Thursday, May 23, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three t 3 .. Senate vote bits court decisions Amendments to crime-control act would end restrictions on evidence WASHINGTON (N) - The Senate has voted to undo Su- preme Court restrictions on admissibility of confessions and eyewitness testimony in criminal trials - landmark high court rulings that have greatly strengthened defendants' rights. But in a series of votes yesterday the Senate voted against a proposal to curb the Supreme Court's jurisdiction to review convictions in state courts. The voting came in connection with a broad crime- control bill that ranges from profound constitutional ques- Nort hi Vietnamese talks may fail _x . Congress i *OK~s fair credit bill WASHINGTON (R) - Congress sent to President Johnson yester- day a far-reaching bill requiring that buyers and borrowers be told the true costofcredit \on con- sumer transactions. The Senate completed Congres- sional action on the long-debated measure byvoice vote after a brief debate. The House acted several hours earlier, also by voice vote. Sponsors said they are delighted withi the unanimous approval of the bill, officially titled the Con- sumer Credit Protection Act. It is the outcome of seven years of controversy in Congress over the "truth in lending" issue. The measure applies to con- sumer-type loans and purchases, not to commercial lending prac- tices among banks and businesses. Basically, the measure requires that those who lend money or sell 4 on credit must tell the consumer the total finance charge in terms of an annual rate. Thus a 1.5 per cent a month charge for a re- volving credit account would also have to be stated as 18 per cent a year. However, if the store's return * is less than the nominal annual rate because of the timing of charges and payments, the store could also tell the customer this. Advertising of credit terms would have to be specific in terms of rate, amount and duration of installments. The responsibility *would be on the advertiser, not the medium carrying the ad. Extending credit on extortionate terms would become a federal of- fense, with penalties up to $10,000 fine or 20 years imprisonment. tions to providing more fed- eral funds to local police de- partments. Sens. John L. McClellan, (D- Ark.) and Sam J. Ervin, (D- N.C.), led the fight to keep intact the section limiting the Supreme Court's review powers and to overturn decisions they contended have hampered law enforcement. They said there is nothing in the Constitution to provide for what they termed "a judicial oli- garchy." Sena. Joseph D. Tydings (D- Md.), who spearheaded forces op- posing a lessening in Supreme Court powers, said th1e court'srul- ings were designed to protect the innocent, the ignorant and the .oppressed. 'NO SUPPORT' He said there was no factual support for arguments that the1 decisions accounted for increased lawlessness. The Senate .voted 55 to 29 to let stand a provision in the bill mak- ing admissible as evidence in any federal criminal prosecution a confession voluntarily given. Trial judges would decide if the confes- sions were voluntary. Similarly, the Senate rejected 58 to 27 an amendment to knock out a provision on confessions. This amendment provides that confessions shall not be inadmis- sible in federal trials just because of a delay in a suspect's arraign- ment after his arrest. EYEWITNESS By a 63-21 vote the Senate re- jected an amendment to eliminm te a provision making identification of a defendant by an eyewitness to a crime admissible as evidence in federal court trials. Defeated 52 to 32 was a provi- sion that would have barred the. j Supreme Court and other federal courts from reviewing or revers- ing a state court ruling admitting a confession in evidence as volun- tarily given, if the ruling had been upheld by the state's high- est court. Waiting in Resurrection Cii Poor People Cc WASHINGTON (P)-The ranks The Rev. James Bevel, a direc- of the poor at Resurrection City, tor of the Southern Christian USA, fluctuated rapidly yesterday Leadership Conference, which is as officials of the Poor People's sponsoring the campaign, said the Campaign banished 200 demon- youths had been unable to get strators homeward and welcomed along with the others in the camp, 400 new ones. especially the whites. The departing group was made I "They went around and beat up up largely of militant young men on our white people," said Bevel. from Chicago, Detroit and other "They interfered with the workers Midwestern