4 #' Thursday, July 16, 1970 Aj I THE MICHIGAN DAILY e £tigan Da1t 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Mich. Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Editorials orinted in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of the author. This must be noted in all reprints. cinema A middle-America flick For Direct Classified Ad Service, Phonie 76 12Non eadineMonday through Friday, 10:00 to 3:00 THURSDAY, JULY 16, 1970 News Phone: 764-0552 New anti-crime bill IF CONGRESS PASSES the administration's "anti-crime" bill as it was reported out of a Senate-House conference committee Monday, a policeman will be able to burst in- to your house unannounced. If he arrests you, and a judge considers you to be a "danger to society," you can be held in "preventive detention" for as long as 60 days before your trial. Upon the third felony conviction you automatically receive a life sentence. If you feel you have been wronged by the system, you can always sue for false arrest - but you will pay the legal costs of the policeman you charge -even if you win your case. The bill presently before the Senate and House ap- plies to only the District of Columbia, but the adminis- tration designed the proposal as a model for the whole nation. And its approval by the conference committee is considered a major victory for Nixon and his "law and order" campaign. THE BILL, which also includes a limited wire-tapping provision, effectively eliminates individual privacy. The "no-knock" provision allowing police to enter unan- nounced if notice is likely to endanger the life of the po- liceman and the provision obligating the plaintive to pay the attorney's fees for policemen charged with false ar- rest establish the nation's police forces as the adminis- tration's own Gestapo-like force free to pursue its work with virtual impunity. While the bill provides the government with a dan- gerous instrument of repression, its potential effective- ness in lessening crime is dubious. Nixon's "anti-crime" proposal ignores completely the conditions of poverty, ghetto dwellings, p o o r education and inadequate job training and placement programs--especially prevalent in Washington, D.C. - that breed the crime he is sup- posedly so concerned about. THE BILL'S PROPOSED higher-paid, tenured judges empowered to impose stiffer jail sentences enter the scene only after a crime has been committed, and the in- adequacies of this deterrent philosophy of crime preven- tion have already been made obvious by the ineffective- ness of the present capital punishment laws. Nixon's "anti-crime" proposal is inhumane and repres- sive. It is also racist. The white administration has chosen a city with a 70 per cent black population as its first tar- get in a nation-wide campaign of repression. The bill is expected to pass the House. Unless the Senate takes a stand to block it, Nixon's racist policies of repression will be "legally" established in Washington, D.C. as a blueprint for the rest of the country to follow. -ERIKA HOFF By DREW BOGEMA When you play the movie mo- guls' game and take a chance upon a mainstream, middle-American flick, what do you do when the thing is a hype. Do you walk right out and sneer at the pretty girl selling concessions? Do you just fall asleep until the debacle is over? Do you daydream away? I mean like, what do you do? It's no secret that Airport-that action-charged, t e n s i o n-filled, emotionally-depraved, hype of the year- has been playing at the Michigan Theatre for eight con- secutive weeks. Why has it been running for eight consecutive weeks? Well, who knows? It is because Ann Arbor is not only one of the hippiest, freakiest community in the Midwest, but also a community paradise