Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY 'Ar - -41 Wednesday, August 5, 1970 U ,. I Wednesday, August 5, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY I II * * #1 6 e i~$ ?i.9 . ** -Z e ~~ '%A s4* . :'wtiew By1 The Associated Press FOUR MORE CITIES were added yesterday to the govern- ment's list of major metropolitan areas with substantial unem- ployment of six per cent or more of the work force, bringing the total to Z4 - highest in more than five years. The latest cities of 50,000 or more population to win the dubious distinction on the Labor Department's list were New Britain, Conn.; South Bend, Ind.; Portland, Ore. - including Clark County, Wash.; and the Springfield-Chicopee-Holyoke area of M~assachusetts. In addition to the larger cities, the department said 27 smaller labor market areas were added to the list of those with "substantial" or "persistent" unemployment yesterday, bringing the total of such areas to 575. ChARGES OF RACIAL DISCRIMINATION w e r e leveled yesterday at Arkansas A & M, a predominantly black college. A petition mailed to federal officials claimed that the college's board and officials have maintained a racially segregated faculty and staff in violation of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. The petition was signed by members of the Arkansas chapter of Freedom, Inc., a Texarkana, Tex.-based organization formed more than a year ago to promote freedom of choice as the method .to ach- ieve school desegregation. The complaint asks that Health, Education and Welfare offi- cials wIthhold all federal funds or grants from the college until the "racially discriminatory system" is eliminated "root and branch." SIt also asked the Justice Department to initiate court action against the college to "terminate the racial policies" and "to do it now." * * * TWO EXECUTIVES OF THlE UNITED MINE WORKERS were indicted yesterday on charges of filing false expense vouch- ers and financial reports, and conspiracy. Named in a four-count ndictment returned in U.S. District Co't in Pittsburgh were UMW District 5 president Michael Budzanoski and District 5 secretary-treasurer John Seddona. The indictment charged Budzanoski and Seddon conspired with four members of District 5's executive board to file false vouchers in order to obtain funds from the union's bank account. ---un iverSity players--t s #TONIGHT + Ce real makers back nutrition of product WASHINGTON t(A) - The cereal industry snapped back yester- day at assertions that its products lack nutritional value, telling a Senate subcommittee a breakfast built around dry cereal is as good as, or better than, bacon and eggs. With five specialist witnesses and lengthy statements from the major companies, the industry described earlier testimony by Robert Choate as incomplete, misleading, confusing, meaningless and dan- gerous. "Quite frankly," declared the Kellogg Co. spokesman, "we fear that his testimony has dealt a staggering blow to the improvement of nutritional literacy." "Breakfast cereals with milk contribute importantly to the nu- tritional quality of the total breakfast," said Dr. Frederick Stare, Harvard nutrition professor, newspaper columnist and government consultant. Cereals, said Stare, testifying for Kellogg's and the National Bis- cuit Co., "provide approximately the same amount of protein and calories as a bacon-and-eggs breakfast." He said cereals provide substantially more calcium, riboflavin, niacin, thiamin, and iron and substantially less saturated fat. NGC TH-EATRE CORORATION A NATIONAL. 6ENERAL COMPANY FOH VILlAGE 375 Noe MAPLE RD.-*769.1300 MON.-FRI. 8:15 ONLY SAT.-SUN.1:45-5:00-8:30 GEORGE KARL (. SCIT / MALDEN A, G"','4 Gorge S P MGA m 0.0 N 'a.41, iiPATTON eline, pending dire JERUSALEM (A)-Prime Minister Golda Meir said yesterday that Israel has no intention of withdrawing from all the territory it occupied in 1967, but is willing to carry on peace talks despite doubts as to the Arab leaders' sincerity. Mrs. Meir told Israel's Knesset-parliament--- that Israel accepted the American proposal "de- spite the doubts we have concerning the readiness of the, Arab leaders to embark sincerely on the road to peace." The prime minister was outlining Israel's reply to the United States. She said there has been no decision yet "on the issue of the map of peace," but she repeated Israel's determination not to return to the