N.C. rally permit was given GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) - A rnan who identified himself as a 1 )nember of the Ku Klux Klan was given a copy of the parade permit for an anti-Klan rally two days before gunmen killed five persons at the demonstration, police 1 acknowledged yesterday.; Police Capt. J. W. Hilliard said of- ficers had conferred with the city at- torney before giving the man a copy of the permit, which gave the precise location.of the rally. Accor- ding to Hilliard, the city attorney advised that the permit was a public record and therefore could not be withheld. SEVERAL carloads of white men drove up to the anti-Klan rally Saturday morning and opened fire, killing five persons and wounding nine others. Fourteen persons have been charged in the shootings. Hilliard refused during a news conference to comment on whether police kept the man under sur- veillance after he got the parade permit and would not elaborate on the man's identification. HIlliard also said authorities were still searching for Jack Wilson Fowler, 27, of Winston-Salem in con- nection with the case. Fowler is charged in warrants issued this week with four counts of murder and one count of conspiracy to murder. Earlier, the Communist Workers Party, the small leftist group that organized the fatal rally, vowed that its members would be-armed during a Sunday funeral procession. The party also said it would file a lawsuit charging law enforcement agencies with planning the ambush. POLICE AND FBI agents flatly to KKK denied the charges and said the lef- tists are refusing to cooperate in the investigation. "We will be armed," declared Sally Bermanzohn, a party member whose husband, Paul, remained hospitalized yesterday with wounds suffered in the shooting. His con- dition was listed as satisfactory. Ms. Bermanzohn announced in nearby Winston-Salem the party plans to file a $500 million damage suit against the FBI, the State Bureau of Investigation, the city of Greensboro and the Greensborro Police Department. U.S. ATTORNEY H.M. "Mickey" Michaux of Greensboro said 24 to 30 FBI agents have been working on the case. He said it is part of a nationwide investigation of the Ku Klux Klan launched under orders from the White House. Michaux said federal officials will look at allegations by the American Civil Liberties Union that the police response to the shootings was inadequate. Michaux noted, however, that local authorities were in the position on the day of the shooting of being "damned if they did or damned if they didn't." Police spokespersons said the rally organizers told them they didn't want police at the site. Of- ficials said the demonstrators were chanting, "Death to the Pigs," so police retreated to a spot several blocks away. Michaux said a federal force will be in Greensboro this weekend for the planned funeral march for the five killed. The Michigan Daily-Thursday, November 8, 1979-Page 7 Syn. uels bill survives cut attempt WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate easily defeated The $20 billion would be spent over the next four or Senate had been approved by the Senate Banking attempt yesterday to sharply scale down the size five years by energy companies willing to invest in Committee. President Carter's proposed $20 billion synthetic commercial development of plants to extract oil and ITS SUPPORTERS said not enough is known about els program. gas from coal, oil shale and tar sands. the development of synthetic fuels to warrant an ex- : By a vote of 57-37, the Senate set aside a $3 billion CARTER'S SUPPORTERS cited the uncertain pensive program to build eight to 10 plants at a cost of nthetic fuels measure urged by critics of the syn- supply of oil from Iran and said onlv if a big svnthetie b .'r k:11: an of fu( sy thetic fuel program, a crucial element of the president's energy plan. A CLOSE VOTE had been expected and Vice President Walter Mondale was on hand in case his vote was needed to break a tie. More challenges are expected to the proposal, in- cluding attempts to eliminate creation of a five- member independent corporation with authority to hand out billions of dollars in loans and loan and price guarantees. fuels program is sponsored by the government will the United States reduce its dependence on foreign oil. Sen. Henry Jackson (D-Wash.), chairman of the Senate Energy Committee, said approval of a strong synthetic fuels measure "will send a signal so the world will know we are making a beginning" on fin- ding new sources of energy. "Surely we don't want to make a puny beginning," he said. The smaller $3 billion version defeated by the aoout $2pinion eacn. But Carter's allies in the Senate said only if the government finds a way to make it profitable for energy companies to invest in synthetic fuels will such fuels ever become a major source of U.S. energy. Sen. Pete Domenici (R-N.M.), said that voting for the $3 billion proposal "is to wave the white flag of surrender in this war for energy security, in this war for national security." Dems criticize city adminsitrator search The cold, hard facts about lab cadavers (Continued from Page 1) to Belcher, who relayed the consensus to Korn-Ferry. THE SAME FIVE or six candidtes were recommended consistently by members of the citizens committee, the Democrats and the Republicans, Belcher said. Korn-Ferry, he ex- plained, notified the candidtes earlier this week on the basis of this consensus even though recommendations had not been submitted by all of the coun- cilmembers. As additional recommen- dations have been received Belcher said he has relayed the information to the firm in Los Angeles. Korn-Ferry received 60 applications for the $50,000 a year position. On the basis of a job profile prepared by Coun- cil in August, the firm screened out the twenty resumes they judged most qualified. Council is scheduled to interview five finalists for the post Saturday morning at Campus Inn. The session, which will begin at 8:00 a.m., will