A Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY 11 9 Saturday, August 1, 1970 Saturday, August 1, 1970 4~ THE MICHIGAN DAILY Lead, arsenic found SENATE REPORT in La. waterways Bomb attacks doubled last year WASHINGTON (A - Preliminary tests show substantial amounts of lead and arsenic are being poured into Louisiana water- ways, federal water quality officials have disclosed. Although they declined Thursday to provide details on the re- port which apparently is the first of its kind, government witnesses advised a Senate subcommittee their preliminary tests are being verified now. After chief enforcement officer Murray Stein told of the ini- tial testing results involving intrastate waters, Assistant Secretary of the Interior Carl Klein said a final determination "will have to be made by a judge. And I would rather not have Mr. Stein make that determination until an analytical test has been run on it." Sen. Philip Hart (D-Mich. the subcommittee chairman, said later he takes the testimony to mean the case involves " the lower reaches of the Mississippi." In Louisiana, Robert LaFleur. director of the state's Stream Control Commission, said Thursday night: "I know they have been taking samples and looking for it, but I don't know where they took them or what they got. They don't tell us much." WASHINGTON (P) - T h e number of bomb attacks or at- tempted attacks in the United States a g a i n s t government buildings, embassies, industries, churches and synagogues has nearly doubled in the past year, Senate investigators were told yesterday. Philip Manuel, an investigator for the Senate permanent inves- tigations subcommittee, said the number of bombing incidents has risen from an average of 1.6 per cent in 1969 to 3.1 per day through the first six months of this year. Nearly 100 of the incidents' documented in a study done for the subcommittee, said Manuel, occurred in high schools and elementary schools "indicating that teen-agers and even young- er children are taught how to use explosives and incendiaries and indeed are using them." The 150-page study done by Manuel and three investigators on loan from the General Ac- counting Office covered three chief areas--bombings and at- tempted bombings, thefts of ex- plosives and terroristic attacks on police and police installa- tions. The study and Manuel's testi- mony prompted subcommittee chairman John McClellan (D- Ark), to say: "With all this information now available it seems to me no citizen can any longer be com- placent about the problem or be under an illusion about there being an underground revolu- tionary effort to destroy this government." U prof turns down UC post From Wire Service Reports BERKELEY, Calif.-Prof. Wil- liam Alston of the University's philosophy department has refused a post at the University of Cali- fornia because of California's re- fusal to rehire black communist instructor Angela Davis. Alston was to have served as Mills professor of philosophy at the Berkeley campus for the win- ter and spring quarters. He re- fused the post, calling the decision of the U.C. regents not to rehire Miss Davis at UCLA a "particular- ly flagrant case of political in*,er- ference" in university affairs. Alston is presently vacationing near Aspen, Col. and was unavail- able for comment yesterday. MICHIGAN REPERTORY' fl ---university players- TONIGHT garson kanin's BOR N YEST E RDAY Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre Air Conditioned 8:00 p.M. Ph: 668-6300 "COME TOGETHER" A play by Jonathan Slade MUSIC BY THE FLOATING OPERA Sunday, Aug. 2 8 & 10 p.m. 635 S. Main, AA $1.00 "I've told you about the walrus and me" JULY 31, AUGUST 1-FRIDAY, SATURDAY SMARRIED A W ITCH dir. Rene Clair (1942) FREDRIC MARCH-VERONICA LAKE Charming fantasy of a major director. Short: CHICKENS COME HOME (Laurel & Hardy) 7 & 9:05 Architecture 662-887175c Auditorium I Last Time Around THE SORRY MUTHAS with BILL HINKLEY TONIGHT at $1.50 at the door, which opens at 8. "Mutha music" causes you to roll your fingers on the table top, nod your head from side to side, knock your knees together, top your toes, and if you do all these at the same time you need a sedative." -THE BEARDED WHIZ blues. iuq, blue grass Center for Alternative Media Projects presents THEWA GAME extraordinary documentary . a fifty minute dress rehearsal for Hell . . ."