Al bee's A DELICATE BALANCE Trueblood Theatre now thru Sat. Box office open-1 0:00-8:00 P.M. Phone 764-5387 "One of Ihe year's most pleasant page three 'B £ i~icttn tii NEW S PNE 764-055 BUISINESS PHONIE: 764-05534 Tuesday, February 3, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three Repression work shops discuss politics, mlitary . movie experiences." "'The Reivers' fills onewith a joyous sense of life and laugh-: ter. A marvelous time is had by all."-New York Magazine .. Steve McQueen .The Reivers' -Tire (EDITOR'S NOTE: The following story was compiled by Daily reporters Erika Hoff, W. E. Schrock and Tammy Jacobs.) Sunday's workshops on repression, part of a two-day conference on the subject, provided much debate .and dis- cussion as students, servicemen, law- yers a n d other interested people ex- changed ideas about current national problem's. "The dilemna of a political trial is that you want to be acquitted without betraying your politics and pleading not !guilty," said Frank Joyce, a member of the "Conspiracy 7" defense staff. Leading the workshop on political or, anizing and political trials, he discuss- ed strategy in the Chicago trial and pos- sible mass actions to be planned for the end of the trial. However he warned against antici- pating a verdict of guilty in planning any action. "We can't have any activity before the jury reaches its decision that would reflect a pre-judgment of t h e jury," Joyce said. "An objective of the defense has been to politicize the jury," Joyce said, "and we feel now that there is a definite pos- sibility that .the jury will be hung." The workshop group also discussed action for the week of Feb. 14 to 21, which has been designated for anti-re- pression demonstrations. Packing all courtrooms and law school classes was suggested along with more specific demonstrations surrounding the trial of the "Ann Arbor Six" and the "Con- spiracy 7." Cowrwin Moore of the A n n Arbor draft counseling center opened the workshop on the draft by declaring the draft "obviously repressive." Moore said individual action has little effect in combating the draft. He said the system could be shut down if every registrant appealed e v e r y change of classification. The resulting crush of appeal cases could bog down the sys- tem entirely, he explained.' Moore admitted this strategy is un- feasible right now and suggested the best method is to keep individuals in- formed so they can make their own de- cisions. Talking about an inductee's first. few weeks in basic training, Ron Smith of New Mobe said the military's pro- t gram is designed to make a man into a "military-fearing, civilian-hating, par- anoid automaton." "The first three days, they .try to ex- haust you physically and mentally," he said. "They try to build up a fear of the authority controlling you by showing that you're always vulnerable." No individual can stand up against the system, Smith continued. He claim- ed that military justice is almost non- existent if an officer really wants to get a man.. .'Andy Stepp of the American Service- man's Union concentrated on the hat- red of the enlisted man for the officer and .the career soldier, or "lifer." In Vietnam, Stepp said, a group of enlisted men offered $10,000 bounty for t h e death of the "hero of- Hamburger Hill:" Smith added that similar situations . have occurred when a group of soldiers decide when an officer is no good and might get them killed. They believe he must be eliminated, Stepp said, and then draw lots to see which one will kill him. "I've come to the conclusion that the only legal self-defense is don't get caught," asserted Ann Arbor Attorney Don Koster, during the workshop on legal self-defense. Koster spoke at the workshop along with Detroit movement lawyer M a r c Stickgold and Richard Criley, regional director of the National Committee to Abolish HUAC/HISC (the House Inter- nal Security Committee, formerly th'e House Un-American Activities Commit- tee. Criley emphasized that "we must do something about repressive bills before they become statutes and we have to face them in the courts." Stickgold suggested it is advisable to defend oneself, in cases "where penal- ties are not severe," such as misde- meanors, and "cases that are political in nature." One advantage of self-defense, both lawyers said, is that the defendant can talk directly to the jury. "He can also say things that would put me in jail for contempt of court," Koster said. rG.' MICHIUAN NEXT: "VIVA MAX" ... Tuesday, Feb.3 Samuel Fuller Festival in ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM : 7.: "VERBOTEN" 9: "THE RUN OF THE ARROW" in AUD. A: 7: "POTEMKI N" (Eisenstein's masterpiece, part of the American Studies Film Series) 9: "THE NAKED KISS" "Fuller is My Favorite Director" -JEAN LUC GODARD Program Information 75 (Pay once for 662-8871 1 double bills Engineers: Join the diversified world of Martin Marietta I. the1 news today by Tlhe Associated Press and College Press Service BLACK PANTHER DEFENDANTS in a bomb -conspiracy case disputed pre-trial proceedings in New York yesterday. The 16 Panthers shouted, raised clenched fists, and heckled the state's prosecutor and defied the judge. State Supreme Court Justice John M. Murtagh abruptly recessed the hearing on pre-trial motions after the defendants demanded that newsmen at press tables be evicted and replaced by Panthers. Later, Murtagh tried to proceed but was interrupted by a com- motion between defendants and a court officer. The defendants were indicted last April on charges of plotting to