Eastern Michigan University PRESENTS ASSOCIATION FRIDAY, APRIL 17, 1970 8:30 P.M. Bowen Fieldhouse, E.M.U., Ypsilanti, Mich. "TICKETS: $3.00, $4.00, $5.00 Advance Tickets Available: E.M.U. McKenny Union, W.S.U. Center Bldg., J.L. Hudson Co. Mail Order: Send check or money order payable to E.M.U., Uni- versity Activities Board, McKenny Union, Ypsilanti, Mich. page three im4c 1Mfrliijzn Itit4 NEWS PhONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 -.. ,.o Thursday, April 16, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three FBI hunts for Ch lCcago 12; one arrested .r I By The Associated Press NEW -YORK - Linda Evans, one of 12 Weathermen wanted in Chicago in connection with riots there last October, was arrested by FBI agents yesterday on the lower East Side of Man- hattan. Seized with her was Thomas Neiman, 22, of Staten Island, who was accused of assaulting an FBI man during the arrest of Miss Evans. Miss Evans was indicted by a federal grand jury in Chi- cago April 10 with 11 other members of the Weatherman faction of the Students for a Democratic Society (SDS). The whereabouts of the re- mainig 11 Weathermen re- mains a mystery. FBI agents, who are con- ducting a nationwide search for the other 11 are not com- menting, on the case. A Chicago law enforcement official, who declined to be identified, said some of those sought may still be hiding in Chicago, where a federal grand jury charged them April 2 with violating the federal antiriot law. The Weathermen have closed all their communes in Chicago and New York, the official said. "There used to be two or three places you could go and there'd always be somebody," he said. "Now there's nobody." T h e Weatherman leaders dropped out of sight more than a month ago, before they were scheduled to appear in local courts on state and local charg- es stemming from street ram- pages Oct. 8-11. Chicago police reported trat one of the 12 indicted leaders, Bernardine Dohrn, 28, was sighted on a North Side street, several days before a cache of dynamite and guns was found in a North Side apartment on March 30. Miss Dohrn, a former S D S national secretary, also is being sought by Chicago police for questioning in connection with the discovery of the cache, de- scribed by police as a "bomb factory." Police say she- fits the description of the girl who rented the apartment with a man.I Thomas A. Foran, U.S. dis- trict attorney, says, "it's going to be difficult to find some of these people." He has tended to discount reports the radi- cals have fled to Canada. Chicago police also say they have no knowledge that any of the 12-eight men and four women-are in Canada or Cuba. Foran said "a trial could be- gin without all 12 being in cus- tody" and that it might be held as early as September. The federal case against the 12 is the second test of the controversial 1968 "Rap Brown" antiriot law, so called because of the black militant's pre- sence at the 1968 racial riots in Cambridge, Md., shortly be- fore the antiriot provision w a s tacked on to an open hous- ing bill. The government first used the law last. year in charging eight persons withe fomenting violence at the time, of the 1968 Democratic National Con- vention in Chicago. Five of the defendants were convicted of crossing state lines to incite a riot but were ac- quitted of conspiring to do so. Two others were acquitted of all charges. The eighth, Bob- by Seale, Black Panther party chairman, w a s severed from the rest and scheduled to be tried later. _. t_ 11 the news today by The Associated Press and College Press Service TWO BLACK PANTHER CHIEFS have received six-month jail sentences after being charged with contempt of court. David Hilliard, chief of staff and Elmer Douglas, the party's minister of culture received the sentences duringĀ°a hearing of five party members charged in a murder case. A scuffle with sheriff's deputies came as Hilliard and Douglas were huddled together in the spectator's section reading a sheaf of papers. A deputy reportedly ,told them not to read while court was in session, and the scuffle ensued. The court has banned demon- strations during court sessions in the Panther cases. * . * THE SOVIET UNION has accepted a Chinese proposal for a mutual withdrawal of