be open to the public. A representative from Korn- Ferry will present a detailed report of each candidate's background before the interviews. MAYOR BELCHER and Robert Stavin, a Korn-Ferry spokesman said the finalists had already been notified and arrangements had been made for them to be in Ann Arbor on Saturday. The names of the five finalists will be released to the media Friday afternoon, according to Belcher. A committee of nine citizens appoin- ted by the mayor met with Slavin two weeks ago to review the twenty resumes. They were asked to submit their comments about the candidates to the mayor. Council is scheduled to make a final choice before the end of the month. The city administrator, scheduled to take office January 1, formulates the city's budget and supervises the operations of most of the city's offices and depar- tments. LATTA ALSO said that Belcher had made a special effort to solicit the opinions of local businessmen about the resumes even before some coun- cilmembers had copies. Belchr said he had shown "a few" businessmen the resumes but said he did not consier this a violation of the plans for the selection process. The' businessmen were asked to comment as ad hoc members of his citizen's committee, he explained. Morris and Susan Greenberg (D- First Ward) picked up their copies of the resumes on Friday. But Earl Greene (D-Second Ward) said he did not know the resumes were available until Sunday evening and he finally saw them Monday afternoon. GREENE SAID HE did not submit his recommendations until yesterday. "I hope mine (recommendations) will be considered," he added. "I have not felt involved at all. . . I've done what I was asked to do by the mayor," Greene said. "I have concerns about the process too," said Republican Councilman David Fisher (Fourth Ward). He said yesterday he was not aware that the finalists had already been notified. He said he planned to take his recommen- dations to the mayor this morning. Councilman Edward Hood (R-Fourth Ward) picked up the resumes from his city hall mail box Friday afternoon. He said he felt all of the councilmembers had had an equal opportunity to provide input into the search process. NOON LUNCHEON Homemade Soup & Sandwich 75C Friday, November 9 Marcia Barton PIRGIM: "Michigan's Nuclear Moratorium Bill" Guild House, 02 Monroer The Ann Arbor Film CooperatiVe Presents at Aud. A: $1.50 THURSDAY, NOVEMBER $ TOKYO STORY (Yasujiro Ozu, 1953) 7 & 9:30 AUD. A A quietly brilliant film by a master of contemplative cinema. The story concerns an elderly couple who journey to Tokyo to visit their growing children. Using this simple story, Ozu constructs a restrained and touching meditation on the family, changing social patterns, and alientation. Although Ozu is often consid- ered uniquely Japanese, his style and themes transcend national boundaries. Tokyo Story was voted one of the ten best films of all time in the SIGHT AND SOUND International Critics' Poll. In Japanese, with subtitles. Saturday: Jane Fonda and Jack Lemmon in China Syndrome at MLB public lecture by LOUIS MARIN Jones Professor of French SUNY, Buffalo "A Reading of The Arcadian Shepherds by Poussin: Towards a Theory of Reading a Painting." THURSDAY, NOV. 8-7:00 p.m. Lecture Room 2, MLB SPONSORED BY The Program in Comparative Literature with the supportof Romance Languages and Dispositio (Continued from Page 1) anyone who is dead. You wonder what kind of life they (the cadavers) had, and what they did," said Bill Frederick, a graduate student in Anatomy, who has taught the course twice. "You have to dehumanize (the cadavers) to do what we do and joke to keep your mind off what you're doing. It's pretty necessary because it's a really morbid thing," he said. plastic surgeon r#eceires top research award A University of Michigan plastic surgeon has received the top research award from the American Society of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery for a new technique to provide closely- matching donor tissue in reconstruction of breasts and for head and neck surgery. Eric D. Austad, M.D., University clinical instructor in surgery, received first-place honors in a clinical research competition at the Society's recent an- nual meeting in Toronto. THE TECHNIQUE involves use of an expanding implant placed under nor- mal skin on the chest, face or neck next to the reconstruction site. In effect, the body produces closely matching "ex- tra" skin in the same way that skin ex- pands during periods of heavy weight gain or pregnancy. Dr. Austad, who practices at Univer- sity Hospital and at Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit, said the technique is particularly applicable in rebuilding areas lost to cancer surgery. The new skinl is almost identical to that which was lost and is a much better match than using tissue from other parts of the body such as the back, as is commonly done. There also is no scarring of the site'from which the donor skin is taken. Dr. Austad, a University of Michigan Medical School graduate, is a native of Escanaba, Mich. His co-author of the award-winning research paper was Gregory Rose. DENTAL STUDENT Phillip Shipko noted "an apprehension about starting the course. But once you start it's no big deal." He added, "You get used to it very quickly. You have to approach it with the idea that you're there to learn." After dissection, the remains are placed in a container. They are then cremated, and the ashes are sent to the donor's family, Frederick said. Unclaimed bodies are cremated as well, and the ashes are sent to the University's burial . plot in Superior. Township, where they are interred af. ter an Ecumenical service, Oelrich said. The University absorbs the cost for transporation, embalming, cremation, and, in the case of unclaimed bodies, burial, Oelrich said. I The The University of Michigan Professional Theatre Program PRESENTS: John Houseman's D Acting Company in 'by GEORGE ABBOTT Directed by and PHILIP DUNNING GERALD GUTIERREZ RQAD 4Y