.,foge 6-Saturday, October 28, 1978-The Michigan Daily 0 S.N.: N. Korea has tunnel under DMZ PANMUNJOM, Korea (AP) - The N. command accused North Korea yesterday of drilling a tunnel under the demilitarized zone separating North ,and South Korea that could accom- fnodate a march by three or four columns of fully armed combat troops. The North Koreans responded that 'he tunnel was dug by South Korea. ;They said a tunnel is of little use in modern warfare and that no sensible 'commander would think of digging one. THE ACCUSATIONS came during a four-hour meeting of the Korean Military Armistice Commission in this truce village. American Rear Adm. Warren Hamm :9r. proposed a joint investigation,4) saying, "Let us go right now to the tun- bel site which is within the DMZ. I have Vehicles standing by. You and the rest pf the world can see the truth of what I have said. It is not a fabrication." Maj. Gen. Han ju-kyong, Pyongyang's chief delegate, refused. Han said the U.N. charge was designed o smear North Korea and cover up an American and South Korean arms buildup despite the Carter ad- nistration's pledge to pull out American troops. r SOUTH KOREA and the United 1Mates have agreed to a phased with- rawal of the 36,000 U.S. ground troops South Korea by 1982. < Hamm said the existence of the tun- nel was confirmed Oct. 17 after an in- tercept tunnel dug by the U.N. com- mand, broke through into the secret tunnel, ending a three-year search. He said it is the third tunnel found since 1974 and was located about a mile from the Panmunjom camp the United Nations uses for Armistice Commission talks with the communists. The six-foot-wide, six-foot-high tunnel was drilled through solid granite 73 yards below the surface and extended at least 435 yards across the military demarcation line, the U.N. commander said. HAMM SAID the command had suspected the existence of the tunnel since September 1974 when North Korean defector Kim Pu-song reported he had worked on a tunnel in that area. The admiral backed up his statemen- ts with charts, photographs and videotapes showing how the latest tun- nel was found, what the interior and ad- jacent terrain looked like and with testimony of the North Korean defec- tor. One American officer, a geologist who worked on the search, said it is safe to assume the North Koreans are building more tunnels in the zone. He said rumblings have been heard coming from underground at several locations. HALLOWEEN COSTUME PARTY S a t TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31 at 9 p.m. ADMISSION FREE if in Costume Prizes for Best Costumes- Judging atI Ipm A fall facade Daily Photo by CYRENA CHANG Countless shadows of leaves and branches transform an ordinary brick wall into marble. Is it a trick? No, just a touch of autumn magic. DISOBEYED KELLEY'S ORDERS: FBI officials destroyed files 611 CHURCH, NEAR S. University 995-5955 ROMAN POLANSKI: THE TENANT 1976 . Features some of the most chilling images ever to hit the screen. Poa nski's most recent film in which he plays a timid file clerk who takes the apartment of a woman who jumped to her death from it, and slowly becomes convinced that his neighbors are driving him to become the dead girl. SUN: Roman Polanski's CUL DE SAC TONIGHT AT ANGELL HALL, AUD. A CINEMA 7&9:15 $1.50 LOGO CONTESTI Design logo for Cinemo i (to be used on our film schedules & posters) & WIN free admission for two at all our winter films. DEADLINE Nov. 7th. Send entries (as m y atyo n want) to LOGO CONTEST Cinema N, c/o 909 t Church St., Apt. No. 2, Ann Arbor, MI. 48104. * SATURDAY, OCTOBER 28 The Ann Arbor Film Cooperati8vpresents at MLB 3 z ATTACK OF THE CRAB MONSTERS (Roger Corman, 1957) 7 only-MLB 3 Roger Corman plumbed the depths of our primal fears to produce this science fiction thriller. After all, we have all dreoded an attack of the crabs Great acting aboundsith masterp eee including the giant :$ a twenty-foot crab with a French accent. With RICHARD GARLAND and PAMELA DUNCAN ' THE CARS THAT EAT PEOPLE (Peter Weis, 1974) 8:40 only-MLB 3 , Air bogs are no protection against THESE babies! Port science fiction, port block comedy, this macabre film has been compared with NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD "Alarming and sardonic, raw but not unsophisticated, 4a genuine exploitation of one of those changelessly pastoral settings as a breeding ground for nightmares." e -SIGHT AND SOUND. ANN ARBOR PREMIERE. NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD (George Romero, 1968) 10:20 only-MLB 3 A group of people trapped in a form house are surrounded by radioactive ghouls who hove come out of their graves, murdering, mutilating, and eating human flesh row. More frightening than THE BIRDS, more shock- ing than than HOUSE OF PSYCHOTIC WOMEN, more grotesque than FREAKS, more menacing than INVASION OF THE BODY SNATCHERS, this movie is as horrifying a nightmare vision as one could hope to see on film. Kill the brain and you kill the ghoul," Monday: John Ford's MY DARLING CLEMENTINE and RIO GRANDE AMEN APPEL ARP BAFKE TOMORROW# CALDE CHAGASUNDAY CHAGA CECNOCTOBER 29 th DUPRE DA LI Win Schuler's Marriott FEAFLN3600 Plymouth Rd. GOY GAITIS Ann Arbor, Mich. HUR JANSEN LIL LALANDE Ballroom 14AX MI RO MANE ' MOT NE IMAN I . RE ROCKWELL UBIN 0 RENOI RO RAUCH SHAHNF -* SC SARIANiO ROTH S TORM VASARELY U VICKERS WALKER OILS..... GRAPHICS..Antiq ILS CHAMPAGNE., EXHIBITION 1:00PM. AUCTION 2:30 PM. FRAArqcIN aFRF I WASHINGTON (UPI) - One or more FBI officials apparently disobeyed or- ders from former director Clarence Kelley and destroyed files that detailed illegal FBI break-ins in the early 1970s, court documents disclosed yesterday. Defense lawyers, revedalinglhey had been advised more than 47 FBI files on the surveillance were missing, said they would ask a federal judge to dismiss conspiracy charges against former FBI Director L. Patrick Gray and two of his top lieutenants. THOMAS KENNELLY, defense at- torney for former FBI intelligence chief Edward