IF YOU DO FEEL THAT THE WAR SHOULD STOP NOW: THEN DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT CONTACT: New Mobilization Committee seco id f routdpag~e. P 41M friogiCan 43ai1l NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PhONE: 764-0554 Thursday, October 9, 1969 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three --ti the news by The Associated Press today andu Clle( e Press Service I 2522 SAB 769-2570 Do Your Own Thing FOR YOUR MICHIGANENSIAN SENIOR PICTURES SIGN UP IN THE DIAG (Fishbowl-If Rain) SENATE-HOUSE CONFEREES agreed on a compromise bill to support the student guaranteed loan program. The bill's key feature increases government subsidy payments to banks from the present ceiling of 7 per cent to 10 per cent. The num- ber of loans granted has dropped since the prime interest rate rose to 8 " per cent. Agreement between the two houses came after a compromise on an amendment offered by Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.) re- quiring banks not to force students or their parents to do business at the bank to receive a loan. TWO RESOLUTIONS seeking U.S. withdrawal from South Vietnam were introduced in the Senate. Sen. Harold Hughes (D-Iowa) introduced a resolution that would end U.S. aid to South Vietnam "with all reasonable haste" unless Sai- gon ends censorship, releases political prisoners, and prepares to yield power to a provisional government. The other proposal, submitted by Sen. Frank Church (D-Idaho), urges American withdrawal after a "reasonable interval" to guard the safety of U.S. troops and South Vietnamese who might want to leave with them. 10-4 MONDAY-FRIDAY LAWYERS for Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.) asked the Massachusetts Supreme Court to clarify inquest procedures. ,a*Edward B. Hanify, Kennedy's attorney, said -the senator does not want to block an inquest into the death of Mary Jo Kopechne but wants his constitutional rights protected'if one is held. ACADEMY Questioning the constitutionality of the state's inquest law, Han- ify asked the State Supreme Court to allow Kennedy to have counsel A A Dthere with the right to cross-examine other witnesses. He also asked ..SMwthat the inquest be closed to the public. - Haynsworth Conlin bn extra-trial statements By IRA HOFFMAN County Circuit Judge John W. Conlin yesterday ordered all persons involved in the! John Collins murder trial to y refrain from making any ex tra-judicial statements. Conlin explained that the reason for the issuance of the "ex-parteI order" was to prevent any pre- w judice in the trial of Collins, ac- cused murderer of Eastern Michi- gan University coed Karen Beine- man. According to Michael Devine, a. court spokesman, the order is directed at "police officials, the defense attorneys, the prosecution and their staffs, any investigators, and all court personnel." In other developments at yes- terday's pre-trial hearing, Conlin delayed judgment on two key de-! fense motions until an additional Sen. Kennedy discus hearing scheduled for Tuesday. --- -- The first motion asks the court 'CHICAGO 8' TRI to quash Collins' trial on the grounds that Collins was arrested illegally. The defense lawyers ; W have charged that police arrested Collins "solely for the purpose Df obtaining fingerprints." Conlin also delayed judgment i on a defense judgment on a de- meC] fense motion to suppress certain evidence that has been introduced by the prosecution. CHICAGO (R')-A key govern ment witness testified yesterda The defense claims the evidence that he heard two of the eigh was obtained through the use men charged with inciting violen of faulty search warrants. during Democratic Conventio Meanwhile, there have been un- week in 1968, urge crowds t confirmed reports that the de- fight police in the streets. fense may ask for a change of Robert Pierson, a Chicago po venue for the trial. Defense at- liceman, told a U.S. District Cour torney Robert Francis yesterday jury of 10 women and 2 men th declined to comment on the pos- he posed as a motorcycle gan sibility. member and became a bodyguan iWINNER! iw two P Rmmounof LEO TOLSTOY'S WA~anJPEACE VP~MUT!O 'M WA&M U M AQJWOAG~fAND MS AW * - = CA - 00-S.AW CMO * C T AL NOW SHOWING-PART 1I "Natasha and Pierre-The Burning of Moscow" nomination question' WEEKDAYS-2:00-8:00 SAT. and SUN.