__ _ _ __ _ _ nnp,,. U raus Iuesaay, iNovemberr .: ,T 5' 1 i~l IV% 5YI ne I Q-%,JI 5N Ll 16 L. T rag 1I nI r Hostages freed in N..prisonfiaseot NEW YORK ()-Five guards world as long as no blood has held hostage by rebellious in- been shed."t mates at Rikers Island city pri- Malcolm blamed the disturb- son were freed unharmed yes- ance on the city's current fiscalt terday after officials agreed to crisis, citing overcrowding and demands for improved condi- a cutback in the guard force! tions at the overcrowded and because of budget economies.l isolated jail in the East River. Some 352 guards have been laid But some 350 prison guards, off in recent months. upset over terms of the truce,t ignored orders by authorities to EQUIPMENT was damaged,' return the 1,200 prisoners to glass broken and some mattres-' their cells and to clean up five ses set afire at the outset of! damaged cellblocks. the riot. It began about 9:302 p.m. Sunday when inmates oft PRISON authorities said no five of the prison's seven three- guards suffered injuries during story cellblocks refused to be the disturbance but that some locked in for the night. The in- prisoners had been injured. The mates had armed themselvesI cause and extent of their injur- with homemade weapons, fash- ies were not immediately ioned mainly from broom and known. mop handles. The peace terms that brought About 30 guards were on duty an end to the 17-hour disturb- when the disturbance began. An ance, which began Sunday night additional 450 corrections office i when inmates used homemade ers were summoned for standby weapons to seize control of the duty, and they were joined by jail, were greeted angrily by about 100 policemen with gas" guards, who declined to identify masks and bulletproof vests. themselves in talking with re- Outside, police helicopters and' porters. launches patrolled the prison "They proved they can take island and 24 emergency cars this place over whenever they and trucks with tear gas and want it and you can bet they automatic weapons were posted will," declared a guard. inside the prison gate. China explains detente By AP and Reuter terday in a commentary by the of the other superpower, they TOKYO - China, indicating official Hsinhuo news agency, feverishly advertise that only the line it will take when Pres- I which said Soviet leaders are when they possess superiority ident Ford visits Peking next claiming smugly that the So- can detente be preserved," week, said yesterday that de- v.iet bloc's international position Hsinhua said. tente in Kremlin terms means has strengthened while the U. Amid Chinese concern over others should hand over to the S. position has weakened. thousands of Soviet troops ar- Soviet social-imperialists what "When the Soviet Union was rayed along their border, Hsin- they demand." outdone by the United States in hua said that to Moscow, de- Ford will hold at least three military strength, they said tente means "that the Soviet so- rounds of talks with Chinese that peace would be ensured sial '- imperialists are free to leaders next week in Peking. only with equal security for both run amok all over the world CHINPSE OFFICIALS lec- sides. Hence, the Soviet Union is with immunity: It means that tured Secretary of State Henry 'justified' in expanding arma- the West should willingly pro- Kissinger on what they see as ments, added the commentary. vide them with money, technol- the dangers of detente with "AND NOW when their mili- ogy and grain to augment their Moscow when he visited Peking tary strength is close to, or has capability in their quest for recently to prepare for Ford's exceeded in some aspects, that world domination." trip. The theme was hit hard yes- i WHY WALK FARTHER fr~ewil be penLEVI'S BRAND Friday and Saturday AP Photo ' A HOUSE burns brightly yesterday during the extensive brush fires that hampered the Los Angeles areaa. Fires hit L.A. area U-4v1Stylists at the UNION Have a happy Thanksgiving Chet, Harold & Dave AV01i1ble of Wild's Varsity Shop FEATURING: " Denim Bells 0 Panatella 0 Work " Brush