Page 2-Friday, January 5, 1979-The Michigan Daily KENNEDY TAPE TERMED WRONG cel-lar (sell or)*, n. 1. a roor or set of rooms, wholly or part lyunderground and usu neh a buildi 9~ n r rl rnn Two-gunmen theory questioned NEW YORK (Reuter)-Acoustics experts may have been using the wrong tape recording when they revived the theory that two gunmen shot at President John Kennedy the day he was assassinated in Dallas, CBS News said yesterday. The acoustics experts told the House Assassination Com- mittee last week that an analysis of the recording they believe came from the motorcylcle radio of officer H.B. Mc- Clain established that shots were fired at President Kennedy from two different directions. IT WAS ON the basis of this evidence that the committee said it believed there had probably been a conspiracy in Ken- nedy's murder. But McClain, interviewed on CBS, said he does not think the recording came from his motorcycle which was part of the escort for the presidential motorcade through Dallas ,on November 22, 1963, because he could not hear a siren. "It wasn't mine," McClain, now retired, said after hearing the tape for the first time. "If it had been stuck (open) then there would have been a siren on it all the way t the hospital." . "1 JL%. 1 V'4V. 'I e wine o s it io n t celo tW dle as ce] iar h~e. ;ruc # , Y : In the interim . . 0 'I I 3. in sport lowest po teams, es omet it i go o 0004I4~yh (Continued from Page 1) Police said they believe the theft was executed by three persons, possibly helped by inside information. "They knew exactly what they were doing and what they were after," one investigator said. Repub heads county board Richard Walterhouse (R-Ann Arbor) was elected chairman of the Washtenaw County Board of Com- missioners Wednesday night in another power tussle between members of the Democratic-dominated board. Walterhouse was elected by a unanimous vote of the 14 com- missioners. Catherine McClary (D-Ann Arbor). McClary and her sole suppor- ter, Commissioner Meri Lou Murray (D-Ann Arbor), conceded their votes to Walterhouse. LATER IN the board meeting, Com-. missioner Willis Israel (D-Ypsilanti), was elected vice chairman over Mc- Clary by a 10 to 4 vote. McClary 'expressed disappointment over the election results, and said that deals had been struck between some Democratic and Republican board members. In exchange for Walterhouse's Democratic support, ac- cording to McClary, Republican Com- missioners rewarded Democrats with key county board seats, including vice chair of the Board of Commissioners. The Board of Commissioners has had a history of rifts splitting the Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti Democrats. Wednesday's board election, however, is one of the few times members of a majority party have aided a minority party member to gain the board chair. Fleming, Jenkins speak On the afternoon of Sunday, Dec. 17, both University President Robben Fleming and Roy Jenkins, president of the. Commission of the European Com- munities, gave general overviews of the state of their organizations. Fleming, in his last commencement address (reprinted on today's editorial page), gave his assessment of the goals of administrators of American univer- sities in the form of five fundamental principles. The University should be: a "free market-place for ideas"; a "humanizing influence"; an institution in which fair, open decisions are made; an organization in which mediocrity is avoided by setting priorities; and, finally, a non-discriminatory employer and educator. Jenkins spoke of the common in- terests between the U.S. and the European community. "The European image of America no longer vacillates between supercilidbs disdain and frustrating envy," sgid Jenkins, "and the more equal the par- tnership between the United States and the uniting states of Europe, the bettier" for both, and the longer it will endure..' A new bank in town. Ann Arbor residents will have their choice of banks expanded sometine mid-year when the new Michigan National Bank-Ann Arbor opens. Tl'e bank, which will be headquartered at an undetermined location downtown, Is being established by the Michigan National Corporation, a parent cort-, pany of many similarly named banks across Michigan. The charter for the bank was ap- proved November 24 by the United States Comptroller of the Currency 4f- ter a lengthy period of objections by local bankers, according to Michigan National spokeswoman Diane Norton.. LOCAL BANKERS say the area is already competitive and does not need another bank. "I think it's one of the most competitive banking areas in the state," said Ann Arbor Bank and Trust president Bruce Denner. Norton said plans for Michigan National branch offices in the area ate not yet complete. City pathway opens A new pathway connectingcentral campus and Gallup Park has been completed by the city of Ann Arbor. The Reuben and Dina Kahn walkway,; named after the internationally famous scientist and his wife, now gives central campus students easy and safe access to the Gallup Park-Huron River area. The city plans to keep the pathway clear of snow this winter. Student joggers can now run down th 4,556-foot pathway through the park t Huron High School and then travel w along an eight-foot-wide asphalt pat that ends at the corner of Fuller Roa and Glacier. Access to Central Campus from this point is by city sidewalks. 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