The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, November 15, 1977-Page 3 GOVERNMENT DENIES POLICE BRUTALITY: tCU SEE NE4S APE C Z.AL i e { y Discord in copyland Employees of the Accu-Copy center, 524 E. William St., walked off the job yesterday and hit the picket line after an impasse developed in talks for thesworkers' first contract. "It's not a financial strike - we do not have financial grievances against the owners. It's a matter of job security,' said Bill Wilcox, spokesman for the seven striking workers. Accu-Copy's employees voted unanimously on August 22 to be repre- sented by Graphic Arts International Union (GAIU) local 289. Talks bet- ween company and workers began shortly thereafter, but stalled on issues of guaranteed ork hours. "All (the striking employee') have seen the money come in and they think there's oodles and oodles of cash, but it isn't so," said Phil Zaret, co-owner of the shop. "It's unfortunate that the employees must share in the fortunes of the business" through fluctu- ating work hours, Zaret added. "They'll have to ride it out." Meanwhile, the strikers have filed ln unfair labor practice charge against Accu-Copy for cutbacks in hours the day after the union vote. Negotiator for Accu- Copy is none other than William Neff, chief bargainer for the University in last winter's contract talks with service workers, which led to a month- long walkout. Hapenings. e . ...you've all heard about the new murality -- now Prof. James Cock- roft~addresses the subject with a noon speech on "Contemperary Mural Movements" in 162 LSA ... Rev. Herb Lowe speaks on the "Wilmington Ten" at a noon luncheon in the International Center, 603 E. Madison ... M. Nincic will speak on "The Future of North-South relations" before a noon hour crowd in 1017 Angell ... make the scene with the Dean as LSA Dean Billy Frye and philosophy faculty and students meet for tea in 1011 Angell at 4 p.m. ... Sociocinema continues to crank out the free films, this week showing Death of a Peasant and Hearts and Minds at 4:00 in MLB Aud. 4 and again at 7:30 in MLB 3 ... Mavis Hetherington of the University of Virginia psychology department speaks on "The Young Child and Divor- ce" at 4 in the School of End's Schorling Auditorium ... Edward Field gives a poetry reading at 4:10 in the Union's Pendleton Room ... the Ski Club meets in the Union's Anderson Room at 7:00 ... Prof. Zvi Gitelman speaks on "Soviet Jewry" in 164 East Quad at 7:00 ... First Ward Democrats will meet to discuss issues and candidates at 7:30 in Room 207, Community High ... the Chess Club meets at 7:30 in the Bursley Library ... Jacques Cousteau, talent agent, has recruited "The Singing Whales" for a film of the same name: sponsored by Greenpeace at 7:30 in the UGLI Multi- purpose Room ... the Law School's Roger Martindale speaks on "Admis- sions to Law Schools" at a meeting of the Michigan Economic Society at 7:30 in 301 Econ Building ... Israeli consul Dan Kyram discusses "Pales- tinians, the West Bank and Geneva" at 8:00 in MLB Lec. Rm. 1 ... Peter Goldmark will speak on "The New Rural Society" at 8:00 in Rackham Amphitheatre ... the All Campus Orchestra will toot for free in Hill Auditorium at 8:00 ... Rose Slivka, editor of Crafts Horizons, will speak at 8:00 in the Pendleton Room as part of the Craftsmen Guild Yeats Series get your "Wings" at a free Cinema Guild showing, 8:00 in the Old Arch Aud. ... and an informal community education series on diabetes will be he7 in Biarwood Community Room D from 7:30-9:00. On the outside athe:week, withLaehigh.of 520 andea Today will be the one warm yewRutheSweethahifRadha overnight low of 37*. There is a chance of showers today or tomorrow. Sorry. Biko inquest begins in PRETORIA, South Africa (AP)-- The day before black activist Steve Biko died of brain injuries he was found on the concrete floor of his cell glassy-eyed, panting and foaming at the mouth, police witnesses testified at an inquest yesterday. The officers also said the 30-year-old leader of South Africas' black consciousness move- ment, whose death set off protests and demonstrations, was kept naked in his cell