Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, May 14, 197 Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, May 14, l97~ Reinecke: Immunity expected/ (Continued from Page 3) Reinecke's attorneys t o I d Parker that Reincke was mis- led and trapped by agents of the government. CONNOLLY was questioned at length about a number of con- versations he had with Frank Pagliaro Jr., at that time Rei- necke's principal attorney. The conversations began in mid-July of last year. Did Connolly tell the attorney that Reinecke could surmount his personal problems if he would cooperate and if he dis- played an excellent memory? Cox asked. "No, Idid not . . . I pointed out one or two areas of Mr. Reinecke's account as he gave it to us that left me uneasy in terms of hic credibility," said Connolly. REINECKE SAID he would like to be tried by his peers in California - if he is to face trial at all - where he believes the political climate is different than in Washington. Trucker strike sparsely By The Associated Press said Bill Clark, a Maryland Independent truckers k e p t State Police spokesman. their rigs rolling yesterday, gen- Militants who called for the erally ignoring a call for a latest shutdown claimed it was nationwide s t r i k e over fuel highly effective in several areas, prices and speed limits. There but their estimates could not be was scattered violence in a few confirmed. areas, but authorities in most places said truck traffic was JAMES COX, information of- normal. ficer for the state police in "We've got zero problems," Pennsylvania, w h e r e earlier Taylor loins race (Continued from Page 3) The observers also seem to feel that Taylor may be the proper candidate-she has a long record of activism coupled with a relatively "down to earth" image. "PEOPLE VIND Perry erratic at times and difficult to deal with," one Democratic party member said last night. "He is just off in his own world." The Democratic insider contended that Bllard's involvement with Deep Throat has made the rep- resentative "look silly." He went on to speculate that Taylor would probably have to be considered the front runner as soon as she officially enters the primary contest. Taylor sees her strength in hitting Bullard's image in Lan- sing and his relative ineffective- ness as a legislator that has re- sulted from his presence at the Hash Bash and support of the pornographic movie, according to the commissioner. "HIS ANTICS have pissed off people in Lansing," she said. "Consequently they write him and the issues he advocates off as irrelevant, but those issues by and large are very import- ant." She further charged that Bul- lard has consistently failed to establish a clear set of priori- ties and as a result "his con- stituents have not gotten a real hearing." Nonetheless, Taylor concedes that she and Bullard would prob- ably vote the same way on most measures but for what she said would be "very different rea- sons." shutdowns sparked violence and cut traffic, said at midafter- noon: "Truck traffic is smooth and normal in volume and every other way. This is just an ordinary Monday." He said 11 incidents of violence had been reported, most minor and most before daybreak. Other violence was reported in Georgia, Tennessee, Ken- tucky and Oklahoma. Most of the incidents involved wind- shields smashed by rocks or sniper fire, and no injuries were reported. Michael Parkhurst, editor of Overdrive magazine, a Los An- geles-based industry publication that called for the shutdown, s a i d state officials couldn't prove their claim that truck traffic was normal. 'He said their reports were "pure guess- work." HE SAID produce shipments from Florida were "down to a mere trickle" and claimed a Colorado meat processing plant had shut down because of the work stoppage. The manager of the Pompano State Farmers' Market, one of Florida's busiest shippers, con- firmed that shipments were down, but said the strike had nothing to do with it. "P r o d u c e shipments from Florida are down . . . because this is toward the end of the season for us. We don't have The onl yelectronic camera with atotalsystem. Announding the Minolta XK. The Minolta XK Is the only 35mm electronIc camera Automatic and manual operation. You can set lena you can virtually design to fit your own photographic opening and ahutter speed. Or let the Minolta XK set needs. ltself'for perfect exposure based on a lens openIng wh~chyou slect The MInolta XK Is the central