fron- tiers of June 4, 1967-the day before the Middle East war sarted-which gave the Arabs "decisive - advantages." The plan, proposed by U.S. Secretary of State William Rogers, calls for a 90-day cease-fire and resumption of efforts by U.N. mediator Gun- nar Jarring of Sweden to bring the two sides to negotiations based on the November 1967 U.N. Security Council resolution.'The resolution calls for withdrawal of Israeli forces from all soil seized in the 1967 war. The Israei Cabinet voted Friday to accept the U.S. peace plan already accepted by Egypt and Jordan. As Jarring resume with the big powers and the Arab states, pledged the full reso to help push peace ef "There is now, I portant advances," s "Who knows wheno other change? "In the light of t oral, available to me after the very helpfu tary of State Rogers, developments in the c East." Mrs. Meir said she that Israel would not cease-fire lines until reached with the Arai Reference in the 1 from Arab territory c believed to be the firs officially by the Israe Mrs. Meir said -Is with the Arabs, des such contacts. School of Music and Department of Art OPER1A conductor-JOSEF BLATT stage director-RALPH HERBERT COMEDY ON THE BRIDGE Bohuslov Mortinu GIANNI SCHICCHI Giacomo Puccini's Hilarious Comedy MENDELSSOHN THEATRE AUGUST 14-15-17-18 at 8:00 P.M. Admission $3.00 TICKET INFORMATION: 764-6118 BOX OFFICE HOURS: Monday, August 10 thru Thursday, August 13 12:30-5:00 P.M. Open 12:30 to 8:00 P.M. Performance Days. (Closed Sunday, August 16) -Associated rress ISRAELI CABINET minister Menahen Begin, leader of the right- wing Gahal Party, meets press yesterday after submitting his cabinet resignation. Begin quit the government after Israel's acceptance of the U.S. Middle East peace plan. US. admits raiods' over Cambodia peter nichols' JOE EGG PERFORMANCES THRU SAT., Lydi Hoeudelssohn Theatre Tickets: $1.50, $2.00, $2.50 m AUG. 8 8:00 p.al. Ph. 668-6300 isI r t o t4''~- .,- 1I ._. n.. _..... ,..., oiL I k41P07 \ 1' V A OPEN 12:45 Feature Promptly At 1-3-5-7-9 P.M. TODnAY LADIES DAY! f' .. 1214 S. UNIVERSITY I l varies 7c 1 DIAL 668-6416 Ladies 75c 1- "BRILLIANTLY BITCHY"-Time Magazine "SCREAMINGLY FUNNY"-Joyce Haber 6 P.M. Spend a marvetus evening with eight 4 dte \ Mart Crowley's IN Tilt I" RADICAL FILM SERIES PRESENTS lngmar Bergman's THE VIRGIN SPRING A Benefit for Pun, Skip & Jack TON ITE Shows at 6:45-8:30-10:15-12:00-Donation $1 CANTERBURY HOUSE-330 Maynard NEXT WEEK: TORMENT SAIGON (4 ) - American officials in Saigon confirmed yesterday that the U.S. Air Force is answering Cambodian re- quests for help by sending up to 50 fight- er-bombers on daily raids in Cambodia. Informed sources said the planes each carry about eight t o n s of bombs and rockets on their daily missions over Cam- bodia. "We are responding to anyone's re- quest for interdiction missions in the ar- Manson atty. asks m-istri~al LOS ANGELES (P) -- Charles Manson held aloft yesterday for the jury to see at the Sharon Tate murder trial a copy of a newspaper with a banner headline say- ing: "Manson Guilty, Nixon declares." His action came as the afternoon ses- sion resumed, after a morning session in which a defense motion for a mistrial on the basis of Nixon's comments was re- fused. The judge, after a recess and a con- ference in chambers, ordered jurors pol- led on whether they had seen the head- line. Coprosecutor Aaron Stovitz shouted, "Your Honor!" when he spotted Man- son's action. Newsmen heard one gasp from the jury box. A bailiff quickly con- fiscated the paper, an early edition of yesterday's Los Angeles Times. President Nixon commented Monday that Manson was guilty of eight murders, then later said he did not mean to pre- judice the case. Superior Court Judge Charles Older denied without comment a defense mo- tion for a mistrial due to the remark. He said he had taken special precau- tions to prevent jurors from learning of the comment, and "I'm satisfied there has been no exposure." Nixon, at a law enforcement confer- ence in Denver, told reporters Monday, while saying news media sometimes make heroes of criminals: "Here is a m a n (Manson) who was guilty, directly or in- directly of eight murders without rea- son." Nixon later issued a statement saying he did not mean to speculate on guilt and defendants in the case should be pre- sumed innocent at this stage of the trial. Besides the series of seven Tate