POT LAW See Editorial Page Eighty-Nine Years of Ediiorial Freedom tti BACK TO WINTER High-28d Low-16C See Today for details if Vol. LXXXIX, NO. 123 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, February 25, 1979 Ten Cents Eight Pages plus Supplements China vows to stay in Viet border land Daily Photo by LISA UDELSON BluNe swan song A Wolverine "Blues Band" trumpet player kicks out the jams during a break in the action of yesterday's basketball game. Michigan lost, 67-59, to the visiting Boilermakers. Cagers drop home finale, 67-59; seniors disappoint Orr in loss By UPI, AP, and Reuter China's armies hammered Vietnam yesterday with the heaviest artillery barrage in Indochina's war-weary history, but they appeared to be gaining no ground in their drive to "punish" Hanoi for border incidents. Reports from Peking yesterday said China intended to pull its troops back when its mission was finished, but only to "the border line. . . recognized by China, not the border claimed by the Vietnamese." The report by Japan's Kyodo news service came too late for comment by Vietnamese officials yesterday. VIETNAMESE officials reported fighting in the streets of two of their provincial capitals - Lao Cai and Cao Bang- and said neither side could claim control of the towns. Intelligence sources watching the week-old China-Vietnam war from Thailand earlier had reported both towns were among four provincial capitals seized by the Chinese. Two members of the U.S. Congress visited the front lines Friday, and Viet- namese officials said they were glad to see them. Sources at the Foreign Ministry in Hanoi also told UPI they were "very happy" that the United States had taken up the Indochina issue at the U.N. Security Council. "THIS MAY be a first step away from the erroneous American policy of sup- porting China in the war," one official said. American correspondents who traveled with the congressional party - Reps. Elizabeth Holtzman (D-N.Y.), and Billy Lee Evans (D-Ga.) - yester- day saw one of six Soviet AN-22 cargo planes being used in an airlift of emergency military supplies. The Vietnamese obviously were pleased by the Soviet shipments, but they would not discuss them. MEANWHILE, Treasury Secretary W. Michael Blumenthal arrived in Peking last night on a nine-day visit to initiate trade talks, formally open the American Embassy, and convey to Chinese leaders President Carter's concern about their invasion of Viet- nam. Blumenthal said on the flight to the Chinese capital that the Carter ad- ministration feels better relations bet- ween the United States and China should not be jeopardized by fighting between China and Vietnam. There was little in the city of 10 million people to indicate concern with the fighting along the border 1,500 miles to the south. Few soldiers were on the streets. BLUMENTHAL said on the flight that the Soviets should not interpret the trip, which was planned and announced before the invasion started, as support for what China is doing. The Soviet news agency Tass has called the visit "a gesture of approval to the Chinese aggressors." At the United Nations, Britain and France urged the U.N. Security Council yesterday to call for an immediate end to the fighting in Vietnam and Cam- bodia and said all foreign forces should be withdrawn from the two countries at once. Their demands echoed those of U.S. Ambassador Andrew Young and other speakers at the council's first session Friday on the Indochina wars. YOUNG APPEALED to the Chinese to withdraw their invasion forces from norther Vietnam and for the Viet- namese to remove their troops from See BLUMENTHAL, Page 8 V Despite escalating war, life in Hanoi largely unaffected By DAVE RENBARGER Johnny Orr was mad as hell. And he's not going to take it anymore. Orr's slumping Wolverines absorbed their third consecutive loss yesterday, dropping a lackluster 67-59 contest to Purdue. In his post-game press con- ference, the usually-somber coach lambasted several of his players-specifically seniors Tom Staton, Alan Hardy and Phil Hub- bard-charging them with in- dividualistic play, a poor general at- titude, and a failure to give 100 per cent. "You just can't dribble through three or four guys, like Tom Staton and Alan Hardy did," Orr said. "Phil Hubbard, did it too. "I'M REALLY disappointed in Phil," Orr conitnued. "He's never done that before. I don't know what's happened to him. I think maybe it's playing with his own teammates, a couple of 'em." Orr then singled out Staton, who, ac- cording to the coach, showed up to the final home game of his career a half hour late. "There's no way you can tell me that he (Staton) was thinking about this game when he got here at 3:28 and we're playing at 4:05," said Orr. "There's no goddamn excuse for that. Everybody's supposed to be here by 3:00." Staton nonetheless started the game, as did Hardy, who were both making their final homecourt appearance. It was no coincidence, however, that Staton, Hardy and Hubbard were all on the bench in the game's final four minutes, while the Wolverines were fruitlessly trying to work their way back into the game. DOWN THE STRETCH, Orr put Paul Heuerman, Johnny Johnson and Mike McGee on the floor along with surprise starters Mark Lozier