-HALLOWEEN
at the
Stage Door Restaurant
TUESDAY, OCT0BER31
* Happy hour begins at 6:00 p.m.
Lasts all night-25C OFF ALL DRINKS
*Prizes for best costumes
Stage Door Restaurant
ACROSS FROM HILL AUDITORIUM
Page 8-Friday, October 27, 1978-The Michigan Daily
BUREAU NAMED IN LA W SUIT:
FBI discredited slain activist
DETROIT (UPI)-Newly-released
FBI documents show that the bureau
attempted to discredit Detroit civil
rights activist Violo Liuzzo to prevent
her death from becoming a symbol of
the civil rights struggle in the 1960s.
According to the documents,
published in part yesterday by the
Detroit News, the FBI also tried to in-
fluence the White House against Liuzzo,
who was shot on March 25, 1965 while
driving civil rights marchers between
Selma and Montgomery, Ala.
THE DOCUMENTS show that the
late FBI director J. Edgar Hoover
maligned Liuzzo in memos to the White
House.
The records, part of 1,800 pages of
federal investigative reports into the
slaying, were released by the FBI at the
request of the Liuzzo family.
Family members have filed a $2
million civil claim charging that the
FBI failed to prevent Liuzzo's death.
SOME DOCUMENTS in the case
were withheld by FBI director William
Webster, who said they would interfere
with the pending murder trial of Gary
Thomas Rowe, an FBI informant who
said he was in a car with three other
men who opened fire on the civil rights
worker.
Three men originally were convicted
on federal charges of violating Liuzzo 's
civil rights. However, an Alabama
prosecutor reopened the case last mon-
th and Rowe was indicted for first
degree murder.
The documents showed that the FBI
tried to impugn Liuzzo's integrity by
flasely claiming she was a drug user.
Other documents pertained to Liuz-
zo's treatment by a pyschiatrist, an(
her earlier arrest for refusing to sent
her children to Detroit schools t
protest a state law allowing students t
drop out at age 16.
The records showed that hours aft
the killing, Hoover wrote a memo t
President Lyndon Johnson, apparentl
trying to persuade him not to make
public issue of the case.
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FREE PARKING ADMISSION $3.00
The independent Audio Specialists of Michigan
PRESENTS...
Carter sued over interim FEC appointmenl
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Common
Cause sued President Carter yesterday
in an effort to prevent his interim ap-
pointment of a friend of House Speaker
Thomas O'Neill to the Federal Election
ComMission.
Common Cause, the consumer's lob-
by, called the appointment of Boston
lawyer John McGarry "a political
payoff" and accused Carter of "playing
the shabbiest politics."
MC GARRY WAS sworn in Wed-
A1AP AteLLAAAI
nesday to replace FEC Commissioner
Neil Staebler, an out-of-favor Democrat
whose term expired April 30, 1977.
Staebler, a former Michigan
congressman, has been serving until a
replacement was appointed and con-
firmed.
McGarry showed up at yesterday's
FEC meeting and took his seat while
Staebler remained in his FEC office.
When MCGarry's appointment was an-
nounced Wednesday, Staebler had
refused to vacate his seat.
Carter named McGarry to the post 18
months ago, but the Senate twice failed
to act on his confirmation before ad-
journment.
WEDNESDAY Carter made a
''recess appointment" that does not
require Senate confirmation and allows
McGarry to serve until the next
Congress adjourns without being con-
firmed.
Common Cause and Staebler filed
suit in the U.S. District Court in
Washington against Carter, the FEC,
Secretary of State Cyrus Vance and
McGarry, seeking an injunction against
McGarry's appointment on grounds it
is unconstitutional.
Staebler and Common Cause contend
there is no vacancy because the law set-
ting up the FEC requires Senate con-
firmation of new members.
MC GARRY, A protege of O'Neill and
longtime adviser to House Democrats
on election reform legislation, drew fire
during Senate hearings for:
* His 15-year association with the
same people whose campaign financing
he would sit in judgment on.
