Tuesday, March 11, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Former CIA man claims not kili WASHINGTON (UPI) - An analysis of t a p e recordings shows Lee Harvey Oswald was, telling the truth but perhaps a dozen other persons lied about their knowledge of J o h n Kennedy's assassination, a for-7 mer Central Intelligence Agen- cy official said yesterday. "I don't know the name of the man who pulled the trig- ger," author George O'Toole told a news conference called4 to introduce his new book on the subject. But the Warren Commission which investigated the crime, he said, had no choice but to o return the verdict it did - blaming Oswald and saying hej 1- U.S. in d t- a { is WASHINGTON (P) - Labor. leader George Meany said yes-! terday the nation's unemploy- ment rate amounts to a depres- sion. The AFL-CIO president blam- ed administration and Federal Reserve Board policies for cre- ating current conditions and' said the policies appear to have Oswald- did Kennedy 4r mirtgalt Batty u mmer ublet upplement is coming March 23, 1975. Now is the time to submit your ad for this annual event. Forms may be found in the Daily, at various locations around campus, or at the Student Publications Bldg., 420 Maynard St acted alone - because the cli- mate was so volatile in the country at the time. IN A BOOK, "The Assassina- tion Tapes" which contends that Oswald was "framed," possibly by employes of the Dallas police force and the FBI, O'Toole based his conclu- sion primarly on the measure- ments of a device invented in 1970 known as the psychologi- cal stress evaluator-or PSE. The machine measures chan- ges in human voice frequencies, and when the modulation disap- pears, it is as a result of stress and is a strong indication the+ speaker is lying. '"HIS (Oswald's) categorical denial that he shot anyone contains almost no stress at all," O'Toole said. "But the absence of stress is a sufficient condition of truth- fulness . . . Oswald d e n i e d shooting anybody - the Presi- dent, the policeman J. D. Tip- pitt, anybody. O'Toole quoted polygraph expert Lloyd Hitchcock, ofI Lavonia, Ga., as saying: "Assuming that he was not suffering from a psychopatho- logical condition that made him ignorant of his own action, I can state beyond reasonable doubt that Lee Harvey Oswald did not kill President Kennedy and did not shoot anyone else." ~m fI AP Photc Hills heads HUD Carla Anderson Hills yesterday was sworn in as Secretary of Housing and Urban Develop ment by Supreme Court Justice Byron White. She thus became the third woman ever nam ed to a Cabinet post. Praising Hills, President Ford said that she faces an immense task i her new position, taking on "the very serious responsibility of administering this impor ant department at a time of recession in the housing industry." The new HUD secretary, Los Angeles attorney and mother of four, responded to Ford's words saying that she wa determined "that we shall make substantial strides toward the goal of achieving for ever American family decent shelter and a proper living environment." TESTIFIES BEFORE COMMITTEE: Ford and Congress seek energy accord, says Zarb epression - IMean and two-tenths per cent, repre- Arthur Burns, chairman of the senting nearly seven and one- Federal Reserve Board, have half million people without jobs, both said that in fighting reces- it is time that the administra- sion they are concerned over tion stopped kidding itself and the danger of over - stimulating trying to kid the people." the economy into another round Speaking before a symposium of inflation. sponsored by the National Hous- The current unemployment ing Conference, Inc., Meany statistics compare to a 25 per noted that the administration's cent unemployment rate, with budget was pegged to estimates about 13 million people out of that unemployment will remain work, during the Great Depres- at nearly seven per cent or sion of the 1930s. higher through 1978.----------------. The Joint StdntFcut Policy Committee,. deals broadly with any issue that offects the process of education in L$&A. IS THERE ANYTHING ELSE WE SHOULD KNOW? x ' , . r i ' ii t' I E _} _'E 1 I 1 _ b 6f een altered little. MEANY URGED a tax cut early half again as large as MR. KEVIN COUNIGHAN . 1105 White - 665-9616 PROF. HORACE DEWEY . 3004 MLB - 4-5382 WASHINGTON (R) - White intend to refer it to the House did go into ef House and congressional staffs Ways and Means Committee, collections ofx are talking in an effort to find which can hold it in suspense. March 1. a compromise between Presi- Asked whether this amounts Another mat dent Ford and Democratic lead- to holding "a sword of Damoc- sion, he said,i ers on energy policy, Energy les" over Ford's head, Albert protection orc Administrator Frank Zarb said replied, "I would turn that guarantee tha yesterday, but the crucial around and say it showed the out of imports question of timing remains un- President we are really trying mestic supplie resolved. to cooperate." A number of Zarb also told the House Bud- Questioned by Budget Com- been pushing get Committee the administra- mittee members as to possible quotas rather tion maintains its support for a areas for compromise, Zarb ing taxes as; tax on imported crude oil, rath- said "there have been meetings ducing import er than only on gasoline as key with various congressional com- Without saying Democrats propose. mittee chairmen, and staffs too. words, Zarba BUTHE dde, "e hve ot "THE MOST prominent area that the admi oT H rE adeda"We have got raised is that of possible phas- consider stand ries its share." ing in a program rather than ilar authority. Zarb's testimony was the first imposing it on the economy "A major poi official confirmation from the abruptly." is whether we executive side thaticompromise Under Ford's original plan, million barrels efforts had moved into the the $3-a-barrel tax, without ports by