0 0 t Saturday, July 25, 1970 Saturday, July 25, 1970 P A Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY THE MICHIGAN DAILY DIAL 5-6290 Inventor of H-bomb - blasts campus unrest WASHINGTON -t?) - Nuclear weapons pioneer Edward Teller asserted yesterday that student protest, if unabated, will weaken national defense and invite a foreign takeover in 20 years.' Teller, testifying before the President's Commission on Campus Unrest, based the grim forecast on grounds that "in- doctrinated young people will not take a defense-related job." The hearing was the last of a series in Washington. Com- mission Chairman William W. Scranton announced that an investigative team is now in Jackson, Miss.,, preparing for hearings there next month over the May slayings of two youths at Jackson State Col- r° lege. 603 E. LIBERTY ST. NOW SHOWING SHOWS AT: 1:00-3:00-5:00 7:00 &9:05 P.M. Box office opens 12:45 P.M. When they take you for an out-of-towner, they really take you. Gov't a DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Day Calendar Saturday, July 25 Cinema Guild: The Horror Chamber of Dr. Faustus & Hog Wild (short), Architecture Aud., 7 & 9:05 p.m. Department of Speech - Michigan Repertory '70: Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck, Lydia Mendelssohn Theater, 8 p.m. Recital: Martha Nasat, piano, Sch. of Music Recital Hall, 8 p.m. Degree Recital: Carole Halmekangas, organ, Hill And., 8 p.m. Monday, July 27 Music for the Disadvantaged Student Lect.: K. Iverson, Chicago, lecturer, 2043 Sch. of Music, 3:30 p.m. Audio-Visual Center Films: "CBW: Tht Secrets of Secrecy" & "Voyage- of the Enchanted Isles," Multipurpose Rm., Undergraduate Lib., 7 p.m. Summer Concert Series: James Ma- this, pianist. Rackham Aud., 8:30 p.m. General Notices All season ticket holders for home footbal games must have applications In by Aug. 1 to retain seating priorities. Teller, a University of California physics professor, said student movements are forcing univer- sities away from defense research and that while "those of us who are older can carry on, it only will be for a very few years., He said the problem will be critical in another decade, and 10 years after that the nation will be "disarmed" unless the trend is reversed. Speaking without notes, Teller said universities must "abstain from politics and protect academic freedom" even if it means throw- ing agitators off campus. - Scranton termed Teller's re- marks "startling." Commissioner Joseph Rhodes Jr., a Harvard graduate student, asked Teller, "What do you propose to do with these student protesters, shoot them?" "There will be some accidents," Teller replied. "But I can tell you that if we stop research on defense, and that research is going on at an ac- celerated pace in totalitarian countries, then your freedom of 7 speech will not last much longer than mine." WASHINGTON (R - The gove: to curb mercury pollution under a 1 books since 1899. Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell said U will se k court injunctions against the lethal mineral by 10 industrial plants oc Georgia to Maine and Washington. Mitchell said the action results fron Justice Department this week from Secr J. Hickel. The 71-year-old Refuse- Act, which matter except sewage into nearly all U. penalties of $2,500 fines and one-year j Department spokesman said the govern accomplished through coirt injunctions. "Because mercury pollution is a ve .light," said Asst. Atty. Gen. Shiro Kashiw Resources Division. x Mercury pollution, a matter that ha attention of the federal government, ha, 4 ~and Wisconsin to be declared off limits1 -Associated Press cases, sport fishing. Canada this spring ( Bomb blast kills telephone executive fishing in Lake Erie and Lae St. Clair b Hickel two weeks ago sent telegram Philip Lucier, president of Continental Telephone Co., was killed yesterday in Clayton, Mo. when a informing them that mercury pollution o bomb demolished his car. The explosion was triggered when he turned the ignition key. Two as- their states had become "an intolerable tl sociates were uninjured as they stood waiting outside the auto. of Americans." CHARGES REPRESSION -% PARA' U ~ fS PRESENS JACK LEMMON SANDYDENNIS A EIlSMiMSTORY THE OUT-O-TOWES COM rMOW'ELAG A PfME T U CM Edward Teller - - -4-Associated Press pg We wvant to be Jour barber! EXPERT BARBERS- NO WAITING DASCOLA U-M Barbers- formerly Lee's E. Univ. at So. U. WINNER OF 6 ACADEMY AWARDS University of Oklahoma head OPEN 12:45 P.M. DAILY IA I E SHOWS AT 1-3-5-7-9 P.M. Feature 20 Min. Later .NOWCAN A PLANET LONG ENDURE Corner State & Liberty Sts. HALF APE, HALF MAN? DIAL 662-6264 "PLANET OF THE APES" was only the beginning . . . . NGC THEATRE CORPORATION A NATIONAL GENERAL COMPANY FOH VILLGE 375 No. MAPLE RD..7694300 MON.-FRI. 8:15_ONLY SAT.