-1 :00, 4:30, 8:00 10 F 'FTH FyOrUM IN MONTREAL striking firemen and policemen returned to work as the army continued to guard key installations around the city. Both departments were reported operating normally after a night of near chaos Tuesday in Canada's largest city. Two people were kill- ed in the rioting and scores were hurt as mobs looted the St. Cath- erine St. shopping district. Elements of four rifle companies flown in Tuesday night remain- ed on guard around police headquarters, municipal buildings, and broadcasting facilities. MAYNARD JACKSON, a black attorney, was elected vice mayor of Atlanta, Ga. Tuesday, by more than 18,000 votes. Jackson is the first black to hold Atlanta's second highest politi- cal office. Unofficial returns showed him defeating a veteran city alderman 54,455 to 36,229. Last year Jackson, a political newcomer, challenged U.S. Sen. Herman Talmadge and lost. THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES voted to nearly triple President Nixon's request for federal water pollution control funds. The bill, which now goes to the Senate, increased the $214 mil- lion requested by the Nixon administration to $600 million. An effort to raise the amount to $1 billion was narrowly defeated 148-146. The clean water program provides federal grants to states and local communities to help build waste treatment plants. -Associated Press ses the Haynsworth case IA L: ~ays Rubin 111 ag o riot Griffin joins opposition. WASHINGTON (91 - Senate Republican whip Robert P. Griffin openly joined the op- position to Judge Clement F. Haynsworth Jr. y e s t e r d ay, dealing a severe - and pos- sibly fatal - blow to Hayns- worth's Supreme -Court nomi- nation. The White House s a i d, how- ever, that President Nixon's sup- port of Haynsworth does not rest on any Senate head count but on the President's faith in the judge's integrity and background. Ronald L. Ziegler, press secre- tary, said Nixon still believes the nomination will move out of the Senate Judiciary Committee and will be confirmed on the floor. In the Senate, Griffin's decla- ration sent shock waves along both sides of the aisle and led to Judiciary Committee postpone- ment for 24 hours - until 10:30 a.m. today - of any action in the case. "It is our hope that the matter will be faced up to and disposed - of one way or another," said Ma- jority Leader Mike Mansfield. The Montana Democrat said he had sent telegrams to all Demo- cratic Judiciary Committee mem- bers urging them to be present and that Republican Leader Hugh Scott was doing the same with GOP members. Griffin's move prompted at least one other influential Repub- lican senator to join the opposi- tion and caused a Democratic e' leader to comment that there now is "serious question" that Hayns- - worth could be confirmed. h Maine's Margaret Chase Smith, n chairman of the Senate Republi- of can conference, said in a floor ispeech she opposes Haynsworth on the basis of his business dealings n and decisions while a member of 's the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals. 3e She said Republican opposition Ie to the nomination in the Senate s- is much greater "than is generally e- realized." le Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, the u assistant Democratic leader, said there is "serious question" of erHaynsworth receiving sufficient a support for confirmation. he Kennedy declined to say how he as stands. But he said he still ex- Ve pects the Judiciary Committee to ie report the nomination to the floor er although he said the vote will be Ve "much closer" t h a n before the Ps Griffin announcement. Griffin led the successful fight an last year to block elevation of Abe r- Fortas to chief justice a n d he J. made no secret of his feeling that y there was little difference between by conflict of interest charges against Fortas and Haynsworth. RUSS GIBB Presents at The Grande-Riveria FRIDAY, OCTOBER 10 SRC AMBOY DUKES ALICE COOPER Admission $3.00 SATURDAY, OCTOBER 11 THE WHO ALICE COOPER THE SKYj Admission $4.00 SUNDAY, OCTOBER 12 THE WHO ALL THE LONELY PEOPLE AMBOY DUKES Admission $4.00 ALSO: World's First Sonavision Laser Beam Light Show TICKETS AVAILABLE AT BOX OFFICE Call 834-9348 Grande River at Joy in Detroit kic out the flicks! 10 F H.orui. UNDERGROUND MOVIES Friday and Saturday evenings at 11:15 P.M. not continuous with "War and Peace," separate admission DIFFERENT PROGRAM EACH WEEK Felix Greene's "INSIDE NORTH VIETNAM" The film provides on authetnic account of life in North Vietnam under war conditions. Felix Greene did the photoaraphy when he was sent to North Vietnam for 3 1/ months as a special corres- pondent for the San Francisco Chronicle and for C.B.S. Television News. He returned to the United States with 20.000 feet of uncen- sored film and from this footage INSIDE NORTH VIETNAM was made. "INSIDE NORTH VIETNAM is superb cinematography, but it is more than that. It is an exact mirror of life in North Vietnam today. n- ay ht ice on to g- irt at ng rd DRAFT OFFICES PRIME TARGET FBI investigates raids on federal buildings: for Jerry Rubin, a Yippie lead who is one of the defendants. Pierson described several con versations he said he had wit Rubin in August 1968 in Lincol Park and in Grant Park, sitesc clashes between police and ant war demonstrators. Pierson testified that Rubi spoke to a crowd of 1,000 person Aug. 26, 1968, in Lincoln Park. H quoted Rubin as saying, "Th elections are phony. We must di, rupt the elections. We must b come fighters and take to th streets in small groups. See yo in the streets tonight." Pierson testified that anothE defendant, Bobby G. Seale, Black