THE ATTICA REVOLT See Editorial Page \:JI r e Lit4 :43 a t tH QUAINT High-72 Low-52 Partly cloudy, perchance rain Vol. LXXXII, No. 5 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wedneslay, September 15, 1971 Ten Cents Eight Pages Vaughn' urges:k it : May electiony would assist h)1 young voters By SARA FITZGERALD A state legislator yesterday° began a state-wide drive here to win support for a May pri- mary to give young people a ": voice in choosing delegates to nominating conventions. Speaking at a voter registration rally, Rep. Jackie Vaughn III (D- - Detroit) urged passage of a bill which would set up a May pri- mary to elect precinct delegates for county, state and national nominating conventions. Unless the law is changed, the primary will be held in August-after the na- tional conventions. "It is unthinkable," VaughnC said, "that newly enfranchised 18- 21 year-olds will have no voice in the selection of candidates by the major political parties." In the event the bill is not pass-r ed, the Democratic Party filed suit yesterday against the state ofh Michigan, claiming current state election laws deny young people their due 'process to choose dele- gates.W Under present Michigan law precinct delegates are selected two years in advance of the presiden-. L c ld m n tao sp tial election. - The Democrats face a creden- DESEGREGATION CONTROVERSY: tials challenge at their 1972 na-_ tional convention because of new Democratic rules muaking it illegalI for delegates to be "locked up" s i before January, 1972.a Vaughn, long a proponent of young people's rights, also said his office would act as a full-timeU students' representative in the capital. However, he urged that a state- wide coalition of university stu- 'dent governments be formed to hire a full-time lobbyist in Lans-t ing. Expenses, Vaughn suggested, could be pro-rated among partici- pating schools. "Universities and other groups all have well-paid lobbyists," he said. "It's time students had someone to serve as a watchdog for their concerns." If the May primary bill is pass- ed, it will be another step in the ; h' process of achieving equal voting rights for the state's new young voters. It comes on the heels of a state Supreme Court ruling that stu- dents may vote in their college towns, and a ruling by Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley .Athat students may run for state offices which have no age limit-including such posts -Associated Press as university regents and county ABOUT 400 TO 500 SUPPORTERS of the anti-busing National sheriffs. Action Group forced the closing of a General Motors Fisher Body If approved, the May primary plant in Pontiac yesterday. would also enable young people to - _---__--- run for precinct delegate posts. Vaughn predicted the bill will'" pass the House the first day terp ayen ts, October. However, he said the pro- ,ce-foreepaym ents, port in ordero pass through the discussion head Reg evenly split Senate. Tvhe representative, sponsor of the state's 18-year-old vote law. By ALAN LENHOFF approve the University's 1971-7 said he would also introduce a opeating budget at the pub .. President Robben Fleming said iprtn ugta h ul legislative package he termed the ri ' u **/*.J~i I1112r J~ "Young Citizen's Bill of Rights." yesterday he will soon announce session Friday - almost two an The package includes legislation whether the University will make ne-half months after the start o to e eage limis fr st payments to the city of Ann Arbor the fiscal year. tioffes.aglmtfor police and fire services-after Details of the new budget hav ic offes. will be speaking at he discusses the matter with the not yet been publicized. Wayne State University today and Regents Gov. William Milliken last Fet at other universities in the next The Regents, h o 1 d i n g their ruary recommended that the tr few weeks to gain support for his monthly meetings tomorrow and ditional police and fire payment proposals. Friday, are expected to tentatively 'be discontinued, citing that An MA -edical states illed I ATTICA, N.Y. (R-A county medical examiner disclosed yesterday that nine hostages slain in the storming of riot- torn Attica Correctional Facil- ity all died of gunshot wounds and none of them died of slashed throats as officials had maintained for 24 hours. Hours after the medical exami- ner's report, State Corrections Commissioner Russell Oswald con- ceded that the official version that knife-wielding convicts slew most of the hostages was errone- ous. Oswald