for the redneck and the bourgeoisie? Could it be that just like you or I sometimes visits the plastic Fox Village Theatre out Stadium, the rednecks-thinking that this is a free country-in- vade theatres like the Michigan or the State whenever MGM or Fox try to get in good with the public and stuff family entertainment down their throats? Well, maybe, it' could be. Some- body told me the other day that all the theatres around Ann Arbor -- meaning the Michigan, the State, the Campus, and, even the University Drive-In, were owned by this guy Butterfield. It figures that once money gets tight and the kids stay away from your movies like the plague, that may- be you ought to change your audi- ence, cultivate a new clientele, like they say in the-trade.a When was the last time you saw an outasight movie at one of these Butterfield theatres? Zabriskie Point, maybe, or Easy Rider; or Alice's Restaurant, or The Ballad of Cable Hogue? Were these really the movies you enjoyed more than anything else in the world? If they were, that's cool as Peter Fonda might say, but if they weren't maybe everybody ought to all get together and figure out how they can get the capitalist distributor Butterfield to start re- presenting the_ people's interests. But, wait. The people have al- ready done all this and they even show movies once and a while. They show movies at Canterbury House and Cinema Guild and Cinema II and at, the Ark and there are even places in Wash- tenaw County like the Washtenaw County Film Library where an average-Joe like you or me can take out movies, projectors and screens free. You can see things like the Red Balloon, early Chap- in movies, a couple of W.C. Fields', or maybe if you like to travel, they have good travelogues. You don't have to sit around and wait for good stuff to come to town be- cause maybe the money-makers Twill decide like who are you? I'm only saying that if you're dissatisfied with the fact that Airport has been here for eight weeks and there is nothing else worth seeing, well what can, you do? I went to- see Airport and fidgeted two hours in my seat while I waited for it's thrilling climax to a close. It's the type of movie you can tell if you like it by the cast, whom I won't mention by name, but you know those people. Anyway, good luck to ya, but if you want to see a real good movie, you might try Cinema Guild this Friday and Saturday when they play The Big Sleep with Hum- phrey Bogart which is a killer. I mean, that's if you want to be subjective about it -and not lose your objective eye. FOR RENT MEALS, LAUNDRY, FRIENDSHIP, TV at Osterweil Peoples Co-op, $52/mo. 761-6084. OSTERWEIL PEOPLES CO-OP 21048 TV RENTALS-Students only. $10.40/ ma. Includes prompt delivery service, and pick-up. Call Nejac, 662-5671. 27Ctc AUGUS TOCCUPANCY A delightfully spacious, quiet, clean 2 bedroom furnished and unfurnished apartment for 3 or 4. Campus area, ample closets. storage and parking. Cali on Resident Manager, Apart- ment 102, 721 S. Forest. Ctc NEAR MEDICAL CENTER 1035 walls St.-Furnished, new, modern efficiency, 1 and 2 bedroom available. 1-864-3852 or 665-7273. llCtc 1 OR 2 NEEDED to take over lease for Sept.-May. Beautiful bi-level. Call 769-7467 after 5. 25045 NEWLY Panelled single rooms for men, 3 blocks from Engin. Arch. Available now. 663-5930. 26C45 FOR FALL-Modern 2 bdrm. furnished, A/C apt. in remodeled old house. 2 blks. from Law School. $290/mo. All utilities included. NO 2-2466. 