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February 13, 1974 - Image 8

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1974-02-13

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE MICHIGAN DAILY vveanesaay, reoruary t~, ~ i-i.

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Wednesday, a ruary

ompson greets 'U' audience

Students, 'U' battle over johns

(Continued from Page 1)
mal format. "To satisfy contractual obligations
quiring a two-hour presentation) I could read
n the cocaine papers of Sigmund Freud," he
imented. .
[e did make good one threat-to read from the
e and Fall of the Third Reich-,and for a min-
jabbered away faster and faster until he
mmed the book shut and fielded line-drive
stions from the audience.
'he crowd, in an atmosphere of idolitry cheered

whenever Thompson spoke in the style he writes.
Asked if he wanted to edit True Confessions Mag-
azine, he replied, "that's what I call a stupid
question."
Asked to characterize President Nixon's state of
affairs, Thompson commented "he's like the coach
of a football team facing fourth down and 32 who
suddenly discovers his punter is a junkie."
The crowd cheered, ready to lap up everything

(Continued from Page 1)
them to hold "a corridor meeting
in the near future to explain the
current publicity and to clarify the
staff's commitment to separate
bathroom facilities.
400 Alice Lloyd residents joined
forces and sent a letter of com-
plaint to the Regents, requesting
that "students living in University
owned residence halls have the
right to determine democratically,

',
,i

through secret ballot after free would change. But he said, "The
discussion by the residents of each issue is bigger than coed bath-
housing unit, the policy regarding ( rooms. The Regents should not
the use of bathroom facilities." play the role of moralizer.

TONIGHT and every WEDNESDAY
on WCBN-FM, 89.5:
7-8 p.m.: TALKBACK-A listener call-in show with
local guests of interest
8-8:30 p.m.: SCATTERED ARTS-Music and poetry
from the community along with discussion with the
artists
MORE PUBLIC SERVICE PROGRAMMING FROM
ANN ARBOR'S ALTERNATE RADIO STATION!

IN ESTABLISHING co-habitablee
bathrooms, members of a hall get
together and take a vote.-
In most cases it only takes one-
"no" vote to throw out the whole
idea, and since the ballots are
secret, no one gets rejected or
kicked around by the other mem-
bers of the hall if the motion
doesn't pass.
Munson said he doubted Univer-
sity policy on coed bathrooms

"Maybe these bathrooms should
exist," he added, "maybe they
shouldn't, but the decision should
be made by the students."
--I- - - -- -

edge halts transfer

of Calley to prison

{

FOREST TERRACE
1001 SOUTH FOREST
Fall Rentals
Modern Two-Bedroom Apts.

COLUMBUS, Ga. (MP)-U.S. Dis-
trict Court Judge Robert Elliott
has issued a temporary restraining
order for'bidding the Army from
transferring Lt. William Calley to
a military prison.
Elliott ruled late Monday after
lawyers for Calley filed a petition
challenging his conviction for mur-
ders at My Lai.
The judge also ordered the Army
to produce Calley at 10 a.m. Feb.
27 in the court "in order that the
court may inquire into the cause
of petitioner's detention and de-
termine whether all or some of
petitioner's prayers for relief shall
be granted."
Elliott further forbade the Army
from subjecting "the petitioner to
a more restrictive condition of
confinement than that which has
existed in the immediate past"
and from denying "to petitioner

the opportunity to confer with
counsel at reasonable times."
CALLEY, 30, has been confined
to his apartment at nearby Ft.
Benning, Ga., since March 1971
when she was sentenced to life im-
prisonment for murdering 22 ci-
vilians during his platoon's sweep
through the South Vietnamese ham-
let of My Lai.
President Nixon ordered Calley
placed under house arrest instead
of confining him to prison at Ft
Leavenworth, Kan. Calley's life
sentence was later reduced to 20
years. Nixon has said he will re-
view the final judicial ruling on
Calley.
The judge directed that all those
named as respondents in Calley's
petition file prehearing briefs not
later than Feb. 25.
Calley's petition, filed earlier
Monday, was the first action taken

by Calley's lawyers in a court
outside the military system.
The motion asks that Calley be
freed on bail and holds that his
conviction was illegal and that he
was deprived of various constitu-
tional rights.
THE LIEUTENANT'S chief ci-
vilian lawyer, George Latimer of
Salt Lake City, said in a telephone
interview:
"We were tipped that the Army,
was contemplating moving him,I

