RADICAL GROUPS GATHER lI Black Panther convention begins today PHILADELPHIA .P) - Registration began in Philadelphia yesterday for a Black Panther convention of "revolu- tionary, oppressed people." Registrants said they represented a§- sorted militant and radical organiza- tions from around the country, includ- ing the Gay Liberation Front, Women's Strike for Peace, The Resistance and the Young Lords. Others identified themselves as draft resisters, ex-soldiers, teachers, Women's Liberation. advocates and high school and college students. Huey Newton, the Panther national minister of defense who is currently free on $50,000 bail and awaiting a new trial on a manslaughter charge grow- ing out of the shooting of a policeman, is scheduled to make today's keynote address. Nevton is a cofounder of the Black Panthers. Explaining the purpose of the con- ventio;4 one woman said, "We're getting ready to do a lot of serious rapping." She and others registered in an audi- torium of the Episcopal Church of the Advocate, on the edge of Temple Uni- versity campus in the heart of North Philadelphia's black slum. "This is no foolin' time," said another registering participant. The three-day convention is sched- uled to open today in the 4,500-seat Temple gymnasium. Panther leaders want to use the gym tomorrow also, and Temple officials are considering the request. There were no police in sight in the registration area. Panthers stood guard at the church entrances, searching some of those who sought entrance and demanding identi- fication. f "We are just not going to take any chances," said one guard who declined to be identified. "Who comes in here is our business." Police Commissioner Frank Rizzo had sought to keep the Panthers from meet- ing here, suggesting that it might lead to violence. He has not pressed the issue since Gov. Raymond Shafer, backed by prominent city leaders, said that t h e Constitution guaranteed the right of, peaceful assembly to everyone. Last Monday Rizzo sent his men on raids at three Panther centers where 14 guns and a quantity of ammunition was seized and 14 men and women ar- rested. The police commissioner said he acted following the killing of a Philadelphia park guard Saturday and the wounding of another, blaming that violence on the Panthers. Bail for the 14 Panthers, none of whom were charged with the police shootings, was set at $100,000 each. But after a 'hearing before Common Pleas Court Judge Thomas Reed, the bail for Philadelphia Panther Reggie Schell was reduced to $2,500. It is expected that similar bail cut- ting efforts will be made for the others. Panther spokesmen have charged that Rizzo's raids were made only to "squash" the convention page three ii e Sfrig!3n t t1 r NEWS PHONE: 764.0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554. Saturday, September 5, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michigan Pge Three -I-"}S h+IL }Israel threaten s to attack ' I Egypt U DOORS npEN . SHOWS AT: 1, 3,5, 7, 9 P.M. 12:45 Y i on in Moaern Cooiotg 603 E. LIBERTY 4 JURY PRIZE WINNER; Cannes Film Festival 1970 They're young and feel everything more deeply. . and there's so much to feel deeply about { FY, STRAWBERRY' : STATEMENT AROBETIG6tKXF NiiWtKLfFRPCUCTION } r 1 , MTRCOL MOMMM 0 THE NATION'S jobless rate climbed close to a six-year high this past August, government reports showed. ,r During the same period total employment, the factory work week, overtime and workers' purchasing power all declined.- The Labor Department said that the unemployment rate of 5.1 per cent of the work force, up from 5 per cent in July, equalled the highest since October 1964. The last tim~e it was higher was in June 1964, when it was 5. 2 per cent. * * * THE MASSACHUSETTES ATTORNEY GENERAL filed suit against 10 airlines yesterday charging them with maintaining a? public nuisance, Robert H. Quinn asked that they be ordered to install equipment to stop their jet engines from causing air pollution at Logan Inter- neinl national Airport.WC * + * Unemployment last month r VOTING WAS HEAVY yesterday in a crucial Chilean elec- work force-the highest since tion that could give Latin America its first freely elected Marx- employment rate at a news ist president. Commissioner Harold Goldste The voters were choosing from among Marxist Salvador Allende, (standing) and Howard Staml Christian Democrat Radomiro Tomic and conservative Jorge Ales- sandri for a successor to President Eduardo Frei, barred by law from FLAn BOA NT '- seeking a new six-year term.L-A Election results will be announced today. A MAJOR SALINAS VALLEY lettuce g r o w e r, Freshpict G P Foods, Inc., announced yesterday that it is rescinding its labor contract with the Teamsters and will negotiate a new contract with Cesar Chavez' union. / u n et w It became the second grower in the nation's "salad bowl" area to (, e, recognize Chavez' AFL-CIO United Farm Workers Organizing Com- mittee as the workers' representative. WASHINGTON ) - A me -Associated Press aent inches up ose to 5.1 per cent of the nation's e October 1964. Discussing the un- conference yesterday are Assistant in of the Bureau of Labor Statistics nbler,.head of the analysis division. WELCOME BACK STUDENTS! Try Our Famous-Delicious PIZZA and CHICKEN, --Introductory Offer--- FREE Beautiful MICHIGAN PEN with Each Order of a Large or Medium Pizza (While They Last) THO'MPSON'S PIZZA 211 E. ANN ST. (Next to Armory) CALL 761-0001 FREE DELIVERY OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 4:30 P.M.