.1I -Tuesday, September 16, 1980-The Michigan Daily iixonJ SHINGTON (UPI)-Jury selec- began yesterday in the long- ed trial of two ex-FBI chiefs ac- of approving illegal break-ins in irly 1970s-and a defense lawyer e "very likely" will call Richard kto testify. Mark Felt, 67, the FBI's former Late director, and Edward Miller, former intelligence chief, went on after 2 / years of legal haggles procedures for preventing release assified information during iony. EY ARE accused of conspiring to wve illegal break-ins-known as k bag jobs"-as well as warran- wiretaps and mail-openings in a for fugitive members of the rist Weather Underground ization in 1972-73. of U.S. District Judge William it-who spent 30 months working unprecedented procedures for cuting high U.S. intelligence of- M - 1 nay te ficials while protecting classified in- formation-began the weeding process for picking a jury from more than 100 candidates. Selection of the jury, which will be sequestered during the six-week trial, was expected to last a day or two. Prosecutors are likely to call up to 40 witnesses, possibly including former Attorney General Richard Kleindienst, and the defense as many as 60. FELT AND Miller contend they are innocent because former acting FBI director L. Patrick Gray, who faces a separate trial on the same charges, or- dered the break-ins of the homes of friends and relatives of the fugitives. They also say the terrorists had ties with hostile foreign powers, making the hunt a national security investigation with less stringent surveillance guidelines. Felt's lawyer, Brian Gettings Jr., told reporters he rmay call Nixon to testify, presumably to show the orders for the stify in trial of ex-FBI chiefs break-ins came from above. "IF WE ask him (Nixon) to come, he will come," Gettings said. He said he and several other defense lawyers have interviewed Nixon twice, once about two months ago at his New York office. "We said, 'We may need you as a wit- ness,"' Gettings said. "He said, 'I don't have any problem ... If you want me to come, I'll be there.' "HE CAN help us.' Gettings said Nixon agreed to testify if he is given one week's notice. He said "it's very likely" he will ask the former president to testify before a court jury for the first time about activities during his administration. Nixon apparently could be useful to the defense in describing a 1970 conver- sation he had with FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover about the fugitive Former assistant FBI director William Sullivan wrote in a book published posthumously that Hoover described the conversation to him, and said the president ordered that he do anything necessary to find the fugitives. Zimbabwe experiences heavy violence over weekend, one policeman killed, 43, injured -LS&A SCHOLARSHIPS- LS&A Scholarship applications for winter 1981 will be available in 1220 Angell Hall beginning Sept. 15, 1980. To qualify for scholarship consideration, a student must be an LS&A undergraduate and have attended the University of Michigan for at least one full term. Sophomores must have a U of M grade point of 3.7 or better and Juniors and Seniors must have a GPA of at least 3.6. The awards are based on financial need and on academic merit. Completed applica- tions must be returned to 1220 Angell Hall by October 10. AUDIT-IONS Sept. 22 -23 7:030p m University of Michigan Department of Theatre and Drama Guest Artist Series Shakpeare's hOMEO AND JULIET, Dec 3 -7 Directed by Richard Burgwin SALISBURY, Zimbabwe (AP)-A white policeman was killed and at least 43 blacks were injured in the worst spate of violence since Zimbabwe becamedindependent last April, police reported yesterday. Home Affairs Minister Joshua Nkomo claimed four of his Patriotic Front supporters were killed near Salisbury during the weekend violence by militants from Prime Minister Robert Mugabe's Zimbabwe African National Union. THE VIOLENCE over the previous three days included multiple shootings, grenade attacks, stonings, house bur- nings and one kidnapping, police said. "It's like tallying up casualties after You must be 18 yrs and prove it with drivers license .s. . Penthouse International' Films presents: CALIGUA Mon, Tues, Thurs, Fri-7:00, 9:45 Wed-1:20, 4.05, 7.00, :45 Mon thru Thurs oil seats $4.00 All seats $2.50 til 2:00r Fri, Sat, Sun all seats $4.50 INDIVIDUAL THEATRES 5th Ave atuberty 76t*97OO ENDS THURS. ACADEMY AWARD WINNER Best Feature Documentary A BRIGHT, SENSITIVE,} REVITALIZING f <. FILMY Mon, Tues, Thurs-7:30, 9:30 We-1d-20, 3:20, 5:30, 7:30, 9:30 Wed $1.50 til5:30 " a weekend in the war," said one white police officer, referring to the seven- year guerrilla fight against previous white-dominated governments that ruled the country formerly called Rhodesia. A WHITE POLICE inspector died yesterday afternoon after a gunfight between police and four dissident guerrillas in the Magondi tribal area 37 miles south of Salisbury, police reported. They said grenades used in the weekend attacks were of the type used by guerrillas during the war. SCULPTOR NAMED NEW YORK (AID)-Sculptor Luise Kaish has been named chairman of the Painting and Sculpture Division of the Columbia University School of the Arts. The university says Professor Kaish has been critically acclaimed as "an artist who attains a sense of power and authority leavened with a poetic in- nocence that gives her pieces universal appeal." Read and