einglass Tells Truth of Chicago Tria . . J that w i i n c b ' tise incliKird ^.K incnibcf ll! Briii.-iii iino-. >.vill-i • •• •'.-'' r . i s • r. oil no! P.. '.-••- a few "lil •• right now. Weinglass r.ia;iv stone;-•• • in s p i t e Oi '' • 'V t n a i - ^ ^ Ilu'..11 ::i OI; to sav thiit - lariiod • ; •'. : : , r e r -vpiirliT.S s :-.^ - - p . . v . i M \ 1 ,!:iC< fCiiorii r, s i t e d the Vtii i iri who con»ifiui> coiiipiutin.-u mat :>onte is '.: • :-ii ;.ji siatemcnls of c h i d prosecuting attorney Foran. The young attorney started his speech referring to the recent incident on the campus at Kent State. Weinglass stated that this event was related to the conspiracy trial because it exemplified the attitude of the present U. S. administration. According to Weinglass, hiesiueni Nixon's and Vice-president Agnew's actions have condoned rather than repudiated the behavior of the national guard. Weinglass, in discussing the trial, related the frustrated attempts of Bobby Scale to obtain an adjournment since his attorney was ill. When an adjournment was denied. Scale asked the court for permission to represent himself. This request was also denied. Scale was handcuffed to a chair and bound with a gag for three days after repeated attempts to lepresent himself failed. Weinglass went on to explain the controversial " R a p Brown l a w , " of the 1968 Civil Rights Act w-icb pro- weni editor was distorting his stories. The attorney stated that the defense was confident that they would win the case before it came to trial, using the findings of the Walker Commission report, the report of the President's council on crime and numerous witnesses as evidence. Weinglass stated that the defense was denied the the use of the Walker report. He also stated that the validity of the trial was questionable in the minds of the defense when the jury was picked in two hours and 55 minutes in comparison to the two or three weeks it normally takes to pick a jury for this sort d trial. The questions asked in picking the jury was another point Weinglass reiterated upon. Judge Julius Hoffman only asked the prospective jurors their name, occupation, address, how mahy children they had, sixiuse's occupation and if they could be fair in coming to a decision on this c a s e . ^ ' . •0 i l i X i on ]:V. .. V. • n , > - | i , ! .• I l l i l T l l . i : •• , ; ( • • , • • i ••. . , ' • ••• . lud).',e Hoffman. The Judge withdrew his denial the following day but Abernathy had already left Chicago for Mississippi. Weinglass told of his high regard for Ramsey Clark for allowing the truth to be printed before the trial came to court. F"en after Clark had left office as U. .S attorney general, he spoke as a witness on behalf of the defense at the trial against the persnation of a few members from the justice department. An interesting facet of Clark's appearance in court was that Judge Hoffman issued a court order stating that no one present in the room (the jury had been dismissed during Clark's testimony) was to mention the former attorney general's presence at the trial. Tom Hayden later received a six-month jail sentence for mentioning Clark's presence before the jury. According to Weinglass, of the defense's 103 witnesses to take the ^ LOCK H A V E N S T A T E C O L L E G E • •'•-r-r the n g ht to take the s t a n d b\ E AGLE EYE Vol. XIII No. 1 0 5 • • :i : . . . Kevcrcii on a n d s i n g e r s .ludy (\>1• •• ^' u t h t i e . i f t a U on the iittempi : i-laipU AncTMthy • '. is :i,,-: :;y s incc ; i.'t wed. May 6 1970 stand the FBI nroducedat least one typewritten page on each individual called to the witness stand within minutes. The attorney stated that their conspiracy sentence is presently being taken to an appeals court. He also confessed that contempt charges ran high throughout the trial as the eight defendents and the two lawyers combined received over 19 years on contempt charges. Weinglass himself faces 14 counts of contempt of court with a possible sentence of 20 months and 16 days in prision. In concluding he expressed his desire that the truth and full information reach the people of America on all issues hoped and that the trial partially enabled that to come about. SCC Agenda Announced I The following is the agenda this evening's SCC meeting: Call to order Roll call .Approval of minutes Corre.spondence Standing uommittee reporis Special committee reports Old business a. approval of budget h. bookstore decision 8. New business a. c l a s s boycott 9. Announcements 10. Adjournment Of prime importance this evening the executive board will present for discussion the idea of having a day off from c l a s s e s in iiiemorium for the four students killed at Kent S t a t e . Along with this they would like to have a forum or panel discussion concerning the recent actions of the Nixon administration. The oihei matter of importimco is th-.i 111,- i.>..ard of director.s wili '•.'.: • . .' Ill vote upon u dt'i si. ., .-.iher liicy want ic . " ioiirue liiirwit? and . ;..•'.;.;;! liiirtzell cunceriiinji, !iic fijr 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Hadiey, Sabatella Awarded a Gold Whistles .idk M W f DID YOU KNOW T H A T : The first use of gunpowdt'i in Western warfare alleged!) occured ot the Bottle of Bon nockburn in Scotlond In 1.314Probably the w o r l d ' s f i r s : dictionary was pubiishad by Ho Shin of C h i n a . Sarah Polk was her husbano'; confidential secretary, 'be f i r s t time thot o P r M i d e n l ' s wifa had »«#r served in (hot capacity. :tl« 1970- T h e n e w o f f i c e r s are a s follows: p r e s . P a t t i T r e e s ; vice-pres., Jane McNierney; t r e a s . , K a r e n Wilt; r e c . s e c , Susan Kodad; corr. s e c . , Chris Woodland; and k e e p e r of t h e grades, Dawne Williams. Cone r a l u l a l u i n s t presenl was Mrs. Vee l o n e r . Delia / e t a w o m a n of the \ e a r a n d c o a i h ot the w o m e n ' s 0 1 \ i n p i e swim t e a m . She p r e s e n t ed her m m les of t h e 1968 Olympic G a m e s in M e x i c o . We would a l s o like to c o n g r a t u l a t e S i s t e r Linda R e p p w h o w a s o n e of the five finalists in t h e M i s s L o c k H a v e n P a g a e n t . The term " b o y c o t t " comes from the name of Captain Charles Boycott, a ruthless land agent i n County Mayo, Ireland, who was the v i c t i m of the f i r s t boycott. . A\D HERE'S A TROOP REDUCTION AND HERE'S NO DRAET CALL EOR OCTOBER AND HERE'S . . .' Ill / Serin Tl) Ile A Vrrli, the upriiming paperback nn tlie career and tliiiikiiig of K. lUickmaster Fuller, " l i i i i k y " is quoted lliusly: "(letting 1(1 the moon eamiiuflages the real goal iif llie space program: conslriictiiiu of ^pal•e stations from which llie inililary emilil rule the universe." . . . .Muliainmail Ali nee Cassiu* (JIay. wlio"s still the u n d e f e a t e d heavyweight elianip says. "I could lie a liig star in movies and lelevision today. I've lu-eii offered v a r i o u s things. Hut lliey're all traps. I live in a world nf truth. I won't get up on this ..how and dance or show my leelli like .Neiiioes ilo or niaki' love to a while woman. I respect myself. I'm a star all m e r the lilaek world. I rely oil Illy (iod. I don't neetl anytliiiii^ else". . . To he sealed in one Creenwifli \ illage coffee house you just |)ull up a coflin . . . 'flie.se ohser\atioiis eonie from Marshall (Th* .Medium Is The Message) MeLiihan: 1 ) 'file TV generation of students will eoiiliniie lo liallle colleges (and the rest of the FsialilislinienI) until tlie\ rule lliem. 