Friday, May 14, 971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Black Panther's defense ends in NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AM - The defense yesterday rest- ed in the murder kidnap trial of Black Panther Chairman Bobby Seale and Erika Huggins without call- ing Seale to rebut testimony that he ordered a p a r t y member slain two years ago. Defense attorneys announced they had finished calling w i t- nesses shortly after Hug- gins completed her testimony. The Superior Court trial was adjourned until Friday, when the prosecutor said he willtcall rebuttal witnesses.- Scale's failure to take th e stand came as a surprise, since his chief attorney, C h a r 1 e s Garry, said in court two weeks ago - outdated of the jury's presence - that "Mr. Seale will testify." One prosecution witness, George Sams Jr., told the jury of five blacks and seven whites that Seale confronted Alex Rackley in the local Panther headquarters on May 20, 1969, and ordered him killed as a suspected police informer. But the defense made major issues of Sams' character and his motives in testifying against the Panther leader. Seale and Huggins face capital charges of kidnaping resulting in Rackley's death, and aiding and abetting his murder. They also are charged with conspiring to kidnap and to murder Rack- ley, a 24-year-old Panther from New Vork. Seale took the stand at the trial of Lonnie McLucas last summer and testified that dur- ing his 12 hour visit to New Haven in May, 1969, he never entered the apartment w h e r e Rackley was being held, saw Rackley or gave an order for him to be killed. McLucas, also a aPnther, was convicted of conspiring to murder Rackley. The defense in the five- month-old trial contends that Rackley's torture - he was New Haven trial beaten and doused with hot water - and his eventual death were engineered by Sams. Sams has admitted giving the orders at the scene of Rack- ley's fatal shooting, but he claimed he was acting on in- structions from national Pan- ther officials, including Seale. As the final defense w i t- ness, Huggins said she was afraid of Sams and did not pay close attention to what w a s happening to Rackley in t h e days before he was killed be- cause the subject "depressed" her. But the prosecutor, State's Atty. Arnold Markle, depicted Huggins as an active participant in the interrogation of Rack- ley and in his subsequent two day detention at the Panther headquarters, an apartment. CHARLES GARRY rested his case yesterday in the trial of Bobby Seale and Erica Huggins. Seale did not testify in his own defense, contrary to a previous announcement that he would testify. By The Associated Press Hoffman idieted on 2 counts for Mayday WASHINGTON (W) - Yippie Hoffman a n d Connecticut leader Abbie Hoffman was in- pacifist Bradford Lyttle, are dicted yesterday on federal the first of several antiwar antiriot charges stemming from leaders accused of offenses in his alleged participation in the connection with the demonstra- Mayday antiwar activities in the tions to be charged by a grand nation's capital last week. jury. A federal grand jury, con- Lyttle was indicted by a dis- sidering charges against sever- trict ofgColumbianSuperior al of Mayday demonstration Court grand jury on assault leaders, returned the indictment charges earlier in the day. against Hoffman in U.S. Dis- trict Court here. The first count of the in- dictment accuses Hoffman of crossing state lines to incite a riot. The indictment said t he his riot occurred in th Georgetown section of Washington on Mon- day, May 3. ator Hoffman had been arrested by FBI agents at his Manhattan f le d apartment last Wednesday on the basis of complaints t h a t w as f le charged hi iwith intesstate travel to incite a riot and as- saulting a aWhsington police a w eek officer. He was released on $1,000 bond and the charges against him were submitted to the grand jury here. A second count of the in- dictment charges Hoffman with interfering with Washington police officer Larry W. Sap- pington during a civil disorder, also a federal offense. SOUTH VIETNAMESE FORCES repulsed the first two major counterattacks in their month long A Shan Valley campaign. The South Vietnamese claimed 200 North Vietnamese killed with the help of U.S. aircraft, and smashed a regimental-size base camp and arms factory. 90 South Vietnamese marines were reported killed or wounded in the two attacks. LT. GEN. MOHAMMED FAWZI, Egypt's war minister and five other members of President Anwar Sadat's 32-man cabinet resigned last night. The successor of Gamal Abdel Nasser was faced with other resig- nations from the Cabinet and by top officials of the Arab Socialist Union, Egypt's only legal political party. The resignations came as Sadat ordered an immediate end to all kinds of police surveillance including the tapping of telephones, in Egypt. THE NIXON ADMINISTRATION yesterday sent to Congress a proposed bill to authorize a $250 million loan guarantee to save Lockheed Aircraft Corp. The proposed measure does not mention Lockheed directly, but proposes guaranteed loans for major business enterprises in danger of failing. The guarantee amount is limited to $250 million. "It is anticipated that substantially all of the guarantee authority would be used to insure the granting of emergency credit to the Lockheed Corp." said Secretary of the Treasury John Connally. The proposal calls for repayment of the loan in not more than five years, although this period could be renewed for an additional five years. THE UNITED STATES yesterday pushed for some action by the North Vietnamese on prisoner release. U.S. Ambassador David Bruce sought to spur an allied suggestion for internment of Vietnam war prisoners in a neutral country. He said the U.S. is prepared to immediately fly North Vietnamese pri- soners to any agreed neutral country. The North Vietnamese, in an apparent rejection of any prisoner release or internment proposition, said the U.S. must fix a troop withdrawal date, after which other questions, including prisoners, can be discussed. an original musical by JERRY BILIK Ann Arbor Civic Theater presents "THE BRASS AND GRASS es FOREVER !" May 5.8; May 12-15 Mendelssohn Theatre TICKETS: Box Office Open 10-8 Daily Wed. ond Thurs.-$3.00 668-6300 Fri. and Sat.-$3.50 *{ PRESENTS COMMANDER CODY and his LOST PLANET AIRMEN TONIGHT and by outrageous demand SAT. & SUN. NIGHTas well 330 MAYNARD $2 per 668-0606 8 P.M. doors open The Funest Rockabilly Music in the World "4OO MAYNARD ANN AMbOR ?6985I t French Raincoats KNIT shirts, tops, pants and suits Men's Hot Pants Argyle Socks Eminence Underwear Verde and Renegades Boots and Shoes FINE MEN'S IMPORTED SPORTSWEAR