WINNER!S ACADEMY AWARDS INCLUOING BEST ACTRESS KATHARINE HEPBURN NOW SHOWING 3RD AT REGULAR PRICES WEEK PETER O'TOOLEKATHARINE HEPBURN LION IN _ WINTZR )SD DIAL _VSHOWS AT -69 1:15-3:40 5-6290 i 6:20-8:55 most popular play in emu summer theatre history eastern michiqan university theatre Saturday September 20 on a 7.00 and 10:00 P M. HOT tin Sunday roof September 21 8:00 P.M. ALL SEATS RESERVED-$1.75 FOR RESERVATIONS: 482-3453 Box Office Oven Dailv: 12:45-8:30 P.M. AIR-CONDITIONED DANIEL QUIRK AUDITORIUM BONUS PRODUCTION - - paiie ( '7j 4c 1flriitn Daitty NEW1S PHONE: 7641-09552 IBUSINESS I'II1ONE: 764-005505 Friday, September 19, 1969 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three f A, I 4"', the news today b I "/ A Y1ssc itd Pe)411x C1 e Press uI~~ )~~ Seic, e AFL-CIO CHIEF GEORGE MEANY yesterday testified that Judge Clement F. Haynsworth is unfit to serve as Chief Justice on the Supreme Court. Meany said the U.S. Circuit Court Judge is anti-labor, indifferent to the hopes of blacks and has a lack of ethical standards. He assail- ed President Nixon's nominee to the high court after Haynsworth was endorsed by attorney Leonard Walsh of New York, chairman of the Amnerican Bar Association's committee on federal judges. Walsh said Haynsworth "is a man of impeccable integrity" and' that his professional qualifications are "at the top." The Senate Judiciary Committee heard this conflicting testimony' on its third day of hearings on the nomination. PRESIDENT NIXON made an urgent appeal for peace in Vietnam and the Mid-East in a half-hour policy speech to the United Nations yesterday. He called on the Soviet Union in particular to help alleviate the Arab-Israeli crisis and reverse the strategic arms race. In his first speech before the U.N. Nixon also blamed Hanoi for failure to get agreement in Paris on a peaceful end to the Vietnam war. THE FORMER U.S. GREEN BERET COMMANDER in South Vietnam and five of his staff officers were ordered by the Army last night to stand trial on charges of murdering a suspected Viet- namese double agent. The Army has never publicly released details of the case. One attorney for the defense said the killing was ordered by the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency. The CIA, through private briefings in Washington, has denied any such involvement. Various other, sources have said the victim was Chu Yen Thai Khac and that he was killed and his body dumped into the South China Sea after evidence developed linking him with North Vietna- mese agents. The body was never recovered. The six special officers will be tried by two separate court-mar- tials, each on charges of murder and conspiracy to murder. Charges against a warrant officer and a sergeant also accused in the case "are being held in abeyance." the Army said. pending the outcome of the other case. A HEARING WAS ORDERED yesterday on a request for an autopsy on Mary Jo Kopechne's body. Massachusetts Dist. Atty. Edmund Dinis said blood was present in the nose and mouth of Miss Kopechne when she was found dead in Sen. Edward Kennedy's car July 19. In a four-page amendment to his original autopsy petition. Dinis said the presence of blood "may or may not have been consistent with death by drowning." Common Pleas Judge Bernard C. Brominski, who had demanded more solid evidence from Dinis to show that an autopsy would re- solve "the doubt and suspicion surrounding the death." set the hear- ing for Sept. 29. The district attorney said an inquest into the death of Miss Ko- pechne may follow "if the autopsy should disclose that her death re- sulted from some other cause than drowning." DESPITE AN AFL-CIO THREAT to expel the Inter- national Chemical Workers for joining the Alliance for Labor Action (ALA). Walter Reuther said yesterday several other unions have applied for membership in ALA formed by his United Auto Workers and the Teamsters Union. So far the Chemical Workers is the only AFL-CIO union to join ALA, and AFL-CIO President George Meany wants their 110,000 members expelled as a lesson to the federation's other 121 unions that they can't have one foot in his camp and the other in Reuther's. Meany views the alliance as a competitive organization, damaging to the trade union movement. Reuther says this isn't so-that the ALA "is not a dual labor organization." ,(arpil Ogl 0t Housepa Electoral l Something ' 3fishy on By NADINE COHODAS Seafood Expert A carp on Ingall's St. Y must be kidding. Well, actually there are t carp on Ingalls St.