did not say how the hostages were shot. Oswald also described the types of weapons found during a search of the prison since control was regained. Although another correction of- ficial earlier said crude guns were found, no guns were listed in Os- wald's recital, in which he listed among hundreds of homemade weapons molotov cocktails, sharp- ened shears, steel and metal pipes, t e a r g a s guns and projectiles, swords, bolos, straight razors and spiked baseball bats. Oswald met with newsmen at the prison late last night. He told them he agreed with the medical report that the hostages were shot, but refused rto answer questions NEW YORK from newsmen. "There were no cut throats or Attica Correct any kind of mutilation," s a i d continued wor Monroe County's medical exami- ner, John Edland. He examined eight of the bodies after a ninth. hostage already had been estab- lished as a gunshot victim. "All eight cases died of gun- shot wounds,;' Edland later told li1al a news conference. "There were two types of missiles found in both the inmates and the host- ages. Some were buckshot. Some lAbout 250 were larger caliber missiles." In explanation of how the host- tenaw County ages died from gunshot wounds, at Attica Corr Oswald said, "the first and most The marc obvious answer is the fact that in- Attica" sign as they formed a Then, spea person said, report unfire [0stages -Daily-Tom Gottlieb otest Attica police action protests continue. s shut G.M. plant From Wire Service Reports Opponents of court - ordered busing for school integration in Pontiac yesterday crippled op- erations at a 4,200-worker Gen- eral Motors Corporation manu- facturing complex in the city. And last night, tensions re- mained high in the industrial town of 85,000 as about 300 people picketed city hall during a special meeting of the City Commissioners. Outside the meeting, one black and one white were arrested when a disturbance broke out, marking the only incident of the day-long picketing. Throughout the day black leaders accused the mostly white police force of employing a "double standard" in treating black and white picketers. They said the police were sympa- 'U' udget thetic to the anti-busing picket- ers. Inside City Hall, the Commis- sioners approved by a 5 to 2 margin the setting up of a Spec- ial Mayor's committee, headed by the mayor, to study the bus- ing problem in Pontiac. The mayor cast one of the two negative votes. Meanwhile, the anti - busing forces indicated they would keep the GM plant shut down, at least until this morning. Yesterday, several noisy, but peaceful, pickets paraded in front of gates to a Fisher Body Division plant in chilly, pre- dawn fog, urging workers to stay off the job. Defying both the United Auto Workers Union and GM, more than 60 per cent of the plant's 2,000-man day shift was absent at starting time. GM sent home those men who had reported, and shut down the production line because of insufficient man- power. Four hours later, the assem- bly line at the adjoining Pontiac Motor Division plant came to a halt because the flow of auto bodies from Fisher had stopped. Parts manufacturing opera- tions continued, but GM offi- cials said these, too, wouldbe halted if the disruptions con- tinued. Irene McCabe, spokesman for the National Action Group See PLANT, Page 8 -Associated Press STATE TROOPERS guard the main entrance at ional Facility yesterday morning as state stroopers king with the regular prison guards. protest killings, ch to county jail By SARA FITZGERALD people staged a non-violent march to Wash- Jail yesterday, protesting Monday's 37 slayings ectional Facility. hers carried black streamers and an "Avenge s they walked from the Diag to the jail. There circle, clapping their hands and chanting. aking to the prisoners over a loudspeaker, one 'We're here to show our solidarity with the Dr. Edland brothers in Attica and to show we're behind those of you in Washtenaw County Jail." A j a i official reported that prisoners were not agitated, were in their cells and unable to look out on the demonstrators. However, when the crowd started chanting, someone inside the pris- on waved a piece of paper and flashed a peace sign through a small broken window pane over- looking the demonstrators. Police did not interfere with the march. Two Ann Arbor police motorcycles escorted m a r c he rs t h r o u g h the downtown area. Washtenaw County SheriffDoug- las Har ve y,County Prosecutor William Delhey and some plain- clothes deputies stood by outside