Friday, November 2, 1973 I HE MICHIGAN DAILY F'age Three I * i Karleton Armstrong jailed for 23 years I IM -MADISON OP) - Karleton Arm- strong, who pleaded g'illv to charges in the 1970 University of Wisconsin bombing that killed a physics researcher, was sentenc- ed yesterday to 23 years in prison. "Long live the revolition," the bearded Armstrong shouted after Circuit Judge William Sachtjen sentenced him on a second-degree murder charge. The 27-year-old former Univer- sity of Wisconsin student walked out of the courtrdom with his right fist raised in salute. Supporters in the audience responded, "Right on, Karl." government has been running wild," defense attorney Melvin Greenberg said. ATTORNEY William KunstleJ, who defended the Chicago Seven, said he thought Sachtjen should have given Armstrong a shorter sentence. "I know it was hard for him, and if he had taken more time I don't think he could have done it, Kunstler said. "I think he missed i great op- portunity for reconcilation and to set a precedent far beyond the importance of this particular case:" CLARK MacGREGOR-, who directed president Nixon's re-election campaign, answers a question dur- ing his appearance before the Senate Watergate Committee yesterday. M acregor claims innocence o invovement in Watergate SACHTJEN also sent.aced Arm- KUNSTLER said Armstrong's strong to indeterminate terms of act was "not the willful ac* of a up to 15 years for arson and 10 B52 bomber or the president of years for transporting explosives, the United States . . . it was a well- to run concurrently with the sec- motivated and well-intentioned ond-degree murder term. act." Armstrong, who has been in cus- In his closing argum4nts, assist- ; tody since his arrest in Canada ant state Atty. Gen. Michael Zale- early last year will be eligible for member of the "lunatic fringe" in parole if five years. He still faces ski described ' Armstroag as s federal charges in connection with member of the "lunatic fringe" in the bombing, in which physici3t the Madison peace movement and Robert Fassnacht, 33, was killed.said he needed rehabili-ation. Armstrong, who had bean charg- Zaleski said testimony at the ed with first-degree murder in presentence hearing was "totally 1 Fassnacht's death, pleaded guihy irrelevant and immaterial." in September to the reduced charge He said Armstrong was "a sick Sunder a plea bargain ii which the personcrying out for rezogrtion," prosecution agreed to reommend a but that he should not get off with 25-year sentence. a "slap of the wrists." L ,.. WASHINGTON (P) - F o r m e r Nixon campaign manager Clark MacGregor testified yesterday, he was used and deceived in the Wat- ergate affair and said the Presi- dent should submit to questioning by the Senate Watergate commit- tee's two ranking members. In a separate statement, S e n . Barry Goldwater, (R-Ariz.), said an apearance by Nixon before the full Watergate commiu:e may cf fer the President the only way out of problems of credibility that now beseige him. A third formula was offered by Sen. Lowell Weicker, (R-Conn.), who suggested the President' be asked to invite the entire panel to the White 'House and submit to complete questioning. WEICKER SAID that the. corn- mittee will vote on his proposal at its next executive session and that most Watergate committee mni bers have greeted the idea enthus- iastically. Weicker said no oath should be required of the President, but in- sisted that a transcript of the pr:)- posed session be made public.. Testifyiing before th, commit- tee, MacGregor, a former Minne- sota congressman ad White House aide, said he,believes Nixon migllt be willing to submit to questions put informally by We -gate Chair- man Sam Ervin Jr., (D-N.C.), and Vice Chairman Howard B a k e r Jr., (R-Tenn.). MacGREGOR TOLD newsmen he had not checked his idea with Nixon before offering it to the * committee. In his testimony, MacGregor dis- puted parts of the testimon,' of two previous witnesses and said of his' campaign experiences: "It doesn't make one happy to learn