cities who were ex- and were hostile to the press. We pelled for disciplinary reasons. had to get them out." NEAR CAPACITY The arrivals and departures left *-the shantytown headquarters of the campaign near its planned capacity of 3.000, but Bevel and other officials were unable to say precisely how many were there. - A distinguished nonresident{ - showed up to lend a hand on the garbage detail-actor Sidney Poi- tier, who said he was there "to re- establish roots among the people who gave me birth." Poitier attracted little attention from the impoverished residentsj of the camp as he went about his duties with a sanitation crew. The charge Bevel leveled at the 200 marchers who were kicked out -that they "couldn't develop any internal cohesion"-could not be made about the incoming group. The band of 400 Southern Ne- groes, mostly young people who 'No progress I on bombing PARIS ()-The United States and North Vietnam last night recessed their preliminary peace talks until 'Monday after the Hanoi delegation for the first time suggested the possibility that these discussions might fail In calm tones but with acid ----- ---- words the two delegations once . again declined to move from x.' -Associated Press stated positions. The leader of the Hanoi delegation, XuanThuy, 3' ~asserted: "In the event these of- : ficial conversations do not con- elude with results, the American m side must bear the fulland entire i pa igniresponsibility." A U.S. delegation spokesman f said he did not take Thuy's state- ment as an implied threat to e"It is a statement of position, preparing the way for the position The march moved slowly, geared to take if, for any reason, the talks to the pace of a crippled Negro did fail, said William J. Jorden, youth who swung along in the the American spokesman. If the lead on crutches. Unlike the silent talks should fail the people of the marches staged by demonstrators world will make ,their own judg- Tuesday in two forays to the Cap- ment." itol, the newcomers sang, banged The North Vietnamese refuse to bongo drums and clapped their admit they have any troops in hands in rhythm as they moved South Vietnam, although U.S. in- along. ' telligence reports from Vietnam Harriman lean Driving beside them, stuffed say Hanoi has virtually stripped.. with their belonging, were station its own territory and has the wagons of the white Virginia sub- equivalent of 12 divisions in the A TTA CK FAILS: urbanites who had organized their South. care and feeding during the three- "It's hard to see how we can day stopover. move on toward finding a peace- One of them, Jack Sweeney of ful settlement of a war when we H a ti eq p Arlington, Va., said 2,000 white are dealing with someone who Virginians had joined in the effort won't even admit he is there," to take care of the travelers. Jorden said. "This has been a tremendous Time after time U.S. Ambas- pro, e 1 experience," he said, "and I think sador .Averell Harriman, the chief we've gotten more out of it than negotiator, challenged the North PORT AU PRINCE, Haiti they did." e delation to a d a rrnee t The Rev. Ralph David Aber- public statements and mutual re- valier's government yesterday nathy, president of the SCLC, met riminations and to get down to cil to meet promptly to con the 400 at the entrance to the businesslike talks in private. His responsible for the attack ea camp, embracing the march lead- efforts were rebuffed.r s invasion force which the gover ers and being given a resounding Informed opinion here is that Th Hatnrees ws cheer in return, the two sides eventually, and ex- The Haitian request was "Follow me into the new city," tremely slowly, will move toward Siclait in a letter to Britain's shouted Abernathy. "I've been compromise on the bombing issue council president. waiting for you for a long time. and move on to othertmatters, Siclait said that Haiti had We're going to build a new na- though there is no overt sign of tion." that. that the Dominican Republic h, Treasury continues excise taxes ,on phones, cars after lawkV ends WASHINGTON (A") - Although however, because the excises are books because the extension would the Treasury concedes it has no part of the bigger, intensely con- be retroactive when finally adopt- s 1-1 i ht e lit t themtn rela- troversial avreement to tie a ten i ed by Congress. -Associated Press ves Paris talks Rev. Ralph Abernathy had never been out of the South before, marched into the camp singing, clapping hands and hug- ging the residents waiting to greet them. They