The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, June 17, 1980-Page 11 MURDER CONVICTION OF MICHIGAN MAN TO STAND High Court upholds life sentence WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Supreme Court yesterday cleared the way for reinstatement of a murder conviction against a Michigan man, questioned at his trial about contradictions between his testimony and statemertts made at the time of his arrest. Over two dissents, the justices reversed an appeals court ruling that set aside the conviction of Glenn Charles for the murder of Theodore Ziefle, found strangled at his home in Ann Arbor in July 1971. JUSTICES THURGOOD MARSHALL and William Brennan dissented, saying they would have upheld the lower court decision. Charles, who had escaped from Jackson Prison, was arrested several days after the murder driving Ziefle's car. He told police he had stolen the car about two miles from the local bus station. At trial, Charles testified the car had been parked adjacent to the bus station. THE PROSECUTOR cross-examined Charles about why he failed to tell arresting officers about the story he presented at trial. The prosecutor implied Charles was not telling the truth on the witness stand. Charles was convicted of first degree murder and sentenced to life. State courts upheld the conviction, but the Sixth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ordered a new trial. The appeals court said the prosecutor violated Charles' rights in asking why he failed to tell police the same story he related at the trial. THAT COURT said the prosecutor's actions violated a 1976 Supreme Court ruling barring the use of a criminal defendant's silence after receiving of governmental assurances. But in an unsigned opinion, the court disagreed that the prior ruling applies to Charles' case. In this case, the court said the cross-examination did not refer to the Charles' right to remain silent. In- stead it asked him why he didn't tell law enforcement officials his trial story at the time of his arrest. "The questions were not designed to draw meaning from silence but to elicit an explanation for a prior inconsistent statement," the court said. BBC says Pakistan developing nuke bomb TECHNICIANS RESTORE "THE Last Supper," Leonardo da Vinci's masterpiece, Officials report a half-inch wide, six-foot long crack has opened on one side of the wa Apostle John. Worsening crack threc Da Vinci's 'The Last Si LONDON (AP) - Pakistan is developing a nuclear bomb with finan- cial help from Libya, the British Broadcasting Corp. said yesterday. The BBC predicted Pakistan will test a nuclear device in 18 months and speculated that India, which has ex- ploded a nuclear device, might wage war on its neighbor and traditional enemy to stop it from developing a nuclear weapons armory. IN A PROGRAM called "Project 706: the Islamic Bomb" on its weekly "Panorama" television slot, the BBC assembled published and- newly gathered material. claiming to show AP Photo Pakistani scientists have the expertise earlier this month in Milan, Italy. and hardware to make nuclear I1 just inches from the figure of the weapons. It said their uranium concentrates are mined by a French company in te n in gNiger, Libya's Moslem neighbor in the African Sahara. ipper The CONSERVATORY are original pigment fading and requiring Homemade in our frequent restoration. Kitchens daily. Six years ago art experts discovered an even greater danger to the master- piece, the presence of a bacterial mold that was slowly eating away what was left of the original pigment. Attuned to your good taste But Fattori and Martelli said the deep M.sa. 11-9 516 E. Liberty crack that opened in the wall of the M-t- monastery refectory posed the greatest 994-5360 Second Chance threat yet to the work. A world famous cook known as Child CAFETERIA HOURS; Said on leaving the League, "I'm so riled!" 11:30-1:15 My art can't compare 5:00-7:15 With the cookery there SNACK BAR It's driving poor Julia wild. 7:1CK4:AR 7:15-4.00 MILAN, Italy (UPI)-Leonardo Da Vinci's. most revered masterpiece, "The Last Supper," is threatened with serious damage by a widening crack that opened in the plaster wall on which it was painted, art experts said yester- day. The experts, government artistic heritage superintendents Costanza Fat- tori and Gilberto Martelli, said the cracked wall may force them to halt public showing of the masterpiece in- definitely. THE FRESCO, completed in 1498, is located in the dining hall of the Santa Maria delle Grazia monastery. Martelli said the widening of the crack, discovered Sunday by a sensing device, has not yet affected Leonardo's actual painted surface. "It (the crack) is the latest of a series of problems that have been afflicting the fresco for a long time," Martelli said. "It's another element that may force us to take drastic decisions." FATTORI AND Martello said the crack is six and one-half feet long and almost an inch wide at one point. It stretches along the right side of the fresco near the painted figure of the Apostle John. The two experts said emergency work has to be begun immediately to prevent lengthening the crack into major areas of the fresco and that long- term restoration of the painting would take at least two years and cost an estimated $1.2 million. The fresco, considered the most famous religious painting in the world and the first major example of high Renaissance art, depicts the dramatic moment when Jesus tells his assembled disciples, "One of you will betray me." Leonardo painted "The Last Supper" for the ruler of Milan at the time, Ludovico Il Moro, and, as he often did on major commissions, experimented with untested pigments. The fresco, once celebrated for its subtle tonal graduations, has suffered over the years, with much of the Send your League Limerick to: TheViWCchIan Manager. Michigan League 227 South Ingalls Next to Hill Auditorium You will receive 2 free dinner Located in the heart of the campus. tickets if your limerick is used in it is the heart of the campus one of our ads. " "e " l I iE _. e . aa_ p i , i r k 1* li #a 4 a a a ,+ ra a +x w