Miller, filed a dismissal motion before Chief U.S. District Judge William Bryant, arguing the missing files might have contained evidence clearing Miller. Kennelly also asked Bryant to schedule a hearing at which Justice Department officials could explain the destruction of evidence in the case. Attorneys for Gray and Mark Felt, the bureau's former No. 3 man, said they either would join in Kennelly's ac- tion or file their own motions. GRAY, FELT and Miller are accused of authorizing warrantless break-ins, wiretaps, mail-openings and other sur- veillance - known as "black bag" operations - in an effort by the bureau's "Squad 47" in New York to trace the whereabouts of fugitives suspected of terrorist bombings. Francis Martin, a Justice Depar- tment trial lawyer in the case, said, "Obviously, we don't feel that what happened should cause dismissal of the case." In a letter made public yesterday, Martin advised defense lawyers that prosecutors already had reviewed the documents and removed those they needed in the case before any files were destroyed. MARTIN'S LETTER also disclosed that the Justice Department considered taking action against an FBI section chief, who retired recently, because he bucked "specific instructions" from Kelley and a top Justice Department of- ficial in destroying the files in 1976. Justice Department officials said no prosecution of the retired official, Robert Shackleford, is contemplated. It is illegal to knowingly destroy evidence, in a criminal case. The development created a new snag for prosecutors preparing for the scheduled Jan. 22 trial of the three for- mer FBI officials, charged with con- spiring to violate the civil rights of relatives and friends of the radical Weatherman group. The disclosure also raised questions about the Justice Department's inter- nal investigation of more than 60 agents who participated in the illegal sur- veillance. Martin, in an interview, confirmed the 47 files had been destroyed before decisions were made on whom to seek indictments against in the "black bag" case - meaning Justice Department investigators may not have had all reports on the break-ins available when deciding which FBI agents to prosecute. His letter also said other files may have been destroyed "in the normal course of business." Attorney General Griffin Bell elected not to prosecute any lower-level FBI employees, but still is considering whether to take disciplinary action againstm ore than 50 agents. Ray lawyer says FBI killed King WASHINGTON (AP)-Mark Lane, lawyer for James Earl Ray, gave Houseinvestigators yesterday what was described as information that for- mer and off-duty FBI agents assassinated Dr. Martin Luther King. Lane refused to disclose publicly whatever evidence he might have. He said he would if the House panel did not. DELEGATE WALTER Fauntroy of the District of Columbia, chairman of the House assassinations subcommittee investigating King's murder, said he was disappointed. "My conclusion is that there was no new evidence," Faun- troy said. The Rev. Ralph David Abernathy ac- companied Lane to a meeting with Fauntroy and Rep. Louis Stokes (D- Ohio), chairman of the House assassinations committee. Afterward, Abernathy said: "The in- formationx that Mr. Lane revealed is that it was former FBI agents and off- duty FBI agents who took the life of,Dr. King." ABERNATHY, WHOi s King's suc- cessor as head of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, said Lane contends the evidence shows that Ray is innocent. But, said Abernathy, "that is not my position." "My position," Abernathy said, "is that there was a conspiracy which may have involved James Earl Ray but cer- tainly there were other persons in- volved in the conspiracy." Ray pleaded guilty to killing King and is serving a 99-year prison sentence, although after his trial Ray almost im- meditely recanted his guilty plea. King was assassinated in Memphis April 4, 1968. Lane and Abernathy were accom- panied to the two-hour meeting by comedian Dick Gregory and the Rev. James Lawson. Fauntroy told reporters his in- vestigators are pursuing one lead provided by Lane. He refused to describe the lead, but said he does not thinkany of it is new. Fauntroy said he was disappointed because "I was led to believe that there would be names given us of persons who were alleged to be involved in the assassination." He said names were mentioned but none was a possible con- spirator. The District of Columbia delegate to the House said the committee will make public evidence on all 21 conspiracy allegations the committee has been in- vestigating, but refused to say if they contain any substance. Health conference planned A conference on "Planning Health Career Programs in the Community College" will be held Nov. 3-4 at the University. The sessions are designed to provide community college faculty and staff members with practical information on how to initiate, plan, and evaluate health careers programs. To be held in Towsley Center for Con- tinuing Medical Education, the meeting will feature presentations by authorities in nujrsing, hospital ad- ministration, medicine and health professions, and education. Special emphasis will be given to the role of government, the accreditation process, financing, faculty, and student recruitment, and related topics, The conference is designed to enable the participants to establish a plan for beginning health careers programs in their own institutions as well as im- proving their existing skills. The conference is being presented by Washtenaw Community College of Ann Arbor and the University's Medical School and Community College Keynote speaker is Dr. David Hoover, deputy director of the Division of Associated Health Professions in U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare. He will discuss "Allied Health Education: The Federal Per- spective" at 7 p.m. Nov. 3 at Win Schuler's-Mariott Inn. "THE GREATEST MAGIC SHOW IN A QUARTER OF A CENTURY"-L.A TIMES SUNDAY OCTOBER 29 2n m & 7nm