEL CAINE NIGEL GREEN I n "THE IPCRESS FILE" 7:15 L r im OW/ -- f AUSCHWITZ (R) - More than martyrdom he was pronounced 150,000 persons trekked to this for-I "blessed" - a step toward can- mer Nazi death factory Sunday to onization in the Roman Catholic pay homage to the "Saint of Church. Auschwitz" - Polish priest Maxi- Under cold gray skies and a milian Kolbe who was beatified strong wind, the crowd stood exactly a year ago by Pope Paul shoulder to shoulder, packing the VI. camp's mile-long extermination Father Kolbe volunteered to block. Some weeping, others down suffer an agonizing slow death, no on their knees, they listened to sermons from Poland's primate, food or water was given to him Stefan Cardinal Wyszynski and for 14 days, in order to save the John Cardinal Krol of Philadel- life of a fellow prisoner. For his phia. Scientific developments Deep sea lab PALM BEACH (A)-A small uncumbersome underwater sea laboratory explores life 80 feet below the surface, complete with three men, a canary and water- beds. Dubbed "La Chalupa," this vessel can be submerged and surfaced completely by the divers living in it, and can be easily towed to other sites, great- ly reducing surface support crews, says Ian Koblick, director of the Marine Resources Develop- ment of Puerto Rico. Ancient remains SALONIKA (P)-Petrified re- main of giant mastodons, dogs and horses with three toes esti- mated to be 13 million years old On Washtenaw Ave. I 1/ Miles E. of US 23-Arborland DIAL 434-1782 SHOWS NIGHTLY AT 7 & 9 P.M. "The biggest, most exciting hit of the Cannes Film Festival." -Boston Globe "A brilliantly acted piece of Americana."-London Times 'JOHN _ HUSTONS COLUMS' P CTSmAES PA'0"s LPGT have been uncovered near this city in northern Greece, scientists announced Sunday. The remains also include parts of rhinoceroses and flesh-eating animals that looked, like foxes, scientists re- ported. Feather satellite VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE (P)-A new satellite equip- ped with heat-sensing infrared in- struments was launched here Sunday for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. DIAL 5-6290 "**** 4 STARS, HIGHEST RATING!" N.Y. Daily News BUTEBFLIEf ARE FREE GOLDIE kWH E1c I4ECRRRT Shows at 1-3-5-7-9:05 p.m. Speaking from a rostrum just a few feet from the ruins of the camp's gas chambers-where four million persons perished - Krol told the throng: "With God or without God, as one stands here, one is forced to reflect upon one thought and one historical truth- the curse of our times is the fact that before our very eyes Nazism was able to perpertrate what no human mind can fully compre- hend." "And the' Nazis were capable of this only because they were IGodless." IAmong the many former in- Smates who revisited Auschwitz on Sunday was Franciszek Gajownic- zek, now aged 71, the prisoner whose life Kolbe had saved. "I never even had a chance to thank him," Gajowniczek told a reporter. "You were not allowed to utter a word. I tried to thank him with ,my eyes." TUES. WED. If you only know the Fellini of SATYRICON you should get accom- panied with the totally different earlier stage of this director. Heavily influenced but not con- strained by neorealism Fellini made this tragi- comedy of the life of a prostitute. NIGHTS OF CABIRIA Dir. FREDERICO FELLINI 1957 With JULIETTA MASINA ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM . : t f , 1 i S . i l I i # i The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of 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). Vas Priglashayul (You're being invited) To the LSA COFFEE HOUR With the' SLAVIC DEPARTMENT, Tuesday, October 17 at 3:00 p.m. in the 3rd Floor Commons Room Modern Language Building I OPEN 12:45 "FIDDLER" AT 1 P.M-4:30-8 P.M. CHILDREN $1.00 ADULTS: MON.-SAT. MAT.-$2.00 EVE. & ALL DAY SUN.-$2.50 IN I PRESENTS I I HALLOWEEN DANCE I 7 & 9P.M. 75c Id s IM) CHUCK BERRY SPECIAL GUEST STAR Plus THE DRIFTERS and THE WOOLIES * FRIDAY, OCT. 27-8:00 P.M. BOWEN FIELD HOUSE E.M. U.-YPSI LANTI RESERVED SEATS $2.90-3.00-4.00 TICKET OUTLETS: YPSI.-McKenny Union Huckleberry Party Store, 2872 Washtenaw r-..rAM. Me.%M ;Jtn---..r-1 - A.D A MULTI MEDIA Production Using 26 PROJECTORS' Controlled by a computer rA n FIC CR AIIl.n_-A Triilu UL TIMATE Fxnprience U ~ - - -~ WK ~ - IW h ~ WF c~7 hil 1.01.