EGISTRATION CURTAILED it &tit SOGGY Hgh-4 See Today for details /See editorial page Eighty-T hree Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXIV, No. 120 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, February 22, 1 974 Ten Cents Eight Pages Somer Uiversiyc retaries me wiath Yepsiat at-s torey Ron Egn last nihton to ditabor lawe i repation forrn an ffort t organe the University clerical staff Eerwarned tea grou ha unionton "illan uphill9 ight." Fusther bmestingstare Jplnned for Monda t noni Ro 212,llt Htchinsndallr ads Tuaeyut at orythe Uon'orine Rcoom. 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Secretary of State Henry Kissinger has told senior members of Congress that he would feel compelled to resign if the House of Representatives votes to impeach the President, the Washington Star-News said yester- day. The newspaper said Kissinger "felt he could not effectively conduct the foreign policy of the United States if the President is impeached." Kissinger, con.- ferring with Latin American leaders in Mexico City, de- scribed the Star-News report as "nonsense." On the inside .Sports page presents a preview of the upcoming hockey games with Notre Dame . . . John McManus takes a look at the Sports Bros. on the Editorial page 4. It'sabird... ~ No, it's an eight-by eight foot me- nopoly board, painted a Ia Mich- elangelo on the ceiling of Room 5035 in Alice Lloyd Hall The two .'*~ .. ~ artists, shown surveying their mas- terwork, are roommates Dave ......... Kemper (left) and Dave Lichter- ..... man, both freshmen. The two Daves got the idea when, accord- ing to Lichterman, "We were just ~ .~.. lying around trying to think of something different to do." 30 hours and $9 worth of magic mark- ers later, there it was: the first ceiling monopoly board. "We were .. . ~ ~ .~ .. a little skeptical about telling the '~' . . ~ ~ . ~ ~. Housing office," adds Lichterman, .. "but they liked it when they saw . it." Dave and Dave say they . ~ ~ .. ~ haven't figured out quite how to play on the giant board yet, but they're checking into flying tok- Y.. ens moved by helium balloons on S - ~ long strings. Notes Lichterman: ~. ..... ~ "It's more of a looking experience ~ .~' 4 than a playing experience." ~ ..................................... Doily Photo by ROI FE TESSEM _______ __________ ____________ Chicano candidate calls Nixon impeachable for for minority solidarit By JACK KROST Ramsey Muniz has never held public office. Yet this year he is running for the governorship of Texas. Muniz is the gubernatorial can- didate for the Raza Unida party, a third party in Texas politics with a predominately Mexican-American constituency. AND MUNIZ claims he stands a fighting chance - mainly be- cause of Texas' previously un- heard from Mexican-American population, which he says is nearly three million strong. Muniz was the main speaker at last night's opening at the Power Center of a t Thifr World Peo- pl' Soiaiy Cofrne He spoke on the efforts of the Raza Unida, Mexican - Americans in Texas, and more generally, on the need for unity among minority peopes mthe . S.Doily Photo by KEN FINK ECHOING the over-all theme of RAMSEY MUNIZ, Texas gubernatorial candidate and co-founder the Third World conference in his of the Texas Raza Unida party, pleads for unity among minority See CHICANO, Page 8 groups last night at the Power Center. mamiammmsms...............................na~lisassasasaissssass asaisiaiss BLA CK HISTOR Y WEEK.: Alen recalls Malcolm X's ROR~rHRR0 offenses, House ~ By Tile AP and Reuter - WASHINGTON - President Nixon could be impeached for noncriminal offenses, accord- ing to a report released yester-. day by the House Judiciary Committee's legal staff. The report, which was at- tacked by the top Republican commiteemember, greatly expands the grounds for im- peachment. In its most significant finldings, the memnorandum - compiled by committee chief council John Doar and minority council Albert Janner -states that criminal law alone is not applicable to the process of removing a president from office. "THE CRIMINAL LAW . . . does not address itself to the abuses of presidential power," says the docu- itorney ment. "In an impeachment pro- ceeding a president is called to account for abusing powers which only a president possesses" Chairman Peter Rodino (D-N.J Mich) at a news conference at which the memorandum was dis- tributed, made it clear it in no way reflected ~the committee's position on the crucial question of what constitutes an impeachable offense. Rodin caled it a useful tool that would helpvidhemembers maken it comes time to vote on whether grounds exist for impeaching Nixon. HUTCHINSON SAID "it speaks