th a ol of m gi la to H The Michigan Daily-Thursday, June 14,;1979-Page 9 Alabama National Guard ordered to protect trucks in a protest to demand guaranteed fuel truck stop in St. Augustine, Fla., called The truck slowdown has cut into allocations, standardized weight and on Transportation Secretary Brock already-short supplies of gasoline. In Alabama Gov. Bob James ordered load regulations, an increase in the Adams to become "actively and vocally Birmingham, Ala., city officials, e National Guard to protect private speed limit to 65 mph, and a rollback in involved" in seeking solutions to the juggling gasoline supplies, began nd commercial traffic i his state escalating diesel fuel prices. diesel fuel problems. rationing fuel for the city's police and esterday and condemned the shooting The truckers got added support IN A CONTINUATION of the sniping fire vehicles yesterday. a Georgia truck driver's wife, the yesterday from the National that broke out over the weekend, rigs "We want to get this over with as ost serious incident of violence in a Association of Truck Stop Operators, were shot up Tuesday night and yester- quick as possible," said Bill Scheffer of rowing nationwide truckers protest. representing 1,100 truckstops, many of day in Alabama, Wisconsin, South Breezewood,. Pa., national vice "This kind of cowardly activity is which have been blockaded or closed Dakota, Colorado, and Nevada. Police president of the Independent Truckers wlessness at its worst and will not be voluntarily, said some of the victims of snipers were Association. "It's either a slow death or lerated," James said of the shooting. William Maebert, incoming chair- warned over citizens band radio they a fast one, and we'd just as soon get it e then ordered the head of Alabama's man of the association and owner of a would be shot if they kept on hauling. over with." Department of Public Safety to "use the full force of the National Guard" to protect trucks carrying perishable goods, including fuel. Doctors at Druid City Hospital in Tuscaloosa, said Linda Pruett, 20, was in critical condition with a bullet lodged in her rib cage. Ms. Pruett was woun- ded early Wednesday when a sniper opened fire on a semi-truck driven by her husband, Fred, 23, on U.S. 82 west of Northport, Ala. THE DEMONSTRATIONS escalated this week after the Independent Truckers Association urged all the nation's 100,000 owner-operators to join MILITAR Y VALUE OF STORED EXPLOSIVES QUESTIONED: Iranian gua Army tests leaking nerve-gas bombs DENVER (AP)-Wearing rubber weapon in the nation's arsenal. senal's toxic storage yard to a six-story suits and working in an airtight cubicle, The six "leakers" were detected laboratory building. Army technicians began tests yester- recently when the Army tested the Behind sealed doors in a "negative day on six leaking nerve-gas bombs Weteyes in preparation for flying them pressure" chamber,' the civilian stored for a decade at the Rocky Moun- to Utah for permanent storage. The technicians in protective suits opened tain Arsenal. flights, scheduled to begin Monday, the airtight shipping cocoons encasing The tests will help the military were postponed. The Army said it wan- the weapons to begin a visual inspection determine whether 890 of the Weteye ted to reassess the move. for leaks. bombs can be safely transported and AN ARMED convoy carried the six "We've used the building for this kind whether the bomb is still a necessary leaking bombs yesterday from the ar- of inspection plenty of times before," said Art Whitney, an arsenal spokesman. "Air can enter the facility, rds pour out wine lquor but no air can leave without going through a scrubber system that purifies WHEN IRAN'S new regime came to away the strong spirits, and reduce the it." power after the overthrow of Shah risk of fire. Rmtlurgists, and welde emrsts, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi's regime last assembled for the testing. Three of the February, revolutionary guards ban- LOCAL NEWSPAPERS reported Weteyes were destroyed last year after ned the consumption of alcohol, which that more than $14 million worth of leaks were found in a weld on the top of Islamic tradition considers an in- alcoholic beverages held as stocks by teeksiwereplu a