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April 14, 1971 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1971-04-14

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

n
A

NOMINATED FORE
ACADEMY
AWARSE
BEST PICTURE
BEST DIRECTOR
BEST ACTRESS GP
BEST ACTOR
Thursday is
Academy Award Night
Attend the 7 P.M, show and then
watch Channel 4 at 10 P.M.

page thi
Wednesday, April 14, 1971
news

Sree

Q

*fr~i ia

SAM
:4BvwtjLy

NEWS PHONE: 764-0552
BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554

Ann Arbor, Michigan

Page Three

briefs
By The Associated Press

Stanford

police

1: 4 :

PARAMOUN PICUR PESUMS
Ali Macraw-"Ryan O'Neal
A HOWARD S6MINSKY-ARTHUR HILLER Poducion
John Marley & Ray Milland

' '
' .
.

603 E. Liberty

603 E. Liberty
DIAL 5-6290
Doors Open 12:45
Shows at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9
Free List Suspended

I

....

.

ciI4 i .J;~

9TH
WEEK

I

4mmo

ENDING TONIGHT
SHOWS TODAY AT
1, 3, 5, 7, & 9 P.M.

THE WHITE HOUSE, in the third inflation alert issued this
year, yesterday called a proposed 32 per cent, three-year wage
hike demanded by steelworkers a threat to the industry's world
position and a detriment to the national interest.
Paul McCracken, chief of President Nixon's economic aides, stop-
ped short of directly condemning the steelworkers demands, but re-
minded them of the recent steel price rollback accomplished through
White House "jawboning" - public pressure through the mass media.
I. Abel, president of the United Steel Workers, denied that his
union's demands were inflationary, and refused to rescind them vol-
untarily.
A MILITARY JUDGE ruled yesterday that a grant of im-
munity extended to an officer who testified in the Calley court-
martial did not bar later prosecution on a charge related to the
infantry assault on My Lai.
Attorneys for Army Capt. Eugene Kotouc, who is charged with
slicing off a finger of a suspected Viet Cong during questioning, ar-
qued at a pre-trial hearing that the granted immunity barred all
further legal action in the case.
The judge, Col. Madison Wright, denied the motion, stating that
Kotouc was still liable for events not directly covered by his Calley
trial testimony. Kotouc's trial was set for April 26.
INHALED TARS from marijuana smoke caused widespread'
destruction of skin celsamong 200 test mice, two medical re-
searchers yesterday reported.
Drs. Raymond Magus and Louis Harris, both of the University of
North Carolina Medical School, delivered the results to the annual
convention of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental
Biology.
The findings are only tentative, the two medics stressed, and
could not be used to establish a link between pot smoking and cancer
in human smokers. The two researchers estimated a human subject
would require nearly 40 marijuana cigarettes daily to obtain results
similar to those observed in the mice.
* * *
THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF NEWSPAPER EDITORS
(ASNE) was urged yesterday to demand Congressional action to
protect news sources from arbitrary and vindictive harassment by
local courts.
ASNE's Freedom of Information Committee, in a report sub-
mitted to the group's annual convention, labelled court subpoenas
of reporters tapes, notes, and sources the worst single threat to press
freedom of the year.

raid newspaper
for sit-in photos
STANFORD, Calif. (M - Palo Alto police armed with a
warrant, searched the offices of The Stanford Daily Monday
night seeking photographs that might lead to prosecutions for
last Friday's violent demonstration at Stanford University
Hospital.
Four policemen from Palo Alto and two from the campus
force spent nearly an hour in the student newspaper office
and left empty handed without disarranging anything, a
Daily spokesman said.
Police Chief James Zurcher said he is seeking complaints
c,4- i O nt-nnf tra tn rc - h -

POLICE RAID the Stanford Dai
newspaper, Monday searching
last Friday's police-student battl
were protesting the firing of a b
U.S., U.K. AID:
Ceylon ago,
Guevarist
COLOMBO, Ceylon (P - A U.S.
Air Force plane landed in the cap-j
ital of this strife-torn nation yes-
terday with spare parts for Cey-'
lon's air force, which has stepped"
up attacks against a youthful rebel
force, the Che Guevarists.
One Ceylonese jet crashed after
a strafing run during the day
against the rebels, the only major
action reported for yesterday. In-
formed sources said the govern-

DIAL 662-6264
at State & Liberty

ACADEMY AWARD
NOMINEE!
1:10-3:45-6:15-9 P.M.

