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October 13, 1971 - Image 8

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Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1971-10-13

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Page Eight

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Wednesday, October 13, 1971

Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Newton murder trial
delayed battorney's
charge of biased judge
OAKLAND, Calif. (2 - Black Panther cofounder Huey
Newton's third trial in the 1967 death of a policeman was de-
layed yesterday when the defense moved to disqualify the
judge on grounds of prejudice.,
Alameda County Superior Court Judge Lyle Cook had
been prepared to preside at Newton's trial on a voluntary
manslaughter charge when the challenge was made.
A hearing was scheduled tomorrow on the charge by
Newton's attorney, Charles Garry, that Cook has been in-
timidated by a citizen's group and therefore could not give
Newton a fair trial.

Byrd likely nominee

Low cost co-ops flourish

Workshop on Defoliation

(Continued from Page 1)
An hour later, Nixon made the
news conference comment that
Byrd is "definitely on the list" he
is considering.
There was no solid White House
indication as to the identities of
the two women. But speculation
so far has centered on Rep. Mar-
tha Griffiths, (D - Mich.); U. S.
District Judge Cornelia Kennedy
of Detroit; Superior Court Judge

Su mmit set
(Continued from Page 1)
war and, of course, most important
of all-and I think this is the
item that, for both us and for
them, led us to conclude that now
was the time for a summit meet-
ing-we have had an agreement
on Berlin."
Nixon was referring to the treaty
signed last month by the United
States, Soviet Union, Great Britain
and France outlining responsibili-
ties' and rights concerning Berlin
and the two Germanys.
The President said it "is quite
premature" to go into specifics of
the upcoming Moscow talks.
When asked why late May was
chosen when he had said earlier
the China visit should come earlier
to avoid U.S. domestic political
involvement, Nixon replied:
"We have this just as close to
May 1 as we possibly could. This
was the best date that the Soviet
Union and we could agree up-
on .".
As to the issues, the President
said a major agreement on SALT
"may be behind us at that point."
"If it is not achieved," he stated,
"certainly that would be one of
the subjects that would come up."
CORRECTION
A person pictured in yes-
terday's Daily was mistakenly
identified as Charles McCrack-
en, president of Local 1583 of
the American Federation of
State, County and Municipal
Employes (AFSCME). T h e
person was actually Harry
Barnett, first vice president
of the local.
The Daily regrets the error.

Presiding Judge Richard Kron-
inger denied Garry's original mo-
tion to disqualify all 25 Alameda
County jurists and bring in an
outside judge.
The defense motion said the
group called Citizens for Law andI
Order, advocates the replace-
ment of "unduly lenient or per-
missive .judges" who fail to "im-
pose the harshest penalties on
those convicted of crime."
The president of CLO, Earl
Huntting, said in response "we
categorically deny that we are
intimidating judges. We feel
honored that Mr. Garry has felt
our influence in the community."
Regents meet
to morrow
(Continued from Page 1)
secretary of the University, this
proposal has recently been the
subject of continuing meetings be-
tween state officials and Univer-
sity administrators.
Kennedy said last night that the
Regents do not plan to discuss a,
recent proposal drafted by the
faculty's Senate Assembly which
calls for an end to most classified
research projects on the University
campus pending its final approval
by the faculty governing body.
The subject has been scheduled
for the Regents November meet-
ing along with an open hearing be-
fore on the topic. The open hear-
ing's purpose will be to allow mem-
bers of the University community
to view their opinions of the pro-
posal.
The Regents will meet in open
sessioon at 11 a.m. Friday in the
Regents' room of the Administra-
tion Bldg.

Top labor
leaders meet
(Continued from Page 1)
Nixon reportedly will a s k
Meany, Fitzsimmons, Woodcock,
President I. W. Abel of the United
Steelworkers and President Floyd
Smith of the International As-
sociation of Machinists to serve
as labor members of the board.
Meany said that for personal
reasons he may not serve, but
that the AFL-CIO would have an
alternate member in that case.
Fitzsimmons and Woodcock said
they would serve on the board if
asked.
"We are telling the President
we are going to serve on this
board and try to make it work,"
Meany tolds a news conference.
But he said when the labor
members will be in a minority on
board decisions affecting wages,"
"It will not bind our unions" who
may decide on their own to strike
or go to court against board de-
cisions.
The three labor chieftains said
also they will insist the board per-
mit wage increases already ne-
gotiated to go into effect and
retroactive pay for the estimated
billions of dollars in pay hikes
held up during the 90 day wage
price freeze that expires Nov. 13.

