E Sir i4un ~aitg ASIA See editorial page WHITEWASH High-2To Low-2o See Today for details Vol. LXXXIX, No. 85 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, January 12, 1979 Ten Cents Twelve Peaces Regents fail to detail presidential search process 5 By MITCH CANTOR Four University Regents who met with the student presidential advisory committee last night, refused to clarify several ambiguities in the presidential search process cited by committee members. In response to pressure from student and faculty advisory groups, the Regents passed a resolution last year granting these co'nmittees active par- ticipation in the process "somewhere down the line." Last night, student committee chairman Jeff Supowit asked Regent Robert Nederlander (D- Birmingham) to explain the im- plications of the resolution. "THE PROCESS now is amor- Full house vews film in spite of protestors By JOSHUA PECK Chanting slogans and carrying signs, 12 people marched in front of the Old Architecture and Design auditorium last night, protesting 'the Cinema Guild showing of D.W. Griffith's 1915 film Bir- th of a Nation. The protestors were members of the National Alliance Against Racist and Political Repression (NAARPR). A leaflet they distributed urged patrons to boycott the film, claiming that it is "an insult and an affront to all democratically-minded people." NO VIEWERS were seen to heed the protestors, and the film played to a full house. "We see their (NAARPR's) point," said Vicki Honeyman, Cinema Guild chairwoman. "We agree with their complaints about the film." Since the film was scheduled and listed, "we have to show it," she added. According to Honeyman, professor Hugh Cohen requested that Birth of a Nation be shown for his Film and Vid-eio Studies 236 (The Art of Film) class. Charles Browne, a member of the NAARPR and the Black Law Students Allicance, was upset with the way the Cinema Guild publicized the film. He complained that the advertising placed "too much of an emphasis on its technical aspects" and failed to stream its racist content. AS THE NAARPR members cir- culated they chanted, "Art, yes, racism, no, Birth of a Nation has to go" and "H1ow much longer will racism last? Birth of a Nation's time is past." They carried signs reading "Democracy is not racism. 'Birth of a See FULL, Page 5 phous ... it could be a disastrous process. We (MSA) have relied on your good faith in appointing a committee," said Supowit. The Regents replied, however, that they have not yet discussed many of the details of the process. "We have not gotten to these issues because we've been busy getting these committees together, getting the needs (of the University) statements together," Nederlander said. THE MICHIGAN Student Assembly (MSA), which in December narrowly voted to select a student advisory committee, made strong demands last year for interviewing rights for the student, faculty, and alumni commit- tees. The faculty group also asked the Regents for interviewing rights last year. According to advisory committee guidelines passed by the eight-member body in October, only the Regents are allowed to interview candidates. Student committee member Carolyn Rosenberg said the advisory groups "may effectively be shut out" of the process if they are denied interviewing rights. Regent Deane Baker (R-Ann Arbor) insisted, however, that "there are no preconditions with any of the commit- tees." Supowit also asked for some assuran- ce that the student committee would meet with the faculty and alumni com- mittees. NEDERLANDER responded that the groups are free to meet with each other whenever they choose, as is stated in the guidelines. Baker, Nederlander, and the other Regents present - Thomas Roach (D- Grosse Pointe) and Sarah Power (D- Ann Arbor) - all encouraged the student committee to promptly submit a "needs of the University" statement to the Regents. Both the alumni and faculty groups submitted their needs statements late last year. Supowit said the group would work as quickly as possible, but without sacrificing the quality of the work done. "IT'S VERY important to us to do a good job as far as assembling infor- mation. Our only authority is in our persuasiveness. We don't want to be pushed into doing a job that is anything less than thorough," Supowit said. The Regents also made a strong plea to the students asking that they keep the names of candidates confidential. "Good candidates don't advertise for jobs. He or she is probably content where he or she is right now. One way to destroy a candidate is to tell somebody about it. It is not in the best interest of the University to discuss candidates with other sources," Nederlander said. "The revelation of a name under con- sideration will be considered a breach of trust." "The sure-fire way to lose one of the candidates is to violate the trust among us," Power said. Nederrander UN to allow Sihanouk to bring charges. Milliken addresses the State Legislature. Daily