FRIDAY, OCTOBER 22,19$5 THE MICHIGAN DAILY VA*--v mtsvilm FRIDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1965 THE MICHIGAN DAILY A i'9 9,.. Kennedy Delays Morrissey Judgeship WASHINGTON (P)-Sen. Ed- the nor ward M. Kennedy (D-Mass), his session voice choked 'with emotion, asked Presi the Senate yesterday to send back it in J to committee the nomination of Morriss Francis X. Morrissey to be a fed- the U.I eral judge. It did so with no ob- sachus jections. him to This surprise action by Kennedy Boston apparently killed the controversial ship.F nomination of the 55-year-old ceive $ Bostonian for this session. It would T require unanimous consent to full th carry it over until next year. ph Senate Republican Leader Ever- the flo ett M. Dirksen of Illinois, leading long-tit the fight against Morrissey, made of the a moving response to Kennedy, The saluting his "sense of responsibil- had de ity-magnanimity and fairness- were to complete integrity." was pt But Dirksen told newsmen after- firmati ward he "fancied" objections of sena would be raised against carrying "that a *B1 HAYNEVILLE, Ala. ()-For the The second time, an FBI informer mony a pointed out young Klansman Col- That t lie Leroy Wilkins, Jr., as the gun- jury. .T man who killed a white civil rights under worker from Detroit. their tr Red-haired Gary Thomas Rowe, a former Birmingham bartender, Hous told during 25 minutes of direct first ef testimony how he and three other Ku Kli Klansmen followed a car in which a prob Viola Liuzzo, 39, was shuttling on fina marchers back from Montgomery Nort] after the massive walk to the James Alabama capital March 23. questioi Rowe was brought into the mittee courtroom through a side en- about trance under heavy guard .of FBI said by agents and state troopers. pell to "Eventually, vie pulled up," charges Rowe, 35, said in describing the Appe chase of the Liuzzo car which ings oc began in Selma. Bern, N "The first thing I knew, Wilk- Rep. ins stuck his arm out of the win- commit dow, elbow length. Wilkins told during Eugene Thomas to speed up. Just official as he pulled up, the woman driv- Mills, c ing looked at us." Ini th Rowe, who said he infiltrated tee in the Klan five years ago at the Mills i request of the FBI, told the court Klan m that Wilkins fired two quick shots and th then several more, and Thomas raise ai and William O. Eaton fired sev- Willi eral shots. fact th "I don't think you hit those pretend people," Rowe said he told Wilkins. violence "He smacked my right leg. He violenc said, 'Baby brother, I don't miss. pelledo That bitch and that bastard are have co dead as hell'." Jones On cross - examination, Rowe and ot] said he joined the Klan in 1960 tutiona at the FBI's request. ble self mination over into the next 1. dent Johnson can resubmit January. Or he could give sey a recess appointment to S. District Court in Mas- etts but this would require give up his $20,000-a-year Municipal Court judge- Federal district judges re- 30,000. Senate Electric Senate was more nearly an usual and the atmos- electric as Kennedy took to or to defend Morrissey, a me friend and political ally Kennedy family. younger Kennedy said he etermined that if a vote aken yesterday, a majority iepared to vote for con- on. But, he said, a number ators had indicated to him is a result of the widespread controversy, they are not prepared to say with certainty that their doubts have been entirely resolved" at this time." Kennedy said, "I would wish any man placed on the court on my recommendation to be able to take his seat free of unresolved con- troversy-on a record clear and complete enough so that any fair- minded person, after study, would conclude from the record that the judge has the necessary integrity and qualifications." He would want, too, Kennedy. said, a decision made after "due deliberation, in a climate free from the press of adjournment, the pressures of partisanship and the atmosphere of controversy." Humble Beginnings Kennedy, obviously filled with emotion, paused and took a drink of water to regain his voice when he spoke of Morrissey's humble beginnings-as one of 12 children of a poor dockworker in the De- pression days of the 1930s, "the family living in a home without gas, electricity or heat in the bed- room, their shoes held together with wooden pegs their father made." That, Kennedy said, answers questions raised about why Mor- rissey went from Massachusetts to Georgia in 1932 to a law school -"He was young and he was poor." One reason it took Morrissey three tries to pass the Massa- chusetts bar exams, Kennedy