SUNDAY MAGAZINE Ski a 4M a t SNOW? High-26 LoNY-14 See Today for details See inside Eighty-Three Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXIV, No. 122 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, February 24, 1974 Ten Cents Eight Pages IfltOU1SEE NEWS HAP PENCALL 7-MfLy Jackson/Wallace ticket? Sen. Henry Jackson (D-Wash.) has moved one step beyond his fellow Democrats in extending the olive branch to Gov. George Wallace by declaring he "would welcome him" as a 1976 running mate. Jackson's com- ments, in response to a question during a recent politi- cal visit to Tennessee, are in line with the effort by party chairman Robert Strauss to woo the Alabama governor and his millions of followers back to the Demo- cratic fold. Asked if he would accept Wallace as a run- ning mate if the convention nominated him, Jackson said he considers the Alabama governor "eminently qualified to be vice president or president of the United States. I think he is qualified and I would welcome him on the ticket," Jackson added. Nixon notes President Nixon yesterday named Vice-President Gerald Ford to head a blue ribbon panel to draft safe- guards for Americans' personal privacy. In a national radio address from his Oval Office, Nixon said he was instructing the 11-member panel to begin within four months to present "a series of direct, enforceable mea- sures . . . that we can immediately begin to put into effect" to equip every American with a personal shield "he canuse to protect his right of privacy." Nixon, fol- lowing up on proposals he sketched in his State of the Union 'address, said that the names of more than 150 million Americans are now in computer banks scattered across the country. 0 Happenings .. ... are varied today. The Human Rights Party's In- ternal Education Committee will sponsor a potluck dis- cussion on "Ageism-Young People" at 1018 Church, at 6 p.m. . . . The Ann Arbor Cantata Singers will perform today at 4 p.m. in the University Reformed Church, E. Huron at Fletcher . .. "The Zooks," a local band, will perform in the Residential College Aud., at 8 p.m. . . . The Simulations and Strategy Games Club will meet in the Henderson Rm. in the Michigan League from 1 to 6 p.m. . . . Warren Day, director for Peace and Conflict Resolution in E. Lansing, will speak on Bangladesh 1974, at the Ecumenical Campus Center, 921 Church St. at 7 p.m. . . . Planned Parenthood will hold an open house from 2 to 4 p.m. at 912 Main St. It's a fund-raising affair for new facilities . . . For tomorrow, the happenings are slim. Women, are invited to discus- sion on career opportunities in management, banking, sales, retailing and probation, at . noon in conference rooms 4 and 5 of the Michigan League. . . . Dr. John Atwater, director of the city and county health depart- ments will speak on the current health problems fac- ing the community at 12:10 p.m. in the Ann Arbor Pub- lic Library Simon says Editor's arrested; abductors bond set NATIVE AMERICAN ADVOCATE Moose Pamp addresses a crowd of about 200 at the Fishbowl yes- terday during a rally held for the Wounded Knee tr ials in St. Paul, Minn. Also speaking at the rally was Clyde Bellacourt, one of the defendants at the trial. Bellacourt, others speak at Wonded Knee rally ATLANTA, Ga. 0P) - Atlanta Constitution Editor Reg Murphy positively identified his abductor yesterday as the husband of a couple arrested in the kidnaping. William August Halm Williams, 33, and his 26-year-old wife, Betty, were being held in the custody of federal authorities in lieu of $1.5 million bond after being charged in the kidnaping. Murphy, 40, was kidnaped by persons claiming to represent the previously unheard-of "American Revolutionary Army." He was lur- ed from his home Wednesday night and released unharmed Friday night after a $700,000 ransom was paid by his newspaper. THREE SUITCASES bulging with money were recovered, but the FBI said it had not yet deter- mined whether they contained the entire $700,000. "There is no doubt Williams is the man I left home with," Mur- phy told reporters. Murphy characterized Williams as a "sick man" who didn't really understand the political ideas he spoke of. "HE IS NOT the sharpest of men, but is very canny in some ways," Murphy added. The couple was arrested yester- day morning without resistence at their home in Lilburn, about 24 miles northeast of Atlanta. The arrest came just hours after Mur- phy was freed. . As they entered the federal courthouse for an arraignment yes- terday, Williams said to reporters, "Mv wife is innocent. The army has been defeated. It's