Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, June 11- 1975 Pag.TwTHMCHIANtAIY-Wdneday"Jne ",,r97 0 In the news today... International LIBREVILLE, Gabon - The Organiza- tion of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) has agreed to put off until Sep- tember any final decision on raising oil prices, Venezuelan Oil Minister Valentin Hernandez Acosta said yesterday. The current chairman of the 13-nation o ii cartel told reporters "some adjustments will be necessary" after the self-impos- ed OPEC price freeze expires on Sept. 30. "We want to be very responsible and make fair decisions," Hernandez Acosta said. The oil producers maintain they need a price raise to compensate for losses due to worldwide inflation. VIE'NTIANE, Laos - U.S. officials sought in vain yesterday an official ex- planation why Laotian police have held a 36-year-old American woman in a ramshackle police station for the past week. "I am a prisoner, can you help me?" Rosemry Conway, a wild-eyed expression on her face, asked a report- er through the window of a Vientiane police station. "I don't know why I'm being held. They haven't told me any- thing." She said she had been locked in double handcuffs for six days and has been sleeping on the floor of the wooden station in a room with several other pri- soners with only an army blanket to shield her from swarms of mosquitos at night. A U.S. official said Conway is being held on "unspecified political charges." NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C. - Three life-term prisoners continued to hold 15 hostages "on death row" yesterday in a small storage vault at British Colum- bia Penitentiary, officials said. T w o staff members and two intermediaries requested by the prisoners met with the inmates who are demanding free pas- sage to a foreign country, said J i m" Murphy, regional director of penitentiary services. There was no word on the pro- gress of the negotiations to end the seige, which began Monday. "I don't have any of the cards, except time," said Murphy. "If we say anything that upsets the people there, we may run out of time." The prisoners have threatened to kill the hostages if their demands are not met. National WASHINGTON -- Sen. Henry Jack- son said yesterday that Alabama G o v. George Wallace is a major threat in next year's race for the Democratic presi- dential nomination, but he predicted Wal- lace would not end up on the party's ticket. The Democrat from Washington, who is also seeking the nomination, said neither Wallace nor any other candidate should be required to take a loyalty oath promising to support any candidate the Democrats nominate. "That puts you in a situation where you're called up to suport anyone in advance," Jackson said. "You don't know who he is, what his program is, or what he's going to offer." State LANSING - The state Department of Education says voters who rejected school millage increases and bond issues can expect to see the same proposals on their election ballots soon. "A lot of these districts are strapped, really strapped for money," said a spokesman yester- day. "I think it's safe to say school boards will put the bonds and millage increases back before the people." School boards may reintroduce defeated proposals within 50 days but there is no firm guarantee they will. In school board elections across the state Monday, vot- ers defeated all but four of 39 major bond issues. As in Ann Arbor, Michigan voters generally approved millage re- newal requests but turned down propos- ed hikes of millage rates. Weather Today should bring recycled M a y weather: the skies will be mostly cloudy with a 40 per cent chance of rain. Highs will reach the mid- to upper-70's, while lows will sink to the barely tolerable 50's. Daily Official Bulletin Wednesday, Jne 11 Days Calendar WtOM: Nat' Town Meeting - Live coverage, panel discussion, "where Is Environmentalism Head- ed?" with Sen. Gaylord Nelson (D- wI) & John Quarles, Deputy Ad- ministrator, Environmental Protec- tion Agency, & moderator Jim Bishop, Environmental Editor for Newsweek, 10:30 am. Bicycle Club: 20 mi. ride, meets, Diag, 0 pm. Women for Cultural Ctr.: Meet- ing, Conf. RmS, 3rd Fr., Union, 8 pm. A CHALLENGING GAME POCK ET B I LLIARDS at the UNION OPEN 11 A.M. MON.