nAll V I-CY7-9 roge tiwo f flit zaruraay, jutyt :3 I IV to Spain frees political prisoners. MADRID (UPI) -King Juan bombings, slayings and kidnap- with the government in shaping Carlos granted amnesty yester- ings. Spain's democratic future. day to most of Spain's political The king's decision came in prisoners in a move designed to response to nationwide pro-am- LAVILLA SAID the amnesty bring about reconciliation in nesty street demonstrations and would affect all those jailed for post-Franco Spain. numerous petitions, including "political offenses and personal The national news agency one from his own government opinions," and would be extend- Cifra estimated the amnesty and another from the Roman ed to about 100 conscientious ob- would mean freedom for more Catholic Church. Both said an jectors imprisoned for refusing than 400 of Spain's 636 political amnesty would help to over- to carry arms. prisoners. come old hatreds stirred by the Lavilla also said nine mili- 1935-39 civil war that brought tary officers convicted of sedi- JUSTICE Minister Landelino the late Generalissimo Francis- tion because of their member- Lavilla said the amnesty was co Franco to power. ship in a clandestine army "wide" and would affect all po- T h e democratic opposition group called Military Demo- litical prisoners except those parties have made the granting cratic Union would be released, convicted of violence - mostly of a sweeping amnesty one of but will be forced to retire from Basque nationalists convicted of their conditions for cooperation the armed forces. Listo f kidnap vitis found CHOWCHILLA, Calif. (A .- A scrawled list of the names of 26 kidnaped children and a school bus driver was found when officers searched the home of one suspect in the case, a published report said yesterday. The Redwood City Tribune quoted sources as saying the list, written on a paper bag, named the children in the order in which they were herded one by one from vans into their makeshift underground prison at a rock quarry. AFTER THE kidnap victims escaped, they told authorities that their abductors wrote down their names as they were ush- ered into the buried moving van. The Tribune said the list was found at the home of Frederick Woods, 24, one of three men jailed in connection with the case. His family's 80-acre estate on the San Francisco Peninsula was searched July 21, six days after the kidnaping. The newspaper's report was confirmed to The Associated Press by an independent source close to the investigation, but the source gave no further de- tails. M E A N W H I L E, a sheriff investigating the case said Friday he hopes to learn a motive for the crime by draw- ing a "psychological profile" of Woods and two other young sus- pects, including "their habits" and "their genes." Madera County Sheriff Ed Bates added that although the three men are behind bars, au-, No. 2 FBI. man admits directing political spy unit thorities still are pursuing leads that others may have helped in the mass abduction. He said at least two of the children men- tioned a fourth kidnaper. "I don't know at this stage that there's any hard evidence that a fourth person was in- volved," he said. "It's possi- ble, but I don't know of any hard evidence." ALAMEDA County Asst. Dist. Atty. John Meehan agreed that there is "still a lot of investiga- tion needed to pull information together. We have no firm proof that others were involved, but we're working on it." A manhunt for the three men wanted in the kidnaping ended Thursday with Woods' arrest in Vancouver, Canada, and the arrest earlier in the day of James Schoenfeld, 24, on the San Francisco Peninsula. Scho- enfeld's 22 - year - old brother, Richard, turned himself in July 23. But none of the three seems to fit one of the composite drawings of the kidnapers sketched with the help of sev- eral of the children who vanish- ed with their bus driver July is. ASKED ABOUT Thursday's arrests, Bates said, "Yeah, I'm happy. It's a relief." But Bates said be still was bothered by the question of why the three accused men al- legedly kidnaned the busload of children from this quiet farming town and sealed them in a moving van buried in a rock quarry 95 miles away. The victims pried their way out af- ter 17 hours. "I want to draw a osvcholog- ical profile of the subjects - their habits, their genes, their educations, their backgrounds - every known thing that could possibly give us a clue to their motivation," said Bates. "Were they seeking publicity? Were they trying to prove to their parents they didn't need mon- ey? Was there a deeper psy- chological need? What are their political beliefs?" (Continued from Pages1) volved in a serious abuse of power. They have declined to provide further details. Held, a 35-year FBI veteran who was head of the Chicago office at the time of his ap- pointment as associate director, said he took the new position "because I truly believe that I can do a good job for the American people." THE department's C i v i l Tee I ' es difference!!! . MCAT v AT and s .Coss - Small classes LSAT Volumious hme GRE studymaterials Csssses that are 9 o htae"constantly TG 1 updated 0 * 09A U Tape facilitiessfor " revews of class * essons and for use CPTof supplementary " FLEX materials Make-ups for a EtcFMG missed lessons r NAT'L