Saturday, July 28, 1973 THE SUMMER DAILY Page Five SatudayJuly28,1973THE UMMR DALY Pge I Pun Plamondon found guilty by Cadillac judge Inmate killed in prison riot (Continued from Page 1) GUNFIRE CRACKLED inside the prison-walls last night when guards fired on a group of in- mates seen carrying cans across a yard near the burning build- ings, officials said. One inmate was wounded, ap- parently in that volley, with a bullet in the stomach and one in the right arm, officials said. He was taken to a hospital after other prisoners carried him to an inner perimeter gate. A prison guard explained the shooting incident, saying prison officials feared the inmates car- ried flammable liquids in the cans. THE TROUBLE began as the inmates attacked Lt. Thomas Payne and Capt. .C. C. Smith, near the prison mess hall in the afternoon, officials said. Smith and Payne were hos- pitalized with knife wounds. Six inmates armed with knives then seized hostages and called for support from other prisoners, officials said. "COME ON this is a revolu- tion," one of the inmates shout- ed on the public address system which had been seized. "In the name of Allah, join us, please join us now solidarity. Come togetner, black or white. Black or white are all convicts. Come join us." About 1,750 inmates populate the pison. Officials said about 94. prisoners were locked in their cells. Hall said ne understood the in- mates wished to speak with him.. He said, however, "Unequivocal- ly, I will not meet with inmates until the hostages are released and all inmates are returned to their cells. I will personally meet with representatives of the in- mates within 24 hours after they return to their cells and release the hostages." AS HALL SPOKE, smoke con- tinued to roll from the prison as more than a dozen buildings blazed. At one time, the column of smoke coold be seen 40 piles from the prison. (Continued from Page I) He appeared to agree with defense attorney Hugh "Buck" Davis in noting that the state police, who played a large part in the prosecution,dhad been im- unsure of key date Continued ironm Page i) tion involvement before the Presi- dent. He said he went to the Oval Office and told him Ehrlich- man, H. R. Haldeman, then Nixon'sHright-handeman, and Dean were all "indictable." Another White House assistant, white-haired Richard Moore, who testified later at the behest of Nixon's present staff, backed up Dean. tn developments outside the hearing room: " Archibald Cox, special Water- gate prosecutor, told a news con- ference he was confident the Su- preme Court would not duck the issue but would hand down a ruling on whether Nixon must comply with Cox' subpoena for tape recordings and papers. Cox also said he asked the White House to give him files on the International Telephone & Telegraph Corp. He said the files are "of utmost importance" and that the request has been pending for some time. " The Senate adopted a pro- posal to provide up to 10 years in prison and $25,000 fines for mis- use of campaign funds donated to candidates for federal office. providently thrust into the po- litical arena" when they were given the job of pursuing radical figures like Plamondon. BUT PETERSON brushed aside Davis' argument that the only "threat of accusation made to Wagner was simply a result of Plamondon's anger at discover- ing hard drugs in Wagner's pos- session. The judge said both state wit- ness Bruce Peterson and "the defendants themselves" confirm- ed in testimony that Plamondon and Blazier had in fact tried to force money from Wagner with threats. An RPP spokesperson said the Rainbow People feel "partially exonerated" by the verdict, but indicated that Davis will probab- ly appeal the decision. "We don't think trying to ex- pose someone who has been deal- ing hard drugs and ripping off the community is anything that should be considered illegal," the spokesperson added. THE WEEK-LONG trial in- cluded contradictory testimony from state witnesses Wagner and Peterson, and repeated defense contentions that Plamondon and Blazier were arrested for politi- cal reasons. In his ruling, Peterson called Wagner "an unscrupulous, im- moral, and dishonest man" and expressed much sympathy with the defendants' plight. Plamondon offered no com- ments on the conviction, but Bla- zier said he "doesn't feel any dif- ferent' as a convicted extortion- ist. HR ADDED, "I just wasted a lot of time." CWcud 'Ai en-iCe--- LORD OF LIGHT LUTHERAN UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH CHURCH (ALC, LCA) CHAPEL (LCMS) 1432 Washtenaw Avenue 801 S. Forest (Corner of Hill St.) 1511 Washtenaw Avenue Service of Worship-Sundays at Donald G. Zill, Pastor Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor 9:30 a.m. through Sept. 2. Spring-Summer Worship - Sun- Sunday at 9:15 a.m. - Worship o * days at 10:30 a.m. Service. FIRST UNITED METHODIST * *Sunday at 10:30 a.m. - Bible CHURCH and WESLEY FOUNDA- ST. ANDREWS EPISCOPAL Study. TION -- State at Huron and Wash. CH AREW EPISOA 0 0Sermon by the Rev. Fred B. CHURCH, 306 N. Division BETHLEHEM UNITED CHURCH Maitland: "B e y o n d the Sacred 1:00 and 10:00 a.m. - Worship O hITPg. Services. OF CHRIST Page." * * * 423 S. Fourth Ave. Ph. 665-6149 Worship Service-10:00 a.m. Minister: Dr. T. L. Trost, Jr. Nursery Care:-9:45-11:15 a.m UNIVERSITY REFORMED Associate Ministers: Dennis R. Church School-10:00 a.m. (thru CHURCH Brophy and Howard F. Gebhart. Grade 5). 1001 E. Huron 9 a.m.: Morning Prayer. Broadcast on WNRS (1290) AM 10:00 a.m.-"Panorama of God's 10 a.m.: Worship Service and and WNRZ (103) FM from 11:00 to Love"-Rev. Daniel Slabaugh. Church School. noon. I Cinema II TONIGHT ONLY-7:30 and 9:30 SHOOT THE PIANO PLAYER directed by FRANCOIS TRUFFAUT (1960) 35 mm Flipping back and forth from tragic to comic, Truffaut's experi- mental escapade is an existential essay on life. An innocent musician is drawn into the underworld. Homage given to Ameri- can gangster film. Subtitled. Starring Charles Aznovour. Nicole Berger. TONIGHT and SUNDAY so Vanessa Redgrove Oliver Reed in KEN RUSSELL'S masterpiece THE DEVILS 7:1.5 -- plus - a unique double-feature in Aud. 4 HERBERT BIEBERMAN'S THE SALT OF THE EARTH 7:00 and GILLO PONTECORVO'S BATTLE OF ALGIERS 9:30 $1 .25 cost. for either program a New Morning presenation by friends of newsreel Modern Languages Auditoriums cinema guild PRESTON STURGES WEEKEND TONIGHT--July 28 DICK POWELL in CH RISTMAS IN JULY Two nice, regular kids find it tough getting married when a bunch of scatterbrained businessmen get in their way. The film was d knockout in 1940. "As a creator of rich and human comedy, Mr. Sturges is closing fast on the heels of Frank Capra."-New York Times 8 and 10p.m. ARCHITECTURE AUD. $1.00