Michigan onslaught scorches Virginia, 56-C See stories, Page 7 VIETNAM'S ELECTION See Editorial Page I 1tr tan :Eatt BORING High-G5 Low-54 Mostly cloudy, chance of rain Vol. LXXXII, No. 9 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, September 19, 1971 Ten Cents Eight Pages P I .. --- The Attica By PETER ARNETT ATTICA, N.Y. (P) - Just four minutes. Time enough for state troop- ers and sheriff's deputies to storm the barricades held by re- bellious prisoners in A t t i c a state prison's cell block D. Time enough on a rain- drenched morning for a blood- letting that has stirred contro- versy across America. Time enough to enter in the record books that bloodiest pri- son riot in the nation's history . . 30 inmates and 10 civilian hostages dead. The archives will show the up- rising began on Thursday, Sept. 9, and was suppressed on Mon- day, Sept. 13. Those are the cold chronological facts. But what of the realities behind the fig- ures? The roots of the rebellion un- doubtedly lie deep in the Amer- ican prison system itself; , the change in the character of the prisoner; and a change in the attitudes of American society. These issues have been blur- red by charges and rebuttals dealing with the use of unneces- sary force and official indiffer- ence. But interviews with ex-in- mates of Attica, with officials, guards, and local residents, in- dicates that the upstate N e w York prison had come to reflect within its gray walls the troub- led society without, just as had the college campuses and t h e U.S. Army in Vietnam. Inside Attica were political activists, usually blacks or Puerto Ricans, arguing that they were victims of a discriminatory society, and recruiting f e 11 o w convicts into political groups that openly flourished in t h e prison yards. There were the guards, a 11 white and all from surrounding rural Wyoming County, increas- ingly exasperated by the politi- ragedy cal activism of their urban-root- ed charges. And the ranks of the guards were split, too, between t h e older men and the younger ones who felt that the old-fashioned methods of pushing prisoners around were no longer valid. Just as the color and the psy- chological make-up of the pri- soners had changed in recent years, so should the techniques to handle them, these younger guards suggested. There were the planned prison reforms themselves that, many guards argued, allowed prisoners too much leeway, destroying re- spect and order. Another factor was the com- munity outside Attica's turreted walls, the neat frame houses with toys in the yards. Most of the people there were dependent upon the prison for their liveli- hood. They gossiped, and dis- cussed the pulse of the peniten- See ATTICA, Page 3 Mid East attacks endanger truce -Associated Press IN THE AFTERMATH of a police attack to regain control of Attica Correctional Facility, a policeman and guard collect the prisoners' make-shift weapons from the exercise yard. ' ,q ASTUDENT PROTEST Vietnamese unrest climaxes in rioting SAIGON (/) - Students rioted in t h e streets here yesterday, climaxing more than a week of rising anti-government unrest and anti-American violence. Protesting the government's compulsory student military training and President Nguyen Van Thieu's one-man presidential election scheduled for Oct. 3, militant Buddhist students clashed repeatedly with police in Saigon throughout the day and long after nightfall. The students hurled fire bombs and rocks and the police countered with massive amounts of tear gas. At least three students and two policemen were wounded. By the end of the day, three jeeps, three motorbikes and an American sedan had been burned by student bombs. A U.S. military RIOT POLICE charge students yesterday in Saigon in response to a barrage of rocks and molotov cocktails. Buddhist students were protesting South Vietnam's one-man pres- idential election. SURVEY OF GRADS fiGS study reveals no bad effect on job or grad school chances bus was forced off a street by students and crashed into a pole. No injuries to any Americans were re- ported. Hours after the rioting, a large South Vietnamese ammunition dump north of the capital was partially destroyed by a series of explosions. There were no reports of casualties in the ammunition dump explosions. Officials said the cause was not known. Artillery shells and thousands of rounds of small arms ammunition were still exploding at daybreak today, four hours after the first blast and fire. Damage appeared confined to one sec- tion of the Go Vap dump, one of the biggest in the Saigon area, located about four miles from the city's center. On the battlefronts yesterday, there was no major ground action reported. Military spokesmen, however, disclosed that the Viet Cong Thursday sprang a double ambush 35 miles north of Saigon that took the lives of three American advisers and inflicted heavy casualties on South Vietnamese troops. In the action, Viet Cong troops, hiding in the Michelin rubber plantation, first am- bushed a jeep, killing the three Americans. Then, military spokesmen said, the Viet Cong ambushed two rescue, platoons of South Vietnamese soldiers, by hitting them with mortar shells, grenades and machine gun fire. Official reports said that of the 70-man government rescue force, 15 were killed, 25 were wounded and three are