Friday, November 1, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PaGe Three __.ICIAN.IY ae he I. Magruder sticks to story on Mitchell approving break-in NOW OPEN! Oyster Bar & The Spaghetti Machine OPEN TUESDAY THRU SATURDAY, 5:00-10:00 P.M. (CORNER OF WEST HURON & S. FIRST ST.) AP Photo Report held Chairman Peter Rodino, (D-N.J.) of the House Judiciary Committee refuses to reveal an FBI report on the nomina- tion of Vice President-designate Nelson Rockefeller submitted to his committee Wednesday. Rodino said, "I believe there will be something, but I can't tell you what's in it." 8.5 'MILLION Groups give m1onies for political races WASHINGTON, (Reuter) - Jeb Stuart Magruder yesterday refused to let defense lawyers crack his story that former At- torney General John Mitchell approved the ill-fated plan to break into Democratic National headquarters. The former Mitchell deputy of. the Nixon Campaign Commit-' tee, self confident and at times argumentative, did concede dur- ing cross examination that his former boss was less than en- thusiastic about the illegal bug- ging scheme. BUT HE repeatedly rebuffed attempts by Mitchell's lawyer, Plato Cacheris, to get him to stray from his damaging indict- ment of the one-time "law and order" attorniey general. The grinning 39-year old wit- ness told Cacheris that Mitchell "was not favorable to the pro- gram . .. but that does not dis- miss the fact that in the end, he did approve the program, al- though reluctantly." Cacheris, a former govern- Daily Official Bulletin Day Calendar Friday, November 1 kWUOM: Dr. Pierre Dansereau, prof., ecol, U. of Quebec, & vice- chmn., Canadian Environmental Ad- visory Council, "Perception for survival," & "Training for Educa- tion & for the Retrieval of Knowl- edge," 10 am. Hospital Commission for Women meeting: W10410 Hop., noon. E d u c a t 1 aonga 1 Media Ctr.: Chishom: Pursuing the Dream, Schorling Aud., SEB, noon.i Hockey: UM vs. Wisconsin, Yost Ice Arena, 7:30 nmp. Music School: "The Music of Scott Join," Hill Ad., 8 pm. City Center Acting Company: Marlowe's Edward II, Mendelssohn, 8 pm. African Film Series. Old Africa and the New; Ethiopia: The Hidden Empire, Aud. D, Angell, 8 pm. Astronomy Visitors' Night: Dr. Hugh Ahler, "Radio Waves from Jupiter;" Birth and Death of a Star; observations of double star, Moon, Jupiter, Aud. B., Angell, 8 pm. Jewish Arts Festival: Ceremonial Art workshop, 1420 Hill St., 8 pm. General Notices CEW: Noon-time discussion, Wed., Nov. 7 "Exploring the Center Library," open to all interested men & women; coffee will be served & you may bring lunch; for more info, contact Ctr., 330 Thompson, 763-1353 or 764-6555. Career Planning and Placement 3200 SAB, 764-7456 Recruiting on Campus: Nov. 4: Northwestern U./Grad Sch of Mgt, U. of Washington/Grad. Sch., & Vanderbilt U. Law; Nov. 5: Blue Cross of Mich., Continental Oil Co. & Southern Methodist U./Law; Nov. 6: NYU/Grad. Sch, of Arts; Nov. 7: Dun & Bradstreet, Inc., Wayne State U. (Personnel dept.), Colum- bia U./Bus. Washington U./Law, & Bankers Life & Casualty Co.; Nov. 8: Upjohn, Villanova U./Law & An- tioch Coll./Grad. Sh of Educ.; Nov. 11: Notre Dame & Oak Ridge Nat'l Labs; Nov. 12: Amer. Grad Sch. of Internat'1 Mgt., Stanford U./ Grad sch. of Bus., Chemical Ab- stracts Service, & Nat Security Ag- ency; Nov. 13: Hayes Albion, HEW- Mgt. Intern Prog.; Nov. 14, Libby- Owens-Ford, NCR, Wallace Bus. Forms, Inc., Ctr. Naval Analyses & U. Hospital/U. of Kentucky (Nur- ses); Nov. 15: Yale U./PhD Grad. Sch. Wash. Post announces Sum- mer 1975 News positions - College Jrs, Srt, ;& grad students Interest- ed in Journalism careers; requires writing, typing plus interest in