N* rSTUDENT FILES SUIT WITHOUT ATTORNEY: Nicaragua authorities "tO claim to hat revolt (Continued from Page 1) ilumn of black smoke rose from the 'ity. A warplane circled the city, spraying achine gun fire. Troops of the ational guard, which is Nicaragua's army and police force, said the plane was attacking fleeing rebels. McLENDON SAID the rebel troops n the barricades appeared tobe .eenagers with old rifles. "They were very young and didn't seem to know Nhat they were doing," he said. "They "ere very much different from the ropps normally controlling access to cities where the rebels had been fighting." There were no reliable casualty reports from the national guard or from the rebels, who are led by the San- dinista National Liberation Front. Opposition groups vowed to fight against Somoza and called the gover- nment actions in the four cities "genocide, extermination and an- nihalation." THE REV. ERNESTO Cardenal, an elderly Roman Catholic priest who claims Sandinista membership, said in San Jose, Costa Rica, that the guerrillas were not defeated. "The Sandinista front has not lost. It has had a great victory. The fact that it could not hold the cities for a long time and had to withdraw does not signify a defeat," he said. The uprising, the latest and bloodiest in nine months of violence in Nicaragua, began September 9 with rebel attacks on cities throughout the country. SOMOZA'S 7,500-MAN national guard, armed and trained by the United States, finally bottled up the rebels in the three northwestern cities of Leon, Chinandega and Esteli. Leon fell Satur- day. Chinandega fell Sunday. The Sandinistas take their name from Cesar Augusto Sandinio, a Nicaraguan who led guerrilla warfare against U.S. Marines in the 1930s. The group was. strongly Marxist-Leninist when foun- ded in 1960 but this year has been sup- ported by conservative business and clergy groups in Nicaragua that want Somoza out. A nationwide strike that businessmen joined to try to force his resignation is in its fourth week. Somoza has vowed not to step down until his six-year term ends in 1981. C REPORTERS WHO visited Leonand Chinandega after the towns were recaptured quoted residents as saying the hardcore Sandinistas had been joined by youths fighting with a variety of weapons. When the guard began its air bom- bardments, the residents said, the San- dinistas slipped into the hills. National guard troops would not im- mediately permit reporters into Esteli but those who visited Leon and Chinan- dega said entire blocks were burned. Residents buried civilian dead in un- marked graves for fear the ntional guard would link any gunshot death with resistance and arrest other mem- bers of the family. Most of the young men fled Chinandega, the residents said, because they feared arrest by the troops. F it's great- We did it UM Styists at the tUNION Chet, Dave & Harold IMACL6 OF -l 1 N A [Q rr C7OMP~A N Y Why go to the corner drug sore when you can come to our professional beauty solon and purchase pro- fessional products such as, " KMS Nucleoprotein * Ihirmock Deadline set or EMU striA YPSILANTI (UPI)-A judge, acting on a lawsuit brought by a student who claims he's getting cheated out of a college education, yesterday gave both sides in the Eastern Michigan Univer- sity (EMU) strike four days to settle their differences. If thereris noagreement by 8 a.m. Monday, Washtenaw County Circuit Judge Ross Campbell said he would or- der striking faculty members back to work under their old contract which ex- pired Aug. 31. ROSS SET THE deadline at the con- clusion of a seven hour show cause hearing on a suit filed by Eric Williams, a 23-year-old EMU senior from Grand Rapids. Williams, unable to get an at- torney to take his case, presented-his own arguments.,..r The judge said the strike was "paten- tly illegal" and agreed with Williams that a long walkout could cause "irreparable damage" to thousands of students. Williams, a senior who plans to enroll. in law school next year, argued that the university failed to inform him when he- registered for the fall term that he would have to cross picket lines to at- tend classes. His suit names both EMU and the American Association of University Professors, which represen- ts some 600 faculty members. ALTHOUGH THE judge declined to issue an immediate back-to-work or- der, he also refused to dismiss Williams' suit as requested by an AAUP attorney. EmUs fa tember 13, were sched students att Although mediate rea the union s ning of thes court order. EMU AN] tedly farf economic i economic is In Detro ministrativ tinued ye University- The Michigan Daily-Thursday, September 21, 1978-Page 11 V3 !e settlement i culty walked off the job Sep- university with an enrollment of 35,000 the day fall term classes students. lIed to begin for about 18,000 Wayne State President Thomas Bon- the Ypsilanti campus. ner released the text of a letter he snt to AAUP officials had no im- faculty and staff members urging a action to yesterday's ruling, quick settlement to the dispute and' aid last week at the begin- pressing his disappointment that, strike that it would obey any unions rejected a nearly $1 million c tract improvement. FM THE AAUP were repor- "I am disturbed, baffled and dee l,' from settlement on both worried," Bonner said. PTV ssues and some 11 key non- "No further offer is possible withox* ssues. -more cuts, possible layoffs and ev it, a strike by 1,600 ad- tually a tuition increase. In good e e and clerical workers con- science, I cannot authorize this in . sterday at Wayne Stae ness to those affected and the overa -the 'state's third largest good of the university." Cox nixes Nixon return By LEONARD BERNSTEIN Former Watergate Special Prosecutor Archibald Cox said yester- day during a Detroit appearance he does "not think there is any place" for former President Richard Nixon in public life. Acknowledging a "bifurcated feel- ing," Cox said, "I still think that all of us should unsparingly condemn what he did." Cox also expressed sympathy for the personal anguish Nixon suffered as a result of his resignation. SEVERAL HUNDRED lawyers at Detroit's massive Renaissance Center heard Cox say: "I don't want to see you (Nixon) suffer, but when you're looking for a position of public trust, I'm not going to forget the past." THE HARVARD Law School professor, who was fired by Nixon during the famous "Saturday Night Massacre" in 1973 made his remarks at a press conference before delivering a speech to the Labor Relations Law Sec- tion at yesterday's opening session of the forty-third annual meeting of the State Bar of Michigan. The lawyers at the Ren. Cen. expec- ting to hear Senator Patrick Moynihan were instead treated to twenty minutes of gags delivered by comedian Bill Cosby. Claiming that his lawyer had inven- ted a new word, "write-offable," Cosby told the assembly of attorneys: "I paid $30,000 for it." Cox tackled a variety of questions in lis forty-five minute news conference. Questioned about guidelines regulating the relationships between university faculty and intelligence agencies which are now being considered at many campuses across the country, Cox ex- pressed his opposition to "any under- cover work on campus on behalf of the CIA" and particularly to undercover recruiting of foreign students. COX WAS ONE of the framers of the guidelines drawn up at Harvard University. University officials are currently proposals. considering similar Cox expressed doubt, however, of the necessity for the establishment of a nation-wide organization to counteract government spying. "Qualitatively, I am sympathetic to their point of view. But quantitatively, I don't see enough spying to get excited about it," he said. * ii i .. . 71 I You will have the opportunity to order from your Josten's College Ring Specialist: DATE TiME PLACE Wed.-Fri. Sept. 20-22 11:00 to 4:00 Michigan. 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