Page elgnc THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, October 13, ' 1976. Page ~ignr THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, October 13, 1976 Lectures Sponsored by The (enter for Near Eastern and North African Studies WEDNESDAY 'Oct. 13 4:00 p.m. KELLOGG AUDITORIUM Co-sponsored by the School of Dentistry Ibrahim el-Nowoy First Curator of the Egyptian Museum "Treasurers of the Paroah Tutankhaiuon"I (Slides & lecture about the collection of King Tut -treasures which is now being shown in the U.S.) GENERAL ,MEETING U of M SKI CLUB ALL SKIERS WELCOME Discussion of Christmas Vacation Ski Trip Thurs., Oct. 21-7:00 p.m. Kuenzel Room, Michigan Union APPEAL LIKELY: i Watergate convictions upheld i (Continued from Page 1) s of plotting to illegally block in-; vestigations into the originalr break-in at Democratic National Committee headquarters during another presidential election! campaign June 17, 1972. Mardian had been sentenced to a 10-month to three-year jail term by U. S. District Judge John Sirica. Mitchell, Halde- man and Ehrlichman were giv- en jail terms of 2 to 8 years. Ehrlichman is also facing a1 minimum 20-month jail term for a separate conviction in the White House Plumbers case. could find "no reason for con- criminal case which by law had' cluding that the population of to be transferred to another Washington, D. C., was so place for trial because of pre- aroused against appellants and trial publicity alone, this is that so unlikely to be able objective- case." ly to judge their guilt or inno- AS FOR Mardian, the court cence on the basis of evidence said a combination of his rela- presented at trial . . tively minor role in the cover- "On the basis of our own re- up and the serious illness of his view," the opinion said, "we principal lawyer, David Bress, have no doubt that the jury was should have prompted Sirica to impartial." permit him to be tried separate- Lawyers for Ehrlichman said ly. he was denied a fair trial be- cause Sirica failed to recess the trial long enough for Nixon to recover from phlebitis and ap- ;pear as a witness. a Two weeks after the trial be- gan Oct. 1, 1974, Bress entered the hospital and underwent an operation for cancer. The judge said the small amount of evidence against Mardian and his right to be rep- resented by a lawyer of his own choice Were enough to permit him to be tried separately, tus making it impossible for the stronger case against the others to taint his own defense. Its.swine * , THURSDAY Oct. 14 4:00 PRIME BIN BAKE * V 4 2SI d p.m. Lecture Room 2 MLB Co-sponsored by Hillel and Women's Studies Program Dr. Yedida K. Stillman Asst. Professor of Hebrew, SUNY-Binghamton "The Status of Women in Near Eastern Soci ety" l 1 r NIXON, who has lived in San But the appeals court said Clemente, Calif., since resign- after reviewing testimony at the ing from the White House in trial, it '-had decided Nixon's August, 1974, was himself nam- "testimony would have been of ed as an unindicted co-conspira- marginal significance." tor by the same grand jury which indicted the others.' He THE JUDGES noted that was later pardoned by Presi- while the defendants challenged dent Ford from facing any Wat- Sirica's method of jury selec- i ergate charges. tion and other actions duringr In their decision, the appeals the three-month trial, they nev- judges dismissed point by er questioned that the verdictf point more than two dozen against them "rested on on any-4 legal questions raised by law- thing other than the overwhelm-I yers for the defendants during ing evidence of their guilt." an unusually long appeals pro- There was no immediatec cess. comment from Haldeman, Mit-i In one, Haldeman's lawyers chell or Ehrlichman, but theirt said the extensive publicity lawyers have indicated thec surrounding Watergate made it case would be carried to the imnossible for an impartial jury Supreme Court. to be chosen in Washington. One appeals judge, Georgec Mac Kinnon, filed a partial dis-r THE JUDGES said, however, sent saying, "If ever in the his-f that despite the publicity they tory of our country there was aI flu irnioeuld1ains (Continued from Page 1) Vaccine from the lot was THE VACCINE was given out distributed around the country in both counties yesterday morn- and caused some states to sus- ing. There were no immediate pend inoculations. At the same reports of ill effects. time, officials in other states Locally Washtenaw County's said they were going ahead with flu vaccination program is not 'flu shots using vaccine from the scheduled to begin until Nov. 15. Parke Davis lot. Dr. Albert Hennesey a member A PARKE Davis spokesperson of the University's Department said the company had distribut- of Epidemeology who has been ed more than eight million doses of Epdemeoogy wo has and confirmed that sm fi involved in influenza researchndcfimdta some of it involved in inuea resrh had been shipped to Allegheny thought that the Pittsburgh County (Pa.). deaths were as yet inconclusive. "We don't know anything Health officials in Wisconsin, about these deaths. If you vac- Louisiana, Vermont, Maine, cinate enough people," said Hen- New Mexico and Texas halted nesey, "you're going to get a the vaccination program in few who are ready tp die any- their states. way." TONIGHT a p asoil n w l e selfucc $4. 50- $5.50 $6.50 Reserved Seats Available Michigan Union Box Office 11:30 - 5:30 Monday - Friday 763-2071 for mail order details and'furrher information sorry, no personal checks "I WOULD doubt very much it has to do with the vaccine," he added. "The stress could throw someone into a coronary. We don't know what precipitates coronary attacks. We just have to wait and see what the pathol- ogy department finds out." Health officials in Pittsburgh said the vaccine in question was produced by Parke Davis & Co. of Detroit, and was part of Parke Davis vaccine lot A91333- 9A. C ar* e THURSDAY NIGHT Is GREEK NIGHT " BEER SPECIALS. ~Downtown . Ann Arbor 115 E. Washington GROUP RATES AVAILABLE: 665-3231 sponsored by the Office of Ethics and Religion and Canterbury House LAST LECTURES Several Michigan Professors have been asked to prepare a lecture as if it were the last lecture they would give - to consider what they feel would be most important to say. Wednesday, October 13th PROF. ALFRED MEYER POLITICAL SCIENCE Wednesdays, 4 to 5 p.m. Auditorium A, Angell Hall NEXT WEEK: PROF. HENRYK SKOLIMOWSKI WEDNESDAY, October 20th L I I AMA DD NOTVfoLP, BEND, STAPLE OR MUflLATE ME INANY' '' WAYt' aK 11 1 , ... I, U. l B...A vi ;WWl,..' 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