Wage 2-Tuesday, November 6, 1979-The Michigan Daily U.N. TO FEED 2 MILLION Cambodia accepts relief 1 1 I 1 l '1 Student Newspaper at The University of Michi igan ---------- UNITED NATIONS (AP) - A U.N. conference "to cope with human suf- fering of an appalling magnitude" in Cambodia brought aid pledges of $186 million in its opening session yesterday. The Phnom Penh government said it would let relief shipments into the coun- try via the Mekong River. U.N. Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim, who opened the conference on ways to end the suffering of an estimated two million persons in the war-torn Indochinese country, called on "all concerned to cooperate fully. . in facilitating the distribution of our sup- plies." HE SAID arrangements for delivery of relief supplies should "assure us and the donors that they arrive in the hands of the suffering civilians for whom they are destined." Waldheim's comments appeared to be an appeal to the government of Premier Heng Samrin and its Soviet and Vietnamese backers, who have held up distribution of relief supplies because they do not want them to go to areas of the country controlled by for-. mer Premier Pol Pot, who was ousted last January. Waldheim mentioned no names and neither did the other speakers, who urged that the rival factions in Cam- bodia put aside their differences for the sake of the relief program. SECRETARY OF State Cyrus Vance cited the desperate need for aid to relieve suffering Cambodia and declared, "Some issues transcend politics. This is one of them. "Clearly there are differences among governments on the political situation," said Vance. "But all of us must put those differences aside as we ask all the authorities involved.. . to turn away from calculations of political and military advantage and turn to the overwhelming human issue that is before us." In a statement broadcast yesterday by the Vietnam News Agency, the Heng Samrin government said it was "from now on ready to receive whatever quan- tity of humanitarian aid .. . without political conditions." VANCE SAID the United States plans $69 million in aid to Cambodia, in- clding $30 million already pledged by President Carter; $9 million in aid for refugees in Thailand; and provisions for $30 million in extra aid now going through by Congress. The pledge total of $186 million during the morning session of the one-day con= ference included all aid sums men- tioned by the 13 foreign ministers and ambassadors who spoke. Cambodian politics became a factor in the session when it was discovered there was a delegate from the Viet- namese-backed Heng Samrin regime, which is not recognized by the United Nations. Keo Prasat, Heng Samrins ambassador to Moscow, arrived in New York over the weekend and sat with the Bulgarian mission. The accredited delegate of the rival regime of Pol Pot, Thiounn Prasith, told reporters that he regretted the State Department decision to give Prasat a visa. ~- - ----- WRITE YOUR AD HERE! - -m m-""- m --CLIP AND MAILlTODAY ..---------- USE THIS H ANDY CHART TO QUICKLY ARRIVE A T AD COST Words 1 1 3 4 5 add. 0-14 1.70 3.40 4.60 5.80 7.00 1.00 Pes niae 151t 2.55 5.10 6.90 8370 10.50 1.50 where this ad 22-28 3.40 6.80 9.20 11.60 14.00 2.00 fr rent for sale 29-35 4.25 8.50 11.50 14.50 17.50 2.50 help wanted 36-42 5.10 10.20 13.80 17.40 21.00 3.00 **ommate I I 43-49 6.80 11.90 16.10 20.30 24.50 3.50 ® Seven words per line. Each group of characters founts as one word. Hyphenated words aver 5 characters count as two words-This includes telephone numbers. 1 I I I I I 1 I I I I I I I 14 held in anti-Klan rally deaths GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) - Four- teen men, described by a judge as "imminently dangerous to others of the community," were ordered held without bond yesterday in a shooting rampage that left five persons dead at an anti-Ku Klux Klan rally. Persons outside the courtroom said they could hear voices singing "God Bless America" and "Onward Christian Soldiers" in the holding cell lwhere the suspects awaited their court appearances. FOUR PERSONS died at the scene of Saturday's shootings in a predominan- tly black housing project. A fifth vic- tim, Michael Nathan, a physician from Durham, died yesterday at a Green- sboro hospital. Nine other persons were injured. Twelve men were arrested a few hundred feet from the scene of the shootings, where gunmen fired repeatedly into a crowd gathered for an anti-Klan march sponsored by the lef- tist Workers Viewpoint Organization. Policeseized a yellow van that was packed with pistols, shotguns and rifles. Each of the 12 arrested Saturday faces four counts of murder and one count of conspiracy to commit murder. District Attorney Michael Schlosser said before the fifth victim died that he expected other charges to be filed. TWO SUSPECTS were arrested in Winston-Salem on Sunday. Each was charged with one count of conspiracy to commit murder. At the White House, press secretary Jody Powell said the Justice Depar- tment