dead." WILLIAMS was charged with vi- olating the federal Hobbs Act, which forbids extorting money from a company engaged in inter- state commerce. U. S. Magistrate J. Roger Thompson set bond a $1 million. Ms. Williams was charged wit knowing about the alleged crim and not reporting it. She was hel on $$500,000 bond. The FBI initially releaseda statement saying the couple ha been charged with kidnaping, bu they explained later that no fed eral kidnaping charges had bee filed because there was no proo Murphy had been transporte across state lines. Thompson set a preliminar hearing in the case for March 4. OFFICIALS would not say how many persons were still being sought, only that Williams alleged ly was "aided and abetted b others unknown." After his release, Murphy sai he was led to believe he was ab ducted by four men and a woman However, he said he was blind, folded during most of the 49-hou ordeal and could identify only tw distinct voices - those of Wi liams and a woman. The newspaper editor said h was convinced Williams, who cal ed himself "colonel," tried to mak him think there were more person present at various times. He sai Williams told him the right-win organization had six colonels an 223 members. Williams, husky and darkhaired and his petite wife, were hand cuffed when brought into the court room. Ms. Williams had been cry ing. UNDER QUESTIONING, Wi liams, a self-employed contractor said he had served 18 months i jail for a 1965 conviction of inter state transportation of stolen m tor vehicles and had been place on probation for one year in 196 for forging a government check. The couple, who have thre young children, have lived in th See BOND, Page 2 t h e d a d it n of d y w Cg y d 1- 1. ro 0 Murphy By PAUL TERWILLIGER For Clyde Bellacourt, the Wound- ed Knee incident is not a thing of the past. He made this evident as he spoke to a crowd of 200 yester- day who gathered for a Wounded Knee rally in the Fishbowl. Bellacourt, a co-founder of the American Indian Movement, is a currently a defendent in the Wounded Knee trials at St. Paul, Minn. Bellacourt shared the stage with two other advocates of Indian rights - Moose Pamp, the na- tive American advocate at the Uni- versity, and Eddie Benton, a Uni- versity student teacher. The rally marked the third and final day of the Third World's Peo- ple's Solidarity Conference, the first conference of its kind to be held in Ann Arbor. BELLACOURT, D U R I N G his speech, defended the Indian cause and Wounded Knee, and attacked the Nixon Administration as well. "We are the landlords, it is the end of the month, the rent isdue. Pay up. We don't want to take back the land, all we want is that you leave us alone," said Bella- court. "With -a 5.5 average grade level, a suicide rate 20 times the na- tional average, and a 43.5 year life span, the Indian people are telling the U. S. people that something is wrong with their system." BELLACOURT P O I N T E D out that the people directly in- volved in Watergate - John Ehr- lichman, John Dean, and Spiro Ag- new - were the same people who headed the offensive against the Indians -at Wounded Knee. "With your support," he said, "we can administer the final blow to Watergate and the corrupt gov- ernment in Washington D.C." Benton, one of the occupants of Wounded Knee during the crisis in fall, 1973, gave an accoount of his experiences and stressed the close- ness of the people involved in the struggle. "I was frightened all the way out to Wounded Knee . . . until I saw our spiritual leader. Then I was no longer afraid." Benton pointed out the substan- dard living conditions at Wounded Knee, and claimed that the press gave an inaccurate view of the See BELLACOURT, Page 2 ASIAN DISCRIMINATION Activist ba ttles for rights Federal energy chief William Simon yesterday an- nounced a two cent per gallon increase in the price of gasoline sold by independent retail dealers effective March 1. The two-cent increase, Simon said, "super- cedes the one-cent increase granted Feb. 16 for service station owners with less than an 85 per cent allocation" of their 1972 supply. That one-cent increase would have been effective March 1. Simon also announced a direc- tive requiring suppliers of retail dealers to put all scheduled March price increases into effect by March 1. Hearsts still waiting Exhausted by 20 days of tension, the Hearst family waited this weekend to learn whether the terrorists who kidnaped Patricia Hearst will free her in exchange for another $4 million in food for the poor. Her father, newspaper executive Randolph Hearst, said his personal financial capabilities