)CTOBER 23, x965 THE MICHIGAN DAILY ,PA9-w PrI21ptr )CTOBER 23, 1965 THE MICHIGAN DAIlY US £ i' ~. PY~S~~US ~ YA,(aiE TIIREE Klansman Of Rig ht' Acquitted Murder r a r rr rM ._ egbt- K' N wfYcaU I9~d4, e 4ll aS'IYi s Td hb.,, irir ra' n .rrr i ire rrrrwir rnrr .r Klan 'Kiud' RecantIs And Tells of Threats FBI Expert Names Gun In Murder Informer Testifies Wilkims Had Emptied Pistol in Liuzzo's Car HAYNEVILLE, Ala. (P) - A young klansman, on trial for the murder of a civil rights worker, was acquitted yesterday after one hour and 45 minutes of jury de- liberation. The klansman, - Collie Leroy Wilkins, Jr., 21, a Fairfield, Ala., auto mechanic, left the courtroom without commenting on the ver- dict. He smiled broadly and puff- ed rapidly on a cigarette. The state had rested its case in the second trial of Wilkins aftr an FBI ballistics expert tes- tified that bullets which killed a white civil rights worker were fir- ed from a gun introduced as evi- dence. The gun, a 38-caliber Smith and Wesson revolver, was identi- fied Thursday by an FBI Inform- er as the one used to kill Viola Gregg Liuzzo last March 25. Defense attorney Arthur J. Hanes called 10 witnsses and rest- ed his case after about an hour. Hanes attempted to discredit much of ithe testimony of the state's principal witnesses and to place Wilkins in Bessemer, Ala., at about 9 o'clock on the night that Viola Gregg Liuzzo, 39, a white Detroit housewife, was killed. Marion E. Williams of the FBI crihiinal laboratory in Washing- ton, said markings on a bullet taken from Mrs. Liuzzo's head and test bullets fired from the pistol bore similar markings. Williams said empty cartridge cases found a half-mile from Mrs. Liuzzo's car on U.S. Highway 80 in Lowndes County also were from the same gun. Gary Thomas Rowe, 38, a klans- man who turned FBI informer, testified Thursday that Wilkins emptied a pistol into Mrs. Liuzzo's car after a nighttime high-speed auto chase on the highway. Williams testified that at least five bullets struck Mrs. Liuzzo's car and that three, including the one which killed her, were recov- ered. During a lengthy session, Rowe, th state's key witness, said an- other klansman, Eugene Thomas, had handed the pistol to Wilkins before the shooting took place. In cross-examination, Hanes questioned Williams on the bul- lets fired into Mrs. Liuzzo's car. Hanes, using a diagram, attempt- ed to show that bullets might have also struck a passenger seat- ed in the car. Mrs. Liuzzo was traveling with a Negro civil rights worker when she was killed. All three Klan defendants also are under deferal indictment on civil rights charges because of the Liuzzo slaying. Wilkins' trial reached the jury after three days' testimony. Hanes completed his presentation in mid- morning after calling 10 witness- es, mainly to impeach the testi- mony of key prosecution witnesses. Atty. Gen. Richmond Flowers, who prosecuted Wilkins, said two other Klan members, also indict- ed for the Liuzzo slaying, will be tried despite the acquittal of the first defendant. The klansmen still awaiting trial are Eugene Thomas, 42, a Besse- mer, Ala., steel company employe, and William Orville Eaton, 41, a retired steel worker also of Bes- semer. IndoArmy Ordered To Halt Action Reports No Military Let-Up Following Last Week's Coup Attempt JAKARTA, Indonesia (P)-Pres- ident Sukarno ordered his armed forces chiefs yesterday to halt destructive reprisals and to end racialism, reference to growing anti-Red Chinese sentiment. The order appeared aimed mainly at the army's roundup of thousands of Communists and the burning of Indonesian Communist party offices by Moslem and oth- er demonstrators. Recently, demonstrations have taken an anti-Chinese turn since many Indonesians believe Peking backed the Communist-influenced coup against Sukarno Oct. 1. . Night-Long Meeting Sukarno's order was issued after a night-long meeting of KOTI, the supreme operations command, attended by all the chiefs of the armed forces. Reports of burning of Commu- nist offices continued, and there was no indication the army was ready to let up in its campaign against the Communists. It has been his policy to bal- ance off the Indonesian Commu- nist party-the largest outside a non-Communist land-against the armed forces. Recently the president told vis- iting Japanese correspondents that some units of the army, air force and his presidential guards had been involved in the coup as well as Communists. 