Wednesday, May 19, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY, Page Seven Wednesday, May 19, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven I sbriefs By The Associated Press THE JAPANESE GENERAL FEDERATION of Private Rail- way Workers Union yesterday called a 24-hour strike after their railroad companies turned down a demand for wage hikes aver- aging $41 a month. Management offered a $25 increase. Commuters in Tokyo, Osaka and other large cities went home on bicycles, hired buses or in their own cars. Thousands of others jammed into commuter trains of the state- owned Japan National Railway. 1 Japan National Railway workers said they would also strike Thursday to back up demands for a $53 monthly wage increase. The Private Railway Union plans to call another 24-hour strike Friday unless its demands are met. EGYPTIAN LEADERS of a reported plot to overthrow Presi- dent Anwar Sadat were jailed at dawn yesterday and may soon 4 face trial. Those jailed included former Egyptian Vice-President Ali Sabry, as well as the former war minister and former interior minister, all involved in last Thursday's attempted coup. Diplomatic efforts to reach a peaceful settlement with Israel are likely to be slowed during the next months as Sadat rearranges his administration, sources say. SOVIET PREMIER ALEXEI KOSYGIN yesterday stressed Russia's interest in lowering force levels in Central Europe and praised Canada's troop withdrawals from the continent as an ex- ample to be followed. Kosygin made these remarks to visiting Prime Minister Tru- deau of Canada at their talks in the Kremlin, and later at'a lunch- 4 eon in Trudeau's honor. SST EXHAUST could reduce the ozone shield protecting the earth from ultraviolet rays, according to one scientist. Dr. Harold Johnson of the University of California at Berkeley claims that the shield from the sun's rays could be cut in half in two years by SST flights. However, other scientists hold that the SST effects would be trivial and Johnston said he could not predict if and when serious hazards to human eyesight and life would appear. The Senate will vote today on the SST project which the House of Representatives approved funds for last week. MARIJUANA SMUGGLING by plane became so prevalent that government agencies are expanding their forces to combat illegal drug traffic through the air. The Federal Aviation Administration has begun to revoke li- censes of pilots convicted of smuggling marijuana; and U.S. customs has expanded its special air division to combat marijuana smuggling to the size of 20 planes. Officials say that the amount of marijuana transported by plane from Mexico to the United States has increased since Opera- tion Intercept, a 1969 campaign to stop surface marijuana traffic between the two countries. So far this year, officials have confiscated 12,000 tons of mari- juana from planes. Senate vote due today on SST, Europe troop cuts WASHINGTON (P - The Senate will vote today on two major issues, the Mans- field amendment to halve U.S. troop strength in Eur- ope and the attempted revi- val of the SST program. The Mansfield amendment is considered significant because President Nixon has stated he will veto the draft extension bill if the amendment is added to it. Although many senators were listed as undecided on the eve of the vote, it appeared yester- day that an all-out d r i v e by President Nixon had checkmat- ed a move to pass the proposal. The situation is complicated, however, by a series of alterna- tive proposals due to be voted on first. The first vote today is due on a proposal by Sen. Gaylord Nel- son (D-Wis.), that would add language to t he Mansfield amendment calling for U.S.-So- viet talks on mutual force re- ductions and providing that, if the talks begin before Sept. 30, the Dec. 31 troops cuts would not take effect. If it fails, the next vote would come on a proposal by Sen. Birch E. Bayh. At any stage, a move could be offered to table, and thus kill, any of the substitutes or the Mansfield amendment itself. Also considered unlikely to pass is a bill to revive the super- sonic transport program. Absent senators could narrow the margin of the SST defeat but probably will no tchange the result, a survey said. The SSTcontractwas cancel- ed two months ago when the House and the Senate voted to kill the project. The project won a narrow re- vival victory in the House last week, however, under strong backing f r o m the Republican leadership. Recent disclosures by Boeing Co., the proposed contractor that it would cost around one billion dollars to restart con- struction have greatly hurt the projects chances in the Senate. Rendezvous Russian trawlers gather alongside the mother ship of the Russian fishing fleet off Cape Cod, Mass., after complaints from area fish- ermen charging damage to fishing gear. A U.S. delegation plans to meet with the Russians today. TESTIMONY END] Jury gets NEW HAVEN, Conn. (f) - Final arguments were completed yesterday in the six month trial of Black Panthers Ericka Hug- ins and Bobby Seale, with Judge Harold Mulvey expected to give the case to the jury today, Seale and Huggins face capi- tal charges in the May 1969 slay- ing of Panther Alex Rackley, who was held at the New Haven Pan- ther headquarters and tortured before he was taken to a swampy area 20 miles north and shot to death. Charles Garry, Seale's attorney centered his final appeal on the question of the credibility of the state's star witness, George Sams, who testified that Seale gave the order to have Rackley killed. Garry said Sams, who pleaded S eale case guilty to second-degree murder in Rackley's death and turned state's evidence, was "a bypro- duct of the racism we've had in this country for over 350 years." State's Attorney Arnold Mar- kle said in his final argument be- fore a Superior Court jury of five blacks and seven whites the slay- ing was "a killing as senseless as any we've ever heard of." Markle charged that Seale, 34, cofounder and national chairman of the Panthers, ordered Alex Rackley killed. He said Mrs. Huggins, 23, a local party leader, was a participant in the events leading to Rackley's death. Seale has denied knowing that Rackley was being held at the Panther headquarters, which Seale visited at the time during a visit to Yale University. HI-Fl BUYS WANTS TO ASK YOU A VERY "SOUND" QUESTION How much do you have to pay for a really good, complete stereo music system? Less than ever before at HI-FI BUYS. Our $400 System gives you everything you need to fill your place with stereo sounds. Featuring the KENWOOD KR 3130 Receiver (50 Watts, FET, IC, AM/FM) that supply enough power to satisfy even the most avid "rock 'n roller." Strong but Sensitive. 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