P-e Eicht THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, October 7, T 970 I P~e Eic'ht THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, October 7, 1970 ~ Judiciary unit nears consensus (Continued from Page 1) committee seemed resigned to the proposal - which nobody really liked but nearly everyone seemed willing to accept. One of the particular concerns of students was avoidance of the heavy hand of authority in trials understood by the academic com- munity but not by the outside," St. Antoine said. "There was also a desire for some sense of order- liness and decorum." "We would have an appropriate balance if an expert made these decisions but could be vetoed by the three side men," he explained. History Prof. Gerhard Wein- berg, chairman of the Senate Ad- visory Committee on University Affairs, said he personally thought the new compromise might be the answer. He emphasized the procedural panel would always include at; least one faculty member and a board to which hearing decisions might be appealed would have substantial faculty involvement. "The plan meets a fairly sub- stantial number of concerns put forth-expertise, involvement of faculty and student concerns for an all-student jury," Weinberg said. ORGANIZATION NOTICES Gay Liberation I ront General Meet- ing. 3-C Union, 8:30 p.m. Thursday, October 8. 1970. * * * * Central Student Judiciary Hearing. Thursday, 7:30, Room 3540 SAB. En- gineering Placement Advisory Commit- tee, et. al., v. Students for a Democratic 1Society, et al. CEASE-FIRE POSSIBLE: Nixon to talk on war (Continued from Page 1) He said it has been discussed with the governments of South Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos "and has the approval of those governments as well, of course, as the approval of the government of the United States." Nixon said he will outline his speech to Cabinet members at 5 p.m. today and brief a bipartisan group of Congressional leaders an hour later. Secretary of State William P. Rogers will brief foreign govern- ments who have expressed an in- terest - or have an interest - in rW4 D NTHS i -Daily-Jim Wallace Even dogs do it Yesterday was a nice, warm Diag day. And that always means frisbee playing wherever there's a few available arms, some open space and the frisbee. Or if you're an energetic dog, a few avail- able paws to catch the plastic sphere will do nicely. ALABAMA AFFAIR: Radical con fesess to being FBI informer Among those in the adminis- the area during the course of the tration who have been involved in the discussions, he said, are Ronald L. Ziegler, White House Ellsworth Bunker, ambassador to press secretary, declined to ex- Vietnam, with whom he met in pand on Nixon's brief announce- California, and Ambassador Bruce ment other than to say that a re- and Philip Habib, Bruce's deputy, examination of the U.S. negotiat- whom he saw in Ireland "and re- i . ceived their assessment of t h e ing position has been going on situation and their recommenda- since the Cambodian operation tions." was completed. You've got the world on a string in a Woolrich Fringed Vest. Cuts you loose from the crowd with thong closure and a turn-on assortment of plaids or solids. Puts new life into body shirts. See if your world doesn't wear a lot better. Men's sizes: XS,S,M,L. About $15. Prep's 12 to 20. About $12. 'i FR EE0 We'll send you the $1.79 size of PlaytexO first-dayM tampons for only 5O. You get more than two months' supply free. (Continued from Page 1) Grimm was an agent of the FBI, Lackey had earlier accused Dean Drake, Knowles, and Dean cited of a breech of ethics in soliciting the fact that after Grimm had lost aid from a state investigator but his athletic scholarship, he w a s said all he knew about the case given a $900 loan from the Na- itself was what he had heard tional Defense Education Act. what he had read in the papers At that time he was on proba- and what he had encountered in a tion for burning obscenities into a recent court case in which Grimm carpet in a university hall, and was an informant. breaking into and entering a Lackey stated Dean had at- w dmthe Offi of S t uaccused tempted to make a deal with a alomh Detateent investigator concerning con- Deeopet after withdrawing stat inestiato cocernng on-from school in July, that he could firmation of Grimm's role as an be reached through the address: informer to the FBI and Tusca-berahdtouhhedrs: loosa Police. The investigator said Eric Wson, Box 85, Tuscaloosa Dean offered him evidence which Wilson