Denims Knit Slaks " Flanne " Boot Jeans " Cordurovs " Pre-Wash Slaks " Denim Wild's Varsity Shop 311 S. STATE STREET Shirts el Shirts Jackets III LOS ANGELES (P) - Uncon-' trolled brush fires raged over the city's rural northern hill- sides yesterday, driving hun- dreds from their homes and casting a choking, sooty cloud of smoke over the entire met- ropolitan area.C Officials said at least 40 structures, including expensive homes, suffered damage or went up in flames but fire fight- ers said the 'actual scope of the damage and danger was beyond ready assessment. THERE WERE NO reports of deaths but a half a dozen fire- men were reported injured. They suffered from minor burns and smoke inhalation. Officials said the 32,000-acre holocaust posed an exceptional I danger. They said high winds gusting up to 70 miles per hour, temperatures in the 80s and low humidity with similar predic- tions in sight for the rest ofI the week were hampering the battle against the fires. "We have no estimate of when we will gain control," a fire information officer said, in- dicating that more than 1,0001 men and scores of trucks, heli-1 conters and planes were fighting the rampaging flames. Addition- al fire fighters were being brought in from as far away asI Idaho and other Western states. THE WORST fire area involv- ed a wall of flames stretching 15 miles along the foothills at the base of the towering Gabriel Mountains from Glendale-La Crescenta northwest to Sylmar. ' San the area Meanwhile, two other less ser- ious fires blazed on Mt. Baldy and in the Santa Susana Pass area on both sides of the ma- jor fire. The fires began Sunday at a flareupofa mere 12-acre brush blaze farther north in the An- geles National Forest. THE FIRES were so exten- sive by yesterday that even 15I miles away in downtown Los Angeles the sun at midday look- ed like a red fireball through a veil of smoke that cloaked and choked the city worse than any smog. Soot from the firecloud- which rose .as high at 9,000 feet - swirled into the eyes of per- sons on downtown streets. Day- light commuters were forced to use their headlights.j I State Discount IN THE TENTATIVE pact, the inmates won amnesty from criminal charges or prison dis-E ciplinary action, a special panel on inmate grievances, an at- tempt to ease overcrowding,! more relaxed visiting condi- tions, and a periodic inspectionj by news media of the carrying out of the agreement. City Correction Commissioner Benjamin Malcolm defended the pact, declaring: "I will be one of the happiest men in the CHARING CROSS BOOKSHOPj Used, Fine and Scholarly Books 316 S. STATE--994-4041 Open Mon.-Fri. 11 -9, Sat. 10-6 CAMPUS FORUM a holiday special PROBLEM DRINKING Attitudes About Alcoholism 307 S. STATE Ph. 994-1262 TUESDAY, November 25 8:30 p.m. CAMPUS CHAPEL a place for people 1236 WASHTENAW one block north of South University and Forest STORE HOURS: MON.-TUES.-WED.-SAT. 9-6 THURS. - FRI. 9 - 9; SUNDAY 12-5 PRICE GOOD ONLY WITH COUPON 10% OFF ALL1 Processing and Developing of KODAK FILM. LIMIT 1 EXPIRES 12-2-75 NEW RELEASES " SOME CUTOUTS ALL SINGLE ALBUMS $3.99 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN re ;;r. x:;{r.:";-:.,;};o {. e: .: - :.;;;.".:{""".::::r.: -i 'r"'S:ii5;"a;...h?:'r::;{q.:;-.::- : Tuesday, November 25 Day Calendar1 WUOM: "George Wallace's. Ala- bama," documentary produced by NPR's David Molpus, 10 am. CEW: Christine Allen, tThe Effect of Transcendental Meditation and EMB Biofeedback on Relaxation and: Stuttering," 328 Thompson St.,' noon. 3rd World Women's Subcommit- tee : Regents' Conf. Rm., Admin. Bldg., noon-i1:30 pm. Pendleton Arts Info Ctr.: Open, Hearth, "Godspell," preview, 2nd$ fir., Union, noon. ISR: Geoffrey Vickers, "Organiz- ational Malfunction in a Complex World," Founders' Rm., 5th fir., ISR, 2-5 pm. Biophysics: C. M. Venkatachalam, "Theoretical Aspects of Protein Folding," 205 P&A Bldg.' Condensed Matter: C. L. Zipfel, Bell Labs: "Electrons on the Sur- { face of Liquid Helium," 2038 Ran- dall Lab, 4 pm. CREES: Soviet Film Festival, 200 Lane Hal, 4 