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October 22, 1975 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1975-10-22

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Wednesday, October 22, 1975
INQUIRY EVIDENCE CONFLICTS:

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Pooe Three

THE MICHIGAN DAILY Pace Three

FBI' acts on

From Wire Service Reports
WASHINGTON - The FBI
said today it is preparing to
take administrative action over
the destruction of a letter that
Lee Harvey Oswald delivered
to the FBI in Dallas shortly be-
fore the assassination of Presi-
dent Kennedy in November,
1963.
James Adams, Deputy Asso-
ciate Director of the FBI, told a
House Judiciary Subcommittee
that following an exhaustive in-
quiry, the facts on the case had
been reported to the Depart-
ment of Justice.
BUT HE said the Department
had concluded it was not an
appropriate case for criminal
prosecutior
Adams added, "We are at
this very moment making our
own assessment of the facts

with a view toward inst
appropriate administrativ
tion."
le said the FBI inquir
no doubt that Oswald
the FBI's Dallas field of
week or 10 days before th
nedy assassination and
note for the special agen
ducting a subversive act
investigation of him.
THE WARREN Comn
that investigated the asst
tion concluded that Oswa
ed alone when he shot
dent Kennedy on Novemb
1963.
The FBI confirmedE
this year that the Oswal
had been received and
destroyed.
Adams said investi
could not pin down whethe

destroyed
ituting officials in Washington at the
ve ac- time knew about the OswaldJ
note and the destruction of it.
ry left
visited ONE former assistant FBI di-
fice a rector has told investigators that
e Ken- the special agent in charge of
left a the Dallas office "mentioned on
t con- one occasion that he had inter-
ivities Fnal problem involving one of his
agents who had received a'
threatening message from Os-
wald because the agent was in-
in vestigating Oswald," Adams
Id act- said.
Presi- Speaking with newsmen later,
er 22, Adams identified the former, as-
sistant director as William Sulli-
van, who headed the intelligencej
earlier division at the time of the as-
d note sassination but has since retir-I
later ed.
Adams said there had been
gators conflicting evidence of the note's
er FBI contents. The agents it was ad-

Oswald lettera
dressed to said it contained no assassination.
threat. The FBI inquiry also uncover-r
ed conflicting accounts as tot
BUT A receptionist at the who had ordered the destructiont
FBI office said it stated some- of the note shortly after Os-
thing like, "Let this be a warn- wald was shot dead by DallasE
ing. I will blow up the FBI and nightclub proprietor Jack Ruby,
the Dallas Police Department and a memorandum concerningE
if you don't stop bothering my it.
wife." The agent said destruction
Adams said all who saw or had been ordered by the spe-
had heard of the note agreed cial agent in charge of the of-
there was no mention of Presi- fice. But the latter said he had
dent Kennedy or anything which no knowledge of the matter un-
would have forewarned of his til July this year.
Interested in Getting Involved?I
~ 8 SGC Seats
AVAILABLE FOR FALL ELECTIONS
(NOV. 18-20)
" Filing open until Friday, Oct. 31
(ALL SEATSV ARE2ATLARGE)
" Information and Registration forms ,
available in the SGC offices, 3rd floor
Michigan Union.

THE MICHIGAN DAILY
Volume LXXXVI, No. 42
Wednesday, October 22, 1975
is edited and managed by students;
at the University of Michigan. News.
phone 764-0562. Second class postage:
paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106.
Published d a il y Tuesday throughi
Sunday morning during the Univer-
sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann
Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription
rates: $12 Sept. thru April (2 semnes-
ters); $13 by mail outside Ann Ar-
bor.
Summer sessionpublished Tues-
day through Saturday morning.
Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann
Arbor; $7.50 by mail outside Ann
Arbor.

We want to get to know
YoU
COME JOIN US!
THE FOLKS OF THE
Single Grads and
Young Professional Students
We meet Thursday nights and other times. cali us at
668-6881 for details. The Wesley Foundation, State at
Huron

I

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"Extraordinary and fascinating."
-Newhouse Newspapers
"Agonizingly funny, a great movie."
-Boston Herald American
THE COMEDY THAT PROVES
PEOPLE ARE STILL
THE FUNNIEST ANIMALS.

Specialist testifies Quinlan
should be allowed to die

STARTS TODAY
SHOWS AT 1-3-5-7-9
OPEN AT 12:45
ZERO MOSTEL
GENE WILDER
and
KAREN BLACK
in
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- t

MORRISTOWN, New Jersey
(Reuter) - A specialist who ex-
amined Karen Anne Quinlan in-
dicated in court testimony to-
day that he sides with her par-
ents, who want to allow her to
die rather than be sustained by
artificial means.
Dr. Julian Korein, a neurolo-
gist at Bellevue Hospital and
the New York University Medi-
cal School, described Karen as
"a chronic vegeatble" and said
he knows of no treatment that
would help her recover from her
six-month coma, the result of
massive brain damage.
Under direct examination by
the Quinlans' lawyer, Paul Arm-
strong, Dr. Korein said: "I and
many of my colleagues have no
interest in saving a life that will
live as a vegetable for 10
years."
His testimony came on the sec-
ond day of trial of a suit brought
by Joseph and Julia Quinlan to
allow their adopted daughter to
die by removing a mechanical
respirator that supports her
breathing.
The Quinlans, devout Roman
Catholics, are supported in their
suit by their local parish priest
and the Paterson Diocese, which
has said that there is no moral
obligation to sustain life with
extraordinary medical proced-
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GIVE TO YOUR
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S checkup
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nS SP ACCOrTRISUT@ 0r T H P1JSusH
and monday
and tuesday
and wednesday
and thursday
WE'RE HAVING A
STEAK PARTY
AT WEST BANK
You celebrate because
it costs only $3.93. It in-
cludes piping hot loaves
of bread, baked or ranch
fried potato, and all the
salad you can eat from
our popular salad bar.
Wear whatever's com-
fortable. It's an informal
party for everyone to
enjoy.
ENTERTAINMENT
and
DANCING
Monday thru Saturday

ures when there is no realistic
hope for some recovery.
Korein defined extraordinary'
procedures as "utilization of
medical personnel, medical tech-'
nology and time when the out-
come has a reasonable possibili-
ty of being successful."
Korein, who was on the wit-
ness stand all morning under di-
rect examination by Armstrong I
and cross examination by at-
torneys for the five parties con-
testing the Quinlans' suit, said
he had examined Karen on+
October 10 at the request of.
Armstrong.
He said he found that her re-+
actions to such stimuli as pin

pricks and sharp noises were
not conscious, but the result of
reflex action.
Police officials had said Karen
was the victim of a mixture of
tranquilizers and liquor, but
Korein said this could not be!
confirmed.
His testimony followed that
yesterday by Karen's two at-
tending physicians, Dr. Robert
Morse and Dr. Arshad Jayed.
They had said that she is very,
much alive and that when the
Quinlans approached them late
last summer about removing the
respirator, they refused. The
Quinlans' suit was prompted
by that refusal.

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663-8611

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HIS CIA CODE NAME IS CONDOR.
IN THE NEXT SEVENTY-TWO HOURS ALMOST EVERYONE HE
WILLTRY TO KILL HIM.

TRUSTS

11

DINO DE LAURENTIIS PRESENTS
ROBERT REDFORD/FAYE DUNAWAY
CLIFF ROBERTSON / MAX VON SYDOW
IN A STANLEY SCHNEIDER PRODUCTION
A SYDNEY POLLACK FILM

A phone call. A simple,
ten-cent phone call for a cab could
save your friend's life.
If your friend has been
drinking too much, he shouldn't
be driving.
The automobile crash is the.

that the drunk drivers responsible
for killing young people are most
often other young people.
Take a minute. Spend a
dime. Call a cab. That's all. If you
can't do that, drive him yourself.
Or let him sleep on your couch.

DRUNKDRIVER, DEPT. Y*
I BOX 2345
I ROCKVILLE, MARYLAND 20852
i I want to save a friend's life.
Tell me what else I can do.
I My name is f

IU 4 :

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