REPORT FROM ST. PAUL Photo by Tom Sweeney/Minnesota Daily £tit4Wn Ptg' Eighty-Three Years of Editorial Freedom Edited and, managed by students at the University of Michigan Their Russell By DAVID STOLL continue THE WHEELS of courtroom jus- ties have tice were grinding slowly last heavy se week in St. Paul at the trial of floor of American Indian Movement (AIM) building, leaders Dennis Banks and Russell accessibl Means. Although the first of the points an Wounded Knee trials packs dyna- marshall mite, the defense and federal judge tectors,r Fred Nichol were learning to live knowsu with each other at least tempor- around t arily. are whis Thanks largely to the exhaus- :":." r: tive cross-examination of defense counsel William Kunstler last "The week's progress for the prosecu- tion totalled disposal of one of 1 868 their witnesses, a Roman Catholic priest who is the fourteenth to testify thus far out of the hund- SOCLO red or so which the government expects to call to the stand. Progress for the defense w a s one with more tangible. After a two-day darker s wrangle over a piece of sloppiness arms-in-t on the part of an FBI agent, de- LASTN fense counsel managed to wangle the featu an order from Judge Nichol fore- room wa ing the FBI to open its Minneapolis all seem files on Wounded Knee to the de- spectator fense. packedv THE TRIAL has been ignored so sympathi far by the national media, but paper cu plenty of time remains for court- when the room tumult to bring it to the at- their feel tention of the country. Wearing ter-objec now into its third month, the trial relief fr( is likely to last until summer. The jur Banks and Means are charged in male and ten-count indictments which range with thea from arson and larceny to assault staller R on a federal officer and conspiracy. Chicano.r Like four other AIM leaders who so painfu will go on trial after them, teir bit thej cases were moved from Siowx ed. Dur Falls, S.D., to St. Paul in order of those to getanunbiased jury. sympathi The defendants plan to rest their tion and ounded Means, Knee t Dennis to make, federal aurhori- e put the courtro m, under curity. Located or the top St. Paul's new federal the Nichol coirtroom is e only through two check- nd a dozen and a half U.S. s, equipped with metal de- radios, revolvers and God what firepower tucked he corner. Whl p r e s s ked right through, every- I'm one of the a"o-neys fir the defendants." In the courtroon no one matches Mr. Kuastler. A man of national reputation with a na- tural Tresence to match. he is so sure )f himself that even when he is over-ruled he makei the state- ments of judge and prosec otor sound apologetic. WHEN KUNSTLER rises to make an objection nis voice is veritably that of iniaeo reason, e defendants plan to rest their case on the 8 Sioux Treaty, a thoroughly neglected docu- ,which would shae the foundations of the d order if it were recognized." d::Y?:}%F 1S":}i iit^,iYi4:iv}.};j.}i.{}"n"r:2;;"'r'ii}Y{:' mii"{; r"":v"::m::'':': i-:}}:' i " * his knowledge of tr;lditional Sioux religion. * his alleged opposition to the Sun Dance, a Plains Indian ritual which has been branded as "pag- an" by Hauhart's bishop. * his alleged complicity in trad- ing-post exploitation of Indians. and alleged beating of Indian children at a mission school with which he is associated. 9 allged exploitation of the Wounded Knee massacre site as a tourist attraction by the Catholic church, upon whose property the mass grave of the victims is lo- cated. The epitomy of inoffensive priest- liness, Father Manhart wore siiv- er-rimmed spectacles, parted his silver hair and had a sm.v)h face and boyish smile. Although he pr"_v- ed skillful at parrying the thrust of Kunstler's questions - to the great annoyance and contempt of Pine Ridge AIM members in the courtroom - at times nis skill at hedging became very obvious. "DIDN'T YOU attempt to hring the Indians of the Pine Ridge re- servation into the Catholic relig- ion?" Kunstler asked in a lethal tone. "What you are asking is too much for me to answer," the priest re- plied mildly. "As a priest I'm in- r to stand watch over then?" asked one. "A U.S. marshall The files were to have been ins lected Sa- tjrday. GLADYS BISSONEI TE loks like any other little old lady in white tennis sneakers, except that she's an Oglala Indian and a de- clared member of AIM on the Pine Ridge reservation. She said her sons have been beaten up by BIA police and her house searched illegally twice. "Most of them's so brake, afraid and barely alive that tney won't talk," said Gl~kdys of the Indians on the Pine Ridge reservation "They get a beating if they open their mouth." When AIM arrived In strength at the Pine Ridge reservation last February, it was at the invitation of