Page 6-Thursday, November 30, 1978-The Michigan Daily Expert predicts space $50,000 OFFER MAY HAVE SPARKED KILLING: colony By MARION HALBE The end product may no Trek," but humans could space colony within 100 ye ding to John Shettler, a pa the 1977 Summer Study Manufacturing Facilities Ames Research Center. Shettler, who spoke Development of Space Cit Space Industrialization," in Tuesday night, said satell between the earth and thex in next century -RG provide a home for up to 10,000 people-' at be "Star Shettler's presentation was spon- Sinhabit a sored by the local L-5 society, an inter- nars, acor- national organization working actively rticipant in to make space colonies a reality. ronpancen THE SPEAKER showed slides and on Space movies of possible uses for the Solar at NASA's Power Satellites (SPS), which would on "The run on solar power, as well as supply Jes through the earth with electricity. Shettler also ithe Union noted that people living on the SPS lites placed could grow enough food on the vehicle moon could to support themselves. Committee questions Ray motive I - I - 0 'The large space colonies are the end produc't . .. but the planning and in- terest is needed for get- ting to that end result. A plan is needed and we don 't hare a plan.' --John Shettler, Sumtinter Study on Space participan t Shettler said the SPS "is the only (space) product that would make a return on its investment. The SPS collects solar energy and microwavesit to a collecting antenna on the earth. Then the energy is converted to elec- tricity." Shettler estimated one SPS could supply the entire state of California with electricity. According to Shettler, the technology is present to construct the first SPS by the 1990's, though he pointed out, "The large space colonies are the end product, realistically, by 1050, but the planning and interest is needed for get- ting to that end result. A plan is needed and we don't have a plan." WASHINGTON (AP) - The House Assassinations Committee said yester- day an alleged $50,000 offer made by two St. Louis businessmen could have provided the motive for James Earl Ray to assassinate Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. The committee said that its two-year investigation has been unable to establish a direct link between those who made the offer and Ray, but "it did determine that they met the necessary criteria for being considered par- ticipants in a serious conspiracy . . ." BEFORE releasing a staff report on its investigation, the committee heard Russell George Byers of St. Louis reluc- tantly describe how he rejected a $50,000 offer to either kill the civil rights leader himself or arrange for someone else to do it. Byers' testimony was disputed by Murray Randall, a St. Louis criminal court judge, who said he believed the story of the offer was "fabricated and purposely planted." Before he became a judge, Randall was Byers' lawyer. He said he believes Byers planted the story with a criminal associate to find out if the man was an FBI informant. BYERS SAID that in late 1967 or early 1968 he was approached by John Kauffman, a friend and business associate, who asked if he was in- terested in making $50,000. When he expressed interest, Byers testified, Kauffman took him to the home of a St. Louis patent attorney named John Sutherland. "I asked him (Sutherland), 'What do I have to do to earn the $50,000'," said Byers, at the time a used car parts dealer under federal indictment for auto theft. "HE SAID either arrange or kill Mar- tin Luther King," Byers testified. "They were dead serious." Byers said Sutherland told him the money was to come from a "secret Southern organization." "I told them I didn't think I'd be in- terested," said Byers, who at the time did not know who King was. BYERS, WHO testified under a grant of immunity from prosecution, was surrounded by four husky U.S. mar- shals throughout his appearance. He testified that he never again spoke to either Kauffman or Sutherland about the proposed murder contract, had no further connection with any plan to kill King, and does not know if someone else was persuaded to take the offer. When the civil rights leader was slain in Memphis, Tenn., on April 4, 1968, Byers said, "It struck me it was an awfully funny thing that I get the offer and the man winds up dead." ASKED WHY he thought Sutherland and Kauffman singled hin) out for the offer, Byers said his brother-in-law, John Paul Spica, had been convicted of carrying out the contract murder of a St. Louis real estate man and was ser- ving a life sentence. Both Kauffman and Sutherland, who are now dead, supported the 1968 American Independent Party presiden- tial campaign of George Wallace, ac- cording to the committee's report. In the staff report, the committee said it had developed "four theories of possible connectives" between Sutherland, Kauffman and Ray, who is currently serving a 99-year prison term for the King assassination. Although