71 ! want my mother to subscribe to 0 4r AtrIllgau DBailly page three $ 4 1* low Aw Alw- Q- t r4 t.9 n D3atit NEI S PlION1: 761-4552. Ii Saturday, May 9, 1970 Print Last Name First Name initial Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three Street No. Street Name Apt. No. Zip Code City State and I agree to be billed later Print Last Name First Name Street No. Street Name Initial Apt. No Zip Code Q 111 $5.00 Think of Mother! City State the news to day by The Associated Press and College Press Servie UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN PRESIDENT Fred H. Har- rington resigned yesterday. Harrington, 57, submitted his resignation at a Board of Regents meeting and will be come a professor in history on the university staff effective Oct. 1 . Wisconsin had been the scene of four days of violent antiwar demonstrations during which 40nor 50 fires reportedly broke out. Harrington had been one of eight university presidents to confer with President Nixon Thursday on recent campus disorders. Move to cut for war in Indochina spreads on Capitol Hill off funds Check one: Q lila $3.00 0 11lb S3.00 ii ~ ANN ARBOR COLLEGE OF JEWISH STUDIES SPRING HALF MAY 12--JUNE 17 BASIC JUDAISM-Jewish views of God, Man, Ethics, celebration, and social change. Tues. eves., 7-8:30 p.m. Beg. Tues., May 12. Rabbi Gerald Goldman HASIDIC EXPERIENCE GROUP - Hasidic songs, stories, and dances in an open group. Tues. eves., 8:30-10 p.m. Beg. Tues., May 12. Rabbi Gerald Goldman and staff READINGS IN PROTOCOLS OF EDUCATED ELDERS OF ZION --Prerequisites: A-3 courses in social sciences in different disci- plines; B-general background in Jewish history. Wed. eves., 9- 10:30 p.m. Beg. Wed., May 13. Dr. Joseph Ben Dak CLASSES MEET AT HILLEL, 1429 HILL ST. FOR INFORMATION 663-4129 WASHINI to cut off f china war Harrington told the board he had planned the resignation move Capitol H. for sometime, adding it was unfortunate that it came "at this time thousands of crisis." swarmed t "I am not running away. Nor am I being pushed away," Harring- dors and a ton said. "The Regents have not asked for my resignation." lawns in ar * * ful lobbying GTON (R) - Moves unds for the Indo- spread rapidly on i 11 yesterday as of young people hrough t h e corri- cross the spacious massive and peace- g effort. ... I -I ._ _ _ .- TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION As Taught By MAHARISHI MAHESH YOGI i i J I i G h G 1 i) i 7 I {t 7 i7 I X TOTAL UNEMPLOYMENT climbed sharply in April to nearly One catch-all resolution drawn four million, the government reported yesterday. up by Sen. Edmund Muskie (D- The statistics, from a Bureau of Labor Statistics Report, showed aine will be int ducersoltin that the national rate jumped from 4.4 to 4.8 per cent of the civilian lays down a broad policy for dis- labor force, equalling the biggest one-month rise in 10 years and engagement from Southeast Asia, continuing the sharpest four-month climb since early 1958. The 4.8 starting withracall foreatcease- figure is the highest in five years. fire, withdrawal from Cambodia The report brought renewed warnings from Democratic Party and an end to U.S. bombing. and union officials that President Nixon's anti-inflation policies are "It's a vehicle for the Senate to pushing the economy into a recession, express its will if other attempts don't work," Muskie said. "I JUDGE HARRY A. BLACKMUN, nominee to the Supreme Court, wouldn't like to see all our legis- lative exertions come to nothing. has criticized campus demonstrators for lack of responsibility, . noted Sen. Robert Byrd (D-WVa) at a Senate judiciary committee held a nes confeece yesteray meeting yesterday. to announce a massive nationwide Quoting, with approval, from an opinion written last year by campaign for an amendment that Blackmun, Byrd said that the Minnesota Judge had asserted that would bar all spending for fight- disruptive campus tactics might be expected of a spoiled child but ing in Asia by next June. not of a college student. Sen. George McGovern (D- Blackmun wrote the decision for the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of S.D.), said the campaign - start- Appeals. The court upheld the dismissal of a suit brought by two ing with creation of a bipartisan Central Missouri State College students for readmission after they congressional committee - will be had been suspended for taking part in a demionstration that disrupted patterned after the recent suc- activities at th college, cessful nationwide effort to defeat the Supreme Court nomination of "College attendance, whether it be a right or a priviledge, very G. Harrold Carswell. definitely entails responsibility," Blackmun wrote. "This is fund- amental. It rests upon the fact that the student is approaching McGove tsai e it probably aus maturity." the nation so citizens will bring pressure on their congressmen. NE E ID NC -Meanwhile, he said, intensive lob- a+ _ _ _ bying will be conducted on Cap-, itol Hill. r p sJoining McGovern were Repub- lican Sens. Charles E. Goodell of New York and Mark O. Hatfield of Oregon