ENDING, WEDNESDAY DIAL 8-6416 page three im4e *fr 4t~i~a 41,, 43- atly NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 TWIN FEATURE PROGRAM :" ad Wednesday, November 25, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three I * THEYOUNG MAN , CIlIFORXGIRLS WHO'VE COLOR BY DELUXE HAD EVERYTHING STARTING THURSDAY "One of the "QACKER major movie ' surprises !EB of the year!" W U -Rex Reed, HOLIDAY MAGAZINE qw 04 I, UMC MKNS 00 - IN" CINEMA II Walt Disney's "DAVEY CROCKETT" "LEGEN D OF SLEEPY HOLLOW" "WIND IN THE WILLOWS" I ne.ws.briefs By The Associated Press ROCK-THROWING DEMONSTRATORS broke windows at Stanford University Monday night in a protest of the U.S. bomb- ing of North Vietnam last weekend. About 200 persons on the 11,000 student campus attended a peace- ful, one-hour rally at which speakers denounced the Indochina war in general and the bombing in particular. A crowd of 100, which witnesses said included some non-Univer- sity students, then marched to the Aero-Astro building. The dem- onstrators dispersed after breaking windows, before campus police arrived. * * * GUINEA CHARGED TUESDAY that Portugese and merce- naries again launched "many incursions" along the coast during the night and were repulsed. The broadcast from Conakry, the capital of Guinea, gave no in- dication of whether fighting was still going on, but it did declare that "The Fascist Portugese aggressor is still in Guinea's territorial waters." Portugal has denied it was involved in the invasion. Inflation hikes cost of iving WASHINGTON (2) - The largest increase in the cost of living in the past six months - six tenths of one percent - was announced yesterday by the federal government. The White House expressed concern and said it will get tougher in assigning specific blame for big wage-price hikes - probably including the recent General Motors-United Auto Workers settlement. The Labor Department said the October rise in living costs boosted the Consumer Price Index to 137.4. That meant it took $137.40 per week last month to maintain a family standard of living that c o s t Thursday, Dec. 3 Friday, Dec. 4 Three Shows: 6:45, 9:00, 11:15 PLEASE NOTE CHANGES IN DAYS AND TIMES Cinema 11 is sorry for the confusion in ads for last Saturday. The Daily is solely to blame for this error, but we are as sorry as you are that it happened. SUBSCRIBE TO THE MICHIGAN DAILY ABOUT 50,000 LEGAL ABORTIONS were performed in New York City in the first four months after the state abortion law r was liberalized last July 1. Figures for abortion-related deaths worked out to a rate of 221 per 100,000 abortions, a lower rate than in Britain or Scandavia, where similar policies also prevail. A YOUNG NAVY OFFICER who signed a petition to the Pentagon objecting to the Vietnam war is getting his discharge by order of a federal judge.} "My objections to war are based on moral and philosophical values that have crytalized since I have been in the military," Lt.! Ronald McMahon said in an interview Tuesday. In a detailed decision Monday, U.S. District Court Judge Gordon Thompson said the Navy failed to prove in two hearings that Mc- Mahon was not a bona fide conscientious objector. The Navy based its case on the letter objecting to the Vietnam war which McMahon had signed with 30 other officers. The group! calls itself part of the Concerned Officers Movement. An assistant U.S. attorney, Fred Holoboff, argued that they object "to a particulart war, not war in general as set forth by the U.S. Supreme Court."E * * * -Associated Press Fonda pickets with militants Actress Jane Fonda joins the picket line in New Orleans with a group marching in support of black militant squatters whom police have tried to evict from city owned apartments. CONSPIRACY CHARGED: Trilof 8radicals begitns in- Seattle A GROUP OF U.S. COLLEGE students will leave New York Nov. 29 determined to sign separate "peace treaties" with students of North and South Vietnam. Sponsored by the National Student Association, a six-man dele- gation will go to Saigon while 10 other students will leave for Hanoi i 1 TACOMA - The trial of the Seattle 8, the second major Fed- eral prosecution of radicals on charges of conspiracy and viola- tion of the antiriot act began here Monday. The charges are the result of the defendants' reaction to the first conspiracy trial. That was the trial of the Chicago 8. Those 8 radicals were charged with City council votes to install more bicycle racks near campus area By AARON HOSTYK tickets given to bikes parked on Olsen said, "I have personally More bicycle racks will be in- sidewalks. "By whatever force this suggested the officers follow the stalled by the city this January in rash of tickets started, can't it go ordinances because the first time the Main St. and S. University away the same way?" he asked. a person gets hit at night they will Ave. areas. Deputy Police Chief Harold 01- come down on us." fomenting disorders at the Demo- cratic convention in 1968. After demonstrators gathered at the Federal Courthouse in Seattle to protest the contempt sentences given to the Chicago defendants and their lawyers by Federal Judge Julius Hoffman, the present case developed. At the demonstration-one of a series of a national protests known as T.D.A. for The Day After-part of the crowd surged toward the courthouse and smashed windows and threw paint until policemen moved in. The defendants, members of the Seattle Liberation Front, a group devoted to building an alliance between students and workers, are charged with inciting to riot, and doing so traveling "in interstate commerce." Originally scheduled for Seattle, the trial was moved to Tacoma While small band of picketers marched in front of the building, the trial began. After Judge Ge- org Boldt entered the courtroom, one of the defendants, Michael Abeles, asked that people in the court "remain standing for a mo- ment of silence in honor of those Vietnamese killed by the United States bombing." The defendants and their youthful supporters stood with clenched fists raised. Selection of a jury continued at a slow pace yesterday as the de- fendants pressed for an oppor- tunity to speak directly to pros- pective jurors. The defendants and their law- yers contend that the prosecution is part of a program of Govern- ment repression