that one has oeeii used." MacGREGOR singled out former THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXIV, No. 50 Friday, November 2, 1973 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 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, publishe 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). White House counsel John Dean HE CONTRADICTED previous and Jeb Stuart Magruder, his im- testimony in which Robert Mar-1 mediate subordinate at Nixon's re- dian, a lawyer for the Nixon re-! election committee, as having used ,election committee, said MacGre-I him.', gor refused to listen when he told! "I think I ought to make it cry- him there was serious "exposure" stal clear- that I do not include in the Watergate affair by key1 the President of the U n i t e d committee officials. States," MacGregor said. "His re- MacGregor said he was kept ig- lations with me have been trust- norant about the Watergate affair I THE AGREEMENT enabled Armstrong's attorneys to present testimony as to motivativi for the bombing in a two-week presenterIce hearing that ended last Friday. Defense witnesses included Pen- tagon papers case defendant An- thony Russo and antiwar activistt Philip Berrigan. Testimony attack- ed United States involvement in! Vietnam and attempted to link activities at the Army Mathemat- ics Research Center with military projects. "Democracy means people must' act to stop the government when it runs wild, as it is clear o u r U 11- MOTION PICT-URES' worthy . ." MacGregor took charge of Nix- on's re-election committee, replac- ing former Atty. Gen. John Mit- chell, two weeks after- the June 17, 1972 break-in at Democratic National Headquarters. HEARINGS BEGIF and the involvement of some cam- paign and administration officialsF in it. After hearing MacGregor in the morning, the committee recessed its public hearings until next Tues- day. No witnesses were announced.' 111 SATYAJIT RAY WEEKEND CHARULATA This Indian master, best known for his apu trilogy, returns with, an exquisitely told story of a woman whose husband neglects her and is oblivious to her loneliness. Senate question's Ford Sat.: RAY'S KANCHENJUNGHA Sun.: RAYS THE ADVERSARY Next Week: JOHN FORD FESTIVAL WASHINGTON (P) - Vice Presi- :ent-designate Gerald Ford denied at his confirmation hearings yes- terday any wrongdoing in the hand- ling of $11,500 in campaign funds which he did not report to t h e House. Itemizing each of the five checks involved, Ford said that to the best :f his knowledge they were report-; ed by the donors in proper public documents and subsequently re- ported by the Republican Congres- sional Campaign Committee as re- quired by law. The funds involved were contri- buted to Ford in 1970 and chan- neled to the Republican Congres- sional Campaign Committee which then sent a similar amount to the Michigan congressman'sdistrict. ALTHOUGH FORD did not re- port the contributions in his per- sonal statement of campaign fin- ances filed with the House, he said they weretalltproperly re- corded in other places. Ford also offered himself as a peacemaker and mediator in al crisis-ridden government saying, "I can be a helpful bridge ,between the executive and the legislative branch." Ford called the 5th congres- sional district of Michigan, which has elected him to Congress 13 times, "a moderate electorate, and my own views are not as conserva- tive as might have been implied. "I CONSIDER myself a moder- ate certainly on domestic affairs," Ford said, "a conservative on fis- cal affairs and an internationalist on foreign policy." In regard to the 1970 campaign funds, Ford said he got more mon- ey than he feeded and sent it to the GOP committee' to distribute to others. He said he sometimes told donors to send money directly to the House GOP campaign commit- tee rather than to his campaign. "Historically, a person in thvd leadership capacity does get con- tributions . . . that are way above our needs for campaigns," said Ford, the House minority leade". FORD SAID there was no under- standing