Wednesday, September 19, 1973 TI*H' MICHIGAN DAILY Nage Three Wednesday, September 19, 1973 fl-C MICHIGAN DAILY ... i Tribunals set up 0 in SANTIAGO ,P) - The four- man junta announced yesterday that military courts will try "foreign extremists" caught re- sisting Chile's new military gov- ernment. Conviction could bring the death sentence. A JUNTA spokesman, giving official figures for the first- time, said 95 persons have been killed and 300 wounded since last Tues- day's coup that toppled the three- year-old government of Marxist President Salvador Allende. There have been 4.700 arrests in a week of skirmishes between troops and leftist militants sup- porting Allende, he said. Earlier estimates by police sources had placed the number of dead at 500 and some said the final toll would be much higher. GEN. AUGUSTO PINOCHET UGARTE, junta president and army commander-in-chief, told newsmen: "We calculated we would have a five-day fight, and we were surprised when instead weshad them reduced in 24 hours." He added that the situation throughout Chile is now "abso- lutely normal." A number of foreigners are be- lieved to be among the 4,700 pri- soners. Col. Pedro Ewin, govern- ment secretary - general, said the foreigners will be tried by military courts "acting as war councils:" Col. Oscar Benilla, the interior minister, said a ma- jority of the Chileans among the prisoners will be freed once an investigation is completed. ONLY PINOCHET has author- ity to impose the death sentence on those convicted by the mili- tary tribunals, Ewin, said. "The courts are going to be very severe with foreigners," Pinochet told newsmen, "be-. cause it is unacceptable that these persons, who came to re- ceive education, appeared later as extremists, killing our own citizens." Patricio Alwin, leader of the Christian Democratic party, the nation's largest, said that before the coup Chile was at the edge of a "tremendously bloody".up- rising. Chile THE CHRISTIAN D E M 0- crats, a middle-of-the road par- ty, had governed Chile before Allende's September 1970 elec- tion as the Western Hemisphere's first freely chosen Marxist pres- ident. They strongly opposed his efforts to socialize the economy. The junta has said Allende committed suicide after troops entered the presidential palace following bomb and rocket at- tacks The palace battle was followed by four days of stiff fighting, with soldiers using tanks, ma- chine guns and rifles against die- hard supporters of Allende snip- ing from balconies and rooftops. Elwin said the 95 killed included 72 civilians, 14 national police and nine soldiers. Speaking at a news conference, he ridiculed figures published abroad that there were 70,000 prisoners. 0 $2.00, Goals expressed at Geneva conference L AP Photo SENATOR (UNCLE) SAM ERVIN, chairman of th e Senate Watergate Committee, strides forward with renewed vigor to attend a closed session mee ting of the committee yesterday, following its al- most two month recess. The meeting was held to a pprove a list of prospective witnesses for the public hearings, which will resume next week. Hunt named le adoffwitness WASHINGTON (P) - The Sen- ate Watergate committee said yesterday that wiretapper' E. Howard Hunt will be leadoff witness when televised hearings resume Monday. The panel also called John Ra- gan, a former FBI man and one- time Republican security con- sultant, to testify about his part in° attempting to wiretap, the home ofnewspaper columnist Joseph Kraft. THE ONLY two other witness- es named were White House speechwriter Patrick Buchanan and former presidential law-en- forcement aide John Caulfield, who previously has admitted as- sisting in therWatergate cover-up. Missing from the witness list were political saboteur Donald Segretti, who has agreed to plead guilty to four election-law viola- tions, and Charles Colson, who reportedly faces indictment i\ the Ellsberg break-in. The committee retains hopes that it can hear from Segretti and former presidential counsel Colson despite their legal trou- bles.' RAGAN'S NAME was a sur- prise. He had been mentioned only once before in Watergate testimony, when former presi- dential counsel John Dean 'III said Caulfield told him Ragan helped tap Kraft's telephone. Ragan, reached by telephone at his home in Massapequa, N. Y., denied tapping Kraft's phone and said he didn't know why the committee was calling him. He said he had conducted a "feasibility study" at Kraft's home in 1969, while working as security director for the Repub- lican National Committee. But he said he didn't know whose home it was at the time. "There was no tap," he said. ONE COMMITTEE s o u r c e said Ragan was believed to have been involved in the Secret Serv- ice's reported wiretapping of F. Donald Nixon, the President's brother. Ragan denied that also. Ragan's name was on an ini- tial witness list released by Chairman Sam 1rvin Jr (D-N. C.), at a news conference fol- lowing an executive session of the committee. The :leadoff witness for the hearings is convicted Watergate conspirator Hunt, a former CIA operative and member of the White House plumbers groups. HUNT ASKED a federal judge Monday to withdraw his guilty plea in the original Watergate case and dismiss charges against him. Hunt said he had been told of the Watergate break-in had the approval of high White House officials and was connected with national security. His Senate testimony .is ex- pected to deal both with Water- gate and with other political es- pionage and sabotage and is .toj serve as a transition to other phases of the investigation. Ervin said Segretti remains un- der subpoena and the committee intends to call him. THE COMMITTEE planned to meet in another closed session Wednesday to discuss a possible appearance of former special presidential counsel Colson. His lawyer reportedly told the com- mittee his client expected to be indicted in connection with the 1971 burglary of the office of the psychiatrist of Pentagon Papers figure Daniel Ellsberg. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXIV, No. 12 wednesday, September 19, 1973 is edited and managed by students at1 the University of Michigan. News phone1 764-0562. Second class postagepaid at Ann Arbor. Michigan 48106. PublishedI daily Tuesday through Sunday morning during the University year at 420 May- nard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (cam- pus area); $11 local mail (Michigan and~ Ohio); $12 non-local mail (other states and foreign). Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday ,morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus area); $6.50 local mail (Michigan and! Ohio); $7.00 non-local mail (other states and foreign). GENEVA, (Reuter) - The second and decisive phase of the 35-nation European Security Con- ference opened yesterday with its Swiss Chairman expressing the hope 'that delegates could bring about a greater degree of secur- ity, freedom and liberty in the region. Officials and experts of 35 Eu- ropean countries, the United States and Canada are faced with some six months of labori- ous work on drafting detailed proposals for measures to insure security and encourage greater East - West economic and scien- tific cooperation and more hu- man contacts. THE CONFERENCE is being held against the background of growing western public criticism of the Soviet Unions treatment of its intellectual dissidents. Rudolf'" Bindschedler, head of the Swiss delegation, said in op- ening the meeting: "I hope that while we devote our efforts to- wards peace we do not forget justice. Durable peace cannot exist unless it is founded on jus- tice." The western delegations are determined to put a human face on the conference by seeking im- portant concessions from the Soviet Bloc countries on more travel and greater flow of in- formation across the east-west dividing' line in Europe. THE WESTERN side has made clear it will not go to the third and final stage of the confer- ence, which the Soviet Union wants to be held at summit level in Helsinki next year, unless there is real progress on the hu- man contacts question. Human contacts will be discus- sed under the third of the confer- ences four agenda items. It was immediately highlighted today when in the committee dealing with it the Soviet Union, Bulgaria and Poland made sug- gestions on the procedure for dis- cussing cooperation in humani- tarian and other fields. WESTERN SOURCES said that the Soviet blocs tactic was to try to get quick discussion on a draft declaration on cultural co- operation and exchange of in- formation put forth jointly by Bulgaria and Poland in the com- mittee and not in a sub-commit- tee. The ,sources pointed out that the declaration was in general terms and provided only guide- lines. The western side wanted agreement on concrete measures which would begin to break down barriers on human contacts and thus help in further reducing ten- The Soviet Union's main inter- est is in getting agreement on a draft declaration it submitted duringethe first stage of the con- ference at Helsinki in July. THE RUSSIAN DRAFT in ef- fect calls for an acceptance of the post-war status quo in Eu- rope. It will be discussed under the first agenda item - questions re- lating to security in Europe. Bindschedler, without making any reference to this or any oth- er of the many draft declarations .put to the conference, told the delegations: "It is not sufficient to adopt declarations and proc- lamations however solemn they may be." HE OBSERVED that although such documents could exert po- litical influence for a more or less long period, they would not be sufficient to build a perma- nent and stable European sys- tem. "It is stability, order and se- curity that weare seeking here which form the only guarantee for peace," he said. s PSKI IS Q O ' MON: Y 217"one of the half " Adozen best albums of the year. r Ann Ar bor -Rolling Stone 9/27/73 WEDNESDAY SEPT. 19 formerly of the S Jim Kweskin WILLIE AND THE Jug Band BUM BLEBEES MN.4'TUS. MON. & TU Es, COVER $1 .00 THURSDAY, SEPT. 20I U.UtahPhillips the Golden voice of the Great and Willie and the Bumblebees TONITE- COVER $3 00 HOOT 50c Fri.-Sat. 21 & 23-JUSTICE MILES COVER $1.50 . Sunday 23rd-RADIO KING-cover $1.50 Monday 24th-UPRISING-cover $1.00 ROCK & ROLL DANCING! , E ". :. -~ . A special extra Leningrad concert with our 100-voice Festival Chorus 1973-74 concert season will be the Leningrad Philharmonic joining with the Festival Chorus of the University Choral Union to present Prokofieff's magnificent cantata, "Alexander Nevsky," sung in Russian. The performance will also feature the 'NIVERSITY m