-swimm lazily in "Little Butch,"' cherubic fountain between B Aud. and the Michigan Leag It's nothing unusual, ho ever, and University offici and employes seem to be take the fish in stride. "We get carp, gold fish aj s quite a few other little good in there," says Robert Hann man grounds foreman int Von* plant department. "We try to get them out aliv he adds, "other wise kids thr rocks at the fish and kill th( They float to the top, and th there's an awful smell arou: the area." If the fish stay in good heal sometices they aren't remov "Around commencement t summer, we had a few fish there, but we left them" Ha selman says. rssbl College Inga is Although Hanselnan says the University really doesn't know where the fish come from, the ou candy and gum lady at the League says, "I guess every now wo and then somebody goes down ing to the river to fish and then the puts them in the pool." Hill The Huron River could not ue. be reached yesterday to verify w- this hypothesis. but early Wed- als nesday morning Nepture report- ing edly noticed the disappearance of two fish. nd Hanselman says carp in the lies pond can turn out to be a cost- el- ly prank if too many people the take pot shots at the fish. "The whole underground system of 'e," fountains is connected by fine 'ow copper tubing," he says. When etn. stones got in the pipes, it aen "wrecks the tubing system and nd it's very expensive to fix." Sometimes the fountain can .th, be functional. Occasionally a ed. domesticated passerby dumps his detergent into the pool, maybe in to do his laundry. an- "When you see bubbles," Han- selman says, "that's soap suds." to enttd votinlg Bill goes to Senate vote VIETNAM Time's Up Action Teach-in with anti-war action workshops September 19-20 I __ . _ ___ vim VERBAL 1N1'EUCOIJU1SE Talk with us at the CREATIVE ARTS FESTIVAL Office if you are interested in a position as chairman of: MSU strike WASHINGTON o - T h e House approved a far-reach- i n g constitutional change yesterday that would abolish the Electoral College and pro- vide for electing the president by direct popular vote. Before it can become the 26th amendment to the Constitution it must get through the Senate by' a two-thirds margin and be rati- fied by 38 states -- both formid- able obstacles. In any event. it appears unlike- ly the ratification process could be completed in time to put the new procedure into effect by the 1972 election. But seven months ago when the House Judiciary Committee began hearings on electoral reform few people thought such a sweeping proposal would even reach the House floor. Its adoption by the required two-thirds majority of the House is a triumph for Rep. Emanuel Celler D-NY , chairman of the Judiciary Committee, and for the House leaders of both parties. A greatdeal of the responsibility for moving the reform measure this far must go indirectly to former Alabama Gov. George Wal- lace whose third- party campaign for the presidency last year spot- lighted what many critics see as the dangerous weaknesses of the present syst:m. During the week of debate that preceded yesterday's vote Wal- lace's bid to block an electoral vote victory for either major party candidate and throw t h e election into the House was con- stantly brought forward as a major reason for making a change. The plan now approved by t h e House is the most drastic of all See HOUSE, Page 7 ~O~L d44~07~.W' LITERATURE--JOURNALISM DRAMA-CINEMA TECHNICAL DIRECTOR COORDINATING ART PUBLIC RELATIONS PUBLICITY TREASUR E SECRETARY MUSIC DANCE ART TICKETS USHERS 2nd Floor Union CAF Office for info sheet Interviews Sept. 23, 24, 25 DIAL 8-6416 TODAY AT 7-9 PM FOR ALL YOUNG LOVERS WHEREVER YOU ARE l Picketing maintenance workers stand at the entrance to Michigan State University. The strike by the local 1583 of the AFL-CIO has kept the school from opening according to schedule. SOUTH QUAD DISCUSSION: Regent raps on bookstore --, The motion picture to be seen again andagain- A MAN ANd AWOMAN ACADEMY AWARDS WINNER. By MICHAEL THORYN "I just came to see what a Re-~ gent looks like," said Sara Fitz- gerald,'73. Miss Fitzegerald and 45 other students went to South Quad's West Lounge last night to hear Regent Lawrence Lindemer