aimed at stifling dissent. The prosecution says that it is a criminal rather than a political trial. $100 weekly In the 1957-59 base period. The rise was a renewed spurt in the nation's worst inflation in 20 years after having tapered off slightly the previous three months. .The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported also that while it cost more to live, most workers were earning less because of reduced economic activity while inflation continued eroding every dollar earned. The average gross paycheck of some 45 million rank-and-file workers dropped 33 cents a week to $121.03 in October because of a further cut in the work week. After taxes and allowances f o r inflation, the paycheck was worth 61 cents less in purchasing power over the month and $1.59 less over the year. It was the 17th straight month in which purchasing power was below year-earlier levels, except for the single month of November 1969 when it was unchanged. Thepricerreport said turkeys in October were up nine per cent to 56 cents a pound or about a nickel above last year. A spot check in- dicated turkey prices were at least as high or higher this month. October's biggest single price increase was a 5.4 per cent hike for new cars. And Labor Depart, ment analysts blamed the recent- ly ended General Motors strike in part for the shortened work week, lower earnings and the decline in over-all economic activity. FEleming gets ACLU honor President Robben Fleming will be guest of honor at the fiftieth anniversary celebration of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) in Detroit Dec. 6. The dinner, which also com- memorates the ninth anniversary of the organization in the state, will feature former U.S. Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark as guest speaker. Fleming is being honored for "his distinguished career in pub- lic life and his unswerving com- mitment to the expansion of free- dom and equality and the defense of non-violent dissent." The event will be held in Cobo Hall, with proceeds to go toward ACLU's program of defense of constitutional freedoms. The ACLU calls itself "the na- tion's only national non-partisan non-profit organization devoted exclusively to matters of consti- tutional rights and liberties for all, irrespective of race, religion, political belief or association." Jackison charges dropped-, JACKSON, Miss. (A) - The only person indicted in connection with violence at Jackson S t a t e College last May will not be pro- secuted, Dist. Atty. Jack Travis said yesterday. Travis said he would not press the charges against Ernest L e e Kyles, 21, a former Job Corps worker from Bolton who was ac- cused of inciting to riot and par- ticipation in a riot. Kyles was indicted by a Hinds County grand jury which investi- gated the incident in which two young blacks were slain as law enforcement officers fired in a girls' dormitory. The charges grew out of the burning of a dump truck near the campus. The trial of Kyles, a black, had been postponed while studies were made of a recent ruling by the Mis- sippi Supreme Court, in which a conviction was overturned because Negroes were systematically ex- cluded from a trial jury. At that time, a spokesman for the district attorney's office said that time was needed to decide whether 'Kyles' case should be submitted to another grand jury. The spokesman noted that the method of selecting trial juries had been changed since the court rul- ing. In an earlier development in the case, a defense motion to quash Kyles' indictment because of ex- clusion of Negroes from the trial jury was overthrown. On Oct. 1, the President's Com- mission on Campus Unrest con- cluded that gun fire by police against a crowd of Jackson State College students was an "unrea- sonable, unjustified overreaction." In addition to the 2 fatalities, 12 were wounded in the May 12 in- cident. The commission was un- able to substantiate the allegation. by the police that they fired only in response to sniper fire from a women's dormitory. Moreover, the panel said some city police officers, "established a pattern of deceit" by denying they had discharged their weapons. FBI tests later confirmed the weapons had been fired, the com- mission said. Every officer who admitted fir- ing testifies he fired into the air or toward a third and fifth floor window where snipers allegedly were hiding. sen later claimed he had no know- Councilmen Nicholas Kazarinoff edge of the alleged increase in (D-Third Ward) and James ticketing. He said, however, that Stevenson (R-F o u r t h Ward) if there is one, "it is probably due to the 'new class of recruits' which seemed to express similar senti- was recently 'put on foot beats'." ments last week when they agreed One police sergeant added that that policemen should strictly en- "for about a year, beat men were force the law. taken off regular beats. These things are being more consistently Mayor Harris, though, said he enforced now that policemen are believed the police should be al- put on foot beats again." lowed discretion when enforcing ~ll The Michigan Daily,tedited and man- agtes, by students at the Universitv 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 mat' laws such as giving out bike tick- ets or in making arrests for al- leged possession or sale of mari-, juana. He claimed that if the policeI were called to enforce every or- Summer Session published Tuesday dinance, the whole department through Saturday morning. Subscrip- could be used up in hunting down tion rates: $5. by carrier, $5 by mail, narcotics violations. 'i- Ue A WARNING TO THu mAYOR: 603 E. Liberty DIAL 5-6290 "ONE OF THE BEST AMERICAN FILMS OF THE YEAR!"P - Newsday TAPE PLAYERS AUTO AND HOME 0-track from $49.95 WE INSTALL OURS OR YOURS OVER 500 8-TRACK TAPES IN STOCK PERFECT FIT SEAT COVERS 2270 W, STADIUM ANN.ARBOR 662-5860 115 H(fREI0 At State & Liberty Sts. hf; 01 ~~TAT b Program Information 662-6264 ENDS TODAY! "2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY" In Stereo Sound RATED G Shows at FLAPPING EAGLE Is in Town for Thanksgiving -STARTS- TAMAnnAW I "THE FUNNIEST MOVIE I'VE SEEN THIS YEAR! THIS KIND OF MOVIE A REVIEWER SHOULD PAY TO SEE! JUST GO, RUN, TO SEE IT!" -New York Post 11 For the student body: Genuine Authentic " Navy IDFA rAT . . . . ...... .I . I