IMPASSE IN THE MIDDLE EAST See Editorial Page muscles past Washington Huskies it rigan 43t~ INSIPID High-60 tow--45 Partly cloudy, cooler Vol. LXXXI, No. 22 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Sunday, September 27, 1970 Ten Cents Eight Pages Ja kson State College JACKSON,- Miss. (R)-"Welcome to Jackson State College," says the sign at the campus en- trance-just behind the fence. "Welcome to Jackson State Prison," mocked Jimmy Voss, a junior studying economics. His voice had an edge on it typical of other students returning to school and discovering the fence. "Its message is clear," Voss said. "Someone's telling us we should think of this place as a reservation." The fence went up early in the week after the Jackson City Council voted to close Lynch Street, a main traffic artery that splits the campus. The council's reason: to control "demonstrations" and prevent "riots and confrontations." To the stu-, dents, the fence has all the symbolism of a Berlin Wall. New students arriving at Jackson State College last week for the start of the fall term walked 'through the one open gate, walked 15 steps farther on, stopped,,looked up to their right at the bullet- pocked dormitory wall. Most merely glanced, of violence mars schools' reopen ing glanced again, self-consciously, as though it were somehow indecent to stare at the marks, to dwell upon them, the way one feels looking at a cripple. The dormitory, Alexander Hall, was where two black youths were killed and 1 wounded last May 15 when police riddled the building with gunfire. Most upperclassmen returning to school paid scant attention to the bullet marks. Their in- dignation centered on the fence. "What that fence is," Voss said, "is an insult piled on a tragedy." Apart from sneers and pointed jokes about the fence, however, most of the conversation on the campus last week concerned books and schedules and the endless red tape of registration. The lobby and lounges of the student union building were alive-not with the strident sounds of demonstrations but with the easy laughter of aquaintances renewed. The shaded campus paths and the nearby haunts, the Tiger Lounge, the Red Carpet, were used for flirtations and fun,' not riots and confrontations. Outwardly, the horror of last spring seemed to have left no visible scar See JACKSON, Page 8 Kent State University ,KENT, Ohio (/P) - Kent State University is beginning the fall term in a mood of uncertain- ty, with students. administrators and townspeople unsure about just what will happen on campus. this year. Few would have predicted last fall that four students would be killed by National Guards- men on the verdant grounds of the campus, in this small midwestern town. But now anything seems possible, and hidden beneath the outward calm prevading Kent is uncertainty and appre- hension. To sum up the mood of the campus, Kent State President Robert White uses words like resolve, nonviolence. communication, participation. But his face is haggared and he has lost weight, and he admits to a constant preoccupation and loss of sleep ,and his voice tiredly attacks "the threats of desperado action . . . the threats of bombings ... We are not going to live in a state of perpetual apprehension: We are going to stay open. .We are going to operate . . . You will in- deed", he tells the freshman class, "encounter the rumor mill - a ghastly institution that works overtime." In 'just 10 days, prior to the opening of the semester, there were six bomb threats at the 'Rock- well Library, the new library and the education, building. Four times the buildings were evacuated. Nothing was found. The campus police have bolstered their small force. The State Highway Patrol have promised quicker aid in case of trouble, and provided more than the' normal number of guards during regis- tration. There are agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation on campus. You can pick them out by their license plates. The threats' made it necesary to- increase se- curity. "Heaven knows I regret it as much as you do," White tells the freshmen. He was trained as an educator, not a peace-keeper, he says, not "a keeper of the dungeon." The ,campus was always conservative, the stu- dent body the same. Mostly the students come from blue collar and middle management fam- ilies. See KENT, Page 8 -Associated Press S URGES END TO WAR Guerrillas free Unre~s WASHINGTON (/P) - The President's Commission on Campus Unrest yesterday released its final report, which blames campus turmoil' on "terrorist" students, "lenient" administrators, and officials in law enforcement agencies and- the govern- ment. a The commission also urges an end to the warin Indochina, calling it a necessary step for bringing a halt to the demonstra- " tions, disruptions, and violence which have been a theme of campus life for the past several years. Haf of U.S. 1 b uses called unsafe by govt. WASHINGTON (P) - At least half the nation's 25,000 interstate buses appear to violate federal safety standards; governs