" His failure to reveal $70,000 ii
proceeds from the dissolution of his law
firm on disclosure forms required ol
House employees.
* His questionable income tax deduc-
tions for a variety of business dealings
and his -deduction of $26,000 in com-
muting expenses between Boston and
Capitol Hill.
"The fact that the President is
making an interim appointment when
no vacancy occurs gives a lot of
credence to the fact that the President
is, on this issue, making a political
payoff to the Speaker," charged Com
mon Cause President David Cohen.
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Stfe NORTHLAND INN
Friday, October 27 - 5 to 10 p.m.
The first passenger railroad in the
United States, the Baltimore & Ohio,
was begun on July 4, 1828, and the first
14 miles were opened to horse-drawn
railcar traffic on May 24, 1830.
i
Saturday, October 28 - 11 a.m.to 10 p.m.
Sunday, October 29 - 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
SEE WHAT's
NEW
Manufacturers from coast-to-coast
will be exhibiting the very latest
and finest home oudio bquipment
ASK THE EXPERTS
How to get the best our of your
present equipment or how to plan
a new system.
SPECIAL
DEMONSTRATIONS
AND SEMINARS
Technical experts w be giving
product demonstrations and offer-
ing special "how-to" seminars.
0
WIN DOOR PRIZES
Register fot the FREE DRAWINGS for
audio components, including a
complete stereo system (you do
nor have to be present to WIN)
THE GREAT MICHIGAN
STEREO SHOW
Is your opportunity to see, hear,
and learn about the very latest and
finest in home audio equipment.
CLASSES NOW
FORMING FOR
DEC. 2nd LSAT
CALL or WRITE
University L.S.A.T. Preparation Service
1-261-LSAT in Livonia
33900 Schoolcraft Rd.
Suite G-2
Livonia, Michigan 48150
Israel to
(Continued from Page 1)
relinquish its 50 West Bank settlements
in exchange for full peace. He also was
reported to have said Washington still
considers East Jerusalem, which Israel
has annexed, to be "occupied
territory.,
Saunders' visit, said one Israeli of-
ficial who asked not to be identified,
was "ill-timed. The United States
should have known better."
expand set
Though the Camp David accords
provide for a freeze on the building of
new Jewish settlements - the duration*
of the freeze is in dispute - they do not
prevent Israel from expanding existing
outposts in occupied lands. But some
diplomatic observers were surprised
the Israelis would go ahead with an ex-
pansion program in the middle of the
negotiations with Egypt.
THE ISRAELI official said
Washington is "completely insensitive
The Ann Arbor Film Coo ersOfv presents at MLB 3
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27
AMERICAN GRAFFITI
(George Lucas, 1973) 7 & 9-MLB 3
In the lost gasp of the Fabulous Fifties, four friends raise various hell on the eve of high-school graduation.
Drag-races (for pink slips!), hilariously stupid pranks, attempts to score underage teen thrills and booze,
that big night at the prom, and the search for the legendary recluse DJ Wolfman Jock'(when he WAS legend-
ary and reclusive). All to the beat of rack 'n' roll's elite--Chuck Berry. Danny and the Jrs., Bill Haley, Dion,
etc.. etc. A beautifully observed and constructed movie, one of the 70's best. Stars RICHARD DREYFUSS, RON
HOWARD, CINDY WILLIAMS, CANDY CLARK, WOLFMAN JACK.
Tomorrow: ATTACK OF THE CRAB MONSTERS, THE CARS THAT EAT PEOPLE,
and NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD
tiements
to Begin's political problems, althou
it is very sensitive to Arab problems.'
Begin, in another obvious barb at tl
Carter administration, propose
moving his and Dayan's offices fro
West Jerusalem to a new site in Ara
East Jerusalem to demonstrate Israel
intention to hold onto the entire cit
Such a move is not planned in
mediately, however.
