/ednesday. April 9, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY rage Three t ,Gg a News Briefs From Wire Service Reports Soviet sub has value, says Pastore WASHINGTON (P)-Sen. John Pastore (D-R.I.), chairman of the Joint Atomic Energy Committee, said yesterday that the CIA "made some significant discoveries" last year when it raised part of a Soviet submarine off the floor of the Pacific Ocean. Pastore, who said his committee had been briefed on the CIA's Project Jennifer, refused to elaborate. But his comments appeared to support recent news accounts that the crew of the agency-financed Glomar Explorer succeeded in recovering two nuclear-tipped torpedoes and other valuable intelligence information from the sunken wreck. CIA DIRECTOR William Colby has told selected journalists in off-the-record briefings that the agency did not recover any of the nuclear weapons aboard the craft, and he urged editors toI withhold publication of the story so that the agency could make another attempt to recover the weapons without the Soviets'. knowledge. Pastore, who spoke to reporters before entering a closed ses- sion with Colby, said he still would rectmmend that the sophisti- cated deep-sea recovery vessel owned by billionaire Howard Hughes return to the wreckage site this summer to complete the operation. Jacobsen unsure of testimony WASHINGTON MP)-John Connally's chief accuser admitted at the former treasury secretary's bribery trial yesterday that he is unsure of some details in his story of payoff and cover-up. Jake Jacobsen; the man who said he made two-and possibly three-$5,000 payoffs to Connally for his help in getting a 1971 increase in milk support prices, was unsure. FOR A TIME, as Connally lawyer Edward Bennett Williams cross-examined Jacobsen, three stacks of bills totaling $10,000 were on the witness stand in front of Jacobsen. It was the money that Jacobsen claims that Connally gave to him to put in his safe deposit box. He said that the defense was trying to discredit him by making it appear that the money never went to Connally but stayed in the box for over two years. Miners protest strip-mining laws WASHINGTON 0P)-A caravan of more than 500 coal trucks wound through the nation's capital yesterday in a protest by Appa- lachian mine operators and mineworkers against strip mining legislation they claim could cost them their jobs. The heavy-duty trucks, most of them from the steep sloping coal fields of southwestern Virginia, formed a slow-moving and often bumper-to-bumper procession through downtown Washing- ton on a route that passed both the Capitol and the White House. As the trucks rumbled by, delegations of miners and their employers buttonholed congressmen in the Capitol and congres- sional office buildings urging them to oppose strip mining bills now in a House-Senate conference committee. Others stood on street corners bearing signs denouncing the legislation and cheering the passing trucks. . NORTH VIETNAM Jackson claims U.S. made secret accord with Saigon PROVINCES January 7 - Phupc tong March 13.- Darlac March 16 - Kontum, Pleiku March 18 - Phu Bon,Binh Long March 19 - Quang Tr; March 22-Quang Duc March 24 -Quang Tin, Quang March 25-Thua Thien March 28-tam Dong March 30-Quang Nam March 31- Binh Dinh April 1- Khonh Hoa April 2- Phu Yen April 2- Tuyen Duc WASHINGTON ( ') - Sen. Henry Jackson (D-Wash.) said Y yesterday he has learned of secret agreements between the United States and South Viet-! nam and called on President Al Ford to make them public. Jackson said in a SenateI speech that he will call admin- H istration officials before one of his subcommittees if the "doc- Oui uments embodying or reflecting Nhon these secret agreements . - - are not made available volun- Tuy tarily. Hoa THE OFFICIALS to be called presumably would include Sec- retary of State Henry Kissinger, H who played the chief role in negotiating the Paris agreement Nha on Vietnam. Trng Jackson, acadat for the Trog 1976 Democratic presidential nomination, said his information n on the alleged secret agree- g ments comes from "the best of authority." "In fairness to President Ford, I think it is only recently that he found out," Jackson added., JACKSON SAID that the ag- reements "envision fateful Am- erican decisions" but that their "very existence has never been acknowledged," even to Con- gress. Secretary of Defense James Schlesinger said Sunday he did not know in detail what commit- ments the United States had made to South Vietnam. But Schlesinger added that it