could not meet the latest demands from the Symbionese Liberation Army that he put up the $4 million in addition to the $2 million in food al- ready available. But Charles Gould, publisher of the San Francisco Examiner, said the Hearst Corp. would put up the $4 million if Ms. Hearst is released unharm- ed. He said $2 million would be provided immediately upon her release and $2 million more in January 1975. " Proper names An Australian politician suggested calling the- street where the Soviet Embassy stands "Solzhenitsyn Ave- nue", prompting an Australian newspaper to suggest that the street housing the U. S. embassy should be called "Watergate Avenue." Appealing for the street to be renamed after the Russian writer, labor member of Parliament Richard Klugman said "I would love to see the Soviet Embassy having to put Solzhenitsyn Avenue on its letterheads." ThetNational newspaper, the Aus- tralian, commented on the suggestion in an editorial. "How about Nasser Avenue for the Israeli Embassy, Watergate Avenue for the American Embassy, and Sep- arate Way for the South African Embassy?" Hitching Charles Docter, a Maryland state legislator has come up with a new way to beat the gas shortage. He wants to legalize hitchhiking in the state for a year. "We must do all we can to get as many passengers as possible into one car," he said. He has also proposed that state police screen prospective hitchhikers and issue one dol- lar identification cards saying the hitchhiker had not been convicted of a violent crime. On the inside .. . ... The Magazine presents a glimpse of a petty thief by Jon Crane . . . The Sports staff has all the details on By CHERYL PILATE Proclaiming this weekend's Third World People's Solidarity Confer- ence at the University as a victory for our people," Asian activist Pat Sumi blasted the model minority" image of Asian-Americans during an exclusive interview yesterday. "The mouthpieces of the ruling class d i s t o r t Asian realities," claimed Sumi. They lead the public to believe that Asians are a con- tented minority and not militant like blacks, Chicanos, and native Americans." SUMI, AN ASIAN studies in- structor at California State Uni- Watergate grand jury to return indictments WASHINGTON (R - After20 months of taking testimony from some of the Nixon Administra- tion's highest officials, the origi- nal Watergate grand jury is ready to return major indictments in the burglary and cover-up. So are two sister grand juries impaneled later to help out with other investigations: campaign contributions, including the milk fund case and the ITT antitrust settlement: the so-called plumb- ers activities in the Ellsberg break-in: the nonexistent and flawed White House tape record- ings; political sabotage. Some of the indictments are ex- pected this week, in time to meet Special Prosecutor leon Jawor- ski's announced end-of-the-month deadline. THEY MAY INCLUDE men once closest to President Nixon, already identified as targets of grand jury probes: -Former Atty. Gen. John AMit- chell; twice the President's cam- paign' manager, his former law partner and attorney general, al- ready standing trial in a cam- paign contributions aftermath. -H. R. Haldeman; the man who r-in the White House for the Presi- -Charles Colson, a tough trou- bleshooter and key political adviser who once said "I would walk over my grandmother if necessary" for Nixon's re-election. THE STREAM of witnesses be- fore the grand juries has included Mitchell, Haldeman and Ehrlich- man as well as Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler, Nixon aide Ste- phen Bull and presidential secre- tary Rose Mary Woods. Some key administration and re- election committee figures already have pleaded guilty to assorted charges. In the cover-up, they include John Dean, Nixon's former offic- ial counsel and his chief accuser; Jeb Stuart Magruder, deputy to John Mitchell in the re-election committee; Frederick LaRue, also atop Mitchell campaign aide. NEGIL KROGH has gone to pri- son for the Ellsberg burglary; Donald Segretti and George Hear- ing for dirty tricks. In all, 29 men and nine corpora- tions have faced state and federal charges arising out of the Water- gate and - Ellsberg break-in and illegal campaign contribution in- vestigations . Tphe.firstot rnnf rl ,.7 xnc rnittinP- versity at San Francisco, stressed the need for unity among all mi- nority groups in order to tran- scend racism and abolish exploita- tion of the working class." Sumi, who opened the Solidarity Conference at H i 11 Auditorium Thursday night, advocated social- ism as the only realistic