-THE NEW REPUBLIC ". I cried, it was an experience not a movie, a purging by pity and terror, and when the lights came up at the end I was exhausted, I didn't want to talk to or look at the people I came with . . ."-ESQUIRE "It may be the most important film ever made. We are always told that a work of art cannot change the course of history, I think this one might. It should be screened everywhere on earth."--THE OBSERVER MONDAY, AUGUST 3 7:00, 8:30, 10:00, & 1]1:30 Admission 75c B WAYIOUSD 330 MAYNARD -Mass. jall PV~ NEW BEDFORD, Mass. 0)A - Nineteen persons identified by police as Black Panthers were arrested yesterday and an as- sortment of weapons was con- fiscated in a raid on Black Panther headquarters. The .arrests came following three nights of racial disturb- ances and sniper fire in -t h e South and West End sections. Mayor George Rogers said he thought the, arrests had errad- icated "the forces of revolution that have been at work through- out the community." Racial violence broke out here early in July and one b 1 a c k teen-ager was shot to death and three others were injured. Three whites were charged with murder. Trouble flared again this week, with reports of sniper fire and a 25-year-old white man, Stephen Botelho was shot in the leg while driv- ing near t h e alleged Panther headquarters. All those arrested yesterday were charged with conspiracy to commit murder and conspiracy to commit anarchy. The group police inthers, included three women, one of whom, a 15-year-old girl, was injured in the early-July dis- orders. The raid came at Pieracin- ni's Variety Store which w a s burned out earlier in the month. Police, joined by state troopers, also conducted a house-to-house search of one block near the store. Police Capt. Harry Kenyon said weapons, including auto- matic rifles, a n d ammunition were discovered at the store and in other buildings that w e r e searched. Kenyon identified the men as Panthers. Kenyon said city police, aided by 40 state troopers, would con- tinue to search buildings in the West End where helicopter re- connaissance indicated snipers may have been firing from. Shortly after t h e arrests Mayor Rogers said, "This bears out our contention some time ago that the violence had been f o m e n t e d by revolutionaries and self-styled leaders who are not representative of the com- munity. CATHERINE PERRY, foreground, and Sheila Roach, left, after arres Black Panther headquarters. The women, shown entering court, were I charged with conspiracy to commit murder, anarchy, incite to riot, an Uruguayan leftist guerrillas kidnap, injure diplomats MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay (AP) - Leftist guer- rillas kidnaped a U.S. embassy official and a Brazilian diplomat yesterday and then offered to exchange them for prisoners held by the govern- ment. A note delivered to the newspaper El Diario did not give the number or names of political prisoners to be freed for the hostages. The note said the U.S. official, Dan A. Mitrione, 50, was shot in the chest when he was seized but claimed his condition was not serious. The guer- rillas failed in attempts to abduct two other U.S. embassy officials who suffered injuries in their escapes. The latest kidnapings followed a pattern that began in Latin America nearly a year ago, with guerrillas seizing foreign diplomats and holding them hostage for the. release of prisoners. One diplomat, West German Ambassador Count Karl von Spreti, was killed by Guatemalan guer- rillas in April after the government refused to free 17 political prisoners. The kidnapers, members of the leftist Tupa- maros band, seized Mitrione as he was driving to work by blocking his car and dragging him into another vehicle. The Brazilian, Aloysio Mares Dias Comigde, 41, who previously had been assigned to Miami, was taken from his home. The guerrillas delivered their communique to the newspaper which relayed it to the police. Included in the communique was a medical report on Mitrione that said he was in no danger from the chest wound. The guerrillas also sent a note, reportedly written by Mitrione, and the serial number of his watch to prove to authorities that they had him in their custody. Mitrione, a