Detroit rally pledges Ca mobdian support The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, November 13, 1979-Page 3 Regents to discuss faculty By MITCH STUART Special to The Daily DETROIT - Calling the Cambodian problem "almost beyond human belief," Prof. Richard Strichartz of the Jewish Community Council of Detroit spoke townearly 200 people at a Concer- :ned Citizens for Cambodia rally Sunday inKennedy Square. "No longer can we be silent. . . when people are being subjected to genocide," he said. ANNOUNCEMENTS of support were. -made at therally by an aide of U.S. Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich.), and U.S. Rep. William Brodhead (D-17th District). In a letter read by a staff member, tevin charged the Phnom Penh gover- )iment with "using politics as an excuse for genocide." Dr. John Mames, one of the rally organizers, spoke to the crowd, quoting Secretary of State Cyrus Vance as saying, "I can think of no issue now that can lay greater claim to our efforts." CALLING ON officials in Phnom Penh to allow the U.S. to help the star- ving people, Mames said, "The immen- se tragedy of Cambodia is a crime against humanity today." ^ Another rally organizer, Larry Bren- -oers, a survivor of the Nazi's Mauthausen concentration camp, said :the major problem during the Nazi :hilocause was that people were not -heard. To prevent the Cambodian situation from worsening, Brenners said rallies and media coverage must'be continued. ONE UNIVERSITY law student and Vietnam veteran at the rally who asked nbt to be identified, suggested the U.S. send helicopters to drop food directly to the people, and "ignore the.......Viet- namese government." Brodhead compared the Cambodian situation with conditions in Nazi death camps 35 years ago because "nobody spoke out.. . nobody said anything." TO SOLVE THE Cambodian hunger problem, he said, "We must rise above national . . . (and) political divisions and guarantee basic human rights to' people all over the world." An estimated three million persons have died in Cambodia since the 1975 takeover by the Khmer Rouge forces headed by Pol Pot. The present regime, led by Heng Samrin, was installed by Vietnamese troops last January. The vast majority of the four million remaining Cambodians are reported to be suffering from starvation and malnutrition. One School of Public Health student claimed the U.S., along with the other major world powers, "shares the brunt of the responsibility" for causing the hunger problem in the first place. 'The student said the U.S. should share some of its wealth and integrate itself into the world since, he claims, American development depends on the development of other countries in the.- world. LSA SENIOR Barry Benson said "The problem of world hunger simply can't be ignored," and called attending a rally "the very least anyone can do." salary disclos By JULIE ENGEBRECHT Discussions on disclosure of faculty salaries are continuing this week as the Regents are expected to take some ac-, tion at their monthly meeting Friday. The University's executive officers are expected to recommend that the Regents not challenge the state law requiring those salaries to be released, and will recommend disclosure under the act. BUT THE executive officers also have other requests as a . part of the salary discussion, and will not make specifics public until they have been discussed with the Regents, according to Interim University President Allan Smith. Smith also said the executive officers have recommendations prepared if the question of what information to release arises. The Senate Assembly Advisory Committee on University Affairs (SACUA) met with Smith and Acting lure Friday Vice-President for Academic Affairs Alfred Sussman yesterday in closed session to talk about the disclosure issue. Last week, meetings were held to give faculty and staff a chance to voice their feelings and ask questions about the new law, with which the University is expected to comply. 5th Avenue at Liberty St. 761.9700 Formerly Fifth Forum Theater Gift THE $1'50 Certificates are now on Sale MONTY PYTHON'S LIFE OF BRIAN FINAL 3 DAYS! Mon, Tues Thurs 6:30,8:20, 10:10 Mon, Tues, Thurs-Adults $1:.50 til 7:00 (or capacity) . Wed 12:50, 2:40, 4:30, 6:30, 8:20, 10:10 Wed-Adults $1.50 til 1:30 (or capacity) and Adults $2.50 til 5:30 (or capacity) 'The imlmItetise tr(igedy of Csit - bodIia js a 'prjme. agairIsI hinjultia y todly. -Rail.y organizer Dr. Joha tVM!iies Michael Jaffe, and LSA student and member of the University Students for Israel group, claimed the rally represented "an elevation of world awareness" and a "rise in the scale of humanitarianism." Governor William Milliken and Detroit Mayor Coleman Young were slated to speak at the rally, but were unable to attend. Concerned Citizens for Cambodia is an ad hoc coalition of the following groups: the Christian :Community Council of Metropolitan Detroit Chur- ches, the Jewish Community Council of Metropolitan Detroit, the Archdiocese of Detroit, the Greater Detroit Roun- dtable of Christians and Jews, Sur- vivors of the Nazi Holocaust, and others concerned about the starving people in Cambodia. AP Photo A CAMBODIAN REFUGEE child clutches his baby sister as they sit , together at the Sa Kaew camp in Thailand. More than a dozen refugees are dying every 24 hours from disease and malnutrition. Congresswomen visit Cambodia WOMEN'S DOCUMENTARYF LMS# A collection of documentary film by women which illustrate the various tactics and techniques available to the female docu- mentarist. InclUding THE LIFE AND DEATH OF FRIEDA (a study of America's premier artists), THE WOMEN OF TELECOMMUNICATIONS STATION NO. 6 (documenting the revolutionary activities of Vietnamese women), ROSE- LAND (a frank portrait of a welfare mother in Chicago), and others crossing a wide spectrum of women's issues. ANGELL HALL $1.50 7:00&9:00 SPONSORED IN PARTY.MSA&MCA ,,,.t y; NORMA RAE PHNOM PENH (Reuter) - Six U.S. Congresswomen trying to find ways