Tuesday, October 6, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Tuesday. October 6, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven JENSEN HI-FI SPEAKERS 5 year warranty) WORLD FAMOUS FOR DECADES Hear and compare them at Ann Arbor's exclusive dealership TERM INCIDENT 'NATIONAL TRAGEDY' Commission hits students, Guard at Kent 121 W. i-Fi TUDiO Washington 668-7942 STUDENTS TO SUPPORT THE AUTO WORKERS MASS. WORK MEETING G..Forum-leach-in Picket-line support Tuition waiver for strikers' children Exposing G.M.-University complicity Blues Concert with Doc Ross 2nd floor SAB-1:30 TONIGHT WASHINGTON (P) A presi- dential task force has denounced the Ohio National Guard's fatal shooting of four students and wounding of nine others at Kent State University last May 4 as "unnecessary, unwarranted and inexcusable." the Commission on Campus Unrest condemned the violent actions, of some students, term- ing them intolerable, but said the confrontation "was not a danger which called for lethal force." The judgments were contained in a 22,500-word investigative report, released Sunday night, which focused exclusively on the Kent State incident. "The . . . tragedy must surely mark the last time that loaded rifles are issued as a matter of course to guardsmen confront- ing student demonstrators," de- clared the panel. In Ohio, Gov. James A. Rho- des, Kent State President Rob- ert I. White and Adjutant Gen. Sylvester T. Del Corso of the Ohio National Guard all de- clined comment. They noted they are under court order not to discuss the issue until a state grand jury finishes hearings. Meanwhile, in Kent, one of the nine Kent State University students wounded when four others were killed May 4 in a confrontation with Ohio Nation- al Guardsmen said today the re- port on the KSU violence by the President's Commission on Cam- pus Unrest was "too general." "The report wasn't specific enough," said Dean Kahler, of East Canton. "They generalized incidents that occurred during four days and made it sound like they all happened May 4." His comments were among the varied reaction that came from the Kent State campus to the commission report. Kahler, 20, has been paralyzed from the waist down and con- fined to a wheel chair since the shooting. He said he was "only a spectator" at the demonstra- tion where the shooting took place. He is not enrolled at KSU for fall quarter, but says ne plans to return next quarter. Another s t u d e nt, Debbie Jones, a sophomore, said: "Burning the ROTC building and looting downtown had no bearing on shooting people." "I don't see how you can blame one group of people for what someone else did," said Jean Whitehill, a freshman. But James Macek, a soph- omore, agreed with the commis- sion, saying "The students who burned the ROTC building de- finitely brought the National Guard on campus and had they not been there, there would have been no incident. They all share the responsibility." A commission recommenda- tion that loaded rifles should not be issued "as a matter of course of Guardsmen confronting stu- dent demonstrators," was favor- ed by Janet Patrick, a soph- omore. "They don't need loaded guns on campus," she declared. But Laura Patrick, a junior, said she thought the situation on campus should d e t e r m in e whether loaded rifles should be carried. "The National Guard's job is to protect," said Miss Whitehill, "and I can't see how they can protect without guns." She add- ed, however, "The Guard needs to be trained as to when they should use the weapons." One student who declined to give his name said that stu- dents will start carrying loaded guns if the Guard comes back on campus with loaded rifles. The report represented the completion of the commission's three-month probe into violence on the nation's campuses. General recommendations were day on the shooting deaths of two students at Jackson State College, also termed unjustified. The Kent State report said the Guard had committed "a serious error" in attempting to disperse what was, at first, a peaceful gathering. The subsequent burst of 61, shots within a 13-second period, without any apparent order to open fire, "cannot be justified," the commission said. The report rejected claims of sniper fire.1 In hundreds of interviews, Commission Chairman William W. Scranton, former Republican governor of Pennsylvania, said: "Those who wreaked havoc on the town of Kent, those who burned the ROTC building, those who attacked and stoned National Guardsmen, and all those who urged them on and applauded their deeds, share the responsibility for the death and injuries of May 4. "Violence by students on or off the campus can never be justified by any grievance, phi- losophy, or political idea," he 75 yards away when the firing occurred. -The specific student assem- bly in a legitimately busy cam- pus area which prompted the guard action was peaceful at the outset. -The guard itself became the transcendent issue, and it never did disperse the crowd as it set out to do. -Nothing was found to suggest that SDS, Students for a Demo- cratic Society, had a hand in the disturbances. However, FBI information indicates