said, was that as 'a child of this family he could not afford to study law full time but had to do so at night and work during the day. The senator commented that he had been asked why in view of the unfavorable publicity about Morrissey "I would not in my own interest, ask that it be with- drawn." "When a man has been unfairly attacked and unjustly accused," Kennedy said, "I cannot in good conscience desert him. And I should not." Experience Questioned Kennedy said no one has ques- tioned Morrissey's integrity and character, but "one pre-eminent voice," the American Bar Asso- ciation, is not satisfied with ex- perience and legal education. Its most "serious assault," he said is on Morrissey's Georgia stay 32 years ago. Johnson's press secretary, Bill D. Moyers, said Kennedy told the President on Wednesday night that under the circumstances it seemed to him best to have the nomination sent back to com- mittee. Senate Majority Leader Mike Mansfield (D-Mont) said he thinks Kennedy exercised superior judgment and he agreed that the votes were available for confir- mation now. But Mansfield added if it had been done "in the at- mosphere which exists at the mo- ment, the results might have been anything but beneficial." Kennedy said he is satisfied the review will result in Morrissey's confirmation by a greatly increas- ed majority and that he will turn out to be a credit to the federal judiciary. He said Morrissey's legal quali- fications have been found per- fectly adequate by lawyers and judges of Massachusetts - "the men who have tried cases before him for seven years, the people who know him best. These are the people whose causes will stand or fall on the quality of justice dis- pensed in his court." O THIS SATURDAY IS MONTE CARLO NIGHT 8 P.M. 'til Midnight ^ Enough time to win . . . win .. .win ROULETTEe DICEe CARDS (Refreshments and Dancing too) 'U $1.00 Person The Newman Center U $1.50 Couple 331 Thompson LOUIS LOMAX IS COMING Petitioning for WRITER' IN RESIDENCE COMMITTEE Petitions available Monday, OQct.'25 through Friday., Oct. 29 at front desk of UAC main office, 2nd floor Union. People needed for Scheduling, Treasury, Publicity, Book- let, Special Events. former Trialr Repeats ITestimony Court Tests Voting Act r witness gave similar testi- at Rowe's first trial in May. trial ended with a hung 'homas and Eaton also are' murder indictments but ials have not yet been set. Klan Investigation e investigators made their fort yesterday to link the ux Klan with violence, in e that has focused mainly nces of the hooded order. h Carolina Grand Dragon Robert Jones was closely ned before the House Com- on Un-American Activities an alleged Klan official investigator Donald T. Ap- have pleaded guilty to s growing out of bombings.' ll said the series of bomb- curred Jan. 24 around. New M.C. Edwin E. Willis (D-La), Utee chairman, said that the trial the alleged Klan , identified as Raymond hanged his plea to guilty. eir questioning the commit- nvestigators alleged that was not dropped from the when he changed his plea at the Klan had sought to defense fund for him. s asked Jones, "Isn't it a at while your organization ds, to have rules against e and pretends to be against e that you have never ex- a member known to you to ommitted violence?" s declined to answer that her questions, citing consti- l guarantees against possi- -incrimination. Jones has refused the commit- tee any information other than his name. The committee introduced as evidence a large, framed certifi- cate which the investigators said was a Klan charter issued in the name of an improvement society of which they said Mills was an officer. Appell suggested that this was only a cover for the Klan, asking "Isn't it a practice to issue char- ters under, cover names such as improvement associations?" Jones declined to answer. Question Money Uses Earlier the investigators prod- ded Jones about money by pro- ducing some of the records he had refused to turn over-income tax returns. Those records showed his in- come took a hefty increase when he became grand dragon of North Carolina. They said Jones enjoyed these fringe benefits as well: -A new Cadillac, which Klan Klaverns all over the state were assessed to pay for. -A new Dodge station wagon they said was paid for out of Klan funds. -A death benefit setup for widows of Klansmen with a built- in "enormous profit" for the Klan. They also accused Jones of mak- ing a false accounting of Klan finances to a Klan rally at Rock- well, N.C., last Aug. 22. Fifth Amendment As he has done since he started testifying Wednesday