1i -,I Pay Raise, Sugar Bill Pass as Congress Nears Adjournment WORSHIP WASHINGTON OP)-Swift ac- tion on a pay raise for federal workers and on sugar quota legis- lation moved Congress within hours of adjournment last night. After less than an hour's de- bate, the Senate gave 67-0 passage to a pay boost of 3.6 per cent for 1.8 million civilian employes-at an estimated annual cost of $641.51 million.. While this was far above the $400-million increase requested by the administration, President Lyn- don Johnson is expected to sign it since it is a deep cutback from the House bill to give a four per cent raise this year and another hike next year at an estimated annual cost of $1.55 billion. Accept The House was reported ready to accept the scaled-down Senate proposal because' of the threat ofj a presidential veto of its proposal. Senate and House conferees agreed on a sugar-quota bill set- ting market allotments for five years-a triumph for Rep. Harold D. Cooley (D-NC), chairman of the House Agriculture Committee. Senate conferees had wanted the much-disputed foreign nation. quotas set for only two years. Before winding up action on the last bills, the Senate confirmed the nomination of David G. Bress as United States attorney for the District of Columbia by a 49-14 vote. Minor Normally confirmation of suchl a relatively minor nomination is' a routine affair but this time there was a three-hour debate marked by a fresh flare-up over the Bobby Baker case. Baker quit his job as secretary of the Senate's Democratic ma- jority after his outside business activities had been questioned. These activities became the sub- ject of a prolonged investigation by the Senate Rules Committee. In 10 and one half months, this first session of the 89th Congress blazed new legislative trails as it implemented about 85 per cent of what Johnson calls his "Great Society" program. Even so,s the funds approved were $2.4 billion below White House requests. Major The major breakthroughs scor- ed by the heavy Democratic ma- jorities in both chambers--with some Republican help-came on health care for the elderly and aid to elementary schools. Elsewhere in the health field Congress approved an $800-million program for community health centers; a three-year, $755-million educating physicians, dentists and educating physicians, dentists and nurses; and a four-year, $650- million program to build regional research-treatment centers to fight cancer, heart disease and strokes. School Aid In addition to providing across- the-board aid to elementary schools--including parochial-tor the first time, the 89th voted greatly increased assistance to higher education. Over-all first- year cost is about $2 billion for the two. In' extensions of earlier pro- grams, it voted to double anti- poverty expenditures to $1.65 bil- lion; provide $1.1 billion for aid to the Appalachia regions and $3.2 billion for development of other depressed areas: and it en- acted a four-year $7-billion public housing program expected to in- clude rent subsidies for low- income families next year. The Congress also wiped out the national-origins immigration quo- tas which favored northern Euro- pean nations and offended some others. Workers To Be Repaid WASHINGTON (R)-Labor De- partment figures show that 406,333" workers were short-changed a to- tal of $74.45 million wages in fis- cal 1965, by employers violating federal pay standards. A spokesman said yesterday, some employers had agreed to pay over $24 million in back wages and overtime, but that the other $50 million is still tied up in nego- tiation or litigation. The report on investigations under the Fair Labor Standards Act will not be officially made public until Secretary of Labor W. Willard Wirtz makes his annual report