the burn- ing of the ROTC building Sat- urday night may have been planned since, "railroad flares, a machete, and ice picks are not customarily carried to peaceful rallies." Also "a significant pro- portion" of those at the burning were not Kent State students. -There was no evidence to suggest drug use among demon- strators. Only one marijuana cigarette was found - in a pocket of someone else's jacket used to cover a shooting victim. The 61 shots were fired from M-1 30-caliber high velocity rifles, a shotgun and two 45- caliber pistols in 13 seconds at about 12:45 p.m., hitting the 13 students. -The nearest students wound- ed, two of them, were 20 yards from the guardsmen. The near- est killed, Jeff Miller, was 85 to 90 yards away. All told, 11 of the 13 were from 76 to 250 yards away. Dean Kahler, 100 yards away, was prone when he was- hit in the left side of the small of his back. Kahler was paralyzed from the waist down. -Guardsmen had bullets in the chambers of their weapons "loaded and locked" from the moment they stepped on cam- pus Saturday night. All that was needed to fire was a finger ..flick of a switch near the trig- ger. Twice before in the 35. hours before the shooting, Guard detachments had knelt and leveled their rifles without firing. En route to it conclusions, the report reflected the confus- ion, the emotions, the rumors and flared tempers that so heav- ily influenced the event sur- rounding the tragedy. It noted that'each guardsman that day at Kent State had an average of just three hours sleep, that their move to clear "Blanket Hill" - the assembly area - was jeered roundly, that they were cut and bruised by rocks, and some were scared. Guard Lt. Alexander D. Stev- enson had testified that "the crowd was acting like this whole thing was a circus. The crowd must have thought that t h e National Guard was harmless. They were having fun with the Guard. The circus was in town." Often it was like a game, wit- nesses said, tear gas coming from the troops, a student hurl- ing a canister back to a round of cheers. Most thought t h e Guard had no ammunition, some thought the shots were blanks. When it was over Steven- son said he felt like he was "swallowing dry lumps" as he checked weapons after, He saw tears in a number of guards- men's eyes. The mood, he said, was as "having a lump in your throat and, although your lips were wet, you swallow dry." For the students the U.S. move into Cambodia of April 30 had ceased to be an issue once the Guard moved in. The feeling had spread among students that they were being harassed as a group, that state and civil officials had united against them and that the uni- versity had either cooperated or acquiesced in their suppression," the commission said. "They re- acted to the guardsmen's march with substantial solidarity." The students used the words "pig" and "fascist" incessantly, spicing their shouts with obscen- ities and gestures, the commis- sion said. Many passing students watch- ed the actions of a comparative few on Blanket Hill and the amphitheater-like c o m m o n s, the commission said. Not every- one was directly involved. Can- celed classes, the noon hour, the. casual interest in "what's happening" brought m a n y there. Many students who describ- ed themselves as "straight" or conservative said they were there - at the assembly begin- ning - to protest the presence of the Guard. One coed who stayed though she was on her way to class said: "Well, I just couldn't believe the guards were on campus. It was mostly just outrage and disgust and fear, and all sorts of crazy things . . . You know, they said I couldn't cross t h e. campus, that we can't assemble on the campus. There was intense emotional heat. "I have never in my 17 years of teaching," said Prof. Glenn W. Frank, a volunteer fa- culty marshal at the ROTC burning, "seen a group of stu- dents as threatening or as arro- gant or as bent on destruction as I saw and talked to that nighti" Phoenix Eye View '~}of Slum CultureI THE SOCIAL ORDER OF THE SLUM Ethnicity and Territory in the Inner City Gerald D. 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Valentine The author takes issue with previous studies of "the poor" by social scientists, pro- pounds his own theories of how such studies should be made, and outlines a program for the reduction of poverty.."One of the most important works of social anthropology ever to have been published in this country."