Tuesday, April 8, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY. Page Three I i News Briefs From Wire Service Reports Belfast blues BELFAST, Northern Ireland (A)-A car bomb exploded last night outside a bar in the Roman Catholic Oldpark area of Bel- fast, injuring three people, police reported. When police arrived at the tavern they were met by a stone- throwing mob and withdrew, a police spokesman said. Ambu- lances managed to take the injured to a hospital where one man 'in his late twenties was described in serious condition. His mother and another man were also hurt, officials said. In the Catholic Twinbrook area, police said two youths burst into a band practice at an ex-servicemen's club and fired two shots at young musicians. No one was hit. Police and troop patrols were strengthened Monday after a weekend of bombings and shootings that left 11 persons dead and at least 80 wounded. Radical arraigned PHILADELPHIA {M)-Susan Edith Saxe, who had been on the FBI's 10 most wanted list for 4 years before her capture 12 days ago, pleaded innocent today to bank robbery and conspiracy charges. The 26-year-old self-styled revolutionary was arrested on a downtown Philadelphia street March 27 and ordered held on $350,000 bail. She was arraigned in a heavily guarded courtroom before U.S. Magistrate Tullio Gene Leomporra. Miss Saxe is accused here of the Sept. 1, 1970, robbery of the Bells Savings and Loan Association. She also is charged with murder and armed robbery in Boston in connection with the slaying of a policeman during a Sept. 23, 1970, bank holdup that netted $26,000. Grad study lounge bans under grads Stale Vitamin C found dangerous AP Photo ATTORNEY EDWARD BENNETT Williams, left, and his client John Connally arrive at U.S. District Court in Washington yesterday. Connally is on trial there for accepting bribes. Lawyer tries to Connally's chief smear PIHILADELPHIA ((R))-Vita- min C tablets kept in the kitch- en or bathroom for a year de- grade into harmful substances, a biochemist told the American Chemical Society yesterday. "Vitamin C is stable in the pure state, when kept away from moisture and oxygen, the researcher s a i d. "However, once a container has been open- ed, and is used frequently, de- gradation sets in." "MOST PEOPLE keep a big bottle of Vitamin C tablets in the bathroom or the kitchen for a year or more. There the lev- els of humidity and temperature are high and the degradation of the vitamin is rapid." Wilk said he analyzed com- mercial Vitamin C tablets with a potency of 100 milligrams. The actual Vitamin C, ascorbic acid, made up only a fourth of the tablets, whichrweighed 400 mil- ligrams. The remaining 300 mil- ligrams was filler, a combina- tion of sugar, lactose, starch, dextrin, talc and magnesium stearate. In the process of degrading, Wilk said Vitamin C breaks down into two sugar compounds. With these by-products and the THE MICHIGAN DAIJY Volume LXXXV, No. 150 Tuesday, April 8, 1975 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. Published d a i11 y Tuesday through Sunday morning during the Univer- sity year at 420 Maynard Street. Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (campus area); $11 local mail (Michigan and Ohio); $12 non-local mail (other states and foreign). Summer session published Tues- day through Saturday morning. l Subscription rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus area); $6.00 local mail (Michigan and Ohio); $6.50 non- local mail (other states and foreign). - tnsrin &11. filler Wilk wYV cail~A Niia m e nuer, n arrieu diabetics not to take large quan- tities of Vitamin C. The ascorbic acid finally de- grades into a toxic substance called oxalic acid, something that is thought to cause urinary infections and accelerate the formation of kidney stones, Wilk said. The biochemist said he bought bottles of Vitamin C from a local drugestore and kept one in a refrigerator and the other at room temperature. Over the course of a year, he said he picked out a few tablets at a time and subjected them to chemical analysis. After 360 days, he said, he found that only 54 per cent of the ascorbic acid in tablets stored in the refrigerator re- mained in pure form, on the shelf the degradation was more rapid. Saudi Arabia, 517,800 square miles in area, occupies most of the Arabian Peninsula. SATURDAY, APRIL 19 HILL AUD. 8 P.M. Good Seats Still Available $6.00, $5.50, $5.00, $4.50 At UM Union 10:30-5:30 Daily 2-5 p.m. Sat. (763-4553) SORRY, NO PERSONAL CHECKS Smokinq and beverages not permitted in auditorium. Presented by UAC Concert Co-op & WCBN I By KATE SPELMAN Outraged undergraduates have been ordered out of the Rack- ham study hall-renowned for its silence and ponderous gran- deur-since the beginning of the term. This exclusion marks the most recent campaign launched by the Rackham Graduate School to enforce a long-standing rule banning undergrads from the hallowed