-SAT. 1P.M. SUNDAYS THE DAILY C make interesting reading Captured prison escapee vows e will attempt secondbreakout DETROIT (UPI) - D a 1 e world's largest walled prison U.S. Magistrate Barbra lack- Remling, who pulled off one and plucked him away. ett on the charges. of the nation's most spectacular With him in federal c o u r t Bond was set at $50,000 f o r prison escapes, smiled his way were five of his seven alleged the other defendants atsd a June through a 28-minute federal accomplices, all accused of air- 20 hearing date was set for court apearance yesterday and craft piracy and conspiracy, each. told reporters he is going to try All five earlier were accused No bond was set for Rem- to get out again if he gets the in a Jackson district curt on ling, who already had been plac- chance. other offenses under Michigan ed in isolation at the Southern But asked when he thought he law. Michigan Prison, where he was would get that chance, the 46- serving a 7- to 1-year 'erm year old Southern Michigan Pri- REMLING was recaptured in for writing bad checks. son inmate just smiled and a bar 15 miles from the prison shook his head. Saturday and, as he did earlier THE OTHER defenda-iss in when confronted by reporters, court included Jalyne C o n n , REMLING was arraigned yes- seemed affable and confident. 31, of Haslett; Joann Van Pat- terday on feder air piracy At one point while FBI agents ten, 21, of Oak Grove; Susan charges stemming from a 30- were escorting him in handcuffs Hill, 20, also of Oak G r o v e; hour escapade that began list into the federal building, re- Calvin Woodbury, 19, of Web- Friday when a stolen helicopter porters asked Remling if he bervile; and Donald Hill, 23, would try another breakout. of Howell. dropped over the walis of the - "Under similar circumstances, Charged with conspiracy and I would do it," he replied. still sought by the FBI are two other suspects, Morris Colosky, REMLING and his alleged 20, of Weberville; and G e r- For confederates stood mute before trude Woodbury, 43, also of - Weberville, who was named as Remling's chief ally in the es- cape plot. They were last sean ii Swan- ton, Ohio, one day after the es- cape. THE FEDERAL gavernment's Hunters complaint said 'Jan Patten told FBI agents that eacn defendant played a key role in the bizarre breakout and that Colosky hi- jacked the helicopter under the A ENTO guise of renting it for a busi- ness trip. Tv tonight 7:50 2 CBS News 4 2 News 9 Beverly tHillbilles 1W 11 Family Affar 13 Days of Champions- Profile pe-ski raer Jean Paul ill, pea gleerArnold Palmer n retired race-car driver Jackie Stewart, 20 Ta Tell the Truth 24 Mod Squad-Crime Drama 30 Ohio Outlook 50 Hogan's Heroes-Comedy 56 Wman-Disussion 57 The Somagnols' Tae- Cookng 7:30 2 13 Truth or Consequences 4 Masqurade Party 7 11 Name That Tune 9 1oom 222-Comedy-Drama 20 Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea 30 Book Beat Career of Judy Garland are ex- ptored by Gerold Frank in hi biography "Judy." 50 Hogan's Heroes-Comedy 56 House Call 52 Liias, Vga and You -Instruution 8:00 n 11 Tony Orlando and awn -Variety 4 13 Little House on the Prai- rie-Drama 724 That's My Mtma- Comedy 9 Excuse My French 315650Feeling Good A high school's attemot tos s teen age drug abusers isrec- amined be host Dick Cavett 5 Merv Gr~iin Glora Sicnem 8:10 7 24 Movi-Comedy "It Colrn't Happen to a Nicer Gy." A real - estate salesman who is raped at gtOPOi'iby a batiful sco- ran. (Repeat; 0 mi.) 9 News 20 Danie l one-Adee 30 57 tDoblt e Rd-Musc 6 Romantic Rebetion Enlish ainter John on- stable 9:001 2 11 Caoin 4 13 Lucas Tanner-Drawma 9 Canadian Boaing Test 30 56 5 Markheim-Opera nw 9:30 205 00Club 50 Dinah! 10:002 nest of Magazine-eport 4 13 Petrocelit-Drama 7 24 Baretta-Crir-e rama 9 Arctic Four-Documentar 11 Windos ohe World Functions of internatol banking. 10:10 30 56 57 Films A profile of an 87-year-olS e- attle actress: and a study o an artist who specialies I coloring ood, ,with cw,,ii.'.i on a feast he prepared for the Henry Art Gallery of Se- attle. 10:30 30 5 tRenoi-Profile 57 Frank Wakeield ii:00 2 4 1 513 24 News 9 CC News 20 Charisma 30 Janaki-Exercise 50D ealer's Choice 5 It's our Turn 57 Ohio This Week 11:20 9 News 11:30 2 11 Movie-Western w "Gold of the seven Sains 4 13 Johnny Carson 7 24 wide World Special "Not Now Norman" 50 Movie-Comedy BW "The Jackpot." 50 7 ABC News- 1200 9 Movie-Western "Lawof the Lawless." 1:00 4 Tomorrow 7 13 News 1:25 2 Movie-Comedy "Beach Bal." 11 News 2:00 4 News 2155 2 News THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXV, No. 25-S Wednesday, June 11, 1975 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. Published dally Tuesday throug Sunday morning during the Univer' sity year at 420 Maynard Street. n Arbor. Mihign 4804. uistiPtO rates: 10 by earer'(campusare ; $11 local mail (Michigan and O0IO1 $12 non-ca mal (other states and foreign). Buimmer session published Tool's- day through saturday morning. Subscription rates: $5..50 by carrier (campus area) 0$6.00 local Mal (Michigan and Ohio); $6.50 non' local mail I other states and foreign). t i;. . a : , = J 4the RETURN of the Punk Undted Arnists S0 . M t . E S o n SHOWTIMES: Mon.-Sot. 7 & 9; S.-Mon. 5, 7 & 9