NOW SHO VIN Showtimes Today 7-9 P -1Saturday and Sund 302 Washen Ph.43a4-178 1-3-5-7-9 Between Ypsilanti &LY Ann ArborE1-3AD-7- 0~ POSITIVELY'NO ONE UNDER 18 ADMITTED 4G y gage three 1 4P tc4 t ttn NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Friday, September 4, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three ii6 W S D:: .......i>:.... ..:: : : I vt* w$ #Wf0 f t- .y.h e As sciaited Pres By The Associated Press WELCOME BACK STUDENTS! Try Our Famous-Delicious PIZZA and CH ICKEN ---Introductory Offer--- FREE Beautiful MICHIGAN PEN with Each Order of a Large or Medium Pizza (While They Last) THOMPSON'S PIZZA, 211 E. ANN ST, (Next to Armory) CALL 761-0001 FREE DELi/VERY OPEN 7 DAYS A WfEK 4:30 P.M.-1 :30 A.M. Sat. & Sun. Until 2:00 A.M. THE AFRICAN PEOPLE'S CONFERENCE began yesterday in Atlanta, Ga., with plans to cut down on conflicting black ideologies. The congress, composed of organizations oriented toward black nationalism ,has set a goal of establishing standards and philosophies common to all.' U.S. AMBASSADOR David K. E. Bruce yesterday met with North Vietnamese delegation chief Xuan Thuy for the first time. Thuy, who returned to the Paris conference table after a nine- month boycott, read a prepared statement reaffirming his govern- ment's demands that the U.S. withdraw unilaterally from Vietnam and replace the present Saigon regime with a provisional coalition. MARTIN SWEIG was sentenced yesterday to 22 years in federal prison and was fined $2000 for perjury in connection with the misuse of House Speaker John W. McCormack's Washington office for influence peddling. Sweig had been an aide of McCormack for 24 years. The government claimed that he and Nathan Voloshen, a: Washington lobbyist and friend of McCormack, conhpired to use McCormack's name and prestige to pressure government agencies in behalf'of favor-seeking clients. * * * THE INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE said yesterday it will "take a hard look" at the tax-exempt foundation set up by Yippie leader Jerry Robin. Rep. William Scherle (R-Iowa) called for a thorough investi- gation and revocation of the tax-exempt status of the Social Edu- cation Foundation, also known as the Jerry Rubin Fund, which is! 3% months late in filing its mandatory income report with IRS. The foundation holds the copyright on Rubin's book, Do It!" which is subtitled, "Scenarios of the Revolution." Scherle said, "We should not be forced to subsidize our own destruction with our own; taxes.", In applying for tax exemption, the foundation claimed its funds would be used among other things, for "relief of the poor, distressed and underprivileged." * * * A FEDERAL OFFICIAL who approved government partici- .1 CINEM LUILD SEPTEMBER 3, 4-Thurs., Fri. WINTER LIGHT Dir. INGMAR BERGMAN (1962) A minister, undergoing a crisis of faith must face the world's spiritual emptiness. SHORT: "His Wooden Wedding" with CHARLI E CHASE SEPT. 5, 6 --"Shoot the Piano Player" 7 & 9:05 7c Architecture 662-8811 5c Auditorium, The inevitable choice, among automatic turntables- the hewPE72040 and PE-2038 -Associated Pres Battle for Srang Cambodian soldiers carry the body of a seriously wounded comrade to the rear in the wake of bitter fighting for the town of Srang, 30 miles pouthwest of Phnom Penh. Cambodian troops re- occupied the embattled town yesterday after a force of 1,000 North Vietnamese and National Lib- eration Front soldiers withdrew and marched toward the provincial capital of ~Kompong Speu. Srang had been held for five days, but the forces moved out unaccountably just before Cam- bodian troops advanced. ELECTION EVE CALM: Chi eans go to p s fol ing rough presidential ,cadmpaign FBI seeks our in bombing WASHINGTON (M., - Four young men who allegedly bragged about setting off the bomb that blasted an Army research center at the Univer- sity of Wisconsin were being sought by FBI agents yester- day. At least two of the fugitives may have gone to Canada, federal of- ficials believe. Steps were being taken in Washington and in Mad- iso6n, Wis., to prepare- charges against them that would insure their extradition if they are ap- prehended north. of the border. Federal officials said the three offenses charges - sabotage, de-. struction of government property and conspiracy - are not extra- 'itable under U.S.