KENT STATE: DIVISION See Editorial Page, YI rL 3kr 11a113J PLEASANT High--S5 Low-38 Sunny and mild, cool breezes Vol. LXXXI, No. 43 I Ann Arbor, Michigan - Thursday, October 22, 1970 Ten Cents Ten Pages I I I ARRESTS CONTINUE: Rally planned tomorrow at K & KE or Cent By MARK DILLEN Special To The Daily JNT. Chin _- A ,'oll fnr- 5 oss' board approves plan to bar biased s t a -Associated Press Nobel Peace Prize winner Agricultural expert Norman Ernest Borlaug, who won the 1970 Nobel Peace Prize yesterday, handles experimental wheat at the Rockefeller Agricultural Institute in Mexico. (See story, page 3). FLQ HOSTA G: Search continues for kidnaped Canadian MONTREAL (M - Canadian police yesterday continued their search for James Cross, the British trade commissioner in Montreal, who remained a hostage of the Front for the Liberation of Quebec (FLQ). Inspector J. L. Melancon of the provincial police termed probably a joke in very bad taste" a series of telephone calls by a man claiming to represent the Quebec terrorists. He offered to discuss the terms for freeing Cross, who was abducted Oct. 5. Meanwhile, an autopsy on the body of Quebec Labor Minister Pierre Laporte indi- cated that he was strangled Raci l clash by a small chain he wore around his neck, Montreal's hits Cairo, Ill. coroner reported. Laporte, along with Cross, had CAIRO, Ill. (P) - Police and been abducted by the FLQ, which snipers entrenched near a public demanded the release of 23 "po- housing project traded gunfire for litical prisoners" in exchange for three hours last night in this the release of the two hostages. racially divided Southern Illinois The province stands on its offer, city, officers reported. last announced Monday, to allow The new "outbreak of violence the kidnapers safe conduct to this racially troubled city fol Cuba if they release Cross. But lowed a fire at a Veterans of For- there has been no word from the eign War hall the previous night, kidnapers. where a black was stabbed by a Police throughout Quebec Pro- white. vince were still holding more than Police were temporarily pinned behind an armor barricade in their 240 persons, who were rounded up station, three blocks from the pro- after Prime Minister Pierre El- ject, but then a small group liot Trudeau invoked the War ,1 charged out of the station and Measures Act last week. Relatives' took cover behind nearby build- ings, blasting back at the snipers with pistols, carbines and sub- plained they were not allowed to machine guns. talk with the prisoners. nationwide moratorium to- morrow to protest the indict- ment of 25 persons for in- volvement in last spring's dis- orders here elicited a positive response yesterday from sev- eral c a m p u s e s around the country. Students organizing the activi- ties at Kent State University said that the colleges participating in the moratorium include the Uni- versity of California at Los An- geles, the University of Virginia, Temple University, and Alleghany College. Last night, the University's Stu- dent Government Council offered its support to the moratorium, urging students to remain away from classes tomorrow. Meanwhile, in Kent, a four-day old police search for those in- dicted by the special grand jury continued yesterday, as the elev- enth of the 25 charged by the jury surrendered. The four days of disorder at Kent State last spring ended May 4 with the shooting deaths of four students and the wounding of nine in a confrontation between Ohio National Guard troops and rock- throwing anti-war demonstrators. The state grand jury exonerat- ed the National Guard in a report issued last Friday. The report blamed the May in- cident on a "permissive, over in- dulgent administration and stu- dent troublemakers." The jury has withheld the names of those indicted until arrests are made and issued injunctions for- bidding those who took part in the hearings or those indicted, to comment on the findings. Those arrested are not permitted to dis- cuss their cases. Of the 11 named thus far, all are reported to be students at Kent State or former students except Dr. -Thomas Lough, professor of sociology and alumnus of the University. Included also is Craig Morgan, president of Kent's stu- dent government. Meanwhile, a rally and work- shops are planned here for noon tomorrow, in conjunction with the moratorium. The activities, termed "Civil Liberties Action Day," will include discussions throughout the day on legal research and student rights, conducted by law students. See RALLY, Page 10 - -e Associated Press A mjjJp~rflJLC iatn in I from. rthn 1 ' MIIU/1-'5 U' . IA/" '' t. A group of Americans back from Cuba yesl to the United States. The group, numbering 'U' TO HOLD CREDITS: ! U144/1 # ! ! "#a i t K '~- t"(A&I terday board a bus in Canada. The bus will return them g about 400, were in Cuba