Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, McarcK 16, 1973 Page T w o H E IC HI A N AIL YFri ay, arc 16, 197 DOLLAR CRISIS CONTINUES Nations confer in Paris JAZZ IN DETROIT By AP and Reuters PARIS - The dollar declined' against major European curren- cies yesterday on the eve of the Paris meeting expected to end three weeks of monetary crisis throughout the Western world. The dollar had been showing some signs of strengthening over the past few days and some Euro- peans had expressed hope that the dollar crisis that began in early March might be ending. But uncertainty seemed to devel- op on what might be the outcome of today's major meeting of non- Communist trading nations in Paris. Representatives of the '14 na- tions most deeply involved in the Union fun latest monetary upheaval are ex-, ference is whether the U n i t e d pected to make final decisions to enable foreign exchange markets to reopen normally on Monday when they gather here today. Success for the conference seems assured following last weekend's decision by the nine-nation Com- mon Market to float six currencies jointly against the dollar and the three per cent revaluation of the German mark. Treasury Secretary George Shultz conferred with Chancellor Willy Brandt in Bonn yesterday on the monetary crisis before flying to Paris. Total secrecy was imposed on the outcome of their talks. A key question at today's con- States will assist the Common Mar- ket's plans for a joint float against all other currencies by taking steps to support the dollar. West German newspapers sug- gested that no strong U.S. commit- ment to help the Europeans on the money front could be expected unless the Common Market offers such return favors as lowering trade barriers to agricultural and other imports from the United Stat- es. TWEATHER REPORT MAR. 16=18 STRATA CONCERT GALLERY/46 SELDEN TICKETS: $4 advance. $5 at door FIRST SHOW, 9:30-SECOND SHOW, MIDNIGHT/FRI. & SAT. FIRST SHOW, 8:00-SECOND SHOW, 10:30/SUN. TICKETS AVAILABLE AT: STRATA CONCERT GALLERY, 831-1666 DISCOUNT RECORDS, 1235 S. UNIV., ANN ARBOR 4 ds payoff -a 4 Yablonski murders? ERIE, Pa. {P)" - The prosecu- tion began calling union organizers and pensioned miners to the stand yesterday in an attempt to link the United Mine Workers and defeatedj union president W. A. "Tony" Boyle to what the prosecution con- tends was payoff money for the Yablonski murders. Frosty AN INDIAN IN WOUND guard duties to confer character as the Amer week of occupation of thei PENTAGON P ourt .-.- .. :As the state's murder trial of AP Photo former UMW organizer William the Snow guard? Prater resumed in Erie County b Court, one witness admitted lying ED KNEE, S.D. takes time out from his to a federal grand jury probing with a fellow warrior of rather frigid the killings and said he feared he ican Indian Movement begins its third would "be killed, too" if he chang- ir newly declared nation. ed his story. Noah Doss, a union organizer in the Tennessee-Kentucky coal fields, APERS: testified yesterday that he helped arrange kickbacks in union funds. " He said he had lied when he told e grand juries he was never involv- ed in a kickback scheme with Al- bert Pass, who is scheduled to Prater and Pass are accused of helping divert union funds to pay for the murders of Boyle's arch- rival in the union, Joseph A. "Jock" Yablonski, and Yablonski's wife and daughter. The government claims that Pra- ter and Doss were among six or- ganizers in the UMW's District 19 who helped divert $20,000 in union money to pay for the killings. ,1 Soviet decree; may restrict publications MOSCOW (P) - A new Kremlin I I law made public yesterday could called by defense stand trial on state murder charg- sharply restrict publication in the es iWest of works by Russian authors LOS ANGELES (P) - Theodore' Sorensen, special counsel to Presi-t lent John F. Kennedy, arrived yes- terday to testify in behalf of Daniel Ellsberg and Anthony Russo at the Pentagon papers trial. Sorensen, the fourth Kennedy adviser called by the defense, said he would tell jurors that two vol- umes of the top-secret Pentagon study of the Vietnam war had no relation to U.S. national- defense by the time Ellsberg and Russo! nnIA d h in 1940 that release of the Pentagon pap- ers in 1969 would have had no ef- fect on U.S. defense interests. Before Sorensen could take the stand, the government prosecutor cross-examined a 79-year-old Can- adian diplomat, trying to prove that the witness tried to encourage Vietnam peace talks in 1966 only because of Canadian "ulterior mo- tives." The witness, white-haired Ches- ter Ronning. emphatically denied The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0562. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan. 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (campus area); $11 local mail (in Mich. or Ohio); $13 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 (in Mich. or Ohio); $7.50 non-local mail (other Sstates and foreign). considered anti-Soviet. The law, passed Feb. 21 by the Supreme Soviet and signed by Pre- sident Nikolai Podgorny, was dis- tributed yesterday in the legisla- tive body's latest weekly bulletin of new legislation. The law seemed aimed at stop- ping publication abroad of "samiz- dat" works critical of the regime. Samizdat, which means self-pub- lished, circulates clandestinely in typewritten copies and many such works eventually reach the West and are published there. I c0pe t mem ii n11 6U Y. , -. In the past week, the Kennedy this. "New Frontier," has, been repre- He said President Lyndon B. sented at the trial in testimony of Johnson believed in the "good former advisers McGeorge Bundy, faith" of Canadian efforts to bring Arthur Schlesinger Jr. and John U.S. and Hanoi officials to the ne- Kenneth Galbraith. All have said gotiating table. MUSIC LESSONS SIGN UP NO WFOR CLASS GUITAR LESSONS. JUST $12.00 FOR A SIX-WEEK COURSE. Rentals available. Also private lessons on guitar, flute, recorder, banjo,j piano, and moog*'CALL Ann Arbor Music Mart 769-4980 9:30-9:00 336 South State Street TODAY SHOWS AT 1 -3-5-7-9 P.M. "NEVER GIVE A INCH" was the motto of the Stampers of Oregon... and live it they did! 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