Photo by ANDY FREEBERG Milliken calls for state unity By MICHAEL ARKUSH Special to the Daily LANSING-Governor William Milliken, who survived a long and bitter election battle with for- mer State Sen. William Fitzgerald (D-Detroit), issued his State of the State message yesterday, and appealed to a packed joint session of the state legislature to put aside partisan differences and work together to create a more progressive Michigan. In his 11th annual address before the state lawmakers in the House chambers, the 56-year-old governor repeatedly called for intra-party collaboration to solve the state's most crucial problems. "HAVING SHARED IN many successes and a few failures; with the election and all of its divisiveness behind us; with new terms ahead for you and for me; and with a new decade ap- proaching-let us put aside our partisan and intra- UNITED NATIONS (Reuter)-The U.N. Security Council decided last night that the government of Pol Pot still is the legal authority in Cambodia despite the claim of Vietnamese- backed insurgents to control the coun- try. Overriding Soviet and Czechoslovak objections, and without even taking a vote, the council agreed to hear that government's charges of Vietnamese "aggression" which helped the rebels seize Phnom Penh, the capital. THE COUNCIL agreed also that Prince Norodom Sihanouk, former ruler of Cambodia, should plead the gover- nment's case. Officials.said the delegation of which the prince is a member would also be seated in the General Assembly when it resumes next week after the holiday recess. It was a severe defeat for the Soviet side, which backed Heng Samrin's in- surgent regime and tried to delay the start - of council debate until a delegation named by him could arrive. China strongly defended Pot's claim, saying his was the only legitimate government of Kampuchea (Cam- bodia)-although it has fled into the jungle. The council defeated the Soviet motion 13-2. CHINA, SUBMITTING its first-ever resolution to the Security Council, proposed that the 15-nationbody strongly condemn Vietnam's "armed' invasion and aggression" against Cambodia. The text would also have the council call on Vietnam "immediately to halt its armed aggression" and withdraw all its forces from Kampuchea. Heng Samrin, head of the new Kam- puchean Revolutionary Council, infor- med the U.N. that he was sending his foreign minister, Hun Sen, to New York to seek a hearing by the Security Council. Representative Chen Chu of China; which supports Pol Pot, suggested to the council that the message was fraudulent. In one of three separate interven- tions, Soviet Ambassador Oleg Troyanovsky told the council that it could not discuss the situation in Cam- bodia in the absence of the only legitimate representatives of that coun- try, the Revolutionary Council. - - THE SOVIET ambassador said the delay would permit members to become aware of the "true state of af- fairs in Kampuchea and draw their own conclusions," rather than hear Prince Sihanouk or any representative of what he called the "criminal regime" of Pol Pot. The government of Heng Samrin alone was entitled to represent Cam- bodia, the Soviet delegate said. Chen Chu, who accused the Soviet Union of support of Vietnam's "large- 'scale naked, armed aggression against Democratic Kampuchea," defended the claim of Pot's delegation to be heard. He said the setback the Pot gover- nment had sustained, including the loss of the capital Phnom Penh, in no way affected its status. He wondered how a government whose representatives had been recognized by the current U.N. General Assembly could now be declared non-existent. CHEN CHU CALLED the Revolutionary Council tools and lackeys of Vietnam and the Soviet Union. In the procedural debate, which was not as heated as some delegates had feared, U.S. Ambassador Andrew Young and the delegates of Kuwait and Bangladesh all opposed Troyanovsky's efforts to delay the start of substantive debate. Kuwaiti Ambassador Abdulla Bishara said, "Rome is burning and here we fiddle, waggling over non- essential issues." Iran reforms issi I 7 Pfl m nhc vi t TEHRAN, Iran (AP) - A mob hauled down and burned the American flag in front of the U.S. consulate in Shiraz yesterday as Prime Minister Shahpour Bakhtiar appealed to Parliament in Tehran for a mandate to restore order in the troubled nation. He announced a 17-point program of reforms. Secret police agents opened fire on , the rioters in Shiraz as they stormed SAVAK (Iran's secret police) headquarters, residents said. Between two and eight demonstrators were reported killed and from 10 to 15 woun- ded. The city is 275 miles south of Tehran. MEANWHILE, scores of political prisoners streamed out of jails in Tehran to a tumultuous welcome from relatives and friends. Their release was part of a plan to free 266 prisoners that the Bakhtiar government announced Tuesday in the shah's name. Bakhtiar also told the parliamentary deputies that