28C48 711 ARCH -Near State and Packard- Modern 2-Bdrm. Apts. for Fall, $260/mo. Letters to .the Editor Collier's To the Editor: I read with great interest the article about the fraudulent prac- tices of Collier's Encyclopedia (Daily, July 10). Six years ago my husband and I bought a set of Collier's in California under just the sort of arrangement Lindsay Chaney describes. Every year since then we have paid $3.95 per year for the yearbook. This April we- received their yearly inquiry about our present address. Among the various en- closed ads and brochures was a form letter asking us to pay $4.95 this year-out of a sense of fair play, as their costs have gone up., The actual bill, which arrived about a month later with the year- book itself, made no mention of the dollar increase. It simply listed the amount due as $4.95 plus 20 cents tax. Only by accident would anyone have ever noticed that form letter among all the ads in the envelope. I sent $3.95 plus 16 cent tax, and have heard nothing more. -Linda J. Hubbel Ann Arbor, Mich. July 13 \\ I ~-7 ...y.How e . . q t , r, ;I . -;'- :. 11'Itttttr. , ., W Dishwasher Balcony * Air-cond. i And much more Close to campus Phone 761-7848 or 482-8867 Y FURNISHED-FALL RENTAL 1 and 2 Bedroom Apts. 1111 S. State 1506 Packard 1-864-3852. 353-7389 or 761-2366 after 5. 1. 18Ctc 12Ctc CAMPUS NEW, FURNISHED APARTMENTS FOR FALL DAH LMANN APARTM ENTS 545 CHURCH ST. 761 -7600 38Cto Summit Associates CHOICE APARTMENTS STILL AVAILABLE FOR FALL FOR RENT- 2 BDRM. FURN. units on campus. avail. for fall. McKinley Assoc., 663- 6448. 5Ctc 2 BbRM. FURN. units on campus, avail. for fall. McKinley Assoc., 663- 6448. 50Ctc APTS. LOCATOR, $12.50, Summer and Fall, on and off-campus. 1217 S.U. 761-7764. 22048 Campus-Hospital Fall Occupancy Furnished Apartments Campus Management, Inc. 662-7787 335 E. Huron 47Ctc 911 S. Forest Near Hill St.-Modern 2 Bdrm., 3-man. 668-6906. Fall. 14Ctc Apartments l Limited ONE AND TWO BEDROOM APARTMENTS FOR FALL 663-0511 761-5440 50Ct WANTED TO RENT 2-MAN APT. room with kitchen Priv, about $100/mo.mCall 761-8627. 31L50 DO YOU NEED someone to fill your funky old house, near campus for the fall? I want to. Please call or phone Stan. 761-9766. 2L47 3 Bedroom House Wanted by 4-5 grad students for fall. Please call 761-5d78 or 761-7839. 20L49 WANTED: Furnished Apt., I or 2 bed- rooms, A/C, Univ. Prof. attending ISR 7/28-8/21. Write Dr. Cohen, C/O Lucksen, 1176 Lydig Ave., Bx., N.Y. 10461. 19L47 HELP WANTED MATURE student or couple wanted to take care of professor's infant and 3 yr. old Aug. 13-15 and the infant Aug. 29-Sept. 5. 761-8838. 13H50 LOOKING FOR A JOB? Talented or experienced or interested in a particular field? Try placing a Michigan Daily "BUSINESS SERV- ICES" or "PERSONAL" ad-and help a job find YOU. HDtc GOLDsmith's services desired. Cali 769- 6852. Keep trying. HD48 HELP WANTED-The Ann Arbor Ten- ants Union is seeking a full time paid office worker, for late summer and to continue thru school year. Call 763-3102 or 764-4404 for more in-, formation. 9H46 HELP WANTED for Mike Stillwagon, 30 yr. old former poverty lawyer now (running for Congress. Straight or freak - anybody welcome. Call 769- 3288 or drop in 2004 Traver Rd. 10H53 TIME'S UP for the Nixon-Agnew-Mil- liken ticket. Time for a change in Lansing. LEVIN FOR GOVERNOR-DEMOCRAT 663-5972. 482-2396, 663-6932 11H4 USED CARS PORSCHE ,'59, 356 A type convertible, body excellent, eventually will need engine work. Best offer over $500. Cali 662-2576, 9-6. 32N49 VW SQUAREIBACK, 1966, black with red interior, fine cond., best offer. 761-3419. 33N49 '63 R-60 B.M.W. $750. 769-0947. 34N48 VW BUG, 1963, FM, $200. VW Square- back, blue,.1967, $1400. 665-7057. 35N50 ALPINE 1725, 1966, radials, many ex- ti-as, excellent condition. $1050. 663- 7042. 1 owner, after five. 19N48 JAGUAR, 1961, 3.8 Mk. 11 Sedan, good condition, unusual ar. $900 or best offer. 665-8912. 20N47 '64 FORD Fairlane 500 in ex. ond. Best offer. Cali Brian at 662-5955 or 764- 0410. 