slayings, Manson is charged with an eighth mur- der for which he has not been tried. ea of Cambodia," said one U.S. official. Associated Press correspondent T. Jeff Williams reported Monday from Kom- pong Speu that U.S Air Force Phantoms had been dropping bombs and napalm on Viet Cong and North Vietnamese forces who had held Highway 4 since Saturday. cutting off Phnom Penh's access to Cam- bodia's only oil refinery on the south coast. Williams reported yesterday that High- way 4 had been reopened by Cambodian forces. The U.S. Command has declared that American attacks in Cambodia are aim- ed at "enemy troops or material which could threaten U.S and other free world lives in South Vietnam." But officials in- dicated that the planes are also striking at Viet Cong and North Vietnamese t'oops. "If the Cambodians say there is an en- emy troop concentration or supply area at a given point," one source said yes- terday, "and U.S. bombers go in to in- terdict, this seems well within President Nixon's ground rules." On June 3, Nixon set guidelines for re- maining U.S. military activity in Cam- bodia after the withdrawal of American ground troops ther-e - a move finished June 30. The President said there would be "air missions to interdict the movement of enemy troops and material where I find it is necessary to protect the lives and security of our men in South Vietnam." His stated policy seemed to rule out direct air support for Cambodianaforces, but wa~s ambiguous enough to allow a wide latitudesof interpretation by U.S. field commanders. Meanwhile, Cambodian troops patroll- ing Highway 4, 50 miles southwest of Phnom Penh, found the bodies of 11 civil- lans, one apparently a European, killed by a Viet Cong ambush on Sunday. At last report, Communist forces still were reported holding Skoun, 40 miles northeast of Phnom Penh. Cambodian military spokesmen said government re- inforcements were being sent there to try to retake it. The town straddles a key road junction leading to the besieged provincial capital of Kompong Thom, 45 miles to the north, and the 1st military region headquarters at Kompong Cham, 25 miles due east. The commander of the ousted Skoun garrison told correspondents yesterday that U.B. Phantom jets bombed and strafed just ahead of Cambodian troops trying to recapture the town. Manshed town Arnass Pass, Tex. looks as though a bomb had hit it Celia which passed between it and Corpus Christi tropic storm, with winds up to 145 miles per hour, 1 officials in Corpus Christi said 90 per cent of the dowr or badly damaged. IN LOS ANGELES: Unrest cormite wiUvtness on policc Luxo Lil, the swinging little lamp with the BIG light for home, office, school. A high intensity lamp that swings, swivels, stretches to direct light exactly where it's needed. Just a top and it glides into any position and holds it, thanks to flexible spring tension balancing. Vented shade stays cool no matter how tong the light burns. 7" base, 24" fully extended. White, red or charcoal enameled metal. U' approved. $20. Jacb A N LIBERTY AT MAYNARD LOS ANGELES(P) A sociology profes- sor told the President's Commission on Campus Unrest yesterday, that he is con- cerned that police undercover agents like "Tommy the Traveler" may be operating on some campuses across the nation. Dr. Richard Flacks, instructor at the University of California at Santa Bar- bara, said, "The usual students' assump- tion lately is that anyone who advocates violence on a campus is a police agent." "Tommy The_ Traveler," whose r e a 1 name is Tommy Tongai, is a police in- formant who officials at Hobart College in Geneva, N.Y., say posed on their cam- pus as a student militant. Hobart officials s a i d "Tommy" in- structed students on how to make bombs and urged them to hold violent demon- strations. A county grand jury is currently in- vestigating the charges. James Ahern, a commission member and police chief of New Haven, Conn., asked Flacks why any law enforcement agency might try to foster campus vio- lence. "Some elements of police forces are politicized," F like to discred Flack's tests about 10 minu ican youth, Ji Angeles, shou gallery that racism." Rodriguez s Americans or which was set June 13 to de dent turmoil. Commission ton, former go vited Rodrigue demonstratior two-day heari Two other., mission yester chairman of William McG versity of Cal they believed one of the n campus unres NONE"