thee phase of nuts-and-bolts discus- congressional action, would said. "Our v psio nhave been fully effective April should and tha sin.1. action." Ford invited compromise ef- Zarb said there was some a forts by deferring last week the sentiment at the talks for tak- second and third increments of ing measures to restrict imports his proposed $3 a barrel tax on a step at a time and seeing how imported crude oil. House Dem- each step works. (.world Ai ocratic leaders, in response, HE INDICATED there has not LUXURIOUS BOEING moved to hold up a vote on ov- been time to see anyrefect on TO F RA!r erriding Ford's veto of a billbim tomeahefctxoG that would postponed for 99 imports from the $1 of tax that Travel Grou C days the entire imported oil .3 ...m. tax hikes. HAEay26 SOME REPUBLICANS, con- A sETHMay 26 tending they have the votes to 2 June1 1 sustain the veto asked for an 4 June30 early vote, but Speaker Carl 5 July 21 Albert (D-Okla.) told newsmen 6 July28 yesterday that when the mat- 7 Aug. 11 ter comes up Tuesday, leaders N " CISend m ealdi EXHIBITION and SALE ofm %.. S -.4 l ADDRE. S ffect Feb. 1, but which began only ter under discus- is "some form of quota system to at savings come rather than do- 5s." Democrats have that approved by the House. Het supported more public serviceG jobs. And he proposed stimulat- ing the housing market through subsidized interest rates for home buyers while providing. a safety net for unemployed, workers who fall behind in their house payments. "Yes, America is in a de- pression," Meany said. "Wheni the unemployment rate is eight MEANY SAID the underlying policy which created current conditions and would prolong economic hardships "is the policy of trying to fight infla- tion by using methods which have failed in the past and will! fail again." Treasury Secretary William' Simon, the administration's chief economic spokesman, and, "li PROF. JOHN FINE .... ..4622 Haven - PROF. LAWRENCE JONES 2063 Randall - PROF. CATHERINE KELLEHER 3-0192 4-4445 6613 Haven - 3-2221 MR. KEITH KERWIN 721 S. Forest No. 207 - 761-3592 MR. TIM KUNIN .. 1316 Geddes No. 12 - PROF. WILLIAM LOCKWOOD 215 C Angell - PROF. MARGARET LOWRIE 1631 Haven - 4-7153 4-2393 allocations and ij than price-rais- a means of re-, ts of petroleum. g so in as many appeared to hint inistration might lby quota or sim- nt still unresolved want to save 1 s a day of im- end of 1977," he iew is that we at we should take rways G 747 JUMBOJETS NK FUR T harter Airfare Only $395.98 max. June 19 March 26 July 3 April 7 July24 April12 July31 April 27 Sept. 4 May 17 Aug.28 May24 Sept.2 jJune7 t, MI 4 - --2-T.6a 1 5 formatlon. MD; -----I 1 -- a_ PROF. MICHAEL MORRIS 3521 Chemistry - 4-7360 PROF. ERIC RABKIN......2613 Haven - 4-6345 MS. JEANNE SELLNAU .. 4327 Couzens - 4-6205 I 9 206 E. Liberty 663-8611 MR. MITCHELL SNAY .... 909 Church D - MS. GINGER STILLINGS .. 5031 Lloyd - PROF. ARTHUR WASSERMAN 3011 Angell - 663-4782 4-5982 4-0375 POWER CENTER i 400.1. 0 401 ician Union, STUDENT OFFICE HOURS: 3:00 - TUESDAYS For Information CALL 763-1107 CampusInterviews mi nds I I Original Oriental Art An outstanding selection of antique oriental woodblock prints plus original etchings, wood- cuts, lithographs by contemporary oriental printmakers. UNION GALLERY v 1st floor Michigan Union MARCH 12 and 14-10-5 p.m. MARCH 13-1-8 p.m.o ARRANGED BY Marson Its., Baltimore, Maryland 21208 (PURCHASES MAY BE CHARGED) nowo AY NITE 37 ! i~ i i"'1r { G - This $15 haircut may not be i what you had in min in mind... " matter MITRE is a place which daily faces the challenge of minds over matter, and where, even more importantly, minds matter a lot. Since we're a nonprofit system engineering company operating wholly in the public interest and dealing with tough problems assigned to us by more than a score of governmental agencies, we know that our greatest resource is the human mind. And we know that the kind of mind we need also needs to know that it will be working on important problems with other professionals. What's more, we'll be quite specific in spelling out your assignment to you. All of this because you matter and because=at MITRE, minds matter. We are currently seeking new graduates to work in command and control systems, information processing systems, electronic surveillance systems, communications systems, and environmental, health and other social systems. If you're an EE, Computer Science, Math, Operations Research, or Physics major, you could be working on problems in telecommunications, voice communications, micro- wave and digital signal processing, educational information systems, radar design, propagation studies or advanced modulation, coding, error control and data compression techniques. Or, you might want to get involved with solid waste disposal techniques, digital. information systems, data handling and reduction, microprogramming techniques, data base structure, time sharing, text processing, management information systems for courts and police, computer program design and development or evaluation of present day software for phase-over to next generation machines. These are just a few of the areas in which you might get involved at MITRE. All of these positions require a minimum of a BS degree. 1f, you have more than a bachelor's, that's even better. Almost two-thirds of our 750 technical staff members have advanced degrees. All these openings are at our corporate headquarters at Bedford Massachusetts (suburban Boston). If you are interested and think you can meet our standards, send us your resume. Better yet, we'd like to talk to you on campus. Sign up at your Placement Office. We'll be there on March 13 and 14. Mr. Kenneth B. Keeler The MITRE Corporation Box,208 Bedford, Massachusetts 01730 lrvFj ' f,. Ir. f: f. : :: f.:r f:.f .: :::. I INCLUDES: TOSSED SALAD BAKED POTATO HEARTHSTONE TOAST I MICHIGAN UNION BARBER37 ORL I - Am