4 CIILE: BLOW TO SOCIAL CHANGE See Editorial Page \:1 it&igzr AdIF 44b :43 a t t4p AMBIGUOUS High-76 Low-SO Partly cloudy Eighty-Three Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXIV, No. 7 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, September 13, 1973 Ten Cents Ten Pages [F1USEE NLS APICALL7-NlY HRP meets The Human Rights Party, which has been having its problems of late, is making an effort to pull itself together. A masts meeting is scheduled for tonight at the Ann Arbor Public Library at 7:30 p.m. The party will elect a steering committee and coordinator, discuss fall election strategy, and work on the petition drive to pu the $5 marijuana ordinance on next April's ballot. Happenings ... Ann Arbor Film Co-op's Twilight Zone Festival continues at Aud. A Angell Hall with program No. 3 starting at 7 p.m. and program No. 4 starting at 9 p.m. . LaCava's Man Godfrey is Cinema Guild's offering at 7 and 9:05 p.m. in Arch. Aud. 7 . . . and New World Film Co-op is again showing Slaughterhouse Five (MLB, Aud. 3, 7:30 and 9:30 p.m.) and Alice in Wonderland (MLB, Aud. 4, 7:30 and 930 pm) Pornpidou meets Mao French President Georges Pompidou and Chairman Mao Tse-Tung held a two hour meeting last night at Mao's residence in Peking's Forbidden City, a French spokesman reported. The meeting with Mao, which was kept secret from journalists covering the president's week-long visit, was twice as long as hat between Mao and President Nixon - the last Western leader to visit China. Nixon's taxes: 'no comment' The White House refused again yesterday to say whether President Nixon paid federal incomes taxes in 1970 and' 1971. Using almost precisely the same words he employed on Tuesday, Deputy Press Secretary Gerald Warren repeated, "I am not going to discuss the Presi- dent's income taxes. I think that's a personal -matter, and I'm just not going to discuss it." The question arose after the Baltimore Sun reported on Tuesday that Nixon apparently had paid no income taxes in 1970 -and 1971 because his deductions for interest, real estate taxes and the donation of his vice presidential papers to the National Archives exceeded his annual salary of $200,- 000. Mine massacre South African police shot and killed 12 black workers during a labor riot in a gold mine near Johannesburg. The incident that ended yesterday was the most serious black-white confrontation under South Africa's apartheid regime since the 1960 Sharpesville shooting. Another 27 Africans were reported injured, two of them seriously, and one policeman was hurt. The disturbance, said to have involved many of the 1,000 machine operators, climaxed a week-old pay and job classification dispute. Rebels fired Chrysler Corp. has fired some 50 workers at its Mack Avenue stamping plant for participating in a wild- cat shutdown of the facility Aug. 14, sources said yester- day. The sources at the plant confirmed the number of dismissals, saying the workers were notified by tele- gram several days after they forced the closure of the plant for 27 hours. The sources said the workers were identified by plant supervisory personnel at the factory. A Chrysler Corp. spokesman refused to disclose any information about dismissals at the plant. He said the company has a policy of not discussing disciplinary actions against workers. London bomb The third bomb blast in 48 hours exploded in one of London's most crowded shopping streets yesterday and injured six persons. The shopping-bag bomb blew up in Oxford Street, at offices of the Prudential Assurance Company. The explosion. shattered the windows of a clothing store on the ground floor. Four of the injured were office girls hit by flying glass. Scotland Yard spokesmen said none of the six injured was in serious condition. Nude note The Cookie Monster faded off the television screen in Montreal yesterday and on came a parade of beautiful nude women. Red-faced Don Di Cesare, assistant direc- tor of National Cablevision Ltd., apologized to the par- ents of children who were watching the educational pro- gram Sesame Streec in which the monster is a central character. An electronic switch shut down a weakening signal from Burlington, Vermont automatically and re- placed it with the program on a studio monitor, normally just a test screen. But station employes were watching the Miss Nude Galaxy Pageant held two weeks ago in Quebec. A floor of calls from parents was the first warning the pageant was on the air. "It was lousy tim- ing," said Di Cesare. "Machinery is machinery." On the inside ... A story about Attica by the Attica Brigade ap- pears on the Editorial Page . . . the Arts Page features a story by Bill Irvine on the Friends' Roadshow, an Eng- lish mime troup which performed recently at the blues and Jazz festival . . . and Joel Greer writes about JUNTA FACES FIERCE