-Ralph Ellison. $2.50 The University of Chicao Press Phoenix Paperbacks unveiled a week ago, land detail- ed findings were released Thurs- three days of hearings and 8,000 pages of FBI reports, "nothing was found to indicate that any- one other than a guardsman dis- charged a firearm during the incident," it said. But Lt. Col. J. E. P. McCann, an aide to Del Corso, said in Ohio Sunday, "Our policies haven't changed. We still feel the individual at the very least is entitled to protect himself, realizing, of course, that when they put ammunition in the rifles is up to the commander on the scene. The men will be armed and issued ammunition." Of the violence committed by some of the Kent State students, said. "There can be no sanc- tuary or immunity from prose- cution on the campus . . . ." Among other findings of the commission: -The weight of evidence shows no order was given to National Guardsmen to fire that Monday at the students or any- thing else. -Aggressive people in the crowd were not closer than 20 yards to the guardsmen-never at bayonet point as one said- and the main body was some catch up throughout t h e country, con- centrating in areas which are near activist campuses. Last spring, a special contin- gent of FBI agents infiltrated Yale, before a n d during the May Day demonstrations on be- half of a student strike a n d Black Parpther leaders then coming to trial in New Haven. And at virtually every march -j, (including the Vietnam Mora- FBI rushes to Shop Jacobson's Mon.-Tues.-Wed.-Sat. 9:30 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. Thurs. and Fri. 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. ,.. :,... /J ,,£:""w ... ". .y" 's . _ iri . By Dispatch News News Analysis WASHINGTON - The FBI is not waiting for more money or congressional approval to in- vestigate student unrest. Its agents are already on campus. The evidence indicates the FBI, because of miscalculation and what some claim to be its myopic view of radicalism, is struggling desperately to catch up with developments in t h e student left. When FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover, with support from Pres- ident Nixon, asked for 1000 new agents for use in cases of cam- pus violence, the back to school movement among t h e federal agents had already begun. In the last six months the FBI has quietly created n e w "new left desks" in its offices / 1 ) i y .r :r: X ;iF k Y. ;:;; Y . 'ry .. i carg pocket bell jeans. -- going great in cotton corduroy. They're in. . . stop by and check them out! Brown or green corduroy. They're easy-going Waist 27 to 36. $8. :. ;< ' :.rium's candlelight procession ..: past the White House last fall), FBI agents, some of whom pose as newsmen, have taken pic- tures of demonstrators. Despite these efforts, the FBI has been apparently unprepared 100% KA N EKA LON-Miracle Fiber for theexplosive changes in the radical movement. And it has CHECK ITEM been unable to make much of Shag Look ...$12.50 _-Long Straight .$12.50 = o>oo oc == o - .Dutch Boy .. 18.50 -Perm. Part ... 18.50 D - DANCE OF w I 100% HUMAN HAIR ; sINDIAQ CHECK ITEM CLASSES START CHEC ITM >> 'WED., 7 P.M. 7 2oz.Long Fall, 18" to 20"........$...34.50 for 10 weeks 512oz. Mini Fall, 14" to 16" ............24.50 3 oz. Wiglet, 10" to 12" ................14.50 Information: _2 oz. Wiglet................... .... 6.50 665-2383 662-5804 CHECK COLOR --Black _Light Blond -- -Off Black Silver Blond Dark Brown --Pink Blond The Sony Quiek Med. 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But they have succeed- ed in one of their missions - demonstrating that it is not dif- ficult to remain underground in, this country, eluding capture. Ironically, some criticism for the FBI's failures has come from its friends on congression- al internal security committees and among local and state po- lice. There is the old complaint from local police that the FBI eagerly takes their information and gives none in return. In the Wisconsin bombing case, for example, local police twice ar- rested the suspects (on routine -Change Artist EPlays Stereo or Stenographerf Runs off Batteries or Household Current The Best of ~ Both Worlds traffic investigations) b u t let them go because the FBI didn't tell anyone they were wanted. More important, in the opin- ion of the few existing sophisti- cated police observers of t h e radical movement the FBI has spent so many years infiltrat- ing and watching the old left it has no idea what the new left is thinking. It was relatively easy for the FBI to understand the old left, meaning the Communist Party, and to infiltrate its ranks with informers and agents over 30. But it is not so easy to fright- en or red-bait the young, and find agents a n d informers youthful enough to infiltrate to- day's radical groups, especially as they become tighter and more disciplined, Also the FBI's old, monolithic view of the left (that of a sin- gle, co-ordinated conspiracy), has made it unable to !discern important strategic differences among the organizations of the new left. In its 1968 report, for exam- ple, the FBI commented on the claim of Students for a Demo- cratic Society that they were "a brand apart from those in the old-line communist move- ment." "While the distinction may seem important to them, it is irrelevant to the rest of Ameri- ca because the basic objective of both New Left and old-line communists a n d their adher- ents in our society is to com- pletely destroy our form of gov- ernment," Hoover's report said. As a result of this sort of an- alysis, the FBI, during 1968-69, concentrated on the American Communist Party's attempts to influence the course of the mod- erate and radical new left, rath- er than on the left's search for its own direction and tactics. Thus the federal government apparently misunderstood the post-Mobilization silence of the w Left MI.-