to ease the agony of four million Cam- bodians were confronted yesterday witl hungry orphans, hospitals without doctors or medicine and a ,.once-lovely city, trying to overcome four years of terror and decay. The .legislators met with foreign minister Hun Sen, who later told repor- ters traveling with the delegation on its tour of Phnom Penh that the visit had been "very useful and substantial in- deed." "The people of the United States are deeply moved and troubled by the plight of your country," said delegation leader Elizabeth Holtzman (D-N.Y.). The official talks dealt with efforts the international community could make to provide more and speedier aid to ward off starvation and disease in the Southeast Asian nation. The main purpose of the eight-hour visit was to convince Americans that the Vietnam-backed regime in Phnom Penh was doing its best to fight against tremendous odds and that Cambodia needed help. The group visited an orphanage with 555 children, most between 11 and 15 years of age. The person in charge told the visitors that among the known cases, 37 per cent of the parents of the children had died'of hunger and almost 50 per cent were killed during the Pol Pot regime, which was overthrown in January by a Vietnamese-led invasion. At the January 7 Hospital - named for the day Pol Pot fell - Dr. Nouth Savoeun said there were only eight doc- tors and 577 beds for the 600 to 800 patients normally receiving treatment. He said mortality rates were 10 to 11 per cent of admitted adult patients and 20 per cent of children. Describing himself as the country's only remaining pediatrician, Nouth Savoeun said medicine was coming in from international relief agencies as well as Communist countries, but more was needed if "genocide by famine" was to be avoided. The youthful 28-year-old Foreign Minister Hun Sen told reporters Cam- bodia was ".grateful for all aid from the outside, provided it was not linked to any political conditions." In addition to Holtzman, the delegation included Reps. Olympia Snowe (R-Maine), Patricia Schroeder (D-Colo.), Margaret Heckler (R- Mass.); Corrine Boggs (D-La.), and Barbara Mikulski (D-Md.). Also with the delegation were two Australian Senators, Kathy Martin and Susan Ryan. The group flew to Phnom Penh aboard a presidential plane and retur- ned to Thailand the same day. , r 4 The Ann Arbor Film Coopertwive Presents at Aud. A: $1.50 Tuesday, November 13 JAWS (Stephen Spielberg, 1975) 6:30, 8:20, 10:15-AUD. A Long Island's uninvited guest comes to dinner; and he comes again, and again, and . . . Shedding the unnecessary and cumbersome sub-plots so typical of schlocky Hollywood disaster films, JAWS achieves-exactly what the then 27- year-old Spielberg sought: to scare the hell out of you. Streamlined action through a tight script, excellent special effects, effective manipulation of cinematic techniques, and superb acting (especially from ROBERT SHAW and RICHARD DREYFUSS) all combine to malee this film one of the most adept pieces of fright since PSYCHO. Admittedly not an "artsy" film; JAWS seeks to bypass the cerebrum in favor of a straight bite the viscera-the simple pleasure of being scared witless. It succeeds. A policeman wounds fleeing burglary suspect BY TIMOTHY YAGLE said. The officer said Russell kepi L r Tomorow: THE KIDS ARE ALRIGHT at Aud. A t run- FILMS Ann Arbor Film Co-op-Jaws, 7, 9 p.m., Aud. A, Angell Hall. Cinema I--Women's Documentary Films, 3, 7, 9 p.m., Aud. 3, MLB. Cinema Guild-Citizen Kane, 7, 9:15 p.m., Old Arch. Aud. PERFORMANCES School of Music-University Philharmonia, Stephen Osmond, conduc- tor, 8 pm., Hill Auditorium. School of Music-New World Quartet, 8 p.m., Rackham. SPEAKERS Ann Arbor Public Library-Margaret Rothstein, "Booked for Lunch," 12:10 p.m., Main Library Meeting Room, 343 S. Fifth. Center for Western European Studies-Dr. Giacinto Militello, "Worker- Management Relations in Contemporary Italy," 4 p m., Anderson Room, Michigan Union. Department of Geology and Mineralogy-Professor David Blackwell, "Heat Flow and Plate Tectonics of the Pacific Northwest," 4 p.m., Room 4001, C.C: Little Building. 25th Annual Ermine Cowles Case Memorial Lecture-David Jones, "Mesozoic Accretionary Tectonics of Western North America-Significance for Biostratigraphy and Paleobiogeography," 8 p.m., Rackham Am- phitheater. MEETINGS Michigan Association of Railroad Pa'ssengers-Depot discussion, 7:30 p.m., Community High School, 401 North Division Street, Ann Arbor. School of Education-Cross-campus transfer information meeting, Schorling Auditorium, Education School, 1:30 p.m. Career Planning and Placement-Seminar for graduate students in the humanities interested in non-academic alternatives, 3 p.m., East Conferen- An Ann Arbor policeman shot and ning until police cornered hi'm at a wounded a fleeing burglary suspect late dead-end parking area in the alley. Sunday night as he ran through a down- Russell is reported in good condition at town alley behind a jewelry store, Ann University Hospital. Arbor Police said yesterday. Officers found a gold cigarette lighter According to police, the officer shot on the suspect believed to have been twice and wounded 21-year-old Billy stolen from the jewelers. Russell from Ypsilanti after seeing him break a display Windowwith a baseball As other officers arrived at the scene, bat shortly before 11:30 p.m. at Daniel's the spokesman said, they arrested a 34- Jewelers at 201 S. Main St. year-old Negaunee, Mich. man driving POLICE SAID Russell started run- a blue pickup which police had seen ning east on Washington St. and the of- parked in front of the jewelry store and ficer fired a warning shot at his feet af- which was believed to be the getaway ter ordering him to halt. When he did vehicle. He was jailed overnight and is not stop, the officer fired another shot, expected to be arraigned today on a striking -Russell in the back," police breaking-and-entering charge. Second Chance and WQ9 present FORBERT Vantage Point A T i~