RESISTANCE U.S. By Reuter Sources in the Nixon administra- tion said yesterday that the U. S. government had inside knowledge at least 48 hours in advance of the coup which toppled the Marxist government of Salvador Allende in Chile Tuesday. Although official administration sources repeatedly denied any American involvement in the take- over, these sources said members of the Chilean military connected with coup were in touch with of- ficial or unofficial U. S. represen- tatives for some time prior to the action. THE SOURCES indicated that these contacts had taken place not mew later than last weekend and that Washington had originally expected the coup on Monday. But the coup was postponed for a day to complete final plans with police units, it was stated. President Allende upset the United States by nationalizing U.S. owned copper mines, telephone exchanges and other properties. HOWEVER, administration sour- ces went out of their way today to try to dispel any impression that the United States had deliberately stood by while Allende'sgovern- ment fell. They claimed the coup was purely an internal matter. Meanwhile in Chile, leaders of the newly-formed junta were fac- of ed with fierce resistan groups in the country w mained loyal to the Alle ernment. Artillery blasts - andr gun fire ripped through th Santiago despite a 24-hour The military said they had 'See related story Page 7 wing resistance in at leas ters - apart from the1 tial residence and the Mon ace where Allende diedi day's coup. THERE WAS no offic cation of the number ofc Chile ( ce from the figure appeared to be high. ihich re- In Mexico City, the Chilean em- nde gov- bassy said several thousand people had been killed in fighting between machine- pro-Allende forces and troops in 1e city of Chile. r curfew. Speaking for the new junta, Gen. Imet left Augusto Pinochet, commander in chief of the army, said the mili- tary was ready to "exterminate Marxism from the country." 5t 15 cen- A TELEPHONED report to Bue- presiden- nos Aires from a journalist in San- neda pal- tiago said troops appeared to be in Tues- using artillery to crush resistance from leftwing workers in the in- dustrial belt around the city. ial indi- Manuel Mejido of the newspaper dead but See U.S., Page 10 'oup Pinochet plans Allende East ou t 4; orum strike uition f attended by By DAVID BURHENN About 120 persons jammed an East Quad meeting room last night to discuss the recently-called stu- dent tuition strike and related is- sues. The forum was sponsored' by the Student Action Committee (SAC), a coalition of left wing organiza- tions formed last summer after the announcement of massive stu- dent fee hikes by'-the University. STUDENT Government Council President Lee Gill, who originally called for the strike in a speech to incoming freshmen last week, pro- vided the highlight of the evening when he announced that President Robben Fleming and Vice-presi- dent for Academic Affairs Allan Smith would be meeting with him to discuss the tuition controversy. Gill said that Smith would meet with him today to "supply me with straight dope on the tuition hike." The SGC president said that his session with Fleming would take place on Tuesday. "SOME PEOPLE", Gill said, "have begun to hear rumblings that this (strike) might be big." Gill also announced that some 2,000 signatures have so far been collected on petitions pledging sup- port for the strike. SGC officials hope to present 10 to 15 thousand AP Photo names to the Regents when they meet next week.t nen on A PRINCIPAL Pniversity argu- story ment for the fee jumps has been they were necessary to meet stu- dent aid commitments. Forum participants last night at- tacked such an explanation, claim- ing, that the University's goal was to pit poor students against weal- thier ones, blacks against whites.' One participant, Psychology Prof. Dick Mann, maintained that the proportion of students coming from wealthy backgrounds was increas- ing at the expense of both poor M and middle-class young people. M A N N said that computer entry are studies show that 41.2 per cent of urbanin-state students come from the top 10 per cent income areas in Michigan localities such as Ann Arbor, Grosse Pointe, and Birm- ingham. SAC members last night called for volunteers to expand and con- tinue the petition drives support- ing the tuition strike. . IN A MEETING last week, SGC voted 8-1 support for the strike and Gill called on students to withhold 120 their September tuition payments. Some University sources have indicated that a widespread refus- al of September payments might put the University in a near-criti- cal financial bind at the end of the month. Smith said last week that a massive withholding of tui- tion might indeed create a "crisis" for the University. Feldkamp tells homeless frosh not to, worry" Just an old