solution" to what she considerediAmerica's racist politics. "Only when the working people have mastery of society, can we overcome racism," she exhorted. It is impossible to make imper- ialism less imperialistic-the only thing we can hope for is a com- plete transformation of society." C I T I N G THE MOB brutality against Asian-Americans in the late 1800's, Sumi emphasized that, be- cause exploitation is an inescap- able part" of Asian-American his- tory, their militancy is not new. "We are a part of the Third World peoples because we share a common history with Black slaves and the Chicano laborers," she said. "In California, we have al- ways been relegated to the posi- tion of poor, unskilled laborers." Endorsing the need for political revolution, Sumi stressed that "No one can do it for us, except us." "Because there are so few Asians in the Midwest, few people here realize the unfinished tasks that lie before us," she continued. SUMI BELIEVES that the only solution to racism and explaitation comes from all people working to- gether. "Only then can we unleash the tremendous potential of this country," she said. "T h is conference brought all people together and created an immense sense of power and rich- ness." she continued. Sumi cited the "glorious tradi- tion" of slave rebellions, workers strikes and the battle for civil rights in emphasizing the need for anti-imperialistic struggles. "WE ASIAN, black, brown and native American peoples are de- termined to end exploitation and become the masters of our so- ciety," she said. "One-third of the world", peoples le. e X-senator s d Knowland d, -: sh oots self Y- GUERNEVILLE, Calif. (R) -Wil- l- am Knowland, editor and pub- lisher of the Oakland Tribune and n former U.S. senator, was found r- dead of a self-inflicted gunshot o- wound at his summer home near d here yesterday, the Sonoma County Sheriff's office said. Knowland was 65. e Undersheriff Robert Hayes said e Knowland's body was found by members of his family just before 2 p.m. at his home near the small town of Monte Rio, 75 miles north of San Francisco. He said death apparently had occurred "a few hours earlier." "AN INVESTIGATION by the sheriff's department disclosed evi- dence the victim died of a self- inflicted gunshot wound," Haves said in a statement. "The weapon is in custody of the sheriff's de- partment." No information was immediately available on the nature of the wound or the weapon used. Knowland reached a peak of rank and power as the U.S. Senate's Republican leader at age 45. He was considered a potential presi- dential contender. KNOWN AS A staunch conserva- tive, Knowland's principal interest was in Asia, which he considered a breeding ground for Commu- nism. In 1945, during his initial gear in the Senate, Knowland traveled to the Far East and came back de- manding the U.S. pay as much at- tention to that region as to post- war Europe. He spke bluntly in favor of a "get-tough-with-Russia" policy. Soon after the war started in Korea, he made a fact-finding tou. to the Far East and returned with very definite ideas of how to win it. He wanted to bomb the Clm- munist bases in Manchuria, set up a naval blockade of the Communist See KNOWLAND, Page 2 Pat Sumi Whiz kids go for baroque By BILL HEENAN Tiny feet pitter-pattering in Tappan Hall. Has the University been turned over to the pre-teen set? It almost seemed so while waiting for this par- ticular history of art class to begin. Ten children ranging in ages from 8 to 14 quietly filed into the room. A wiry, sandy-haired instructor followed, greet- ing each by name. "Now we're going to discuss what you requested last week-baroque sculpture," he finally added. STEPHEN INGRAM, an art history graduate student, casually commented on various art slides of the era: "Notice the variety in texture," he ex- claimed, pointing to "The Rape of Persephone." dominated by little heads barely emerging above seats? Uncannily, these children reacted to the lesson like older folks. One girl knitted while one neigh- bor conscientiously took notes and the other looked perfectly bored. However, the class could not suppress a few child-like giggles when Lisa, 9, insisted Saint Peter's Basilica in Rome was the White House. THE YOUNGSTERS are exceptional children who take Ingram's course for enrichment. Using University slides as a vehicle he allows their in- terests to dictate the pace. Ingram marvels at the youngster's perception: "These kids are energetic and show unabashed en- thusiasm." But his students keep him on his toes. "The quality of their questions have often forced I I