Sylvia Bacon of the District (f
Columbia; and Rita Hauser, U.S.
representative to the United Na-
tions' Human Rights Commission.
Several times in past years Byrd
has voted against confirmation of
court nominees he regarded as too
ultra-liberal. He also took the jus-
tices to task for what he termed
too lenient a position on crime.
In two recent speeches, Byrd as-
sailed the Supreme Court for its
school busing pronouncements and
what he termed soft pedalling of
lawbreakers.
"What is most likely to be
achieved bysbusing and forced in-
tegration is increasing mediocrity
in education," he told a national
convention of the conservative
Young Americans for Freedom,
meeting in Houston, Tex., on Sept.
3.
"A leveling process will have
been set in motion which can have
the effect of stifling incentive for
the bright and gifted student while
discouraging the less well pre-
pared student and the slow learn-
er."
Byrd said the claim that forced
busing and integration will teach
the races to live together is false.
"Judging from the many racial
incidents of fighting, knifing, and
shooting t h a t are increasingly
occurring in the nation's high
schools, there is cause to question
the efficacy of such forced race
mixing as a way to achieve racial
peace and understanding," the
senator said.
Byrd noted that the 1954 Su-
preme Court decision which out-
lawed school segregation was based
on the premise that school assign-
ment on the basis of race is un-
constitutional. Yet, he said, busing
is in itself assigning students to
schools on a racial basis.

(Continued from Page 1)
hazing and initiation rites the
year-round.
Still, most past and present ICC
members seem to look fondly at
cooperative living. Most say the
people in co-ops, and the life-
style in general, is not much dif-
ferent, from what one would be
likely to find in dormitories, fra-
ternities and apartments.
"It's like living in a dorm, only
they keep you fed," a fifth year
engineering student living in a
North Campus Co-op house says.
"Compared to the fraternity I
was in, it's very much the same,
except the frat had no girls," he
adds.
ICC members do not pay rent.
Since they are shareholders in the
ICC, a corporation, they pay
"dues" for the houses' expenses
for food and upkeep.
The ICC has grown in spurts
with a large expansion in the past
few years due to the acquisition
of defunct fraternity and sorority
houses and the construction df the
North Campus Co-op, which houses
over 200 students.
As dormitory and apartment
rates have swollen, more and more
students have turned to the ICC
as a cheaper alternative.
In addition, the communal at-
mosphere of the cooperative house,
run democratically and with an
open admission policy, is apparent-
ly more attractive to today's Uni-
versity student than to those of
earlier years.
Most members contacted say
they chose ICC living for practical
reasons of "convenience, congen-
iality, and cheapness," rather than
any ideological commitment to
communal living.
The co-op isa "nice, friendly"
place to live and a good place to
meet people, a sophomore living
in Lenny Bruce Co-op on Wash-
tenaw, says. "Whatever people do
in Ann Arbor, they do here. This
place isn't any different," she
adds.
Co-ops have long been proud of,
their open house stance on "cash-
ers" and visitors but in the last
few years, their casual policies
have cost some houses dearly.
Telephone calls to Australia by
one crasher put $1,100 on the Len-
ny Bruce bill and the stereo set
also disappeared. Virtually all the
l.
Jl"!
B $150,

houses have been hit by a rash of
purse disappearances and minor
room thefts.
As a result most houses now
keep back doors locked all day
and members find themselves be-
ing suspicious of strangers.
With the arrival at the Univer-
sity of more low income students,
ICC planners have hoped to supply
increased low cost housing op-
portunities in Ann Arbor. To some
extent they have succeeded.
However, when an ICC request
for a $750,000 loan from the De-
partment of Housing and Urban
Development was rejected recent-
ly, plans to buy up to seven addi-
tional houses had to be temporar-.
ily abandoned.
The ICC has rented one house
this Fall, allowing the opening of
a new co-op serving 60 members.
REGISTRAR CLASSES
Deputy Registrar classes will be
held from 2 to 4 p.m. and 7:30 to
9:30 p.m. today and from 7:30 to
9:30 p.m. Friday in City Council
chambers, second floor, City Hall.
Students wanting to become reg-
istrars must be registered voters
and must attend one of the ses-
sions.
The new registrars will be used
in th~e two-week campus voter
registration drive which will be-
gin next Monday.