a nd Democrats Alan Cranston of California. Harold E. against Panthers =n== again t Pan hersHughes, of Iowa and Gaylord Nel- son of Wisconsin. Also on hand were three Demo- CHICAGO uA - The state of Illinois yesterday dropped cratic and two Republican mem- attempted murder charges against seven Black Panther party bers of the House which twice in members who were present during a shooting in which police the past two days has decisivelyI killed two Panther leaders. defeated efforts to curb the flow of money into the war effort. Two policemen and four Panther members were wounded McGovern and the others also in what authorities have described as a gun battle initiated told their news conference that by the Panthers during a pre-dawn raid on a West Side apart- they were seeking television timej -Associated Press SENATORS GEORGE McGOVERN (D-SD), left, Mark Hatfield (R-Ore), center, and Harold Htghes (D-Iowa) talk to newsmen about antiwar legislation at a news conference yesterday. Seated behind them are Reps. Daniel E. Button (R-NY), left, and Abner Mikva (D-Ill). Nort ibegins series of attacks near DMZ SAIGON R) - North Vietnamese forces launched a series of attacks in the northern reaches of South Vietnam yester- day but suffered a stinging defeat in the biggest battle there. North resistance slackened in Cambodia base areas after one brisk fight. South Vietnamese infantrymen following up a U.S. B52 bombing raid clashed with a North Vietnamese foce defend- ing a base area south of the demilitarized zone. They reported 215 enemy killed in the combined attack. An Associated Press correspondent reported from Quang INTRODUCTORY LECTURE: AUD. A ANGELL HALL, MAY 13, 1910, 8:00 P.M. ment Dec. 4 to answer what they called a one-{ Judge S AEn.usided view of the war. Judge Saul A. Epton of Circuit Court granted the motion They said that although they to dismiss the attempted murder charges. do not plan to participate in to- Nicholas Motherway, an assistant state's attorney, said day's anti - war demonstration. new evidence showed that bullets fired during the raid by a they hope violence can be avoid- search party of black and white policemen did not come from -- Tri that the day-long battle began when the 54th Regiment moved into the Da Krong Valley, 17 miles south of the de- militarized zone, to assess the effect of the B-52 strike. - - 3T h e North Vietnamese troops 5 p4. _______ g u n s belonging to the de- fendants. State's Atty. Edward V. Hanra- han elaborated on the move and said the new evidence was received from the police crime laboratory! April 28. Hanrahan said a preliminary re- port, made at a time when the laboratory did not have all the weapons seized at the Panther apartment, identified two expend - ed bullets as having come from a gun belonging to defendant Brenda Hoover says police wrongly accused' of harassing Panthers Are you still reading the way your parents read. In the first grade, when you were taught to read "Run Spot Run," you had to read it out loud. Word-by-word. Later, in the second grade, you were asked to read silently. But you couldn't do it. You stopped reading out loud, but you continued to say every word to yourself. Chances are, you're doing it right now. This means that you read only as fast as you talk. About 250 to 300 words per minute. (Guiness' Book of World Records lists John F. Kennedy as delivering the fast- est speech on record: 327 words per minute.) The Evelyn Wood Course teaches you to read without mentally saying each word to yourself. Instead of reading one word at a time, you'll learn to read groups of words. To see how natural this is, look at the dot over the line in bold type. grass is green You immediately see all three words. Now look at the dot between the next two lines of type. and it grows when it rains With training, you'll learn to use your innate ability to see groups of words. As an Evelyn Wood graduate, youll be able to read between 1.000 and 3.000 words per minute . . . depending on the difficulty of the material. At 1,000 words per minute, you'll be able to read a text book like Hofstadtler's American Political Tradition and finish each chapter in 11 minutes. have enrolled in the Evelyn Wood course since its inception in 1959. The course isn't complicated. There are no machines.tThere are no notes to take. And you don't have to memorize any. th inrg. 95% of our graduates have improved their reading ability by an average of 4.7 times, On rare occasions, a graduate's read- ing ability isn't improved by at least 3 times. In these instances, the tuition is completely refunded. Take a free Mini-Lesson on Evelyn Wood. Do you want to see how the course works? Then take a free Mini-Lesson.T- The Mini-Lesson is an hour long peek at what the Evelyn Wood course offers. We'll show you how it's possible to accelerate your speed without skipping a single word. You'll have a chance to try your hand at it, and before it's over, you'll actually increase your reading speed. (You'll only increase it a little, but it's a start.) We'll show you how we can extend your memory. And