NOTE SPECIAL
SHOW
TIMES!
DUSTIN
HOFFWIN

^ tagainst demonstrators w iiv
escaped in a clash with police,
"if they can be identified."
His search party had a warrant
from Municipal Court Judge Bar-
ton Phelps.
During the 30-hour sit-in that
-Associated Press ended with a police charge Friday
ly, Stanford University's student night, 23 persons were arrested,
for pictures of participants in pitals for treatment of injuries.
e at a nearby hospital. Students and damage estimated at $100.000
black janitor. was done to administrative offic-
- - e ..
IZurcher called it "the most vie-
ious and unprovoked attack on
police I have ever witnessed."
The trouble grew out of pro-
tests against the firing of a black
f h janitor, Sam Bridges, who h a d
been employed at the hospital for
a month. Demonstrators were de-
de manding his re-instatement.
Stanford's president, Richard
Lyman, said the university had no
ment had ordered some officials of advance notice of the search of
North Korea's embassy to leave the student newspaper office.
the country, who were believed to T h e paper's managing editor,
be linked to the insurrection. Mari Oorff, said photographs,
Six U.S.-built helicopters were negatives and notes on coverage
being prepared by Britain for im- of last week's demonstration were
mediate shipment to Ceylon to give removed from the Stanford Daily
government forces more mobility office Friday. She said it had been
in fighting the guerrillas, who have the paper's policy last spring to
attacked government installations remove or destroy such material
from their ,jungle hideouts since so it cannot be used in criminal
April 5. prosecutions.
Britain is the major supplier of
Ceylon's armed forces but the
Ceylonese air force is equipped court
with American helicopters.
wihAeia eiotr.WUA Foreign Office spokesman in
London said Ceylon had asked both i
the British and U.S. governments sSO li e
for six more helicopters. Britain,
he said, made arrangements with KALAMAZOO () - W e s t e r n
the United States to ship them to Michigan University's student su-
Ceylon. preme court, which invalidated a
The insurgent threat against the March 18 campus election because
government may be considerably of alleged irregularities, has been
lessened if the new year period dissolved.
passes without incident, according The action occurred Monday'
to some sources. after the University's lawyer, Hen-
Support by friendly governments ry Ford, ruled the court itself is an
apparently was strengthening the unconstitutional body.
government's hand. Last year's student constitution
The purpose of Indian ships, in- says court members must be elect-
eluding destroyers, which lay off- ed at the same time as other stu-
shore was not known. But there dent officers. However, the court
were reports that 100 Indian troops has been appointing its members
were being lent to the hard-pressed and no one ran for the court last
local forces. month.
Despite the 4 p.m. to 6 a.m. cur- Thomas Coyne, the school's vice
few, food and other essentials are president of student services, said
still being distributed. No tradi- a special committee will be created
tional new year religious services to probe allegations of unfair prac-
are being held. tices in the March 18 election.

Four held
in plot to.
kill Daley
CHICAGO (R) - Four men ac-
cused of plotting the assassina-
tions of Mayor Richard J. Daley
and the Rev. Jesse Jackson were
held incommunicado yesterday
while a police official said he ex-
pects several more persons will be
arrested.
No official or investigator would
discuss details of the case with
newsmen.
The accused men's bonds were
set at $5,000 each. The newspapers
claimed the four men were mem-
bers of a black militant group that
wanted Daley and Jackson killed
in order to start a race war which
would enable their group to as-
sume power in the city.
An anonymous source in the
state attorney's office said the al-
leged plotters planned to kill Da-
ley and Jackson just before the
election last week in which Daley
was chosen for an unprecedented
fifth straight four-year term.
Charged with solicitation to
murder and awaiting arraignment
in Circuit Court April 21 are:
-Earl Dillard, Howard Harris,
Charles Whiteside, and Terry
Simmons.
Three of the accused have po-
lice records.
Simmons and Whiteside were
arrested April 5, but the initial
complaints against them did not
name any intended victims. The
case came to light when Harris
and Dillard, arrested April 10,
were brought into court Monday.
The MichigantDaily, 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.