he pleaded guilty to the murder in 1969, he has since recanted a confession made then and says he was drawn into the assassination conspiracy by a mysterious figure named Raoul. THE COMMITTEE investigation found that Ray and Spica, Byers" brother-in-law, knew one another when both were inmates in the same cell block of the Missouri State Prison and worked in the hospital there. Byers ins sisted he never told Spica about the $50,000 offer. A second possible link involves Dr; Hugh Maxey, now 80, retired as the physician in the Missouri State Pison Maxey arranged for prison parolees to take jobs with Kauffman and also knew Ray as a patient. Maxey said he was unaware of money offers to kill King circulating at the prison. A third connection involves Robert Regazzi, an associate of Spica, whose former wife, Naomi, worked as a bar; tender in a St. Louis bar operated by James Earl Ray's brother, John. Alj denied to committee investigators that they played any part in relaying any money offer for King's death. The fourth possible link runs through Sutherland's and Kauffman's activities in the Wallace campaign, an interest shared by John Ray, whose bar, the Grapevine Tavern, was a gathering place for American Independent Party. campaign workers. j4 4 l Drafting Tables and Boards Parallels Drafting Machines Technical Pens Luxo Lamps MORE THAN A BOOKSTORE 549 E. University Soviets present $26.4 billion defense budget University of Michigan Gilbert & Sullivan Society Presents November 29, 30 December 1,2 1978 Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre For ticket information call 994-0221 AfterrNov. 25 763-1085 MOSCOW (AP)-The Soviet Union announced yesterday a 1979 defense budget of 17.2 billion rubles-about $26.4 billion-which it said was necessary to counter "aggressive im- perialist circles" attempting to achieve military superiority. The disclosure by Finance Minister Vasily F. Garbuzov at the opening win- ter session of the Soviet parliament makes it the third straight year that reported Soviet defense spending remains unchanged. BUT WESTERN experts estimate that the Kremlin's real military budget is probably five times the reported amount, most of it said to be hidden elsewhere in the budget, which for 1979' will total 268.8 billion rubles, or $413.9 billion. Garbuzov told the Supreme Soviet legislators and ruling Politburo mem- bers that the Soviet Union was "con- sistently working for peace and inter- national cooperation," as well as making numerous disarmament proposals particularly at the United Nations in New York. "However, aggressive imperialist circles are resisting the relaxation of international tensions, whipping up the arms race and trying to achieve military superiority," the minister declared. THE 1979 DEFENSE budget of. ficially will account for only 7 per cent of total Soviet spending in 1979. But U.S. officials usually put the Kremlin's defense expenditures at more than $100 billion. Among other things, Western experts contend, the Soviet Union maintains one of the world's largest standing ar- mies, most powerful nuclear arsenals as well as array of conventional weapons. Just two weeks ago, President Leonid I. Brezhnev disclosed to a visiting delegation of U.S. senators that the Soviet Union has tested a neutron bomb but never started production of the warhead-a costly venture even as an experiment. ON THE OTHER hand, a Soviet soldier's pay can be as low as $7 a mon- th, while the United States pay substan- tially more. The Ameican defense budget for fiscal year 1978 was $110.0 billion, or about 24 per cent of all government ex- penditures. The Soviet press is constantly ac- cusing President Carter of pledging during his presidential campaign to cut U.S. defense spending substantially and not following through on his pre- election promise. ALSO AT yesterday's Supreme Soviet meeting, the country's newest full Politburo member made his ap- pearance in a conspicious front row seat. Konstantin U. Chernenko, 67, joined Breshnev, Premier Alexei N. Kosygin, top Kremlin ideologist Mikhail A. Suslov and central committee secretary Andrei P. Kirilenko at the front of the palatial Kremlin meeting hall. Chernenko was promoted to full membership in the Politburo Monday, and Kremlinologists here have tipped the Brezhnev protege as a possible suc- cessor to the 71-year-old presidentwho was seen limping from the car to the Kremlin hall yesterday. ON OTHER matters, state planning chairman Nikolai K. Baibakov announ-. ced that the Soviet Union took a "big stride forward" in its 1978 economic production, recording a five per cent industrial growth rate which has higher than the 4.5 per cent targeted. Buoyed by the good economic news, Kremlin leaders called for an am- bitious 1979 program to increase in- dustrial production by 5.7i per cent and agricultural by 5.8 per cent over 1978 figures. In 1979, the Soviet Union plans to en- sure a "stable, balanced growth,"%of heavy industry, targeting