we'll show you how we make chapter outlining obsolete. Take a Mini-Lesson this week. It's a wild hour. And it's free. MINI-LESSON SCHEDULE U of M UNION--530 S. STATE Harris, 18. The charges were based on the original laboratory Hanrahan said, and "our ence to fundamental legal pals compels us to dismiss dictment." largely report, adher- princi- the in- Hanrahan said lesser charges! against the seven Panthers also were dropped. The state did not say where the! two expended bullets had come from or if the crime laboratory! had determined their origin. A defense attorney, James Mont-j gomery. told reporters after the hearing: "It seems obvious that the bullets supposedly fired from Brenda Harris' gun were actually fired from police guns." WASHINGTON A)-FBI Di- rector J. Edgar Hoover says law enforcement agencies were not to blame for confrontations be- tween the Black Panther party and police. Testimony released yesterday by a House appropriations sub- committee q u o t e d Hoover as saying police in several cities have been "wrongly aecused of harassment by many well inten- tioned but uninformed voices echoing outright lies generated" by the Panthers. "A free society is in trouble when blatant propaganda so overshadowsnthe truth that the rule of law is jeopardized," H o o v e r said in his testimony March 5. Although Hoover strongly de- fended police in each instance, a special federal investigation is still under way in connection with the fatal shootings of two Black Panthers last December by Chicago police. But Hoover attributed Panth- pr-police clashes in both Chicago and Los Angeles to the militant b 1 a c k organization's "intense hatred of and vindictive hysteria against local police." He described the Panthers as a "black extremist organization" consisting mostly of "hoodlum- type revolutionaries," who stock- pile weapons, espouse Marxist- Leninist doctrines and terrorize black communities. While condemning the Panth- ers, Hoover also attacked "prom- inent individuals" who, he said, have made "substantialecontri- butions" to legal defense funds for party members accused of crimes. Specifically, he named com- poser-conductor Leonard Bern- stein, film director Otto Prem- inger, black entertainer Dick Gregory and the wives of or- chestra leader Peter Duchin and film director Sidney Lumet. "Let us clear away the rhe- toric and confusion purposely generated to shroud the Black Panther issue and get it back into proper perspective." Hoover said. "An organization which stock- piles illegal weapons. trains in guerrilla warfare and seeks con- frontation with enforcement of- ficers for the expressed purpose of killing them is certainly in violation of the law." "Yet," he added, "when law- ful process is applied to bring the Black Panthers under con- trol, their cries of genocide and harassment are seemingly ac- cepted without question." Besides lambasting the Panth- ers, Hoover also criticized judges in Detroit, Washington, Phila- delphia and St. Louis, contend- ing they delivered light sen- tencesto hardened criminals. "The law abiding majority," he said, "is rapidly losing pa- tience with those whose flagrant abuse of the humanitarian prin- ciples of parole and probation makes a mockery of justice. "They are properly question- ing the reasoning, wisdom, moti- vation and capabilities of some jurists and parole and probation authorities who appear more concerned with finding excuses and evasions'for unrehabilitated repeating offenders than main- taining the welfare of the gen- eral public." stood and fought to defend the base camp but withdrew shortly before dusk. The government forc- er-bombers, reported counting 93 of the north killed by air strikes es. supported by American fight- and 122 by the infantrymen. They also found a 'ware house contain- ing 1'l tons of supplies. In another battle, this one in- side Cambodia, U.S. 1st Air Cav- alry Division soldiers suffered eight killed north of the Fish- hook region. This was the largest number of Americans killed in a single operation in Cambodia. The U.S. Command said 24 North Vietnamese were killed. The North Vietnamese, how- ever. were moving through t h e northern provinces of South Viet- nam. Da Nang was shelled and ground attacks were launched against the provincial capitals of Tam Ky and Hoi An. {An American armored column from the 5th Mechanized Infantry Division that had been supporting jovernment operations in the Da Krong Valley area was attacked as it was pulling out. More than a dozen American casualties were reported. The U.S. troops reported killing 11 North Vietnamese. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- a' ed by sntdents at the University of Michigan. Nes phone: 764-0552. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- mn. 420 Maynard St.. Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- dav through Sunday morning niver- -itv %r ear'. Subscription rates: $10 by Carrier.. $10 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- t n ates 5. by carrier. $5 by mail. 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