residents opposed to the regime of tribal chairman Richard Wil- son. In his first nine months of office, it was nharged, Wilson had put family members an i friends in most of the key position- of tribal government; sold favo-s to white businessmen and ranchers at ?he expense of Indians on the reserva- tion; and harrassd and fired from their jobs everyone who opposed him. SINCE Wounded Knee, AIM charges that BIA police and vigi- ial o Banks 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104 News Phone: 764-0552 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 1974 Contempt and the presidency skin of an off-white or shade is subjezted to an he-air shake-down. WEEK the atmosphere in reless wood-panelled court- s so even-tempered that it ed beside the point. The rs' benches were usually with AIM memoers and .zers, the jury sat like t-outs in the jury box, and e attorneys all jumped to t with objections and coun- tions it was a welcome m the boredom. rors are predominately fe- d young. They're all white exception of telephone in- Richard Garcia, who is a The selection pro.:ess was ul that it took a month, juror's are not sequester- ing the questioninl most chosen revealed vagu- 4es for the Indian condi- Seven vaguer- kn,)wled e IMPEACHMENT OF THE President is a wretched business, justifiable only when the behavior of the incumbent is such that tolerating it will set a prece- dent which, if followed for any length of time by any future Presidents, would constitute a clear and present danger to the survival of any form of democracy. The long litany of charges against Richard Nixon, if only one out of ten prove true, would be more than enough to make his removal from office,impera- tive. For this reason, it is entirely just and proper that Mr. Nixon not be judged by the narrow standard of criminal right and wrong, but also by the impact of his' Presidency upon the future interpreta- tion of the Constitution, the role of the executive, and the conduct of public of- ficials. Yet greast care must be taken to en- sure that the impeachment inquiry not degenerate into a circus as it did against Andrew Johnson. That fiasco consigned impeachment of President into limbo for a century, virtually ensuring the event- ual emergence of such arrogance as has characterized the present Administra- tion. ALTHOUGH THE majority of people now regard Mr. Nixon with deserved distrust, it is clearly bad policy to advo- cate impeachment as a sop to volatile public opinion, or to satisfy an intense individual disliking of the person. Those people who gave Mr. Nixon his landslide -even if they are now disillusioned with his utter ineptitude and possible crimi- nality - will have every right to demand that his ouster follow a full and public accounting of the charges. Unless it is perfectly clear that throw- ing out Richard Nixon is not an arbitrary and capricious act, the benefit to the democracy which should derive f r o m imposing the ultimate check upon White House grandeur, will not come. If the present impeachment inquiry treats Mr. Nixon with anything like the contempt with which Mr. Nixon has treated it and the American people, we would be almost as well off to forget about it and absorb three more years. -CLARKE COGSDILL dignity and justice itse'f. After he has addressed a question to a wit- ness with whatever measure cf menace or kindliness he cares to put into it, he thrusts his lion's head up with pursed lios w h il e waiting for the answe-, hand fold- ed into coat pocket. Then, taking the answer with the faintest con- traction of his brows, he strides down the length of the bar to the next question. "Is this the second string?'. quered one of the defense lawyers of the government's men in cotrt last week. Outclassed down to the quality of his courtroom repartee, the prosecution's work horse is as- sistant U.S. Attorney for South Dakota R. D. Hurd, who did vir- t'iallytall the government's ques- tioning and objecting last week. With a baby face and worried eyes sink into sockets under furrowed brows, Mr. Hurd looks a lct hke a Doonesbury character. T h e government's four other men get involved only in the battles royal, THERE'S NOT much else they can do after the defense h a s launched into cross examination, which in this trial cus'ornaril tak- es three or four timei as long as direct questioning. When one of Mr. Hurd's objections develop into a three-sided argument between bench, defense and prosecution, which they often do, Kunstler ha- bitually complains that if Mr. Hurd hadn't objected, the line of ques- tioning would be finis ied already. Then Kunstler launches into a new and oblique avenue of examination, if not the same one under another guise. The jurors smile faintly, he's their media