Floating Opera Winner of "BATTLE OF THE BANDS" 2nd-Love's Alchemy iftg 3rd-Love)Ifight i I r I i t E i I i WASHINGTON (i) -- A b of the National Violence Co publicly divided for the first t demned today the use of mass obedience as a tactic to chang But a six-member minority mission - including its two bl tended t h a t the tactic, whE without violence, is perhapst fective means of overturning The commission divided ovE of disobedience - restaurant violation of segregation laws - enactment of major civil rig tion in the 1960s. Speaking for the seven-ma Houston Attorney Leon Jawo views were a direct result of th es of disobedience. "We suggest," the majority if in good faith the constituti statute, ordinance or a court be challenged, it can be don by one individual or a small page thr panel splits are majority the judicial test is in progress, all other mmission -- dissenters should abide by the law involved time - con- until it is declared unconstitutional." ive civil dis- Disputing that argument U.S. Dist. e the law. Judge A. Leon Higginbotham Jr., who is of the com- black, said: acks - con- "If the majority's doctrine of 'everyone en practiced wait until the outcome of the one individ- the only ef- ual test case' had been applied by black unjust laws. Americans in the 1960s, probably not one er te kndspresent major civil rights statute would er the kinds have been enacted. I fear that the major- sit-ins and ity's position ignores the sad actual history - that led to of some of the most tragic 'legal' repres- ghts legisla- sion of the civil rights of Negroes in this country." an majority, Dr. Milton S. Eisenhower, chairman of rski said its the commission, was on the minority side ose instanc- of the question but unlike four minority members did not issue a statement. said, "that A source close to Eisenhower said he was ionality of a strongly opposed to the majority view but decree is to took a neutral public stance in order.not e effectively to dilute his authority over the 13-member group. While panel. vee In eight previous reports since its in- ception of the summer of 1968, the Na- tional Commission on the Causes and Pre- vention of Violence produced findings bearing the unanimous stamp of its 13 members. The commission goes out of business this week and will issue its final, comprehen- sive report for next Sunday's newspapers. Ironically, the majority includes Rep. William M. McCulloch of Ohio, ranking Republican on the House Judiciary Com- mittee. McCulloch w a s instrumental in House passage of the 1964 and 1968 civil rights acts and the 1965 Voting Rights Act - all of which followed widespread dem- onstrations and civil disobedience by blacks in the South. 'Our concern w i t h civil disobedience," the majority said, "is not that they may involved acts of violence per se. Most of them do not. Rather, our concern is that erosion of the law is an inevitable conse- quence of widespread civil disobediences." on civil disobedience 77we /kuj e (p/a geM Present AN EVENING OF IONESCO "THE LESSON" and "THE BALD SOPRANO" WEDNESDAY, DEC. 10 8:00 P.M. -Associated Press U.S. DISTRICT JUDGE Leon Higginbotham discusses the minority report in support of civil disobedience released yesterday by members of the sharply-divided National Violence Commission. At THE HOUSE 1429 HILL ST. ADMISSION 75c ANN ARBOR CIVIC THEATRE Q proudly introduces its "Best Girl" meet her December 14-21 8:00 P.M. Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre BOX OFFICE HOURS 10:00 A.M. to 5:00P.M. 668-6300 _ __ p.r~igt a4irt NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 1 ' 1 r}/ I tlyr t ' rj/ 4 4 > 1 jjr Tuesday, December 9, 1969 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three the n ews tday by The Associated1 Press and Colleg~e Press Service Panthers battle I "'The LIBERTINE' COMES ACROSS- INCREDIBLY WITH WRY hUMOR . .AD TASTE." Nra eu i persons under 18 not admitted THE SENATE voted yesterday to maintain certain tax bene- fits now available to wealthy citizens who receive pension plan contributions. A provision to eliminate the tax benefit was removed from the tax reform bill on a 50-37 vote. The move was denounced by Sen. John Williams (R-Del.) "as one more step in whittling down the tax re- form in this bill." HOUSE AND SENATE COMMITTEES slashed at the embat- tIed foreign aid program as major battles loomed today over spec- ial aid to South Korea and fighter planes for Nationalist China. The House Appropriations Committee, setting a record $1.6 bil- lion low for the program, included $54.5 million for Nationalist Chi-: nese fighter planes but cut a special $50 million grant to South Korea. Meanwhile, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee approved a bill setting a $1.9 billion ceiling on the program and containing no pro- visions for either the Nationalist Chinese planes or the special aid1 to South Korea. President Nixon's original proposal called for $2.6 billion total in foreign aid. DEFENSE ATTORNEYS yesterday sought the dismissal of all charges against Army Lt. William L. Cafley Jr. in the My Lai massacre court-martial. The attorneys argued that widespread publicity and statements' by government officials had made it impossible for Calley to receive a fair trial. The lieutenant is charged with the deaths of 109 Viet-; namese civilians. Lt. Col. Reid Kennedy, the military judge in the case, set a hear- ing Jan. 20 for oral arguments on the motion to dismiss the case. Meanwhile, the Army was expected to announce by mid-week whether it will court-martial a second soldier for his alleged involve- ment in the massacre. INCUMBENT PRESIDENT Tony Boyle and challenger Joseph Yablonski closed their heated campaign for presidency of the United Mine Workers with last minute appeals for votes. 