Page Twelve THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, August 8,.1972 'age Twelve THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, August 8, 1972 Charges on Bacon dismissed SEATTLE ()-A federal judge dismissed a perjury charge Fri- day against anti-war activist Leslie Bacon, accused of lying to a grand jurge investigating the 1971 bombing of the U.S. Capitol. A spokesperson for the Justice Department said the charge was dismissed because "the decision was made not to answer the de- fendant's motion for disclosure of electronic surveillance." Bacon pleaded innocent to the charge May 5, called the indict- ment absurd, and later told newsmen she had not been on the Capitol grounds on March 1, 1971, the day of the bombing. The bomb went off in a men's room in the Senate wing of the Capitol. Bacon, 20, was charged with knowingly making "false ma te- rial declarations" when she de- nied to a federal grand jury she had visited the Capitol in Feb- ruary, 1971. U.S. District Judge Walter McGovern dismissed the perjury charge in Seattle on a request frpm Assistant U.S. Atty. Ger- ald Olson. The FBI arrested Bacon in Washington in 1971 as a material witness to the explosion. She was transferred to Seattle for a grand jury investigation and testified for three days but was cited for contempt of court in May 1971 for refusing to answer 18 questions despite an offer of partial immunity. Voters decide primary today (Continued from Page 1) Harold Saunders, only 45 per- cent of those registered are ex- pected to vote today. Almost 11 per cent of the voters are in the 18-20 year old bracket. The decidedly liberal candidates are counting on these voters for crucial votes. Another fraction of the votes coming in today, which are considered decisive, are the ab- sentee ballots. Many of the positions in this primary will be decided on by a small mar- gin of votes. It has been pre- dicted that at least one of the contests will be decided by less than 800 votes. With 4,200 ab- sentee ballots outstanding, a candidate could win or lose the primary on absentee ballots alone. Saunders says his office must receive the ballots by 7:00 to- night, tohbebtransferred to the counting stations and recorded. VOTE TODAY-7 UNEXPECTED MOVE Judge retains dig-in charges (Continued from Page 1) "unwinnable" for the prosecu- tion. Elden's action yesterday fol- lowed his acceptance of the prosecution's amendment, which changes the charge to trespas- sing and "digging up the lawn and the earth beneath the lawn" in violation of an 1887 statute. Elden had stated last week that he .dismissed charges against Goldman because the prosecution amendment hadnot been filed within the court- appointed deadline. In yesterday's proceeding he said that no court deadline or order is official "unless it takes the form of a written order," and said that no such deadline order- had been made. Elden had stated in the July 20 pro- ceeding that the prosecution could not file the amendment after July 21. Don Koster, defense attorney for Plamondon, insisted that the amendment had appeared three days late. "Am I to understand that it is the practice of this court to ignore its own deadlines?" he asked Elden. The judge did not respond and declined Koster's request for dismissal of charges. In the pretrial for 27 persons charged with destruction of property in the June 17 crater dig, the court's action changed the actual charge to trespassing and digging, in violation of the same 85-year old statute being brought against the three re- maining May 19 crater dig de- fendants. Elden accepted the new com- plaint, which named University Safety Director Frederick Davids as representing the complainant, in spite of the fact that Davids had not signed the complaint. Such a complaint form is us- ually considered invalid without the complainant's signature. Elden maintained that the two ifferent charges are "based on the same essential grounds" and hence a new signature from Davids, who signed the original complaints, is not necessary. Davids said yesterday that he has not yet seen the new com- plaint. Bentley and Koster called the court's action "a clear denial of the right to due'process" and said they would probably seek higher court action against El- den in both crater cases. MUSK OXEN Musk oxen need no barns and little fodder. They eat about one sixth of what cattle eat. HAPPY BIRTHDAY The national parks system is 100 years old, this year. There are 36 national parks covering 28 million acres, most of them west of the Mississippi. HELL OF A STONE The largest hailstone ever known to fall in the United States was a grapefruit-size lump of ice measuring 171/~ inches in circumference and weighing 1.67 pounds. It fell during a severe storm at Cof- feyville, Kan., in September, 1970. TOWER TALE Melted down, all the iron in Paris' 1,056-foot Eiffel Tower would fill a cube only 33-feet on side - or the size of a three story house. CARL F for SHERIFF * EXPERIENCED INTEGRITY Vote Republican on Aug. 8 Paid political sdvertisleent U FISCHERor SASY Pick the winner . ..and BE A WINNER! WIN THIS CHESS SET' VALUED AT OVER $100 -I Courrtesy of and and S MAAAIM AMM ARBR : . MURRAY J. KNOWLES, JR. for Drain Commissioner (Republican) paid political adveetisement TV & Stereo Rentals $10.00 per month NO DEPOSIT FREE DELIVERY, PICK UP AND SERVICE CALL: NEJAC TV RENTALS 662-5671 CONTEST RULES: 3L1 "".'MAN,"An "AKVV 1. 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