A I POLICE BRUTALITY See Editorial Page V' LIEt IEIUIIQ SOME SNOW High-Tos Low-20s See Today for details Vol. LXXXIX, No. 65 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, November 21, 1978 Ten Cents Ten Pages SOME SHOT, MOST DRANK CYANIDE-TAINTED WA TER Cultists engage in mass suicide Goalpost antics no laughing matter BY JOHN SINKEVICS When the goalposts are torn down by happy home-town fans at the conclusion of a victorious football game, the mischievous act is usually looked upon as just a rowdy, long-standing college tradition. But following last Saturday's Michigan-Purdue contest, students who rushed onto the field were shocked to find armed policemen swinging night- sticks and shoving students who attem- pted to pull the posts down.- Many students who witnessed the "postgame" activities said students who were near or on the goalposts were struck, by policemen or dragged from the crossbars. "'The situation was too overwhelming to believe," said Bruce Carol, a sophomore in the Literary College (LSA). "I was on the field to see what wasgoing on, and everyone of the cops was swinging his nightstick. Some were really swinging and others were just puhing and tapping." SY BERMAN, an LSA sophomore, said he saw several students hit by the Ann Arbor policemen who were stationed on the field after the game. He said the actions were unnecessary. "One kid was trying to climb up the post and a policeman smacked him right in the chest with his club, knocking him down," he explained. "The police knew the posts were coming down, I don't know why they took the actions they did." Captain Kenneth Klinge, the officer in charge of the Ann Arbor Police Department's football game detail, said he knew of no such violent inciden- ts taking place and said no complaints were filed with the department. "I BELIEVE the accusations are false. I don't know of any arrests that were made, and I saw no use of ex- cessive force," he said. Klinge said, however, that two officers did receive minor injuries after Saturday's game. Klinge said the key concern of the policemen and the University's athletic department was to ensure that no one would be severely injured by the con- siderable weight of the goalposts when they collapsed. "If the goalposts came down, they could kill somebody," said Klinge. "In any event, the people were trying to commit an act of malicious destruction to property, and in a different situation could have been arrested for this act." ATHLETIC Director Donald Canham said ensuring the safety of the students is the prime consideration of security personnel at the football games. He said injuries have been sustained in the past (one student had his leg broken af- ter last year's Ohio State game) when the goalposts were torn down, and policemen have been instructed to keep the playing field clear. "The policy is to stop people from coming onto the field," explained Canham. "I have no control over the police department and neither do you. The policeman is just doing his duty. If for some reason, someone gets hit on the head, it's part of his job." "Anybody who goes onto the field af- ter a game is pretty dumb," he added. "His ticket obviously doesn't permit See POST-GAME, Page 7 409 reported dead; hundreds missing GEORGETOWN, Guyana (AP) - Guyanese soldiers searched through a steaming jungle yesterday for hundreds of American religious zealots who fled their remote com- pound after the suicide-murder deaths of at least 409 fellow cultists. Some were shot, but most ap- parently lined up and took doses of cyanide poison mixed in a tub with flavored water, government officials said. A witness said poison was spoon- fed to babies All were believed to be Americans, with most of them from California. THEY PERISHED at about the same time Saturday that enraged members of the sect attacked an investigative group led by Rep. Leo Ryan (D-Calif.), killing Ryan and four others at a dirt airstrip. By* midafternoon, soldiers reported counting the bodies of 163 women, 138 men and 82 children. A police spokesman said later the toll was 409 as the terrible task continued at the set- tlement in this small South American country tucked below Venezuela. He said bodies still were being found., Also found in the fields, huts and communal dormitories were 17 shotguns, 14 rifles, seven pistols, a flare* gun and large amounts of ammunition, government officials said. BY DARK, police and soldiers had found only 12 survivors from among the estimated 500-900'who had fled into the bush. Among the dead were Jim Jones, founder of the People's Temple set- tlement called Jonestown, his wife and one of their sons. Jones, the offspring of an inter-racial marriage, and his followers, both blacks and whites, established the inland settlement last year. It was carved from the jungle in an isolated region 150 miles northeast of Georgetown and 50 miles south of the Venezuelan border. The 46-year-old Jones, who had seven children, founded the sect in the 1950s in Indianapolis with the avowed purpose of breaking down class distinctions. His "children," as "Dad" Jones called his followers, were both black and white. AFTER MOVING to California, Jones became a political figure, crusading for liberal causes, and even- tually was appointed chairman of the San Francisco Housing Authority. But reports of his unorthodox, authoritarian control over the sect - with allegations of brutal treatment of wayward mem- bers - led to his resignation from that post. He called the charges "outrageous