helping with the harvest. Bookstore assessment comp anies Excludes firms with offices in S. Africa By GERI SPRUNG The Office of Student Services (OSS) Policy Board yes- terday adopted guidelines and procedures barring use of OSS Placement Services facilities by companies with offices in South Africa. Some 250 major U.S. firms would be affected. The policy board's action was part of a larger measure aimed at amplifying and enforcing University rules which bar on-campus recruiting by corporations which discrim- inate against minority groups and women. In the past, corporations using Placement Services facil- ities have only been required to sign an affadavit affirming non-discriminatory hiring practices. Placement Services of- ficials say no company has been barred under this, procedure. In its resolution, the board stat- -_ - - ed that OSS would investigate any corporation using the Place- ment services which is charged with discrimination. If the allegations are found to be correct, the statement added, OSS will issue either a warning, or deny the corporation use of the Placement Services. However. in the case of corpora- tions which operate "where dis- crimination is legally enforced on the basis of color, creed, or sex, for example, South Africa, (they will be denied) use of the services of the OSS Placement Office. According to Brain Mistrust (BMT), a radical group which has been active in the recent cam- paign against on-campus job re- cruiting, about 250 corporations currently operate in South Africa, including General Motors, F o r d, Chrysler, Dow Chemical Co., the Chase Manhattan Bank, and most Bernadine Dohrn other major corporations in the United States. According t the policy board 41ge a i y mnember thes crporations will be denied the use of the services of the OSS Placement Services i unless the corporation can .prove adm it D ohrn that it does not follow the apar- i theid policies of the South African ALGIERS () - The possibility government. that Bernadine Dohrn, the Weath- The policy set by the board is erman leader on the FBI's list of only binding on the OSS Place- the ten most wanted persons, has ment Services and not on any of taken refuge in Algeria was rais- the other placement services in ed yesterday by Black Panther the University. leader Eldridge Cleaver. The Placement Services, geared In a telephone interview, Cleav- mainly toward liberal arts stu- er said that a "Miss Dohrn" had dents, deals mainly with corpor- joined him and Dr. Timothy Leary ations that require non-technical in exile here, but refused to say personnal such as advertising. if she was Bernadine Dohrn, or However, some of the major cor- her sister Jenifer. porations in those categories, for Cleaver said he would provide example, Chase Manhattan, will additional information at a later be affected by the new ruling, press conference. Although the University has had Rumors had been circulating for a policy for some time that denies several days that Dohrn, 28, who its services to "any organization replaced black militant Angela or idividual which discriminates Davis on the FBI list after Davis because of race, color, creed, sex, was arrested last week, had ar- or religion or national origin" the rived in this haven for top politi- Sgeographical extent of this de- cal refugees. finition has been unclear. Through The official Algerian news their resolution, the board has ex- agency announced Tuesday that tended the policy to apply to ay Leary, the LSD prophet, who es- area in which a company oper- caped last month from jail in San ates. inside o outside the United Luis Obispo, Calif., had arrived States. here and the Algerian government The specific indictment of had granted him political asylum, South Africa stems from a pro- Leary was- serving a term on a posal presented to the board by narcotics conviction. "BMT alleged that many of the Dohrn joined the FBI's 10 most companies recruiting on campus wanted list for alleged "interstate See fECRUITERS, Page 10 See DOHRN, Page 10 still unpaid by By ROSE SUE BERSTEIN About 15,000 students have re- ceived a notice from the Univer- sity informing them t h a t their failure to help fund the new Uni- versity bookstore may render them unable to receive their transcripts and register for the winter term. According to the notice, t h e University will place a hold credit in the account of students who do not pay the $5 which has been assessed against all students by Oct. 25. When the Regents approved the bookstore last fall, they stipulat- ed that the student body would' have to vote a $5 assessment per student to fund the bookstore. The assessment was subsequently ap- proved by the students, and over the summer, the University billed all students who had gone through early registration. However, students in academic units which do not participate in University-wide registration - such as the law school - were never officially informed of the assessment, according to Gary Al- len, '71, president of the book- store's board of directors. 