World War II Navy veteran and former Indiana policeman, was public safety ad- viser for the Agency for International Develop- ment, which dispenses U.S. foreign aid abroad. Dias Comigde was Brazil's consul in Montevideo and first secretary in the embassy. Moments after police announced the double kidnaping, Gordon Jones, 26, second secretary at at the U.S. Embassy, showed up dazed and in- jured at the suburban home of Juan Antonio Paolino. "He reached my house in a daze, and asked incoherently if he could use the telephone," Pao- lino said. Paolino quoted Jones as saying he had been taken at gunpoint from his home, tied and wrapped in a blanket, and placed in a car. Nathan Rosenfeld, 48, a bachelor from Mer- kimer, N.Y., "played dead" when guerrillas hit him on the head as he entered his garage, a U.S. Embassy spokesman reported. He said the guer- rillas ran.. Rosenfeld, the embassy's cultural affairs of- ficer, was only slightly injured and returned to work in the afternoon. appeal' CHICAGO (P)-William Kunstl Chicago Conspiracy trial, said Thu filed asking an appeals court to ro contempt citations against seven de because of alleged wiretapping by the Kunstler said in a telephone int tapped several telephone conversat: chairman of the Black Panther Part Garry, while Seale was being held : time of the trial. Seale was later cited for conter from that of the other defendants. Kunstler said the government h conversations related to the conten that it has refused to make records able to the defense. A representative of the White Pi closed that Kunstler may defend Jo conspiring to bomb the Ann Arbor tember 1968. The Panthers also announced t the free rock concert, in Gallup Pai celebrate the end of a fast protestin clair, who is currently serving a 9% session of marijuana. The concert i and the Funkadelics. 3020 Washtenaw Ph. 434-1782 Box Office Open Today 12:30 SHOW TIMES Today and Sunday 1-3-5-7-9 Monday and Tuesday. 7-9 Thousands gath of banned rock 603 E. Liberty St. HELD OVER!! fHOWS AT rfectaor bt )lModern Ceob'zq - . IN I DIAL 5-6290 1 -3-5-7-9 P.M. "JACK plus SANDY plus NEIL equals A BAGFUL of LAUGHS!" -N.Y. DAILY NEWS THE FIRST OF THE SHOCK ROCK! "Russ Meyer promised to make the wildest, craziest, funniest, the farthest out Musical-Horror-Sex-Comedy ever released. He has succeeded." -Los Angeles Herald Exami Thi s not a se there has never bee nything liket O smeDos . A Russ Meyer Production MIDDLEFIELD, Conn. (0")-- T h e weather was hot and muggy, there was no music and not much to do, but young people kept streaming into the Powder Ridge ski prea yesterday for a rock fest- ival banned by court order. Some of them hitchhiked and others drove and abandoned their cars and trucks up to five miles away near police barricades and continued their trek on foot. Estimates varied, but at least 15,000 to 17,000 young people dotted the ski slopes of Powder Ridge. Why do they stay? "It's a lot better than hanging around town," said a 17-year-old from Webster- Mass. Others were convinced there would be a festival. And one youth from nearby Meriden said he would stay "until the food runs out. I've got to get my twenty dollars' worth somehow." Tickets for the full three days of the scheduled rockfest sold for $20. Meanwhile, in New York City officials of the New turned down ival be held Yankee Stad plan was "in The festivE hoped to hor at the stadiu A few of t Ridge and w arrivals. "There's r came here fi a group of Despite th the festival residents of 4.500 were no out. "I'm surpri arrogant you derful. Absol Habersang, c from the ski been "better week. Serving dinner until 2 am Jon The Daily Sports Staff JACK LEMMON SANDY DENNIS ANBlLSIMONSTORY THE OUT-F-TOWUERS S COR OByMOVe. A tA MoU#.r PI Fron 201h Ce t D~Stin OLLY READ / UYKIHLA YRS IMAIA ACOM JH N U A R L/M AEL BLODGETT DAI 61 BR AK / c-EDY WI UAMS /'rom ad WtRUSS MU R/cmre.RO6ER BERT j dor Ih#JR& EBERTu i8USS _ ! R tPMIISiOtr Color by DELWE' Positively No One OX.. Uinder 18 Yrs. Admitted 14tiE NAr~a l HEntl lx' AIM DU. u I .16aetfi.4oU u ~rssrne -Associated Press Marriage on Sunday Roger Mills, a whitelaw clerk, stands with his black fiancee, Berta Linson after a U.S. District Court judge in Jackson, Miss., overturned a state law banning interracial marriages.