journalisni; deadline for apps. Dec. 1, 1974. For details see D.O.B. file in reception area, CP&P. " ment prosecutor, zeroed in yes-! terday on Magruder's testimony earlier this week that Mitchell gave the go-ahead for Gordon Liddy to place illegal wiretaps in the Democratic Headquarters at the Watergate office complex here at a March meeting in Key Biscayne, Florida. THE defense lawyer tried all morning to get Magruder, now serving a 10 to 30 month jail term for his own confessed role in the cover-up, to say Mitchell had wanted to delay the pro- posed illegal bugging operation, saying his client never gave "absolute approval." 301 W. HURON MENU: CATHERINE McCLARY working in her community .,.. SHE KNOWS the State of Michigan has con- demned the current jail as "unfit for human habitation." SHE KNOWS county inmates have sued the county to build a new jail. McCLARY: "This must not be an excuse to build a new 'Superiail.' Instead the county should have de- centralized, community-based facilities and programs includin 'halfway houses and supervisory release a FRESH BLUE POINT OYSTERS ON HALF SHELL .............. $1.75 DINNERS: Green Salad-CAESAR dressing, home made bread, butter and coffee included., SPAGHETTI: ? Tomato sauce .. 2. Meat sauce...... 3. Mushroom sauce ... . .. .. ..$2.50 $2.50 $2.50 sauce . ... $2.50 4. 5. 6. 7. Meat and Mushroom Red Clam sauce .. . White Clam sauce .. Sicilian sauce ...... 8 Chicken Liver sauce ..........$2.75 9. Tomato sauce with Meat Balls . $2.75 10. Tomato sauce with Chicken Livers ..............$2.75 11. Marinara sauce ............$2.75 12. Butter, Garlic, Sweet Basil sauce ............$2.50 1 3. Potpourri (tomato, meat, clam, sicilian sauce)........$2.75 $2.75 $2.75 .. $2.75 VEAL SCALLOPINI: 1. Ala Marsala ......... . $2.95 2. Alla Francaise ........... . HOUSE SPECIALTY: Homemade Green Noodles ............ SPECIAL CHILDREN'S PRICES BEER-WINE-COCKTAILS $2.95 .... $2.95 I COUNTY COMMISSIONER i Q Q, ? lU 1-- 2 0 663-2403 "Three I Women1 A lecture PROF. EDNA AN i DEMOCRAT sraeli Poets"I re by WIR COFFIN t H ILLEL li St. THIS IS SHIRLEY BURGOYNE 9:00 P.m. al 1429 Hi WASHINGTON (P) - A new analysis of campaign spending shows that special interest groups have donated $8.5 mil- lion to candidates for the Sen- ate and House so far this year. The state and national com- mittees of the American Medi- cal Association tops. the list of big givers, with a combined total of more, than $1 million, according to Common Cause. ')THER interest groups, in order, are the AFL-CIO with $918,294; the United Auto Work- ers, $651,426; the several mari- time unions, $479,014; the Ma- chinists union, $301,405; the sev- eral banking and financial funds, $247,861; the National Education Association, $229,080; the United Steel Workers union, $215,925; the Business-Industry Political Action Committee, $214,800, and the National As- sociation of Realtors, $197,200. These totals don't include money given to state and local candidates or to political par- ties, and cover only the period up until Oct. 14, the cut-off for the a wave of campaign spend- ing reports filed with the gov- ernment. Further reports came due yesterday, covering the period up until Oct. 24. These reports, the last ones required before election day next Tuesday, will push some of the totals -even higher. THE ANALYSIS was done by Common Cause, the self-styled ANN ARBOR WINTER ART FAIR U. OF M. NEW FIELD HOUSE IN FERRY FIELD Entrance on State St. 10 a.m.