Thursday, August 2, 1973 THE SUMMER DAILY Page Three Ervin committee asked to halt Gainesville trial; spying cited GAINESVILLE, Fla. '- Six of the so-called Gainesville Eight yesterday asked the Senate Watergate committee to halt their prosecution on charges of plotting violent disruption of the 1972 Re- publican National Convention. The six defendants sent a telegram to Committee Chairman Sam Ervin (D-N. C.) asking that Congress order U. S. Dis- trict Court Judge Winston Arnow to re- cess the trial pending an investigation of two FBI agents caught Tuesday evening with electronic bugging devices in a closet adjoining the defense attorney s' confer- ence room. * AT A NEWS conference, defendant William Patterson of Austin, Tex., termed the incident "a clear violation of our Fourth and Sixth Amendment rights." Defense attorneys asked for a full hear- ing on what FBI agents Carl Ekblad and 'Robert Romans of Jacksonville were do- ing in the closet. Arnow denied it. However, the judge said he would con- sider granting a trial recess after the jury is selected to allow time for an in- vestigation. HEARINGS IN the judge's chambers on the discovery of the agents took up much of the time during the second day of the trial of seven members of the Vietnam Veterans Against the WAR (VVAW) and " a VVAW sympathizer. In the telegram to Ervin, the six de- fondants said, "We trn in a desperate ap- pel to Congress to intervene and halt 'ny firther proceedings in this case until a fell and immediste investigation of prosscutorial misconduct can be made." The telegram accused Arnow of ignor- ing "what could only be called Water- AP Photo gate Two." THE VVAW has maintained since the a friend. Afterwards he in- defendants' arrest last year that the d about by his friends and charges were filed by the Nixon admin- istration to draw attention away from -- the Watergate burglary. Defense attorneys said they could not explain why two of the defendants refused to sign the telegram. Arnow banned any e participants in the trial from making pub- lic statements concerning the case. Arnow is known in the Florida pan- handle as a man who speaks his mind, v o c a te but is willing to listen to argument. He's also remembered as the man who threw y research revealed that the the Rebel flag out of school. d increased the OSS budget by THE DEFENSE attorneys have asked him to excuse himself from the case. Ar- crease, $7,000 is earmarked for now has refused, saying he canupreside at a fair and impartial trial. But he also y services-advocacy for stu- warned that he will not allow the trial to resently represented by minor- be turned into a political forum or permit :es. The remaining $3,000 is to the uproar that accompanied the Chicago Seven trial. ted among new programs. Arnow has said repeatedly that he does not see the case as a political question. It N expressed confidence, how- is a criminal trial, he says, telling the the total $10,000 needed to ex- defendants at one point that governmental hicano advocate service to full- misconduct was not a defense and "the ee CHICANO, Page 5 government is not on trial in this case." Just clownin' around Zapata, a clown with Ringling Brothers, Barnum and Bailey, takes a hard right to the jaw from dicated no willingness to swap jobs with the President because Nixon has been getting knocke aides for over a year now. VP pledges 0U Chicano student ad' If USE WEN ~mM.?i{Y Better late School Board President Duane Renken finally forked over his 1972 city property taxes, only seven months late. He settled up the $2,000 debt Tuesday. A Daily in- vestigation published last week revealed he failed to pay the property tax, % of which is used to finance the city's public schools. The board has the responsibility for overseeing school operations just as city residents have a responsibility to pay their taxes. We are glad that Mr. Renken has at least made an effort to do both. Happenings... . . . the Bach Club will meet tonite at 8:00 p-m. at 730 Tappan . . . those inter- ested in the Divine Light Mission are in- vited to attend a meeting at 7:30 p.m. in room 4202 of the Union ... Williams' "Cat on A Hot Tin Roof" will be presented by the 'U' Players at 8:00 p.m. at the Power Center . . . Bergman's "Persona" will be shown at 7:00, 8:45 and 10:30 pm. in Aud. A, Angell Hall . .. the film "Lorax" will be shown in Aud. 3, MLB at 7:00 p.m. . - . Nat. Sci. Aud. will have "Myra Breckinridge" at 8:00 and 10:00 p.m. A2's weather Cloudy skies and cool temperatures should prevail over the city today. Chance of rain is only 10 per cent. By JACK KROST V i c e President for Student Services Henry Johnson yesterday promised that the University will provide a full-time Chicano advocate, despite a severe lack of funds presently felt by the Office of Stu- dent Services (OSS). Johnson made the promise at a meeting with representatives of the student group Movimiento Estudiantil Chicano de Aztlan (MECHA), which describes itself as an "umbrella organization of all Chicano groups at the University." AFTER CITING the OSS's financial dif- ficulties, Johnson appeared to make a t u r n a b o u t in his attitude toward the MECHA request. By the end of the ser- ious but orderly confrontation, he had con- sented to fund the full-time Chicano advo- cate position by re-allocating internal OSS monies. Johnson, however, reserved comment on whether a full-time advocate for Native Americans would be funded, saying, "I'd rather not focus on that point at present." Earlier in the meeting he stated, "In my mind, the needs of the two ethnic groups (Chicano and Native Americans) should receive top priority." The University's Chicano students pres- ently have only a part-time advocate or "liason officer," MECHA spokespersons explained. The post includes a budget of $5,000. JOHNSON SAID current OSS priorities favor extension of advocacy positions for Chicanos, Native Americans and gays to full-time status. The office also wants to increase funding for Project Community, he claimed. Recently back from a vacation and ap- parently not prepared for the meeting, Johnson was unfamiliar with the Regents' appropriation to the OSS for the coming year. Hast Regents ha $10,000. Of the in constituenc dents not p ity advocat be distribut JOHNSOP ever, that' pand the C S Spanish commission gives okay to women matadors MADRID (P) - A national commission and under their own responsibility, con- yesterday decided that women matadors, tract their services to fight brave bulls on now limited to fighting bulls from horse- foot." back, can battle the beasts on the ground As a rejoneadora - or woman bull- just as the men do. fighter on horseback - Hernandez is pro- The blow thus struck for the Spanish hibited by a 1931 law from getting off her version of women's liberation still has to mount to kill the bull. be endorsed by a higher authority, prob- Hernandez was not immediately avail- ably -the Supreme Court. able for comment. She reportedly is in BUT IT IS expected to propel 24-year- Seville in southern Spain training with old Maria de los Angeles Hernandez Go- Paro Ruiz, manager of retired matador mez toward her goal of becoming the Manuel Benitez, known as "El Cordobes." country's first authorized woman mata- IN PUSHING her case toward the Su- dor. preme Court, Hernandez has described Hernandez has vowed a fight to the her effort "as part of the women's libera- finish - with both the bulls and the tion movement. Women should have the courts. same rights as men, including fighting In supporting her petition before the bulls in public. Why can't I do it?" Ministry of the Interior, the National Before the commission, her attorney Commission of Feminine Labor said: cited the Spanish constitution, the civil "THE CRITERION of this commission code and a 1961 law saying: "The woman is that women can, freely and voluntarily can undertake any kind of wor contract."