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June 12, 1969 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1969-06-12

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

KEEP AHEAD
OF YOUR HAIR!
* NO WAITING
* 6 BARBERS
* OPEN 6 DAYS
The Dasoa Barber
at Maple Village--campus

x

--OM#COUO O -..M
I I
I I
STHOMPSON'S:
:. PIZZA
761-0001
I I
I U
s
.$1.00 OFF
i One a large one item (or more)*
: pizza. One coupon per pizza.
s s
* Pick Up Only
I I
211 E. Ann St.-Next to r
the Armory
4 R
I Expires Aug. 1
..I.. .I. .

WOW!
A three-piece Treasure Chest
chicken dinner, plus french fries,
for only 79! Larger take-home
orders also. Try a box soon!!
stIf G AbPEEDY orc
West of Arborland

second front page

4I

Szr~i!an

Thursday, June 12, 1969 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three

Da4ti

CI

--,.

NEWS PHONE: 764.0552
BUSINESS PRONE: 764-0534

"A NEW CLASSIC ...A GREAT
MOMENT IN AMEICA MONIES!j"

Friday & Saturday.
THE LADY, EVIE
Dir. Preston Sturges (1941)
Barbara Stanwyck
Henry Fonda
"Best picture of 1941"
N.Y. Times
Sturges was the foremost
film satirist of the 40's.
75c
7 & 9 ARCHITECTURE
662-8871 AUDITORIUM
Litter doesn't throw
itself away; litter
doesn't just happen.
People cause it-and.
only people can prevent)
it. People" means you.
Keep America Beautiful.
--Udvertising contributed
Ifor the public good

the
news today,
by The Associated Press and CoVege Press Service
THE UNITED STATES AND CAMBODIA hove agreed in
principle to resume diplomatic relations broken four years ago.
Cambodia's Prince Sihanouk said the decision followed receipt
of a May 22 note designed to assure him of U.S. intentions to respect
Cambodia's frontiers.
Cambodia broke relations with the United States in aMy 1965
after U.S. troops entered combat in neighboring South Vietnam.
The Cambodian government charged violations of its territory by
U.S. forces, and the border question has been a prime issue since.
U. S. State Department officials said what remains to be worked
out are administrative details such as where the emmisaries of the
two countries would be housed.
* * * *
A PENTAGON OFFICIAL conceded before a -House-Senate
economic subcommittee meeting that the cost of the primary
missile program had approximately doubled.
Barry J. Shillito, assistant secretary of defense for installations
and logistics, said Air Force figures tend to support the estimate that
the Minuteman II missile program has grown from $3.27 billion to
about $7 billion.
Shillito was also confronted by subcommittee chairman Sen. Wil-
liam Proxmire (D-Wis.) with evidence that the Navy's Deep Sub-,
mergible Rescue Vehicle program cost estimate had risen from $3
million to $80 million.
THE STOCK MARKET has plunged more than 60 points
since mid-May.
The Dow industrial barometer closed Wednesday at 904.60,
a' six per cent decline from the 968.85 pinnacle of May 14. It had been
as high at 985 last December.
Skyrocketing inflation, lack of a breakthrough in Vietnam peace
talks, and tight moneyhave been responsible for the decline. Stock
brokers last week saw their brokers' loan rate upped to 8% per
cent, and the nation's banks raised their prime rate of interest to this
figure for a record high, on Monday.
- Eldon Grimm, senior vice president and analyst for Walston and
Co., said the Federal Reserve Board "has put a real crunch on the
money and credit supply." Grimm said that about half the reason
for the market going down is scare selling, a practice in which
investors sell when they see the market going down.
THE INTERNATIONAL Longshoreman's Association pledg-
ed yesterday to join the union striking two Charleston, S. C., hos-
pitals in an effort to force the state government to grant the
workers the right to collective' bargaining.
It was agreed that ILA representatives would go to Charleston
next week to =inify efforts to force South Carolina to recognize cor-
lective bargaining by hospital and Charleston Port Authority em-
ployes.
ILA spokesmen said action would be determined by the response
of state officials, a stand which could be interpreted as a threat to
strike the port of Charleston.
State officials have maintained they cannot bargain with the
union since hospital workers' salaries are set in advance by annual
legislative appropriations.