15,000 The $5 fee will be refunded to each student when he leaves the University. Students who are exempt from the fee are those who attend the University's Flint " and Dearborn campuses and those who will graduate in December. On October 15, the University turned over the first installment collected from the assessment - $74,000. Allen explained that since the fee is refundable upon leaving the University, students lose only the use of $5. Currently, the store sells only school supplies, records, photo- copies and other sundry items. Al- len says it will begin selling text- books in January, emphasizing that funds are now needed to buy books, equipment and p ay the store's rent. Approval of the bookstore last October resolved a four-month long controversy between students backing the creation of a book- store, and the administration, which expressed doubts about whether it would be solvent. In ultimately approving the store, the Regents stipulated that the University must be isolated from liability for the store's debts, and suggested the student assess- ment as one way of assuring con- tinued solvency. SGC, SMC call on U' students to back Kent State moratorium By ROSE SUE BERSTEIN SGC last night called for a moratorium tomorrow on classes along with workshops and a Diag rally "to express solidarity with the Kent State 25." In response to an Ohio Grand Jury report on the Kent State disturbances last May, Kent State student body President Craig Mor- gan has requested a nationwide moratorium on classes tomorrow. In a support statement last night, the local chapter of Stu- d e n t Mobilization Committee (SMC) also called for a boycott of tomorrow's classes "in response to the call from the student body president at Kent State." Further support came from the Social Work Student Union, which urged students in the social work school not to attend classes to- morrow to "show solidarity with our brothers and sisters across the country." CANADIAN CRISIS Slaying lessens FLQ's support An ad-hoc Committee for Soli- darity with the Kent State 25, or- ganized yesterday in answer to Morgan's request. The committee plans to work with SMC and SGC in planning tomorrow's activities. According to Jerry De Grieck, SGC executive vice president, to- morrow's activities will include leafletting, a Diag rally, and workshops. Space in the Michigan Union has been arranged for speakers and workshops. In addition, representatives of various groups sponsoring the moratorium will go to Ravenna, Ohio, to bring to Ann Arbor a spokesman for the Kent State students. De Grieck noted that the activ- ities will be confined to tomorrow afternoon because of the limited time available for organizing. In other business, SGC respond- ed to requests by various local women's groups and demanded that the University immediately issue "unaltered" the health, ed- ucation, and welfare department report on the status of women at the University. The report involves academic advancement and employment practices. Council and the women's groups fear that if the report is not released, the University will alter it. The HEW report, which Presi- dent Robben Fleming has declined to release, results from an in- vestigation last August in response to allegations that the University discriminates on the basis of sex. The Ann Arbor Focus on Equal By JONATHAN MILLER Special To The Daily News Analysis MONTREAL - The killing of Pierre Laporte, Quebec's min- ister of labor, seems to have ser- iously damaged the hopes of the Front for the Liberation of Que- bec (FLQ) for gaining public sympathy in their campaign for the province's independence. Up until Saturday, when the body of Laporte was found many French-speakingsQuebec- ois, especially students at the University of Quebec here, had been sympathetic to the FLQ and to its goal of making Que- bec into an independent social- ist state. The death of Laporte has c-hanngedthat. While many stn- people could see just how mess- ed up they (the FLQ) are," she adds. In an opinion poll published in today's Montreal Gazette, the figures speak for themselves. The headline reads: "90 Per Cent of Quebecers Opposed to Kidnapping." Although the poll was statistically shoddy - the sample very small and the re- fusal-to-answer rate was very high - there are clear indica- tions that the FLQ has about as much sympathy among the Quebecois as the Nazi Party. Meanwhile, citizens of Mon- treal have exhibited a generally calm reaction to Prime Minister Pierre Elliot Trudeau's imposi- tion of the War Measures Act last week. I . . . . . . . . . . ........ ...... .. . . . . . . . . . .;, .:- ,r. , ;..'4..:.''