21N48 '65 VW, 47,000 miles, AM-FM radio, snow tires, 1 owner, 1800. 761-4278 after 5. ISN45 VENERABLE PEUGEOT, $50. 761-8855. 14N46 1962 CONTINENTAL-as is, $150. Needs wheels and fuel pump; otherwise in good shape. Call 663-3482 or '663-5512. ND46 PORSCHE--1965 Coupe. 35,000 miles, ex- cellent except for some rust. $2300 or best offer. 662-0309. 11N46 VW, 1966-Red conver. Radio, good con- dition. Best offer. 971-0420. after 6 P.m. 971-37J08. . 12N47 SUMMER SUBLET 1 BDRM. APT.. 2-man for Aug. Third and Madison. 665-6985 after 6. 36U49 GIRL NEEDED for 3-man apartmtnt July 19-Sept. 1. Near campus, own room. $40. Call 761-9016. 37U47 FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted - Own room, near law quad. $45 rent. Call 663-6828. 38UD50 MODERN EFFICIENCY available July 20 at 418 E. Washington, also fall. Call 668-6906.1 2Utc MOD. EFF. for Aug. 5 min. from UGLI. Negotiable, swimming pool. Call 663- 7846 after 5, keep trying. 10U46 SUMMER RENTALS Choice Apts. at low rates. Ann Arbor Trust Co. Phone 769-2800. 22083 SUMMER SUBLETS 761 -8055 14Utc BIKES AND SCOOTERS 1948 INJDIAN, 500c, twin,'rigid frame, springer forks, original Indian saddle bags. $300 or best offer. 761-0745. ZD53 '63 HAR. DA. XLCH, must sell, $825 or best offer. 663-9560. Z51 '67 BSA Hornet 650. Call Larry Toot,! 663-7850. 32Z48 '66 HONDA Super Hawk for sale. Good condition. Call 665-8789. 3047 HONDA REPAIRS, TUNE-UPS, OVER- HAULS. Reasonably done, guaran- teed, 1 day service. 665-5479. 25Z51 MOTORCYCLE tune-up and service. By appointment only. Call 665-3114. 26Z71 BUSINESS SERVICES EXPERIENCED public stenographer wants to do typing in her home: manuscripts, thesis, business reports. Call Barbara, 761-0104. 30J50 COUPLE WISHES house-sitting spot for fall semester. Excellent refer- ences and experience. Call 663-4323. 28J48 THESES, PAPERS (inc. technical) typ- ed. Experienced, professonal: IBM Selectric. Quick service. 663-6291. 42Jtc EXPERI'ENCED SECRETARY desires work in her home. Thesis, technical typing, stuffing etc4.IBM selectric Call Jeanette, 971-2463, 2Jtc TASK ALL THESES-MANUSCRIPTS-PAPERS expertly typed-edited PRINTING - THESES - FLYERS BROCHURES economical, 24-hr. round-the-clock service FOR ANY OFFICE SERVICE call THE PROFESSIONALS 10 years experience in Ann Arbor 761-4146 or 761-1187 1900 W. Stadium Blvd. 26Ptc MULTI PLE TYPING SERVICE 'IThesls Service Papers Dissertations General Office and Secretarial Work Pick-Up and Delivery Available Prompt Service CALL 485-2086 Jtc PHOTO SUPPLIES COMPLETE DARKROOM set-up, in- cludes Omega B22 enlarger. $200. 426- 8969. 22D50 MUSICAL MDSE., RADIOS, REPAIRS HERB DAVID GUITAR STUDIO Unavailable instruments, repairs and instructions - 209 S. State. 665-8001. RADIO, TV, Hi-fi, car repair. House calls.2Very reasonable-even CHEAP! 769-6250. XD5 "NEW 15" loudspeakersA$20 ea or 6 for $90. New and used ARE sound sys- tem equipment and parts. 6780 Jack- son Rd. 13X47 GARRARD SL65 automatic turntable with base and dust cover. Shure M93E cartridge. $60 or best offer. Call 761- 5201.- XD48 FOR SALE RECEIVER AM-FM stereo, $75; mono- amplifier, $15. Call 665-2111 after four. -9Btc BARBELLS, weights, used LP's, 8 mm Movie Editor. Call 761-0372. 2OB47 KELVINATOR REFRIG., apt. size.764- 6632 or 455-9186. 15B46 BOX SPRINGS and mattress. CHEAP. 1 pr. old, call Joe, 426-3440. 14E47 LINES 1 day 2 1.00 3 1.10 4 1.35 5 1.55 6 1.80 7 2.00 8 2.20 9 2.40 10 2.60 INCHES 1 2.60 2 4.90 3 6.95 4 8.90 5 i0.70 UNCONTRACTED CL Additional costs per day after six day Ads that are 11/, 21/2, 312, etc. average of the lower and higher i LOST AND FOUND FOUND-Striped calico kitten, about 4-5 months old. 761-3884. AD48 LOST-13-week-old female puppy, part labradour and shepherd. Black with brown and white markings. 