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July 23, 1974 - Image 2

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Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1974-07-23

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Page Two

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Tuesday, July 23, 1974

Pag To HE ICIGN DIL.TesdyJuy 2, 97

In the news
National
WASHINGTON - U. S. District Judge Ger-
hard Gesell yesterday set aside one of the
charges for which former presidential John
Ehrlichman was convicted in the Ellsberg
break-in trial July 12. Ehrlichman was con-
victed of conspiracy and lying to a federal
grand jury and also of lying to FBI agents on
what he remembered seeing in his files about
the break-in at the office of Daniel Ellsberg's
psychiatrist. Yesterday Gesell set aside the
conviction involving the FBI.
WASHINGTON - California Lt. Gov. Ed
Reinecke took the witness stand in his own
defense yesterday and said he informed Atty.
Gen. John Mitchell in May 1971 of a financial
pledge to underwrite the 1972 Republican Na-
tional Convention. Reinecke's testimony con-

- -
this morning
tradicts tesimony by Mitchell before the Sen-
ate Judiciary Committee that he did not learn
of the commitment from Sheraton Corp. until
after the Justice Department had settled an
antitrust suit against International Telephone
& Telegraph Corp. in July 1971. Sheraton is a
subsidiary of ITT. Earlier yesterday U. S. Dis-
trict Judge Barrington Parker dismissed one
of the two perjury counts against Reinecke.
Weather
The weather will stay cool with a 20 per
cent chance of showers this morning. Highs
are expected near 80 with partly cloudy skies
this afternoon and evening. Lows are expect-
ed in the middle '50's, approaching the re-
cord low for this date of 52, set in 1947. Winds
are expected from the northeast at 6-12
m.p.h. -

STEVE'S LUNCH
1313 SO. UNIVERSITY
Home Cooking Is Our Specialty

Breakfast All Day
3 eggs, Hash Browns,
Toast & Jelly-$1.05

Specials This Week
Beef Stroqanoff
Chinese Pepper Steak
Home-made Beef Stew

Gsoutash
Ham or Bacon or Eao Rolls
Sausage with 3 eggs, Home-made Soups (Beef,
Hash Browns, Toast and Barlev, Clam Chowder, etc
Chili, Vegetable Tempuro
Jelly-$1.40 (served after 2 p.m.)
Fried Rice with Sausages
3 eggs, Rib Eye Steak, and Veqetobles
Hash Browns, Spahetti in Wine Sauce
Toast & Jelly-$1.90 Beef Curry Rice
FAST AND FRIENDLY SERVICE BY MR. AND MRS. LEE

tc3

sdj~

MON.-FRI.: 8-8
SAT.: 8:30-8
SUN.: 9-2
1313 SO UNIVERSITY
STEVE'S LUNCH

I've come
QaIonIWQy
THE

THE MICHIGAN DAILY
Voisume LXXXIV, Na, 40-'S
Tuesday, July 23, 1974
is edited and managed by students
at the University o Michigan. News
phone 764-0562, Second class postage
paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 4010.
Published d ai l y Tuesday through
Sunday morning during the Univer-
sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann
Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription
rates: $10 by carrier (campus area);
511 local mail (Michigan and Ohio);
$12 non-local mail (other states and
toreign).
Summer session published Tues-
day through Saturday morning.
Subscription rates: $5.50 by carrier
(campus area); $6.00 local mail
(Michigan and Ohio); $6.50 non-
local mail (other states and foreign).
Dial 665-6290
603 E. LIBERTY
RODGERS., HAMMERSMINS
SHOWTIMES
2:00-5:00-8:00
1214 S. UNIVERSITY
Dino 668-6416
Brondo! Brando! Brando
Tanao Streetcor
3:00-7:10 1:00-5:10-9:20
231 S. STATE ST.
Dial 662-6264
As American As Apple Pie!
WARREN BEAJTY
TME
PARALLAX V[EW
SHOWTIMES:
Sat., Sun., Wed.