star. Flare-ups continuall , erupt over questioning which prosecution and judge consider far afield. in one celebrated exchange the week be- fore last, defense attorney L a n e asked a BIA policeman and al- leged vigilante why he had been transferred from the Pine Ridge reservation to Winnebago, Nebra- ska. "Were you," Lane asked, 'trans- ferred because you shot and killed Little Spotted Horse, an Oglala, and because you shot your brother Wayne Randall in the leg, and be- cause you struck a pregnant wo- man, Mary Burns Prairie, in the stomach with your biLy club, caus- ing her to miscarry? "MR. LANE! Mr. Lane!" shout- ed Judge Nichol as prosecutor Hurd jumped to his fret, speech- less. "I am sick and tired of your behavior," the judge 'old Lane as he struck the question from the record, adding that because Lane had "abused his right of counsel' he could not continue the cross- examination. Typically, however, Nichol quickly decided that t h e counsel could continue if he asked questions in another area. "The defense wants to put the treaty on a par witp the Consti- tution," Hr. Hurd said in his of- fice Thursday noon. *'We'll argue that the treaty is on a par with any other law of Congress. That's Go Blue! WE APPLAUD THE truly magnificent performance of the University of Michigan basketball team throughout this Big Ten championship season. Pick- ed to finish as low as eighth by some pre- season prognosticators the scrappy Wol- verines played tough basketball from the outset and have thus far garnered an impressive and well-deserved 21-4 re- cord. Under the tutelage of coach John Orr, who has in one short season risen from arch-villain to super-hero in the eyes of many Wolverine fans, Michigan has TODAY'S STAFF: News: Dan Biddle, J. Fraply, Cindy Hill, Rob Meachum, Cheryl Pilate, Jeff Sor- enson, Judy Ruskin Editorial Page: Paul Haskins, M a r n i e Heyn, David Stoll, Sue Wilhelm Arts Page: Ken Fink Photo Technician: David Margolick steadily improved and is now among only sixteen teams still in the running for the coveted NCAA championship. Showing surprising poise and matur- ity for such a comparatively young team (having only one senior), the Wolver- ines defeated conference co-champion Indiana on Tuesday night in front of a clearly hostile crowd at a "neutral" court at Illinois. Despite injuries to both starting guards, the loss of All-American for- ward Campy Russell on fouls in the sec- ond half, and the near-loss of front- court men Wayman Britt and C. J. Ku- pec also on fouls, they outlasted the Hoosiers and will play Notre Dame in the Mid-East regional on Thursday. CONGRATULATIONS and best wishes for continued success to coach Orr and the Maize and Blue! -RAY O'HARA (n4S OBJEGr OF I1MA1 A "We C~PLACE ' w*46e I16 -.RIUN NUMQE le~iuGN 'WIn~trQutm BEING S e.) A 2-UNIT HOUSING project is one Wounded Knee occupation. case on the 1868 Sioux Treatv, a thoroughly neglected document which would shake the foundations of the social order if it were re- cognized. Defense counsel will try, to use the treaty, not only to es- tablish the illegality of the federal government's actions on the Pine Ridge reservation last year, but also to introduce the whole con- text of the occupation into the trial. SUCH CONSCIOUS politicization of the proceedings will put great strain on Judge Nichol, who has already displayed a dangerous tem- per. The day the defendants pre- sented their opening sta-ements to the jury, Nichol ordered Kunst- ler and two other defense counsel thrown out of court for objecting t his rulings. Unlike Judge Julius J. Hoffman, however, Nichol is a liberal, at heart. Twenty minutes later he found it in himself to in vite the attorneys back and apolo- gize. A lean-jawed man of 61 years with an exasperated tone to his voice, the judge was in good umor most of last week. He received the sallies of prosecution and de- fense with toothsome, skeptical smiles, settling disputes with care and adding profuse explanations of what he was doing. Defense at- torneys openly distrust his ability to control himself when court and defense lock horns on the treaty, however. NICHOL has yet to rut: on the extent he will admit the document to the trial, but it's already peei- ing out from between every ques- tion the defense poses in ~ r o s s- examination. The major battles will probably be fought after the defense opens its case in April or May. Then counsel will try to pull out of their own lengthy succes- sion of witnesses all sorts of testi- mony - concerning the history of the Pine Rigde reservation, tradi- tional customs and AIM attempts to return to them, conditions on the reservation and at *h-: Bureau ofL T. .... /)T A Aff-- "s.. .1-k:.. of the more visible results of the of the events at