"We didn't want him moved at
this time, we saw no sense in it,
not until President Nixon acts as
he said he would," Latimner said.
The lawyer said he had had no
documentation from Nixon that
Calley would be left under house
arrest, but "it was my understand-!
ing that Lt. Calley would be left
where he was ordered placed by!
the President until such time as
the President acted."
Daily Classifieds I

LOOKING FOR AN AREA
OF CONCEN TRA TION?
Interested in Sociology?
Come to the Sociology Lounge (3501 ) LSA
3:00 p.m., Thursday, February 14
and hear what's going on

'
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fully furnished & carpeted
each apt. equipped with its own
burglar alarm system
private parking-free
garbage disposals
24 hr. emergency maintenance service
live in resident manager
Cable TV-free
8 or 1 2 month lease available

that they were preparing certain Bring Quick Results
papers.

See Randy or Andy Young
Apt. 211, 769-6374

Valentine Ring Days
at the MICHIGAN UNION
For the week of Feb. 11-15 all rings purchased will
include a FREE signature etched in gold. See our
display of class rings at the concession stand on
the first floor.
BOO K
Hundreds of hardbacks on clearance
priced 1.98 or as cheap as 19c. Single
copies and changing fast with values to
74.95-40% to 90% off. New titles daily.
Here are a few of the hundreds:
LIST SALE
Great Bridges of the World .....................Spec. 1.00
Vergil's Aeneid (line by line trans) ..............6.95 1.29
Three Centuries of childrens books in Europe ......8.95 1.98
Gehlen's Memorir of WW 11.................10.00 1.98
Concise Hist. of Modern Art ..................6.95 1.98
Political Anthropology-Balandier .... . .........6.95 1.98
Life of Moliere-Bulgakov ........... . ........ 6.95 1.98
Russian Folk Tales.. .... .......... ..... . 4.95 1.00
The French-Portrait of a People ..............7.95 1.98
Double Measure (critical study of D.H. Lawrence) 5.98 1.00
Science of Art-Cybernetics.................. 6.95 1.49
Poets Thru Their Letters: Donne, Swift, etc........8.50 1.98
Stendal-Notes on a Novelist..... . ..........5.98 1.98
Briefing for a Descent Into Hell-Lessing .........6.95 1.98
Internt. Communism in Era of Lenin.......... 7.50 1.98
Basic Problems of Philosophy 680pp...........8.95 1.98
Hindu Mysticism ............... . .... . . .... 4.95 1.00
European Enamels in Color (illus) ....... ....'. 4.95 1.49
Tacitus-A Biography............. . .... . 5.95 1.00
Reisman's Conversations in Japan...... . ........7.95 1.98
Elizabethan Handwriting-A Manual ...........8.95 1.98
European Carpets (illus color) .................4.95 1.49
Henry James-A Biography..... . .............5.95 1.98
George Santoyana's America...................5.75 1.29
Down Hill All the Way-Leonard Woolflex .......5.95 1.29
Early Decorative Textiles (illus color)......... .4.95 1.49
BORDERS BOOK SHOP
316 So. State St. 668-7653
ALMOST ALWAYS OPEN
9 a.m.-10 p.m. Mon.-Sat., 11-6 Sun.
"Where the 5.00 bag is still a reality!"
Faculty and non-faculty:
10% discount on hardcovers
BOO~qWK SAL

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