Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, October 12, 1975 .... .. RAVEL MICH. UNION 7M3-214 Thanksgiving Flights to NEW YORK Depart-NOVEMBER 25, 26 SPECIAL FARE-only $79.73 BOSTON Depart-November 25, 26 SPECIAL FARE-only $89.73 Sign up deadline-October 24 Flights arrive at La Guardia Ask about our special fares for Christmas flightsj For more information, call us at 763-2147 OR Come to 2nd floor-MICHIGAN UNION DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN v C.Y : "''Y: ":i:::: : 4:.' "t"^:" {"S}"":.: :":' : :rS ..: CIA disclosure may 5 convicts escape Sunday, October 12 Day Calendar TV Ctr.: The Natural World, WWJ J TV, channel 4, noon. WUOM: The States of the Union,E bicentennial series -- featured state, Rhode Island 1,pm. craduate outing: Hiking, N. En- try, Rackham, 1:30 pm. PTP: Miller's Death of a Sales- man, Power, 3 pm.? Music School: Piano Chamber Mu- sic, Recital Hall, 4:30 pm; 15th An- nual Conference on Organ Music, Science, Human Values Series : 0 TiiutFollies, Aud. B, Angell, 8 01o e citr sn Musical Society: Gustav Leon-' Aud., 8:30 pm. (Continued from Page 1) Career Planning & Placement, 3200 SAB, 764-7456 Recruiting on campus: Oct. 13-Bell System Oct. 14-Battelle N.W./Research Ctr. - ' Oct. 15- Rike's ; :t 'E t j 1 Hill, 8:30 pm. Oct. t-raurvard Bus. School, J. L. Monday, October 13 Hudson Co., & Princeton U/Wood- row Wilson Sch. of Intern'1 Affairst WUOM: "A Portrait of Sir Mi- Oct.22-Procter & Gamble, Union chael Tippett," 10 am. Oil Co. of Calif., & Inst. for Para- English: Coffee hour to meet John legal Trng. Ciardi, Topwood Rm., 1006 Angell, Oct. 23-Conn. Mutual Life Ins.5 10:30 am. Co., Inst. for Paralegal Trng.,Pur- Ctr. Near Eastern, N. African Stu- due U./Krannert Grad. Sch. of In-I dies: Bag Lunch, C. Krahmalkov, dustrial Mgt., & Lewis & Clark/Law "Kings at Carthage," Lane Hall, Oct. 24-Eastman Kodak Co. noon. Advertising Women of New YorkI Hillel: Nahum Glatzer, "Kafka: will hold thei rannual conference Existentialist and Jew," Lee. Em. for seniors and grad students in-t 2, MLB, 4 pm; "Martin Buber: Cri- terested in communications fields.] tique," 1429 Hill, 8 pm. Learn practical facts about career Hayward Keniston Lecture: John opportunities., Sat. Nov. 1. $5.00 fee.] Ciardi, poet, "In and Out of the Register by Oct. 22 with this organ-! Dictionary," Rackham Amph., 4:10 ization at 153 E. 57th St., NYC pin. 10022.t Music School: DMA'organ recital, Burke Marketing Research, Inc.; Hill Aud., 4:30 pm; carillon recital, offers full tuition for graduate Hudson Ladd, Burton Tower, 7-8 study in marketing at the U. of] pm. Cincinnati plus on-the-job trainingI Slavic Language, Literature; Ro- in all facets of marketing research manee Languages; Comparative Lit- at Burke. Write: Dir. of Personnel, . erature: Tzvetan Todorov, "Stra- Burke Marketing Research, Inc.,fS tegies of Interpretation," Lee. Rm. 1529 Madison Rd., Cincinnati, Ohio! I1, MLB, 5 pm. 15206. -hI (Continued from Page1) wrongdoings. Pike said disclo- sure of some of the material contained in the report, which earlier had been provided to both the Senate intelligence panel and the Rockefeller Com- mission, "would just plain be embai-assing in the conduct of our international relations." Pike said he had obtained the internal CIA report on alleged wrongdoings after telling direc- tor William Colby he was pre- pared to accuse the agency of a cover-up if the report was not turned over. Pike said that if he were at- torney general he believed he would prosecute those involved in some of the misdeeds de- scribed in the report, but he acknowledged that the judgment of others might differ. i affect adversely our relations (Continued from Page 1) policeman. A gun and two xaz- with that country." fudi h tto Discussions in the same two Besides Roche, the escapes ors were foun inthe tao documents of "coordination with were identified as Maurice