missing. In the U Minh forest, deep in the Me- kong Delta, fighting died down after three days of large-scale action with heavy losses on both sides. The South Vietnamese claim- ed they killed 189 North Vietnamese and Viet Cong but acknowledged losses to them- selves of 47 killed and 97 wounded. The day's political disorders began with a short-lived demonstration by 18 opposition deputies of the National Assembly and ended with a rain-soaked clash between stu- dents and police at a Saigon University stu- dent housing compound on Minh M a n g Street in the Chinese section of the capital. In between, other student groups ranging in size from 50 to 200 staged noisy demon- strations in at least three other parts of Saigon, including one at Van Hanh Buddhist University. By The Associated Press Israel and Egypt exchanged missile fire along the Suez Canal yesterday, pushing the 13-month-old cease-fire dangerously close to collapse. Cairo said Israeli Phantom fighter-bombers attacked Egyptian canal side positions with American-supplied Shrike missiles, without causing damage or casualties. It added that Egypt fired antiaicraft missiles back. The Egyptians described the attack as an "unsuccessful attempt" to retaliate for the shooting down of an Israeli transport plane Friday over the Israeli-occupied Sinai Desert. Egyptian and Israeli troops were put on alert all along the 13-mile waterway after the World War II-vintage Stratocruiser was shot down by Egyptian air defense, Tel Aviv said. Israel charged yesterday's exchange was begun by Egyptian missile batteries which fired Soviet-supplied rockets at Israeli war- planes flying on the Israeli side of the water- way. The military command said its planes were untouched and returned the fire. The Egyptian communique said the for- mation of Israeli Phantoms fired missiles from about six miles east of the canal on the Israeli-held side. A military spokesman in Tel Aviv declined comment on the Egyptian communique. The weekend incidents underscored the fragility of the U.S.-initiated cease-fire in the absence of a political settlement between Israel and Egypt. Reliable sources said there had been con- tacts between American diplomats in Tel Aviv and Israeli officials, but could add no details. It was assumed the Americans, as archi- tects of the canal truce, expressed fear that retaliation might revive the eye-for-an-eye military policy that has carried the Mideast through 23 years of conflict. In Washington, the State Department sought yesterday to head off a renewal of the fighting by calling on both Egypt and Israel to abide by the truce. "We urge both sides to scrupulously ob- serve the cease-fire," a State Department spokesman said in a brief public statement. Informed sources indicated Washington would be conveying similar messages to both countries through diplomatic channels. Israeli officials insisted Israel had not broken the cease-fire, declaring it would See MISSILE, Page 8 Women call for shopping boycott The local chapter of Women Uniting to End the War (WUEW) is calling for a "no- spend day" this Tuesday in protest against the Indochina War. In a campaign aimed at uniting Ameri- can women in a nation-wide protest, the WUEW urges all area women not to spend money on Tuesday. "The intent of the boycott," said one of WUEW's leaders, Jean Converse, "is not to deprive stores of business, but to make women aware of the feelings of other women concerning the war." According to Mrs. Chris Gerzevitz, an- other of WUEW's organizers, refusing to spend money is a private action all women can take. "Women who haven't expressed their feelings before about ending United States' military involvement in Indochina will have a chance to protest," she says. Tuesday's boycott is the second "no spend day" organized by WUEW to protest the Vietnam War. ISRAELI SOLDIER surveys the wreck- age of a Boeing Stratocruiser, downed by Egyptian missile fire Friday in the Is- raeli-occupied Sinai. Panel probes ~sexism In county govt.l By SUE STARK Members of the Committee on the Status of Women, a county women's group, em- barked on a study of alleged sexism In Washtenaw County government this week by presenting their plans to top county officials. BothCounty Administrator Ross Childs and County Commissioner Jay Bradbury met with the committee members earlier this week and expressed their willingness to cooperate with the women's probe. Childs said, however, he did not believe any sex discrimination existed in the coun- ty government. "At least there isn't any violent discrimination that I know of," he said. "But if there is," he added, "we want to stop it too." Responding to Child's remarks, commit- tee chairman Gail Boyd said, "Just be- cause the county has a written policy that says it doesn't discriminaterdoes not mean that, in fact, it does not." "Part of our job is to educate, to help the county officials administrators and the gen- eral public to see how subtle the discrim- ination indeed is," added another commit- tee member, Debra Oakley. Working with the woman's group is Sue Sayre, the only woman commissioner on the Washtenaw County Board. Sayre re- cently said of the probe that "nothing is factual yet so we really don't know whe- ther discrimination at the county govern- ment level does exist." However, she continued, "We