4 4 -* j 4 . Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, July 22, 1970 Wednesday. July 22. 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY .:..... ..,. ... I .... J ..__r I. bI nn 'fotllr eat M Cak"t a I! x'"en o news ,b. brie fs:. By The Associated Press IN SUIPREME ,COURT: Test asked of C.O. status- for Catholics i BRITISH MEAT AND PRODUCE WORKERS tightened the grip of a nationwide dock strike yesterday as they voted to refuse to handle any foodstuffs unloaded by troops. The Central Markets Committee - a union representing all London markets - decided the dock dispute did not warrant use of troops as stevedores. The government has said it will send troops in, if necessary, to unload such vital items as food. "Members are recommended not to receive such produce," said a formal announcement by the Committee. EGYPT'S ASWAN HIGH DAM has been completed after ten years of work with considerable Soviet cash and technical assist-1 ance. The last of the 12 turbines in the power station began turn-I ing yesterday. Sad el Aali, as the high dam four miles south of Aswan is known, will provide Egypt with five times the existing power output of the entire country, and is expected to pay for itself within two years. It will bring into commission more than a million extra acres of agricultural land through irrigation and provide cheaper power for industry.I OFFICIALS OF LIBBY-OWENS-FORD INC. denied govern- ment charges yesterday of discriminating against women em- ployes. Differences in treatment of male and female workers, the com- pany said, are due to "a basic conflict between the 1964 Civil Rights Act and Ohio female protective laws." The U.S. Department of Justice filed suit Monday in Toledo, naming LOF. sole supplier of auto safety glass for General Motors, and the United Glass and Ceramic Workers of North America, AFL- CIO. and its Local No. 9. HOUSE INVESTIGATORS have called for tougher govern- ment controls over broadcast news operations after charging that CBS acted recklessly in filming an abortive Haitian commando invasion plot in 1966.I A CBS News spokesman denied the charges by the House Com- merce investigations subcommittee Monday and criticized the panel's inquiry as unfair., The issue centers around the invasion scheme thwarted on Jan. 2, 1967, when U.S. authorities rounded up a battle-clad, 75-member force in the act of embarking from the Florida coast. The report said some events might not have occurred without CBS inducements, and rejected a suggestion that cash payments to conspirators were in the nature of payment for releases-legal per- mission from an individual to film him. The program was never broadcast. THE TRANSPORTATION DEPARTMENT is moving to see what effect the supersonic transport plane will have on the en- vironment. The department will spend $27.6 million to determine effects on the weather, although William Magruder, director of SST develop- menit, said the possibility of any adverse effect is remote. WASHINGTON Ul)-The gov- ernment asked the Supreme Court yesterday to d e c i d.e whether Roman Catholics who oppose the Vietnam war on reli- gious grounds are entitled to exemption from the draft as conscientious objectors. The government appealed from a ruling by U.S. Dist. Judge Alfonso Zirpoli that the draft law is unconstitutional in that some Catholics were forced to c,; -qse between their beliefs and prison terms. The case involves James Mc- Fadden, 26, of San Francisco, a Catholic who refused to submit to Army induction on the grounds the Vietnam war is un- just and military duty would violate his conscience. Zirpoli dismissed the indict- ment against McFadden last February. He said that under the First Amendment guarantee of free exercise of religion the government cannot command a man to act against his con- science. Last month the Supreme Court agreed to hear appeals by an ex-soldier and by a convicted draft evader who claim they should have been exempted from the Army as conscientious ob- jectors. The Justice Department ap- peal said the Catholic doctrine issue raised in the McFadden case should be decided at the same time. McFaden, a graduate student in philosophy at UCLA last spring, once studied for the priesthood. He contended he must obey the commands of divine law when his conscience peceives a conflict with laws of man. Various Catholic theologians, including St.