before the House Committee on Un-Ameri- can Activities, Jones gave a stock1 reply that he' declined to answerf because it might tend to incrimi-t nate him, and cited the Fifth, First, Fourth and 14th Amend- ments. Like Klan Imperial Wizard Rob-t ert M. Shelton before him, Jonest has refused to deliver any Klan_ records and documents subpoen- aed by the committee. He too was warned that he faces possible con- tempt of Congress charges. Chief committee investigator Donald T. Appell produced Jones's income tax returns. School Time Is OLYMPIA TIME WASHINGTON (P) -The gov- ernment, invoking a rarely used constitutional power, asked the Supreme Court yesterday to affirm the constitutionality of the 1965 Voting Rights Act. The Justice Department action also asks the court to end ob- struction of the voting law by Ala- bama, Mississippi and Louisiana. In those states, state courts have blocked registrars from enrolling some of the voters registered by federal examiners appointed under the 10-week-old voting law. The government-for only the 15th time in history and the first time since 1949-asked the high court to assume original juris- diction in the case. This means Read and Use Daily Classifieds A the Supreme Court would accept the case directly instead of on appeal after the normal course through lower federal district and appeals courts. Article 3 of the Constitution provides that the high court may assume such jurisdiction "in all cases affecting ambassadors, other public ministers and consuls, and those in which a state may be a party." HILLEL SUPPER CLUB resumes this Sunday at 5:30 1429 H ill St. all may partake 75c members $1 guests- JAZZ is coming to Canterbury House this weekend Friday-Saturday 8:30 218 N. Division One dollar per person l+w. c ;p 44 n ); I at, Armor p f ". 3 GAY GIBSON'S Great Look for Sure-Fire Holiday Plans!.. A slightly shaped sheath dress of lacy knit wool, softly accented with embroidery at the neckline and sleeve, will accompany the season's big plans with certain style! A\ flatterer if ever there was one, you'll see it featured inthe November issue of Glamour magazinel Ours ekclusively ... in white, Sizes 5 to 15. $2500 MANY OTHER SPECIAL OCCASION DRESSES TO PLEASE THAT GUY. I University Typewriter Center Home of OLYMPIA, the Precision Typewriter 613 E. William St 665-3763 !I World News Roundup TALENT? A FILE LISTING ALL TYPES OF STUDENT TALENT IS AVAILABLE THROUGH reCk4 215 S. State co. By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - Sen. Stephen M. Young (D-Ohio) says a mem- ber of the Central Intelligence Agency in Viet Nam told, him the CIA committed atrocities there to discredit the Viet Cong. Young, who recently returned from Viet Nam, said he was told that the CIA disguised some people' as Viet Cong and they committed the atrocities, includ- ing killing men and raping women. A CIA spokesman, asked for comment, said that "as far as our agents having done such things, the statement is absolutely false." * * * STOCKHOLM, Sweden - The Royal Swedish Academy has awarded the Nobel Prize for chem- istry to an American scientist, and the prize for physics jointly to two Americans and a Japanese. The chemistry award went to Prof. Robert Burns Woodward of Harvard University for his con- tribution to the art of organic synthesis." Sharing the, physics prize are Julian Schwinger of Harvard; Richard Feynman of the Cali- fornia Institute of Technology, and Sin-Itiro Tomonaga of Japan. * * * WASHINGTON-Senate-House conferees knocked out funds to start the national teachers corps yesterday as they approved a $4.7- billion supplemental appropria- tions bill. The teachers corps was the sec- ond major casualty in the con- ference. Earlier, Senate conferees had bowed to House insistence on dropping funds for the controver- sial rent supplement program. -* * * LONDON-Prime Minister Har- old Wilson announced yesterday he will fly to Rhodesia in a bid "to avert the tragic consequences" of seizure of independence by that African colony's prime minister, Ian Smith. Wilson said in a message to Smith that he was going to Sal- isbury not only to talk to him, but anyone else "whose views I feel to be relevant to a solution of this grave problem." 662-5527 I rA 400 : AM6- U To list or find talent cal 662-4431 ext. 1030 or come into U-Ac offices. 0 -9 I U t M t.t W )Y( $j gltue~l~! { 4i tI TH IIIT I I'm going steady w ith Viner Casuals are so basic, so right for every occasion that a gal marries them for life! 795 to 995 --,.: z - SANDLER OF BOSTON'S STRAPLER .,. boldly belted, A / :: /' in '. I11I E II 6 I I I II