-Canadian tres- ties. They, are urging Wisconsin officials to press murder charges against the four. One man was killed and three others injured in the Aug. 24 bombing. The fugitives are brothers Karle- ton Lewis Armstrong, 22, and Dwight Alan Armstrong, 19, of 'Madison; David.Finq, 18. a form- er night; editor of theecampus pap- er; and Leo Frederick Burt, 22, a summer student at the University of Wisconsin. Washington sources said t h e Armstrong brothers are also sus- pects in a bombing attempt on the Badger Army Ammunition Plant at Baraboo, Wis., last January. No charges , have been filed in that case. The FBI said the explosion oc- curred in a panel truck loaded with chemical nitrates soaked with fuel oil and detonated by dyna- mite. The nitrates are commonly used as an agricultural fertilizer. Only two minutes before the blast, Madison police received a telephone call in which an uni- dentified voice said: "Okay, pigs, now listen and listen good. There's a bomb in the Army Math Research Center - the University - 'set to go off in five minutes. Clear the building. Warn the hospital." The FBI confirmed that two Sauk County deputy sheriffs had stopped four men at a road block on the morning of the explosion, but let them through after the four told them they were on their way to a campsite at nearby Dev- il's Lake. pation in transactions involving a San Diego builder and a Team- SANTIAGO, Chile (P) - A sters Union pension fund, it was revealed yesterday, is now pres- Marxist, an, aging conservative ident of a firm owned by the fund and the builder. and a Christian Democrat closed E. L. Tagwerker, former director of the Federal Housing Adminis- out their campaigns yesterday and tration's San Diego office, approved FHA arrangements with builder the nation's 3.5-million voters Irvin J. Kahn and the Teamsters' Central States, Southeast and prepared to ballot in Chile's cruc- Southwest Areas Pension Fund during 1968 and 1969. He said he had ial presidential elections. not received nor contemplated any job with Kahn's organization un- The nation was reported calm til after he retired in February 1970. month campaign in which six The pension fund involved has been under steady federal scrut- persons were killed and more than iny for several years.- 200 injured. commissioner chares FCC With silencing dissent on war WASHINGTON (I)-A mem- ber of the Federal Communica- tions Commission has charged that the FCC appears to have moved toward silencing dissent on the Vietnam war. In a statement issued Mon- day, Commissioner N i c h o 1 a s Johnson said, "It is difficult to avoid the conclusion that this Commission has taken great strides towards silencing direct dissent in the country on the war." The remarks were contained in a concurring opinion to an FCC orde of Aug. 18, which granted some television time for response to f i v e televised speeches by President Nixon, but denied there is any abso- lute right of anyone to answer a television telecast. Johnson took issue with the commission's holding that the s t r i n g of five presidential speeches constituted a unique situation and said he concurred only because the decision "was a distinct improvement over the situation as it has existed." T h e commissioner also dis- agreed with the portion of the decision giving the Republican party time to answer to t h e Democrats televised opposition Johnson criticized a state- to Nixon. ment by FCC Chairman Dean Burch criticizing press coverage of the decision as announced in a news release. He charged that White House intervention in helping Burch prepare t h e statement was improper. Johnson said he found final justification for his position in the context of other FCC de- cisions on the war issue. "Although we have at least said that the Vietnam war is a controversial issue of public im- portance," he said, "rwe h a'v e kept the doors of 'access' to the media for the direct expression of views on that war tightly locked." "If citizens groups and po- litical parties cannot even buy the television time routinely available to s o a p companies," Johnson said, "and if now they are not entitled to replies to major presidential addresses on the war, then, I fear that the pressures from bottled-up dis- sent in this country will build toward an inevitable 'explos- ion.'" The presidential candidates are: --Jorge Alessandri, 74, presi- dent 1958-64, now an independent with support from the right; -Radomiro Tomic, 56, former ambassador tothe United States, candidate of the Christian Demo- cratic party of the incumbent, President