FREEING ANGELA: NOW WHAT? See Editorial Page 4tIiri igaul ~Iaitip 110-HUM High-30 Low-25 Cloudy, chance of snow in afternoon Vol. LXXXII, No. 115 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, February 25, 1972 Ten Cents Ten Pages FULL DIPLOMATIC RELATIONS?- Senate Nixon seeks close ties with China during talks OKs --Associatea Press PRESIDENT NIXON talks with Chinese youngsters during his trip to Peking yesterday. *EIGHT MORE FIRES: University buildings hit by'arson attempts By MARTY PORTER The rash of deliberately set fires continued yesterday. By early this morning eight fires had been discovered in West and South Quads, in the Michigan Union, and in Mason Hall. The latest blazes brought to 41 the number of unsolved cases of arson on campus since early this month. The first blaze, in a women's room in Mason Hall, was reported to the fire department late yesterday afternoon. It was extinguished before the arrival of firemen. The second fire struck West Quad at approximately 9 . From Wire Service Reports After four closed-door ses- sions with Premier Chou En- lai,nPresident Nixon was de- scribed yesterday as aiming at eventual restoration of full diplomatic relations between the United States and main- land China - whatever the repercussions in Taiwan. An informed American source said Nixon and Henry Kissinger, national security affairs adviser, are talking with Chou about is- sues involved in establishing what the premier has termed "normal state relations." While the top American and Chinese leaders formulated broad policy, Secretary of State Wil- liam Rogers, his Chinese counter- part Chi Peng-fe and their as- sociates were working out ques- tions 'of how to effect summit policies. While no U.S. officials involved in the talks would discuss mat- ters of substance, there was good reason to believe Nixon and Chou had embarked on setting up cul- tural exchanges, limited tourism between the two countries, a sys- tem for handling Chinese-Ameri- can trade and means for estab- lishing regular contacts short of full diplomatic relations involv- ing an exchange of ambassadors. While no one would talk about the means likely to be employed in continuing the dialogue be- tween the two nations on a diplo- matic level, there would be pre- cedent for establishing consular relations without setting up em- bassies. Britain, for example, has recognized mainland China 22 years - but it continues to have a consulate on the Nationalist Chi- nese island of Taiwan. Rogers and his Chinese coun- terpart, were conducting signifi- cant, talks aimed at carrying the process forward in practical ways, a high-level American official re- ported. In the matter of diplomatic re- lations, the question of the Na- tionalists is not easy to resolve, since Nixbn has said he has no intention of abandoning Taiwan. Nixon spent three more hours yesterday in private conversa- tions with Chou. Presumably, somewhere along the line the subject of Indochina has come up. Chou said before Nixon came to China that the U.S. peace plan was unacceptable. Nixon has said aspects of the Vietnam war was on the agenda. On his visit to the Great Wall of China yesterday an engineering marvel built 2,200 years ago to keep out barbarians, Nixon told reporters: "What is most import- ant is that we have an open world. He also called for an end to "walls of any kind." See NIXON, Page 7 Daily- Sara Krulwich The gift of life A nurse gets ready to take blood from a student donor at the Student Blood Bank, conducted the past two days in the Michigan Union ballroom. More than 180 people participated in the program, which was sponsored by the American Red Cross and Alpha Phi Omega. RENT STRIKE CASES: State, U. S. courts gve tenants mixed rulings Hear ing held on . " jail sut By CHRIS PARKS Circuit Court Judge William Ager, yesterday, declined to grant a four point "emergency injunc- tion" in a suit pending against WAshtenaw County Sheriff Doug-, las Harvey and other county of- ficials over conditions in the coun- ty jail. The suit, being brought by three -lnmates of the jail, charges Har- vey, Captain and chief turnkey Kenneth Shultz and the County Commissioners and Board of Au- ditors with illegal and unconsti- tutional administration of the jail anti-busin g com promise WASHINGTON (M "-The Senate yesterday adopted a compromise amendment designed to put some limits on school busing for desegregation purposes but to allow it when local officials approve. The provision was offered as an amendment to a com- bined $23 billion higher education bill passed last year by, both the Senate and the House of Representatives. To this bill President Nixon has attached legislation to authorize $1.5 billion for schools in the process of desegregation. The compromise proposal was denounced by Southern Democrats and others opposed to- busing as worthless and a hoax. Some senators attacked it as a retreat in the integration fight. Sen. Abraham Ribicoff ---_____ -- (D-Conn.) said it served "public notice that we have given up the struggle to end discrimination." p.m. last night and was quick- ly followed by two more blazes in the dorm. Minor damage was reported to restrooms in Chicago, Williams and Wenley houses. Two fires in the Michigan Union were then discovered. One, in a women's restroom on the third floor, was quickly put out by a security