1 Some 200,000 miners, active and retired, go to the polls today in the climax of one of the angriest campaigns in the history of organized labor. The campaign has centered around charges that the union1 is not responsive or responsible to rank and file members. ~ - - - - - - - - TOUGHER SENTENCES G Th nousandsrei } r: I. -As~sociated Press POLICE PROVIDE COVER for the officers who finally entered a Los Angeles Black Panther headquarters yesterday after 11 Panthers inside battled more than 300 police during a four-hour seige. The police had warrants to search for illegal weapons. I police raid 11n LA LOS ANGELES (M - More than 300 police held a four-hour seige outside a Black Panther headquarters yesterday as 11 Panthers held them off with sporadic gunfire and several home-made grenades. The Panthers finally surrendered when police issued an ultimatum of "come out or we'll come in." Three officers were wounded, one critically. Two Panth- ers were wounded in the exchange of gunfire. Police said they were attempting to serve warrants on two Panthers and on an illegal cache of weapons reported in the building. They said they found two submachine guns, three sawed-off shotguns, six hand guns, 12 rifles and car- bines, and quantities of ammunition on the first floor. Debris prevented them from reach- _ ing t h e second floor imme- diately. The raid was one of three on USSR, r-'"fTlrP DITIELXTL>. s HELD OVER Tues., Wed., Thur. 7:15, 9:00 "Thoroughly en- Soyable ... a Classy. put-on." "The most en- joyable sex romp of the sea- son. --WINS -Michigan Daily U 6 U11 1 l i U x.irU Los Angeles Panther locations j yesterday. About 14 persons were Ger man arrested in the two. other raids "Y As where no resistance was encount- Arove proseutio ered. hr, Police said all of those arrested 0 " at Panther headquarters would be 1 f of tiai' oti sellersbooked for investigation of assault MOSCOW (M~ - West Germany with intent to commit murder. and the Soviet Union opened long- Those arrested elsewhere would awaited negotiations yesterday on WASHINGTON (M - The Supreme Court approved yes- be held on a variety of bookings, nutual renunciation of the use of terday prosecution of sellers of untaxed marijuana and nar- a spokesman said. force, taking a major step toward cotic drugs in a 6-2 ruling. Charles Garry, legal counsel for improving their traditionally tense the Black Panthers denounced the relations. The court, in an opinion by Justice Byron R. White re- police action. Of the police state- jected the argument that drug sellers are the victims of un- ment that the raids were uncon- The 90-minute opening session constitutional self -discriminatio. nected with those made on Pan- was held in a "good andtbusiness- thers ineothrdcitieiheisai:o"Thatlike atmosphere," a West German Justices Hugo L. Black and William O. Douglas dissented. 'sen in other cities he said: That Embassy spokesman said. The They said the government part anid package of a national next meeting will be held swift- does not supply order forms scheme by-the various agencies of ly," he added, although no date sIVEN for illegal narcotics deals and government to destroy and com- was set. should n o t be permitted to mit genocide upon members of the Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei punish people for not comply- Black Panther Party." A. Gromyko led the Soviet side in In Illinois, meanwhile, demands the opening session. Ambassador ing with an impossible regula- were raised for an investigation of Helmut Allardt spoke for the West tion. the shootout last week on Chica- Germans. This represents the largest whecorthl Csontreedto decide s ther leadeSidet death forn- The talks came amid numerous total since 1945, when militarywh.ter ion requires others were tndealongwftr signs that Moscow is responding manpower reached a World Juies f 12 people in stbte crim- therslwemen favorably to Chancellor Willy mapwrianu Widinal trials, two policemen. Brandt's overtures for better re- War II peak of more than 12 na . . Mayor Leonard Chabala, May- B s r r II L tIha cII UII f r Vl a, d IAnc with ikm C nni cU i t. ti - P.ADLEY MEzGE& "THE EIBERTINE" starringi Catherine Spaak and Jean-Louis Trintignant V,.d-*8 by Silvia fa-t* .Dfra~td dby Nwquala r..a..c..,i 4 FASTMANCOLOR saR..d ihrao=,, !tj AuDttON ILIKS FI~PFTH ForumI -j --- --- --- go. MrW'r' "ii~~~~~~~ b r', I'm proud of .1 where he bought my diamond! . . *. ..1 \T Will she be proud or embarrassed when friends ask where you bought her diamond? And, will you be embarrassed about the price you paid for the quality received? Today, there are no "bargains" in diamonds. You save no more-often lose-when you try to cut corners. Your knowledgeable American Gem Society: "" member jeweler-one with a local reputation to safe- guard and standards to maintain-is your wisest choice. ,1 Nia WASHINGTON (R'2) - Thou- sands of young men are being prosecuted for draft-law viola- tions as a result of the most intensively organised war-resis- tance campaign in the nation's history, official figures show. And judges are getting tough- er in their crackdown on youths who refuse induction. Asst. Atty. Gen. Will R. Wil- son said in an interview that the nation's courts and federal HAPPY 9 HOLIDAYS! Student Book Service prosecutors are being burdened with caseloads swollen by youth opposed to the Vietnam war. Presently, he said, prosecu- tions are being initiated against more than 300 young men each month. This is about the num- ber for an entire year only three years ago. Wilson said 1,839 young men were prosecuted for draft viola- tions during the first six months of 1969, and 915 were convicted. Most of the remainder, he said, chose to go into the armed forces and charges were drop- ped. Wilson said prosecutions to- taled fewer than 300 for each year between 1960 and 1965. During the 1969 fiscal year -extending from July 1968 through June 1969-3,455 young men were prosecuted, he said, and the number continues to grow. million in the armed services. Now, less than athird that many are in the fighting forces, with only 480,000 it Vietnam. Wilson noted that convictions and the length of sentences are on the upswing. He said the average prison term imposed on draft violators was 32.1 months in 1967, compared to 37.3 in 1968. Advance estimates indi- cate a still higher figure this year,'he added. In 1945, there were 2,890 con- victions for draft law violations. During the Korean war, with approximately 3.5 million men in the armed forces-about the same as now-there were only 425 convictions in 1954 and 345 in 1953. - in ne samei case, rom F'oriaa a on01s w ~ uommunls rasL ur- awood, Iii., where Fred Hampton the court will decide whether a good Il, wsk ed Hamton'ope. defendent must notify the pros- tion, claiming evidence that all In the past, the Russians have ecutor in advance that he w ill tehe shooting was done by police demanded that B o n n recognize Iresnothractnesth' and calling the deaths "a blatant East Germany, renounce the West In other actions, the court: act of legitimized murder." German claim to speak for a 11 - Upheld t h e government's 'German people, accept the post- power to punish ex-Communists war realignment of German bord- and gamblers for filing false reg- ers and abandon all efforts to ob- istration statements. M ove t acquit tain nuclear weapons. - Ordered a new hearing for a . West Germany has satisfied the Bronx narcotics addict sentenced Chicago 8 fails'nuclear weapons demand, just to life in prison for the murder of last month having signed the nu- a housewife. The action tempor- clear nonproliferation treaty. arily postponed court considera- CHICAGO (P)-A motion for Brandt al s o has moved toward tion of the common police practice acquittal in the trial of the seven recognition of the Oder-Neisse of detaining suspects for question- men charged with conspiring to line as the border with Poland. ing without arresting them. incite rioting during the 1968 - Agreed to review a Texas law Democratic National Convention that bars the publication, print- was rejected yesterday. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- , tht brs he ubliatin, rin- 'aged by students at the university of ing, sale or televising of anything "The court, at this time, must Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second "which is obscene." consider more favorably the evi- Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- -_dence presented by the govern- igan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, ment" sid US. istrct our Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- ment," said U.S. District Court day thrcugh Sunday morning Univer- Judge Julius J. Hoffman. The en- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by tire morning session was spent carrier, $10 by mail. arguing the defense motion. Summer Session published Tuesday The motion for acquittal came through Saturday morning. Subscrip- after the close of the prosecution's tion rates: $3.00 by carrier, $3.00 by case which lasted 10 weeks. _mail. - __I__ ___ _ ___ - FREE THE ANN ARBOR "6" BENEFIT FOR Black Beret Legal Defense Fund THE IRIS RFI I Tues., Dec. 9 8-12 P.M. SPEAKERS Union Ballroom Donations BAN DS 89 weeks at the RUBAIYAT and now on RECORD Ends Wednesday dEm DIAL 668-6416 "A complete delight, l "m in love with it!" -Judith Crist-N.Y. MAGAZINE .I pA I I I