lies," and in August 1977 came with some 1,200 followers to Guyana. The goal of their farming commune was to become self-sufficient. Charles Kraus, a reporter for the Washington Post who was with the Ryan party but escaped death, reported that scores of bodies were packed in the hall, a round pavilion about 120 feet in diameter with a roof but no walls. Other bodies were in clusters outside the hall. S. Africa group me snooungs in Guyana thaL ie u Rep. Leo Ryan and four others, said yester- day that the assailants picked andb yd chose their targets. "They pushed some people aside ... so they wouldn't be hit," Sung said after By STEVE SHAER undergoing surgery in the hospital at Special to The Daily Andrews Air Force Base in suburban NEW YORK - The plenary session of Maryland. the Northeast Coalition for the "IT WAS DEFINITELY their inten- Liberation of South Africa (NECLSA), tion to shoot the congressman," he ad- held Sunday at New York University, ded. failed to complete its agenda or pass Sung said the shots were fired by four resblutions for future coordinated ac- or five persons over a period of about 10 tions due to discord between activist minutes. He said that after he was shot organizations present. he stayed on the ground for at least 30 The final day of the three-day con- minutes before moving. ference, intended to create a unified The technician was asked why he national movement to break all U.S. thought he and ether news personnel ties with the white minority regime in were targeted. "I think they believed Southein Africa, had started on a good we were there to destroy the camp," he note. A proposal for a national week of replied. anti-apartheid action was passed by the Fleming bids farewell to faculty iscord coalition with a minimal amount of debate. The snag in the session began during debate on the second of 14 proposals to be voted on. The resolution clarifying the principles of unity for NECLSA was debated ov r three hours and little progress Was made. Participants talked out of turn frequently and the chair had difficulty maintaining order. DUE TO THE problems, a member of the chair said, "We recognize, openly, that there is a split in this conference. We therefore suspend the agenda and open it up to political discussion." . Activists from several political groups spoke with the overwhelming majority blaming the problem on the ,Young Socialist Alliance (YSA) and the The YSA and SWP don't have much grassroots sup- port so they try to domi- nate meetings.' -Jeff Iolm an, Harvard conferee Socialist Workers' Party (SWP). Their complaint was that these groups stacked the conference with their sup- porters in order to dominate the session. YSA member .Brenda Franklin, of Boston, said, "We want to build a movement to support liberation. The majority of the people who voted for the See S. AFRICA, Page 2 BY LEONARD BERNSTEIN Robben Fleming bade farewell to the faculty yesterday and warned them of more problems the University is likely to face in the years to come. The 61-year-old University president expanded on the theme of last month's State of the University address before a Faculty Senate audience of about 100, calling on them to recognize the growing problems of University-State relations, minorities and women, student financial aid, emerging scholars and international programs. Fleming warned the Senate that "there will be a resurgence of effort to resurrect the power of the State Board (of Education) in the days ahead." AND HE ADDED that because the declining number of eighteen-year-olds will force University enrollments down, "for the first time, some of our sister universities will join" in that ef- fort. "I have thought in the past, and still think, that is a mistake," Fleming said in reference to attempts to increase State Board of Education power to Tuesday I guide University affairs. Fleming mentioned a State Board of Education proposal currently being considered which would establish "spheres of influence" around the state's 15 state-supported universities as one example of this trend. THE PRESIDENT'S speech at the semi-annual meeting of the Univer- sity's entire faculty also considered the "very complex" problems of minority enrollment and advancement oppor- tunities for both minorities and women. Fleming said decreasing minority enrollment was "not so much related to admissions as to retention," and that the limited minority pool and inadequate pre-college education many minority students receive affects their enrollment at the University. But Fleming came to the defense of the government in this area. Noting that "we frequently complain about government projects" as badly administered and poorly thought out, Fleming urged the audience to respect the government's contribution to the situation of minorities because "we don't move unless somebody needles us to do it.' "WE CAN'T SPEND all our time complaining. There are great social gains to be made for this country if we make these programs work." The message was identical when he turned to advancement possibilities for See FLEMING, Page 2 Council tables motion on alcoholpossession Diggs sentenced; faces up to three years in prison bY JUDY RAKOWSKY City Council last night tabled a motion to penalize alcohol consumers between the ages of 18 and 21 with a five legislature is working on penalty provisions for Proposal D and the Ann Arbor state representative Perry Bullard is proposing a similar fine ~a s By AP and UPI DIGGS WAS found guilty Oct. 7 of in-