-SUN. 1:00-5:00-8.30 G;EO)RGE KARL C. SCOT/ MALI)EN ii TTON" g , PATTG- reigns it NORMAN, Okla. (A) - Dr. J. Herbert Hollomon, who has resigned as president of the University of Oklahoma, said yes- terday he took the action to allay the "strong forces of repression" unleashed by the governor of Oklahoma. Hollomon said he feared for the fun- damental freedom of the university stu- dents and faculty to maintain views con- trary to "the accepted style." Gov. Dewey Bartlett, who made repeat- ed public attacks on Hollomon's handling of student antiwar demonstrations last May 12, launched an unsuccessful attempt to oust him last month. Hollomon fought around the clock then to save his job. Why did he relinquish it a month later? "The governor obviously intended to continue his attacks on me," Hollomon said. "I could stand it, but this (his resignation) was the only way I knew i~ dispute with Gov. to give the university, as we know it, a chance to survive. "No charges of any substance were made against me," he said. "In no case has there been any question of the im- provement, progress and development of the university-which is what I'm sup- posed to be doing. "But the repressive forces are so great that anybody who differs from the ac- cepted style can be destroyed, and through him, these forces can destroy universities as we know them. - "The reason I resigned was that I refused to be the symbol by which the governor and repressive forces would get at the university and its students and faculty." The governor last month attempted to persuade the university's seven-member Board of Regents to replace Hollomon, Student and faculty leaders, in a series of meetings with the regents, said that Hollomon kept OU open at a time when many schools were closing. And they said there was no property destruction or serious injury during antiwar demon- strations. The regents voted 4-1 to retain Hollo- man, with one of his foes abstaining and another, the regents' chairman, protested by boycotting the meeting and later re- signing in protest of the president's re- tention. "The governor has no desire to carry this any further," said a Bartlett aide yesterday. "The man is leaving and that's that." Bartlett issued a terse statement wish- ing the outgoing president good luck "in the future" and calling for "the students, the faculty, the alumni and all citizens of the state" to unite behind his suc- cessor. tiril d+ pr LONDON demanded tion in ParlI let-proof sc Irishman w grenades of House of Cc High on I er security a shield be the public g can watch Laborite u r g in gt warned: "O lem of marr dom that ti enjoy and t safeguard t and statesn - - PRESENTS James Mahi Young Texas Piano Virtuoso in the fourth and final concert m of The Summer Series Mon., July 27 at 8:30 IN RACKHAM AUDITORIUM REVISED PROGRAM Sonata in E-flat, Op. 27, No. 1 ....,. Beethoven Suite in A minor, Op. 143 . . Schubert Sonatine. .............. . . . ..... Ravel Fantostuecke .......... Schumann Nocturne in E minor (Op. post .) .Chapin Scherzo in C-sharp minor, Op. 39 .......Chopin TICKETS: $5.00-$4.00-$2.501 at UNIVERSITY MUSICAL SOCIETY, BURTON TOWER, ANN ARBOR Office Hours: Mon. through Fri., 9to 4:30; Sat., 9 to 12 (Telephone 665-3717) (Also at Auditorium box office 1 112 hours before performance time) MEIRO-GOJN. AYER PRESENTS A CARLO PON I PRODUliON DAVID LEAN'S FILM OF BORIS PTERNAKS DOCfOR ZIIIVAGo GERALZNECHAPUN 'JULIE CHRIE 10M OURTENAY ALEC GUINNES "SWBAMoKENNA -MRALHD "H~)O OMAR SHAm oiROD SIBGER SAFNGHAM ROBERT BOLT-DAVID LEAN IN PANAVISION'AND METROCOLOR SATURDAY, SUNDAY-5:30 and 9:00 MONDAY, TUESDAY-7:30 only F iPTH FOrUm 3 OWNTOWN ANN ARSORPPHAMU TLBRYI ____________ INFORMATION 761-8700 -DOUBLE FEATURE "LIKE A VOLT JOLT FROM STARTS WEDNESDAY THE THIRD RAIL!" _ Tune Mag THE WAITER READE JR JOSEPH STRICKPRODUCTION THE WAILER READE ORG6ANiZATiON PRESENTS SHIRLEY KNIGHT' AL FREEMAN, JR. r-. DURCHM RN t I r 16 I S Based on th Award Wdmittae will be dnd Le Roi Jones. OW OURWaCE - Oansm a tor. . St. Ignace police arraign Plamondon Three leaders of the White Panther Party were arraigned on a number of charges yester- day following their arrest on Thursday in St. Ignace. Lawrence "Pun" Plamondon, White Panther minister of de- fense, Milton "Skip" Taube, minister of the interior- and John Forest, Detroit region min- ister of education, were all ar- raigned in St. Ignace before Dist. Judge Robert Wood on charges of carrying concealed weapons and having them loaded. Bail on the loaded weapons charge totalled $1,500 and $5,000 on the concealed weapons charge. The bails did not mat- ter; however, as Taube and For- est were taken to the Grand Rapids district office of the Fed- eral Bureau of Investigation, where they were arraigned ,on federal charges of.harboring a fugitive. Plamondon will be taken to Detroit today to be arraigned Monday on charges stemming from the September 1968 bomb- ing of the Central Intelligence Agency's Ann Arbor office. A year after the bombing oc- curred, he was indicted by a Detroit Grand Jury on two counts in connection with the case. One charge was conspir- ing to commit the bombing, the other was the actual bombing of the office. The conspiracy charge carries a five year maximum sentence ,and a $10,000 fine. The bombing charge may lead to 10 years im- prisonment and a $10,000 fine. The Grand Jury also indicted John Sinclair, currently serving a 91,-10 year sentence at Mar- quette State Prison for posses- sion of marijuana, and Forest, who was taken into custody the same day the indictments were handed down and has been free on bail, for bombing the CIA office. At a news conference yester- day in Detroit, Yippie leader Abbie Hoffman threatened an "act of revenge" within a week in retaliation for the arrest of Taube, Forest and Plamondon. ABBIE HOFFMAN, center, addresses a press conference yesterday where revenge" within one week because of the arrest of three members of the left is Genie Plamondon, white panther minister of international affairs don who was one of the three arrested. At right is Ken Kelley, white p oration.