Wolverines surge pas t Na vy, 46-0 Middies,; music and moonmen There was something new-or rathei somebody new at the football game yes- terday. The Middies of Navy (left) came to Ann Arbor to swelter in their uniforms Sand watch their team take a drubbing at the hands of the Wolverines. At half-time, the Appollo 15 astronauts, (center, from left) David Scott, Alfred Worden, and~ James Irwin got a drive around the Tar- tan turf and a warm welcome from the crowd. And Band Director George Caven- der (right) got into the swing of things by leading the band in "Anchors Aweigh" and "By the Light of the Silvery Moon. See story Page 7 --Daily-Jim Jucilus -Daily-Robert wargo THE SUNDAY DAILY See Editorial Page Sir ija ~IaiIM SWEATY High-83 Partly cloudy; chance of late afternoon thunderstorms Eight Pages Vol LXXXIIL No. 21 ,Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, October 3, 1 971 Ten Cents -ssucaeu r- ~ A PRO-GOVERNMENT South Vietnamesc hands out posters promoting President Thien recently. The election for the Presidency, with Thieu as the only candidate'. will be held today. COA L MINERS STILL OUT Dock strike slows shipping; West coast settlement seen Vie! election opens amid shells, strife SAIGON (IP)-Demonstrations in Da Nang brought voting in South Vietnam's one-man presidential election to a virtual standstill there today. Early reports from other parts of the country indicated a light and scattered turnout at the polls. President Nguyen Van Thieu is the only candidate. Election officials in Saigon, where a bar- rage of Soviet-made missiles killed three persons before the polls opened, reported a light early turnout which picked up by mid- morning. Rockets were also fired into three other cities, killing an additional six persons. The rocket attacks wounded 20 persons, including five in Saigon. Demonstrators in Da Nang, Vietnam's sec- ond largest city, attempted to close all the polling places there. Three hours after polls opened, unofficial election returns from half of the 'country's 44 provinces showed an average voter turn- out of 14.4 per cent. The turnout ranged from a low of .3 per cent in the opposition strong- hold of Hue, to 41.6 per cent in Phong Dinh province in the Mekong Delta. t ~D''a Nang,eBuddhist monksandnyouths bombs and blocked intersections near at least Thieu technically is assured of reelection but has declared he will resign if he does not eeve more than 50 per cent of the votes Opposition factions have called for a boy- cott of the election. Thieu lashed out at his critics last night, charging their acts "are illegal and lend a hand to the Communist enemy in sabotag- ing the nation."' Minor terror incidents broke out in Saigon, where police reported four explosions within an hour, and in the coastal city of Qui Nhon, 275 miles northeast of Saigon, where a bomb destroyed part of a bridge. "'Terrorim"~ preceding the election had been at an unusually low level in the rest of South Vietnam until a surge in shelling at- tacks in the 24 hours before the voting started. The election day action followed a series along the Cambodian bordae The raids wr among the heaviest there since the allied invasion of Cambodia 18 months ago. -Associated Press THE REV. JESSE JACKSON explains the "black power handshake" to Chicago Mayor Richard Daley at the Black Expo this week. Blakxo: Chance .t Oseek 'the dream~l Clamp put on Mayday From Wire Service Reports WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Washington po- lice may not disseminate arrest records for nearly all of the 12,000-13,000 persons ar- rested during last spring's Mayday anti-war demonstrations, the U.S. Court of Appeals here ruled Friday. Any records already released must be tra- ced and retrieved, the court said. In addition, the city must refund collat- eral forfeited by those who chose not to re- turn for trial. The Washington Post esti- mated the city would have to refund $30,- 000 for the approximately 3,000 such cases. The court action is the latest in a series of judicial rebuffs to the city's arrest pro- cedures. The American Civil Liberties (AC- LU) filed suit against the procedures lead- ing to Friday's order. The demonstrationls, last April 28 through May 5, were aimed at disrupting the gov- ernment, and resulted in the largest num- ber of mass arrests for a single cause in a single day. The usual field arrest routine was abandoned, leading to challenges of the legality of the arrests by the ACLU and other groups. The court also said it may order all May- day arrest records expunged, except those un es it y official can dem onstrate "legi- In addition, the court issued a temporary injunction stalling the estimated 325 May- day cases still pending until the city's law- yers conduct a thorough "screening". Be- fore a case can be tried the court ruled, the prosecutor's office must show cause for ar- rest and demonstrate the probability of a sound case. The court said that, in retrieving the records, the police department must pro- vide the total number arrested; the dispo- sition of all cases, including the number dropped and number in which collateral was forfeited; the number of cases dismiss- ed, including .those due to lack of suffi- cient identification or police data; and the number of persons who have already sought expungement. The ACLU hailed the court- ruling as an "almost total victory." Meanwhile, city See COURT, Page 8 2 