Poge Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, June 11, 1974 page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, June 11, 1974 Conservatives, liberal elected President rejects orders (Continued from Page 1) align themselves wi'h it sa- dent voters." BECK AND HRP 1,ueful Larry Mann ran on : :adical platform of commuitny and Stu- dent control of Cie schools. Beck said the re'uins we:e 'v e r y inconsistent" i t h a t voters defeated the rnitlage in- :rease but elected tandidates who supported the tI-i' hike, which HRP opposed. Mann, 14, ran a write-in cam- paign after school officials re- fused to accept his nominating petitions, citing state laws pro- hibiting people under 18 from holding elected office. He received 304 votes, a low total compared to approximate- ly 1,500 garnered by IS-year-old HRIP candidate Sonia Yaco in 1972. MANN POINTED out that II- NP ran "a stronger campaign" for Yaco and that the party's large slate of hopefuls that year drew attention to Yaco's can- didacy. At the conservative end of the spectrum, outgoing school board member Theodore Heusel claim- 37 M PG' IN TRODUCING Peugeot-Diesel 4-door, sunroof INTRODUCING. the only Dir- seI station wsoon in America. INTRODUCING- The sedan that costs about $2,500 less than the other Diesel, TOYOTA ANN ARBOR, Inc. 907 N. MAIN at DEPOT ST. 769-7935 ed Israel won a seat because of crowded conservative field. Besides the three Republican- backed candidates, hopefuls E. Stevens Binder and George Ko- lasa split the conservative sup- port, Heusel contended. Sign law.. gets f irst reading OK Last night City Council gave preliminary approval to an ordi- nance which, if passed a second time, will limit the number and location of billboards erected in the city. A state Supreme Court ruling May 23 struck down parts of the city's existing billboard law as too broad because it limited nearly all forms of commercial signs. The proposed ordinance would limit the number of city bill- boards to 30 and would prohibit billboards from being erected within 500 feet of any park, playground, bridge, school prop- erty, residential building or within 50 feet of any street. The pygmy owl, Canadas smallest owl, is about seven inches long. (Continued from Page 1) to Watergate prosecutors. Sirica already holds the tape, but Nixon lawyer James St. Clair asked him not to release it pending approval. In his six-page letter to Ro- dino, Nixon attacked the com- mittee's warning that it may assume that material he with- holds is damaging to him. The President said his execu- tive privilege claim "must be accepted without adverse infer- ence-or else the privilege itself is undermined, and the separa- tion of powers nullified." EHRLICHMAN, scheduled to stand trial with three others on conspiracy charges stemming from the break-in of Daniel Ellsberg's psychiatrist's office, had subpoenaed all his notes, hand written on yellow legal pads while he was President Nixon's domestic counselor be- tween January 1971 and April 30, 1973. tast Friday Gesell angrily told St. Clair that refusal to allow Ehrlichman to see all the notes with his lawyer present "borders on obstruction" of jus- tice and threatened to hold a contempt hearing. In a three-page letter to the judge, St. Clair said that Ehr- lichman could examine the en- tire file of his notes of conver- sations he had with the Presi- dent but that his attorney still had to wait in another room. ST. CLAIR said that 'after Ehrlichman had determined he wanted a particular document, a presidential lawyer would re- view the request to determine whether the material was rele- vant to the case. Last Friday, U.S. Dlisrict Judge John Sirica had :rdered a 15%-minute section of a Sept. 15, 1972 tape recording turned over to the prosecutors, saying that he, Sirica, made. a mis- take last year when he deemed that part of the tape as privi- leged. The judge, however, gave St. Clair a chance over the week- end to review the sectiin of tape and comment on whether it should be turned over to the prosecutor. ST. CLAIR wrote Sirica that the President "disagrees that the portion of the tape in ques- tion relates in any way to Watergate," and that the Presi- dent stands on his claim of privilege. He said he will file an appeal by Friday. Also in Sirica's courtroom an attorney for former Atty. Gen. John Mitchell a r g u e d that charges against Mitchell in the Watergate cover-up should be dismissed. Lawyer William Hundley said Mitchell's chance of a fair trial was destroyed by his appear- ance before the Senate Water- gate Committee last summer. Meanwhile, the special prose- cutor and the White House ask- ed the Supreme Court to re- lease materials which reported- ly reveal that Nixon was named by a grand jury as an unindict- ed con-conspirator in the cover- up. Tom Jones Ann Arbor Film Co-op Aud. A, 7, 9:15 Tony Richardson's superb 1963 adaptation of Henry Field- ing's novel of life and love in 19th century England returns tonight for what should be an- other successful appearance. Somehow, this lusty triple Os- car winner (including Best Pic- ture) starts the audience laugh- ing at frame one and keeps up the pace until the very last name on the crawl at the end. Richardson's keenly develop- ed timing and masterful visual touches will both delight and amaze you. Photography, cos- tumes, and the other technical credits are extremely impres- sive - especially John Addi- son's perky music score that is humorous in itself. -David Blomquist Gettoknowthe twoof you before yo 0u become the thn e Wyou. Get to know what you both really like. What you both really want out of life. Get to enjoy your freedom together until you both decide you want to let go of a little bit of it. But make it your choice. Research statistics show that more than half of all the pregnancies each year are accidental. Too many of them, to couples who thought they knew all about family planning methods. Get to know how the two of you don't have to become the three of you. Or the four of you. Or... Plnned Paenthooi- Children by choice. Not chance. Pb, further informatiow, write Planned Parenthoo, Box 431, Radio City Station, New York, N.Y. 10019. PlaSadPareatkoad i aatia a profitrrganizatio rhee be s4 iaftettatied eet wr e aasotfam iaaning t4 alawh. ata s d t . ""Own veIak wa 1w a * C VW~eakable- 4 Nites Only-June 13 to 16 TWO OF THE FINEST ACTS IN CONTEMPORARY FOLK MUSIC The Composer of "THE CITY OF NEW ORLEANS" STEVE GOODMAN AND ONE OF THE MOST POPULAR ENTERTAINERS ON THE CLUB CIRCUIT CHUCK MITCHELL reservations suggested-cover $3.50 29101 Greenfield, Southfield, Michigan 48076 Phone: 557-2622 for Reservations