21 The real aelivists are only I t years old now and have not reached the scene of action yet. .'it .Mini-skirts are only the first step toward Instant .'sex. 1 i Experience is of no u~e in hu-iiiess. therefore look for a 2(l-\ear ohi president of IliM . . . The perfect button to give Pops or I nele Hill: Dirty Old Men Need l.oxiiig Too! . . . Doisiin R a d e r iColunihia '681 .S.D.S. Aclivist, told (Campus R a d i o Voice c o r r e s lioniUnl Dennis Mc(]ahe- '"'I'here is very little overt sexuality in the movement. It has a kind of puritanical caste, makiii^L il dillerent from the French and (German movements, 'file swearing, obscenity, long hair and wiaker's clothes are to protect \nur-clf against selling out" . . . .Momi^iii ill P o p : -Mama Cass, The .Mothers of I n n ' n t i o n , .Mother Lode, and Cal Mother anil the Ail-Night \ e w s l i o \ s . .And now, on their latest L P it's Peter, Paul and Mummy, Oh niollier! , . . H i p that they're on to a good thing in pushing (at l a s t ! ) s u p e r - c a r s , auto makers predict there'll he drag racing in midtown stadiums here within the next five years , , . I n s t a n t money can lie made in short-order snacks with instant iced tea mixes, pre-sweelened and pre-flavored in lemon, lime and mint. Just add water, stir and add ice. Make grilled cheese sandwiches hy wrapping the bread and cheese in aluminum foil and putling your iron, (set at 'wool') on lop of each side for 1 minute . . . Peter (Ea.iy Rider) Fonda posed for some nude shots b u t n o l o n g e r speaks to the photographer-friend I female) who took them. She might at least have told him she was selling ihem to the New York Review of Sex. Hut then what's Peter got to hide':" . . . Bob Downey, who wrote and produced Putney Swope, is having trouble raising bread for his next film project. The story's a <'ontemporary re-telling of Jesus' return as J a m e s T.Chrysler, He speeds around in fast cars helping the poor and preaching against racial prejudice and the war in Vietnam. These actions make him many enemies. Betrayed hy a follower, he's lured into a Los Angeles used car lot where he's hanged hy a hate group . . . .And what constructive thing will you he doing on the Great Day (Ocinber 15) ? . . . B u m p e r sticker popular wilh hip westerners: Custer Asked For It . . . New look on a New York c a m p u s : Do-it-yourself poncho. Two hath towels, in a West PointPepperell jungle print, joined at the shoulders, (leaving room for your h e a d ) , left unjoined al the sides, worn over a body stocking, in flesh nr contrasting color. For faculty, or parents, sash it in a Ue, or a chain worn low. For intimate friends, why bother? Original and easy to wash . . . no ironing . , . Nice in pairs. Newark Captures Judo Tourney LOCK H A V E N - N e w a r k College of e n g i n e e r i n g d o m i n a t e d t h e s e c ond a n n u a l L o c k H a v e n S t a t e C o l l e g e j u d o t o u r n a m e n t h e l d May 2 , t a k i n g t h r e e of s i x f i r s t p l a c e s a n d t h r e e s e c o n d s for a t e a m s c o r e of 1 4 1 . L H S ' s ' A ' team took second w i t h 87 p o i n t s a n d t h e ' B ' t e a m c a m e in third w i t h S": D o i n t s . Slippery Rock State College, w i t h o n l y four c o m p e t i t o r s in t h e six-man round robin eliminations, s c o r e d 25 p o i n t s . L H S t o o k t h r e e f i r s t s a n d two seconds. The R o c k e t s ' Berner w a s t h e t e a m ' s o n l y p l a c e wi.aner w i t h a s e c o n d in t h e 140-pound and under c l a s s . Larry Rippey, a NAIA champion w r e s t l e r for L H S t o o k a f i r s t in the 155-pound class. Other p l a c e w i n n e r s for L H S w e r e : R e e d a t 170 a n d E v a n s a t h w t . w h o t o o k f i r s t w h i l e Miller a t 185 a n d M a z o t t a a t 2 0 0 c a p t u r e d seconds. Officials for the tournament were Clyde Herter of Lock Haven, Jackson Howell of Coudersport and Thomas Lambert »f Slippery Rock. The placewinners: 140 and under — 1, Lhotak (NCE), 2. Berner (SR). 155 and under — 1. Rippey (LH), 2. Park (NCE). 170 and under — 1. Reed (LH), 2. Velazquez (NCE). 185 and under — 1. Strauss (NCE), 2. Miller (LH). 200 and under — 1. Alvord (NCEl, 2. Mazzotta (LH). 200 and over - 1. Evans (LH), 2.Dujnic(NCE). William Henry Harrison died after having served only one month as President, the result ef pneumonia brought on by delivering a two>heur inaugural address in a freezing wind.