Panther leader, spoke to t crowd. Pierson quoted Sealee saying, "The time for singing, 'W Shall Overcome,' is past. It's tim to buy .357 magnums, .45-calib( pistols, carbines and kill pigs. W must break up into small grout and surround the pigs." Seale stood up in court whe Pierson mentioned his name eat her. Seale asked Judge Julius Hoffman to strike the testimon because he was not defended the counsel of his choice. By The Associated Press The FBI said yesterday it has launched an investigation into bombings, arson and van- dalism that have hit draft board offices and other federal instal- lations across the country. Hundreds of draft records have been destroyed during t h e night-time raids in recent months and extensive damage has been done to many of the buildings. The latest incident occurred Tuesday night at New York City's Armed Forcs Induction Center in lower Manhattan, where an explosion shattered more than 40 windows, damaged walls and blew out partitions. The building, which also had been the target of a bomb blast in 1968, houses the files of thousands of draftees but none of these records were damaged. Several persons were in t h e lobby of the building when the 11:25 p.m. blast occurred on the fifth floor but no one was hurt. An explosion at the base of a tree near an ROTC headquart- ers on the campus of Texas A&M University in College Sta- tion, Tex., shattered 31 win- dows in four dormitories Tues- day. Again, no one was hurt. Three incidents occurred in the early morning hours of Sept. 26 -- explosions in the federal buildings in Milwaukee and a National Guard armory in Madison, Wis., and a fire at a draft board in Akron, Ohio., In Milwaukee an explosion in a stairway near draft offices did $75,000 damage. At almost the same time the armory in Madison suffered $100,000 dam- age from an explosion at the entrance to a drill area. The fire in the Summit Coun- ty draft board in Akron was at- tributed by authorities to an arsonist after two empty clean- ing fluid cans were found. Fire officials said the fluid had been poured on draft board records dumped from files, with heavy destruction of the records and walls of the office. Six days later, two members of a group of antiwar demonstrat- ors picketing the federal build- ing and a church in Cleveland said publicly that they "felt re- sponsible" for the Akron fire, but no arrests were made. The FBI and New York au- thorities are investigating an explosion that did considerable damage to the new federal building in downtown Manhat- tan on Sept. 19. The blast damaged Depart- ment of Commerce offices - near a Department of Defense office and a floor above Selec-. tive Service offices. Whether the explosion stem- med from a bomb or accumula- tion of gas has not been dis- closed. At Stroudsburg, Pa., Aug. 16 all A-1 classification cards were burned, along with a picture of President Nixon, on the floor of the offices of a draft board. The approximately 9,000 f i I e cards have since been replaced. Fifteen persons allegedly were caught dancing around a bon- fire of draft records in a draft board on Chicago's Southside May 25. Police said the group had smeared the draft records with paint and tar before burn- ing them. Last Saturday, fire destroyed files and damaged equipment at the Naval ROTC offices at Co- lumbia University in New York. Judge Hoffman ordered a mar- shal to make Seale sit down, and' he noted as he has done many times in relation to words or ac-j tions by the defendant, "the mat- ter will be appropriately dealt with at a later time." Pierson testified that Rubin3 gave him a diary which Pierson later turned over to police, then told Rubin he burned it to prevent In his statement, Griffin said "the fact that Judge Haynsworth is willing now to conduct himself differently in the future is not a sufficient answer." Griffin, who notified the Presi- dent of his decision Monday, said he believes Haynsworth to be an "honest and learned judge." "But," he added, "legitimate and substantial doubt has been raised police from getting it. The con- concerning his sensitivity to the tents of the diary were not dis- high ethical standards demanded closed. of the bench." THE FIFTH MARTIN LUTHER KING SATURDA DIMENSION FUND BENEFIT CONCERT LY, OCT. 11 SALE-NOW EVENTS BUILDING 1st Floor MICHIGAN UNION I i i t i r r WHY WASTE TIME CLEANING!1 We Can Do It Quicker and Better j QUALITY CLEANING -' AMPLE PARKING " OPEN 7 A.M. to 6 P.M. EUREKA CLEANERS 308 N. Main St. TICKETS ON 8:30 P.M. Alpha Phi Alpha- "It is impossible not to be moved by this film . . . the eloquence of its scenes would shake even a hardened militant." BACH CLUB presents Harold Haugh speaking on "BACH AS PREACHER AND WORD PAINTER" Thursday, Oct. 9, 8 P.M. 1 236 Washte now (at S. Forest near S.U.) Refreshments and FUN for further info: 665-6806, 663-2827, 761-7356 ACADEMY AWARD WINNER! SBEST ACTRESS! SBARBRA SIREISA . 4 $. HE A L lv~A1AW 1 " Uk fl U'T*Uk.[ -Boston Herald Traveler Felix Greene's