to the committee, it does not speak for the committee." And he left no doubt that it did not speak for him. "It supports a broader concept of impeachment than I would think wise in dealing with a president," said Hutchinson, who added that he believed criminal behavior should be required before a presi- dent was removed from office. B u t h e e m o r n d u 4 s t a t e d history of impeachment in England, the deliberations oftthe rContiu tional Convention ortepreeet of the House to support the narrow vie esousd by Hutchinson. "IN DRAWING articles of im- peachment the House has placed little emphasis on criminal con- duct," the memorandum says. "...Much more common are allegations that the officer has say violated his duties or his oath or seriously undermined public con- fidence in his ability to perform his official functions." Turning specifically to the stan- dards against which a president must be judged, the memorandum states that no precise criteria can be listed. The brief also says the duty of a president to "preserve, protect and defend the Constitution in- cludes the duty not to abuse his powers or transgress their limits- not to violate the rights of citizens, such as those guaranteed by the Bill of Rights, and not to act in derogation of powers vested else- where by the Constitution." See related story, page 3 for impeachmnt set by th emor- andum "very, very high. It must be conduct so grave that it amounts to a subversion of the system of government and the Constitution itself." He added that "it comes very close to criminalt." There were reports from some members that Jenner was at one time considering filing minority views but joined in the memoran- dum when provisions that would have made it even broader were removed. With the memorandum to guide it, Rodino said the committee was now ready to seek evidence from the White House. A request listing specific tapes, documents and logs is being prepared, he said, and will be sent to the White House no later than early next week. By MARY LONG Author Robert Allen saw M9al- colm X shot to death exactly nine years ago. h Allen, editor of the Black Shol- ar - now a name in his own right - is well able to draw an auditor- ium full of students when he lec- tures in tribute to the martyred black militant. THE AUTHOR spoke as part of the Black History Week series sponsored by the University's Cen- ter for Afro-American Studies. In 1965, Allen said, he was an unhappy Columbia student living in Harlem's slums. He came to a church meeting one evening in February to hear Malcolm X, who had proposed a plan for changing the economic and political struc- ture of the New York ghetto. Allen remembers a "flash and an explosion." He thought that someone had merely thrown a fire- cracker into the building to frigh- ten the crowd. lIE REALIZED in horror that the noise was a shotgun blast - five more followed in succession. Everyone in the room dove to the floor. The blasts continued for what Allen described as "an eter- nity." "I honestly thought that some- one was trying to kill all the people in the audience," the editor said. When Allen finally rose to his feet he looked around him to see how many people had been killed. To his amazement, apparently no one was hurt. But when he turned, almost cas- ually, to the stage, he saw Mal- colm X lying murdered, aides des- perately trying to administer ar- tificial respiration. When Allen walked home that night he said it seemed as if he walked "into a world filled with assassins and killers" "MALCOLM X is dead," Allen said emphatically, "but his ideas hAllen mentioned thatttheleader -slain at the height of his power-- articulated the present belief among black militants that the capitalist system must be com- pletely dismantled before black self-determination is possible. . Malcolm X also believed, if murder Allen emphasized. "Peace without justice is a contradiction. In the search for justice, Malcolm X con- doned armed self-defense for the black community. The author pointed out the need for solidarity on an international level. "Blacks should jon wit all Spee ALLEN, Page 2 By BARBARA CORNELL .Charlie Justice, a Bursley secur- ity guard recently named to the softball hall of fame, was honored yesterday by black students dur- ing an annual banquet. Hearst's kidnapers demand more money HILLSBOROUGH, Calif. (IP) - Terrorists kidnapers of Patricia Hearst demanded that her father add $4 million to a $2 milli'oi food giveaway he established to win her freedom, a reporter said yesterday. The Symbirv'ese Liberation Army (SLA), which claims to be hold- inn thn 9A0-opn,-- ,l h air a "nrisoner oaf war." also threatened to .. : x m am m m m em en a