con1victs shot PONTIAC, ILL. (P-Two prisoners were shot. and five guards injured yesterday in a disturbance at Pontiac State Prison, officials said. About 300 inmates at the maximum secur- ity institution armed themselves with home- made weapons anid scattered throughout the prison, an official said. John Drieske Jr., an Illinois Department of Law( spokesman, said he had been in con- tact with state police at the scene who re- ported that two inmates suffered gunshot By The Associated Press Longshoremen's walkouts ,at all but a few 4U.S. seaports have halted miajor ocean trade, although the shutdown poses little threat to the economy since importers had expected it for months and stockpiled shipments. On other labor fronts, "substantial pro- gress" t o wi a r d settlement of the three- month-old W e s t C o a s t dock strike was reported and there was a weekend recess in the soft coal mine strike talks. About 80,000 miners in more than 20 states had walked out Friday in a wage dispute. The Association of American Railroads embargoed freight movements of export items such as grain and coal to East and Gulf Coast ports that were struck Friday when dockworkers' contracts with shippers expired. Ports in Houston and three other Texas cities were kept open by the International Longshoremen Association (ILA) locals that refused to join the walkout, while union workers under separate contracts with Mid- western shipperts kept freight moving from The nation's first simultaneous shutdown of Atlantic and Pacific ports idled interna- tional bulk mail, forced passengers arriving aboard cruise liners to carry their luggage ashore and posed a threat to farm prices. President Nixon withheld immediate emer- gency acticn under the Taft Hartley Act to halt the two strikes temporarily. He said he had received optimistic reports on negotia- tions on the West Coast and hoped for a quick settlement there. There was little hope, however, for an Searly settlement of the east's walkout. Each of the ILA's contract rounds since the end of World War II has end-'d in work stoppage. Last July importers began step- federal mediators failed to resolve the im- passe between the union and the New York Shippers Association over guaranteed an- nual income. The guarantee entitles eligible dock work- ers in New York pay for 40 hours a week', 52 weeks a year whether or not work is available for them. The shippers agreed to continue the year- old guarantee only if union members became employes of specific shipping firms where they would be under closer supervision and could be assigned to any pier on the dock, thus increasing their productivity'. The union rejected the offer. The 45,000 East and Gulf Coast dockwork- prts down" tradition in which tey usuall follow the lead of the New York local. How- See DOCK, Page 8 By GAYLE POLLARD Special To The Daily CHICAGO - Among the crowd of over 200,000 yesterday at Chicago's Interna_- tional Amphitheatre were children wear- ing small signs which read, "we had come to see the dream come true" - an apt description for the third international Black Expo here. The minority business and cultural ex- hibit is sponsored by the Rev. Jesse Jack- son and Operation Breadbasket - the economic arm of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC). The exhibition -- a memorial to Martin Luther King -- has attracted more than 400 exhibitors who are displaying teir busneses and sto promote black capital- ism. As it has in the past, Black Expo offers black people - businessmen, politicians, entertainers, and visitors - an oppor- tunity to share knowledge with each other. The conference is focused on stronger national economic and political involve- ment for black people. And black produc- tion is proudly displayed with booths set up by groups such as Freedom Ways mag- azine, Joe Lewis Milk,- and Motown Re- cords. However, not all of the. exhibitors or visitors are black. Ten per cent of the par- ticipants are white companies here to do business in the lucrative Afro-American market. Cooperation comes fo ousde the business community as well. Chicago Mayor Richard Daley proclaimed last week Black Exposition Week, and urged citizens to take advantage of the event which ends tonight. * The exposition has also attracted a va- riety of national and local black politi- cians, - including Cleveland Mayor Carl Stokes, Reps. Ronald Dellums (D-Cal.), William Clay (D-Mo.) and Parren Mit- chell (D-Maryland). Jackson has been a major figure throughout Expo. "Our survival hinges on our solvency ' Jackson said last night, as he compared black America to an underdeveloped na- Vote set on Senate Assembly is expecteG to take a final vote tomorr( on a proposed policy that would eliminate most classified i search at the University. .In a special session set for 7:30 p.m. in Dow Aud. of t Towsiey Center, the faculty representatives will consider resolution stating that the University will not generally acce projects that limit open publication of research results. Last Monday, Assembly voted 31-15 to substitute the resol tion, proposed by sociology Prof. Howard Schuman, for t report of its Research Policies Committee (RPC)-. Assembly ordered RfC to conduct a study of Universi policies concerning secret research last March. In its repo RPC urged continuation of classified research on campus l with certain procedural changes in the' review process I secret research