ment officials said yesterday. According to Secretary of Transportation John Volpe, more than one in ten buses inspected re- cently was ordered off the road. "The buses ordered out o service were found to have hazardous defects which pre- sented immediate dangers for passengers." Volpe said yesterday. "In addition, many other buses were cited for lesser safety yiolations 'as were a nuriber of drivers." Of 3,516 chartered and scheduled buses inspected by the government since Aug. 18, more than half had at least one safety vio- lation and 11.5 per cent were removed from service for immediate repairs," said Frank B. White Jr., the technical field coordinator for the Transportation Department's Bureau of Motor Carrier Safety. The results of the inspection drive appear to be an accurate reflection of the safety of the 'estimated 25,000 interstate buses, White, said. Volpe ordered intensive, on-the-road checks last month following a succession of fatal bus accidents in the East. The safety violations found by teams of inspectors included faulty brake hoses, cracked windshields, broken lights, empty fire extinguishers, and defective speed- ometers. panel releases report The report stresses the commission's be- lief that government actions and inactions ares an important contributor to campus unrest. It also cites "unwarranted 'harrass- ment" by law enforcement officials as caus- ing unrest in some instances. The nine-member commission was estab- lished last spring following the killings at Ohio's Kent State University and Missis- sippi's Jackson State College. The report calls upon President Nixon to "bring us together before more lives are lost and more property is destroyed and more universities disrupted. We recommend that the President seek to convince public of- ficials, and protesters alike that divisive and insulting rhetoric is dangerous." The commission headed by William Scranton, former governor of Pennsylvania, states that only a 'small minority of stu- dents, faculty members and agitators are bent on the destruction of universities. The report urges swift removal f r o m campuses of perpetrators of violence. At the same time, the commission accuses some authorities of abuse of power. "Too many law enforcement officers have responded with unwarranted harshness and' force in seeking to control disorder," the report states. "Actions and inactions of government at all levels have contributed to campus un- rest. The work of some political leaders have helped to inflame it. "Law enforcement officers have too often reacted, ineptly or overreacted. At times, their response has degenerated into uncon- trolled violence," the commission adds. The report came under attack even before it became public, with some Republicans de- claring that the commission is packed with liberals who would try to "whitewash" the true picture of campus violence and excuse permissive college administrators. However, the commission decries what it calls a weakening of disciplinary systems within the universities. "At many universities today," "the com- mission says, "students encounter little formal deterrence because administrators and faculty have often failed to punish il- legalacts./ The report notes the study by the Amer- ican Commission on Education which found that faculty members were involved in the planning of over half the s t u d e n t See UNREST, Page 3 last hostages; all Americansi -Associated Press Huskies blitzed Frank Gusich (14) Michigan's wolfman ;puts a blitz on Sonny Sixkiller, quarterback for the Washington Huskies. See story of the Wolverine victory, page 9. COMPANIES CONTA CTED 'U' placement office seeks to end discrimination by sex By The Associated Press The remaining hostages from three hi- jacked airliners were freed yesterday by the Palestinian guerrillas who had held them for nearly three weeks. According to Radio Amman, all of the hostages released were American. In Cairo, a spokesman for the Egyptian government said that all the hostages had been handed over to the Egyptian embassy in Amman, the capital of Jordan, and were free. They are the last of 54 hostages held by the guerrillas since the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) mas- terminded the hijack of the three western jetliners to Jordan Sept. 6 and 9. Meanwhile, Jordan's King Hussein named a new government yesterday in an attempt to placate his Arab critics. Tension remained high, however, as Cairo accused Hussein of plotting to liquidate the Palestinian guerrilla movement sand charged that Jordan's army had violated. the cease- f ire. A spokesman for the International Red Cross said in Geneva that continued fight- ing in Jordan still poses great difficulties in aiding victims of the civil war. He said that, in some areas, Red Cross convoys are unable to get through to the wounded. The Egyptian spokesman confirmed that Hussein would fly to Cairo today to meet with President Gamal Abdel Nasser and other Arab leaders. , In Washington, President Nixon ordered emergency relief for