had walked the last mile- and-a-half of a two-week journey that began in Mississippi and wound by bus through Alabama, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina and Virginia. CAMI IN CHURCHES Since Sunday theye have been camping out in 15 churches in northern Virginia waiting for housing in Resurrection City to become available. They regrouped yesterday in front of Arlington National Cemetery and walked across Memorial Bridge, spanning the Potomac River, to the camp- site. tests U N invaslin (M - President Francois Du- asked the U.N. Security Qoun- sider sanctions against those rlier this week by a 35-man nment says has been smashed. made by Ambassador Raoul s Lord Caradon, this month's d been a victim of aggression, lad concentrated troops on the Haitian frontier and that U.S. warships had been alerted in the Caribbean. Although Haiti asked the coun- cil to consider sanctions, it did not accuse any country of allow- ing the invaders 'to use its ter- ritory to mount the attack. Siclait and Duvalier said earlier that the invaders could have come from one of five places - the United States, the Dominican Re- public, Cuba, Jamaica or the Bahamas. Government and diplomatic sources in Port au Prince said the instigators of the attack were Haitian exiles based in the United States. Government spokesmen claimed they were supporters of Paul Magloire, a former president of Haiti, and were members of the New York-based Haitian Coali- tion. Government sources said Hai- tian troops killed 10 and captured 16 of the rebel invaders and seized two B25 bombers . that landed them near Cap Haitien Monday. The invasion was preceded by a bombing raid on the capital in which one person was reported killed and several others injured., Informants said the 10 invad- ers were killed in a 20-minute battle Tuesday at Cap Haitien, about 85 miles north of Port au Prince. Those not killed or cap- tured fled to the hills, they said. i f( } 4 i egai rlgn LO eCM Llei, tively high excise taxes on auto- mobiles and telephone service and probably will continue to exist. Both the House and the Senate earlier this year approved in iden- tical form extension of the ten per cent excise tax on telephone service and the seven per cent manufacturers' excise tax on automobiles. Final action has been delayed, per cent tax surcharge to $6-bil- lion in spending cuts. A House vote on the entire package has now been postponed at least until the first week in June and probably later. In the meantime, the Internal Revenue Service has asked tele- phone companies to continue col- lecting the tax and auto makers to continue figuring it on their' ___. Originally, the ten per cent tax on telephone service was sched- uled to drop to one per cent last April 1 while the other tax was to fall to two per cent. / Congress in mid-April adopted a resolution extending both ex- cises at their old rate through April 30. This was after both houses had voted to extend the taxes at their old rates through calendar year 1969. The resolution gave the Treas- ury Department legal authority to collect the tax through April 30 which it has done. But it has no legal authority to collect the taxes at the higher levels for May. Legally, it can col- lect only two per cent on auto- mobiles and one per cent on tele- phone service. Taxes collected at the higher rates by the telephone companies and assessed on auto makers from May 1 through May 15 ordinarily would be deposited with the gov- ernment on May 31. under the existing collection scheduled. But because of the legal block, it's a virtual certainty that the Treasury will be forced to post- pone the deposit date until Con- gress. acts on these excises. Telephone companies and auto makers, however, will be urged to continue assessing the levies at the higher rates. Should Congress refuse entire- ly to aprove the extension any tax actually collected by the Treasury Department illegally would have to be refunded on telephone serv- ice where the tax is paid directly by the customers. In the caseaof the auto excise, which is levied on the manufac- turer, no refund need be made unless the manufacturer estab- lishes that the tax was not in- cluded in the price of the car or that he had refunded the tax to the car buyer. i l 1 I i ! i I r II President Duvalier SANDLER OF BOSTON'S VIVACE -the couth little cut-up. Cut out at sides and back to bare the dare of wild wild stockings. Yesterday we had BATIK, SILK BROCADE BY THE YARD, and SARIS r: W/ W tf.,f f 1 Gig /f:,r % ..ff rA ; ' , ,r