enate asks By The Associated Press which "expresses the feelin Stopping just short of a vote to cut off of the Senate." war funds, the Senate yesterday urged There seemed little possibil President Nixon to withdraw all U.S. would go even as far as the S troops from Indochina in nine months if the The Mansfield amendme Communists release all war prisoners. The historic, first-of-its-kind action these steps came in climax to an afternoon of roll calls -Immediate negotiations on various withdrawal formulas. A 57-42 Vietnam for a cease-fire. vote approved the amendment offered by -Negotiation of a planned Democratic leader Mike Mansfield of withdrawal of U.S. troops fr Montana to the draft-extension bill. which would coincide withl Mansfield conceded his own end-the-war drawal of prisoners of war, formula, calling for phased and simulta- in total withdrawal of troops neous troop withdrawal and prisoner re- lease of prisoners in nine mo lease, is a guide only and "has no power Adoption of the Mansfield a and there's nothing binding about it." the draft-extension bill appear He called it a declaration of policy en the already uncertain pros for g and sense ing the dr rent law ity the Horse The Ser Senate. leadership nt calls for debate by vote is re Senator, with No tls past the J they had and phased At the rom Vietnam Ronald L. phased with- not bindin "culminating continue 1 and total re- ing. Ziegl onths." "It stat mendment to policy sho red to threat- Congress pect of pass- end to war aft measure by the time the csr- expires, June 30, nate is due to vote today on a move to limit the rest of the invoking cloture. A two-thirds squired. s seeking to filibuster the bill une 30 deadline predicted earlier enough votes to succeed. White House Press Secretary Ziegler said the amendment is g and that President Nixon will the policy he has been follow- er told reporters: es what 57 senators think our uld be. It is not the view of the as a whole." See SENATE, Page 10 TWO SPONSORS of the draft bill amendment, Ted Stevens (R-Alaska) and Vance Hartke (D-Ind.) meet outside the Senate chambers yester- day. I~e Eirliigan ij Vol. LXXXI, No. 35-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, June 23, 1971 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Court bars Boston Globe study; Bans on Times, Post extended More papers enter in Viet study conflict By The Associated Press The New York Times and the Washington Post yes- terday were restrained in- definitely from printing more material from a sec- ret Pentagon study. A fed- eral judge in Boston re- strained the Boston Globe and ordered the paper to turn over its copy of the document, while the Chi- cago Sun-Times printed a story it said was partly based on the same report. At the same time, government officials announced steps to re- view and declassify parts of the study on U.S. involvement in Vietnam. Defense Secretary Mel- vin R. Laird said he had ordered censors to move "as rapidly as we possibly can." In New York, the 2nd U.S. Cir- cuit Court of Appeals extended a temporary restraining order against the Times pending a final decision which the brief judge promised "in the next few days." Beforethe hearing moved into closed session U.S. Atty. Whit- ney North Seymour said the gov- ernment was ready to review the papers and declassify portions within about 45 days. In Washington, the U.S. Court of Appeals banned the Post in- definitely from publishing more 8e! COURTS. eage 2 Ouch! Scientists at the University's Institute for Social Research have disclosed in a recent re- port their finding that students workingat The Daily have a threshbold of pain which is 35.827 per cent lower than that of the average University stu- dent. In the light of this informa- tion, The Daily staff is skipping town earlier than anyone else. lint after temporary suspension of publication between terms, we wil be back next Wednesday morning, June 30. Same time. Same doorstep. .... ~ - - - - - - - - - - a ca IN THE MIDDLE OF a news conference outside the Federal courthouse in Detroit, Ken Kelley (right foreground) looks down to put a match to his subpoena to testify before a federal grand jury. (From left) attorney Hugh Davis, Larry Canada, also holding a burning subpoena and Terry Taube look on. Judge rejects dis-missal of activi*sts' subpea By JONATHAN MILLER demonstrations in Washington, newsmen that a notice of appeal Special To The Daily government sources say. would be filed with the appeals DETROIT - Six young anti- Kennedy ruled that although court in Cincinnati and that a war activists failed in a bid to the six anti-war organizers need motion for a further stay of the have their subpeonas to appear not testify before next Tuesday-- grand jury subpoenas would be before a federal grand jury here giving them time to seek an in- submitted while the court delib- quashed by a federal judge yes- junction or a temporary re- erates on the appeal. terday, but succeeded in winning straining order from the Sixth U.S. Attorney Ralph Guy said a one-week delay in the grand U.S. Court of Appeals in Cin- yesterday afternoon that if such jury hearings to allow time for cinnati---she did not believe a stay is granted, "it could be them to appeal. "there is demonstrated here a October" before the grand jury Stating that there was no pre- need for an injunction." finally gets underway. cedent for an "anticipatory hear- "One may not quash a sub- The Sixth U.S. Court of Ap- ing" in the case, Judge Cornelsa peona merely' because someone peals is scheduled to recess at Kennedy ruled that the six young believes he or she may be re- the end of next week. witnesses do not have a right to quired to answer incriminatory Representing the government a hearing on the legality of po- questions," Kennedy stated, at the hearing in Detroit's tential grand jury evidence nefore Kennedy also refused to dis- downtown federal building yes- they testify, solve the grand jury on a motion terday was U.S. Assistant At- Attorneys for the six had asked that it was not representative of torney General Guy Goodwin. the court to rule on the legality the community, and refused to Goodwin told the court that the of wiretap evidence they expect quash the subpoenas themselves six had failed to establish the to be used by the grand jury. because evidence used in wire- three criteria necessary for their The grand jury is part of .a n.a- taps of persons other than the motion to be upheld. tionwide investigation into the six might be used. These were, he said, that ir- March 1 bombing of the U.S. The attorney for the six, Henry reparable harm to the six would Capitol and the May anti-war DeSuvero of New York, told See JUDGE, Page 10 Judge orders Globe to turn in documents BOSTON (R--A U.S. Dis- trict Court judge, acting at the request of the Depart- ment of Justice, yesterday restricted the Boston Globe at least until 10 a.m. Fri- day from publishing further excerpts from a secret De- fense Department study of the origins of the Vietnam war. Judge Anthony Julian also ordered The Globe to deliver to the court for impounding any documents "or other tangible evidence of such documents" re- lating to the study of American involvement up to mid-1968. The Globe announced it would obey the court's temporary re- straining order in effect until a hearing Friday morning but said the newspaper would confer with counsel about the im- pounding order. "We don't like this impound- ing order," editor Tom Winship said in a statement. "We are consulting counsel and will have something to say tomorrow." In ordering impounding of the Globe's documents, Julian ap- parently went further than other federal judges who dealt with similar publication by the New York Times and the Washing- ton Post. Appellate courts yesterday ex- tended indefinitely court orders against the Times and the Post to prevent their further publi- cation of the war study. In those cases, the Justice De- partment requested that the newspapers turn over their doc- uments for inspection but both refused. The government did not seek subpoenas for the docu- ments' return but the news- papers did submit lists of docu- ments in their possession. The Globe printed excerpts of the study yesterday morning. T h e articles covered a 1964 meeting at which Adm. Harry Felt, then commander of the Pacific forces, argued that com- manders should have the free- dom to use tactical nuclear wea- pons in Vietnam. In Honolulu, however, Felt, See THIRD, Page 2