component of the most Through-thelens metering wIth MInolta's patented advanced camera system In 35mm photography. "CLC" systam. While other electronic-shutter cameras only offer Fauetrhndigsedndcaivpho- interchangeable nses, the Minolta XK goes far be- ea d a yond that wIth a wide assortment of Interchangeable raphy Include a unique "Senswitch" that turns the vhMie leandK Ifocusngyscree tonestasurt an meterIng system "on" when the camera Is held, eye- potoganIc situationityoronhto y piece curtains multiple exposure capabilIty, deliber- ate over or under exposure and much more.n- An electronlcaily-controlled shutter Is at the heart AcceptainterchangeableRokkor-Xlensasfrom6mm of the Minolta XK. No other camera In the world of- fsheyeto 1600mm telephoto. Thesepreclslon optlca fers a range ot shutter speeds from 16 full seconds are computer-designed and apeclly bult to gIve to an Incredibly fast e/2000th second. unmatched sharpness and colorwith the Minolta XK. Come in and try the camera it took seven years to create. SOUTH STATE AT WEST STADIUM 2755 PLYMOUTH ROAD , NORTH UNIVERSITY NEAR LIBERTY (PLYMOUTH MALL) 761-201 1-Daily and Sat. 'til 6, Fri. 'til 9 665-0621--Dailv 'til 9, Sat. 'til 6 761 -8690-Daily 10-9, Sat. 10-6 backed that much to ship," he said. "Everything's normal here." Colorado authorities had no report of strike activity. A spokesperson for Montfort of Colorado, the state's largest meat packing plant, said offi- cials were watching the situa- tion, but reported that the shut- down had had no effect so far. THE PROTEST was the third by independent driver-owners in recent months. Many truckers said they couldn't afford to shut down again after the work sto- pages in December and Feb- ruary. "The feeling is we definitely should shut down, but we can't afford it," said John Pinchot, president of the Connecticut Independent Truckers Associa- tion. The February job action last- ed 11 days, claimed two drivers' lives and resulted in temporary layoffs for thousands of work- ers in affected industries. It ended after negotiators for the government and the estimated 100,000 truckers who own their own rigs worked out an agree- ment providing increased sup- plies of diesel fueland permit- ting the drivers to pass some uf the fuel cost increases on to their customers. Leaders of yesterday's werk stoppage said they wanted a fuel price rollback, an increase in the 55 mph. speed limt, higher weight limits for truks and an audit of the oil com- panies. Supreme Ct. invalidates bug evidence (Continued from Page 1) tually been approved by Mit- chell himself. This the court ap- proved. In other action yesterday, the court: -Rejected International Busi- ness Machines Corp.'s request for Supreme Court review of a lower court order that it turn over some 700 documents to gov- ernment anti-trust lawyers or face a fine of $150,000 a day; -Ruled 5-to-4 that the public Chicago Transit Authority can refuse to accept ads calling for President Nixon's impeachment, even though it accepts paid po- litical advertisements for such causes as election campaigns and antiwar positions. -Refused to hear a plea that universities discrimi- nate against women students when they require them to obey dormitory curfews not imposed on men students. Daily Official Bulletin -- :amm.. Tuesday, May 14 Day Calendar Dental Schan, Dental Reearch tot.: Bangt Magnuson, University of Gothenburg, Sweden. 'Hstoloegie Evaluations of Popotomy in the Primary Denaton":- A0 3elogg 1 p.m. Baseball: U-M vs. Central Michi- gao (2 games): Fisher Stadium, 2 pm. .Aerospace, App. Meeh., Tng. st.: John Russett, "WhiriIng Cable wth viscous Drag": 229 W. Engs., 4. General Notices MAY 23, 1974 (5:0( p.m.) is last date Cr SprIng halC Term and Sprng-Summer Term when Regis- trar's OCfice will: a. Accept the Student 10 per tent withdrawal Notice for refund purposes. (Eclud- ing a W50.00 dsenrollment fee. b. Allow refund for the student who reduces hours of course credit. May 30, 1974 (4:00 p.m.) is last date for Spring HalC Term when Registrar's Office will allow refund for a 5) per cent Withdrawal. Career Planning & Placement 3200 SAB, 764-7456 Interviewing on Campus. Tues., June 4: IBM (far Various locations). BS/MS: All disciplines for Marketing & System Engineering Trainees & BS/Ms: Comp. Sei., Math, Physics. Chem. or equiv. for System Analysis & Programming. Dec. '73. May '14 and Spring - Summer grads are en- couraged to sign up for interview at CP&P. -