the jail. Harvey's "secret weapon", an armored vehicle equipped with spray - gun devices, was in the parking lot and several police dogs See 250, Page 8 ants agenda mates dressed all hostages in pris- on garb to insure difficulty in identifying prisoners and guards." The hostages, he added, were also "used as shields and forced forward into gunfire." The nine were among 41 per- sons who lost their lives in 96 hours of mutiny, according to re- vised State Corrections Depart- ment figures on the worst riot in New York's penal history. Forty- See GUNSHOTS, Page 8 Protests on Attica scattered From Wire Service Reports There were scattered protests throughout the nation yesterday, both inside and outside prison walls, in the wake of the shooting deaths Monday of 41 prisoners and hostages at New York's Attica Correctional Facility. At the Baltimore, Md., city jail, inmates staged a brief protest in the cafeteria but were quickly su- pressed after guards cordoned off the area and lobbed tear-gas gre- nades in the vicinity. Officials said the disturbance was related to the Attica rebellion. A slight disturbance was also reported at the Cleveland city jail but officials said it was quickly subdued. Demonstrations and condemna- tions of the action of the New York prison officials continued last night. In New York City pickets were thrown up around Gov. Nelson Rockefeller's Manhattan offices. 2 c d of ve Arbor is the only city in thie skateI to receive this type of subsidy from a local college. Sources in the State Legislature, however, disclosed to the Daily last week that $300,000 cf the Uni- versity 's recently approved $78.1 million state appropriation had, rte. T b- been "unofficially" earmarked to a- go to the city. ts University officials, meanwhile, i I th th av ith Group pushes drive to remove Brad Taylor from SGC seat PETITION DRIVE i Abortion reform sought .f 'By GERI SPRUNG With the state's abortion reform bill buried in Sthe House, proponents of reform are beginning a petition drive to put the issue before the state's zoters ip the Nov. 1972 elections. h A kick-off rally scheduled for today in Detroit and sponsored by the Michigan Coordinating o Committee for Abortion Reform signals renewal of the drive to legalize abortions performed by licensed physicians up to the twentieth week of _ prsgnancy. Thp fiivxwPk cer (.flj f 1l111%fian is anpffort. h ave insiste iai ney nrneier have an obligation nor the avail- able resources to make the pay- ments to the city. The payments, which totaled~ about $1.1 million last year, amount to 16 per cent of the city's police and fire budgets. City officials have predicted that an end to the subsidy would greatly affect their ability to provide ade- quate police and fire protection to the campus. The Regents' approval of a new budget will set University spend- ing levels for the current fiscal year. Since the start of fiscal 1971-72, University departments1 have been operating at list year's funding levels. The new budget figure, however, is contingent on Gov. Milliken See Editorial Page for related column. By W.E. SCHROCK A recall drive against Stu- dent Government Council mem- ber Brad Taylor gained mo- mentum this week as an ad hoc committee reported collect- ing nearly 700 signatures of the thousand needed to place the issue on an SGC ballot. The drive, coordinated by the Committee to Recall Brad Tay- lor, focuses on Taylor's partici- pation in the House Internal Se- curity Committee (HISC) re- the best of my knowledge, all my testimony was true." Taylor's critics have also stated that in the same SGC election which brought Taylor to office, the student elec- torate overwhelmingly approv- ed the People's Peace Treaty. In effect, they argued, Tay- lor had gone against the wishes of his constituency in appear- ing as a "friendly" witness. They have pointed to HISC's traditional "harassment" of left - wing "subversive" activi- ties as an indication that im- plementation of the treaty may be hindered by testimony such Opinion meanwhile remained sharply divided on the decision of New York officials to invade the prison. Penologist Dr. Vernon Fox, who "talked-down" a prison disturbance at tl e Southern Michigan Prison at Jackson in 1952, described as "inexcusable" the Attica killings. President N i x o n telephoned Gov. Rockefeller to commend him for taking the action he did, and numerous other officials around the country indicated their sup- port of the state's actions. Sen. James Buckley (Con- Brad Taylor