514 S. Forest, Apt. 3E. 662-7524. 26A56 FOUND-Male black puppy, short hair, floppy ears, white markings on chest. Call Barbara, 663-3005 after 5. AD48 FOUND-Small brown and black beagle in School of Natural Resources. 763- 0297. AD47 LOST-4 mo. old orange male kitty. Near 5th and Madison. Please call 761-1664. 24A49 FOUND-Woman's glasses, Geddes and Forest, Friday evening. 764-4536, ask f or Allan. AD47 FOUND - Black shaggy haired puppy with collar. 665-7962. AD47 FOUND-Pair of wire rim glasses on S. Univ. Call 769-0142 or 764-8557, ask for David. AD47 LOST-3 mo. old collie puppy, light brown and white, female, answers to "Gru."-Please call 761-6742. 25A49 LOST-Wel loved puppy. Near Burns Park Sun. Red fur and green eyes. 769-2382. 21A46 PUPPY LOST-Male, brown and white, greenish eyes. Lost Fri., vie. Forest and Geddes. 761-8062, anytime. 23A46 PETS AND SUPPLIES FREE KITTENS AND CATS all varieties Call 665-4830 TD52 NEED stud for female Siamese cat in heat. 663-7259. 15T46 SE E W] S IF I a LE NC E 3 H1 E 'r 2 days 1.60 2.15 2.60 3.00 3.40 3.75 4:15 4.55 4 95 4.95 9.50 13.50 17.35 21.10 3 dos 2.35 3.10 3.75 4.35 4.95 5.50 6.10 6.65 7.15 7.15 13.80 19.75 25.55 31.40 4& 3.C 4.J 4. 4.! 6. 73 7.9 8.1 9. 9.: 17.8 25. 33.. 41. I Di y -Defending unpopularciet sik By ERIC SIEGEL "T THAS BECOME professionally and legally dangerous -to be a lawyer representing the poor, minorities, and the politically unpopular." -Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review * * * PHILIP J. HIRSCHKOP, a 35-year- old ex-Green Beret and a lawyer for the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), despite all his legal and political acu- men, never realized the degree of .truth in the above statement. Until a few days ago. At that time, the disciplinary arm of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia recommended that Hirsch- kop be suspended or disbarred for "pro- fessional misconduct" during last Febru- ary's trial of nine Catholic laymen and clergymen who ransacked the Washing- ton offices of Dow Chemical Company in a protest against the Vietnam war. The disciplinary arm, officially known as the Committee on Admissions and Grievances, whose members are ap- pointed by the District Court judges, charged that Hirschkop -"failed to support the authority of the court"; -"was often 'ude, offensive, discour- teous, disrespectful, abusive and in- sulting"; and -that he uttered statements that were "prejudicial to the administration of justice." The Court's grievance committee ini- tiated a hearing on Hirschkop at the re- quest of Judge John H. Pratt, who pre- sided at the trial of the DC Nine. Judge Pratt also charged Hirschkop with corl- tempt of court during the seven day trial, a charge that is now before the U.S. Court of Appeals. QUITE OBVIOUSLY, the Hirschkop case has rather wideranging implica- tions. These implications were quickly recognized. Almost immediately after the committee's recommendations were released, ACLU released a statement of its own. "The grievance committee is, in ef- fect, serving notice on all attorneys who handle the defense of political dissi- dents in the best spirit of the Bill of Rights that their effectiveness in behalf of their clients will bring them under attack." A day later, an ad hoc committee of 35 lawyers, many of them members of ACLU, announced that they would be- gin investigating the grievance commit- tee. They issued a call for all Washing- ton lawyers "concerned about the effect of actions ... of the grievance commit- tee . . on the vigorous advocacy by lawyers of unpopular or controversial causes" to join their investigating com- mittee. In a prepared statement, the ad hoc committee said: "All lawyers recognize that the abuse! of