and Marty Bod- nar. The group played well, pulling to within six points on one occasion, but nobody on Michigan's roster could con- tain Purdue's Joe Barry Carroll yesterday. The 7-1 pivotman dominated the game, scoring 35 points and grabbing 15 rebounds to lead the way for the fourth- place Boilermakers (10-5 in the Big Ten and 21-7 overall). Lee Rose's team is See CAGERS, Page 7 By ALAN DAWSON HANOI, Vietnam (UPI) - If there is war fever in Vietnam, it hasn't yet reached Hanoi. Hundreds of soldiers still stroll the streets. Lovers sit beside the lake, and friends stop in the parks after work to chat. NO ONE IN the capital has started redigging the one-person air raid shelters. The gold-on-red banners strung across the streets of the capital of Viet- nam still call for hard labor for the nation, none for the defense of the fatherland. Vietnam's home policy is still aimed at efforts to feed its population rather than at mobilizing the country once again for war. BUT IT IS obvious there is fighting going on and who the enemy is. Newspapers - which are quickly sold out these days - and radio reports keep up a constant flow of propaganda saying China is even more barbaric than the United States was at the height of the U.S.-Vietnam war. A large billboard facing the Lake of the Restored Sword shows Chinese casualties daily and draws a large crowd. But the crowd is good-natured, not angry. THE FEW Chinese diplomats still in Hanoi have taken no chances, and have locked the gate to their embassy. But no demonstrations have been held there. "If the situation on the China border becomes worse, we may have to have large public demonstrations against the Chinese," a Vietnamese official said. "For now, only representatives of the people are involved in the anti-China campaign." At the Phuc Yen airport northwest of Hanoi, the MiGs were once again distributed far apart, some of them parked on the roads up to two or three miles from the runway. But at Noi Bai, northeast of the capital and doubling as a civilian air- port, 15 MiGs were lined up neatly beside the runway, their bomb and missile racks empty, indicating they were not even on standby. 'U' class preserves Amerindian tongue By SARA ANSPACH ject anc The class is small and intimate, son, nur everyone is talking. The chatter stops some v when a tape-recorded voice begins: Butus. "Aanii-sh naa, bngii ma miin'waa isudefi ndaa-aadsooke . . . " (Well, I should tell clss.efT another little story ...) class. T The students are listening to a tle hom ,narrative in Ojibwa, a language that one stu4 was once spoken by Native Americans learning in all of Michigan, northern Wisconsin learns t Minnesota, and much of Canada. pNAT Today, the University is one of two importa. schools in the country that teaches the taught. Native American tongue. social NOW SPOKEN by about 90,000 people learns 1 in the United States and Canada, Ojib- Indian wa has a vocabulary as large as "The English, complete with words for 20th Rhodes century inventions like typewriters, tempo, movies, and cars. te s Richard Rhodes, a visiting assistant The st professor of linguistics and lecturer for a compli the class, explained that Ojibwa is an the wor extremely difficult language to learn. must be Ojibwa verbs agree with both the sub- Sun.day " Iran will probably resume disgus exporting oil to many countries, "I've including the United States, I've n within 15 days. See story, page 8. that t " American civil rights activist Press, Robert Williams, who lived in exile in China for three years, urged greater tolerance of the Chinese government Friday night. See story, page 3. I * Johnny Orr is thoroughly' d4 object of the sentence in per- rmber and gender, which means erbs have over 4,000 possible rlike most languages, grammar itely not the emphasis of this he students have no text and lit- ework. The method of learning, zdent explained, is a little like g a language the way a child to speak. VE American culture plays an ant role in the way the class is The class observes the Indian convention about elders, and by gentle teasing and making one another as members of the community do. mind set is so different," explained. "There's a different a different pace to life." tructure of the language reveals etely different way of looking at ld. When speaking Ojibwa, one sure to give 'you' top priority See NATIVE, Page 8 sted - with his, seniors. coached for 29 years, and ever had any of them do before." See Full Court page 7. Read the Today column, Page 3 Rezoning approved for new subdivision; unusualcr By ELISA ISAACSON After six months of revision and debate, the rezoning of the proposed 77.5 acre Cranbrook Village, a multi- million dollar subdivision that would fill vacant farmland on the city's south side, was approved by City Council Thursday night. The 6-4 vote was split between the mayor and other Republicans on one hand, and the Democrats and a Republican coun- cilman in whose district the develop- ment would be constructed on the other. The unusual cross-party Council split could well be a political statement in the months before the April city elec- tion. Reelection candidate Mayor Louis Belcher led the Republicans in overtur- ning motions to table the issue. HE