2nd HIT IEU2 WEEK! seconid fronit page futr440Ptgan Daiti NWSES PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0551 Now DIAL 8-6416 Friday, July11, 1969 -NL LET IT SUFFICE TO SAY THAT ILIS A MASTERPIECE." PLo VO " THE MOST INTERESTING FILM SO FAR THIS YEAR::. -VOGUE Ann Arbor, Michigan "IF YOU'RE YOUNG, YOU'LL REALLY DIG -CosOPOLITAN .which side will yu he on? I Page Three Trial set for band leader, Terry W. Tate, 26, leader of the Tate Blues Band of Ann Arbor was bound over to Circuit Court yesterday on an indecent exposure charge. Tate, who police say - took his "American flag" suit off while performing at the June 29 rock concert in West Park, was ordered by Ypsilanti District Court Judge Henry D. Arkison to appear in Circuit Court Aug. 8. Ann Arbor Police Capt. Walter V. Hawkins, called to the stand by Assistant Prosecutor Thomas F. Shea, testified that Tate was wearing a red, white and blue suit with a field of stars on the seat of the pants. Hawkins said the 'suit resembled an American flag. The captain said he saw Tate take offA the trousers of his suit and remove h i s shirt. Hawkins said Tate then began "jumping up and down" in front of t h e au- dience. Della Boice, a witness for the defense, testified that Tate's suit had been sown together the night before the concert and t h a t it "just came apart." Under cross examination from Shea, Miss Boice said Tate threw his clothes and boots into the au- dience. She also testified that oth- er clothing was brought to him and that helput it on. In addition to calling Capt. Hawkins andhDet. Sgt. Norman Olmstead to the stand, Shea in- troduced eight copies of pictures taken at the, concert as evidence against Tate. Judge Arkison ordered Tate's' $5,000 surety bond to be contin- ued. Tate currently is in t h e first year of a five year probation giv- en him in Circuit on a conviction for felonious assault. He was con- victed 1 a st year of firing a .22 caliber pistol into the side of an unmarked Ann Arbor police car.' -Associated Press Walk on the wild side? Astronaut Neil Armstrong will look like this when he takes his first step on the moon July 21. The drawing from Grumman Aerospace Corp. depicts the astronaut just der from the lunar module. Earth is in the background. Council tightens ark restrictions (Continued from Page 1) a 11 o w electronically amplified music). "They do not appreciate having Ann Arbor be opened up and bared to the specter of hard or acid rock." However, Councilman L e r o y Cappeart (D-Fifth Ward) said the "inherent" arguments were all, "verbal garbage." "Tell me, what is inherent in football games that brings 75,000 people to Ann Arbor from outside the city," he asked. "I guarantee that if 500 policemen went to the stadium there would be a mini- mum of 5,000 arrests." "These regulations are reason- able," said Councilman Nicholas Kazarinoff (D-Third Ward). "We do not have the constitutional right to forbid the performance of a major art form in the city parks." Councilman Roy Weber (R- Fourth Ward) claimed that the White Panthers had forfeited the right to sponsor future concerts because of alleged law violations. However Harris countered that the regulations do not preclude grant- ing of permits to White Panthers and that their representative will be in the citizens group. KW IK N KLEEN after he has descended the lad- Mrder wea on (Continued from Page 1) Krasny said yesterday only bullets from the Phillips murder have been found. These matched the bore marks on the submerged gun, but Krasny emphasized po- lice do not have bullets from any other murders recently, contrary to earlier reports crediting police with finding bullets in the murder of Alice Kalom. Prosecutor Delhey explained that the July 25 court date is a brief Circuit Court arraignment, similar to the District court pro- cedure. Delhey speculated the actual trial could possibly be de- layed as long as the first or mid- dle of next year. Delhey based his time estimate partially on the details that must be taken care of before the trial can begin and also on the busy Circuit Court docket. After the arraignment July 25, a pre-trial summary must be set. The summary is held to allow the defense and the prosecution to decide what matters' must be cleared up before the actual trial can begin. Defense Attorney Ralph Keyes said last night, "It is really too early to make a statement about the plans of the defense at this time." Keyes explained the case is "in a limbo" between District and Circuit Courts now, and noQ theI news today by The Associated Press and Co/:e Press Service PRESIDENT NIXON'S voting rights bill was ignored by a House judiciary subcommittee yesterday. Instead the committee overwhelmingly approved a five-year ex- tension of the present law. Nixon's bill would extend the ban on literacy to all states and eliminate state residency requirements for voting in presidential elec- tions. Chairman Emanuel Celler, (D-NY). said he thought the full judiciary Committee will take an equally strong stand for extension of the 1965 Voting Rights Act next week and that the House will ap- prove it. Celler felt that a straight extension of. the 1965 bill would be harder to get through the Senate, but he discounted the possibility of filibuster by the opponents of the act. Nixon's proposal to replace the existing act, which affects only seven southern states, was not offered at the subcommittee meeting. Civil rights leaders feel the bill would weaken black voter protection in the south. UNITED STEEL WORKERS stopped work at the two main plants of the International Nickel Co. of Canada (INCO), Ltd. yesterday, freezing the flow of the world's biggest nickel producer. More than 17,000 workers stayed out at the Sudbury and Port Col- borne Inco plants as bargaining for a new three-year contract and higher wages went on in a Toronto hotel. One announcement from the bargaining chamber said Inco had upped its early wage offer to an 87-cent an hour increase over a three year period. But the union was reported holding out for a $1.50 boost. Although workers refused to call the work stoppage a strike, pick- et lines were set up around the plants. A prolonged work stoppage could paralyze output of steel pro- ducts in Canada, the United States, Japan and Western Europe, of- ficials say. Inco supplies 40 per cent of the world's nickel. * * ANDREI GROMYKO, Soviet Foreign Minister, yesterday made an appeal for "friendly relations" with the United States, and denounced Communist China for its hostility toward Russia and her Communist allies. The foreign policy statement, delivered at a Soviet parliament meeting, underscored the worsening of Soviet-Chinese relations. Gro- myko said "Even our most rabid enemies have never used such unwor- thy methods on such a scale as the Chinese leaders." Gromyko said the Soviet Union favors wide-ranging negotiations with the Nixon administration. Explaining that Nixon's statements for a well-prepared summit meeting have not gone unnoticed in the Soviet Union, Gromyko said "We are developing good relations with the United States and we want these relations to be frientdly." Gromyko denounced the war in Vietnam in milder tones than usual, and explained that the sooner the United States recognizes the need for ending the war and withdrawing all American troops, the better-"the better also for the United States," FRENCH PRESIDENT GEORGES POMPIDOU, in a news conference yesterday, suggested France might ease its embargo on arms shipments to Israel. Informed sources believe this means resumption of weapons de- liveries to Israel should begin within a few months. Pompidou said France might be led to make its embargo more flexible, restoring a pattern where spare parts, some defensive arms and weaponsrwith "a small offensive capacity" could be sold and shipped to Israel. Pompidou, however, did not raise the possibility of a complete end to the embargo, particularly the unblocking of delivery of air- craft. * * PRESIDENT NIXON unveiled a broad health program yes- terday aimed at holding down soaring medical costs while pro- viding effective medical care to all Americans. "We face a massive crisis," the President said. If something ur- gent is not done, there would be a breakdown of medical services in three years, he predicted. His report blamed "crippling inflation in medical costs" onthe previous administration. Main points of the president's plan include the elimination of allowance to hospitals and nursing homes for unidentified costs and new regulations curbing medical fees. There will be an expansion of programs like review of drug utilization, pricing effectiveness and safety. The program, however, contained little that was new or unex- pected. Instead, it appeared to be more of a gathering of programs and policies that Secretary of Welfare Robert Finch or his aides have discussed for weeks.' A BRITISH DRAFT TREATY to outlaw germ warfare was submitted yesterday to the 19-nation disarmament conference. The draft, presented by Minister of State Fred Mulley, calls for a ban on manufacture, use or stockpiling of 'any kind of biological agent. There was, no immediate reaction to the proposal but last week President Nixon indicated the United States is "prepared to examine carefully, together with other delegations, any approaches that offer the prospect of reliable arms control in this field." Nixon's message came after a United Nations report warned that use of biological and chemical weapons could "open the doors to hor- Order Your Daily Now- Phone 764-0558 740 PACKARDa On Hangers Or Packaged. SHIRTS 33c With Dry Cleaning Order I Sell Paraphernalia presents to you SPECIAL OFFER fo $25 ...One Pair of Pants, plus ..One Fitted Tunic Top' *Machine Washable Machine Dryable ... Guaraneed Not To Shrink. In Assorted Colors ..Normally Sold At $42 Complete I I HOURS Mon. thru Fri. 7:30 A.M.-8 P.M. Saturday 7:30 A.M.-6 P.M. Coin Operated Laundry Room Open Mon.-Sun. 7:0 A.M.-11 P.M. PHONE 662-4241 662-4251 POT in Daily - I Classifieds I motions, briefs, or other action can take place until the case is oficially on file in Circuit Court after the July 25 arraignment. .4 U CL h0 S a' PLAYBOY ran ten well-stacked pages on this film! a I "A sort of 'What's New Pussycat?' brought up to today's level! Filmed in the new style...slick cinema...bright wit...satiric barbs!" -Judith Crist. N.Y. Magazine GINIMA LUILD' Friday and Saturday Mutiny on the Bounty dir. FRANK LLOYD (1935) rors beyond man's control." CLARK GABLE CHARLES LAUGHTON I: RATONL ENERC ORPORATION FOX EASTERN THEATRES~c FOXl VLLa5 375 MAPLE RD. "769.130 ENDS TUESDAY TIMES: 2:00-4:30-7:00-9:30 I "See the real Bligh" 7&9 662-8871 75c ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM r- ! I August A OIUTOFA MOM COLUMBIA PICTURES PRESENTS BRUBsOUT 0313 gos ouAni CARL FOREMAN'S x4 MACLENN X ' STATTSUPERWE NAYN C SEREOPHONIC SOUND STARTS WEDNESDAY I Steven Elliott Tri with TOM PECK and DAVID KUPELLAN Electric Jazz TONIGHT AT 6500 1:00 MARK'S io -------011_. "0 U P 0N ----- THOMPSON'S PIZZA 761-0001 $1.00 OFF One a large one item (or more) i pizza. One coupon per pizza. tI Graduation A I'1 l1 j,%3"l C lC H 1f i I 1 i..2L...... i,..i.,.. tw..w .. inn 1134.. D.A. 1 I II I