-Thomas Acquinas, have classified some wars as just and others as unjust. However, Zirpoli said, there is no state- ment by the Catholic church it- self that the Vietnam war is un- just. STEREO SPECIAL 70 watt Monarch Amp 2-8" 3-way speakers Garrard changer & Pickering diamond magnetic cartridge AN UNBEATABLE VALUE AT $250 HEAR IT-BUY IT H Fl STUDIO 121 W. Washington 668-7942 GET YOUR MAN WITH A Want la: WASHINGTON (RP) - A Sen- ate committee was told yester- day that migrant farm workers, lowest paid in the nation, are exploited by Texas politicians " and huge corporations such as SmtCoca Cola. . u j omm toldThe charges were leveled at the second day of hearings by the migratory labor subcommit- tee. On Monday, a team of doc- tors spoke of wretched living and health conditions for farm workers. Philip Moore -testified that Coca Cola's wholly-owned sub- sidiary, Minute Maid, operates ex 1t farm workers poorly-equipped migrant quart- er's in Florida. Moore, coordinator of a Ralph N a d e r - inspired corporation watchdog group, said the facili- ties have no indoor water or plumbing and conditions gener- ally are "unquestionably bad." "But what is worse, even. than the housing conditions is the social control that is main- tained over the life style of the migrants," Moore said. In order to live in t h e s e houses, a family must work for Coke. If someone is sick, t h e foreman, not a doctor, can de- cide whether the person can stay home," Moore said. "If the foreman decides that a worker is not sick, then he must either work or risk evic- tion from his house and total loss of income, housing, medical support and food." A lawyer working with t h e United Farm Workers Organiz- ing Committee in Texas' rich agricultural valley, Roger Dun- well, said politicians such as Senate candidate Lloyd Bentsen have trol the migi town a k rule priv Dun B valle 192( con said only drug est chen Uni H icar thw RADICAL FILM SERIES PRESENTS Andrej Wajda's ASHES and DIAMONDS Showsat 7 9, & 1 1 P.M. WEDNESDAY, JULY 22 CANTERBURY HOUSE LAST DAYS! DON'T MISS IT! "'AIR PORT' is a great film all the way!" - Chicago Daily News A ROSS HUNTER Production BURT LANCASTER DEAN MARTIN JEAN SEBERG" JACQUELINE BISSET 'GEORGE KENNEDY ELEN HAYES - VAN HEFLIN - MAUREEN STAPLETON BARRY NELSON - LLOYD NOLAN AUNIVERSALP CTUrOOaC DANA WYNTER BARBARA HALE * 603 E. LIBERTY ST. DIAL 1:-:4 'Tiger( to be abo SAIGON iVi--- The South Viel yesterday it will demolish the so-c. Con Son Island prison and replace tl cells. The cells, center of internatior U.S. congressmen revealed their exi: be dismantled immediately, a spoke He added that a survey of Sou institutions will be made with a vi as the government can afford. About 9,000 prisoners are helc southeast of Saigon in the South I litical prisoners, and several hunt confined to the "tiger cages," small in which three to seven persons are '' The new cells, said Informat U-M Barbers Monday-Saturday 8:30-5:15 P.M. Michigan Union 5-6290 oft, BOX OFFICE OPENS 12:45 6:30-9:05 j .e I World's most expensive horse A world thoroughbred auction record was set Monday night when this full brother to 1969 Kentucky Derby and Preakness winner sold for $510,000. Frank McMahon, of Vancouver, British Columbia, made the top bid. He also bought Majestic Prince at the Keeneland sale in 1967 for a then-record $250,000. Leslie Combs II was the seller both times. TESTIMONY BEGINS iColl Ins murder trial: ROCK MUSIC FESTIVAL IN JACKSON, MICHIGAN - AUG. 7, 8, 9 ORDER YOUR I announces the special engagement of JAMES TOCCO United States winner of the Tchaikovsky Piano Competition in Russia (Replacing INGRID A EBLER, who is ill) TONIGHT AT 8:30 in R akhaii Auditorium (air-conditioned) PROGRAM P QOGg L.2KQ O CRc elaFaNRCBSGB 116 ~N aL c Co ~sruo T T20 qlNG arm ROS.4s~fl6 iry1 FESTIVAL TICKETS NOW! Admission at Goose Lake will be strictly limited to avoidconges- tion and allow complete enjoy- ment of the park for all. TICKET PRICES: $1 5.00 ADVANCE TICKETS ONLY ABSOLUTELY NO GATE SALE. 3 DAY TICKETS ONLY. NO READ- MITTANCE WITHOUT NEW AD- MISSION TICKET! Tickets avail- able now by Mail: Send ticket order, along with large, stamped, self-addressed envelope to: Goose Lake Park, Inc. 30999 Ten Mile Road Farmington, Michigan 48024 Tickets also available at all Hud- son and Grinnell stores through- out Michigan. Make certified check or money order payable to: Goose Lake Park, Inc. No personal checks. For further ticket information call (313)831-1652. Sonata in F major, K. 533 Sonata No. 6, Op. 82, Les Preludes, Op. 28. Mozart Prokofieff Chopin SWIMMING * PARKING * AMUSE- RI INANEPERMANENT REST ROOMS & FOUNTAINS " REVOLVING STAGE FRE MENTS " WORLD'S LARGEST " UNLIMITED FOOD & DRINK AVAILABLE AT LOW PRICES I- SLIDE " OVER-NIGHT CAMPING " GATES OPEN THURSDAY AT 7:00 P.M. FOR BUS TICKETS : GREYHOUND round-trip transportation direct to Festival is available by reservation only from the following cities: IDepart for Festival Depart from festival check one letter and one number only Fri. Sun. Mon. Aug. Ag9 Aug.10 } [ A. Detroit-$6.00 Q F. Indianapolis-$21,40 A.1 10 a.m..................6.p.m1 x 0 .BAnn Arbor-$3.35 G. Ft. Wayne--$10.65 z2 010 a.m.........a.m,. 110 Ba 0 3 3p.m.-..-............------...6 pm. Ia~ W0 C. Kalamazoo-$5.65 Q0H. S. Bend-S10.854 w Q 3 pm. 1 a.m. IZ Z 5 0 6pm. .....-....,.....6 pmI l0 O D. E. Lansing-$3.65 1. Cincinnati-$22,80 o 6 0 6 p m.1 a.n 1 1 E. Chicago-$17.50 Q. Toronto-$21.95 A at. (No one allowed on bus without Festival Ticket w 7 0 10 a.m 6 p mm Mail checks or money order to: GREYHOUND TRAVEL BUREAU - 130 E. Congress * Detroit, Michigan 48226 1 NAM E. ___ ADDRESS - _.-- 1 AMN'T .CITY & STATE -:-.