his government will shut off oil supplies to Israel and South Africa, but continue to supply the United States, which gets about six per cent of its oil imports from Iran. In Washington, U.S. Secretary of State Cyrus Vance voiced support for Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi's decision to form a regency council to carry out his functions when he takes a vacation abroad. The date of the shah's departure, a move to quell national unrest, has not been announced. VANCE SAID the United States would continue to work with the shah and voiced strong support for Bakhtiar's efforts to form a new gover- nment. He urged the Iranian military and other elements of the strife-torn country "to find a way to work together." The Shiraz residents, contacted by telephone from Tehran, said between 410,000 and 20,000 people gathered at a city square for an anti-shah rally, then marched to the U.S. consulate. U.S. sources said the American and Iranian staff at the consulate left the building as they sawi the crowd ap- proaching but police remained to guard the complex. The crowd "threw a few rocks" at the building but did no damage, the sources said. THE DEMONSTRATORS tore down the U.S. flag and burned it in the streets, demolished three statues of the shah, and then attacked the secret police headquarters during the four- hour riot, residents said. Bakhtiar told the state radio *that religious leaders had promised to main- tain order when he lifted martial law in Shiraz three days ago and added that troublemakers would "face severe government action." In Tehran, the 268-member Majlis, or lower house of Parliament, burst into A .j 17 1 1 V & applause as Bakhtiar reaffirmed he would dissolve SAVAK and said 68 political prisoners sentenced to life im- prisonment had been freed. Some of the prisoners leaving jails clenched their hands above their heads in a sign of victory, and waved portraits of the Ayatullah Khomaini, the exiled spiritual leader of the Shiite Moslems. The French Foreign Ministry, meanwhile, announced that Claude Chayet, a department official, again met with Khomaini at his home outside Paris to "discuss his situation" in France in the light of his daily attacks on the shah. OIL SPECIALISTS cautioned that ef- forts to cut off Israel and South Africa may be a complicated process without complete success. Frday *Former Maryland Gov. Marvin Mandel'sracketeering conviction has been overturned. See story, Page 2. . A new Vietnamese-backed regime was established in Cambodia yesterday, as former leaders fled the country. See story, Page 5. . The Michigan basketball team fell to Purdue last night, 77-67. See story, Page 11. 'U' hikes funds for merit scholarships TR UCK AND TRAIN COLLIDE, ONE DEAD: Michigan families flee gas leak By JOHN SINKEVICS Attracting highly qualified high school students to the University has been a problem for more than a decade due to escalating tuition costs and com- petition from private schools across the country. Now, to aid the University's new recruitment activities, the Office of Undergraduate Admissions has an- nounced the expansion of its "merit" scholarship program for first-year students. The reorganized program features three types of scholarships which do not require demonstration of financial need, but will be awarded solely on the basis of merit. These "no need" scholarships will total $380,000 for Sep- tember 1979 and will include increases in the amounts of individual awards. CLIFFORD SJORGEN, director of undergraduate admissions, said the major reason for initiating the new and class work. Formerly, the in- dividual awards in this category were $500, and officials said they, hope this increase will attract a greater number of top out-of-state students to the University; Michigan Annual Giving Scholar- ships will feature 130 awards of $500 each. The receipients of this scholar- ship will be awarded, from a pool of candidates provided by University alumni clubs and is also intended for out-of-state students; SRegents Alumni Scholarships for the 1979-1980 school year will, total $65,000 with 150 awards of $500 each being made available to Michigan high school students. In previous years, only $50 awards were awarded in this category, although a greater number of in-state high school students received the scholarships. HARVEY GROTRIAN, acting direc- FRANKENMUTH (UPI) - Twelve cars of a westbound Chesapeake & Ohio freight train derailed at a rural Saginaw County crossing yesterday and crashed into a grain elevator. Police said one person was killed and Police said the evacuated families probably would be allowed to return to their homes by morning. State, and local police said the derailment occurred shortly before 2 p.m. when a semi-truck collided with THE ELEVATOR manager, Howard Rogner, 55, of Gera, was killed. Five persons, including the truck driver, two elevator employees and two railroad workers, were injured, State Police said. -