100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

February 09, 1971 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1971-02-09

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

If you think you are being followed home from this
movie, keep telling yourself that it's all in your mind.

i!

piage tin ree

94C

SfrigMn

aaitu

NEWS PHONE: 764-055?
BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554

Tuesday, February 9, 1971 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three

Six

defendants

news briefs
By The Associated Press
JOHN CONNALLY, former governor of Texas, won swift
Senate approval yesterday as the new Secretary of the Treasury.
Connally, who succeeds David B. Kennedy to the Treasury post,
is the first Democrat to be appointed to Nixon's cabinet.
Despite the disclosure that Connally had received $750,000 in
executor's fees from the estate of a Texas oilman, his nomination
was never seriously contested.
CONSOLIDATED EDISON CO. continued its investigation
yesterday into Sunday evening's unexpected East Side power
failure.
This latest failure, lasting about four hours, directly affected an
estimated half a million city dwellers.
Although considered a minicrisis compared to the November,
1965 colossal power failure, the blackout came ironically on the eve
of New York State's "Electricity Week."
NATIONAL GUARDSMEN remained on duty for the second
consecutive day in racially tense Wilmington, N.C., where two
persons were killed and three others wounded by gunfire since
Saturday.
Working with local police, the guardsmen searched a black
church for what they described as "weapons of destruction and death."
Police Chief H. E. Williamson said the officers found evidence that
shots had been fired from the building.
Williamson announced that a county wide curfew was again
in effect last night.. .
HOBART COLLEGE, charged with criminal coercion for
alleged failure to control students during June disturbances, was
found innocent yesterday.
The verdict was returned by a State Supreme Court jury.
Hobart, a men's college in Geneva, N.Y., was accused of failing
to take steps that would permit law enforcement personnel to follow
through on the arrests of five students during a campus drug raid
last June 5.
** *

pldead innocent in
Berrigan ease
By The Associated Press
The Rev. Philip Berrigan, imprisoned antiwar priest, and
five other persons yesterday pleaded innocent before a U.S.
District Court in Harrisburg to charges of conspiring to kid-
nap presidential adviser Henry Kissinger and blow up heating
tunnels in the nation's capital.
Also yesterday, the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in
Richmond, Va., upheld a six year prison sentence imposed on
Berrigan when he was convicted of pouring blood over draft
records in Baltimore.
Seven other persons, including Berrigan's brother, the
Rev. Daniel Berrigan, were -
named as coconspirators in
that case but were not charg-
edplaiS.

"A swinging detective story.
Mystery crackles!" -w
STARTS
TOMOR ROW
FT1P AVENUE AT LIDUATY
DOWNTOWN ANN ARBOR
INFORMATION 761-9700

SIDWY GtAZn, PNIESENTS
The ,
TeBird
~ WithThe
prystal
*Plumage
Definitely U~ The Hitchcock Tradition.

ENDS
TODAY

"AMERICAN WILDERNESS"

4:30-7-9

r

-Associated Press
SISTER ELIZABETH McALISTER (right), a Roman Catholic
nun who with five others yesterday pleaded innocent to charges in
an alleged bomb-kidnap plot, arrives at the Federal building in
Harrisburg for arraignment. At left is Sister Jogues Igan, named
as a co-conspirator in another case.
STRICT CONTROLS:
Nixon proposes neu
anti-pollution planN

_

I

r

-Iq

ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL

ALL SHOWS
ALL TIMES
admission only

99c

it

r

1 WY'1A71111 t.f T h k- I P1: UIuri,1 I Ic 111 f 1 i.uiU1 _11 Niv
THE AMERICAN BAR ASSOCIATION (ABA) yesterday Nixon yesterday proposed strong on's stated goal of making market
endorsed secret wiretapping by federal, state and local officials. new enforcement powers for the forces work against pollution.
The ABA was encouraged by a top Nixon administration official, Environmental Protection Agency The chief executive gave no
(EPA) to combat water pollution, over-all cost estimates for h I s
Deputy Atty. Gen. Richard Kleindienst, who said federal agents ocean dumping, excessive noise, comprehensive package.f
were finding wiretapping to be a valuable tool in moving against and the misuse of pesticides and
gamblers and narcotics dealers. other poisons. Nixon's program, outlined in a
One judge, a proponent of restricting the use of taps, said in Enforcement recommendations special presidential message to
response to the action, "We are putting our faith 'in the enforcement were coupled with proposals to tax Congress, would require passage of
officer rather than the Constitution." air polluting sulphur in fuels and about 14 pieces of legislation, said
____ Russell E. Train, chairman of the
President's Council on Environ-
SPLASHDOWN TODAY mental Quality.