Eduardo Frei; and -Sen. Salvador Allende, 62, a Marxist and three-time loser in presidential elections. He is sup- ported by a coalition of six leftist groups, including the Communist party. A victory by Allende could give Latin America its first freely elect-, ed Marxist president. The pos- sibility has led tospeculation that the nation's traditionally apolitical military leaders could stage a coup to frustrate an Al- lende takeover. But military of- ficials have denied the possibility. ' All three candidates have run such a close race, however, that it is considered likely that none will receive the absolute majority ne- cessary for election to a six-year term. Ifthat happens, Congress. will meet in joint session on Oct. 24 to choose between the two men with the most votes. As the political campaigning drew to a close, the Roman Catho- lic archbishop of Santiago called on the nation's 9 million citizens to reject violence as a means of achieving justice. "We all long for peace," said Raul Silva Cardinal Henriquez, "but we differ in the roads, in the methods and in the speed of achieving it." "There are those who want two 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, Fishermen demand stop to fatal industrial, pollution. accelerators while others would prefer two brakes," he said. "But all of us are sitting in the same car." "We must decide once and for all in favor of justice," the cardi- nal continued. "We will discover to our surprise that our rights will never be better guaranteed than when we love the rights of others.' "The candidate elected can be no more nor less than an inter- preter, a coordinator . . . He needs the people as his principal protagonist and 'unreplaceable ex- ecutor," the cardinal concluded. PENSACOLA, Fla. W - Mil- lions of dead menhaden covered Escambia Bay yesterday as fisher- men, their profits dwindling after 52 fish kills in 18 months, de- manded an end to industrial pol- lution in the bay. Authorities said no effort would be made to remove the dead fish from a square-mile section of the brackish water bay, once a na- tionally famous fishing ground and nursery for white shrimp. State and county officials blam- ed the kill on industrial discharge from three companies already un- der citation for pollution-Amer- ican Cyanamid, Escambia Chem- ical Co. and the Monsanto Corp. Nitrogen, carbons and phos- phates from the discharge serve as nutrients for algae in the bay. Rapid growth of the algae, con- servationists say, depletes the oxygen supply in the water. T h e menhaden, a silver-sided fish, grows to be from 12 to 18 inches long and weighs from three-quarters of a pound to a pound. Traveling in schools they are part of the diet of other f i s h while feeding themselves chiefly on tiny plants and animals in the sea called plankton. Menhaden is SUBSCRIBE NOW! DISCOUNTS! BEST SEATS! used chiefly for ifertilizing crops. In Pensacola; wholesale fisher- men with their own fleets have complained of heavy financial losses. Operating expenses h a v e increased, they say, as they have had to seek out new .fishing grounds for trout, snapper, mullet, panfish, and other seafood. "Business is definitely off," re- tailer I. W. Hightower said. "You'd just be surprised the amount of people who ask where my fish were caught. I just have to tell them they didn't come from the bay." Retailers report mounting con- tern from customers' over the quality of fish they offer for sale. Referring to industrial pollu- tion of the bay, wholesaler Buck Richbourg, manager of the large American Seafood Co., said "All. of us down here have lost thous- ands of dollars, mainly because this stuff has killed off all of our shrimp in the bay." Another wholesaler, Allen Wil- liams said that two years ago "we could have just about m a d e a good living; on just taking shrimp out of the bay. Last year, there were a few around but this year, none." "Production is way off. That has to hurt, but there's not much you can do about it," Williams said. In Tallahassee, t h e state de- partment of Air and Water Pollu- tion Control said it had dispatch- ed engineers to Pensacola to in- vestigate the latest fish kill. FK VILLaGE 375N.MAPLE RD.-7691300 Tues.-Fri. 7:25 & 9:45 at.-M". 1:00, 510,7:25,,9:45 Doors nOr 14'$4 Shows at I 6 open x :45 P.M. 9 P.M. DIAL 8-6416 "A FRANTIC FUNNY COMEDY... one is indeed made weak with laughter." L.A. 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