Jordan's civilian casual- ties and also indicated the United States will provide Jordan with more arms as- sistance. Announcing an' initial $5-million relief allotment for victims of Jordan's bloody civil war, the President said, "Women, chil- dren, many others are innocent casualties of this struggle, as is always the case in a civil war. We think action must be taken immediately." Deputy Secretary of Defense David Pack- ard has said that the United States-which supplied weapons to Hussein's forces in the past-intends to replace the arms and am- munition that the royal army lost in battling guerrillas and Syrians. Hussein named Ahmed Toukan, chief of the royal court and former deputy prime minister, as the new prime minister. Al- though Toukan is a Palestinian, the king kept military men in key positions. It was guerrilla rage over the naming of a military regime that helped touch off the civil war last week. The king replied angrily to charges by President Jaafar el Numairi of Sudan, who said that the Sudanese peace mission in Amman was evicted on' Friday. Blaming Hussein for this, he declared: "We are convinced there is a plot by the Harlan Hatcher Library By MARION SELZ "I would predict women will be sought out and hired in preference to men and will receive equal wages," says Bill Audas, as- sistant director of.the University's Office of Placement Services. Audas 'reflects the mood of optimism at the entire placement office. Although it is too early in the recruiting season to have any concrete results, the employes of the office feel that there is a trend toward eliminating discrimination against women in job employment.: Krasny seeks new cooperation The office itself has begun to incorporate the increasingly widespread campaign against job discrimination into its recruiting policies. Starting this year, each corporation which is listed by the placement service receives a document from the office-which includes the passage, "The placement services are not available to any organization or individ- ual which discriminates against any person because of race, color, creed, sex, religion or national origin, nor which does not main- tain an affirmative action program to as- sure equal employment opportunity." The recruiters are requested to indicate their compliance with this policy by signing the document and returning it. "We've had excellent returns," says Evart Ardis, director of the office. "As a matter of fact, many companies have sent us even stronger statements to insure our coopera- tion." A lesser degree of confidence has been ex- pressed by various groups which seek an end to sexist discrimination. Jeanne Tashian, a worker for Probe, a group which is investigating discriminatory practices, questions the sincerity of the com- panies' claims of new non-discriminatory practices. I "Thus far, we have no complaints about the Placement Office," she says. "We sus- pect the real problem is with the companies, New Hatcher plush studyin By DAVID EGNER Last year, the General Library, stu- dents complained, was cramped and crowd- ed, dimly lit and over-heated. They spoke of getting lost in the narrow walkways, and of being buried in the books that filled every conceivable space. This year, the opening of the Harlan Hatcher Library appears to have solved many of these problems, according to library officials. The $5.5 million addition' to the General Library is air conditioned, carpet- ed and well-lighted. 'According to Con- stance Dunlap, in charge of the General Library, the building will hold about a million books and magazines. The library staff is now in the final stages of moving volumes to the new build- ing. Floors two through six will hold about half the General Library's volumes, al- leviating the over-crowding of stacks in the old section. The seventh and eighth floors, to.be opened in mid-October, will hold rare books and a $5 million papyrus collection. Even after relocating is finished next By CARLA RAPOPORT Walter Krasny, chief of the Ann Arbor Police Department, sits in a large office on, the first floor of City Hall. His thoughts are frequently several blocks away, at a campus where some students feel a marked hostility towards him, and his officers. Nevertheless, a student can talk quite com- fortably with Krasny, who speaks freely about the problems he is now facing. He terms the students' view of police as a "sad situation." According to Krasn , stu- A orntc apt. na Aic,+n,.+adninf,,ra of nrlin..a and ala im- The goal of this training, according to Krasny, is to make policemen more sensitive to the people whose laws the enforce. "I guess you could say that we're train- ing the men to act more like gentlemen than bullies," he says. Due to this new training, Krasny says that police work is becoming more like social work. He hopes that one result of the trend will be improved relations with students and the com- munity. Sometime within the next few months, Kra.-mvc ~ctwna ~ainelrntharl cffioavt ixw i 1 1 a h $f x.... x. .... :....#,r _ ... I