wed of the bopb ducement to evil, importers have been destroyed, by or- the filler plug at the rear of the bomb The liquor stores of some Iranian der of the Islamiccourts. case. A similar finding now could lead hotels were confiscated. Others, like One merchant is trying to get gover- to renewed questioning of the military the Intercontinental, which is half- nment permission to export a $1.4 value of preserving the Weteyes. millon onsgnmet tat s stll n a The Army has been trying for more owned by the government, locked their million consignment that is still in a th tworyasto move the ety stocks up pending a government custom warehouse at the port of Ban- from the arsenal on the northeast cor- decison on their disposal. dar Shapur, the Tehran Times repor- ner of Dener to the Tooele Army Depot This week a Tehran court decided the ted, in the western Utah desert. There has fate of the Intercontinental cellar. Sin- All local wine and spirit manufac- been considerable opposition in the two ce Islam decrees a total ban on alcohol, turing companies have been closed, states for safety reasons. it skn, h d TEHRAN, Iran (AP)-Revolutionary guards destroyed the rich wine cellar of the Tehran Intercontinental Hotel, pouring down the drain an estimated $1.2 million worth of wines and spirits including a stream of the proudest French champagnes. About a dozen guards, several with pistols around their waists, worked methodically through Tuesday night and all day yesterday emptying the bot- tles. The drinking of alcohol is a violation of Islamic religious tradition. Vintage champagnes were hauled up from the dark cellar-ordinary bottles, magnums, and giant jeroboams-and carried carefully, one at a time to the hotel's rear staff entrance. THERE THEY were opened one after the other, the pop of their corks soun- ding like muffled sobs, and their con- tents poured unceremoniously into the gutter, at the order of Tehran's Islamic revolutionary court. Hundreds of bottles of fine wines from Europe and local wineries, whiskies, cognacs, rare liqueurs, and 250,000 cans of imported beer all suf- fered the same fate. "We had stock valued at $1.2 million in our cellar," a sad-faced senior hotel employee said. It said, aii its s OCK Snsoui ae destroyed. "IT'S A TERRIBLE waste,". com- plained the Intercontinental employee. "We could have re-exported all this~ drink, sold it, and used the money for the benefit of the poor, or to pay the hotel employees." "Alcohol is bad for the body and nobody must drink it," said one of the pistol-packing guards as he opened beer cans and tossed them onto an ever- growing pile. A hotel employee with a hose dowsed the area with water to dampen the heady smell of alcohol in the air, was IP p The Ann Arbor Film Cooperative presents at Aud. A THURSDAY, JUNE 14 $1.50 SHOOT THE PIANO PLAYER (Francois Truffaut, 1960) 7 only-AUD. A Truffaut transformed the plot he found in a dime novel detective thriller into a deeply oersonol examination of an artist's handling of success in this, his funniest and most daring film. Marked by the brilliant photography of Roaul Coutord and dazzling shifts in pace and mood, PIANO PLAYER represents a high-point thot Truffaut has yet to reach again. "Truffaut's film busts out all over!"-Koel. THE MOTHER AND THE WHORE (Jean Eustache, 1973) 8:30 only-AUD. A JEAN-PIERRE LEAUD delivers an awesome performance as an unattached cafe denizen who dangles between two women, his girlfriend ano a free-living nurse, and two conceptions of woman, the mother and the whore. The film represents a mammoth undertaking by director Eustache and features fine performances by BERNADETTE LAFONT and FRANCOIS LEBRUN, but it is Leaud's triumph. On screen for nearly all of the film's 215 minutes, he fuses the memorable characters he portrayed for Truffaut and Godard, creating the ultimate child of Marx and Coca-Cola. "The most thorough and insightful analysis of contemporary sexual mores yet seen on film."-N.Y. TIMES. Tomorrow: ORIGIN OF THE SPECIES: PUNK AND PROTOPUNK and ISLAND OF LOST SOULS MICHIGAN PREMIERE! FRI. & SAT. MIDNITE SHOW A NEWG MUSICAL-COMEDY H1ORROR-PlC WRE SHOW ALL COSTUMED CHARACTERS DRESSED ENTIRELY IN RED WITH GREEN HAIR-WIG-ADMITTED 2 FOR 1 "Aaarghl..." (Relax, ft's only a movie)