Page Eigm THE SUMMER DAILY Wednesday, July 1 1, 1973 AFFIDAVITS ORDERED Watergate hits Detroit By DAVID STOLL With Wire Service Reports As the result of a decision handed down in Detroit's U.S. District Court Monday, key fig- ures in the Watergate affair may be subpoenaed to appear in De- troit to testify about White House plans for illegal spying on radi- cals and their lawyers. U.S. District Judge Damon Keith ordered the feredal govern- ment to submit affidavits by Sep- tember 3 stating whether or not its agents used illegal procedures to gain evidence against mem- bers of the SDS-Weatherman fac- tion charged in the "Detroit 15" Bdlbing Conspiracy." JUDGE KEITH also ruled that if the affidavits did not satisfy the defense attorneys, t h e y could subpoena witnesses - key figures in the Watergate investi- gation - for a hearing Septem- ber 24. "The whole Watergate crowd will probably be in town unless they dodgeethe process servers," Detroit defense attorney William Goodman said Mdhday. Attorneys for the four due to stand trial in the conspiracy case claimed the government used il- lgal methods to gather evidence, perhaps involving the W h i t e House "plumbers" unit. GOODMAN TOLD the D a i l y yesterday that while there is "concrete" evidence only that defendant's phones were tapped, there is "some evidence" that the homes and offices of the de- fendant's legal counsel were burglarized and that conversa- tions between the defendants and their counsel were monitored by government agents. Last month the government admitted the illegal wiretapping of the SDS National Office. In addition, Newsweek magazine has revealed that the W h it e House's Intelligence Evaluatioli Committee, later known as the "plumbers," engaged in illegal spying and sabotage activities against the SDS-Weatherman fac- lion and the Vietnam Veterans Against the War. During the hearing Monday, it was disclosed that investigators for the special Watergate pro- secutor Archibald Cox and the U.S. Senate Watergate Commit- tee were studying the Detroit case for possible conections with their probe of illegal governent activi- ties. FOUR MEMBERS of the Wea- therman faction of the SDS are charged in the case with plotting a nation-wide bombing campaign at a secret meeting in Flint in 1969. Fifteen persons were in- dicted in the case, eleven it whom still remain fugitives. "The government is not pre- pared to say whether misconduct took place," said William Ibers- hof, head of the criminal division of the U.S. attorney's office in Detroit. "Archibald Cox has been aware of the activities in this case," Ibershof said. "If there's any in- vestigation, it should be' inde- pendent of this case and prosecut- ed separately." Daily Official Bulletin WEDNESDAY, JULY 11 DAY CALENDAR Commission for Women Meeting: Homer Heath Lounge, Union, 11:30 commission for Women Slide Show -Turnabout: 2065 Frieze; 3042 SPH; CPH Aud., 12:10-12:40 pm. Audio-VisualS summer Films: Per- suasion, Politics theme, MLB Aud. 3, 7 pm. Grd Coffee Hour: E. Conf. Rm., Rackham, 5 pm. Benjy Schultz, 'U' Cellar employe and former LS&A student, won the state's Road Champion race Sunday - a grueling 120 miles of cycling at the GM proving grounds near Milford. The new state champ, well-known among Ann Arbor's "serious" cycling set, finished the course in five hours, twenty-eight minutes, and eight seconds. WVVorkers- on sti ke at Michigan State EAST LANSING (UPI) - Unskilled workers honored picket lines set up yesterday by 220 skilled workers at Michigan State University (MSU) but university officials pledged that essential services would be maintained. Keith Brody, vice president for labor relations at MSU, called the walkout illegal. THE STRIKE by members of Local 999 of the American Federa- tion of State County and Municipal Employes AFSCME - most of the masons, pipefitters and plumbers - began Monday night in a classi- fication dispute. The 1,090 members of AFSCME Local 1585, which covers mainte- nance and janitorial employes, showed up on campus yesterday but told their superiors they could not cross picket lines. The local sched- uled a meeting last night to take its own strike vote. Local 999 President Chuck Jennings said the university was at- tempting to classify members of both locals together, an action he said would "downgrade" members of his local. Dia 662-6264 rd HIT WEEK 231 S. State St.3T TODAY IS BARGAIN DAY1 ST ATE Adults $1.00 before 5 P.M. Feature promptlyot1, 3, 5, 7 & 9 P.M. ROGER JAMES MOORE. BND I SiinIAN f LEMING'S , LIVE AND LE DIE SDireted byGUY HAMi LION usedAmts s -s "6LOWIN6 AND INSPIRINGW " ROBERT ANNE SHAW BANCROFT.4 ENDS TODAY SIMON Shows at WAR 6:15-8:45 YO0UNG WINSTON. 1214 S. Univ.@0 Dial 668-6416 * STARTS TOMORROW Steve McQueen in "BULLITT" plus the film whose stylized violence made Sam Peckinpah famous- "THE WILD BUNCH." Starring a great cast- Robert Ryan, William Holden, Ben Johnson, Ernest Borgnine, Strother Martin, & Warren Oates. TODAY IS BARGAIN PAYI Adults Only $1.00 before 5 P.M. { on in Moern oin - lDGERS...HAMMER INS < ROBE r WISE It-rel-d by TWENTETH CENTURYFOX SHOWS AT 1:15 4630 & 8:00 P.M .DIAL 665-6290 ei I cinem1a guild PRESENTS AWednesday Night Classic Comedy Series beginning .Tonight with CHARLIE CHAPLIN'S THE CIRCUS /Made in 1928. This film has the Tromp leave his seemingly ceaseless battle-against society to enter a competition of clowns in a circus. It is a film rarely shown anywhere and is sure to hold surprises for those familiar with or new to Chaplin's legacy. * * Coming Attractions JULY 18-Touble in Parodise by Ernst Lubitch JULY 25-Duck Soup with The Marx Brothers AUGUST 1-Nothing Sacred, directed by William Wellman starring Carole Lombard, Frederic March AUGUST 8-A Nois La Liberte-Rene Clair AUGUST 15-Double Feature You Can't Cheat An Honest Man-W.C. Fields Sherlock, Jr.-Buster Keaton AUGUST 22-I'm No Angel-Moe West and Cory Grant I c~oming AugUus i oiano ifH n rams IL a