Phi- wagon. other agencies . . . could prompt lion, 40, of Oakland, Calif., serv- The prison officials gave this attacks on our diplomatic per- ing a 50-year sentence for bank account: sonnel overseas as being spies robbery, assaulting a federal The escape began when an and covert operators," the sum- officer and attempted escape; inmate feigned an illness and mary said. Henry M. Gargano, 43, of Chi- overpowered two hospical at- THE SUMMARY by NSC staff cago, serving 199 years for bank tendants who were c irrying him secretary Jeanne W. Davis was robbery and murder; Dennis D. from his cell on a stretcher. submitted to District Court Hunter, 26, of Salem, Ohio, serv- The inmate forced the attend- Judge Thomas Flannery by Jus- ing a 22-year sentence for kid- ants and two guardsI into a cell tice Department lawyers as the naping, assaulting a federal of- and obtained a key to release result of a suit filed in July by ficer and escape, and ArThur J. five other inmates. Morton Halperin, a former Mankins, 37, of Germantown, The. inmates, three of them member of the NSC staff. N.C., serving life sentence for lifers forced their way through In addition to the CIA's char- murder. five gates and climbed a hill to ter for covert operations, the Meanwhile, six inmatas fled Ware eo Jnkins' he. summary also described a 1952 the Indiana State Prison in A fea Jenkins home. memo from President Harry Michigan City with five hos- control booth disoteyed prison Truman establishing the super- tages, including the warden and rules by ooening aate for the secret National Security Agency his wife. But their flight ended ines any ope hg a ge the and the so-called NSCIDs (Na- two miles away, amid a gun- mates and hostages. Te in- tional Security Council Intelli- fire-punctuated chase, when a mte shot at the guard but gence Directives) that since 1947 policeman shot out a tire on themissed. have dealt out broad assign- getaway car. ments to the U.S. intelligence ___- - .- 1-7 t The' summary of secret docu- ments filed in U.S. District Courf by the NSC said that por- tions of two 1948 documents community. dealing with "the activities of Confirmation of the CIA plot another country during the cold against Lumumba came in se- war" are so harshly worded that cret testimony before the Sen- "the language employed in the ate committee by Dr. Sidney documents could be exploited to Gottlieb. SUNDAY DINNER at Pizza Prices! 1321 SOUTH UNIVERSITY ANN ARBOR, MICH. 769-1744 1 HEAPING PLATE OF SPAGHETTI, with tomato and meat sauce prepared in our kitchen. plant sale you've dreamned of is coming. October 14! Imagine 18,000 lush, healthy tropical plants overflowing the Union Ballroomion the Mich- igan campus. You'll save from 20%-50% over retail prices October 14, 15, 16, and 17 from 10:00 a.m.-8:00 p.m. Select from over 35 varieties of plants and you'll benefit Multiple Sclerosis. An art instruction book that is itself a work of art THE HUMAN BODY' by Frederic Taubes, the well-known author of more than thirty- books on art tech- niques and aesthetics, is a book that is both beautiful in its con- ception and execution and of great technical value to the art stu- dent. Featured are 90 illustrations with de- scriptive captions and delightful, decorative "marginalia" on almost every page. Size.9" x 12"x. $8.95 The Human Body Aspects of Pictorial Anatomy by Frederic Taubes Published by G Clarkson N. Potter, Inc. Buy It at your boox- store, 5or send check or money order to the distributors. Crown Publishers, 419 Park Ave. South; New York, N.Y. 10016 THE VEHICLE crashed into a sign post along a city street, with neither escapees nor hos- tages hurt seriously. As the score of police cruisers con- verged on the disabled car, he inmates surrendered. The right front tire of the sta- tion wagon used in the escape was shot out by a Michigan City Dr. Paul C. Uslan OPTOMETRIST Full Contact Lens