Use Daily Classifieds! UNITED NATIONS (AP)-Thirty- five years after the United Nations was created out of the chaos .left by Adol Hitler, the international body for the first time will choose a German a General Assembly president. It is largely a ceremonial position but West Germany's Ruediger von Wechmar, the president-designate said he and his aides waged a two-year international diplomatic campaign t gets the post because it 'meant world recognition of a "new democratic ter- ( NEW A , ATAll Day Everyday Many guerrillas have left assembly camps where they gathered after the Dec. 29 cease-fire and have become bandits in the countryside. Mugabe made his first visit to the assembly camps last weekend in an ap- parent attempt to defuse the rising violence. INFORMATION MINISTER Nathan Shamuyarira, a ZANU member, blamed Nkomo's party for the wave of political violence hitting the country. "All evidence from independent ob- servers shows that it is the Patriotic Front that is trying { to disturb the peace," the minister said in a statement. "Having lost dismally in the last general election, the party is now trying, to intimidate Zimbabweans to vote for it in the district council elections next month." Nkomo and Mugabe commanded separate guerrilla armies in the war that led to independence. They have been rivals for power in postwar Zim babwe and have exchanged accusations of this type on more than one occasion. Mugabe's party won British- supervised, pre-independence elections last February in what was then white- ruled Rhodesia. It captured 57 seasts in the 100-member executive national assembly, compared to 20 for Nkomo's party. 0I German diplomat to * Showcase Series * Assembly many." s WEST GERMANY AND communist f East Germany were admitted to the e United Nations just seven years ago; s and an obsolete clause in the U.S. char- ter still refers to Germany as one of thet' , "enemy" states of World War II. n . Von Wechmar got a first-hand look at the war when he served "from El" r Alamein to Tunis" as a first lieutenant ° in Field Marshal Erwin Romme i SAfrica Corps, he said. - The 56-year-old diplomat inherited the title of baron from a long line of vdn Wechmars traced back to a knight who took part in a tournament at Trier, the ancient city in West German's Rhine Province, in 844. But he plays down his aristocratic origins, describing his most recent forebears as "mostly civil servants, ministers, officials and of- ficers in the army." "WE ARE A famous family of prisoners of war," said Von Wechmar, who was captured by American troops in North Africa. "My father was one (a British POW in World War II), I was one, my brother was one, both my grandfathers were prisoners and my great-great grandfather was one in various wars. TrmboQfilIm rescheduled 11 Ecceyntricities of a Nightingale by Tennessee Williams Nov 19-22 Directed by Kendra Chopcian Callbacks Sept. 24 -Auditions by appointment only. See sign- up sheets outside of Room 1502 In the Frieze Building. Read all Instructions carefully. P0N )(ourn choice r -, SPECIAEL Chopped Beef Dinner Special dinners feature choicedo Chopped Beef or Fish Filet. and both include All-You-Can-Eat Salad Bar. Baked Potato and Warm Roll with Butter Fiset Fish Dinner 11 Command Performance. Haircuts for the looks that get the looks. Our new Command Performance haircutting store is open. And our precision haircutters are waiting to give you the best haircut you've ever had. You tell us the hairstyle you want; we'll adapt it to the hair you have. So even as your hair grows, our, haircut will continue to hold its shape. And you'll continue to get all the looks you're looking for. Shampoo, precision cut and blow dry for men and women. $14. No appointment necessary, ever. Command Performance* For the looks that get the looks"' We're brand new in the new Kroger Center (next to Wayside Theater) on Washtenaw, just East of US-23. - Briangthe kids, too!... " .they'll love ourNE W Kid's Menu Includes HAMBURGER or French Fries All-Beef HOT DOG or Baked Potato. Only $1.29 Pudding or Gelatin 3 354East Washtenaw Ave. (Across from Arborlond Shopping Center) On West Stadium Blvd. (Just North of Interspetion of Stadium & Liberty) The antiwar film Johnny Got His Gun, scheduled to be shown last Friday at the Michigan Theatre, will instead be shown tonight at 7:00 and 9:30 at Auditorium A in Angell Hall. According to the 1971 film's producer, Bruce Cam- pbell, the showings at the Michigan were halted after the 4:00 matinee because the Butterfield theatre chain, which is planning on giving Johnny a two-wek run in October in the Ann Arbor area, "became terribly alarmed that might' have a hit on their hands," after notidg, the fair size of the matinee crowd. In order to prevent satiating the area market for the film before their owni screenings, the chain managed to pull rank and halt the later showing' The Ann Arbor Film Co-op will be sponsoring the scheduled showings tonight of this film based on Dalton Trumbo's 1939 novel, starring Joseph Bottoms, Donald Sutherland and Diane' Varsi. Cannot be used in combination wth other discounts. Applicable taxes not included. At Particpating Steakhouses. L 1 ~980 Podeosa System Inc I. 1- -_________________________________ e. 10 - - - - - - .' A- -,ooo -g P's I fI Special Get-Acquainted Offer: Shampoo, precision cut and blow dry, just $10. 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