Saturday, February 12, f 97? THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five a JFK, King assassination probe inpei ri Z WASHINGTON (UPI) - A1 congressional probe of the as-c sassinations of President Ken-, nedy and Martin Luther King1 Jr. came close to collapsing yesterday as a result of a dis- pute within the investigating, committee., Four investigators from the staff of the House Assassinations Committee were refused access to FBI files on orders from Rep. Henry Gonzales, (D-Tex.). Gonzalez, the committee chair- man, announced Thursday he was firing Richard Sprague,the committee's chief counsel and staff director. HOWEVER, Sprague refused to be fired. He showed up at his office yesterday morning,, worked a while, then left to keep an appointment in Philadelphia, where he had been a crack pros- ecutor. The 11 other members of Gon- zales' committee b a c k e d Sprague, claiming Gonzalez lacked authority to fire him. Speaker Thomas O'Neill told capitol police to ignore Gon- zalez' request that Sprague be forcibly removed from his office Stewart McKinney, -,(R-Conn.), Rep. Samuel Devine, (R-Ohio), The committee doesn't meet on Thursday evening. I said, "If Mr. Sprague is ulti- and Delegate Walter Fauntroy again unil Wednesday, when the In Norwich, Conn., Rep. Chris- mately relieved of his duties, I of the District of Columbia - is- House returns from a recess. topher Dodd, (D-Conn.), a com- will seriously consider resigning sued a statement insisting that Gonzalez' effort to fire Sprague mittee member, said the dispute from the Select Committee." "the committee is no in dis- -and the staff's efforts to gath- could kill the investigations. Three other members - Rep. array." er information from the FBI - ANOTHER MEMBER, Rep. Richardson Preyer, (D-N.C.), Gonzalez, in San Anonio, Tex., apparently will remain unre- said Sprague "can work for free solved until then. - he is not going to work under Unless the committee resolves the payroll. its problems, Gonzalez said, he will recommend that it be abol- G O N Z A L E Z said he fired ished at the end of March. :.'Sprague for trying to commit the committee this week to Even before the Gonzalez- spending more than the $84,000 a Sprague flap erupted, the com- month authorized by the House. mittee's life had been in dan- The four investigators from ger. The House formed the com- t: rthe committee staff had been mittee last September, then let coming almost daily to FBI it die at the start of he new headquarters to consult material Congress in early January. It connected with the King and was revived on a limited basis Kennedy assassinations. later. When they came by yesterday morning, however, they were Midwest's Largest Selection of denied access to any of the ma- Erea Chrters (. Canadian and U.S. A U JUSTICE Department Cndm $289 sookesperson said Gonzalez and Attorney General Griffin Bell CALL 769-1776 agreed Thursday that' staff in- vestigators would receive FBI' ' sreat Places pZ Kennedy ____216S._th_ veAnno K;ng information only on written re- 2Arb quests from the committee. i. A A Film groups criticize proposed X - film ban SHOWTIMES Sat. & Sun.: 1':30-3:45,6:15-8:45 I'd hate to see the cam pus turn into one big Walt Disney Festi- val' -, Jane Siegel, Preside]nt of Cinema II. fContinued from Page 1) flims. "They're j'ist explitation films," he adled. "For 's, (X-rated movies)j would defit-utelv he the excep- tion. Hlard care films hi e been shown by PBC (Peoples Busi- ness Commission) Films and New World Film Co-op," he sta- ted. "It's kind of an offensive' move," commented Mike Price, president of PBC films. "There are lots of films that have X-' ratings that are j?-msrxverygood films," he added. "A SUPREME FILMMAKER IN TOTAL CONTROL OF HIS MEDIUM !" --John Simon, New York Magazine "LIV ULLMANN'S PERFORMANCE SHATTERINGI" -Jack KroI, Newsweek AFSCME strike AP Photo Happy Birthday, Abe Today marks the 168th anniversary of Abraham Lincoln's birth, and to spruce big Abe up for the celebration, Archie Garling of the National Park Service applies a broom to the marbelized hand of the Lincoln Memarial in Washington. VA CASE: PRICE SAID when PBC brought the sexually explicit 3 movie Emanulle to campus, It did well - people went to (Continued from Page 1) employes, the removal of the see it. There's such a demand BUT, ANDERSON added, de- current 15 cent cap on supple- for (sexually oriented movies)." spite all the time invested mental cost of living payments, Price gave the 'X' movie ban AFSCME "got all that we asked e x p a n s i o n of hospitalization little chance of passage, how- for." benefits and other provisions, ever: "i don't think it will get Neff agreed that the emphasis The specifics of the Univer- very far." Both Murphy and on non-economics has so far sity's counter proposals were (Siegel concurred. worked out well for the union. not divulged, but A F S C M'E "The union must go back to called them "totally unaccept- "I'd hate to see the campus its membership and tell them able." turn into one big Walt Disney that the University is tight on Festival," Siegel concluded. wages and benefits, but at the NEGOTIATORS say they have -- -- same time they can show mem- every hope that economic is- bership how they have been able sues will be "wrapped up" by EU &* " to facilitate employe conditions Tuesday. - by making the promotion sys- Whenever a settlement is tem more attractive," Neff said. reached, AFSCME will have to STILL, AS negotiators settled cross a major hurdle "selling" ) non-economic differences, the it to union members. economic ones have sat gather- University employes may not ' ing dust. Only yesterday, with value improvements in promo- five days left to negotiate, did tion and transfer procedures as the University and AFSCME much as wage increases. In delve into serious economic dis- fact, workers may look at their h cussions. union's new-found frankness to- The union originally asked.for ward economics as a comprom- a $1.04 hourly increase for its ise which they don't deserve. SHOWTIMES 1-3-5-7-9 Dead man's DINOCE LAAJRD4ThS ESENTS INGMAR DEP6MAN'S "FACE TO FACE" storfing LIV ULLMANN' ith, ERLND JOSLPHSON KARI SYLWAN Written. Directed and Produced by INGMAR DERGMA1N Filmed in Color by SVEN NYKVIST Poperbock published by Pontheon Books A Paramount Releose , cc ! Wd!''t R Q~s' Sf...MR~vr- note can't ,BON riU AND LYE CD THEYAINT49 be used as evidence DETROIT (UPI) - A hand- charged with murdering two pa- written note by a man who is tients and poisoning eight oth-x now dead cannot be used as evi- ers at the hospital during the dence against the two nurses summer of 1975. They have charged in the Ann Arbor Vet- pleaded innocent to all charges erans Administration Hospital and their trial is scheduled to mass murder case, a federal begin March 1. judge ruled yesterday. The prosecution evidence U.S. District Judge Philip Pratt threw out was. a note writ- Pratt also ordered government ten by John McCrery, a former prosecutors to drop three heart patient at the Ann Arbor charges of poisoning from the hospital who suffered a breath- indictment against the nurses, ing failure on Aug. 15, 1975. Leonora Perez, 32, and Filipina Shortly after he was revived he Narcisco, 30. was asked by a doctor to iden- ALTHOUGH the two rulings tify the nurse who had given were a victory for the defense, him an injection only seconds Pratt also denied one important before he suffered a breathing motion filed by attorneys for the lapse. nurses. He allowed prosecutors to use the testimony of a dying BECAUSE he was breathing cancer patient who claims he through a tube and could not saw Perez in his hospital room neak, McCrery wrote a note just before he suffered a breath- containing only three letters: ing attack. I PIA. The prosecution argued Perez and Narcisco are that the note identified Narcisco, se nickname is PI, whic stands for the Philippine Is lands, her homeland. However, Pratt agreed wit the defense that since McCrer is no longer alive to explai what he meant by the note,i should be disallowed as evi dence. McCrery died last Jun of a heart attack. Pratt ruled against the de - fense, however, by allowing th prosecution to use the testimon of Richard Neely, 63, a dyin cancer patient from Osceol Ind., and the only surviving vic time who claims to have see one of the nurses just before suf h y n it i- e e- e y g a, c- n f- MA di tering sudden paralysis and breathing difficulties. Defense lawyers had chal- lenged Neely's testimony, charg- ing that it had been influenced by subtle suggestions from FBI I agents who questioned him while he was under hypnosis. + Use Daily Classifieds + TONIGHT in Schorling Auditorium, School of Education The Ann Arbor 8mm Festival SHOWINGS at 2, 7 and 9 p.m. ADMISSION $1.00 WINNERS NIGHT, SUNDAY . SATURDAY, FEB. 12 PUTNEY SWOPE (Robert Downey, 1969) 7, 8:45 and 10:30-MLB 3 What happens when blacks take over an ad agency? Robert Downey (a prince) takes a scathingly funny perspective on the subliminal manipulations of Madison Avenue, its political and corporate bed- fellows, and how much "truth and soul" there really is behind the Revolution. "It is funny, sophomoric, brilliant, disjointed, marvelous, unintelligible and relevant."-Vincent Canby. "I don't mind if you call some of my pictures tasteless. I love bad taste. It makes the day go faster."-Robert Downey. Arnold Johnson, Laura Greene. JACK JOHNSON (William Clayton, 1971 ) 8:45 only-MLB 4 Right or wrong Jack Johnson was a figure before his time He was the first black heavyweight champion and a man who lived the way he *anted-driving fast cars, loving white women and de- fending his crown against a succession of "white hopes," until his last bout in 1915 a fight rumored to be thrown. This docu- mentary has rarely seen boxing footage and shots from Johnson's private life set against Miles Davis' throbbing jazz score. Narra- tion by Brock Peters. "JACK JOHNSON . . '. demonstrates not only the highest art of documentary making, but (also) that truth can outshine fiction."-Judith Crist. MINGUS (Thomas Reichman, 1966) 7 and 10:30--MLB 4 Jazz composing genius and virtuoso bassist Charles Mingus expresses rage, love, passion, hate, and serenity through his music. These feelings emerge vividly as he is documented here with foot- age from many sources, particularly the November 1966 -night he was evicted from his Bowery loft for non-payment of rent on an invalid lease Scenes in a Boston club, his favorite restaurant ip Harlem and his historic 1962 Town Hall concert offer a very personal portrait of a complex, proud, and humiliated man dis- possessed. "It is the first film about jazz."-Michael Zwerin, Village Voice. Plus: PULL MY DAISY (Robert Frand, 1959) i k 1 i$4 i V t ' GEORGE SEGAL 'JANE FONDA FUN WITH DK&JANE" Held Over! Held Over! 1 DAILYAT7:00AND9:15 ;:.E;ESUNDAY AT 4:45 7:00 9:15 ':::yS :: r, : «.,,: : :; "". ;,:;: ":itiRY. tip:-': w.ti {.. %: ............ '" Horrible isn't It ? r T ._. 16 r /. SW'7 m :e Aft MEWW"I r