colintry lawyer Sen. Sam Ervin (D-N.C.), chairman of the Senate Watergate committee,, talks with newsm Capitol Hill yesterday prior to attending an executive session of the committee. (See on Page 3.) HAZY PLANNING: By STEPHEN SELBST University Housing Director John Feldkamp yesterday told a group of 50 freshmen who have not yet been placed in campus dormitories that the University "will not leave anyone stranded." The encouraging words came at a meeting of the students-who' have been temporarily quartered at East Quad and Bursley Hall-with Feld- kamp yesterday morning. AT EAST QUAD, the homeless freshmen have become third per- sons in double rooms, but at Bursley they have not fared so well. Storage rooms, and in one case, an over-sized linen closet, have been pressed into service as student habitats. Feldkamp says that the roomless students are being moved into University housing as soon as space becomes available. It is likely, however, that all of the students will not find living quarters by Satur- day, at which time they will be required to leave the temporary housing. ACCORDING TO FELDKAMP, the University has arranged to lodge those who remain without rooms, at the Michigan Union or the Bell Tower Hotel and also to help subsidize the cost of such a stay. But he cautioned that his office has no commitment to those who failed to return their housing applications by Aug. 1. FELDKAMP BLAMED the housing problem on increased enroll- ment. "We have no figures yet, but it seems as though an increased enrollment has simply meant a larger number of housing applications. See DON'T, Page 10 Confusion surrounds journalism credit ext By CINDY HILL Students opting to take Jour- nalism 301 by examination in place of the regular four-credit course may be in for a hassle. Although the journalism has de- signed the test and scheduled it for Saturday, just how the exam will be graded and credit trans- ferred ,onto transcripts, and even how much the examination will cost, remain a mystery. The credit-by-exam program was approved by the literary college faculty in January. The journalism department was one of the first in the college to adopt credit-by-exam, working throughout the summer to develop an eight-hour test for Journalism 301, a beginning writing course. however, with the exam Satur- day and the registration deadline at 5 p.m. today, the University has yet to establish basic administra- tive guidelines for the credit-by- examination program. No one knows on what basis cre- dit for the course will be given, for instance. Pass/fail, pass/ no entry, and grade/no amens the, ossibilities dil1g L pt P~bU1C. Neither does anyone know how the grade will be noted on the transcript, how the grade will be averaged in with others, or even what constitutes a passing grade. While the journalism department does not know if a fee will be col- lected for the exam, the Office of Academic Affairs said there will be one, although how or when it will be collected, and how much it will be, has not been determined. The dozen or so students regis- tered for the exam, according to the journalism department, have not yet been notified that there is to be a fee at all. "Quite frankly, we won't have all the answers' by Saturday," said Ernest Zimmerman, assistant to Vice-President for Academic Af- fairs Allan Smith. AT THIS point. it is not clear New residency rules vague and secretive,' students claim t Both sides agree to Laos coalition govt. By HOWARD BRICK While University officials weed through applications for residence status changes, critics of the ad- ministration are charging that the new residepncy rules are vague and that the procedure for implement- ing them is secretive. "The problem with the rules is that they are administered in vir- tual secrecy," says Roger Chard, a lawyer in the student legal aid office. "The potential for abuse is tremendous." have been rejected without any explanation, Chard reports. A letter with a check in the box marked "denied" is the only in- formation these students have re- ceived. Roderick Daane, the University's general counsel, explains, "The University has the right to believe that he (the applicant) has given. us all the .facts, and (in the case of denial) they are just not enough. Denial can only be interpreted as a failure on the applicant's part to carr the hurden nf nrnrf by a dark." The new residency rules allow for appeals within 20 days of the initial decision. The secrecy in- volved in the decision-making pro- cess, h o w e v e r, makes appeals rather meaningless, Chard claims. Since the applicant is not informed of how the decision was reached, an appeal becomes largely a re- statement of the first request, he says. r VIENTIANE, L a o s ( P) - The the Vientiane side through a long "YOU SHOULD be required to tell neonle what you are doing and