. '-. ..i : '1 MAR WIL See editorial page 4kp ~IaiIQ INDIANA SUMMER See Today for details Ninety Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXX. No. 45 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, October 27, 1979 Ten Cents Ten Pages Internal problems plague huii By JOHN GOYER, Last in three-part series A year after its members were appointed, Ann Arbor's citizens advisory panel on Human Rights is still in an "organizational" stage, according to panel members and observers. The seven-member Human Rights Commission is' responsible for advising City Council and Per- sonnel/Human Rights Department staff on city anti-discrimination programs and educating the public about the effects of discrimination. BUT CRITICS of the panel's performance suggest that it has failed to identify and address problems of discrimination in the city. "Ask them what they've done in the past year, that's all I have to say," declared Kenneth Latta (D-First Ward). "The last six months to a year, I'm not aware of much the new commission has done," Gerald Bell (R-Fifth Ward) said. EVEN THE Vice Chairwoman of the com- mission, Sherry Chin, agreed: "I really think that if you were to try to make a story about the Human Rights Commission right now, there wouldn't be much to say." Chin cited membership turnover and lack of a defined role for the group under the revised Human Rights ordinance of Match, 1978 as reasons for its inability to provide direction to the Human Rights staff in City Hall. Chin and commission members Bill Cash and. Janice Caldwell referred inquiries about the commission to its chairman, William Alexander. BUT MONDAY, even as Chin spoke, Alexander resigned from the human rights panel. His resignation brought to three the number of commissioners who have left the board recently or who will lave soon. Former commission member Doulas Buchanan moved out of the city in August. and John Powell's term will expire Nov. 27. Mayor Louis Belcher confirmed Tuesday that Alexander had resigned, acknowledging that tan rights1 "friction with the (Personnel/Human Rights) Department staff contributed to Alexander's decision. "I THOUGHT the commission was getting far too much into trying to solve its internal problems," instead of fighting discrimination in the city, Belcher said. He added that he has asked the commission for an evaluation of the city's human rights programs and the group's "internal problems" should not in- terfere in that evaluation. Belcher also said Alexander's appointment to another citizen's commission played a part in his See CITIZENS, Page 7 panel S. Korea CIA chief kills President Park; U.S. troops on alert Daily Photo by PETER SERLING In anticipation of today's homecoming football clash, Univesity students yesterday smashed cars and stormed the Diag shouting "Let'sGo Blue." In a demolition derby pitting northside fraternities against those to the south, a crowd of more than 150 witnesses the an- nual Evans Scholars Car Bash at the north end of E. University. Street. I The south rose to take the vic- tory by a score of 96.92 to 92.62 in the contest that left a Maverick and Falcon, circa early '70s, mangled. JUDGING THE event were state Sen. Edward Pierce'and former marching band director George Cavender. The autos, which were inoperable to begin with and even less so after the contest, were donated by a local auto supply shop. After dark, "Meechigan" an- nouncer Bob Ufer (above) alleged before a Diag crowd that the Maize and Blue are "No. 1." From AP, UPI and Reuter SEOI L, South Korea - President Park Chung-hee, 62, authoritarian ruler of South Korea for 18 years, was shot to death last night by the chief of the Korean Central Intelligence Agency in a dinner party quarrel that exploded in- to bloodshed. The South Korean government said Park and five other persons were slain in a gun battle last night that erupted following an argument between the KCIA head, Kim Jae-kyu, and Park's chief bodyguard, Cha Chi-chul, at a dinner given by Kim. Cha also was killed and Kim was being questioned by military authorities, according to the broadcast announcement by Infor- mation Minister Kim Seong-jin. HIS REPORT said the KCIA chief accidentally fired the shot that woun- ded Park and the president was taken to a nearby army hospital where he died at 7:50 p.m. ( 6:50 a.m. EDT). President Carter was advised of the situation at 2 p.m. EPT and the Defense Department immediately ordered the 38,000 American troops in South Korea into an increased state of alert. The information minister's announ- cement came several hours after the government had declared over national radio that Prime Minister Choi Kyu- hah was named acting president under a constitutional clause that permits a successor to be named if the president is unable to perform his duties. That report made no mention of Park's death. RUMORS OF an assassination swept See S. KOREAN, Page 2 CPark ... assumes presidency ... 18-year rule ends South Africa denies INFLATION RATE HIGHEST SINCE 1946: Prices s pral: Kahn sees no end From AP and PI'I WASHINGTON - The worst rate of inflation in 33 years continued its assault on Americans' pocketbooks in September as consumer prices in- creased another 1.1 per cent, the gover- nment said yesterday. Administration officials added to the gloom of the latest price report by con- ceding temporary defeat in their efforts to slow inflation, which was atan an- nual rate of 13.2 for the first nine mon- ths of the year. "I SEE No short term relief in sight," said Alfred Kahn, President Carter's chief anti-inflation adviser. He told a congressional committee it would be "hard to quarrel" that inflation will be above 10 per cent for a long time. Inflation has been the chief factor in a drop in the purchasing power of workers' paychecks, which fell another 0.7 per cent in September and was down 4.4 per cent from a year earlier. Con- sumer prices for the 12-month period ending in September were up 12.1 per cent. While the most dramatic increases in September were for food, housing and fuel, prices were higher for virtually everything therconsumer uses. Even drowning one's financial sorrows in drink was more expensive, as the price of alcoholic beverages rose 0.6 per cent. THE CONSUMER price report con- tained the following bad news: * Food prices rose 0.9 per cent, the first substantial increase in food costs' after three months of little or no change. Fruits and vegetables were up 2.7 per cent. . Gasoline rose 3.1 cents to 99.8 cents a gallon, an increase of 31.3 cents since December. The price is the average for all types. * Home heating oil rose 4.8 cents to an average 84.8 cents a gallon, an in- crease of 30.3 cents so far this year. * Housing prices rose sharply for the eighth consecutive month, up 1.2 per cent. Home financing costs rose 2.5 per cent because of higher mortgage in- terest rates. John Layng, a Labor Department economist, offered an historical prospective on the 1979 inflation level. He said there was a good chance that inflation would finish the year at the highest rate since 1946, when the United States was struggling to recover from World War II. nuke basi From AP and Renter JOHANNESBURG, South Africa - South African leaders yesterday ridiculed U.S. intelligence reports suggesting that this country may have set off a nuclear test explosion last month. And in Washington, government of- ficials backed away from U.S. in- telligence reports suggesting South Africa had detonated a nuclear device in a remote area of the Southern Hemisphere. "THERE IS NO independent eviden- ce that would link a particular country" with the suspected explosion of the nuclear device, said a senior Defense Department official, asking that he not be named. And another government source; also asking anonymity, said, "There is no reason whatsoever to implicate South Africa in this." This source said "no one really knows" vwhat actually oc- curred in the remote area where the blast is reported to have taken place. A one-second burst of light is the only U.S. evidence thet a nuclear blast might have occurred in the vicinity of South Africa last month, a senior Pen- tagon official added, THE BRIGHT flash was picked up September 22 by a U.S. satellite especially designed to detect nuclear t reports blasts. Within hours the information was known to President Carter and his top aides, who relayed it to Washington's European allies. .If the Americans don't know what is going on, I suggest they first make sure of their facts before they run away with the idea," said Foreign Minister Pik Botha. "I KNOW absolutely nothing about the matter," said Botha. "Why don't you ask the Russians or the Chinese, or even the Americans for that matter?" If South Africa did acquire nuclear weapons, they would be the seventh country in the world to do so after the United States, the Soviet Union, Britain, France, China, and India. Secretary of State Cyrus Vance said the United States had been working for months to obtain South Africa's signature to the Nuclear. Non- proliferation Treaty which would preclude its development of nuclear weapons. "They have refused so far to do that," he said, "but they have said that they would not develop nuclear weapons. "We do not yet have any evidence that they have. "I think the devefopment of nuclear weapons by them would of course be a de-stabilizing and dangerous' step for- ward,.. Mr. Vance said. Police arrest 4 in Ann Arbor cocaine bust By TIMOTHY YAGLE Four persons were arrested early yesterday morning when a team of un- dercover police officers seized an un- determined amount of cocaine from an Ann Arbor residence, Ann Arbor Police and a witness said yesterday. Ann Arbor Police Captain Robert Conn said the amount "was an ap- preciable amount for a sale, at least one 'dose." According to police and the witness, a team of WANT (Wayne Area Narcotics Team) undercover narcotics agents purchased the cocaine from four college-aged persons at 1512 Geddes Rd. between midnight Thursday and 12:45 a.m. yesterday, and then made the arrests __________________________________________________________________________________________ S WCCAA appeal A panel of three state Court of Appeals judges has ruled that the University's written argument in the Washtenaw County Coalition Against Apartheid (WCCAA) appeal of an April decision will be allowed to stand. That earlier ruling, allowed the University to bar protestors from Regents meetings. The University requested the ruling after the March Regents meeting when the WCCAA disrupted the Regents meeting to protest the University's investments in frend stood guard by the candy machine. Suddenly the friend threw the quarter in the air, signalling to the assassin, and a woman walked by. She spotted the assassin and walked into the room. 'Are you looking for a guy with curly hair," she whispered, "because he's right outside." "No," the assassin smiled sadistically, "I'm looking for you." The assassin pulled out her gun and shot the woman. She was dead. Stranger than fiction? No, it's reality in East Quad where Killer has once again taken over the minds of mid-term crazed and dorm food-fed residents. Killer, which players. By Friday at 3 p.m. more than 95 people were off for that big East Cloud in the sky. On the inside Turn to the editorial page for the Current State of Con- sumerism in the Pirgim Awareness Column ... The Per suasions on Arts Page 5 ... and read all about the opening of the Michigan Hockey Season on Sports, Page 8. iw i I