-1 :30 A.M. Sat. & Sun. Until 2:00 A.M. iator hits O.s.n Iy The Associated Press Israel said yesterday that it was prepared to take military action if Egyptian missiles }were not pulled back. Meanwhile, the United States called on Egypt and the Soviet Union for "rectification" of cease fire violations along the Suez Canal. Israeli allegations that the Egyptians have been con- structing sites for Soviet missiles inside the truce zone after the 90-day cease-fire began Aug. 7 have blocked peace talks at the United Nations. A State Department spokesman in Wa hington said the United States had sent notes to Cairo and Moscow "seeking rectification of the situation arisen out of our 'confirmed evidence of the violation of the standstill" by the Egyptians. A State Department spokesman mr- i v. "'"":};:;""rl."'yy' l.".}', 'Vyf "J Sf ;:;:y; i,'%": :3:rrja .":": 'r'. ¢.t . " Yrr: i'": r:?tiffC::::%?:};";V:;:.r+r:':"i : :???r:v 7;s";:i's::Cti":::: . ":"i:"ii?-.4i: ::.i UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN GILBERT AND SULLIVAN SOCIETYr Mass Meeting for Yeoman of the Guard TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8th 8 P.M.--Michigan Union WE WANT: singers, dancers, writers EVERYBODY: ventriloquists, tap dancers, etc. [[ "r.,: ":rr..r.{; " v r r:;y{r"i:}} "i:""i:::".:;.b:..:Yd^}":SEii":p""+ ?irlN :x:.:r ' ber of the Senate Republican leadership says the President's Commission on Campus Unrest has been "flamboyant, inflamma- tory, prejudiced and irresponsible" during public hearings over the past months. And, said Sen. Gordon Alott of Colorado, chairman of the Senate GOP Policy Committee, he is afraid the commission's forth- coming report will be a "flaccid whitewash" of campus radicalism that will do far more harm than good. Allott commented in a speech prepared for delivery this morn- I ing to a milk producers conven- tion in Chicago. The text was re- leased for publication last night. "First," Allott said, "some of the commissioners are hardly ob- jective investigators. It will be re- called that o n e young commis- sioner - who his been the *darl- in'g of the media - almost im- mediately after being appointed announcedwthatthe thought the President was to, blame for, the problems at Kent State." Allott said the commission has given too much time at its hear- ings to speeches by radicals and members of the commission hav been "rude, arrogant and high- handed in dealing with persons who are not radicals." "The fourth failing of this com- mission is that its member's have not demonstrated proper sensitiv- ity to the civil rights of witness- es,"Allott concluded. I m~ in Washington said the United States had sent notes to Cairo and Moscow "seeking rectification of the situation arisen out of our confirmed evidence of the viola- tion of the standstill" by the Egyptian~s. He did not define "rectifica- tion." Israel has insisted that Egypt must not only stop violat- ing the cease-fire but. also must withdraw .the missiles installed since Aug. 7. Israeli Foreign Minister Abba Eban, in a Jerusalem television interview, said Israel is entitled "to take action on the political level and any other level it deems necessary" against Egypt for vio- lations of the military standdown. "We are now pursuing political methods," he said., V He added that Israel's ambassa- dor to the United Nations, Yosef Tekoah, would not be returning immediately to New York to con- tinue the indirect peace talks opened last week by U.N. special envoy Gunnar larring with Israel, Egypt, and Jordan.. U.S. diplomats acknowledged the notes did not meet Israeli de- mands that Egypt roll back its missiles, but they said it would be unrealistic to expect Egypt and the Soviet Union to admit to vio- lations and to agree to dismantle the missiles in question. , There were these other develop- ments in the Middle East: -Diplomatic sources in Paris said King Hussein of Jordan ap- pealed to 'the United ,States, the Soviet Union, Britain and France for support against threatened Iraq military action. Jordan's foreign minister, Antoun Atallah, denied the reports, Radio Amman said. -Iraq, with some 12,000 troops in Jordan, warned Hussein sev- eral days ago that it would take military action if Jordan tried to "eliminate" Palestinian guerrillas based in Jordan. Pestieide ban 111fetive By The Associated Press News Analysis The federal government's flurry of, action against pesticides h a s failed to reduce significantlythe amount of chemicals polluting the environment, and the bans it has ordered aren't likely to be effective for at least a year. The Agriculture Department, over the past 10 months, has an- nounced cancelation' or suspension of a number of the registered uses for DDT and two of its close chemical relatives - pesticides containing one form of the poison- ous metal mercury, and the herbi- cide 2,4,5-T, which has b e e n shown to cause birth, defects in animals. SThe actions, however, left intact registered uses that account for 75 per cent of domestic applica- tions of DDT and 2,4,5-T. And government officials concede that because of legal loopholes ,and possibly lengthy appeals by manu- facturers' some retail sales of the pesticides for uses officially ban- ned will continue until at least next year and perhaps for two td three years. 'Nevertheless, government health officials say the Agriculture De- partment has demonstrated a new and unaccustomed willingness to act against pesticides that! appear to threaten the environment. By contrast, the House Government Operations Committee; accused the department only last year of "al- most incredible failure to regulate pesticides." r----- - I r r, r , r ' r ,' c7i Israeli and American Fol ksingers Free Coffee Free Coke Subscribe nnw DIAL 8-6416 Doors Open 12:45 P.M. Shows at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 P.M: "A FRANTIC FUNNY COMEDY... one is indeed made weak with laughter." L.A. HERALD EXAMINER "START THE REVOLUTION WITHOUT 4th SMASH WEEK! THIS COTTON DOESN'T SHRINK! : : '. # « ....I V UU 11 X11 o i II I I I I I I I U F~ii~WJ 'EU L!U'7.~U I~E'Ww5 I