-

HEW to build pollution lab here

, rillia ."
Positively
A NEW CLASSIC
who's that
KNOCKING
at my door
introducing HARVEY KEITEL
staring ZINA BETHUNE
asTHE NICE GIRL, BUTa.
Joseph BrennerAssociates Release
CAMPUS

The University area h as at-
tracted what will be the world's
largest and most up-to-date
laboratory for pollution control
research, development and cer-
tification.
The Department of Health,
Education and Welfare is cur-
rently seeking a firm to build
and lease to the government the
facility on an Ann Arbor site.
Estimated cost of the project
has been set at approximately
$6 million.
The site requested by HEW
is in the research park n e a r
North Campus, in the vicinity of

the Conductron Corp. facility
on Plymouth Rd.
Federal specifications call for
building the laboratory on a 12
to 15 acre site bound by U.S. 23
on the north and east, Plymouth
Rd. on the' south, and Pontiac
Rd. on the west. The site is to
have a minimum of 600 foot
frontage.
S. T. Gerganoff of Gerganoff
and Associates architectural
firm of Ypsilanti, consulting
architect, says that land has not
yet been purchased for the fa-
cility and a site could be select-
ed in another Ann Arbor area.
HEW chose the Ann Arbor

site because of the availability
of the University's automotive
facilities and the automotive
training classes at Washtenaw
Community College. Another
factor in the decision was prob-
ably the nearness of Detroit.
The proposed building will
contain nearly 100,000 square
feet of laboratory space and 19,-
000 square feet of office, space.
It 'will be built in four phases,
with delivery of 50,900 square
feet of laboratory space requir-
ed on or before Sept. 1, 1970.
'the balance will follow in se-
quence.
The completed building will

house the Division of Motor Ve-
hicle Research and Develop-
ment and the Division of Motor
Vehicle Pollution Control of the
National Pollution Control Ad-
ministration.
HEW was directed by Con-
gress in the 1966 Motor Vehicle
Air Pollution Control Act to test
new motor vehicles or engines
for airpollution and to set
standards.
A temporary facility was then
set up at the Willow Run Air-
port research complex, pending
construction of the permanent
laboratory in Ann Arbor.

-Associated Press
Provisional leaders
Nguyen Huu Tho, left, and Huynh Tan Phat yesterday ,were
named' top men in the Viet Cong's newly-formed provisional
government for South Vietnam, which will take the Viet Cong
place at the peace talks in Paris. Both men are currently the top
officials of the National Liberation Front.
IGNORE CONGRESSMEN:
Capi tolpolice'arrest
V1etnam protesters
WASHINGTON (R - Capitol police arrested a score of
demonstrators but ignored four congressmen reading names
of Vietnam War dead yesterday in what has become a weekly
affair on the Capitol steps.
It was a replay of last Wednesday's antiwar demongtra-
tions when a smaller number of members of a Quaker action
group were arrested on the same charge-unlawful entry-
and three congressmen were not arrested despite their pro.

..