an increase of 5.8 per cent. Light industry, or con- sumer goods, will increase by 5.4 per cent. Baibakov, however, noted that there were still several "unresolved problems" dragging down the nation's productivity: bottlenecks in certain sectors, low quality of goods, bad management, poor utilization of materials, low labor productivity. In other areas, Baibakov said the country will increase its electrical power production by 4.8 per cent. A 2 church to get oriental minister- AT YOUR SERVICE. . Billing 764-0550 Circulation 764-0558 Classifieds 764-0557 Display 764-0554 News 764-0552 (including happenings) Sports 764-0562 'U' Cellar refuses to recognize IWW local (Continued from Page 1) 150 years old, is located at 502 E. Huron Street. Morikawa is also excited about having a ministry near a college cam- pus. He says the University's primary purpose is no different from the pur- pose of the church and synagogue, to fulfill a moral and social accountability to God and society. "I FEEL more at home in a univer- sity community than in any other place," the minister said. "What ap- peals to me most is the persistent pur- suit of newness, pursuing the unrealized and unconquered mysteries of the universe." Since about 50 per. cent of his congregation is associated with the University in some way, he feels that "how U-M fulfills its moral and social responsibilities should be of primary concern to all.of us." The 66-year-old pastor, who runs four miles a day, will also supervise the church's student programs, which are among the nation's oldest. "I amvery much looking forward to being involved with these students," he said. "There is a definite growing tendency among young people to turn to religion to find the answers of the issues of life." "Even the most tragic, abhoritive prostitution of religion found in the tragedy of Guyana is a pathological ex- pression that there is in the human spirit a longing to believe in an ultimate authority," he added. Morikawa said that the different religious and social groups in the area should "work very closely together", respecting each- others' beliefs. "Coexistence is very necessary - no one can claim to be the possessor of the ultimate knowledge. We simply must learn from each other." b +an (Continued from Page 1) But no, I don't think there'll be much of a delay," Bradley said. Bradley is the spokesman for the board which consists of six Michigan Student Assembly-appointees, three Senate Advisory Committee on Faculty Affairs-appointed faculty members, and one administration representative, appointed by President Robben Fleming. Bradley added that: "We though we'd give the employees a little time to think about what they're doing." MEANWHILE, MOST of the Cellar employees who are IWW members, signed membership cards as far back as September, according to Bjorklund. She said the union would "like to in- crease control of our working con- ditions. There's been lots of hassles over keeping the same number of em- ployees and employee hours. Management has also been trying to force us to have department managers," Bjorklund said. Bjorklund also said employees are dissatisfied with the Cellar's present wage and raise structure. "They've (Board of Directors) informed us we will not get merit raises in January," said Bjorklund. However, Bjorklund stressed that the Cellar is still a sound operation. "The Cellar is in excellent working condition, especially compared with all the other Ann Arbor book stores. We just want to keep it that way," she said. IWW organizer Eric Glatz said Cellar employees are not planning any strike action at this time. The IWW has been a union since 1905 and reached a high membership total in the 1920s with over a million membes. "Now there's only about 3000 members in the few remaining branches. Our branch of 50, members is the largest local in the United States," Bjorklund said. PIRGIM wants $5 fine on ballot (Continued from Page 1) Ann Arbor City Council last week reviewed a proposal by Earl Greene (D-Second Ward) to assess a five dollar fine for the consumption of alcohol by those between 18 and 21.' The motion was tabled but Mayor Louis Belcher said that Council will probably pass a similar resolution "by the end of December." Moran said PIRGIM "can't wait to see what they (City Council) are going to do. The main problem right now is Qf zI U getting the signatures." The drive leader also said that despite the Republican majority on Council, "one reason they might pass it is because being on the ballot, it would bring out a heavy, student turnout," which would probably mean more sup- port for the Democrats. The proposed referendum bears much resemblance to the city ballot proposal which several years ago made marijudna smoking a misdemeanor punishable by a five dollar fine. Thursday: Drink & Drown Rock Bottom Prices Friday & Saturday: No Cover Before 9:00 With Current College ID HAPPY HOUR Until 9:00 _.. By William Shakespeare