rage Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, Jonuory 17, 1969 ~a~e Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, January 17, 1969 GARRISON'S REQUEST: Clark releases information from JFKi autopsy review Bookstores plan strategy (Continued from Page 1) He was unavailable for coin- mnent last night. if WASHINGTON (IM--Atty Gen. Ramsey Clark last might released a report by a heretofore secret panel of experts saying the autop- sy findings on the death of the late President John F. Kennedy, as set out in the. Warren Conm- mission Report, were correct. The report was made public on the e've of court proceedings in- stituted by New Orleans District Attorney Jim Garrison to have l photographs and x-rays taken at the autopsy sent to Lousiana to! be used in the trial of Clay L. Former Assistant Atty. Gen. Burke Marshall was quoted in the Clark statement as saying the material was released after con-. According to an observer who sultation with the President's Lee Harvey Oswald, who was act- 1asked to remain unidentified, widow, ,Mrs. Aristotle Onassis, and ing alone. George Coons, manager of Slat- Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D- "Examination of the clothingI er's, talked yesterday afternoon Mass), the late president's brother. and of the photographs and X- !with a representative from an- rays taken at autopsy reveal that other bookstore about a meeting I Clak'ssttemntsai bth adPresident Kennedy was struck by of the owners and managers of, no comrment to make on the report toblesfrd rmaoeadthe five stores. or its release. It was the late "behind him, one of which travers- " He said he would be receptive Robert F. Kennedy who originally ed the base of the neck on the to such a meeting," said the ob- had he atopy supresed, right side without striking bonesevr Robert Kennedy and Mrs. On- and the other of which entered Coons also was not at home last assis in 1966 had turned the re-tesulro bhiddxpd- night. The wives of both Coons port~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~h ovrt h ainlAcie diskulrigh siehedsummary of tand Ulrich said they were attend- ontecondition that it Antibe trgthenlsireorthsummary o ing business meetings, and would made public until 1971.~_ most likely not be back until late. we wer avrw C A I "n"'D S lllot offvllnlr +1,n 1-1r -f z I SDS stages' protest over i Litton policy By CHARLES SILKOWITZ About 20 members of Students for a' Democratic Society, yester- day confronted an employment re- cruiter from Litton Industries. in the second day of protests against= the corporation. The g r o u p marched into the corridor of the engineering place- went service on the ground floor of the West ,Engineering Bldg. They performed, an impromptu guerilla production outside Room 128-1) where the recruiter, Frank R. McCarter, 'was conducting an; interview. 'Throughout the performance, and during a debate between SDS miembers and office personnel which followed, a girl rhythmical- ly kicked the interview room door with her boot.! Prof. John Young, director of the engineering placement service, called the protest "a definite dis- ruption of a service to our stu- dents. It is basically intolerable," he said. However, R ich a rd Shapiro, grad, who was being interviewed, at the time, said the protest was' non-disruptive. "It didn't bother#, us a~t all," he said. "In fact, 'I thouight it was rather ludicrous." After completing the interview with Shapiro, McCarter entered the corridor where the SDS mem-j bers gave him a leaflet contain- ing Litton's alleged abuses. Mc- Carter refused to respond to the charges,, but indicated that Lit-. ton's press relations staff would prepare a reply available for cir- culation in Ann Arbor soon. One member of SDS said the real object of the protest was to [point out "the huge, American) super-corporation, of which Lit-1 ton is only typical. Litton is a good example because of its abus- es," he claimed. DistictAttyJimGarison at " ie bullet uckrw.thle back 01 DistOrctatty.haJimenGarringtothe decedent's head well above the obtai Olantoshogahabenseekndtoexternal occipital protuberance. X-ray pictures of President Ken-heBasleaningefobradowithahis niedy. A Washington court was hewladnoquly tothhlsft scheduled to hear arguments to- hetnetisbltstuck, tothe hot- day on the matter, hnti ultstuktepoo graphs and X-rays indicate that A)t Garrison had asked for a court came from a site;,above and slight- order to enable the report to be ly to his right. This bullet frag-1 taken to New Orleans for evidence mented after entering the cran- in Shaw's trial. ium, one major piece of it passing He claims the report will show forward and laterally to produce that Kennedy* was shot at least an explosive fracture of the right once from the front.: The Warren side of the skull as it emerged! Commission concluded the Presi- from the head," the report con -I dent was shot from the rear by; tinued.I Yesterday afternoon, one of the book store owners, who also asked not to be identified, said he be-, lieved the SBS did not want to pay the price for the service,' which he said was approximately! $500-600 per store yearly. Hlowever, Shure said SBS is cur-r rently forced to spend "a couple thousand dollars per year" com- piling their lists because he must duplicate all the work of the other five stores. Shure said, however, that now he is established, and his lists "are the best ones in town." vihIieohewytewudnecd you. 4l 1: 4 ..7}.4£. .ice °' '' ' ; f x '' 4 .x... '* 4 s1K'. ' i t . .:. it- i = y. * .e " AliY i . s -r " " 1 \S it "~.y . ' H ~ :,'.~ *vi( 1 . 7 r # r C s ef t k + . ( +! *. J .t ,t F'r+. :Y l 'A '" r i G r '7 . v i -axe Asv )' ft- L.: ,rvr v' n y, t~ L" j t't. < , ~ "34 7 ."°' r A ."1 .." . t t' 4 \ b .. iJ '7 F . i *'' f f' ' y t } . '+ t .1- t (}_ r r n't '