kill policemen and to bomb police stations, department stores, rail- road tracks and the Bronx Botanical Gardens. ISRAEL battled with both Syria and Egypt yesterday as the Middle East conflict continued. In the heaviest outbreak of fighting between Israel and Syria since the 1967 war, Israel and Syrian tanks, planes and artillery clashed along the occupied Galoan Heights. It was the second straight day of fighting between the two countries. Meanwhile, Israeli jets penetrated deep into Egyptian territory. The military command said bases at Baltim, at the mouth of the Nile Delta, and Mankabed, deep in the Nile Valley, were targets of Israeli guns and bombs. Egypt retaliated with hit-and-run tactics across the Suez Canal, north of El Qantara.; * * * ONLY MINOR DISTURBANCES resulted as several more Southern school systems desegregated to meet the Feb. 1 Supreme Court-ordered desegregation deadline. Seven school districts in Mississippi were integrated without inci- dent and schools in three Louisiana parishes opened quietly with near normal attendance. Minor pupil and parent protests occurred at two Alabama dis- tricts. CLEVELAND POLICE CHIEF William P. Ellenburg yester- day denied allegations that he received Mafia bribes and said he does not plan to resign., Detroit attorney Lawrence Burns was quoted in the Detroit Free Press charging that Ellenburg, a former Detroit police inspector, and other Detroit policemen had shared in bribes averaging $1,000 a month which Burns paid to protect a Mafia abortion ring. Ellenberg was named police chief by Cleveland Mayor Carl Stokes last week. Stokes said he would not fire Ellenburg on the basis of an "unsubstantiated" story. THREE MEN indicted on conspiracy charges in the slaying of United Mine Workers insurgent Joseph Yablonski pleaded innocent at their arraignment yesterday. The cases of Paul E. Gilly, Aubran W. Martin and Clauda E. Vealey, all of Cleveland, were continued on $250,000 bond each by U.S. District Court Judge Frank J. Battisti. Meanwhile, the federal grand jury which last Thursday indicted the three men resumes deliberations today, apparently in an effort to determine the extent of a plot it blames for the murder of Yablon- ski, his wife and daughter. * ' ' NORTH VIETNAMESE INFLITRATION ROUTES, supply depots and staging areas were blasted by six waves of U.S. B-52 bombers yesterday following the heaviest fighting in Vietnam since September. As many as 30 of the planes dropped up to 900 tons of bombs on enemy positions in the A Shau Valley along the Laotian border, on the central coastal plains and in Tay Ninh province bordering Cam- bodia. The bombers struck after a weekend in which the enemy launched more than 100 attacks by rockets, mortars, and infantry against al- lied bases and towns throughout South Vietnam. . -Associated Press Russell dies Philosopher Bertrand Russell died at his in Penrhydeudraeth, Wales, late last night. LECTURE AT RACKHAM: failure to aidcities tem, would be $73.5 billion, or 37 per cent of the total bud- get. The so-called human re- sources programs would be $81.9 billion, or 41 per cent. The 2,073 pages of proposals and explanation make no mention of how much Nixon thinks the Viet- nam war will cost this y ea r or next and Robert P. M a y o, the Budget Bureau director, refused to elaborate at a news conference Saturday. Mayo cited two reasons for dropping t h e Vietnam figure, which President Lyndon B. John- son included in his last two bud- gets. First, he said, was Nixon's "desire for flexibility in making his plans for Southeast Asia" and second is the fact that "there is no real accounting support f o r such a figure" because of the dif- ficulty of apportioning costs be- tween Vietnam and non-Vietnam military spending. Nixon budget WASHINGTON (') - President Nixon proposed yesterday a $200.8-billion federal budget for the next fiscal year, prom- ising new cuts in defense and space spending. In his first formal budget message to Congress, Nixon suggested raising spending for the control of crime, pollution and hunger, and said the anticipated $1.3-billion surplus his program would leave is needed to control inflation. Against the cuts in defense, Nixon balanced $8.6 billion in increased outlays for "human resources," which he defined as' education and manpower, health, income security and vet- erans benefits and services. Defense spending, including military aid and such items as the Selective Service Sys-O SAN FRANCISCO (f) - Ten sheriff's deputies and two former deputies were charged yesterday in federal indictments with vio- lating the civil rights of partici- pants in the "People's Park" riots in Berkeley last May. The indictments referred spe- cifically to shotgun blasts fired at demonstrators and bystanders and to the treatment of the hun- dreds of persons arrested. Ohne man waskilled and several others were wounded by shotgun fire and more t h a n 100 others were injured in more than two weeks of violence that started when Berkeley militants seized a vacant lot belonging to the Uni- versity of California and turned it into what they called "People's Park." By ANITA CRONE Former Detroit Mayor Cavanagh yesterday criticized federal and state governments for providing only token support to the nation's cities in a lecture to about 150 people in Rackham Amphitheatre. The biggest problem facing our cities today, Cavanagh said, is a lack of money. With funds con- troled by the federal and state governments, Cavanagh explained, the only way a city can raise money is through a municipal in- come tax. This