guard. Damage was re- portedly minor. More serious was thought to be a blaze in the closed-circuit tele- vision guarded vending room in the Union basement. Despite the presence of the camera, which is hooked-up to a monitor at the Union desk, staff members were only alerted to the fire when the basement began filling with smoke. Twenty-five minutes later, two more fires were started, these in South Quad. One was set in a utility room in the west of the Quad, another was thought to have been set on the seventh floor of Huber House. From Wire Service Reports Tenants seeking the right to withhold rent until landlords repair their homes have received a back- to-back victory and defeat. Locally, the State Court of Ap- peals yesterday upheld the case of a group of Ann Arbor tenants who refused to pay rent to landlord Louis Rome during the time their homes did not meet health stand- ards. Meanwhile, however, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled Wednesday that the Constitution does not give tenants such a right unless state law provides it. The state decision came after a long legal battle which saw Cir- cuit Court Judge Ross Campbell rule several months ago that the condition of rental property was no excuse for non-payment of rent. In the new decision, the court held that state law requires land- lords- to warrant that the property is in good repair and that it com- plies with health and safety laws. The controversy, which sparked the efforts of the Ann Arbor Tenants Union, led to Rome's res- ignation as head of the State Com- mission of Law Enforcement and Criminal Justice. The Supreme Court decision, meanwhile, dealt a blow to those who had hoped to liberalize land- lord-tenant laws through Supreme Court decisions. City to use part of federal grant to expand police complaint unit "The Constitution does not pro- vide judicial remedies for every social and economic ill," Justice Byron White said, in upholding most of an Oregon eviction law. The case was brought by a Portland couple, Donald and Edna Lindsey, whose $100-a-month house was declared unfit for habitation by city officials in 1969. When the landlord would not comply with their requests for improvements, the Lindseys held back their rent. They were subsequently evicted. States such as Oregon do not protect tenants who refuse to pay rent to unresponsive landlords. However, Michigan laws do pro- tect tenants from eviction after registering complaints about the condition of their homes. The Lindseys claimed they had a constitutional right to remain in their house without paying rcnt until it was made habitable. However, White said, "We are unable to perceive in that docu- ment any constitutional guararitee of access to Jwellings of a par- ticular quality, -r"thegright of a tenant to occupy the real property of his landlord beyond the terms of his lease." Dissenting from the opinion Here Justices William Douglas and Wil- liam Brennan. Brennan said he thought the Oregon law needed further clari- fication from a lower court. Douglas, however, said the Ore- gon laws was "a vestige of 4eudal, agrarian society" and that to put a tenant "into the street when the slum landlord, no the slum tenant is the real culprit, deprives the tenant of a fundamental right." The vote was the first in the Senate floor fight over the bus- ing issue. -Sens. Mike Mansfield (D- Mont.) and Hugh Scott (R-Pa.), the maj .rity and minority lead- ers, introduced the ameandment Wednesday in an effort to defuse the' bitter Senate dispute over the issue. The Mansfield-Scott amend- ment would bar use of federal funds to carry out a racial reseg- regation plan except on the writ- ten request of local school offic- ials, and prohibit courts or fed- eral officials from ordering local officials to make such a request. It would state that federal funds cannot be used for busing when the time or distance of trav- el is so great as to risk the health of the children or significantly impinge on the educational pro- cess. Meanwhile, the state said yes- terday its lawyers will go to the U.S. Supreme Court to try to win a review of a federal judge's rul- ing that state and local officials in effect caused segregation of Detroit schools. Michigan Atty. Gen. Frank J. Kelley said a petition would be- filed soon with the high court. His announcement followed 8 lays left Have you registered to vote in Ann Arbor yet? If you will be 18 by April 3, will have been in the city for one month by that time and have not voted in another state since Oct. 3, 1971, you are eligible to vote here. You can sign-up at City Hall 10-5 weekdays or at any temporary registra- tion site. But hurry, the dead- line for registration is March 3: dismissal Wednesday in the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati of the state's previous appeal. The court's refusal to reopen an earlier ruling by U.S. District Judge Stephen Roth of De- troit was contained in a terse, three paragraph order. Roth held last fall that "actions and inactions" by Detroit, State and even federal officials contri- buted to what he said amounted to segregationist policies in run- ning the city's schools. A number of integration plans involving student busing now have been presented to Roth for pos- sible implementation before the start of new classes next Septem- ber. on secret research By SCOTT GORDON