Page 8-Saturday, January 19,1980-The Michigan Daily SWEDISH MOTORISTS DROWN: iter topples bridge Pres. candidates make last effort for Iowa caucuses Congress to rush on help for Pakistan STOCKHOLM Sweden (AP)-Frog- inen searched for at least 10 motorists hurled into deep water yesterday after the mid-section of a highway bridge collapsed when a freighter rammed it in early morning fog. Six cars and a truck plunged into the strait on the Swedish west coast, police paid. 4 More than a dozen frogmen were sent to the scene. But chances were slim of finding any survivors in the freezing temperatures. None of the vehicles had been found by nightfall. .BECAUSE OF POOR visibility, frogmen were able to search only half- way down the 130 foot deep waters un- der the bridge connecting Tjorn Island with the mainland about 300 miles north of Goteborg. Police feared currents had carried the vehicles 60 feet or more away from the collapsed bridge. During a critical hour before police cordoned off both approaches, wit- nesses said seven vehicles plunged into the cold water when speeding onto the Use Daily Class ifi eds- 1,700-foot bridge, missing the 800-foot mid-section knocked down by the freighter. About 12,000 vehicles normally cross the bridge each day. THERE WERE NO reports of cars using the bridge at the moment it was rammed by the Liberian-registered 16,000-ton Star Clipper at 1:27 a.m. The 33-member crew of the freighter escaped injury. Police said they plan- ned to question the pilot and captain. One Spanish crew member, 4osto Souto Villa, said he saw six or seven cars speeding over the edge of the bridge and falling into the water. He said, "We could do nothing." After the Star Clipper rammed the bridge, the crew radioed authorities and mainland policemen were on the scene in 14 minutes setting up a road- block at one end of the bridge, police said. A policeman on Tjorn Island was called at home about 10 minutes after the accident, police said, but it took him 50 minutes to get dressed and drive to the bridge to block the other end. Coast guard officials said' the freighter, owned by Norwegian Olsen Line, hit the bridge span apparently while being piloted too close to the island. The concrete pnd steel bridge, costing $3.6 million, was completed in 1960. Experts estimate it will cost up to $12 million and two years to complete repairs on the bridge. 0 (Continued from Page 3) "Jerry" Brown, the third Democratic contender, effectively withdrew Thur- sday from the Iowa caucus and urged all his supporters to vote uncommitted. Brown has made a token effort in Iowa, spending only $20,000 and buying no radio or television com- mercial time, His volunteer cam- paign staff of 18 is being shored up by the California-based Campaign for an Economic Democracy (CED), the left-wing lobby organization founded by activist Tom Hayden. On the Republican side, the can- didates were also making last- minute appeals for support. BEFORE A CROWD of some 500 Republicans in Cedar Rapids, presidential candidate George Bush unleashed another attack on President Jimmy Carter last night, criticizing him for the spiraling in- flation rate and calling him "one of the most ineffective presidents in foreign affairs this country has seen in decades." Bush said the President Sias not fulfilled America's global commitment and miscalculated the Soviet threat during his three years in office." "He wakes up after three-and-a- half years in the White House and says 'Hey we can't trust the Soviet Union'," joked Bush. The Quad City Times in Davenport endorsed Bush yesterday for president, saying he was the only candidate able to meet the nation's foreign and domestic crises. FORMER CALIFORNIA Gover- nor Ronald Reagan, once the over- whelming frontrunner for the Republican nomination, has seen his campaign suffer a serious setback in Iowa since his decision not to par- ticipate in the Jan. 5 GOP debate. Reagan's strategy had been to keep a low profile in Iowa, but recent drops in public opinion polls here have led Reagan's political operatives to reconsider. In breaking with his strategy, Reagan was interviewed yesterday morning by telephone from New York on the Iowa radio station where he was once a sports broad- caster in the 1934s. Development of safe male 'pill' still far off, (Continued from Page 1) Relations Committee on Monday, the day before Congress reconvenes, and at public hearings of the Zablocki commit- tee later in the week. Acting under requirements of a federal law, President Carter last year halted all U.S. aid to Pakistan, exce Food for Peace shipments, because of that country's refusal to allow inter- national insecption of a nuclear resear- ch program which U.S. officials believe is geared to produce a nuclear weapon. BUT AT THE Capitol yesterday, the nuclear dispute was all but forgotten in the concern over a. possible Soviet thrust into Pakistan from Afghanistan, and the need to meet Pakistan's defen- se requirements. "We' _ do it as fast as we can," sai Gary Hymel, chief aide to Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill. In other developments Friday: " Chinese Foreign Minister Huang Hua arrived in Islamabadhthe capital of Pakistan, for talks he indicatedt would be dominated by developments 'in Afghanistan. (Continued from Page 1) cent effective, its effects are irreversible. The urologists said the most promising birth control pill, however, is one developed by the Chinese. Proponents claim an effectiveness rate7 of 99.89 per cent for "Gossypol," a derivitive of seeds and other parts of the cotton plant. Chinese doctors say the effects of ...._ tIg Gouq __ - presents SATURDAY ~ 9pm- lam NO COVER! the ournf 3140 South Univ ers ify Gossypol are completely reversible. TAKEN DAILY for three months, Gossypol prevents sper- matogenesis-the formation of sperm. If males wish to remain infertile, they take a maintenance dosage. Fertility can be restored within a year after a man ceases to take the pill, doctors say. Both Anderson and Konnak agree that Gossypol has much future poten- tial in the U.S., but neither is certain whether it is currently being resear- ched here. "Don't expect to hear much about research until it's fairly conclusive," cautioned Konnak. "Not only do these (Chinese) researchers want to test the pill extensively, they also fear the com- petition." announcing the January BRUNCH 0. Sunday, January 20 10:30 am-1:00 pm Men's Brunches are:Iocated. in East Quad's Halfway Inn (with entrance on Church st.) for more info call Phill 763-2795 or March 662-2809 campuses, labor onfs speaker Harrington. says (Continued fromP-age 1) not the spending of the government for the poor. That is utterly inadequate." ' HARRINGTON ALSO said that the "black, the brown, the female, and the young are victimized by the corporate SAVE UP TO 50% MIDWEST NATURAL FOOD WAREHOUSE SALE vitamins, teas, books, personal care products, foods. ONE DAY ONLY- Sunday, January 20 9 a.m.-3 p.m. 170 AprIl Dr. (left off Jackson Rd. aCurt erova Cadillac, ! mile west of Weber's). Corporations moving onto Carter: Iran transformation" of the economy. It was these groups, he said, that were "Scapgegoated" to absorb the cost of defining the natural rate of unem- ployment at four per cent. Speaker William Winpisinger, president of the International Association of Machinists, outlined what he cited as the major problems confronting both labor organizations and the population at large. He said "maldistribution of income and wealth in the country, unemployment, and in- flation and energy - energyflation" are three of these problens. The fourth, he said, "is the failure of the Carter administration to fulfill its campaign pledges and address the needs of the people - the Carter credibility gap." journalist ban may be helpful OKLAHOMA CITY (AP)-President Carter surprised a group of visiting Oklahomans at the White House by in- sisting that Iranian expulsion of U.S. journalists'could help negotiations fo' the release of the 50 U.S. hostages held in Tehran, the Daily Oklahoman repor- ted yesterday. Carter broke his silence on the ex- pulsion of the journalists in a meeting Thursday with 150 Oklahoma residents who had been invited to the White House for a day-long briefing, the newspaper said. "HE (CARTER) said the presence of the press in front of the embassy was giving the kidnappes too much influen-m ce," Stillwater banker Torn Bennett said after the meeting. "With the press absent not so much attention would be focused on the demonstrators." _u1 v ..r r --- .s r. * If you're Interested in Working at the Daily come to the: £tdigan ThxiIg Mass Meeting Si DORM MEETINGS TUESDAY, January 22: at E. QUAD (Greene Lounge) 7 pm at WEST QUAD (West Lounge) 7 pm WEDNESDAY, January 23: at MARKLEY (Angela Davis Lounge) 7 pm at BURSLEY 7 pm Bill