v

Berrigan is currently serving a
three and a half year sentence for
burning draft b o a r d records in
Catonsville, Md., and will serve
the six year sentence concurrently.
The other defendants in t h e
- Harrisburg case, all free on bail,
include two priests, a nun, a form-
er priest who is married to an ex-
nun, and a Pakistani graduate
student. Bail was continued.
Tight security prevailed through
t h e Harrisburg federal building.
Federal employes cndu c t e d
searches of the building after two
bomb threats were telephoned to a
switchboard, a Justice Department
spokesman said. However, no one
was evacuated from the c o u r t
building and no bomb was found.
Besides Berrigan, the defen-
dants are Edbal Ahmad, a student
at the University of Chicago's Ad-
lai Stevenson Institute for Inter-
national Affairs; Sister Elizabeth
McAlister, a member of the Re-
ligious Order of the Sacred Heart;
the Revs. Joseph Wenderoth, 35,
and Neil R. McLaughlin, both of
Baltimore, and Anthony Scoblick,,
a former Josephite priest in Bal-
timore.
All six defendants waived read-
ing of the indictment handed
down by a federal grand jury in
Harrisburg last Jan. 12. They
earlier claimed the charges were
fabricated and part of a delib-
erate effort to destroy the peace
movement in America.
U.S. District Court Judge R.
Dixon Herman told their lawyers
he would give them 60 days to file
motions, and that he would set a
trial date later.
There were indications that the'
trial would n o t be held before
summer or early fall.
The Michigan Daily, edited and man-
aged by students at the University of
Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second!
Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich-
igan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor,
Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues-
day through Sunday morning Univer-
sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by
carrier, $10 by mail.
Summer Session published Tuesday
through Saturday morning. Subscrip-
tion rates: $5 by carrier, $5 by mail.

troop cut
0
in Korea
SEOUL (1) - Military spokes-
men say that under a U.S. plan
American troops will be w i t h-
drawn from the demilitarized zone
facing North Korea, and South
Korean troops will guard the 151
mile frontier. This plan is design-
ad to cut American troop strength
in Korea from 62,000 to 42,000 by
July.
"We cannot expect the United
States to station its forces forever
in Korea," said President Chung
Hee Park in announcing the re-
deployment. "We now stand at a
new turning point in our continu-
ing struggle for the attainment
of a self-supporting economy and
self reliant defense."
American troops have been serv-
ing under the United Nations
flag in Korea since -1950 when
North Korean troops crossed the
38th parallel and invaded South
Korea.
Under the plan there will be no
change in the composition of the
guard at the armistice village of
Panmunjom which lies 30 m iile s
north of Seoul inside the DMZ.
It includes the Americans, o t h e r
U.N. troops, North Koreans and
personnel of the Armistice Com-
mission.
The U.S. 2nd Division now
guards 18 miles of the zone along
the 38th Parallel, including t h e
corridor to Panmunjon. A South
Korean spokesman said the 2nd
Division would be placed in re-
serve.
Park said President Nixon had
reaffirmed that the pullout would
not affect the mutual defense
treaty signed in 1954. He said the
United States would "fulfill faith-
fully its obligations" under that
pact.
A spokesman for the State De-
partment said in Washington re-
cently that no decisions had yet
been made for additional with-
drawal of American forces in the
fiscal year beginning July 1.