forces from border areas disputed by, the two Communist countries. Dispatches announcing the acceptance reached the West yes- terday along with reports that Russia is still resisting two additional elements of the package settlement proposed by Peking. The dis- agreements are: -A proposal to freeze the border disputes pending a peaceful! accord: and -The creation of a Chinese-Soviet commission to defie once and for all the 4,000-mile border. MAJOR STEEL PRODUCERS said yesterday a week-longj work stoppage of independent steelhaulers may force them tol shut down operations. Traffic supervisors for five major steel producers told a federal judge in Pittsburgh that trucking companies cannot supply the equipment or the drivers the industry needs because nonstrikers feared to travel on the highways In other labor areas, teamsters' strikes have forced layoffs by the thousands in several states and teachers' strikes continued in Los Angeles, Minneapolis, and Muskogee, Okla. In New York City, the chances for a strike between the city's four major newspapers and their 10 unions increased following the unions' rejection of a proposed 24.79 per cent pay raise over a three-year period. * * *k HOUSE REPUBLICAN LEADER Gerald R. Ford asserted yes- terday that Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas may be1 unfit to remain on the court. Addressing the House, Ford claimed that Douglas was involved in questionable outside activities, including controversial writingsI and possible associations with underworld figures. * * * THE HOUSE OPENED DEBATE on the merits of President Richard 'Nixon's welfare reform bill yesterday but were stale- mated over the issue of guaranteed income., The new family assistance plan would replace the present more limited program of aid to dependent children. It would provide an1 assurance of income at the rate of $500 per year for the first two family members and $300 for each additional member. Thousands demonstrate across country in anti-war actions 60,000 assemble in Boston; Violence. erupts in Berkele By Tlye Associated Press Opponents of American policy in Vietnam mnassed in Boston and New York yesterday, whilesimilar protest demon- strations-some objecting to the use of tax dollars to support the war-were staged in cities and towns across the country. Crowds in Boston Commons were estimated at 60,000, in New York's Bryant Park, 20,000, but generally turnouts were below that of previous moratoriums. Tea was dumped into the Mississippi and Cedar rivers as re-enactments of the Revolutionary era's tax defiance-the ANTI-WAR PROTESTERS file past the statue Washington in Boston Garden yesterday as they1 anti-war rally on Boston Commons. PROTEST REGENTS: EMU- studenI~ts ( for class strike tc p pm TIONEXECUTIE PRODUCER HAROLD WEBENZAL y of Univeral, Marion Corporation COLOR BY.MOVELAB Wed., Thurs.-6:45-8:10-9:35 Fri.-6:45-8:10-9:35-1 1:00 (o ~IFPITH For'um F~J IFTH AVENUE AT LIBERTY Dii OWNTOWN ANN ARBOR. LL. INFORMATION 761-9700 Boston Tea Party. Demonstrators at Internal Rev- enue Service sites numbered 4,000 in Chicago and in New York City, and ranged down to about 700 in Washington, D.C., 200 in Boston, 150 in White Plains, N.Y., and 16 in Oklahoma City. Violence flared during a demon- stration at the Berkeley campus of the University of California. Pro- testers hurled rocks an water-, filledrballoons at the ROTC cen- Associated Press ter and about 40 police, responded of George with smoke bombs and tear gas head for an grenades. Officers clubbed several demonstrators after police were _/pelted heavily with stones and de- bris during a, 10-minute skirmish, newsmen said. Demonstrators at Pennsylvania State University seized and dam- aged the administration building, and a brief melee erupted between police and protesters in Detroit. Thousands of antiwar demon-. strators leaving a moratorium rally, ) on Boston Commons rampaged,,in Harvard Square last night, smash- ts claimed that ing windows and battling police. meeting to stu- Scores of officers and youths were of a court ac- injured t the Regents The crowd of youths, splintering claimed that off from the rally of some 60,000, 1 along to open hurled rocks and chunks of pave- ment at police. Police responded e room for stu- with