4

Wed., 2 P.M.-Ecology
417 Detroit St.
for info. 761-3186

VOTER REGISTRATION
DRIVE
NEXT WEEK
Need. Deputy Registrars
Sign Up at SGC Office
3X Michigan Union 3rd Floor

Ai

A

Center

Ai

SHOP MONDAY, TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY and SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. to 5:30 P.M.
THURSDAY and FRIDAY 9:30 A.M. UNTIL 9:00 P.M.

Moratorium activities slated
(Continued from Page 1)
Lobby, Student Wing, SAB.
3:30-5 p.m.
PUBLIC ATTITUDES TOWARD THE WAR, 2451 Mason.
IMPACT OF THE WAR ON U.S. CITIES, Lounge B, Old Univ.
Club, 1st floor, Union. VIETNAM, INTERNAL DEVELOP-
MENTS AND INTERNATIONAL SCENE,, 3529 SAB. EVICT
NIXON - PHASE TWO, 3545 SAB. RACIST AMERICA AND
WAR AGAINST PEOPLES OF THIRD WORLD, Program Con-
ference Room, 3rd floor, Union. PEACE -. WHAT WOMEN
CAN DO, YM-YWCA. TRAINING IN NON-VIOLENT ACTION,
3524 SAB.
I ,

Jacob OTC
Miss Js best
rainy-day companion
is a lined cotton
canvas coat treated
to shed water like a
duck's back. .
contemporary version
of the trencP coat,
topstitched for contrast.
Navy, natural, grape,

DAILY OFFICIAL
BULLETIN
The Daily Official Bulletin is an
official publication of the Univer-
sity of Michigan. Notices should be
sent in TYPEWRITTEN FORM to
409 E. Jefferson, before 2 p.m. of
the day preceding publication and
by 2 p.m.' Friday for Saturday and
Sunday. Items appear once only.
Student organization notices are
not accepted for publication. For
more information, phone 764-9270.
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 15
Physics Discussion: W. Zakrzewski,
"A General Formulation of Inclusive
Sum Rules," Lounge, Randall Lab, 11
gym.
Moratorium Day Teach-In: Work-t
shops from 2-5 pm.; schedule posted in
Mich. Daily and Univ. Record.
°LSA Coffee Hour: Today's guests,
Student Counciling Ofc. people and
Course Mart Committee, 2549 LSA Bldg.,
3-4:30 pm.
Speech Dept. Performance : Student
Lab Theatre, "The Room," and "The
Flies," Arena Theatre, Frieze, Bldg.,
4:10 pm.,
Physics Colloquium: F. Henyey,I
"Mass of the Photon," P&A Colloq.
Um, 4 pmn.
Tonight ONLY (
Toi h N Yfrom 7 to 9,
a showing of high
QUALITY
TURKISH
COATS
Embroidered and
in various colors.
Men's and women's sizes
The prices are the best
in the Midwest.
For further info telling
where you can see these "
beautiful coats call
764-3627 or 763-6392
For the student body:
Genuine
" Authentic
' Navy
PEA COATS

Law School Question & Answer
Meeting: For prospective law school
students with Theodore St. Antoine,
Dean, 2402 Mason Hall, 7:30 pm.
Museum of Paleontology: D. Savage,
"Cenozoic Mammal Geochronology and
Rediometric Dating in North America,"
Rackham Amph., 8 pm.
Moratorium Day: Anti-War Convoca-
tion, Hill Aud., 8 pm.
Dance Program of Dept. of Phys.
Educ.: "A Panel on Dance and Move-
ment Therapy," moderator, Elizabeth
Bergmann, Aud. D, Angell Hall, 8:30
Pm.
The ALLEY
This FRI.-SAT.-SUN.
ALBERT KING
2 Shows Fri.-Sat. 7:30-10:00
1 Show Sun.-8:30
$2.50 ALL SHOWS
Adv. Tic.-SALVATION RECORDS
Coming Oct. 22, 23, 24
JIMMY REED

Lighthouse
Fanny,

Kansas City

Jammers

Rushfield
Saturday, October 16
8-12 p.m.
HILL AUDITORIUM
Ann Arbor, Michigan
$2, $3, $4
Tickets Available at Michigan Union
Presented by Enact and the Ecology Center

brown. 7-15 sizes. $26.

lopic Kec. Artist
trom England
LOU
KILLEN

4%06J~og?

1 ' .

I

ATTENTION:

SENIORS
CLASS OF 72

concertina

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".unusually
subtle and
sensitive .. .
grand, and
vigorous .. ."/
-Robert Shelton
N.Y. Times
THURS.-

Miss J steps lively in

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$1.00

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