between him and the "I believe in this case -here is no violation of the laws whatso- ever," Ford said. Ford also denied that the money he got from the GOP committee exceeded the limit set by Michigan law. Ford said the law requires1 that no candidate may spend more than $10,500 on his own behalf. He said some money went to commit- tees other than to the Ford forj Congress Committee, of which he was treasurer. "LATE IN the campaign several other committees had been estab- lished on my behalf," Ford said.' HAND-MADE FUR JACKET WE HAVE THE LARGEST SELECTION OF SHEEPSKIN COATS IN ANN ARBOR NOW ON SALE HOUSE OF IMPORTS Mon. & Fri.-'til 9 Tues., Wed., Thur., Sat.-'til 6 320 E. LIBERTY ANN ARBOR-769-8555 CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT at 7 and 9:05 Architecture Aud. Adm. $1 **TONIGHT & SATURDAY ** DAVID LEAN'S LAWRENCE, OF 1962 ARABIAI committee that the money be neled back to him. fun- Like the desert itself, this film about the famous British soldier-adven- turer, T.E. Lawrence, is vast, awe-inspiring, beautiful with ever chang- ing hues, exhaustive, and wide screen. Peter O'Toole, Omar Sharif, Alec Guinness, Anthony Quinn. i THIS WEEKEND! CINEMA 1' AUD. A ANGELL HALL 6:45 & 10:00p.m. FRI. & SAT., NOV. 2, 3 Admission $1 The Leningrad Philharmonic IN TWO DIFFERENT PROGRAMS: Saturday at 8:30--all-Prokofiev Sunday at 2:30--Rachmlaninoff and Prokofiev SUNDAY FRENCH CINEMA: Jean Luc Godard's CONTEMPT 11 both in HILL AUDITORIUM YNJOVEkT Y @vIUSICAL O8GIETY BURTON TOWER, ANN ARBOR Weekdays 9-4:30, Sat. 9-12 Hill Aud. box office open Sat. at 7 p.m., Sun. at 1:00 Phone: 665-3717 1111 PRESENTS 11 the movic at BRIARWOOD Adjacent to J.C. Penney 0 769-8780 " 1-94 & S. State, Ann Arbor STUDENT DISCOUNT DAILY FROM 1:30- (except Fri. and Sat. eve.) ,75c OFF ADULT ADMISSION, School I.D. Reqd. MOVIE, GEORGE SEGAL GLENDA JACKSON 1 TOUCH OF CLASS (PG' MOVIE 2 (PG) HELD OVER 2ND WEEK "BILLY JACK" DISCOUNTS DO NOT APPLY Wed.-Thur.-Fri. at 4:55, 7 & 9:05 Sat. at 10:30, 12:40, 2:50, 4:55,7 & 9:05 Sunday at 12:40, 2:50, 4:55, 7 & 9:05 MOVIE 3 (P.G.) PIn MI UAIAL If it was murder, wheres the Basedonthe Tony Award FPO 4 Winni~gpBroa way play TWENETMCEMURY-FOX Palomar Pictures International nt Neil Simon's I the Colorful 16 Member Ensemble Holiday in Greece htwY YYY YY YY Y Y'' :rK * F +++++++ - - New world media international film series 'TTTT'r -PRESENTS- PROGRAM NO. 7 CINEMA, AFRICA -FEATURING A LUTA CONTINUA Mozambique, 1971. Directed by Robert Van Lierop; photographed by Robert Fletcher. 32 minutes, color. English language narration.A "A LUTA CONTINUA is unquestionably the best available film on the African liberation struggle . (it) not only portrays the texture and quality of life in free Mozambique with a sensitive and sympa- thetic camera eye, but it also sets this portrait within an historical and political context." -Southern African Magazine TAUW Senegal, 1970. Directed by Ousmane Sembene. 26 minutes, color. Wolof with English subtitles. Directed by Ousmone Sembene, Africa's best-known film-maker, "Tauw" focuses on the anomie and despair caused by Senegal's high rate of unemployment, and the generational clash, in which the old still cling to Islam, polygamy, and paternal dictatorship, while the young' listen to rock, steal without guilt, and grapple with man and womanhood in a rapidly changing society. YOU HIDE ME England, 1972. Directed by Kwate Nee-Owoo. 20 minutes, black arid white. English language commen- 'K 'K Ty 'K 'KT YK Ty Ty Ty TK yK 'K 'Ky TT 4C y'K T'K TK 'K 'KT TK 'K TyK Ty 'K Ty T' 'K. Ty, TK Ty TK 'Ky Ty Ty Ty 'KT 'T 4t' " HARRY LEMONOPOULOS (Bouzouki)--played for Melina Mercouri in "Ilia Darling" and for Anthony Quinn in "The Kings Dream" * MARIA MELAGIA and FOTIS KOIS-Vocalists who are the rage of the Plaka * PROSSOS and TANDA-Choreography. See and Learn the Sirtaki, the Zorra Dance and Many Others. This SUNDAY,-Nov. 4-8 p.m.- a.m. Direct from PLAKA rhe Holiday will include: e THE BIRDS-Rock, European Style * PETRUS-plays fine clarinet (the Artie Shaw of Greece) *