I Wednesday, June 30, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven X / aigPresident vetoes job bill, The man who shot Colombo? Police carry a man believed to be the gunman who shot reputed S mob chieftain Joseph Colombo Sr. to an ambulance Monday in New York City. Later identified as Jerome Johnson, 24, of New Brunswick, N.J., the man died on the way to the hospital. He was shot down by an unknown person moments after bullets cut down Colombo. 'I n ews briefs By The Associated Press - HUEY NEWTON, a founder and the highest ranking officer in the Black Panther party, went on trial again yesterday for the fatal shooting of an Oakland policeman. It is the second time that Newton is being tried for the shooting. He was found guilty of the crime in 1968 but that conviction was over- turned by the California Court of Appeal two years later. A HOUSE COMMERCE SUBCOMMITTEE yesterday recom- mended that the Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS) and its president, Frank Stanton, be held in contempt of Congress for refus- ing to comply with the demands of a subpeona. The action by the subcommittee follows Stanton's repeated refusal to turn over to Congress the material collected for the CBS program "The Selling of the Pentagon." ANTI-WAR ACTIVIST Leslie Bacon was indicted today by a federal grand jury on charges of making bombs and conspiring to blow up the First National City Bank in New York last Dec. 4.. Bacon, 19, has already been indicted in New York by another * grand jury on a charge of conspiring to firebomb the same bank. Subscribe To THE MICHIGAN DAILY, NOW SHOWING -2ND HIT WEEK mar Box Office NIGHTLY Opens 15 Min. ":6AT Before First - 9 P.M. ON WASHTENAW AVE. 1i/ MILES EAST OF ARBORLAND-U.S. 23 Matinees Added Wed-Sat-Sun 1:15 & 4 P.M. upholds WASHINGTON (/P) - President Nixon ruled out Tuesday any stimulation of the economy with new tax cuts, coupling his deci- sion with a veto of a $5.6-billion public works bill designed to cre- ate more jobs. ' In deciding to stick with his present economic policies, Nixon named Treasury Secretary John Connally as his chief economic spokesman, a newly created post. Connally, a Democrat and three-time Texas governor, told newsmen Nixon feels the econo- my is on the right path and does not need new stimulants now. Democratsresponded by criti- cizing Nixon's decision to stay put with his economic policies and the veto. Connally said that, although it will take time, the present 6.2 per cent unemployment rate will begin to decline through the poli- cies the President has laid out. The secretary summed up Nix- on's ideas about the economy this way: "He is not going to insti- tute a wage and price review board. He is not going to insti- tute mandatory wage-and-price controls. He is not going to seek tax reductions. He is not going to increase fiscal spending." All these proposals have been mentioned within Nixon's admin- istration and by Democrats as measures to cut into unemploy- ment and battle inflation. Nixon vetoed the public works bill by saying it "would not even make a real start on delivering its implied promise" of creating new jobs quickly. ..Groea a G s In - bok't present, The President said he was ve- toing the bill because of a $2-bil- lion section of the measure that would set up public works pro- jects in localities with high un- employment rates. A similar law approved in 1962 indicated an 18-month time lag before the vetoed measure would become fully effective, Nixon said. He said by then "further stimulation would be unnecessary and inflationary." policy But the President asked Con- gress to enact promptly an emer- gency employment act to finance creation of temporary public service jobs. He argued these jobs could be filled quickly and help cut unemployment. The vetoed measure includes money for the Appalachian Re- gional Commission and the Eco- nomic Development Administra- tion. TONIGHT ONLY! HUMPHREY BOGART LAUREN 1BACALL in THE BIG SLEEP (Warners, 1946) Probably the finest detective movie ever, combining the best efforts of the best old pros-Humphrey Bogart, Howard Hawks, William ('What tinsel?') Faulkner, and Jules Furtman, who wrote half the good movies that ever came out of Hollywood. ALSO-CHAP. 9, FLASH GORDON AUD.A. 7and9p.m. 75c Series A, B, D sold out Series C subscriptions available MENDELSSOHN LOBBY, Mon.-Fri., 12-4 p.m. I AUSTIN DIAMOND 1209 S. University 663-7151 W Pan Am StudentYouth Fure--Europe Now available--Student/Youth Fares to most major cities in Europe. These fares are valid for one year, any day, any flight. Basic season fares and ages listed below: From Detroit Student/Youth Fare Student Age' Youth Age* TO: AMSTERDAM $253.70 12-29 12-25 BRUSSELS 253.70 12-29 12-25 COPENHAGEN 263.70 12-25 GERMANY 263.70 12-25 (All Cities) GLASGOW 240.00 12-14 15-25 HELSINKI 263.70 26-29 12-25 LONDON 240.00 12-14 15-25 MILAN** 259.00 12-25 OSLO 263.70 12-25 PARIS 253.70 15-25 SHANNON 253.70 12-25 STOCKHOLM 263.70 12-25 ROME 259.00 12-25 *Inclusive **Eff. July 15 See your Pan Am travel agent or coil Pan Am reps. Tom McCaffrey or Tim Jones at 769-3814, Ann Arbor or 274-8850 Metro Airport Daily non-stop service from Detroit to London continuing on to Amsterdam I .N I