Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, June 8, 1974 ~oge Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, June 8, 1974 Hearst vows to fight on' Gesell alleges contempt (Conutinued from Page 1 SLA slogan, "Death to the fas- cist insect that preys upon the life of the people." "The name Cujo means 'un- conquerable'," she said. "It is the perfect name for him. Cujo conquered life as well as death by facing them and fighting. "Neither Cujo nor I ever loved an individual the way we loved each other, probably because our relationship wasn't based on bourgeois values, atti- tudes and goats. "I WAS RIPPED off by the pigs when they murdered Cujo -ripped off the same way that thousands of sisters and broth- ers in this fascist country have been ripped off of people they tote.". She talked fondly of her SLA comrades. Of DleFreeze she said, 'Cinque loved the people with tenderness and respect- They listened to him when he talked because they knew that his love reflected the troth and the future. "Cinqte knew that to live was to shoot straight. Iie longed to be with his black sisters and brothers, but at the same tuIne he wanted to prove to black people that white freedom fight- ers are comrades in arms.' OF CINQUE, she also said: "He taught me virtually every- thing imaginable but wasn't liberal with us. He'd kick our asses if we didn't hop over a fence fast enough or keep our asses down while practicing. "Most importantly, he taught me how to show my love for the people. He helped me see that it's not how long you live that's important, it's how you live, what we decide to do with our lives." Of the "combat unit" she and the other two voices on the tape identified as William and Emily Harris, said they had formed and named after the slain black nationalist leader, Hearst said, "The Malcolm X combat Unit of the SLA was a leadership training cell under the personal command of Gen- eral Field Harshal Cinque. 'All of us were prepared tN function on our own if necessary until we connected with other combat units. 'The idea that we are leader- tess is absurd as long as any SlA elements are alive." (Continued from Page 1) jury materials but the docu- ments themselves had already been forwarded to the Supreme Court as part of the evidence it is reviewing in a dispute be- tween Nixon and the special prosecutor over whether to re- lease scores of White House tapes. Reports published Thursday said Nixon was named by-the grand jury as having a role in Air conditioner power reduced (Continued from Page 3 Commenting on the Univer- sity's air conditioning economy measures, one student said, "It's all right with me, as long as Fleming, Overoerger, Pier- pont, and the rest of those guys aren't living at 68 degrees." "If more of the schoo's build- ings had been built without seal- ed windows," remarked another student, "the cotbinatiot of Ann Arbor's prevailng winds nid some fans would keep peo- ple cool at a fraction of the cost of air conditioning -" the cover-up, but not legally in- dictable for various reasons - including his role as the na- tion's chief executive. In other Watergate - related developments yesterday: -Chief U. S. District Judge George Hart sentenced former Atty. Gen. Richard Kleindienst to a month in jail and a $100 fine, both suspended, for fail- ing to answer questions before a Senate committee regarding the ITT case; Mideast troo (Cotioned from Page 3) Israel has denied earlier claims of mistreatment and said the Arab prisoners were handled better than required by international law. RETURNED SYRIAN prison- ers claimed they were hand- cuffed, blindfolded, beaten and kicked during the first day of captivity. They also said they suffered solitary confinement in small cells for up to three weeks during periods of intense inter- rogation. A Syrian pilot, who com- )I -A White House spokesper- son denied reports of a special fund to pay the legal expenses of Ehrlichman and H. R. Halde- man; and -Ehrlichman's lawyers said that subpoenas have been is- sued for the appearance of Sec- retary of State Henry Kissinger, White House counsel Fred BTw,- hardt and chief of staff Alexan- der Haig, at his trial, and that Gesell denied another subpoena for President Nixon; ps start split plained of a spinal injury so painful he could hardly walk, said he was in a hospital for only eight days during which time a doctor saw him only once. "That was all the medical treatment and examination I had in the nine mouths of my captivity until 20 days ago when a doctor saw me briefly," he added. lussin Mahle, an army pri-. vate, said his leg was in a cast for nine months but the frac- ture never mended. He said the leg was put in plaster "without a proper examination for fur- ther treatment, no X-rays, nothing." He claimed he was slapped and cursed in Arabic several times a day by hospital order- lies throughout his captivity. THIS WEEKEND 8 :30 $2.50 FRI.-SAT. LEKTRA RECORD'S Spider John Koerner 1 -,, w o 1 yf l AI*MpbN Can anyone do what you do Probably not. All things considered you do what you do pretty doggone well. After all, no one has taken your job. And you're eating regularly. But... But have you ever considered what doing your job just a little better might mean? Money. Cold hard coin of the realm. If each of us cared just a smidge more about what we do for a living, we could actually turn that inflationary spiral around. Better products, better service and better management would mean savings for all of us. Savings of much of the cash and frayed nerves it's costing us now for repairs and inefficiency. 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