MED DS NAT'L DENT BDS write or all: 19155Pauline lvd. * Ann Arbor 48103 * oti2-3148 * K 4N M EDUCATIONAL CENTER * C PscsvcO SPEtouS S ING'.E.1933 Minority parties await decision on ballot bill By GEORGE LOBSENZ Michigan minority parties are anxiously awaiting a court decision Monday that will determine the constitutionality of a bill requiring minority parties to garner a certain percentage of votes in Tuesday's primary in order to earn a spot on the Novem- ber ballot. According to Libertarian and U.S. Labor Party spokesmen, judges reviewing the joint suit filed by the two parties in con- junction with an American Civil Liberties Union suit, have made a verbal commitment to hand down a decision before the August 3 primary. THE BILL, CALLED the Minority Party bill-Michigan law 1323-was passed last May 8. Since its passage, supporters of the Libertarian, U.S. Labor, Communist Labor, Socialist Worker, and Socialist Labor parties have decried its constitutionality, and claimed it was passed only to serve the purposes of the two major parties, particularly the Democrats. The bill requires minority parties to amass three tenths of one per cent of the total votes cast in the primary for a spot on the November ballot. Proponents of the bill claim it was initiated because there was not sufficient room on the ballot to accom- modate the number of parties attempting to secure a spot. Libertarian state Chairman James Hudler conceded that this was once the case, but no longer. "THERE IS ONLY room for nine parties on the machine ballot," said Hudler, "and at the time the bill was introduced, 14 parties were trying to get on the ballot." However, only nine parties now have submitted enough peti- tions to qualify for the ballot, "so this bill isn't really even necessary anymore," he says. See MINORITY, Page 10 efont ht Television viewing9ongh 6:00 2 4 11 13 News 4 Herb Alpert and the Tiua- 30 washington week in na Brass-Music Review 20 Lesson-Pat Robertson 50 Star Trek-Adventure 50 Lou Gordon 56 Upstairs, Downstairs 62 Movie-Drama (bw) 62 Gino washington-Variety = "Secret People" 6:10 9 cac News-George Finstad 10:30 20 Chrisma-Religion :20 9 xxI Olympic Games 10:50 56 Movie-Comedy sw) 6:302 I CB New-Da Raher "The Man in the White Si" 6:30 2 t cnBs News-Dan Brather 1100 2 4 7 11 3 News 4NC Ne om 0rokaw so Warren Roberts-Religion 13 TV13 IReport II iA~Nw 20tMovie-Dramsa. "Vendetta 11:30 oview me Drama. "The at Sorrento" Da10 2 rma" 30 wail street Week-Louis ain Doeans" 4 Ma ovie-Crime Drama. "The Rukeyser Wreck of the Mary cfare." 62 Sill osbycomey95CDC New-George Flstad 7:00 2 Truth or Consequrees 1 Movie-Dama. "Dinner 4 Profiles in Bsack 'at Eight.n 7 Detrolt-Disrussion 12 Mary Hartman, Mary 11 wheels Keep Roling-Auto Hartman-Serial Mary and Racing Loretta suspect Tom (Greg 13 50 Lawrence Welk Mliavey) of being unfaithful; 30 Firing Line-Buekley Heather (claudia Lamb) tells 50 Evenn at Pops where she's been for two days. 62 Fshl' ole (2 hs., 0 mi.) 7:30 2 $25,000 Pyramid-Game 50 Saturday Night-Variety 4 11 Baseball 11:45 9 Nightbeat 7 24 xxi Olympic Games 12:30 9 XXI Olympic Games 62 Outdoors with Ken 1:00 11 News Canaway 5o chaplain o Bourbon street S:00 2 Jetfersons 1:20 2 Movie-Crime Draams(bw) 13 Emercency - "Dick Tracy's Dilemaa" 30 At the Top 1:30 Movie-Adventure. "Coast of So Movie-Musica.t "A Song skeletons" is Horn" 9 Supersonle-Music 5 Men who Made the Movies 1:45 13 News -Documentary 1:45 13 News 62 withit 2:50 2 Mayberry R.F.D.-Comedy 8:30 2 Doe-Comedy 3:00 7 Soundings-Discussion 62 HBuck on Black 3:20 2 News 9:00 2 Mary TylerBMoore 3:30 7 News 3 Movie-western 30 57 Movie-Crime Drama THE MICHIGAN DAILY ,w) "Dr. Mabuse, the Gam- THE MICHIN DI ble"- Volume LXXXV, N. 5 50 Movie-Drama. "Cesar and Saturday, July 31, 1976 Rosaie" is edited and managed by students 62 Future Schoek-Dance at the University of Michigan News 9:30 2 BbNewhart phone 764-0562. Second cass potae 70 Tempe Baptst Church paid at Ann Arbor. Michigan 4019. 10:00 2 11 Dinah Shore-Variety Published datits y Tuesday througb Sunday morning during the Univer- sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 Sept. thru April (2 semes- ters) ; $13 by man outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tues- day t h rou g h Saturday morning. Subscription rates: $6 50 in Ann Arbor; $7.50 by mat outside Ann Arbor. Rights Division has been inves- tigating whether FBI personnel committed criminal violations of the civil rights of Americans by breaking into the homes and offices of political militants. FBI director Clarence Kel- ley has acknowledged that the FBI committed some burglar- les as recently as April 1973, three months before he took of- fice. However, the Socialist Work- ers party's Denver office was burglarized earlier this month and the department is investi- gating whether an FBI inform- er, Timothy Redfern, commit- ted the break-in. Party attorneys were ques- tioning Redfern under oath in a deposition in Denver yester- day. According to the National Au- tomobile Club, about 14 per cent of all the petroleum used annually in the U. S. goes to passenger automobiles. CITY NOTI4 Attention voters trom Ward 1, Precinct 2, South Quad Your POLLING PLACE for the August 3, 1976, primary election has been moved from South Quad to WEST QUAD, 541 THOMPSON ST.