and that he had to be subdued and shackled after he attacked interrogators during a ques- tioning session. The witnesses testified on the first day of an inquest ordered into Biko's death Sept. 12 in a Pretoria jail. An autopsy report said he died of head injuries. BIKO WAS the 21st black to die in police detention in 18 months, and his death sparked an outcry in South Africa and abroad. It set off a progression of protests and crack- downs culminating in an internation- al arms embargo voted against South Africa in the U.N. Security Council. South African government officials have maintained that Biko did not die as a result of police brutality. Thus the inquest has come to be viewed as a test of the South African government's contention that it maintains a rule of law, whether anyone likes that law or not. About 20 spectators and reporters, about half of them black, attended the opening session in Pretoria's Old Synagogue, rented for the inquest from the Jewish community. BEFORE THE hearing opened, Winnie Kgware, first president of the now-banned Black People's Conven- tion, raised a portrait of Biko wreathed in flowers and cried in the Xhosa language: "What have we done?" Others responded with black- power salutes and shouts of "Amand- la!"--meaning "power." Biko's mother and widow sat in the front row of the visitor's gallery dressed in black. Many other specta- tors wore tribal costumes. The police witnesses testified that Biko was arrested on Aug. 18 at a roadblock at Grahamstown for breaking a five-year banning order restricting him to Port Elizabeth, on the southeastern coast 50 miles away. He was transferred the next day to Walmer police station in Port y Africa Elizabeth, questioned for five days by security police and finally--afte- he was found on his cell floor--trans' ported by land 750 miles north to' Pretoria the day before he died. MAJ. HAROLD SNYMAN, who led the interrogation of Biko from Sept. 6 to 11 at the Port Elizabeth security", police headquarters, testified that"2 Biko was aggressive on the first day- of questioning and had to be hand- 2 cuffed and put in leg irons. Snyman said that on the second day the chains were taken off. - Suddenly Steve Biko jumped up from his chair with a wild expression , in his eye. He threw his chair at me where I was standing near the door," the major said. t Obscenity trial nears STEVE'S LUNCH 1313 SO. UNIVERSITY HOME COOKING IS OUR SPECIALTY end after t 1 KANSAS CITY, Kansas (AP)-- After an overturned conviction, a fight for a change of venue and an illness that brought yet more delay, the obscenity re-trial of sex maga- zine publisher Al Goldstein neared its end yesterday--almost three years after he was indicted. Both sides gave the federal District court jury their final arguments, and all that remained before jury deliber- ations were rebuttal arguments and the judge's charge to the jury. Goldstein's lawyer, Harold Price Fahringer, said he was "not proud of what's in 'Screw' magazine." "I'M NOT GOING to stand here and defend the contents," he said. "But I am proud of the fact that I live in a country where I can buy 'Screw' magazine, or ignore it or throw it away." Asst. U.S. Atty. Ben Burgess argued that "Screw" and "Smut", another tabloid that Goldstein pub- lishes in New York, "appeal to lust and morbid and shameful interest in sex" and the jurors must draw the line between "candor and shame." "The publications themselves are the best evidence of obscenity .. They make every effort to be offensive," Burgess said. LAWYERS FOR Goldstein, 41, his former partner James Buckley, and their Milky Way Productions Inc., argue that censorship and press freedom are involved in the case, and they claim the case is being prosecu- ted unfairly in a conservative area half a continent away from where "Screw" and "Smut" are published. The case rests on a charge that the defendants mailed 11 obscene issues of the magazines into Kansas. If convicted, each would face $65,000 in fines and 60 years in prison. The 12-count indictment was hand- ed up in December 1974 after four postal inspectors in Kansas subscrib- ed to "Screw" and "Smut" under I i itree years fictitious names anu then returne, the unopened copies to New York. GOLDSTEIN AND Buckley wer convicted in 1976 in Wichita, but th verdict was overturned by U.S District Court Judge Frank Theis who ordered a new trial. He objecte( to a prosecutor's argument that conviction would uphold decency an keep pornography out of Kansas. Later, Goldstein's lawyers argue that an anti-pornography campaigi by county authorities in Wichita hai made a fair re-trial there impossible and Theis moved the case to Kansa; City. It was scheduled in April, bu Goldstein won three more delay, because he suffers from a rar sleeping disorder called sleep apneE syndrome. It can cause the victim ti stop breathing/while sleeping. Q kAe Breakfast All Day 3 Eggs, Hash Browns, Toast & Jelly-$1.5 Ham or Bacon or Sausage with 3 Eggs, Hash Browns, Toast & Jelly-$2.15 3 Eggs, Rib Eye Steak, Hash Browns, Toast & Jelly-$2.45 Egg Rolls L L. EVERYDAY SPECIAL$ Home-made Soups, Beef Barley, Cla, Chowder, etc. Home-made Chili Vegetable Tempuro (served after 2 pm) Hamburger Steak Dinner Fresh Sauteed Vegetables with Brown Ri Baked Flounder Dinner Delicious Korean Bar-b-q Beef (Bul-ko-gee) on Kaiser Roll Fried Fresh Bean Sprouts Kim)Chee TUESDAY-FRIDAY 8-7 SATURDAY 9-7 SUNDAY 10-7 MONDAY 8-3 769-2288 1313 So. University Seal & Vi~cro1a Classics _ t y 0 aI Cla ic uall-ity 1Og9 each 17c each Daily Officifi Bulletin Tuesday, November 15, 1977 DAY CALENDAR Physics/Astronomy: Harold Metcalf; SUNY at Stonybrook, "Quantum Beats in OH Free Radical," 2038 Randall Lab., 4 p.m. Ctr. Early Childhood Development: Marvis Hetherington, UVirginia, "The Young Child in Divorce," Schorling Aud., SEB, 4 p.m. Musical Society: Pennsylvania Ballet, Power Cen- ter, 8 p.m. Humanities: Peter C. Goldmark, inventor, execu- tive, helped develop LP recording, color TV broad- casting, electronic recording, Rackham Amph., 8 p.m. Music School: Campus Orchestra, Hill Aud., 8 p.m. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXVIII, No. 59 Tuesday, November 15, 1977 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage is paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morning during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor; Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 September through April (2 semesters); $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday thrAugh Satur- day morning. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.50 by mail outside Ann Arbor. the ann arbor film cooperative TON IGHTI Tuesday, Nov. 15 THE KING OF MARVIN GARDENS (Bob Rafelson, 1972) 7 AND 10:20-AUD. A Two brothers seek the elusive American Dream. Jack Nicholson as a late-night D.J. is content to spin his dreams in words, but Bruce Dern has a big deal cooking and wants to cut his brother in. They meet in Atlantic City-that seedy, rundown playground, immortalized as the fabled city of MONOPOLY. Powerful acting, faultless direction. "An irresistably fascinating film"-Jay Cocks. With Ellen Burstyn. DRIVE, HE SAID (Jack Nicholson,.1971) 8:45 ONLY-AUD. A Of the rash of college films to come out of the late 60's, this witty sensitive film was the only honest one. Typically, it was overlooked. Its story of a college basketball star, who must choose between his sport and political activism, will strike home for any university student. Bruce Dern's excellent performance as the coach won the best supporting actor award from the National Society of Film Critics. WILLIAM TEPPER. KAREN BLACK. ROBERT TOWNE. Single Admission $1.50. double feature $2.50 1 -~ Our FREE Buy any Pizza c and. 2 ve an El Dr. Niara Sudarkasa Professor in the Department of Anthropology and the Center for Afro american-African Studies Will present a lecture on Friday, Nov. 18-8 p.m. "Andrew Young and Alex Haley: Symbols of New Dimensions in The A L - -- --:-- A . .:. I"r)ni ,n"I at2 entire CA ClaSical 6R 1d Seal, selections are specially priced! SALE PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY, NOV. 19th AVAILABLE AT THESE STORES: elections e price'd, 187 each drinks and roce identical Pizza FRI .i EE PIZZA lb / 1 . 10I AO i