Wounded Knee. The defense table is a lively place. Besides Kunstler, counsel include Mark Lane, author of the Kennedy asassination expose "Rush to Judgment", and three attorneys from the Twin Cities who have worked with AIM be-ore. NO PASSIVE spectator, Means dashes off notes to his counsel during cross-examination with great vigour, rattling them in the air to get attention. Several times a day last week he visibly lo s t patience with the proceedings, slapping his pen down on the table and muttering an "Gh Jesus" or equivalent audible through the courtroom. A heavy set, tightly' belted man with a cruel ,mobile mouth, Means looks the more dy- Photo by Tom Sweeney/Minnesota Daily William Kunstler terested in sharing what i have with others. Nobody becomes a Christian by persuasion." "But isn't is a part of your duties to convert Indians to the Catholic religion?" persisted Kunst- ler heavily. "I'm sorry, but I can't accept the implication of your phrasing,' answered Fr. Manhart, "It is not my office to convert souls. Of my- self I do nothing. It is only through the grace of God that people are brought into the faith." Whether the jurors were impressed by or ashamed of Fr. Manhart was un- clear. Seven of the twelve a r e Catholic. The government never loked more inept last week than in the two-day brush-fire which led to the opening of the FBI files to the de- fense. ALTHOUGH Judge Nichol h a d ordered copies of all documents the government would use in c ou r t handed over to the defense 1 a s t October, Tuesday morning Hurd off-handedly passed a new docu- ment over to the defense table- a petition signed by a number of peo- ple in Wounded Knee early in the siege, asking that the U.S. mar- shalls be .withdrawn. Under cross-examination Fr. Manhart promptly labelled several of the signatures forgeries, on the grounds that the designation "resi- dent" or "non-resident" entered next to each name was incorrect. During the lengthy dispute which developed, it turned out, that the document in the hands of the court was not the original peti*.on In- stead it was a copy which had been scribbled on by Bureau of Indian Affairs policemen and FBT agents, sent over by mistake acc )ding to Mr. Hurd. "I used to think the'FBI wis one of the greatest bureaus that ever came down the pike," flared Nich- ol Wednesday morning as he or- lantes under Wilson's direction have instigated a reign of terror on thedreservation, beating up su- spected AIM sympathizers. a n d firebombing and shooting at their homes. Last month, Wilson w a s apparently re-elected tribal chair- man, however, defeating Means by 123 votes. AIM immediately cried fraud, charging that the tally for Wilson had been bought with money and alcohol, coerced by in- timidation, and supplemented with the votes of whites and non-re- servation Indians. According to AIM, a total of 275 people, mostly Indians, face charges stemming from the Wound- ed Knee siege in a variety of fed- eral, state and tribal courts. Of the five leaders scheduled to stand trial in St. Paul after Banks and Means, one is dead and and- ther has been "banished and'cen- sured" from AIM. PEDRO BISSONETTE, an offi- zer of the Oglala Sioux Civil Rights Association on Pine Ridge, w a s killed last October by BIA police who say he moved for a weapon while they were trying to arrest him. Defense attorney Lane, who was able to inspect the body, says the BIA story is false and that Bissonette was murdered. Although Carter Camp shot in- dicted AIM leader Clyde Belle- court in the belly last summer, he was not formally repudiated by the rest of the AIM leadership until a month ago, when a letter he had written was intercepted by the FBI. The content of the letter'has not been revealed, but Banks term- ed it "potentially damaging" to the rest of the 'defendants. Last week AIM members expressed the fear that he might turn up in court to testify °against Banks and Means. In Sioux Falls, S.D., where the federal government is prosecuting the bulk of its Wounded Knee ;n- 95-.1- -rI ' f ~ ass.. * t 4* It. LZI 6 t t R pt. t 0 4-," poll x 77 = - " M pop r yH'<9 fk 15 "" 1 Y r _ 1y'f"'ri::!' , tTY"G. _ "'k+J'r r it i M THE TRADING POST at Wounded Knee, now just a pile of rub- ble, was destroyed during the AIM occupation last year. namic of the two defendants in court but has been accused of swagger. Banks is leaner, quieter, and looks more Indian. wicti a sadness in his expression which could be taken for defeat. In the hall out- s>de .he courtroom. tho'h. iye the way Indian treaties have been interpreted by the courts in the past. Insofar as treaty provisions conflict, later acts of Congress pre- vail." Last week was spent in cross- examination - chiefly by Kunstler - of Jesuit Father Paul Manhart,