had established a special unit to investigate the violence and has two dozen FBI agents on the scene. In yesterday's court hearing, District Court Judge Robert Cecil ordered the defendants jailed pending a probable- cause hearing on Nov. 20. He denied bond for any of the men after Schlosser described them as "a band of marauders, 14 strong, who descended on Guilford County and cut a path of destruction that left dead and bloody bodies." IN HANDCUFFED pairs, the defen- dants were brought into the courtroom to hear the charges and to tell Cecil whether they planned to hire a lawyer. Wearing wrinkled and ill-fitting jail- issued coveralls, most of the men stood passively and said nothing except for simple answers to Cecil's questions. One defendant, however, asked the judge if he could make a statement. Cecil agreed. "God save America and this honorable court," Rayford Milano Caudle said as he left the courtroom. In an unusual security move, Cecil ordered families and friends of tle suspects as well as other spectators kept out of the courtroom, but reporters were allowed to view the proceedings. Nelson Johnson, an organizer of the anti-Klan rally, said at a news con- ference .Sunday that the site of the gathering had been discreetly moved in an attempt to prevent violence but the attackers apparently had no problem finding where the marchers were gathered. d b A .- . - R Mail with Che NAMF ADDRESS CITY PHONE ack to: Classifieds, The Michigan Daily 420 Maynard Ann Arbor, MI 48109 -{-- ----- I WASHINGTON (Reuter) - Senator Edward Kennedy will launch his drive for the presidency tomorrow with a whirlwind trip into nine states, cam- paign aides said yesterday. Kennedy will travel several thousand miles into the north, south and midwest seeking the democratic votes he hopes will wrest the party nomination from President Carter. ASSOCIATES SAID Kennedy is Nine state tour to start Kennedy drive w; t Lie down and be counted. THE Professional Theatre Program PRESENTS... ACTING COMPANY ON TOUR FOR THE JOHN F. KENNEDY CENTER Power Center NOV8Sa8, &llat2 by GEORGE ABBOTT Directed by and PH L P DUNNING GERALD GUTIERREZ B / t- Nov9 at8 ELIZj TH°I +F by PAUL FOSTER Directed by LIVIU CIULEI Nov lU0atio by JOHN WEBSTER Directed by THEMICHAEL KAHN ," ITIE anxious to get his campaign into high gear before December 4, when Carter plans to announce his intentions for the 1980 contest. As previously announced, the Massachusetts Senator will make ,his formal declaration in his hometown of Boston at Faneuil Hall, the historic Revolutionary War meeting place. He then plans to go to Maine, whose Democratic Governor, Joseph Bren- nan, became the first governor to en- dorse him, and then to Chicago, where Jane Byrne became the first big city mayor to. back him over President Car- ter. Before returning to Washington late' Saturday, Kennedy will,visit Oklahoma City, Okla.; Nashville, Tenn.; Miami, Fla.; Charleston, S.C.; and Hartford, Conn. Daily Official Bulletin Tuesday, November 6, 1979 Daily Calendar WUOM: viewpoint Lecture: Maggie Kuhn, founder of the Grey Panthers, "New Lifestyles for this New Age: Interdependance and Cooperation," 10:20. Computing Center: "File Editing for the Begin- ner," 1011 NUBS, noon. Statistics: Raoul LePage, MSU, "Stable Random Variances and Time Series," 439 Mason, 3p.m. CICE: John Anderson, McMaster U., "Coding to Conserve Bandwidth and Power: A New View of Channel Coding," 1504 E. Eng., 4 p.m. Great Lakes Marine Water Center: Thomas P. Poe, "Winter Navigation in the Great Lakes: Poten- tial Effects on Aquatic Biota," 165 Chrysler Ctr., 4 p.m. Education/Developmental Psychology: Barry Lester, Harvard Medical School, "Deveopmental Assessment," Schorling Aud., 4 p.m. Bioengineering: John A. Faulkner, "Contractile Properties of Human Skeletal Muscle," 1042 E. Eng., 4 p.m. Physics/Astronomy: G. Karl, "Electric Dipole of Unstable Particles," 2038 Randall, 4 p.m. Guild House: Poetry readings, Margaret Condon, Judith Kerman, Paula Rubinstein, 802 Monroe, 7:30 p.m. THE MICHIGAN DAILY (USPS 344-900) Volume LXXXX, No. 53 Tuesday, November 6, 1979 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48169. Subscription rates: $12 Septem- ber through April (2 semesters) ;$13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday mornings. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.00 by mail out- side, Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POST- MASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann .Arbor, MI 48109. President Jimmy Carter signed up 51 times. in America, 3% of the people give 100% of all the blood that's freely donated. Which means that if only 1 % more people- maybe you-became donors, it would add over thirty percent more blood to America's voluntary bloodstream. Think of it! But forget arithmetic. Just concentrate on one word. The word is Easy. Giving blood is easy. You hardly feel it (in fact, some people say they feel better physically after a blood donation). U I I I - -- - - - - - - " - -I