Service Visual Examinations 548 CHURCH ST. 663-2476 KOSHER- MEAT CO-OP Organizational and Ordering Meeting Sunday at Noon at H I LLEL I FRENCH GREAD SALAD: crisp greens with your choice of dressing. COFFEE, TEA, WINE, OR BEER. iiiii $2.50 NOON-9 P.M. PITCHER NITE with FOOTBALL T.V. $2925 SENIORS and GRAD STUDENTS WHAT ARE YOU DOING AFTER GRADUATION? I GRAD SCHOOL C- _"" JOB HUNTING village bell Bl 20%/-50A III BELOW-RETAIL GRAD SCHOOL JOB HUNTING- HERE IS HOW WE CAN HELP Grad School Directories Testing Information Catalogue Information Counseling ? Grad and Professional School Recruiters On Campus Interviewing with Recruiters Sept. 30th thru March 25th' Job Hunter's Resource Library Career Counseling q %p Dems told to blast Ford's tax plan WASHINGTON (P) - Demo cratic congressmen are being advised to tell their constituents that President Ford's proposal for a $28-billion tax cut. matched by an equal spending reduction is phony and designed to help his election campaign. This is a major theme of two documents distributed to Demo- cratic House members, one by the Democratic Policy Commit- tee's information task force and the other by the party whip's office. "HE WANTS the tax cut to begin in Januaryh1976, the $28 billion reduction in government programs would not begin until October 1976," the task force said. "Thus for the entire period of the election campaign he would offer voters a tax reduction plus the government programs. "But as soon as they vote, the programs would be cut off .. "The phoniness of this ap- proach is fairly obvious." Both apparently reflect con- cern among Democrats that Ford may have hit on a pro- posal that would appeal to Americans worried about their own budgets. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXVI, No. 34 Sunday, October 12, 1975 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 4810. Published d a 11 y Tuesday through Sunday morning during the Univer- sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription rates: $12 Sept. thru April (2 semes- ters); $13 by mail outside Ann Ar- bor Summer session published Tues- day through Saturday morning. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.50 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Professional Theatre Program * y* Guest Artist Series *. ARHRMILLERS* DE ATH OF A . SALESMANI*E OTOBER 8-12 WED-SA 8PM SUNDAY PM y* in the Power Center * "r Advance sales through PTP Ticket Office 'Klocated in lobby of Mendelssohn Theatre* Mon Fr. 10 a.m.-1 p.m.. 2-5 p.m 7640450 m 'KPower Center Box Office open evenings of J' performance' 6-8 p.m. (313) 7633333Yy( TT T T T T T T START NOW!- Come To CAREER PLANNING AND PLACEMENT 3200 STUDENT ACTIVITIES BUILDING 1321 SOUTH UNIVERSITY ANN ARBOR, MICH. 769-1744 i U SUNDAY & MONDAY E "All You Can Eat" PAN FRIED CHICKEN includes unlimited trips to our famous salad bar, choice of potato or vegetable and loaves of hot home baked bread. HAVE YOU BEEN SHOT YET? ADULTS . . . . . . . $3.25 CHILDREN al LAST WEEK 'of yearbook portraits, so make your ap- pointment now. Visit Diag booth 10-4, or call 764-0561, 6-8 p.mn. MICHIGANENSIAN Q U-M's Year in Review (under 12) Served Sunday Noon 'Til 8 P.M.-Monday 5 P.M.-11 P.M. Wiest Bank at the Holiday Inn West 2900 JACKSON RD., 665-4444 S . $1.75 11 "C #-w-- eMmmn+NMuMmmmIS IMMwMMmam m mmmmaammamSnimMammmaammm mmma ma - .wn a mmma-m- iMM mINmISmm mm a * t You can order your copy of the '76 Michiganensian right now. Enclose a check or money order for 8.00. Unfortunately, we cannot bill you later. You will receive a receipt within one week. A I Narne _______________________ A ddress. If your campus group or organization could use a color TV, a pool table, a microwave oven or your choice of 24 other valuable prizes, then you should join the MILLER PICK-EM-UP. For further details contact your campus rep today! o , " o o ; o .. . r l 0 Campus Rep.,MIKE GANNON II I