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October 25, 1972 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1972-10-25

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,Page Two.

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Wednesday, October 25, 1972

PaeTw HEMCIGA AL

Wednesday. October 25. 1972

NATIONAL GUARD INVOLVED

ATTENTION! TEMPORARILY CHANGED

High

court

to*

consider Kent case

WASHINGTON (AP) - The Su-
preme Court yesterday agreed to
hear an appeal by Ohio to block
an investigation into the train-
ing and weapons given members
of the Ohio National Guard,
which was involved in the Kent
State shooting.
The inquiry, ordered last Feb-
ruary by the U. S. Circuit Court
in Cincinnati, resulted from
shootings at Kent State Univer-
sity in May 1970. Four students
were killed when guardsmen op-
ened fire during an antiwar
demonstration.
Ohio officials claimed Guard
training and weapons are not
subject to judicial review. Even
if judges found the procedures at
fault they would not have means
to enforce their findings, said
Attorney General William Brown.
The Supreme Court will hear
the appeal later this term. The
investigation was to be conducted
in a U.S. district court in Ohio.
The suit was filed by three
former Kent State students,
Craig Morgan, Thom Dickerson
and William Slocum. It named
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 mal (in Mich. or
Ohio); $7.50 non-local mall (other
states and foreign).

Gov. John Gilligan Adj. Gen.
Dana Stewart and Asst. Adj.
Gen.. Robert Canterbury of the
Ohio National Guard as defen-
dants.
The suit originally asked the
district court to issue an injunc-
tion against the governor to keep
him from "prematurely" order-
ing National Guard troops to
duty, and to keep National Guard
leaders from violating the stu-
dents' constitutional rights. The
suit also asked the court to rule
unconstitutional an Ohio law ab-
solving state officials from blame
when they ordered the use of
force to quell a disturbance.
In other action yesterday, the
court granted a hearing to Susan
Struck, an Air Force captain fac-
ing discharge from the service
for having a baby.
'In her appeal, the 28-year-old
nurse claimed Air Force regu-
lations unconstitutionally single
out pregnant women for punish-
ment and intrude "into a per-
son's fundamental right to decide

whether to bear a child."
The court will hear the case
early next year. An order last
May by Justice William Douglas
had barred the Air Force from
discharging Struck until the court
decided whether to hear her suit.
The career officer became
pregnant while serving at Cam-
ranh Bay, Vietnam, early in
1970, Her baby was given up for
adoption.
At the time, Air Force regula-
tions required discharge in case
of pregnancy unless the preg-
nancy was terminated. Since
then the regulations have been
modified to permit a waiver.
Struck's request for one was de-
nied' in June 1971..
The appeal said that as a Ro-
man Catholic she was prevented
by her religion from securing an
abortion.
Since an abortion or miscar-
riage would have permitted her
to remain in the Air Force, the
appeal contended the regulations
also violate the constitutional

I

.h'4r0rco0rtv
RETURN ENGAGEMENT AFTER OUR SUMMER POPULAR SHOWING
BEAUTY. AND THE BEAST
A CLASSIC, EXQUISITE AND BAROQUE FANTASY!
Directed by JEAN COCTEAU. French dialogue - English subtitles.
TONIGHT-OCTOBER 25th--ONLY!-
35mm-7 & 8:45 P.M.
TOMORROW Evening: Francois Trauffout's delightful STOLEN KISSES
all showings in Auditorium A, Angell Hall--$1

right of Catholics of the "free
exercise" of their religion.
The court also:
-Ruled 8-1 against John Ni-
chols, a Kansas pathologist who
has been unable to pry from the
government skin samples, bullet
fragments and clothing of the
assassinated President John Ken-
nedy. Nichols wanted to make
laboratory studies in order to re-
fute or confirm the Warren Com-
mission's conclusions.
-Turned down, 6-3, an appeal
by a group of Texas prisoners
who said they were fed bread
and water for up to 15 days in a
pitch-black solitary cell.
Justices William D o u g 1 a s,
William Brennan .Jr. and Thur-
good Marshall said they were
entitled to a ruling on whether
the conditions are unconstitution-
ally cruel.
WEDNESDAY
8Y2
Dir. FREDERICO FELLINI, 1962
with Marcello Mastroianni
and Claudia Cardinale
Fellini's ironical self analysis of
a successful film director, what
to do next after 81/2 films?
Starts with a chillingnightmare
of a traffic jam, goes on as a
mixture of very funny and seri-
ous.
THURSDAY
The American
Underground Perspective
PROGRAM 7
Nine famous experimental
shorts.
ARCH ITECTURE

Everyone \A
Nown

Vandenburg Room
2nd Floor
Michigan Union

Fun, Food, People
NEW PEOPLE WELCOME!

DIAL 5-6290
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Thursday

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* STARTING FRIDAY

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Gene remembered It all.
That summer during World War 1I,
the friendships at school,
and most of all,
the tree which changed their lives forever.

,11

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Al

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Ed Holstein's songs
have been recorded
by Tom Rush, Jack-
son Browne, and
others.
He played last
summer at the
Power Center with
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"Eddie is not only
a good songwriter
and I mean good,
he's funny as hell."
-Steve Goodman

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