CYNICISM UNDERCUTS NEW LEFT See Editorial Page Y 5k1 p~Att GERMANE High--75 Low--55 Mostly mild and cloudy; 50 per cent chance of rain Vol. LXXXI, No. 32 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Friday, October 9, 1970 Ten Cents Ten Pages ALLIES BACK PL Hanoi Nixon AN- denouncesSenate passes bomb bill; proposals three blasts hit W . Coast By The Associated Press Delegates of North Vietnam andethe Viet Cong yesterday denounced the five-point plan for peace in Southeast A s i a submitted by the U.S. in Paris. U.S. Ambassador David K. E. Bruce said, however, that the re- sponse did not discourage him, In Saigon, the South Vietnamese government voiced support for the proposals, which include a stand- still cease-fire throughout Indo- china, and, in the U.S., President Nixon said that world reaction to his proposals was "overwhelming- ly good." North Vietnamese Ambassador Xuan Thuy hastened to call the plan "an electoral gift certificate," saying it was "aimed at deceiving public opinion in the United States and the world." Viet Cong emissary Nguyen Thi Binh said the proposals were a means "of legalizing American ag- gression in Indochina." The two delegations, however, reserved the right of further com- mentary. Bruce said he would "await with interest a more thoughtful response." What Bruce put on the table as a part of the conference proceed- ings were segments of Nixon's ad- dress Wednesday night lifted ver- batim from the text. The five points were a call for a standstill ceasefire all over Indo- china under international super- vision, an Indochina peace con- ference to settle the Vietnamese, Laotian and Cambodian disputes, negotiations on a timetable for troop withdrawals; a political set- tlement reflecting the present bal- ance of forces in South Vietnam and the immediate release of all prisoners of war by both sides. South Vietnamese ambassador Pham Dang Lam said Nixon's1 plan "was formulated with the full agreement" of his government "and has received its complete approval." The official reaction in Saigon: stressed that South Vietnam would insist on "an efficient organiza- tion to supervise the cease-fire to prevent either sidefrom "increas- ing its fighting forces from the outside." The government again reiter- ated its willingness to hold private talks with the Viet Cong and to discuss methods by which all Viet- nam could take part in free elec- tions. Meanwhile, a Cambodian offi- lTerrorist conspiracy suspected By The Associated Press :? Predawn bomb blasts jarred two military facilities and a c o u n t y courthouse on the West Coast y e s t e r d a y and authorities investigated a pos- sible conspiracy involving rad- ical terrorists. There were no injuries and no arrests, but police said they had leads in one of the explosions. The first blast, at 1:27 a.m. Pacific time, ripped through a, courtroom and rest room of the Marin County Civic Center in San Rafael, Calif., scene of the kid- napding and fatal shooting of a judge Aug. 'r : 7.:: ~ Yii:: The second blast, a little more than an hour later, caused an es-; timated $150,000damage to a building housing theNvanAi Force ROTC departments at the University of Washington in Seattle. At 4:17 a.m., the third explosion . shattered a section of the outside wall of an Army National Guard Armory in Santa Barbara, Calif. "We certainly believe this bomb- ing is connected with the Wat- erma faction and other trrors groups in our nation today," said Santa Barbara Police Chief A. W. Trembly. Trembly said detectives and FBI agents have several leads to the person who planted the Santa MARIN COUNTY SHERIFF DEPUTY it Barbara bomb. morning in a 'washroom, damaging the a A fourth explosion was pre- San Rafael, Calif. vented when a bomb was found early yesterday and deactivated at the Univeristy of California's Cen- FIREBOMBINGS FAIL: ter for the Study of Law and So-_*_ ciety in Berkeley. California state police Lt. Fred Baker said the explosions on the! Daily-Jim Judkis Henry Steele Commager Henry Steele Commager, noted historian and professor at Amherst College, speaks yesterday on "The Uses of History" to over 300, in a lecture sponsored by the Center for the Coordination of Ancient and Modern Studies. (See story, Page 10.) CITES NUISANCE: Injunction requested to stpU'MUga-me By ANITA CRONE A request for an injunction which would stop the Oct. 17 Michigan-Michigan State football game and permanently close the Michigan stadium was filed yesterday in Washtenaw County Circuit Court. The complaint by Washtenaw County resident Joel Block, represented by candidate for state representative, Donald Koster, charges that the stadium, "as operated by the defend- , ants, is a place within which the laws of the State of Michigan can be broken with impunity." The complaint names as defendants the Regents, Presi- dent Robben Fleming, the Board in Control of Intercollegiate Wiretap privileges expanded WASHINGTON () - T h e Senate yesterday approved a sweeping overhaul of the na- tion's antibombing laws, vot- ing to give federal agents ex- panded wiretap power and a broad new mandate for ven- turing onto disrupted college campuses. The measure was part of a fist- ful of anticrime bills the election- minded Senate