Page 2-Sunday, December 3, 1978-The Michigan Daily W A- A A AL AL &, A db "WIP, qmr "dw "Mr "MP dkpvwqmr 4w -4 - - ba} *x Detrot Pres Clulind Woingtne fmajoraistic And 1 M.ilwaukee * hns the .av the obby blUe-ribbon 6-pack 1, *f SSubscribe to. 1 t 81 8 C4 *.Cl 7405 *r_- a; YYYY Y~b[YY"cttjt YYYY YYYI XXp'p k# King con (Continued from Page 1) he saw Ray at the service station since has been identified as having been miles away from the station himself. * Concluded the FBI's investigation of King's assassination was flawed by not making "a concerned effort to check the possibility of a Ray family conspiracy in the assassination." * Arthur Murtaugh, a former agent, said the idea that anyone beyond Ray was involved "was pooh-poohed from the very beginning. . . . The bureau decided 24 hours after King was killed it was not a conspiracy." " Concluded there is no sustance to speculation the FBI was directly or in- directly involved in King's murder, even though the FBI-admits harassing the civil rights leader. The supposed $50,000 bounty con- sp tracy theorized spiracy in King's assassination rests on the testimony of one man, Russell George Byers, who describes himself as a St. Louis antiques dealer. Byers testified that in late 1966 or early 1967, a now-dead St. Louis patent attorny named John Sutherland offered him $50,000 to "kill or arrange the mur- der of Martin Luther King." Sutherland wore a Confederate-style hat and made the offer in a house decorated with Confederate flags,, Byers swore, and said the money would be raised "by a secret Southern: organization." Byers said he rejected the offer and heard no more about it. TE HE COMMITTEE'S chief in- vestigator, Edward Evans said an exhaustive search was "unable to show; any direct link" between Ray and the supposed $50,000 offer. Vietnamese refugee boat capsizes :: ?$ ; r, . Y (Continued from Page 1) of the monsoon season. The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees says up to 40 per cent of the 75,000 boat people thought to have fled Vietnam since the 1975 communist takeover may have perished at sea. Since November, up to 500 boat refugees a day have been arriving in Malaysia. Most are ethnic Chinese, who dominated Vietnam's merchant class before 1975. There are reports that the Vietnamese consider them un- desirables and are letting them buy their way out of the country, a charge Vietnam denies. IN THAILAND, the English-language Bangkok World said yesterday that 330 ethnic Chinese refugees from Vietnam had arrived off the southern Thai coast, having survived for days without food and other supplies. They reportedly told officials Viet- names authorities gave them food and fuel and towed their boat into inter- national waters. TH E MIC111G A ai, Volumie IXXXiX .No. 72 Sunday, 1Decemb er.,, 1978 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 76i4-0:62. Second class postage is paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Published daily Tuesday throug) 'inda ymorning during the Univecrsity year at 4120) Mayxniard Street, Ann Airbor. Michigan 48109. Subscr iptionria~tes: $12 Sptmbertihrough Apr ii 2 semesters):$13pbymail. outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesda y t hrough Saturday morning. Subscription rates: $650 in Ann Arbor: $7,00 by mailoutside Ann Arbor. Hpme Affairs Minister Ghazali said the United States should take the lead in solving the problem of what to do with the refugees "since the problem started with the U.S.," a reference to the In dochina War. He said the American territory of Guam in the West Pacific could serve as a center for processing refugees. More than half of the 16,000 Viet- namese refugees who have left Malaysia for other countries have gone to the United States. Malaysia says it does not want the Vietnamese as permanent residents because they would not fit in with the country's Moslem Malay majority. Daily Off .' l Bulletin SUNDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1978 iDailv Calendar: Kelsey Museum: Merrianne Timko, "Guardians of the Nile: Sculpture from Karanis in the Fayounli 1250 B.C-A.D. 4501", Kelsey. 2 p.m. MOND)AY, IDECEMBER 4. 19)78 Dailv Calendar: Health Behavior/Health Education: Karen Roth; "Values: You and Your Client iA WORKSHOP FOI Health and education students, professionalsi Vaughan Lounge. 1 p.m.A Applied Mech/Eng. Sci.: Y. Y. Yung, Oakland-U1 "The Role of Optical Methods in Experimental Mechanics," 214 W. Eng., 4 p.m. Physics/Astronomy: D. Meyer, "Ultraviolet 'Photoionization Cerenkov Counters." 2038 Randall Lab., 4p.m. From the new CLOSE TOq )PE Contomporarv Linger:ie Catalog In the French tradition. The Madeline. This delightful camisole and tap pant ensemble by Formfit Rogers is just one of the many se- lections in the exciting new Close To Me catalog. Red with black lace trim in softly sensual nylon tricot. CAMISOLE - Sies 32.34.36 $14. TAP PANT - Sizes 5.6.7 S9. add $1.75 postage. Mi. residents add 411& sales tax. Visa. Mastercharge ac- cepted. No C.O.D. 's. Send for our free catalog of elegant contemporary lingerie. CLOSE TO (IPE Dept. AA, P.O. Box 155 Holt, Michigan 48842 The Ann Arbor Premiere of Agnes Varda's 1977 ONE SINGS, THE OTHER DOESN'T With feminine insight and feminist ardor but without heavy handed political statements, Varda has made a very warm movie about women and human relationships, following the friendship of two women over a period of 14 years. Lovely music is sung throughout this lovely film. VALERIE MAIRESSE and THERESE LIOTARD star in French. TUES: SAMURAI SPY (free at 7'& 9:05) WED: CITIZEN KANE (free at 7 & 9:05) THURS: Rossellini's OPEN CITY Ic YYYY. .Y' CINEMA GUILD. TONIGHT AT 7:00,9:0& OLD ARCH AUD $1M jdrkh. Ad A ARP-d§0kAWk-Amb AWk v V V V V aiV VT TV TT TT" .V VTTVTT r V V r- UN I N 1W N I, N N 1W 1W 1W U N N N 1W N 1W N N N N 1W N 1W N I I N N N I I I I N N I Tis the Season to be Cold, Calculating.... an d SHARP' EL-5806 * Statistical calculations with statistical mode [STATI, number of samples/ /Zx [nEXI, mean /Ex2 lXEX2l. standard deviation [SuJ, enter data/correct data [DATA CD] keys. " Automatic power-off function. " Trigonometric, inverse trigonometric, logarithmic, and hyperbolic functions. * Degree/minute/second and Polar Rectangular Conversion. 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