do know that there are a lot of county jobs that are sex-oriented, traditionally women's jobs." Sayre added that all jobs are classified by "grade and level" with promotions de- pending upon these specifications. "T he study should point out whether some peo- ple are being moved along faster than oth- ers," she said. By JIM IRWIN With a preliminary study i on the first graduating class now completed, indications are that the University graduate with a Bachelor of General Studies (BGS) degree need not fear lowered, status in the job or graduate school market. In fact, of the 30 University graduates holding a BGS degree who responded to a survey over the summer, only two thought the degree had any negative effect on their chances for gaining employment or accept- ance to graduate schools. The BGS degree program, unlike the tra- ditional Bachelor of Arts (BA) or Bachelor of Science (BS) degrees, carries no language, distribution or concentration requirements. The degree was created in winter, 1969, fol- lowing a wave of student protest seeking to eliminate langauge and distribution require- ments from the regular BA degree. In the past, the BGS has been regarded Local Vietnam vets organize to protest war in Indochina By MARCIA ZOSLAW The newly-created Ann Arbor chapter of the Vietnam Veterans Against the War (VVAW) held its first meeting last week with a turnout of over 40 veterans. 'The Ann Arbor chapter was incorporated into the national VVAW this past August. VVAW became nationally prominent last May during the demonstrations against the Vietnam war in Washington, D.C. While a leader of the Detroit VVAW spoke on the group's national goals at their meeting last week, Mike Lewis, co-founder of the Ann Arbor chapter address-d the veterans on how to relate their anti-war activities to the Ann Arbor community. Projects suggested by the veteran group included the showing of anti-war docu- mentaries in an attempt to draw local com- munity support as well as participating in the teach-in against the Vietnam War to be held here Oct. 13, National Moratorium Mike Reade, co-founder of the Ann Ar- bor chapter, spoke of "shoving the war home" by using guerilla theater to drama- tize the demands they raise. VVAW's overall national objectives in- clude "stoking the waning fires of the anti- war movement" along with increasing GI benefits, Reade added. The veterans group is also calling for an immediate end to the fighting in Indochina and withdrawal of American troops. Viewing themselves as a permanent watchdog group, VVAW plans to investigate what they see as ties between American business interests and the Vietnam War. In an effort to increase GI benefits VVAW also demands that servicemen and women in the military stopped "being treated as second class citizens" and that legislation for veterans hospital care and veterans job plac ment and training be enacted. The VVAW also pledged it support to all mili- by many faculty members and administra- tors, and even some students, as an aca- demically inferior degree. They say the program is not as rigorous as the BA program, and the lack of require- ments allows students to "take it easy." Despite such fears, however, the program enjoyed a phenomenal growth last year- increasing from 300 to over 1,000 students. And a survey last spring on BGS undergrad- uates indicated BGS students were every bit as "academically qualified" as their BA and BS peers, and were pursuing equally rigorous programs. This summer the LSA Committee on the Underclass Experience (CUE), composed of. students and faculty, sent out a question- naire to the 88 students who graduated last April with BGS degrees. According to John Revitte, '72, and Ron Alpern, '74, both committee members, the response rate was 37.5 per cent, which they consider to be "fair" considering the dif- ficulties of locating graduates by mail in the summer. The BGS graduates were asked: -What effect BGS had on being accepted to graduate or professional programs; -What effect BGS had on obtaining a job; and -Did BGS benefit their education. Of those grads seeking entrance to gradu- ate and professional schools only one felt the BGS degree had any negative effect on his chances for acceptance. Of the remain- ing, 31 per cent felt the degree had helped them gain acceptance, and 63 per cent felt the BGS had neither helped nor hindered their chances for acceptance. This compares favorably with a nation- wide telephone survey conducted by The Daily last winter, which revealed that most RESPONSE TO DEMANDS ' promises Indian admissions, aid The University is moving to meet Indian demands for in- creased Indian course offerings, admissions and financial aid at the University, according to Vice President for Academic Affairs Allan Smith. Smith's announcement at Fri- day's Regents meeting was the essential in founding the Uni- versity. The land, the suit maintains, was originally ceded with the understanding that the Univer- sity would provide for the edu- cation of Indians, an obligation it says the University has failed to meet. been taken" to answer the de-e mands. "We will have a re- cruiter in the admissions office. We hope he will be an American Indian, and that he can continue visits to high schools," Smith said. Further, Smith promised to take action on Indian demands '+" ii