to Congress next January. A department spokesman said that while some of the back wages may never be paid due to legal technicalities, the important re- sult was that employers caught violating the law generally start paying the proper wage levels im- mediately. WASHINGTON P) - One re- canting Klansman told of a veiled death threat and another resign- ed from the Klan in the witness chair in dramatic moments yes- terday of the congressional in- quiry into the hooded order. Roy Woodle, a bricklayer from Lexington, N.C., who identified himself as a former Klan klud (chaplain) pointed to a man in the hearing room as a Klan offi- cial who once warned him he had "authority to do away with me." Joseph G. DuBois,, a used car dealer in Goldsboro, N.C., declar- ed his resignation from the Klan while testifying before the House Committee on Un-American Ac- tivities. He said he believed God and his country should come be- fore any Klan vows. Woodle said he belonged to the Klan for about 10 months and re- signed about five weeks ago when, Special Forces Continue To Resist Viet Cong at Plei Me SAIGON P)-Sporadic firing re- j sumed yesterday near the special forces camp at Plei Me and the American-advised troops braced for another attack by a Viet Cong assault force they have held off for three days. In the second such reinforce- ment in 24 hours, a detachment of Vietnamese rangers flew in to bolster the ordinary garrison of 300 Montagnard tribal irregulars and 10 or 12 United States Spe- cial Forces merr. Official sources said losses with- in the camp remained light, but Communist gunners downed two of, the fleet of U.S. planes strik- irg at Red lines in support of the garrison. These were a Skyraider fighter- bomber and a Canberra jet bomb- er. The airmen were reported res- cued. Two helicopter crashes there earlier in the week had killed eight Americans. U.S. pilots braved heavy fire in the central highlands sector 210 miles northeast of Saigon and re- supplied the Plei Me camp in the first major air drop since Wed- nesday. Officers said the shoot- ing subsided late in the day, then resumed after dusk. Guerrilla losses seemed to be mounting. With 90 enemy dead of- ficially counted, fresh reports from the scene said bodies littered a field a few hundred yards north of the camp. These were presum- ed to have been hit in the aerial strafing and bombing. U.S. officials said they believed an American construction work- er, Joseph L. Dodd, 24, of Paoli, Okla., has been kidnaped by the Viet Cong. He disappeared Oct. 13. Dodd was a mechanic for a United States firm which is work- ing under a contract with the U.S. government on a. new port at Cam Rahn Bay, 190 miles north- east of Saigon. U.S. Marines operating in the Qui Nhon area ambushed a Viet Cong force and reported they had killed 11 without losses of their own. A spokesman said 11 others had been killed by Marines in the Chu Lai and Da Nang sectors farther north., he said someone began circulat- ing stories that he had been put into the Klan by the government to "tear it up." According to the stories that he got, Woodle said, "I got on this! platform at a rally in Trenton, N.C., and said something about Mr. Shelton, so I had to go down." Woodle said he insisted that he had never said anything about Imperial Wizard Robert M. Shel- ton or anyone else, but no one would give him any more details. Telephoned He said a friend telephoned him to say that a Klan official he identified as Boyd Hamby was going to call him. Chairman Edwin E. Willis (D- La) asked if the caller threatened him with "bodily harm." "I don't know if you call it bodily harm or not," said Woodle, "but he said he had the author- ity to do away with me." When Willis asked Woodle if Boyd Hamby was in the room, Woodle turned and pointed out a swarthy man with a mustache sit- ting smiling in the front row of the spectator seats. Not Threatened But Woodle said that Hamby had not actually threatened his life. DuBois, who said he was treas- urer of the Goldsboro Klan Klav- ern, turned over records and docu- ments of his unit to the commit- tee which had subpoenaed them. "I have no intention to take the Fifth Amendment no matter what," he said. Later he told newsmen "only a Communist takes the Fifth Amendment or someone with something to hide." The Klan leaders had used the Fifth Amendment's protection against self-incrimination in re- fusing to answer questions or turn over records to the committee. 12:10 LUTHERAN STUDENT CENTER AND CHAPEL National Lutheran Council Hill Street at South Forest Ave. Pastor: Henry O. Yoder SUNDAY 9:30 and 11:00,a.m.-Worship Services. 7:00 p.m. - "The Place of the Church in Education"-Dr. Robert Long, Wittenberg University. WEDNESDAY 9:00 p.m.-Bible Study. 10:00 p.m.-Vespers. ST. MARY'S STUDENT CHAPEL 331 Thompson NO 3-0557 Msgr. Bradley, Rev. Litka, Rev. Ennen SUNDAY-Masses at 7:00, 8:00, 9:15, 10:45, 12:00, 12:30. MONDAY-SATURDAY-Masses at 7:00, 8:00, 9:00, 11:30 a.m. and 12:00 and 5:00 p.m. Confessions following masses. WEDNESDAY-7:30 p.m. - Evening Mass. Confessions following SATURDAY-Confessions: 3:30-5:00; 7:30- 9:00 p.m. DARLINGTON LUTHERAN CHURCH (Wisconsin Synod) 3545 Packard-Phone 662-9247 Rev. R. A. Baer-761-1486 Sunday Worship Service-10:30 a.m. For transportation call Rev. Baer. SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH meeting temporarily at 1131 Church St. Pastor T. J. Rasmussen Sabbath School 9:30 (Saturday) Worship Service 11:00 (Saturday) ST. ANDREW'S CHURCH and the EPISCOPAL STUDENT FOUNDATION 306 N. Division-Phone 665-0606 SUNDAY 8:00 a.m. Holy Communion and Sermon 9:00 a.m. Holy Communion and Sermon (Folk Mass) (Breakfast at Canterbury House after 9:00 services) 11:00 a.m. Holy Communion and Sermon (Folk Mass) 7:00 p.m. Evening Prayer (Chapel) WEDNESDAY 7:00 a.m. Holy Communion FRIDAY Holy Communion UNIVERSITY REFORMED CHURCH 1001 E. Huron at Fletcher Pastors: Malefyt and Van Hoven 9:10 a.m.-Collegiate Coffee. 9:30 a.m.-Collegiate Discussion Group. 10:30 a.m.-Sermon: "John The Baptist" by Rev. Malefyt. 5:45 p.m.-An open discussion: "A Univer- sity Student Looks at Death." 7:00 p.m.-Evening Worship and Discussion with Dr. John Alexander, Director of In- ter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, Topic: "Communication w i t h the Academic World." FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1432 Washtenaw Ave. Ministers: Ernest T. Campbell, Malcolm G. Brown, John W. Waser, Harold S. Horan SUNDAY Worship at 9:00, 10:30 & 12:00 Presbyterian Campus Center located at the Church. CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH Corner State and William Services at 9:30 and 11:15 a~m.-"My Name Is Jeremiah," Reverend Terry N. Smith. Church School-9:30 a.m.-Crib-9th grade; 11:15 a.m.-Crib-6th grade. Student Guild, 802 Monroe, telephone 2-5189. PACKARD ROAD BAPTIST CHURCH 1131 Church Street Phone 761-0441 Rev. Jesse Northweather Sunday School at 9:45 a.m. Sunday Morning Service at 11:00 a.m. Sunday Evening Service at 7:30 p.m. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST SCIENTIST 1833 Wastenow Ave. For transportation call 662-4018 9:30 a.m.-Sunday School for pupils from 2 to 20 years of age 1 :00 a.m.-Sunday morning church service infant care curing service. 11:00 a.m.--Sunday School for pupils from 2 to 6 years of age. A free reading room is maintained at 306 E. Liberty, open daily except Sundays and holidays from 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.; Monday evenings from 7:00 to 9:00 p.m. FIRST METHODIST CHURCH & WESLEY FOUNDATION At State and Huron Streets Phone NO 2-4536 Hoover Rupert, Minister Eugene Ransom, Campus Minister SUNDAY 9:00 and 11:15 a.m.-Worship Services, Dr. Rupert: "What Are the Limits of Love?" 10:15 a.m.-Christion Social Concerns Class, Pine Room. Panel of students on Viet Nam demonstrations and sit-ins. 7:00 p.m. T- Worship and Program, Wesley Lounge. The Rev. Philip Doster: "The Work of the Detroit Industrial Mission." TUESDAY 12:00-1:00 p.m.-Luncheon Discussion Class, Pine Room. "Communist Faith-Christian Faith." Lunch 25c. 5:00 p.m.-Church Related Vocations Group, Green Room. Dinner and Program: The Rev. Frank Dennis, Director of Camping and Conferences of the Detroit Conference of the Methodist Church. Reservations needed. 8:30 p.m.-Open House, Charles Bearden's Wesley Foundation apartment. WEDNESDAY 7:00 a.m.-Holy Communion, Chapel, fol- lowed by breakfast in Pine Room. Out in time for 8:00 a.m. classes. 5:10 p.m.-Holy Communion, Chapel. 6:00 p.m.-Wesley Grads, Pine Room. Sup- per and program: Mr. David Kasambira, student in Social Work, "Rhodesia Today and Tomorrow." 6:00 p.m.-- Catholic-Protestant Discussion, Father Richard Center. Supper and panel on problems of the church with Dr. Ran- som, Father Litka and others. Reservations needed. FRIDAY 6:00 p.m. - Young Marrieds, Pine Room. Supper and hayride. Reservations needed. FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH 1917 Washtenaw Erwin A. Goede, Minister SUNDAY Church School and Service at 9:00 and 11:30 a.m.-Sermon Subject: "What We Leave Behind." Church School and Adult Discussion Group at 10:15 a.m.-Topic: "The Wild Duck." BETHLEHEM UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST 423 S. Fourth Ave. Rev. E. R. Klaudt, Rev. A. C. Bizer, & Rev. A. G. Habermehl, Pastors 9:30 and 10:45 a.m.-Worship Service 9:30 and 10:45 a.m.-Church School BAPTIST CAMPUS CENTER & FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 502 & 512 E. Huron 663-9376 SUNDAY 9:45 a.m.-Campus Discussion Class. "The Secular City." Chapter V. 11:00 a.m.-Worship-First Baptist Church, 7:00 p.m.-Speaker: Dr. Paul Stagg. Topic: "Evangelism in the New World." WORLD NEWS ROUNDUP: Gov. Wallace Blocked in Re-Election Attempt By The Associated Press MONTGOMERY, Ala.-A con- stitutional amendment w h ic h would have allowed Gov. George C. Wallace to succeed himself in office was beaten yesterday in a final showdown vote in the state Senate. Wallace forces fell 3 votes short of the necessary 21 votes. It was seen as a major political setback for Wallace, who- called the Legislature into special ses- sion to consider the bitterly fought succession issue. LONDON-Prime Minister Har- CAPE KENNEDY-The Gemini 6 astronauts sailed through final major physical checks yesterday and were pronounced ready to go as Monday's date neared for their historic rendezvous mission in space. * * * KEY WEST, Fla. - Refugees are leaving Cuba by the hundreds but many of them are the very old, the very young or the in- firm. Fifty-three refugees arrived in the first three boats to dock in Key West. Seven others were brought in by a Coast Guard cut- who said he saw service in Viet Nam, walked out of a pacifist meeting at the University of Iowa, recently and about half the au- dience of 300 followed him. One of those who didn't was Stephen Smith, 20, sophomore from Marion, Iowa, who publicly burned what he said was his draft card Wednesday. Two FBI agents arrested Smith yesterday on a warrant 'charging him with destroying his draft card. * * * MANCHESTER, N.H. - A U.S. commissioner asked United States District Court in Concord yester- blocked peak-hour traffic for more than an hour in two of Sydney's busiest streets. - The demonstration was orga- nized by the Viet Nam Action Committee, formed by student groups and "peace organizations." Australia has sent an infantry battalion-about 800 men - to fight on the side of the South Viet- namese. UNITED NATIONS - Pakistan asked yesterday morning the UN Security Council to hold an ur- gent meeting to move ahead to- ward solution of the Indian-Paki- THE CHURCH OF CHRIST W. Stadium at Edgewood Across from Ann Arbor High Roy V. Palmer, Minister GRACE BIBLE CHURCH Corner State and Huron Streets Dr. Raymond H. Saxe, Pastor 9:45 a.m.--Sundoy School. 1 1:00 a.m.-Morning Worship. 6:00 p.m.-Training Hour. 7:00 p.m.-Gospel Service. Wednesday Prayer Meeting at 7:30 p.m. Nursery facilities at all services. If it's Bible you want, come to Grace Bible- Fundamental, Pre-Millenial, Biblical. SUNDAY 10:00 a.m.-Bible School 11:00 a.m.-Regular Worship 6:00 p.m.-Evening Worship WEDNESDAY 7:30 p.m.-Bible Study Transportation furnished for all NO 2-2756. services--Call C~AAPUS CH.APEL UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL 1511 Washtenaw Avenue i I I i i