SUCCEEDED in bringing the proposal to a vote - a good month before the' election. Belcher explained he was trying to keep a pledge he made upon election to office - that the citizens should know "whether a project is up or down.. . so everybody knows where the ball game is." Councilman E. Edward Hood (R- Fourth Ward), appointed last month by Belcher and up for reelection this April, stated at 'the outset of the discussion he ogssparty would oppose rezoning Cranbr because of crowding in a prop( senior citizen project. After receivi promise from the project's develop later on in the meeting that the orig construction plan would be altere please Hood's senior citizen constit ts, the councilman gave the projec affirmative vote. After over an hour of argument, mayor adjourned the meeting f five-minute break, during which H salvaged the project to avoid dead or defeat. vote splits cii ook, HOOD AND Councilman David )sed Fisher (R-Fourth Ward), both ng a representing the district in which the pers project is to be built, had declared they inal would vote against the proposal, d to because they and many of their con- uen- stituents, felt the developers' proposed t an 750-unit senior citizen high rise had too great a density. During a quick hallway the conference during the break, Hood con- or a vinced the developers to alter their [ood building plan, reducing the number of lock units in the senior citizen project to 600. Fisher, however, said he would still ty council oppose the project until he received more citizen feedback, and futilely requested the motion be tabled until Monday to give the Fourth Ward Coun- cilmembers time to discuss the project. "If my constituents in the Fourth Ward feel they want to live in this kind of density, I'll support it," Fisher said, adding, "I don't know whether they are going to feel like rats in a cage." HOOD SAID he was satisfied with the revised development plan. Councilman Earl Greene (D-Second See COUNCIL, Page 2 Hg By CHARLES THOI With wire reports A new government surv more than one million 111,000 of them "major" - high school and colleg programs during the 19 year. Many of these injuries been prevented if schools equipment, gave coaches better training and taught y rules as well as the rulesc HEW Secretary Joseph C injury in scho( WSON yesterday. "This report suggests that the ey estimates casualties may have reached unaccep- injuries - tably high levels," Califano declared in - occurred in a statement. ge athletic University Football Coach Bo 75-76 school Schembechler questioned the validity of the study. He termed the criteria for could have an injury used by HEW - any which used safer kept an athlete out of either classes or and trainers practice - "ridiculous." "The key youths safety issue here is what really constitutes an of the game, injury," Schembechler said. ,alifano said THE HEW survey defined major and 4o sports minor -injuries somewhat loosely. Any injury that kept a student from either athletic practice or from classes for one to 20 days was considered minor; an absence of three weeks or more was major. CONGRESS ordered the survey in response to a bill sponsored by Rep. Ron Dellums, (D-Calif. ), to require trainers to be present at all high school and college athletic events. An aide to Dellums, Marilyn Elrod, said he plans to press again for that legislation. See HIGH, Page 2 Solar By TIMOTHY YAGLE and JOE VARGO At around noon tomorrow, v permitting, the sun over Ann Ar be obscured between 75 and 80 by the moon in the century's la solar eclipse visible from the cc tal United States. The eclipse should begin arou a.m. Eastern Standard time a until around 1:15 p.m. Ann Ar] see about 75-80 per cent obsc with manimum darkening gw eclipse to People who live within a 170-mile wide strip of land from Washington weather state to northeastern North Dakota will bor will see the sun totally blackened by the per cent moon. The strip, which is caused by ist total that shadow, will gradually move ontinen- across North America to Greenland as the moon moves out of direct alignment nd 10:45 with the earth and the sun. nd last The closer a location is to the path of bor will totality, the greater the percentage of uration the sun will be darkened. The closest !cnrrina nnint nf titality n Ann Arhnr will h darken tomorrow's sky A solar eclipse occurs when the sun,' moon, and earth line up in the same spatial plane. The moon moves between the sun and the earth, and its shadow falls across the earth. GRADUALLY, THE sun is blocked by the moon until it appears as crescent. For a few seconds the moon completely covers the sun. At this point, the gases billowing around the sun produce a halo of brilliant spots, known as Bailey's beads. The entire nroress takes about two-and-a-half Studying solar eclipses could also give scientists clues as to the origin of the Solar System. Sears said there was a solar eclipse when one of Einstein's relativity theories came true in 1919. "It made general relativity very popular," Sears explained. "It has been used for the large scale structure of the universe," he continued. A HAZARD of solar eclipse obser- vation is the possibility of temporary or even permanent eye damage. .,HI..-2 WMO ,1184 M 111 I