does not even begin to cover the expenses of a city, he added. Cavanagh stated that if he were still mayor of Detroit "I'd like to try running the city on money for one year, and if it doesn't work, we'd go back to trying other means." Calling for a re-ordering of na- tional priorities, Cavanagh con- demned President Nixon for veto- ing the Department of Health, Education and Welfare appropri- ation bill on the grounds of in- flation while at the same time ap- propriating additional funds for the ABM project. Cavanagh said that if we put our own nation in order, then we can help other countries. In speaking of the role of the mayor of a large city, Cavanagh. called himself and the other may- ors more tacticians than strategy- 1 makers. "A mayor's administration is not judged on its programs, but whether things 'stay- cool' during a term of office," he said. Cavanagh's speech was sponsor- ed by the Institute of Public Policy Studies, the Urban Planning Pro- gram of the school of architecture, and the Department of Resource Planning and Control of the nat- ural resources school. Senate to discuss ABM impact on U.S .-Soviet arms-control talks WASHINGTON (I)-A Senatej disarmament panel yesterday be- gan a new inquiry into the Safe-' guard antiballistic missile system and its impact on U.S.-Soviet arms-control negotiations. It signaled the start of what is virtually certain to become a major new round of Senate debate on that weapon and defense spend- ing in general. Gerard Smith, director of the Arms Control. and Disarmament Agency, discussed the ABM and President Nixon's proposed expan- sion of the contestied defense sys- tem with the disarmament sub- committee of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Sen. Albert Gore ED-Tenn) said Smith had been helpful and can- did, but would not disclose what he said. The subcommittee was a focus of oppostion to the initial phase of the Safeguard ABM- system, approved by the Senate last Aug. 6 after an attempt to block it failed on a 50-50 tie vote. It undoubtedly will take a sim- ilar role in the controversy over administration plans to expand the Safeguard, and make it a defense of populated areas against a light nuclear attack, as well as a shield for America's offensive missiles. Gore said his subcommittee will consider not only the ABM, but also the multiple independently targeted re-entry vehicle-MIRV -a new offensive weapon now being tested, and the nuclear- arms race in general, in their re- lation to arms-limitation talks. A major reason for caution, ap- parently, is"the concern of ABM skeptics lest a sharp early attack on the new Nixon proposal give the issue a partisan flavor, which could act to splinter the Democrat- Republican coalition fashioned against the initial development of the ABM. Gore said he intends to seek public testimony from Secretary of State William P. Rogers and Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird. But first, he said, he will call director Richard Helms of the Central Intelligence Agency, and Pentagon weapons experts, to ap- pear in closed session. and help create tomorrow's technology in: Missile Systems, Launch Vehicles,. Space Exploration, Advanced Electronics and Communications Systems. We're looking for qualified Aeronautical, Electrical, Electronic, Mechanical and Civil Engineers. We offer them deep and rewarding involvement in significant, long-term Research, Development, Design, Test, Eval- uation, and Production programs in the.fields listed above. We have major facilities in Baltimore, Maryland; Den- ver, Colorado; Orlando, Florida; Wheeling, Illinois; and field operations at Cape Kfennedy and Vandenberg AFB. Each location offers opportunities for continuing education with financial support. Representative on campus Thurs. & Fri. Feb. 19, 2 For interview, contact placement office. If unable to schedule interview, please send resume to: .A.., This outstanding documentary of the Spanish Civil War, filmed in Spain during the war by Joris Ivens, was produced by a group of writers and film makers as their means of supporting the struggle for liberation then going on in Spain. "...Hemingway.. . feeling for the people of Spain which comes from his heart, the combination of experience and intuition directing your attention quietly to the moral truth you might well have missed . .. ". ..the power and meaning of its subject is there to feed the imagination-.. ". ..the film does not have to raise its voice to be undeniable, its report a plain tes- timonial to the way men can be lifted clear beyond themselves by the conception of and full response to the epic demand of their time." -New Republic "As face after face looks out from the screen the I? __ picture becomes a sort of portfolio of the human soulL _ <; ... w , : >::> >.? } .4 a 11:fti . 3:: ; +n { :",'j",r:, { "'":y r, h to Ni YY xf {;}f f . +. ¢ + { ti, 1 }, y~ . i r :. .y>:. f . :}:/. Mr ','}1 t: 1%f2 R i r} .y:"}" " ::;yL y {''iC .+ fi { 4 FEBRUARY 6-SAM FULLER, Film Director 8-LOUIS FALCO and Featured Dancers U. O CINEMA GUILD, 7 P.M., ARCH. AUDI MODERN DANCE, 8:30 P.M., HILL AUD. V F- F MICH. $1.25 $2.75 $2.75 IT'S TICKET TIME for Mon.-Fri. 11-4:00, Sat. 1-3 :00, 1st floor Union 12 Ci 1 3-THE CONCEPT! Off-Broadway Show THURSDAY, 8 P.M., FRI., 7:15 & 10 P.M., TRUEBLOOD 15-TOM WOLFE, Author of Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test LECTURE AND WORKSHOP, 3 P.M., TRUEBLOOD 19-JOHN BIGGERS, Black Artist $1.25 $1.00 SLIDE LECTURE, 8:30 P.M., ANGELL HALL AUD. A JAZZ FESTIVAL 20-MILES DAVIS and RON CARTER E U U