NATIONAL GENERAL CORPRATION
ENDS 7FOX EASTERN KEATRE S
TUESDAY YOXRVILLaGE
375 No.MAPLE RD.-7694300,

Feature Times
Mon.-Fri.
6:00-9:00
Sat.-Sun.
1:30-4:45-8:00

Judge 'de lays
'ease against
Milwaukee14
MILWAUKEE, Wis. (M - U.S. District Judge Myron Gor-
don yesterday dismissed federal charges -aginst 10 members
of the "Milwaukee 14" on trial in connection with the burning
of draft records.
Gordon saidhe was dismissing the counts because'"of the
effect of adverse publicity on the prospective jurors."
Acting U.S. Attorney Robert Lerner asked for and receiv-
ed permission that the federal detainer and bond for the 10
be continued pending a possible appeal.
He said he would "strongly recommend" to the solicitor
general that Gordon's decis-0
ion be appealed. d s Ad
Two other defendants hi a d
pleaded guilty Tuesday to the Ait(iii
charge of interfering with t h e
draft, and Gordon had dismissed "
the additional counts of conspir-
Service records against them. He
ordered a pre-sentence investiga- 1..
tion. f;le t -
The Vietnam war protesters, ) ce ri
many of them clergymen, we r e
alleged to have seized and burned CHICAGO (P)o - Three po
draft records in a downtown park licemen accused of beating a
lastSet24
They did not deny that act but newspaper reporter d u r i n g
based their defense on moral street violence at the Demo-
grounds. cratic National Convention in
Gordon said he was impressed Au
with the large number 'of pros- gust were acquitted yester-
pective jurors. 142 were questioned day by a U.S. District Court
who knew of the recent state trial jury.
of 12 defendants on charges of The policemen were chged
burglary, arson and theft, and of with depriving John O. Linstead
the sentencing of 11 of them to of the Chicago Daily News of his
two years in prison. . constitutional rights.
The judge expressed the opinion
that "this must clearly be adverse The six men and six woame n
to giving the defendants a fair spent seven hours in the jury room
trial." before returning their verdicts.
On the first day of the federal Judge Joseph Sam Perry said he
trial, Monday, the defendants act- agreed with the findings bit add-
ing without attorneys had refused ed he waconvinced thatthe po-
Gordon's offer of a change of ven- licemen used excessive force. He
ue or an adjournment, said he f e 1 t the charge should
. Michael D. Cullen, 26, Milwau- have been assault and battery and
kee, the other member of the Mil- been tried in state courts.
waukee 14, is to receive aseparate "I think the element of willful-
trial later on the same charges. ness was missing in the c a s e,"'
And John Hagedorn, 21, Milwau- Judge Perry said. "T h e govern-
kee, a 15th man who led newsmen ment knew that provocation was
to the scene of the, record burning there and that takes away the ele-
and was charged only with con- ment of willfulness."
spiracy, previously, obtained a Linstead, 28, admitted he shout-
change of venue.Led , 28,baditted heot-
Judge Gordon, commenting on ed an obscenity atrnSgt.n Ge
the three defendants who pleaded JDrich, 3, and Patrolmen Vincent
guilty, said "theoretically, that'sJ B D'Amico, 23, and Edward -.
the gamble these defendants took." Becht, 28. 'Judge Perry said LAn-
He added their alternative was to stead's language was'y"v 1 e, de
"seek other relief, applying court grading and guttery."
action." The judge told the jury that
Although dismissing the basic the three policemen could still
charges in the trial, Judge Gor- be tried on assault charges in the
don held six of the defendants in state courts but Thomas A.. Foran,
contempt of court for failing to U.S. attorney for the Northern
rise when he entered the court- District of fIllinois, disagreed. He
room. said the charges would involve the
Gordon sentenced each to 15 same facts and would ,constitute
days in federal custody to be serv- double jeopardy.
ed after the completion of their The government brought in nine
state terms. witnesses during the three-week

, * .

.

i

NEVER SO TIMELVI1 NEVER SO OREATI1
SEE IT DURING THE 25TH
ANNIVERSARY YEAR OF DOAY
DARR. c. ZANUC/S$
THE
DAY WITH rIYTERNATE/OAIA STARSt
Basd ee UBook by COMEL/U RYAN R.I..d by A", Ce tawylox
STARTS WEDNESDAY *