Student Government Council last night established a commit- tee on classified research and called for a mass meeting next Tuesday night "to organize for the end of University war re- search". Council, meanwhile, rejected a motion to put referendum for a student allocation to the anti-war movement election ballot next month. The motion t3 establish the committee was proposed in re- sponse to the recent regental de- cision to reject Senate Assem- bly's proposed limitations for clas- sified research. The committee will work to im- plement "the University com- munity's decision through a va- riety of means, including, but not limited to, discussions with the faculty and administration." The anti-war funding motion was defeated in a six to four vote. The proposal had asked that twenty-five cents per student per term be allocated to SGC for the use of its anti-war committee. Under the proposal the student could designate the allocation to remain within the SGC general fund, or could withhold it com- pletely. In a motion related to the Re- bents' decision, SGC also estab- lished a four-member Regental Reform Commission. Council also proposed the for- mation of a selection committee, composed of both students and faculty, to find a successor to out- going Vice-President for Research A. Geoffrey Norman. SGC called for the discontinuation of "secre- tive and confidential deliberations regarding the general guidelines for this position." In other action, SGC placed its grocery co-op proposal on the spring ballot. The proposal calls for an allocation of twenty-five cents per student per term for the funding of the co-op, which would be open to students and local residents. The store would be under the control of a "Grocery Co-op Board", whose members would be appointed by SGC. An account of the co-op would be subject to in- dependent public audit annually, under the proposal. Other questions placed on the upcoming SGC ballot include a $1.50 per student per term allo- See SGC, Page 10 failitdy. Police were given varying de- In yesterday's h e a r i n g i scriptions of suspects by residents Washtenaw County Circuit Court, of the two dorms last night. A attorney Neal Bush, chief coun- student in West Quad, who asked sel for the inmates, sought to se- that his name not be printed, said cure an "emergency injunction he told officers of a brown-haired which would" close the punish-ml faot58 nhih h ment cell known as "the hole", male of about 5'8 in height who grant inmates' attorneys access to apparently prowling near the the jail to interview potential wit- vicmity of one of the blazes. nesses, restrain Harvey from op- Another description, of a 6'4" *ening mail from lawyers to their male with fair hair, was given po- clients inside the facility, and lice by a South Quad resident. See WASHTENAW, Page 7 See ARSON, Page 10 By LORIN LABARDEE The city has earmarked over $23,000 of a $100,000 federal. 'Law Enforcement Assisttance Administration grant to expand the staff of the police griev- ance office. The remainder of the grant will go to hire a civilian assis- tant for Police Chief Walter Krasny, study improved police record-keeping and recruit three new police cadets. According to the grant, $23,- 400 must be used to provide the city's Grievance Office with ad- ditional staff. The _ money ac- cording to city officials will be used to hire an investigator' and clerical help. The investigator will aid Edward Vandenburg, the current part-time Grievance Officer, study citizen complaints within city departments. Vandenburg, who maintains an active law practice, is under contract to the city and is di- - rectly responsible to City Ad- ministrator Guy Larcom. The city pays Vandenburg for 23 hours per month. However, Van- denburg said he has, in the past, put in up to 20 hours per week investigating complaints against the city. Under the terms of the grant, the police department will es- tablish the position of adminis- trative assistant to the chief of police. Captain Walter Hawkins cur- rently holds a position similar to the new position. However, according to Kras- ny. the new staff member will allotted $35,900 will pay for the cadets' salaries and their tui- tion while they attend the Uni- versity. The police budget recently has not included money for hiring new officers, according to Kras- ny. The city has hired no police department recruits for at least a year, a spokesman for the city's personnel office said. According to the city the cadets will perform functions similar to those now performed by limited duty officers, -such as checking parking violations. I 'PEOPLE'S VICTORY' Angela Davis talks to newsmen SAN JOSE, Calif. (MP - Black revolutionary A n g e 1 a Davis, speaking yesterday to a crowded news conference, called her free- dom on bail "a victory for the people." However, Davis, referring to her trial Monday on murder, kid- nap and conspiracy charges, said fenses. Davis is accused of furnishing four guns and helping plot an abortive escape attempt at the Marin County Civic Center Aug. 7, 1970, during which several persons, including a judge, were killed. Davis in a brief statement, .":ti:"::":":J:t :":: : ' 'i :{%% .... .... .......... .. n v ............................. .: :ti:"...e........................................................................... . "The real reason I * t : :;: