ATROCITIES IN CAMBODIA See editorial page ci C Sir~ta~ ~~IAi&i ICY High-32 Low--20 Windy with snow and freezing drizzle Vol. LXXXI, No. 106 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, February 4, 1971 Ten Cents Ten Pages S. AFRICA TIES S . Viet ,oss bars 4 fir m rms recruiting troops 171 By GERI SPRUNG Four corporations with offices in South Africa have beenI barred this semester from recruiting in the Office of Student Services (OSS) Placement office, as a result of the new OSS policy forbidding corporations which discriminate to recruit there. General Foods, IBM, Dun and Bradstreet, and Ford Motor Company cancelled their scheduled interviews when they were informed of the new ruling. Last October, the OSS policy board redefined the Uni- 4versity's policy of not allowing any organization or individual that discriminates to use its facilities. The OSS board extended the hi C amoda frontier, C ounty Tables plan for squad * The Washtenaw County L a w and Justice Planning Board yes- terday tabled consideration of Sheriff Douglas Harvey's proposed tri-county "Intelligence Squad". Harvey had proposed the squad to combat organized and syndicat- ed crime and narcotics traffic, as Ewell as to gather information con- cerning "campus unrest and union strikes." The decision to table considera- tion was made after a brief dis- cussion of the grant proposal, which must be approved by the *board to enable both federal and county money to be allocated for the squad. Presented to the board before consideration was postponed was a report from its Law Enforce- ment sub-committee which re- commended certain changes in Vhe squad, among them the crea- tion of a squad policy board com- prised of a representative of each participating department. Also recommended was that the squad be involved only in the in- vestigation of criminal activities nd that the grant application be odified to indicate this intent. Mayor Robert Harris has for- bidden the Ann Arbor police to participate in the squad because of fears that the squad would en- gage in political surveillance on the University campus. # Harvey indicated that the pro- posed changes in the squad did not bother him. "There's nothing wrong with a governing board," he said. He added that the wide scope of the term "criminal activity" would not preclude the squad from en- !gaging in the activity he envis- ioned when he made the original grant application. Statements attacking the squad have been made by President Rob- ben Fleming, the Model Cities Pol- icy Board, and Student Govern- vnent Council, among others, out of concern that the squad would gather intelligence information indiscriminately threatening civil liberties and the right to dissent.I Sheriff Harvey is asking for a! total of $92,000 for the squad, a third of which he intends to spend; n surveillance equipment. In- cluded among the equipment t he sheriff wants is a Bell and Howell SK-7 Surveillance Kit. The kit is believed to be a so-: phisticated electronic evesdropping device. It was described in the proposal as a "bugging device."F #Iarvey also wants four Tessinac wristband cameras and a variety of radio equipment, optical equip- ment and "surveillance vehicles" for the squad. statement to forbid the use of OSS placement office services to any "profit corporation operating where discrimination is legally enforced on the basis of race, color, creed, or sex, for example, South Africa." However, these corporations can still use the other placement offices on campus.' The Placement Office sent no- tification of the new ruling in Oc- tober to those corporations having offices in South Africa which had already scheduled interviews. When thecorporations confirmed that they did operate in South Af- rica they canceled their interviews. Upjohn Corporation and the Chase Manhattan Bank, who also have offices in South Africa, have been notified, but William Audas, associate director of Placement' not yet reported cancellations. Services, said the corporations had He adds, however, that once they confirm that they do have opera- tions in South Africa whi h follow that government's apartheid poli- cies, they will not be permitted to use his office's facilities. Proctor and Gamble had also been notified about the policy, Au- das said, since they had been list- ed among those corporations oper- ating in South Africa. However, the company presented evidence that they had canceled their South African contracts in 1968 and were then allowed to use the Placement Office facilities. According to Audas, the policy will affect approximately 15 per cent of the corporations that ask to use the office, which primarily serves students in the literary col- lege. The OSS policy has not yet been approved by the Regents. Presi- dent Robben Fleming indicated last November that part of the policy may contradict a regental decision. The policy requires any corpora- tion to participate in an open hear- ing on any of its policies if re- quested to do so by one per cent of the students. If the corporation -Associated Press Seeking survivors Rescue workers search for survivors at the scene of the Tiokol Chemical Corp. plant explosion in Brunswick, Ga., yesterday. At least 25 persons died in the blast, which destroyed the building where magnesium flares were being manufactured for use in Indochina. The cause of the blast is not yet known. (See News Briefs, Page 3.) DRUG SEIZURE: 3 arrested in raid by combined police squad Laos From Wire Service Reports As reports of a South Viet- namese invasion of Laos g a i n e d increasingly wide- spread acceptance yesterday, 10,000 South Vietnamese troops with U.S. air support entered Cambodia in what ap- peared to be another phase of the same operation. Despite a continuing news em- bargo, American news services ex- pressed little doubt that some troops had crossed the Laotian border. However, it appeared that the major attack, directed at cutt- ing off the Ho Chi Minh trail, was yet to come. As of last night, 25,000 South Viet- namese and 9,000 American troops remained massed near the border south of Khe Sanh. The Cambodian drive was de- scribed by Saigon officials as a re- peat of last year's invasion for the purpose of screening American troop withdrawals. However, some sources raised the possibility that the invading troops would be used to attack the rear of Communist forces defending the Ho Chi Minh trail once the full scale invasion of Laos had begun. The Washington Post yesterday: reported that American troops were under instructions to halt at the Laotian border when cross-border operations begin. Meanwhile, the Soviet Union said it "strongly denounced the armed intrusion of the United States into Laos, while the Peo- ple's Republic of China and the Pathet Lao charged that U.S. and Vietnamese troops were mass- ing on the South Vietnamese bor- der for a "major operation" in Laos. When asked about a report of South Vietnamese action on the Bolovens Plateau in southern Laos, Lt. Col. Nguyn Tuyen, spokesman for the South Vietna- mese Defense Ministry, said "As far as I know there are no South Vietnamese troops in Laos. Up to now, I have no information about that. I cannot confirm or deny it." While refusing to answer ques- tions on the situation, White House press secretary Ronald Ziegler acknowledged that the President met Tuesday night with his top military, diplomatic, and intelligence advisers to discuss Indochina. Meanwhile, leading Democratic senators yesterday blasted the Nixon administration for the sec- recy surrounding the Vietnamese operations, while o t h e r s de- nounced the U.S.-backed drive in- to Cambodia as a new escalation of the war. Sens. E d m u n d Muskie (D- Maine) and Frank Church (D- Idaho) said the new attack "raised questions about the administra- tion's intentions," and criticized Secretary of State William Rogers for not telling the Senate Foreign Relations Committee about the impending operations at a closed session last Thursday. The committee, meanwhile, said it had received no answer to its invitation for Rogers and Defense Secretary Melvin Laird to testify about developments in Laos and Cambodia. By JONATHAN MILLER A raiding party of 16 Washtenaw County sheriff's deputies, state and city police and Detroit Metro Squad detectives yesterday after- noon seized 52 pounds of mari- juana and "a sizeable quantity of hashish, LSD and heroin," and arrested three persons in the city. The raid comes only two weeks after Police Chief Walter Krasny promised a "crackdown" on drug traffic and announced that "the heat is on" drug pushers. Washtenaw County police dog. The dog was on a training mis- sion at Metropoiltan Airport Mon- day afternoon when he smelled the marijuana through several layers of packaging. Sheriff Doug- las Harvey said yesterday that the marijuana was covered by what appeared to be talcum powder- apparently an effort by the sender to disguise the smell of the drug. The narcotics were concealed in what Chief Krasny called a metal package was dispatched from "South of the border." Upon the arrival of the con- signment at 4 p.m. yesterday the police intervened and arrested Pa- tricia Billmayer, 19, of the Brook- ridge address, Thomas Powell, 23, of St. Petersburg, Fla., and John Cassell, 21, of 3402 Grand River, Farmington. All three were charged with possession of mari- juana. Krasny indicated, how- ever, that other charges might be brought at a later date. -Associated Press Bomb offering A student yesterday offers Salvador Lopez, president of the University of the Philippines, a Molotov bomb encased in a bottle during Lopez's speech to the students. The offer was in response to Lopez's appeal to defend the campus against military occupation. COLLEGE COURSE 327: LSA unit opens inquiry on class By BOB SCHREINER and CHUCK WILBUR The Executive Committee of the literary college opened inquiry into the College Course 327 controversy yesterday, as Student Government Council urged the reinstatement of the deleted six sections of the Course Mart course. The committee questioned Psychology Prof. Robert Hef- ner, sponsor of the course entitled "Issues, Strategy, and Analysis in Political Action." They asked about certain "pro- cedural inadequacies" which he has alleged were made by the LSA curriculum committee in' ' refuses, then it would be barred The confiscated drugs were de- footlocker." Krasny said last night that in from using the OSS Placement livered to the house at 219 Brook- The package arrived on a com- fact 29 kilogram-weight bricks of Office for recruiting. ridge by commercial carrier yes- mercial flight from an undisclosed marijuana had been seized in the The Regents, debating the issue in terday afternoon after the con- location, believed to be Mexico, on raids. That quantity should total 1968, decided that corporate par- tent of the air freight consignment Monday afternoon. 63.8 pounds of marijuana but See OSS, Page 10 of drugs was discovered by a Police would say only that the Krasny indicated that the weight of each kilo was probably short .C i. f of the full 2.2 pounds. Suittoso prosecution o Krasny estimated the value of the consignment at approximately $10,000 at current wholesale prices. yKrasnywould not give details 2eof the quantities of other drugs 25 indicted inKentjury repor sHarvey said last night that the CLEVELAND, Ohio (') - Two|New York listed the same plain- saying there was no basis to stop raid was "a well executed arrest suits filed yesterday asked a fed- tiffs as the two suits on which prosecution. made by four agencies working in eral judge to stop prosecution of: Thomas made his Jan. 28 ruling. cooperation with each other. 25 persons indicted in connection- Charging that the indictments The latest raid is but one of a The v dictments were returned were the "poisoned branches of a recent series in the city. Early last with violence at Kent State Un- by a special state grand jury or- poisoned tree," Scribner asked month police raided a farm house versity last May. dered by former Gov. James that Thomas halt prosecution of outside the city and confiscated a U.S. District Court Judge Wil- Rhodes to investigate the four the indictments. quantity of marijuana. liam Thomas was asked to recon- days of violence which ended May, Two weeks ago police raided sider his ruling of last week in 4 in a confrontation between Ohio Scribner said it was not "the h which he let the indictments stand. National Guard troops and anti- physical piece of paper" called the three houses in the city, including At tat ime Thmasdisarde wa deonsratrs.special grand jury report "which the headquarters of the Ann Arbor At that time, Thomas discarded war demonstrators. seilgadjr eotwi Argus, a local newspaper. Six per- a controversial grand jury report Thomas struck from the record deprived the indictees of a fair s, a alrese .Si er- I sons were arrested in those raids on the Kent State disorders in the grand jury's report, saying it trial; it was the contents of the and were charged with various of- which 13 students were shot, four could "irreparably damage" the report that gave rise to the sub- fenses including sale of marijuana fatally, on May 4. rights of the 25 indicted persons stance of that contention. and sale of LSD.m The suits filed in federal court if it were allowed to stand. He re- "The substance of the report, lChief Krasny had announced here by Atty. David Schribner, of fused to throw out the indictments excoriated by the court as illegal his proposed "crackdown" on drug and unconstitutional, has been traffic after the raids. its handling of the case. Committee chairman Alfred Sussman,dean of the literary col- lege, said last night the committee will invite members of the cur- riculum committee, its course mart subcommittee and LSA Stu- dent Government to testify before it next Monday. He explained the committee is "still gathering data on the issue'' and added the committee did not have time to discuss Hefner's tes- timony at the meeting yesterday. Concerning the possible out- come of the inquiry, Sussman said "I could truthfully not predict one way or another at this time." "We are still gathering infor- mation and have not yet even defined what the possible out- See LSA, Page 10 Apollo speeds toward moon SPACE CENTER, Houston (P) - The Apollo 14 spaceship hurtled last night toward the moon for en- try into lunar orbit early t h i s morning at 5,503 miles per hour. Astronaut Edger Mitchell crawl- ed into the lunar lander late last night to check a battery w h i c h Mission Control suspected as de- fective. Nothing was found in the battery, however, "to preclude de- scent" to the moon, spokesmen said. The lunar descent is planned for tomorrow. Iriead andabsorbed and theretore fixed in the minds of those from whom the petit jurors will be called." The suits ask that the court'sj ruling be amended, declaring that the indictments as well as the re- port should be nullified and ex-! punged because "the irreparable injury to the right of each of the accused to a fair trial will not be remedied" solely by Judge Thom- as's ruling that the grand jury report is illegal and should be;I destroyed. Of the 25 persons indicted by the grand jury, 23 have been serv- ed with warrants and are free on bond awaiting trial. No trial date has been set for those indicted. MEDICAL ETHICS TALK Ex-Army doctor urges activism By ART LERNER Dr. Howard, Levy, a dermatologist who was court-martialed for refusing to train medics bound for Vietnam, yesterday urged a predominantly medical student audience to involve themselves with "the growing GI peace movement." "In the long run, it's 'preventive medi- cine' to creat mutinies and stockade re- bellions," Levy said, encouraging doctors to organize "wherever and whatever they Levy stressed, turning to a discussion of the opportunities available to medical per- sonnel for achieving change in the military. "There is something incredibly callous about staying out of the military, osten- sibly to effect change from the outside" and then "opening a medical practice In a suburb of Detroit," Levy said. "To have a real effect, go in the army," he said. "unless you have real conscientious scruples about any military involvement at all." pr!7 , ANNEWIMME'Rafm