grievance committee procedures, as well as the abuse of the contempt power by courts, poses a chilling threat to any lawyer who is dedicated to the provision of equal justice to all persons and groups in our society, particularly those whose beliefs are shared by few." INDEED, OUR WHOLE legal system, with its manner of posting bonds, and its manner of selecting juries (how many people are actually tried by their peers, i.e., blacks by blacks and radicals, by radicals) is.weighted heavily enough against these groups, without any at- tempts by court-directed grievance com- mittees to intimidate the lawyers who- defend them. THE BROADER IMPLICATIONS not- withstanding, there are many specific facets of the Hirschkop case that are intriguing in their own Way. For one thing there are the statements he made during the trial to Judge Pratt, saying, among other things, that Pratt was prejudiced and unable to conduct the trial fairly. These statements were held o constitute "professional misconduct." Yet according to DC law,- if a lawyer moves to have a judge dismissed, as Hirschkop did, then he must state ex- actly why: Then there is the question of why, of the three lawyers who defended the DC Nine and used similar tactics and lan- guage, only Hirschkop-was recommend- ed for suspension or disbarment. ACLU lawyers think they have the answer: Hirschkop was the most effective of all the lawyers, and, besides, as a national director of ACLU, he was a visible target for their repression. And what of Hirschkop? What is his reaction to the whole thing? He said he question's the committee's "ethics and motives" while his appeal is still in liti- gation. He also has shown that he is not about to be intimidated by the commit- tee, the District Court, or anyone else. The day after the committee released its recommendations, Hirschkop went to Richmond to consult with one of his clients. 761-8055 BARGAIN CORNER 49Ctc Sam's Store NEED LEVIS? VISIT US FOR BLUE DENJM: Super Slims .......6.50 Button-Fly ........6.50 Traditional . -...6.98 Bells ., . . ....7.50 BLUE CHAMBRAY SHIRTS ..........2.49 MORE LEVI'S "White" Levi's . . . 5.50 . (4 Colors) Sto-Prest "White" Levi's ... . .. ...6.98 Nuvo's ...........8.50 Over 7000 Poirs in Stock! Sam's Store 122 E. Washington NEED HOME for any of 3 cats, 1 black female (will spay if desired), striped kitten, and large striped male. 764- 9550, 769-6661. 769-4339. 14'T46 ROOMMATES WANTED 2 FEMALE Roommates wanted, 4-man apart. Call 761-3198 after 6. 15Y49 THIRD GIRL needed-2 bdrm. house, for fall. 1020 Oakland, No. 3. Call NO 8-8367. 16Y49 FOR WINTER, $50/mo. 4th girl needed for house, Murray Street, 15 min. from campus. Call Goya, 761-5542. 17Y48 1 FEMALE needed for 2-mart fall apt. Near campus and hospitals. KE 4-9325,1 Detroit. 14Y46 WANTED TO BUY CAR WANTED-4 6 cylinder (low horsepower), 1967 or older, good con- dition, economical. 761-0047. 30K TRANSPORTATION I NEED A RIDE TO BOSTON around July 20. Will share driving, expenses. Call Vicky, 665-4830. GD52 WANT RIDE to N.Y.C. Aug. 2, p.m., Dearborn campus faculty. 271-2300, ext. 342. 29G50 2 OR 3 RIDERS needed for San Fran- cisco area, leaving around July 20.' Call 662-2087 after 5 .46047 PERSONAL AMANDA FENWICK'S fabulous sale, leather shirts, tops, coats, $10-825. 522 E. William. 24F48 COMING - Jimmy Caras, Billiards, champion, M Union, 9-16-70. 25F47 If you are trying to meet INTERESTING PEOPLE in Ann Arbor, come to the BACH CLUB Tb ursdays at 8 p.m. Canmerbury House) 23F51 TI TI _ PA Fl a F1 I - DON'T be a wall flower- -be a WILD flower with fat:h ions from WILD-I FLOWER-the unique boutique. 516 E. William (above the Campus Bike . and Toy Shop). 26F48 GAY LIBERATION FRONT Meeting in Union Lounge 8:30 p.m. 27F46