SUPREME COURT JUSTICE WILLIAM BRENNAN, JR.
has cancelled all speeches, sold his stock and given up his interest
in a real estate venture, histoffice reported yesterday.
The justice made a personal decision to give up all activities
which do not pertain to his court duties. The action was taken in
the last few weeks.
Documents on record showed Brennan owned 1.4, per cent
interest as a limned partner in Concord Village, a garden apartment
complex in Arlington, Va. His share was estimated to be worth.
$15,000.4
* * * *
PROTESTS AGAINST NELSON A. ROCKEFELLER mounted
yesterday in Brazil, Argentina and Uruguay, key stops ahead of
the New York governor's Latin American tour.
In Rio de Janeiro youths stormed the U.S. Information Agency's
public library and distributed leaflet's denouncing Rockefeller, who is
due in Brazil June 16.
About 100 students halted traffic on a main street in the city
as speakers urged massive demonstrations when Rockefeller arrives.
In Uruguay, the nation's largest labor union, the 400,000-member
National Conventional Workers, warned "strikes and demonstrations
will be held at all factories" if Rockefeller does not cancel his
scheduled visit next week.

I

COMING! C)
CONTINUOUS PERFORMANCES ,hE. ct TUTo:i
..REGULAR PRICES 2o0o .CR.TU . FOX

r

u.r.r.

.....

Program Information
662-6264

U

AIR
CONDITIONED

*IProtest #New!l
jb~~ i aA'

Shows at:
1 :00-3:00
5:00 - 7:00
9:05,

tests that they should be.
The protest was delayed t e n
minutes while the representatives
read statements into a battery of
microphones. Then the reading of
names' went on for a half hour be-
fore the arrests were started.
"Down in front, congressmen"
Quaker leader Larry Scott, who
was not on the steps, shouted at
one point.
The congressmen quickly sat
down.
They were Reps. George E.
Brown Jr. of California, Edward
I. Koch of New York, Abner J.
MikVa-of Illinois and Andrew Jac-
obs Jr. of Indiana, all Demo-
crats. Brown and Koch had taken
part in last week's demonstration.
The protesters and the crowd of
some 100 people they attracted
covered about one half of the
steps, slowing the flow of tourists
moving to and from the doors to
the rotunda.
Read and Use
Daily Classifieds

Rock will
roll. again
"Gray skies are going to clear;
up-Put on a happy smile," claim'
the sponsors of Sunday afternoon
rock concerts.
Last Sunday they were wrong
and the event, scheduled for Gal-j
lup Park, was cancelled. But this'
week the concert will go on, bar-
ring any unforseen precipitations
The location is again Gallup Park,
the first right turn off Geddes af-
ter Huron River Drive.
Skip Taube, member of Trans
Love Energies who organizes the
concerts, says the schedule for the
next three concerts has been
changed from last week's an-
nouncement.
The June 22 event will be held
on Fuller Road just below Huron
Towers, and on June 29 the con-
cert will move back to West Park.!

U

,;. ยข

r

I ,
Enjoy Yourself - Join
the Daily Staff Today!

BACH CLUB
Presents
JOSHUA BERRETT
Speaking on
"BACH-WHAT'S
IN A NAME?"
Thurs., June 12, 8 P.M.
Giuld House-802 Monroe
Homebaked goodies, lellydonuts,
and FUN afterwards.
Everyone welcome! For further
information, call761-8291,
665-6806, 769-1605.

trial. Seven were eye-witnesses to
the incident but only two iden-
tified any of the defendants as the
policemen involved with Linstead.
Linstead said he could not iden-
tify any of the defendants as the
policemen who he said clubbed
him Aug. 27 near the intersection
of LaSalle and Eugenie streets on
the Near North Side.
The defense called only one wit-
ness, a Chicago police official who
testified about the crowds of dem-
onstrators and the thrown objects
in the area of the beating.
The prosecution witnesses tes-
tified that there were no objects
thrown at police when Linstead
was struck.
Foran said the government
would continue its cases against
fie other policemen, one former
employee of the National Broad-
casting Co., and 'eight demonstra-
tion leaders who also were in-
dicated by a federal grand jury for
their actions during the August
convention.

1

"A New York version of4
'The Graduate'! Irre-
sistable !"

11

i

I

I

00"1-,UMNW--V-q WIM)ARIMN&6r-a-lm".Mm-m-mmm-&-O*O.o

*_

. ..... . ....

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