pm-midnight. Computing Ctr.: Edward J. Frone- zak, "2nd part Short Course, The Use of Touch-Tone Telephone as an MTS Terminal," Seminar Rmn., 1st fir., 7:30 pm. YOUR 10U1K IIUYS MORE AT STEAK 14 BEEF ® BURGERS CHICKEN N FISH FRY Human Physiology Films: "The Ecology of Sex," Jan Schneider, spkr.; The Pelvic Exam, S. Lee. Hall, Med. Sci. IL 8 pm. Music School: Chamber Orches- tra, Hill Aud., 8 pm; degree recital, Recital Hall, 8 pm. General Notices CEW announces 15 winter term undergrad evening classes at UM; all provide full U credit & require admission; contcat CEW for more info - open weekdays 8:30 am-5 pm, 328 Thompson, 763-1353. Alumnae Council' Scholarship appls. available now thru Dec. 20 at Union.. range $400-$ 1,000; 30 awards given annually; applicants notified Mar. 31. The Housing Office has sched- uled campus-wide informational sessions for prospective staff appli- cants beginning Dec. 1-4 in the in- dividuals halls. Mon., Dec. 1 Baits (7 pm, Thieme Lounge), Bursiey, (7 p.m., Resident Advisors & 8:30! pm, Resident Directors; both in W. Dining Rm.). Check DOB for meet- ings to be held Dec. 2, 3 & 4. .._ __ . ..._e... .._. .. ' The school district of Glen- -- --- - dale, a suburb of 160,000, was - - ---^-- closed so school buildings could serve as evacuation and control centers. Over 12,000 pupils-were p kept out of school. )JUviorYear in GERMANY Mt. Rainier National Park in; Washington cantains 241,992 at FRIBi UR G acres and contains the greatest L L J I~. single-peak glacial system in the United States, radiating from the summit of an ancient FIRST INFORMATIONAL MEETING volcano.;FIS IN O M TO A ME IG Wednesday-Dec. 3, 1975-8:00 p.m. TowersModern Language Building Lecture Room No. 2 (FIRST FLOOR) .(All undergraduates interested in attending the University of "q(Freiburg should attend this meeting. I _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __-_ I GIL' SCOWT HERON AND THE MIDNIGHT BAND 1 1I. FDAY D CEjWE1 5 MJ'ICAJGAN T AA1r Liberty and State, Ann Arbor Reserved seats, S4, S5, and S6 available at:, In Ann Arbor at The Michigan Union, Ann Arbor Music Mart, The Michigan Theatre, and Mr. Music at Briarwood; in Ypsilanti at Tom's Party Store; and in Detroit at White's Records. WE HAVE THE NEW JONI MITCHEL RUFUS ROXY HISTORY OF AMERICA Price Good Only With Coupon Price Good Only With Coupon MENNEN JOHNSON & JOHNSON SPEED STICK Baby Shampoo DEODORANT 2.5 OZ. 1 Z. $1 69, G1.298 8 C REG. 2.19 LIMIT i LIMIT 1 Expires 12-2-75 Expires 12-2-75 Price Good Only With Coupon Price Good Only With Coupon CLAIROL PONDS Clouds of Herbal Essence BODY SPLASH SKIN CREAM 4 OZ. R EG. 2.19 $1.66 REG. 1.19 7 C LIMIT T LIMIT 1 Expires 12-2-75 Expires 12-2-75 PRICE GOOD ONLY WITH COUPON CANDLES -FOR ALL OCCASIONS - 2 for 24c LIMIT I1EXPIRES 12-2-75 Price Good Only With Coupon Price Good Only With Coupon TAB-A-DAY EXCEDRIN VITAMINS WITH IRON FOR PAIN RELIEF 100's 100's 9 C REG. i119 7 c REG. 1.29 Expires 12-2-75 Expires 12-2-75 Price Good Only With Coupon Price Good OnlyWith Coupon VOGUE PLAYTEX BASIC TOILET TISSUE T APO 2-PACK REG. 56c 3 c 30's $119 LIMIT 1REG. 1.39 1.1 LIMIT 1 LIMIT 1 Expires I.2-2-75 Expires 12-2-75 SPECIAL PRICE GOOD ONLY WITH COUPON SPECIAL VITAMIN C-100 MG. 1RE's 59c REG. 1.09 LIMIT 1 .. EXPIRES 12-2-75 Price Good Oniy With Coupon Price Good Only With Coupon Fashion Orlon OPAQUE KNEE SOCKS PANTY HOSE LEGM.T 8PA c REG. 1.50 88c LIMIT 6 PAIR LIMIT 6 PAIR Expires 12-2-75 Expires 12-2-75 3035 Washtenaw across from Lee Oldsmobile Show starts at Midnight l _.,_ - U _. Presented by the SUN newspaper in association with brass Ring Productions and Daystar 1 w __ .. _. __ . a w., i... . ... _. ire _. ... ._ JUNIOR YEAR in FRANCE at AIX-EN-PROV ENCE FIRST INFORMATIONAL MEETING Monday-Dec. 1, 1975-8:00 p.m. Modern Language Building Lecture Room No. 2 A shot against cancer? One day the scariest thing about cancer may be the needle that makes you im- mune to it. The theory: build up the body's defense And the promise for the future is stag- gering. Wouldn't you feel good knowing you contributed to the research? {