loge 6-Sunday, October 7, 1979-The Michigan Daily Troopers push back Seabrook protesters. Vow iPlaying at Butteerr1 4.w 6 6 .6 (Continued from Page 1) protest leader, who refused to give his name. Some protesters said they would return today and try again to seize con- trol of the plant. As high tide began to flood the mar- shes, protesters began retreating, saying they would regroup on dry land and map new strategy. The more militant vowed to stay. "We're staying until we get the plant, no matter what," said Lea Segal, 22, of Lexington, Mass. Others, like Bob Sanders, 24, of Philadlelphia, were discouraged. "WE'LL JUST have to get more numbers and use a better strategy the next time," he said. TIRE SHOW AKRON, Ohio (AP)-An educational exhibition tracing the history of tire development is scheduled to tour 84 cities in the United States during the next few months. The show, which opened in. Akron, uses multimedia techniques and features an X-ray machine that shows the internal construction of a steel- belted radial tire. It is sponsored by the Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. The Boston-based Coalition for Direc- tion, an anti-nuclear splinter faction which organized the protest, had hoped to draw up to 10,000 demonstrators to the site where the $2.6 billion twin generator plant is being built: The demonstrators have said that if they were arrested they will refuse to identify themselves in an effort to clog the courts. GOV. HUGH GALLEN had said all demonstrators who trespassed at Seabrook this weekend would be arrested. He called in extra judges to process cases quickly. Armed with wire cutters and two 'days worth of food; the protesters left their campsites on private property shortly after dawn yesterday, sloshing, through marshes that surround much of the plant. Approaching from all directions, the protesters-chanting "Sin-ergy" and singing anti-nuclear songs-snipped through the fences and dragged the barricades down with ropes. BATON-WIELDING troopers from five New England states quickly moved in, hosing down the demonstrators with fire hoses, mace and tear gas and driving them back. German shepher'dI attack dogs kept the protesters at bay:; as construction crews replaced the torn down fence sections. Covering their faces with plastic" sheets and makeshift gas mask*' groups of up to 60 demonstrator9°" -redoubled their efforts and charged thie fence again. Princeton dedicates Kent State statue PRINCETON, N.J. (Reuter) - A life-size sculpture commemorating the 1970 killings of four Kent State Univer- sity students by National Guardsmen was dedicated yester- day on the Princeton University campus after being spurned by Kent State officials. The sculpture, by New Jersey artist George Segal, is en- titled, "Abraham and Isaac: In Memory of May 4, 1970." It was commissioned by the Mildred Andrews Foundation.in Cleveland for installation at the Ohio university to com- memorate the killings at an anti-Vietnam war demon- stration. BUT OFFICIALS at the university, where the shootings nearly a decade ago stunned the nation, turned down the gift. They had said it was inappropriate to remember the killings with a sculpture depicting an act of violence. The sculpture, in bronze which has been painted black,, depicts Isaac pleading on his knees, his hands tied, as Abraham stand menacingly before him with a knife. Unlike' the Biblical scene, there is no angel to warn Abraham to sto, or a ram for him to sacrifice instead of his son. "I think it's time to look at that sad situation in persyr tive and see it not as politics, radical left against ra ia right, but see it instead in moral and ethica terms, war bet- ween generations," said Segal. He is known for life-likp sculptures depicting people in ordinary situations. SARAH SCHNEUER, whose daughter Sandra was among- those slain, said at the dedication ceremony: "I wasn't sure prised Kent State rejected it. They always tried to cover upc the facts." A Kent State spokesperson has said: "We'd lose no matter,. what we did." Without money, co-op { may close (Continued from Page 1) dam us 214 S. Unive ity 668-6416 Today at 3:15-5:30-730-9:30 A1RENCE OLIMER G Monday at 7:30 & 9:30 islive'sity di-n 0 Carpenter 434-0130 OPEN AT 6:30 MOONRAKER , L.WANDA JAMtESBiOtNsts NE SJAMES BOND OO7"~ oN V D Daily Photo by JIM KRUZ TWO SATURDAY AFTERNOON shoppers at the People's Produce Co-op, located on Fourth Ave. next to the Wildflour Bakery and the Fourth Ave. Food Co-op, leave the store empty-handed. Due to financial difficulties, the co-op's stock is diminishing, and workers must collect at least $500 to keep it from closing down this week. timistic the co-op will get the loan. "It's my personal opinion that if we.., can get the loan, we're a viable enough= institution that. . we're good for paying itack," said Seidman. Seidman said she thinks the co-op'sF main difficulty is poor business- management. "The basic problem is that we don't have one full-time person' to coordinate everything - it's got to b6 run as a business forit to work." THE CO-OP never has been able to afford a paid staff.: The two salaried' coordinators are paid through federal Comprehensive Employment Training Act (CETA) funds, and one of those -+ Foy - is leaving for another job nex$ week. Due to a government freeze on CETA funds, the co-op can't hire a replacement. Co-op workers are tentativey plen- ning a fund-raising Halloween party,. "Even if we do get the loan (from the; Michigan Federation of Food Co-ops), we're going to have to get a lot more,. money," Foy explained. The store has collected $68 in donations since the sign was-posted by the door yesterday morning., ,t Duncert Series all rr , c -'/ SOLOS / DUETS: AN EVENING WITH CHICK COREA GARY BURTON . : , : .. . .._ K _! s< I : WEd. NOVEMBER 7 8:00 pm HILL AudiTORiUM . .. ELLA FITZGERALD SUN. DECEMBER 9 8:00 pm HILL AudiToRiuM Carla Bley Band SAT. 7:30 pm JANUARy 12 pwlncipuluoe tiw KBk POWER CENTER At the Michigan Union t OR s Send $2100 To Season Ticke A joyous musical unity-combining three of the Soviet Union's most exciting traditions, Their Ann Arbor appearance will be overflowing with favorites: Mussorgsky's "Great Gate at Kiev" from Pictures at an Exhibition; Bizet's "Habanera" from Carmen; Tchaikovsky's "Russian Dance" from Swan lake..-- fl.in ._mHILN. eufl &"% t 1 T an h a l e N ter w 1 , . ... . _ .. I