is an FBI agent. could be used in court against As a narcotic agent for the Tus- Grimm in return for the evidence caloosa City Police, the former that Grimm was an agent. University wrestler teamed with a Dean has denied offering the in- Birmingham policeman known as vestigator a deal. "Arnie" in the sale and use o To establish the fact that drugs. The pair figured in the ar- t-- - -rac.f 13 nnnlen n naorcntiec There's no other tampon like Playtex. Outside, soft and silky, not cardboardy. Inside, so extra absorbent, it even protects on your first day. That's why we call it the first-day tampon. in every lab test against the old cardboardy kind, the Playtex tampon was always more absorbent. Actually 45% more absorbent on the average than the leading regular tampon because of the unique way it's made. Actually adjusts to you. Flowers out, fluffs out, protects every inside inch of you. Once you try it, we think you'll love it. That's why we're making you this special "two months free" offer. So go ahead. Use the coupon and get more than two months- supply free. 1 i t s o E _ii r a s f Jane Hart atHllH~e SR speaksr a Hl (Continued from Page 1) ress s1 1, peul oipil-tbU charges, according to Grimm. Grimm later left town when those arrested threatened him. While an agent Grimm said he received money for drugs from City Detective Russell and often cheated Russell in the transfer of funds. Russell testified in court At last! A practical guide to ease the burden of useless courses by Michael Z. Lewin Stuck in some rotten courses? "Worried about final exams? Forget it. A 27-year-old New York teacher has written a book to lessen test-taking fears."-Tucson Arizona Star. "Students everywhere will read it, think it through, and practice its incredible tenets. This book is pure Resistance literature."-University Re- view. $1.95 at stores with guts enough to carry it. The Dial Press , *ased on the average woman's use of ten tampons per month. Here's 50G for my more than two months' supply of Playtex tampons. Send in a plain brown wrapper, please. p Regular Super Namej Adrs (please print)I 1address ICity State Zip f Mail coupon to: International Playtex Corporation, Dept. 580, P.O. i Box 2205, Wilmington, Delaware 19899. Offer expires January 31, 1 1971. Please allow four weeks for delivery. Lihr-rm-- --_--.-_.-----y.; ,.-9----ntn.t -- playtex is the registered trademark of the international Playtex Corp.; Dover, Del. 01970 International Playtex Corp. scapegoating and name calling by Sept. 10, that he did not remem- the administration, and blaming ber Grimm or anything about the everything on the military-indus- accusations made by Grimm or trial complex by herself and oth- defense attorneys Dean, Knowles, ers of her political persuasion. and Drake. Responding to questions con- The statement also claimed that cerning her controversial arrest Grimm, as a leader of the Stu- while participating in an anti-war dent- Faculty Coalition, had ad- action at the Pentagon last fall vocated the use of guns and had Hart said her group was "convict- asked several of his counterpartsl ed of making loud and unusual to steal dynamite for use in cam- noises and obstructing passages, I pus action. which we weren't." Dean said there were two ways She added that the case was in which Grimm could be indicted currently on appeal in the Fed- by a grand jury-through the ef- eral courts, and that no decision forts of the district attorney orI was expected for at least two the grand jury itself. Dean said years. he thought that Lackey, the dis- In response to the possibility of trict attorney, would not act in the her actions having an adverse af- case, and said that he was not fect on her husband's campaign, willing to discuss the subject with Hart downplayed this aspect say- him because of the latter's at- ing, "He doesn't mind." titude. 4, Featured at: jf'i 3 a a + Use Daily Classifieds + I I I 0 E " WILD'S MeatAir "-.g RonLoewit* m Some paperbacks are kid stuff. These explode with ideas. BANJO Claude McKay. A vivid novel, by the author of Fome to Harlem, about a group of Negro beach bums living on the tough Marseilles waterfront in the 1920s. $2.45 MEAT AIR, Poems 1957-1969 Ron Loewinsohn. The first major collection of dynamic poet who rejoices in the ordinary stuff -- work, music, baseball, lovemaking-only to it is the true hirthplace of the extraordinary. a vouing of living discover $2.65 SELECTED POEMS T. S. Eliot. The Waste Land. 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