zipped through in a matter of hours. Other legislation touched on kidnapings of congressmen, pro- tection of presidents and assist- ance to law enforcement agencies. Most potent of ,the measures, however, was the antibombing bill which was approved 68-0 after a fight on capital punishment. Besides making broad changes in current law and adding new de- finitions of explosives and bombs, the legislation has three major provisions. One would permit wiretapping under court order if criminal use of explosives is suspected. Another would make it a fed- eral crime to damage or destroy with explosives any federal pro- perty or the property of any in- stitution or organization receiv- ing federal funds. A staff aide of the Senate Judi- ciary Committee said this provis- ion would give the FBI virtually unlimited access to many of the nation's colleges or universities if any of their property is damag- ed in a blast, Under current law, the aid said, the FBI can only investigate of- ficially if the explosives used were believed to have been transport- ed in interstate commerce. The thirdrmajor provision would make criminal use of ex- plosives resulting in a fatality punishable by death. "We must come to the somber realization that our country faces a very dangerous and critical threat from the forces of subver- sion and revolution that are now committing repeated acts of bombing, arson and sabotage," de- clared Sen. John McClellan, (D- Ark.), chief sponsor of the bill. Also passed by the Senate, a day of law-and-order legislatio was a bill to make it a feder offense to assassinate, kidnap o assault a member of congress or a Congressman-elect. The bill was sent to the House by voice vote, but Sen. Sam J. Ervin, (D-N.C.), said he was against converting what always has been a state crime into a federal crime. The kidnaping or killing of a member of Congress would be punishable by imprisonment up to -Associated Press nspects damage from a bomb which exploded early yesterday adjacent courtroom in the Marin County Civic Center in 11 Pacific Coast "would seem to in- dicate a conspiracy." In San Rafael, however, Sheriff Louis Mountanos said there was no evidence linking the courthouse bombing to Weatherman's "fall offensive" announcement. At a Tuesday press conference in New York, a recording appar- ently made by Bernardine Dohrn, a fugitive Weatherman leader, said roonuiac quieter ayter 4! days of racial unrest cial in Phnom Penh expressed an offensive by youthful radicals fears that Cambodia's interests "will spread from Santa Barbara might be sacrificed by the U.S. to Boston, back to Kent State and desire to end the conflict. He Kansas." "M ri th t -nC:f -..... Solzhenitsyn to receive Nobel Prize .- STOCKHOLM (P) - Russian author Alexander Solzhenitsyn, whose works are banned in the Soviet Union, was awarded the Noble Prize for literature yester- day. He said he would attempt to travel to Stockholm to receive the award, worth $80,000. The Swedish Academy of LAt- ters, which awarded the prize, cited "the ethical force with which j he has pursued the indispensable traditions of Russian literature." Solzhenitsyn's "One Day in the 4 Life of Ivan Denisovich," detailed one day in the prison life of a Rus- sian peasant who fell afoul of the Stalin regime, and was sentenced to 3,653 days in a concentration camp. It was published in the Soviet literary magazine Novy Mir in. 1962. Because it came during for- mer Premier Nikita S. Khrush- chev' de-Stalinization program, it had the blessing of the author- ities and Solzhenitsyn was widely praised, even in the government; and Communist party newspapers. Other major works, which have been published in the West, are. "First Circle" and "Cancer Ward." Western literary critics have said the books put Solzhenitsyn in the Athletics, and Athletic Direc- tor Donald Canham. The request seeks to close the stadium. It asks that, pending final determination, "a temporary, restraining order or injunction be granted ordering that the Defend-; ants not promote or prepare any football game or other public show," including the Oct. 17 game.- In asking for the injunction, the complaint states that available law enforcement officers are in- sufficient to completely enforce the laws at football games. The stadium "is a place used for the purpose of lewdness," the complaint charges, specifying the "unlawful s t o r i n g, possessing, transporting, and sale." of drugs1 and linuor. The complaint states further that the football games held at the See INJUNCTION, Page 10 notead tat a cease-tire would leave the Communist Vietnamese. in control of more than half '.he country. But informants in Phnom Penh considered it unlikely Cambodia would reject the plan outright since it depends upon the United States for arms. The Philippines, Thailand and South Korea, who have supported the United States in South Viet- nam with troops, yesterday wel- comed Nixon's plan. Also yesterday, the U.S. appeal- ed to Russia to use "its consider- able influence" to persuade North Vietnam and the Viet Cong to ac- cept the plan. Commenting on the effect of the plan in the U.S., Nixon denied "Now we are everywhere," the recording said, "and next week families and tribes will attack the enemy around the country." Miss Dohrn is among 12 mem- bers of Weatherman indicted in April on charges of conspiracy to cross state lines to incite to riot. In San Francisco, Atty. Gen. John Mtichell described the three bombings as "abhorrent and psy- chopathic acts." Mitchell spoke at a news confer- ence while in San Francisco to campaign for U.S. Sen. George Murphy (R-Calif). The explosion on the campus in Seattle, the 32nd bombing in the city this year, was the most de- structive of yesterday's three. It happened at 2:45 a.m., 25 minutes By JONATHAN MILLER PONTIAC, Mich, - At least two attempted fire bombings shatter- ed the apparent calm in this city of 90,000 last night. Police reported that the at- tempts failed -, one when a bomb did not explode and the other when the fire was extin- guished. Earlier police officials had been optimistic in interviews with the press that the racial strife which had shaken the city since Monday was drawing to a close. In an impromptu press confer- ence outside police headquart- ers yesterday afternoon, Chief of Police William K. Hanger had in- dicated that the worst might be over although he made it clear that it was impossible to be ab- solutely certain. "A minimum of twenty-four hours of peaceful conduct" would be required to evaluate the situa- tion and lift the state of emer- gency proclaimed Wednesday by Mayor Robert F. Jackson, he said. The provisions of the state of emergency include a total ban on the sale of alcohol, a ban on gaso- line sales in takeaway containers, the suspension of the right of freedom of assembly to not more than four persons, and an 8 p.m. to 6 a.m. curfew. Meanwhile, two predominantly black schools, Eastern junior high and Central high school remained closed on orders from the Board of Education. Central high school was t h e scene of the Monday shooting of four white students. The youths; are all reported in satisfactory condition in hospitals. The Monday shootings have been attributed by both black students and police to an incident resulting out of a dispute at a football game last Friday night. One black said the four stu- dents who were shot were "rac- ists". The shootings provoked large gatherings of both black and white students at the school. Police moved in to prevent a confronta- tion and full scale rioting began. Both high schools were closed Tuesday when groups of rock and bottle throwing youths and police clashed and on Wednesday police, supported by law officers from surrounding communities and State troopers, used tear gas to break up groups of young peo- ple gathered in defiance of the emergency order. Throughout Wednesday the number of incidents reported in- creased. One black youth w a s shot and another run over, police, think deliberately, by a hit-and- run driver. Yesterday morning police ar- rested 17 year old Albert Rivera in connection with the Wednesday shooting.I Rivera was charged with assault with intent to commit murder and is being held in lieu of $10,000 hand to justify obtaining war- rants the police have the suspects under observation, Despite the closing of Eastern Junior High after reports of in- cidents, Harold Rose, community schools director at Eastern denied that the school was "coming apart at the seams" as had been report- ed, he said, by WKBD-TV in De- troit. "There had not been a single incident here, "he said. Rose did not feel that the foot- ball game had anything to do with the current situation. "There have always been fights at ball games," he said. Rose considered that a small group was responsible for the un- rest and that other youths h a d been drawn in. ... life or by death yesterday that his new proposal after two anonymous callers warn- was intended to help Republican ed the campus security police, the candidates in the November elec- city fire department and t h e tions. Seattle Times. PANELS START TOMORROW Teach-in probes women 's status By SARA FITZERGALD Madelon Stockwell, in 1870, became the first female student to attend the Univer- sity. T h i s weekend, a century later, a teach-in will begin the University's Cen- tennial Celebration for Women. The teach-in, on "The Changing Roles of Women in the U.S.," will tomorrow and Sunday bring together national and local women to lead panel discussions and work- shops on a wide range of topics. focusing on women will be occurring on campus, including a display of photo- graphs by University alumna Margaret Bourke-White, a former photographer for Life Magazine. The display will continue at the University Art Museum through No- vember 15. Highlighting this weekend's teach-in will be a Sunday afternoon panel moderated by Barbara Newell, special assistant to President Fleming. Five speakers, repre- senting a diversity of attitudes on the roles and detailed" information on admissions quotas, hiring practices, promotion poli- cies, and salary differentials. Representing another position in t h e movement will be Robin Morgan, one of the founding members., of the Women's International Terrorist Conspiracy f r o m Hell (WITCH) and author of the book "Sisterhood is Powerful." Morgan, a former child star of the "I Remember Mama" television series, be- lio St he r + wm.i mll hp., ,. ,, ,...1ni