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