TV
tonight
6:00 2 4 7 11 13 News
9 Andy Griffith
20 Leave It To Beaver
24 ABC News-Smith/
Reasoner
50 Avengers
5 Carraseosendas
57 Sesame Street
6:30 2 11 CBs News-
Walter Cronkise
4 13 NBC News-
John Chancellor
7 ABC News-smith/
Reasoner
9 1 Dream of Jeannie
20 Nanny and the Professor
24 Dick Van Dyke
30 Lilias, Yoga and You
56 Four Garbage Cans in
Every Yard -
7:00 2 Truth or Consequences
4News
7 To Tell the Truth
9 Beverly Hillbillies
11i To Tell the Truth
3 What's My Line?
20 Rifleman
24 Dealer's Choice
30 Impressions
50 Untouchables
5t Evening at Pops
57 Electric Company
7:30 2 What's My Line?
4 A:dubn Wildlife Theatre
7 New Price Is ight
9 Bewitched
11 Hollywood Squares
13 Truth or Consequences
20 Burke's Law
24 Wait Till Your Father
Gets Home
30 Zoo
57 LIlias, Yoga and You
0:00 2 11 Maude
4 13 Baseball World of
Joe Garagiola
7 24 Happy Days
9 Starlost
30 56 57 Man Builds,
Man Destroys
50 MeHale's Navy
:15 4 13 Baseball AB-Star Game
:30 2 11 Hawaii Five-O
7 24 Movie
"The Third Girl from the
Left"
20 Judd for the Defense
30 56 57 The Naturalists
50 Merv Griffin
9:00 9 News
30 56 57 What's the Big
Idea?
9:30 211 Shaft
9 Soccer
20 Seven Hundred Club
10:00 7 24 Marcus Welby, M.D.
3 30 Behind the Lines
50 Perry Mason
56 Our Street
57 Ohio This Week
10:30 56 Consumer Game -
57 Day at Night
11:00 2 4 7 11 13 24 News
9 CBC News-Lloyd
Robertson
50 Night Ganery
11:30 2 11 Movie
"Pretty Poison" (198)
4 03 Johnihy Carson
7 24 Wide word Mystery
9 News
20 Manna
50 Movie
"Master of allantra"
(English; 1953)
12:00 9 Saint
1:00 4 Tomorrow
7 1l.fews
1:10 2 Movie
"Frontier Uprising." (191)
iNews
2:00 4 Shdos oIe Wall
2:30 4 News
2:40 2 News
Daily Official Bulletin
Tuesday, July 23
Day Calendar
WUOM: Rep M. Griffiths, author
P. Schaly discuss Equal Rights
Arendment (ERA). 9-.7 MHO, 9:45
am.
A-V Ctr.: women's films, Joyce at
34, Aud. 3, MLB, 7 pnL
Mich. Repertory '74: Inge's "Pie-
nie", Power Ctr., 8 pm.
General Notices
Summer Commencement Exer-

rises, Aug. 18, 1974, 2 pm, Hill Aud.
Reception in Mich. League Ballroom
after ceremony. Ticketo: distributed,
Aug. 5 to Aug. 16, Diliosa Dept.,
1518 LEA. Academic costume: cos-
tume rental handled by University
Cellar, Mich. Union. Candidates for
grad. degrees must place orders be-
fore July 19. Candidates for un-
dergrad. degrees need not place an
order in advance; pick up cos-
tumes at Cellar. Aug. 12 or 13.

Around A2
The Audio-Visual Center con-
tinues its Summer Film Show-
case with a series of women
studies films, featuring Joyce
at 34, No Lies, Nobody's Vic-
tim, This is the Home of Mrs.
Levant Graham, and Sylvia,
Fran and Joy. There's no ad-
mission charge and the show
starts at 7 p.m. at the MLB
Aud. 3.
The Ypsilanti SOS Community
Crisis Center is seeking volun-
teers for its Flying Crisis
Squad, a 24 hour emergency
crisis intervention mobile unit.
Evening and weekend training
sessions are given by the SOS
staff at the Crisis Center, 114
N. River Street. Anyone inter-
ested in joining the on-call team
should call SOS at 485-3222.
Training begins July 26.
The Indian Progressive Study
Group is sponsoring a public
meeting to "uphold the armed
agrarian revolution of the In-
dian people. The meeting is at
8 p.m., Rm. 4304, Mich. Union.
Morse dies
duri~ngbi
for Senate
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) - Wayne
Morse died yesterday in the
midst of a campaign to return
to the U.S. Senate, where he
had served 24 years. He was 73.
Morse, known as the "Tiger of
the Senate" for his refusal to
compromise, entered a hosnital
te last Wednesday with a urin-
ary tract infection. His condition
deteriorated during the week-
end, and he died of kidney and
heart failure.
Elected to the Senate in 1944,
Morse was one of the first con-
gressmen to oppose the Viet-
nam war.
When he first ran for the Sen-
ate, his campaign slogan was,
"Principle above Politics. '
Three decades later, the sio-
gan was basically the same: "I
shall work and fight for the re-
storation of integrity in our
own government."
Republican Bob Packwood
narrowly defeated Morse in
1968. Mark Hatfield, also a Re-
publican, easily won re-eection
when Morse challenged him in
1972.

o STEVE KRANTIZ prodclucos. -produtced O51EVE KRANTZ
dilcdcd by RO5ER1IA'iLOkR R %l ETRICTED 'y^
wceL oyKROBERT TAYOR, EDHALLIDAY & ERIC MONTE
cscslcc oOde k'R les d

Morse
Morse was once a Repu5tican,
then became an independent in
1952, saying he was too lioeral
for the GOP, tn1955, he became
a Democrat.
It was 'Hatfield who announc-
ed Morse's death to the Seate,
saying that the late senator's
"early prophecies and warnings
about Vietnam were suzh that

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