-9 p.m. Sun. 10-6 NOV. 1-2-3 FREE ADMISSION over 150 artists & craftsmen citizens' lobby, as part of its continuing watch on campaign spending. Among the highlights: -Organized labor has con-' tinued its pattern of lopsided giving to Democrats. Labor, has given $1.6 million to Sen- ate candidates, of which $1.4 million went to Democrats.' They gave $2.7 million to House. candidates, of which $2.6 mil- lion went to Democrats; -Business and professional' groups, including the AMA, fa- vored Republicans. T h e s e groups gave $790,000 to Senate candidates, with $450,000 of it to GOP hopefuls. They gave $2.5 million to House candidates, $1.7 million of it to Republi- cans; -Most groups favored incum- bent senators and congressmen over candidates trying to un- seat incumbents. Labor groups gave $2.3 million to incumbents and $1.1:million to challengers. B u s i n e s s and profes- sional groups gave $2.6 million to incumbents and a bare $254,- 000 to challengers; and --Senate and House fund-rais- ing committees of the Republi- can party have given more than four times as much financial support for their candidates as have the Democratic party's counterparts. The GOP com- mittees poured more than $1 million into Republican races in the six weeks ending Oct. 14, bringing their total for the year to nearly $2 million. Democratic Senate and House committees have donated only $442,280 this year to the campaigns of their candidates. Since '72, County Accounting Is Computerized ACTIONS SPEAK.. . FOJTIK NOV. 5-Democrat-DIST. 14 Pd. Poi. Adv. Collins Shop SALE $9.00 Reg. $11.00 Loll away the leisure hours ... warm cotton and nylon stretch terry. Great for the dorm. Convenient drop seat, front zipper. A. Red or Blue stripes on white Sizes S-M-L B. Red or Green Sizes S-M-L ,, ! J". . (.. ~ r i p ' 1 t: k r ' 1' A , = ; i - .ra: s^. "-{ '.. ';-;.r, ;; f;.. i4 (Pfd / t 4 " . r ",i r' ' I I Mon.-Tues. Wed.-Sat. 9:30-5:30 Thurs. & Fri. 9:30-9:00 State & Liberty Ann Arbor, Michigan JUDGE FOR 'YOURSELF GRADUATE U of M LAW SCHOOL, 1956 ADMITTED TO PRACTICE: " United States Supreme Court * United States Federal District Court " Oregon Supreme Court - 1957 * Michigan Courts - 1959 CURRENT WORK: " Trial lawyer in private practice " Instructor of law at Washtenaw Communit'y College " Defender for Octagon House (a hard-drug treatment center) TRIAL EXPERIENCE: " Civil trials, settlements, appeals " Criminal trials, guilty pleas, appeals APPELLATE EXPERIENCE: " Law Clerk Oregon Supreme Court (1956-57) ' First Appeal Won, Oregon Supreme Court, 1958 * Civil and Criminal Appeals to Michigan Court of Ap'peals PUBLIC SERVICE: " Chairperson, Committee on Paralegal Training at Washtenaw Community College " Attorney for Women's Crisis Center ... . "i 'n , -i I POUND through For prompt service . A U U ti . .;i - C- C .' . . . ., n s / t f i 1 , f 44 Bernard could sleep later and save gas! Whether you've been studying or partying the night before, you could forget the rush hour hassle and enjoy a few extra winks each morning at our place. If you're involved in campus activities, you can walk to meetings instead of driving. Save your gas money for that special date with your special friend. There are other good features here you'll like. So ... make the right move. r'nme ri wherp the Juiinn ic nne " Legal Advisor for Huron Valley Cooperative Nursery Schools * Michigan Women's Commission Council of (1964-71) (1971-72) MEMBERSHIPS: " American " Michigan " Washtenai * American * American Bar Association State Bar w County Bar Trial Lawyers Association Judicature Society 0 0 Associate Member National Council of Juvenile- Court Judges Oregon State Bar Kappa Beta Pi Legal Sorority Children's Charter of the Courts of Michigan American Association of University Women I i " University of Michigan Alumnae Association (Conger Group) " First Presbyterian Church of Ann Arbor IR~lLEY - - sear. Ad r-' A-