-PHONE - "Direct" Buses Will Be Leaving From University of Michigan.. Nguyen Ngoc Huyen, "will not be the same. They will be dif- ferent. They w i l be better ones. The tiger cages were first used by the French colonial ad- ministration in the mid-19th century, and the Saigon govern- ment said last year they had been abandoned. But Reps. Au- gustus Hawkins (D-Calif) and William Anderson '(D-Pa) man- aged to see them and the pris- oners in them when they visited the island prison. The two congressmen and others in their party said the prisoners in the cages were de- nied adequate food, water and medicine and were subjected to physical abuse and other mis- treatmient. Their disclosure set off an in- ternational outcry, in the West- ern world as well as from Com- munist nations. All condemned the South Vietnamese govern- ment for its treatment of the prisoners and the United States was criticized because it furnish- es financial aid and American advisers to the South Vietna- mese. In reply to the criticism, a spokesman for the Saigon gov- ernment said those confined to the cages were Communist in- corrigibles who had not re- sponded properly to the prison re-education process. Laughtc By JONATHAN MILLER The first full day of testimony in the murder trial of John Nor- man Collins, the accused alayer of Eastern Michigan University coed Karen Sue Beineman be- gan yesterday. It was notable not for the Perry Mason type aura surrounding the stereo- typed TV murder trial, but for the slightly unreal, slightly theatrical aspects of the per- formance.- In the afternoon a rather un- natural joke telling contest was begun with Judge John Conlin making the first entry. Either amused or irritated at defense counsel Joseph Louisell's ap- parent inability to refrain froni terming Eastern Michigan Uni- versity, Michigan State Univer- sity, he gave counsel a brief historical lecture on the inad- missability of the name of MSU in the city of Ann Arbor. He di- rected that, to save Loulsell from remembering, all ref er- ences to MSU be entered into the record as EMU. Louisell, never a man to re- fuse a challenge, so it seems, made his award-winning crack during his cross examination of an EMU campus policeman. While questioning him on the subject of Collin's alleged pos- session of a motorcycle, the po- liceman could describe the ma- chine in question only in terms of it being "shiney." After asking the officer if he knew much about motorcycles and receiving a negative answer, he inquired whether he knew anything about Sheriff Douglas Harvey's motorcycle. The court laughed, but it laughed harder when Prosecutor William Del- hey made his attempt with a re- mark that, to the best of hiss knowledge Sheriff Harvey did not possess a motorcycle any- more. Harvey fractured his ankle in a motrocycle accident earlier this month. Thurmond denies break with Nixon over desegregation plan amid WASHINGTON W)-Sen. Strom Thurmond (R-SC), made it clear yesterday he has not broken with the administration because of President Nixon's school desegregation policies. However, he reiterated that Nixon cannot be confident of win- ning the South in the 1972 election. Thurmond, in a news conference said, "the Republicans are much sounder than Hubert Hum- phrey would have been" if he had been elected President. But Thurmond -stressed he will continue to criticize the administration when he thinks cir- cumstances warrant it. "I do not think the administration has the South locked up," Thurmond said. "I think the South is going to be more independent, and I hope it will be." Last Friday Thurmond implied in a strongly worded Senate speech that Nixon might lose Thurmond's support and the support of much of the South in the 1972 election if the President does not slown down on school desegregation actions. Thurmond said yesterday that although he did not want to name the "liberal and ultra-liberal advisers" who he earlier blamed with influencing Nixon's school policies, he admitted that he is "not happy that Finch has the President's ear." Thurmond also named Jerris Leonard. assistant attorney general for civil rights, as someone Thur- mond could do without. He also told reporters that "someone friendly to the President" told Thurmond that a recent administration decision regarding tax-exempt status of private schools might have been pioposed by Nixon's desire to keep the Supreme Court from imposing tough guidelines affecting the school's racial makeup. tension Although the sheriff missed this interchange, he was very much around, all smiles to his many admirers, as he was wheeled around by one of his deputies in a chromium plated wheelchair. Harvey frequently rolled into the courtroom past another of his men who did a very tho- rough job of searching all those See AIR, Page 7 D ti succ opei Mic plan hea Nev Rob mus 2:3C asst and plai ope was half L was con per V tray two perf ney Mil" and Sag bott of t said ney well pect T criti mot Deli nou terc H phif cor resit nur: "Gs shat coul else R had hea kids wait abot Tickets: $5.00-$4.00-$2.50 The University Musical Society Burton Tower, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104 OFFICE HOURS: Mon. through Fri., 9 to 4:30; Sat., 9 to 12 (Telephone 665-3717) (Also at Rackhom Auditorium 1 ' hours before performance .time)