teargas. er said. In Washington, David Dellinger r th meetingohe Chicago 7 urged a youth- eraskedmeetingyful, largely white crowd of 2,000 rmments to the near the capitol to withhold their Paul Mazman- taxes as a means of forcing ve student de- change in the United States. New York's high school absen- ts had finished teeism was about 165,000-or 60 Board Chair- per cent of the 275,000 senior mick (Monroe- high school students. imments of the The Chicago turnout was about twice the number that attended Regents then moratorium observances last Nov. demands. The 15 in Grant Park. Five persons the rest of the were arrested for not dispersing nost of the de- quickly enough at the rally's end carried out or and were dragged, fighting, to a police wagon. 7 mass i D et roit', By JIM McFERSON special To The Daily DETROIT - Over 7,000 people demonstrated against the Viet- nam war in Detroit yesterday, participating in a march and rally which culminated In Kennedy Square. Police, who estimated the crowd at seven thousand, reported the arrest of 18 adults and six juven- iles on charges relating to action during the protest. Several people from Ann Ar- bor demonstrated with the pre- dominantly Detroit crowd which began the march at Wayne State University with a short rally at 3 p.m. After the rally they mov- ed into the streets, filling t w o lanes with students, workers, blacks, war veterans and middle- aged participants. Police clustered along the route, keeping it 'free of vehicles and often grinned as the marchers jokingly cried out, "Throw down your weapons and join us." Several observers stepped off the sidewalks into the march, others smiled and shot peace signs, while some jeered openly at the protesters. .Led by representatives Ir om two unions - UAW Local 306 and Hotel and . Restaurant Workers Local 75 - the marchers fAn- ally pulled into Kennedy Square at ,4:15 p.m. After the crowd had settled down James Lafferty of the Detroit Coalition to End the War Now, See 7,000, Page 8 fSAVE THIS AD Thurs., Fri.-April 16, 17 LES GIRLS dir. GEORGE CUKOR (1939) A comic Rashomon recitation by dancing girls, Gene Kelly, Mitzi Gaynor, Kay Kendall.- Sot.; Sun.-April 18, 19 YOU ONLY LIVE ONCE\ dir. FRITZ LANG (1937) Henry Fonda and Sylvia Sydney in Lang's ver- sion of the Bonnie and Clyde story. SHORT: Peoples Park EXAM WEEK MOVIES Thurs., Fri.,-April 23, 24 A DAY AT THE RACES dir. SAM WOOD (1937) The hilarious anarchy of the Marx Brothers. Sat., Sun.-April 25, 26 HORSE FEATHERS Daily Classifieds Bring Results Program Info: NO 2-6264 SHOWS AT: 1:00-3:00-5:00 7:00-9:10 P.M. NOW SHOWING! The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day thrcugh Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier. $10 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $3.00 by carrier, $3.00 by mail By MICHAEL SCHNECK Students at Eastern Michigan University called for a strike to- day after the Regents of EMU adjourned their meeting yesterday without taking any action on the five demands students had pre- sented to them. The five demands. include stu- dent voice in decision making on all levels of the university, open- ing of all regental board meetings, the placement ofa non-voting stu- dent member on the board, in- creasing black enrollment, and re- hiring all faculty members re- cently fired. The Regents met in a tense at- mosphere as over 600 people crowded into the McKenny Union ballroom to participate in the meeting. Protesting studen the opening of thei dents was a result tion taken agains while the Regents they had planed all the meeting. "That leaves little dents," one protest Three hours afte began, students wer wished to address c board. At that time ian, '71, read the fi mands. When the studen their presentations, man Edward McCor R) called for the co Regents. The remaining discussed the five general feeling of t Regents was that n mands were being were not feasible. DIAL 5-6290 TODAY Is LADIES' DAY Ladies 75c until 6 P.M. "FOUR STARS ****HIGHEST RATING... A GRATIFYING ACHIEVEMENT." -Wanda Hale, N.Y. Daily News "EPIC BATTLE OF THE SEXES." -Vincent Canby, NY. Times U, .11 rnmwrwrwmwmM M mm"Nommum "Waal a00 ft wwwv, Nurse Counselor US Army Main Station 16820 James Couzens Highway RICHARD BURTON I I " i -