'Apollo 14 crew holds interview

ONE
WEEK
ONLY COA Cot, A oMM .g a

TONIGHT'S
SHOWS
7& 9

By The Associated Press
The Apollo 14 astronauts, who
spent most of the day packing
away their moon treasure and
tidying up their spacecraft, held
a press conference in space last
night.
The astronauts are preparing
for today's re-entry into the
earth's atmosphere and splash
down at 4:04 p.m. EST in the
South Pacific.
During the televised press con-
ference moon walkers Alan Shep-
ard and Edgar Mitchell described
their battle to reach Cone Crater
rim. Their crewmate Stuart
R o o s a described his hours
aboard the command ship in
lunar orbit.
"I think we got to within per-
haps 100 yards or less to the

rim," Shepard said. Mitchell
said they were 100 to 150 yards
away.
Scientists have said that the
climb tired the two astronauts.
Shepard's heartbeat, for exam-
ple, jumped to as high as 150
beats per minute at one point.
Normal for Shepard is about 84.
"I guess we didn't realize we
had problems of fatigue," Shep-
ard said, "To us it was just a
matter of working against the
clock. I think that we had the
capability to go longer from the
standpoint of fatigue."
Shepard said that even though
he and Mitchell were unable to
climb Cone Crater they were able
to gather rocks from the same
general geologic structure which
is believed to contain rocks 4.6

billion years old or as old as the
moon itself.
Roosa, who remained in lunar
orbit while his crewmates landed
in an ancient mountain range
called Fra Mauro, said he spot-
ted the lunar module after it had
landed.
Roosa said the mission had
been filled with "tremendous
sights" but his first sight of the
moon close up was the most im-
pressive.
Mission Control said that they
are extremely pleased with the
scientific job of the astronauts.
The scientists admitted they
had been optimistic in the tasks
assigned the astronauts and that
in the future the spacemen
should have more freedom to
select their own geological tar-
gets.

482-30F[IGHTED PA RKING

Nixon urged stronger regulatory
authority for the Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) created
last December.
The existing program of federal
state water quality standards
should be extended, Nixon said, to
include all U.S. waters and to
limit discharges of waste.
Building upon the Clean Air Act
of 1970, which requires statement
of air pollution from both mov-
ing and stationary sources, Nixon
proposed once more a tax on lead
additives in gasoline and proposed,
for the first time a charge on the
sulphur contained in bulk fuels.
In a related development yester-
day, Rep. Henry Reuss (D-Wis.)
charged that the new program
directly contradicted President
Nixon's Economic Report, issued
last month.
Reuss asserted that paragraphs
in the Economic Report could
provide an economic justification
for pollution for years to come.
the U of M Physical Therapy
and M Clubs present
C.S. MOTT
CHILDREN'S HOSPITAL
BENEFIT WHEELCHAIR
BASKETBALL GAME
featuring the
! DETROIT SPARKS!
February 13, 1971 j
8:00 P.M.E
CRISLER ARENA $1.00

TICKETS NOW ON SALE!
POPULAR PRICES-$1.50-4.50!

Radical Film Series
MARLENE DIETRICH
in
The Blue Angel
TUES.-Alice's Restaurant, Alice Lloyd Hall
WED.-Newman Center, 331 Thompson
75c 7-9-11 p.m.

Ends Wednesday
Rome.
Before Christ.,r
AfterFellini.
M ALBUM R 1 ADPodckto
FELU I SATYCO'
(English Subtitles)
CCOR by D e*K NAMZorN' [MC United Artists
TODAY DIAL
FROM c0
1 P..8-6416

The University of Michigan
Professional Theatre Program

Presents

March 16-21

.1

the WORLD
PREMIERE of

rset
Presents

.,

® r

--THURSDAY-
"Diary of a Schizophrenic Girl"

Connec*ions
k A provocative
new play
by Dennis J. Reardon
Directed by Arthur Storch
(Noted 8dwyirector OvA and Pussyca t Typist o nd Tiger)
~ Designed by- James Tifton

THE ALVIN AILEY
AMERICAN DANCE THEATRE
Direct from six sold-out weeks in Moscow, Leningrad,
Kiev, Zaporozhe, Donetsk and Boroshilobgrad
Friday, February 12, 8:30
IN HILL AUDITORIUM
Lecture-Demonstration Thursday, February 11. Tickets: $1.00
PROGRAM: TOCCATA (Music: Lalo Shiffrin; and Dizzy Gillespie) ; THE
JOURNEY (Music: Charles Ives); ARCHIPELAGO (Music: Boucourechliev;

Tuesday-Feb. 9
AMERICAN FILM SERIES
POTEMKIN
dir. Sergei M. Eisenstein (1925)
This is a classic; a movie ahead of its time. It is also
just plain good. Eisenstein started a whole new film
method with this tale of revolution, starvation and
the sea.
7 & 9:05 75C Architecture
662-8871 Auditorium

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan