Page Two, THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, November 4, 1975 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, November 4, 1975 Speak*ers hit offiial DRIZZLED OUT Acareer in law- without law school. What can you do with only a bachelor's degree? Now there is a wayto bridge the gap between an undergraduate education and a challenging, respon- sible career. The Lawyer's Assistant is able to do work traditionally done by lawyers. Three months of intensive training can give you the skills-the. courses are taught by lawyers. You choose one of the seven courses offered-choose the city in which you want to work. Since 1970, The Institute for Paralegal Training has placed more than 950 graduates in law firms, banks, and.corporations in over 80 cities. If you are a student of high academic standing and are interested in a career as a Lawyer's Assis- tant, we'd like to meet you. Contact your placement office for an interview with our representative. We will visit your campus on TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 18 WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 19 The Institute for Paralegal Training 235 South 17th Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19103 1215) 732-6600 murder theories Rally fails to gather crowd By TIM SCHICK Riding onto campus with the hottest topic of the college lec- ture circuit, three assassination+ investigators Sunday night blast- ed the traditional explanations behind the killings of John and Robert Kennedy and Martin Luther King in the 1960s. Speaking to a Hill Auditorium audience of some 3,000 persons at the opening of the Ann Arbor Teach-In, Mark Lane, Rooert Katz and Donald Freed ques- tioned the conclusions naming Lee Harvey Oswald and James Earl Ray as the lone assassins 'of the Kennedy brothers. "THE TITANIC issue is not who killed the Kennedys and King," said Freed, "the issue is information versus secrecy. The murder in Dallas is just a Ssymbol of the people's right to know." The three day Teach-In, which concludes today, is entitled "The Bicentennial Dilemma: Who's In Control?" and includes lec- tures and workshops on govern- ment surveillance, "corporate manipulation," "subversion of the forces of dissent," and "mind control." A nearly- (Continued from Page1) flicts that underlay the decision'like to agree with you but I'm identical program is also being short speech during which de to fight those wars, we needed much more skeptical about what' presented this week on the Mich- discussed the teach-in in connec-I to bring the war home and we will happen after the teach-in igan State campus in East Lan- tion with the peace movement have done so," concluded Ogles- enthusiasm has died down," said) sing. of the sixties. by. one person. Repeating a program he pre- "We are interested in letting Although many in the audience OTHER speakers present call- sented in Ann Arbor last spring, you know, rulers in Washington, accepted Oglesby's optimism ed for ongoing action on issues Lane attacked the Warren Com- Lansing and the administration over the future of mass action such as tuition hikes, open ad- mission report which pegged Os- building that the people did not against the so-called "rulers" missions, affirmative action and wald ast the nesseathgunman in Presidet enney's d near go permanently to sleep," Ogles- government and University of- tne current freeze on teacherl nea- by stated. ficials, others were not so sure. hirings. ly 12 years ago. bysktd "People are very enthusiastic "What happens when there's THE COMMISSION looked at "THE FIGHT is still going on. about the beginning of a new a budget cut? Do they set up a the evidence through the prism We needed to face the real con- I movement in Michigan, and I'd student committee to help de- of Oswald's guilt," said Lane,____ suggesting the Commission had a preconceived notion towardj Oswald. "Anything that did not, onfress eX could not be seen" "gese pese o c r fit that prism was distorted an cul'nt-e"ee. One of Lane's strongest argu- nents involved apparent incon- over high-level reslng sistencies between the number of shots Oswald allegedly fired land the famous Abraham Zap- (Continued from Page 1) advice , no pressure. He said he (R-Ill.) "it's hard to carry on ruder film taken at the moment Mansfield said he did not ex- wanted his own team." Schlesinger's hard line at the the President was struck. While pect Rockefeller to seek t h e The leading Republican on the same time Kissinger is trying to the Commission reported that presidential nomination in op- House Appropriations Defense ease tension through advocating five bullets were fired, Lane position to Ford. Subcommittee, Jack Edwards of policy of detente." contends the gun linked to Os- Ford sounded a similar note in Alabama, described Schlesig- No official reason was initial- wald was incapable of discharg- his press conference last night, er s departure as most unfortun- I ing more than three shots dur- saying that Rockefeller has "as- ate and a real loss to the gov- ry given for the dismissals but sources speculated that it grew ing the time frame outlined in sured me categorically that he ernment. d r of a difference of opinion be- the film. will support me." But Edwards declined to crit-ween Schlesinger, who favored According to Lane, the Com- icize Ford for his action. s strong defense and a tougher mission explained details of the IN SOME government quart- stand against Moscow; and Ford assassination by employing a ems, however, speculation r a n TW lednDmortcS- "magic bullet theory," which high that Rockefeller has atos, Hubert Humphrey of Mn- and Kissinger, the proponents of stated that a single bullet passed thought about seeking the presi- nesota and Robert Byrd of West . through both Kennedy and then- dential nomination himself. Virginia, strongly criticized Ford In addition, an informed White Governor John Connally with Rockefeller has come under for not having explained his ac- House source claimed there was extremely few traces of the mul- fire from the GOP right wing tiondbefore the news leaked out. "much more to come." tiple impacts. for some time and speculation During the past several weeks, LANE CHARGED the Comm is- that he would be dumped crest- The manner in which the ac-fric- with mishandling of evi- ed during the summer. tions were handled does little f tion between Kissinger and Sch- dence and that they avoided tes-' At that time, Ford's c a m- the credibilit yof the esinger have appeared in the timony from certain eyewit- paign directed Howard "Bo" tratipress, although none hinted that nesses while including in their Callaway indicated that the Pre- the best interests of the citizens investigation the dental chart sident was looking for a younger of our nation," Byrd said in re- of Jack Ruby's mother. candidate to round out the 1976 marks to the Senate. "This is not evidence even if ticket. He said he was particularly K u n sl er Ruby had bitten Oswald to disturbed a the dismissal of d. OBSERVERS believed that Schlesinger, who he described _.frmh +i, t a theone man who articulat- c~de what to do-no, they just put another paragraph in the record telling us about it," com- plained Graduate Employes Or- ganization (GEO) member Don- na Gabacia. But Student Government Coun- cil aspirant Marty Kaufman of- fered his solution saying, "We're too often like a fire drill bri- gade, with action coming and going like the tide. We need a student union to confront prob- lems in a mass way." Mansfield HUNTINGSEASON EXTENDED Due to an unexpected, tho welcome, display of enthusiasm for appts. the : . MICHIGANENSIAN has scheduled an additional week of senior por- trait shootings. Appts. are being taken for the Secretary of Defense would be asked to leave as a result. Colby had been expected to leave his job early next y e a r because of recent criticism of the CIA. eondenrs P CsS e irum ie conservaTI-irOtLlVl -1Y 1 ~ a 1 Earlier, Katz, Director of the ' d best the dangers of oVareV- t~ssiato nomainB-es, led by former California n bs hednesofoeen Assasination Iirenocton hFBu Governor Ronald Reagan, a 1 s o phasis on detente with the Rus- rea , indirectly indicted the FBI figured heavily in Callaway's re- sians," n the Kig killing, pointing to marks. MONDAY, NoV. 10-FRIDAY, NOV. 14 MAKE AN APPT. NOW Call 764-0561 from 6-8 p.m. MICHIGANE NSIAN U-M's Year in Review the late Director J. Edgar Hoo- ver's fear of a "black mes- siah." Katz said witnesses have1 placed the King gunman in bushes below the motel where the civil rights leader was shot, rather than the boarding house where Ray was staying. Members of Congress noted CONGRESSIONAL s u p p o r t' yesterday that Rockefeller's age for Ford yesterday came from - he is 67 - is a big handicap Republicans who defended f h e because the Republicans would President's right to choose his want to nominate a vice presi- advisors but often stopped short dent who could bear the party's of criticizing Schlesinger. banner in the 1980 presidential House Minority leader J o h n election. Rhodes (R-Ariz.) said t h a t while he respects Schlesinger's FORD'S cabinet shake-up, ' ability, "the authority and right Mansfield said the President had to pick his own Cabinet rest told him that "what he did, he with every chief executive." did on his own with no outside' Added Rep. Robert McClory :R uON poice system (continued from Page 1) rently imprisoned, remains the brutality in the black commun- I main theoretician of the Pan- ity in Oakland . . . We were thers and that he is in "constant tired, tired, tired in the face of contact" with the party's pres- police brutality and we were ent leaders. going to protect ourselves and Dixon recounted a lengthy our community against it." chronology of the 1973 insur- rection on the Indian reservation HE INSISTED that the Pan- at Wounded Knee,' S.D. and "U" Towers P ljei " sn" . "op a" presents DUSTIN HOFFMAN in TUESDAY, NOV. 4 (BOB FOSSE, 1974) A Fosse look at s o c i a I comedian Bruce's gritty life and times. Slick and smokey night- club scenes are the director's most apt deptic- tions of those enclaves in the midst of the tight gray 50's. Bruce's own mother and Valerie Perrine balance the Dustin Hoffman method. Color. in AUD. A, ANGELL HALL at 7 & 9 p.m. TONIGHT $1.25 thers have recovered from their decline of the past few years, saying, "The party is growing and will continue to grow. Don't ever believe the Black Panther Party has given up its revolu- tionary goals and objectives... so long as oppression exists against blacks, against Mexican Americans, against I n di a n peoples, against white working people, against any segment of the population." DuBois also said that party' co-founder Huey Newton, cur- added a brief condemnation of the tactics of federal police of- ficials. Speaking in a monotone and peering intently at her prepared text, she at one point hesitated- then told of the shooting death of one Indian in a voice which seemed to break with emotion. She went on to defend, in fierce terms, the goal of equality for Native Americans. Kunstler spoke earlier in the evening to approximately two hundred students in the Law School auditorium. Addressing an audience dominated by law students, he advocated that they consider their career options carefully before choosing a con- ventional route. He told of the change in life- style he experienced after de- fending civil rights activists, in- cluding Martin Luther King and Stokely Carmichael, during the early Sixties. "I had to reanalyze what my niche in this national commun- ity of ours," he said. "You have to believe that this client, this movement, will somehow ad- vance the kind of world you want . . . do something more with your life than make mon- THURS.: 8 / ,k thru SClassified i i itout1f Technioor From WarHner Bros IDA Warner Commuincations Gowpary [RI ey. SERGI EISENSTEIN 1925 POTEMPKIN (AT 7) A graphic view of the Black Sea mutiny of 1905 in which Eisenstein made use of the mont- age. A silent and a Russian one. ANTHONY MANN'S 1953 NAKED SPUR (AT 9:05) James Stewart finally catches up with the out- law (Robert Ryan) he's after but a woman and two men make it hard for him. A great Western filmed in the Rockies. CINEMA GUILD BOTH SHOWS OLD ARCH. FOR $2.00 AUD. We Are Accepting Orders Now, For PHYSICIANS DESK REFERENCE 1976 TO BE PUBLISHED JANUARY 1976 ONLY $12.25 plus tax if payment accompanies your order. P r i c e is $13.50 plus tax if not prepaid. I Specialize in: Corporations Estates, Trusts and b"if SPRING SESSION: SLitiation TFeb. 23 through May 14, 1976 Litigation Real Estate and Mortgages ...,mnramfnrmtn at mi~r trmnlhlCronrasontaitive t the I I I I s 5UzEl U ZI E1" "GaE m