The Israeli newspaper Maariv rep
ted Begin also was considering i
posing restrictions on U.S. diplom
visiting Israel who want to meet w'
Palestinians in the occupied territorie
THE ISRAELI media reported t
settlement-strengthening progra
would allocate $16.3 million for movin
hundreds of families into existing se.
tlements and for building new roa
and water lines.
The settlements issue has been a
irritant to U.S.-Israeli relations fo
several years. The official America.
position is that the settlements ar
illegal, since international la
prohibits settlements on occupie
territory.
At Camp David, Carter and Begi
reached an oral agreement on a freez
on new settlements on the West Ban
But after the meeting, the two leader
disagreed about how long the ban woul
last.
BEGIN SAID he had promised t
freeze new settlements only for a fe
months, while Egypt and Isra
negotiated their peace treaty.
Carter said the freeze was to remai
in effect while the West Ban'
negotiations called for in the accord
were taking place. This interpretatio
would effectively make the freeze las
for five years, the transition periol
called for in the accords.
Begin and Carter never settled thei
dispute and never exchanged the letter
that were supposed to define thei
agreement.
AFTER REVIEWING the draf
treaty earlier this week, Sadat aske
his negotiators in Washington to see
some changes, which chief negotiat
Lt. Gen. Kamal Hassan Ali, the defens
minister, called "clarifications an
technical points."
Egypt, inan effort to make th
negotiations more palatable to othe
Arab states, has sought some fir
commitment from Israel to mak
progress toward a final peacef
solution to the political future of th
Palestinian-populated West Bank an
Gaza Strip. The Egyptians are expe
ted to interpret the settlement expan
sion as a sign of Israeli bad faith in thi
regard.
The Israeli Cabinet is also seekin
changes in the draft treaty. These hav
not been spelled out publicly, bu
Dayan, departing Israel for Wshingto
yesterday, commented, "The sam
things the government of Israel doe
not desire, the government of Egypt i
trying to strengthen, and vice versa."
THE FOREIGN minister also sai
the new mandate from the Israel
Cabinet means "some points we
managed to find a compromise on will
have to be renegotiated."
In another development, Presidents
Hafez Assad of Syria and Ahmed
Hassan al-Bakr of Iraq signed a "char-
ter for joint national action" in Bagh-
dad In nnnne the Vmn (', vfn.
/
Mediatrics presents:
PLAY IT AGAIN SAM
(Herbert Ross, 1972). WOODY ALLEN plays a fanatical movie buff with a recurring halucination of his
idol. HUMPHREY BOGART, offering him advice on how to handle dames. This occurs after his wife
leaves him for "insufficient laughter." He then turns to his married friends, and, of course, Bogart, for
help in establishing "meaningful" relationships with women. The final scene is a terrific take-off on
CASABLANCA'S classic ending complete with roaring plane propellers, heavy fog and Bogart-type
trenchcoats. With DIANE KEATON.
Fri. & Sat., Oct. 27 & 28 Not. Sci. Aud. 7 & 10:30
CASABLANCA
(Michael Curtiz, 1942). A tough HUMPHREY BOGART defies the Nazis and rekindles an old flame,
Ingrid Bergman. Taut, exciting and romantic ... a real classic. CASABLANCA won three major Academy
Awards. De-da-de-da-de-da. . .
FRI. & SAT., OCT. 27 & 28
Nat. Sci. Aud. 8:30 only admission $1.50, $2.50 double feature
'SUNDAY OCTOBER 29
2p~m. & 7pom..
POWER CENTER
TICKETS FROM $6.00-$10.00
CHILDREN IAGE 12 AND UNDER) 1/2 PRICE!!
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FIFTH FORUM
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FRI--7:30 &9:30
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"'Carnal Knowledge' is brilliant.
A feast of a film!"
-Judith Crist, N. Y. Magazine
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