hall. "IT IS SAD that we must stop undergrads from using the hall, but there is limited seating and complaints from grad stu- dents that undergraduates have been uncooperative in adhering to the rules of no smoking, no talking, and not eating in the area," says Frank Zimmerman, assistant to the Dean of Rack- ham. Founded in 1936 with a trust fund left by Horace Rackham, the entire school is designed ''exclusively to furnish graduate school facilities for the Univer- sity." Consequently the spacious stu- dy hall has always been intend- ed for graduate students. But up until now, the school's adminis- trators have been fairly lenient ineallowing other students to use the facility. "WE HAVE posted signs stat- ing that it is for grad students only, but they have been repeat- edly ripped off and ignored," Zimmerman says. Rackham School Government President Craig Cummins also has received complaints about the undergraduate behavior in the study hall. He claims a number of grads have found it "unsafe to study in the building." THE MOVE to exclude under- graduates is as much an at- tempt to improve security as to revive the original purpose of the study hall, Cummins says. Most undergraduates asked about the ban were annoyed about the entire affair. "The place is a study haven," re marked one. "I hate having to go to the UGLI because it's the campus pick-up joint." Cummins acknowledges that sentiment and promises that the Rackham Student Government will help any undergraduates find a place to study in safety, silence, and comfort. Apparent- ly just so long as it's not in the Rackham building. PAPUA NEW GUINEA HAS TWO KNIGHTS CANBERRA, Australia YM -Sir Paul Lapun and Sir Ho- race Niall became the first Papua New Guineans to be, knighted by the British govern-I ment. Sir Paul, the minister for mines and energy, and Sir Ho- race, speaker of the House of Assembly, were created knight bachelors for "long and dis- tinguished service" to Papua New Guinea. The ceremony was in the Australian capital. WASHINGTON (R)-John Con- nally's lawyer attempted yester- day to paint the former treasury secretary's chief accuser as an embezzler and liar who once of- fered to incriminate former President Lyndon Johnson to escape a fraud investigation. "Do you deny that you offer- ed to give evidence to the De- partment of Justice against the former president who you had worked for?" the witness, Jake Jacobsen, was asked. "YES SIR, I deny that," said the man who now insists that Connally took $10,000 in illegal gifts for influencing a 1971 milk support price decision. Edward Bennett Williams, in the first major cross-examina- tion at Connally's bribery trial, attacked Jacobsen's credibility through prolonged readings from former sworn testimony in which Jacobsen said he had notj given Connally the payoff. I Williams' questioning about Johnson, whom Jacobsen had served as legislative counsel in the White House for two years, followed a series of questions about a fraud investigation by the Department of Justice in 1972. HE ASKED Jacobsen whether the Federal Home Loan Bank Board hadsrecommendedsthat he be investigated in a series of bank transactions unrelated to the milk price support de- cision. "I didn't know they'd made such an investigation,"said; Jacobsen, a silver-haired man dressed in a dark brown suit. Williams then elicited from Jacobsen that he had been questioned by the Department of Justice in 1972 about kick- backs on loans from Texas sav- ings and loan institutions. ONE CASE mentioned by Wil- liams involved $175,345 from Robert Taft of Fort Worth- proceeds of a loan of more than $1 million. "I don't understand what you're talking about," Jacobsen insisted. Connally's lawyer then asked about an investigation in- to whether Jacobsen had taken $97,000 worth of stock in a loan transaction. "I don't know," said Jacob- sen. WILLIAMS interrogated Jac- obsen with short quick questions rapidly striding back and forth in front of the jury box. The courtroom was jammed, even with temporary chairs, and a line of people-many of whom had waited since 5:30 a.m.- was left in the hallway.' Jacobsen pleaded guilty last year to a single charge of pay- ing Connally an illegal gra- tuity. In return the government dropped seven felony counts of fraud in a San Angelo, Tex., savings and loan case. Williams read extensively from testimony Jacobsen had accuser given under oath to the Water- gate grand jury and to the Sen- ate Watergate committee. IN ONE grand jury appear- ance on Nov. 2, 1973, Jacobsen was asked what he did with the $10,000 that he had been given by Associated Milk Producers, Inc., for Connally's use. "I kept it," Jacobsen said then. "It is in my safe de- posit box." IN THE sworn testimony that preceded Jacobsen's guilty plea he insisted that Connally refused the money first because he was a Democrat in a Republican ad- ministration and a second time when, out of Richard Nixon's cabinet, he headed Democrats for Nixon. In the Nov. 2, 1973, grand jury appearance Jacobsen was asked why he had not returned the money to the milk producers. "The reason I waited so long was that this Watergate thing came along and I didn't want to return it because of this," Jacobsen said then. "I just left it in the safe deposit box and forgot about it in a little while, frankly." and UNEMPLOYMENT FORUM on ECONOMIC CRISIS Speakers from: i r r F i t United National Caucus-UAW Union for Radical Political Economics TUESDAY, APRIL 8--8 p.m. ANGELL AUD. D NEW AMERICAN MOVEMENT WED. at 1-3-5-7-9 P.M. "DEEP,WILD HUMOR!" -Time Magazine SeductionM of Mimi N4CLORfl FROM NEW LINE CINEMA 9 I 4. /d vi orf 4, ' o ~0J I 1 RENT ME $5 A DAY 1Oc A MILE New VW Super Beetles Pickup and Delivery Available TONIGHT at 7 & 9 P.M. WED. at 1-3-5-7-9 P.M. 7th HIT WEEK -From the deep dark re- cesses of the mind of Mel Brooks comes YOUNG PG FRANKENSTEIN /' __ RENTABEETLE 2016 PACKARD RD. ANN ARBOR I r INCREASES LEARNING ABILITY * EXPANDS AWARENESS * DEVELOPS FULFILLMENT Introductory Lectures (last campus intros this term) WEDNESDAY, APRIL 9 2:00 & 8:00 P.M. Michigan League, Rooms D &E (take elevator to third floor) DAY COURSE: APRIL 9-10 A.M. SIMS OFFICE, 1207 Packard (corner of Wells) *TRANSCENDENTAL ME DITATION for further information, phone 761 -8255 I 994-9300 .vt .. "-..nst..fl syn. . ? ?.;{ ,..n : lfl 1....A.. W4.... . v...... . v; ...:::.": . ..r.tt .... .... Jtt:^""::.. rx.. . ".. .. .x ." . .r:...... ..... ...f" . ..: :.i:.Y....:r:::+.. ::......... .. ...,,. . . . . . F " ~~~~~~~~~~~~~.ff .Y ..".r...i....................... ..........................s ......~ "i.. v............................. rDAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN . 7 .a.r........ v .: ... . ...:{ .^"J ..r,....:..... ...... . I----c-------------- - ---- - -- -- I TOINIGjHT at/7& 9 P.M. WED, at 1 -3-5-7-9 P.M Tuesday, April 8 Day.Calendar WUOM: Milton Friedman, U. of Chicago, "Myth or Reality in Con- temporary Public Opinion," 10 am. Medical Ctr. Commission for Wo- men: C3086 Outpatient, noon. CREES: Halina Taborska, "Meyer- hold and Early Revolutionary Thea- tre," Conf. Rm., Rackham, noon; Ladislav Mateika,'"Language Plan- ning and Language Cinflicts in Yugoslav Cities," 48 Lane Hall, 4 pm. Ctr. Chinese Studies: Mien Laing,' Wayne State, "Big-foot in the Late Ming Art World," Commons Rm.,: Lane Hall, noon. Pendleton Arts Information Ctr.: Open hearth, Martha Burns, Pig- town Flingers, Pendleton Rm., noon. Maternal, Child Health Films: Miss Goodall and the Wild Chim- panzees; Rock-a-Bye Baby, M1112 SPH II, noon. Baseball: UM vs. Western Michi- gan, Fisher Field, 2 pm. Environmental Studies: J. Nys- tuen, "Some Problems of the Green Revolution," 4001 CC Little, 3 pm. Physics: Dr. Philippe Crane, Princeton, "Cosmology: The Eearch for a Standard Candle," 1041 Ran- dali Lab Dr. E. Eichten, Cornell, "Charmonium and Charm Thresh- old," 203$ Randall Lab; both at 4 pm. Statistics: Miloslav Jirina, MSU, "Best Linear Predictor for Certain Nonstationary Processes," 3010 An- gell, 4 pm. English, Extension Service: Poetry reading, Larry Fagin, Aud. 3, MLB, 4:10 pm. Thos. M. Cooley Lecture: Robt. S. Morison, "Biology, Ethics, and Law: Can They Help Each other?"; "Present Prospects," 100 Hutchins Hall, 4:15 pm. Hillel: The Living Jewish Catalog, "How to Do a Jewish Wedding," Hillel, 8 pm. Music School: Piano Chamber Music, Recital Hall, 12:30 pm; con-. cert band, Harry McTerry, conduc- tor, Hill Aud., 8 pm; opera work- shop, Recital Hall, 8 pm. Summer Placement 3200 SAB, 763-4117 Camp Douglas Smith, MI Coed:, interview Weds. April 9 9-5; open- ings incl. specialists in canoe, trip, camp craft, waterfront, nurse & head cook. Jewel Co., Detroit, MI: Interview Thurs/Fri. Apr. 17/18 9-5; openings incl. route salesmen, working estab- lished routes, & customer reps; in- cludes jobs inFlint, Saginaw, Grand Rapids, Toledo; excellent oppor- tunities; further details available. Camp Tamarack, Detroit Fresh Air Society: interview Fri., Apr. 11 1-5; openings for Unit supvs. (21); waterfront & kitchen aids. We have a great reputation and we work at keeping it great. U-M STYLISTS at the UNION ' f t l i July LSAT - SPEND A WEEKEND WITH I OUR ATTORNEY I The Professional Weekend Seminar with an established success record taught by Practicing Attorneys. I Complete Fee-$85. LAW BOARD I CALL TOLL FREE REVIEW CENTER ~' S 800-458-238032 Gramercy Pk. So. I I {!(n Pa. 814-435-6521 ) New York, N. . I ""10003 - I * . I - Detroit 9 San Francisco * St. Louis -I --------------------------- PG r.,___ COLLEGE STUDENTS Su iL hR JOBS A GEO ELECTI ONS XI/iTF1 Are You Interested In: " PHOTOGRAPHY? * MARKETING? " WRITING? . CREATIVE DARKROOM * LAYOUT & DESIGN? WORK? " BUSINESS . ILLUSTRATION? MANAGEMENT? . DECIDING WHAT WILL " SPORTS? BE IN YOUR STUDEN * SALES? YEARBOOK? 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