would be incorrect to say that any commitments made to South Vietnam were made unilateral- ly by the executive branch. Sen. Robert Morgan (D-N.C.) called on Jackson to present de- tails about the alleged secret agreements to the Senate. MORGAN said he thinks Con- gress should be debating the President's request for addition- al military aid to Vietnam in- stead of "making accusations against the other branch of gov- ernment." Noting he had spoken in fa-s vor of such aid, Morgan said "I quite frankly feel it's too late to get aid to South Vietnam now" but that the matter should be debated by the Senate. Jackson said he had not seen the agreements himself. He said: "I have been reliably in- formed that there exist between the governments of the United States and South Vietnam secret agreements which envision fate- ful American decisions, yet whose very existence has never been acknowledged." JACKSON said he was ready to join in recent moves for co- operation between the executive and legislative branches in for- eign policy. "But we in Congress cannot play our constitutional role in constructing a coherent foreign policy so long as information to which we are entitled is kept from us," Jackson said. "Nor will the American peo- ple have confidence in their government so long as the com- mitments made in their name are not' revealed to them." USHERS NEEDED!! FOR University Theatre Programs' productions of The Birds April 20, 1975 3 p.m. and 8 p.m. POWER CENTER AND Don't Bother Me, I Can't Cope April 23 & 24, 1975 8 p.m., POWER CENTER Please sign up IN PERSON at the Professional Theatre Program offices in the Mich- igon League building. You must be a U-M student. Try Daily Classifieds PHUOC LONG ODUC Tz 7 BINH LONG D LAM Do Lot ® DONG ;Phan To Ninh Phuac Ronr Binh "e 'rePhan Thiet SAIGON SOUTH VIETNAM ;_. 4 THE MICHIGAN DAILY 'Arbor. Michigan 48104. Subscription Volume LXXXV, No. 151 rates: $10 by carrier (campus area); Wednesa, Apri 9, 197$11 local maii (Michiganand Ohio); WednedayApril9, 175 A12 non-local mall (other states and is edited and managed by students foreign). at the University of Michigan. News Summer session published Tues- phone 764-0562. Second class postage day through Saturday morning. paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. Subscription rates: $5.50 by carrier Published d a i 1 y Tuesday through (campus area); $6.00 local mail Sunday morning during the Univer- (Michigan and Ohio); $6.50 non- sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann local mail (other states and foreign). I 4, Divided nation The areas in black on the map above are those provinces that have been taken from South Vietnamese govt. control by insurgent forces. The captured provinces are listed at left with the dates they were lost. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - I FEDERALLY INSURED STUDENT LOANS SPRING-SUMMER LOANS Students wishinq to borrow through the University's Feder- ally Insured Loan Program during the Sprinq-Summer Term should submit application materials by APRIL 15, 1975. Fundinq is limited and priority will be given to those who apply by April 15 and those who will graduate in Auqust or December 1975, or those for whom summer attendance is a necessity. For additional information contact the Guaranteed Student Loan Office, 2503 S.A.B., or call 763-4127. a JEAN RENOIR'S 1937 GRAND ILLUSION (AT 7) It's World War I and enemy officers are still civil and 1 respectful to each other. Erich Von Stroheim Plays a Prussian Aristocrat-General who shoots down Two French- men in his planeand laterbecomes commander of their orison. Renoir's humanis~m and hatred of war breaks out and destroys its alorv with its duty and grim reality. LILI 1953 LILI (AT 9:05) A Hollvwood musical like you don't see anymore. Starring Zsa Zsa Gabor and Jean Pierre Aumont in Academy Award Winninq Musical Scope. Cinema GuildBOTH SHOWS OLD ARCH. FOR $1.50 AUD. VOTE GECO ELECTI ONS Wed. -Thurs. April 9-10 FISHBOWL FRIEZE 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. i Students for Educational Innovation announce that Nominations will be accepted for the offices of: " PRESIDENT VICE-PRESIDENT " TREASURER " WOMAN'S ADVOCATE at the MASS MEETING to be held WED., APRIL 9, 6:00 P.M. in the Dean's Conference Room, School of Education. Any undergraduates enrolled in the School of Education, applicants in a teacher certification program, and graduate students in any joint education program are eligible. 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