,_ _.

BIG MAN"
Panavision Technicoor
* 2N D H IT W E E K
CANTERBURY HOUSE Presents
Commander Co,&dy
and his lost planet airmen
plus
PORK
and a movie
"Summer-Ann Arbor 1970"
April 17-8-12 P.M.
TICKET PRICE: $1.50, $2.00, $2.50
s
TICKETS NOW ON SALE: Michigan Union, Dis-
count Records, and Student International - HOT
ITEM: Tickets Rapidly Dimishing!
4 Daily Classifieds Get Results

DRAFT EVASION

Court upholds student's deportation

NEW ORLEANS (P) - A fed-
eral appeals court upheld on
Monday a deportation order
against a college student who
went to Canada to avoid the
draft, formally renounced h i s
U.S. citizenship a n d then re-
turned home.
The 2-1 decision by the 5th
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
said Thomas Jolley, 27, made
himself an alien and must le-
gally be regarded as such.
In dissenting, Circuit Judge
Richard Rives said the govern-

ment should prosecute Jolley
for draft evasion and not make
him "an outcast for the rest of
his life."
In opposing deportation, Jol-
ley argued that his renuncia-
tion w a s made under duress,
with the coercion being "his de-
sire to avoid breaking the Se-
lective Service laws r. ."
Jolley, registered with a draft
board in Bremen, Ga., was at-
tending the University of Geor-
gia under a student deferment
when he left school in 1967 and
went to Canada.

From Toronto, on March 5,
1967, he wrote his draft board
requesting that he be listed as a
conscientious objector. Instead,
on April 17 he was placed in
class 1-A as available for induc-
tion.
After that, Jolley formally
executed an oath of renuncia-
tion of U.S. citizenship before
the U.S. consul in Toronto. He
then returned his draft docu-
ments to the Bremen local
draft board.
On June 13, 1967, and again
on Aug. 7, 1967, Jolley was or-
dered to report for induction. He
w a s picked up in Georgia in
March, 1968. Deportation pro-
ceedings commenced the next
day.

i
i
r
i
i
t
FS
L
a

I

ann arbor film cooperative
announces
General Membership
Meeting
T hrsyApril 15

3020 Washtenaw
Phone 434-1782
BOX OFFICE 12:45 P.M.
SHOW TIMES TODAY
1,3, 5, 7,&9 P.M.

E "r.VE
TECHNICOLOR'
POW isn

PHI SIGMA KAPPA
IS HAVING A
SPROINGET
THURS., APRIL 15
8-11 p.m.
LIVE BAND AND
REFRESHMENTS
GUYS $1.00
GIRLS FREE

11

SALE ON
SH ERWOOD
PRODUCTS
at
HI F1 STUDIO
121 W. WASHINGTON
Downtown across from.
Old German Rest.
NO 8-7942

I

8:30

3524 S.A.B.

all welcome to attend!

I

I

r -

uMAR
-

Charter European Flights
G
0
Leave Detroit Metro-Saturday, May 1 7:40 p.m.

other,
odor,
No feminine spray
can stop it.
The "other" odor. It starts in
the vaginal tract where no spray
can work. Yourcan't spray it
away. And it's more offensive
than external odor caused by
perspiration.
That's the reason you need
Norforms....the second deodor-
ant.'" These tiny suppositories
kill germs-stop odor in the va-
ginal tract for hours. Something
no spray can do. And doctor-
tested Norforms can be used as
often as necessary. They insert
easily, quickly.
Get Norforms' protection for
the "other" odor no spray can
stop.
The second deodorant.

N
G

Arrive London-Sunday, May 2

R
E
T
U
R
N

Leave Paris-Thursday, May 27

Arrive New York-Thursday, May 27 5:45 p.m.

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.is :

Sit _> :.

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