SUNDAY DAILY See Editorial Page Y Lw 43au 4I A*IV TENUOUS High-40 Law-25 For details sde today., Vol. LXXXIII, No. 98 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, January 28, 1973 Ten Cents Ten Pages ietnam lint fighi cease-fire ing goes pact signed outh tI on in -C7 today... if you see news happen call 76-DAILY State HRP meets The Human Rights Party (HRP) kicked-off its state conven- tion here yesterday. Over 40 HRP members, primarily from Lansing, Kalamazoo, and the city attended the working session held in the SAB. Various workshops discussed the establishment of a statewide party organizer post, the relationship between non-electoral and electoral activities within HRP, and HRP's current financial status. Today, discussion will focus on possible changes in the party constitution and platform. Tentatively a statewide organizer will be chosen in the afternoon, shortly be- fore the convention's adjournment. RAP's lapse The Responsible Alternative Party (RAP) contingent in LSA Student Government is apparently not so responsible. The aver- age meeting, attendance mark of the seven RAP government members is only 55.1 per cent; the other ten voting members show up better than 80 per cent of the time. Bob Black, whose own function on the government is ill-defined at best, says he intends to "prefer charges" against RAPpie Stuart Weiner, who has attended only two of 16 meetings. Happenings ... ...Today and tomorrow promise several diversions, both serious and less so. For politically-motivated persons, try the second (and last) day of the "People's Conference for U n i t y Against Repression" at 7 p.m., in Rackham Aud. . . . or the second day of the Human Rights Party's state convention, at the SAB at noon . . . if you feel like ethnic food, Hillel's sponsoring a bagel and lox brunch at 11 for 75c - plus you get to listen to Dr. Armand Lauffer on "American Judaism as an Ecology of Games" . . . or check out the Ark Coffee Houses' communal supper at 6 . . . for those interested in canvassing for Lisa North (running for HRP's Second Ward nomination) and Ann Bobroff (trying for HRP's mayoral nomination), there will be a campaign meeting at 4 today in theDHRP's offices . . . At 2, . there's the international Children's Day at Rive Gauche -- bring the whole family . . . And tomorrow's offerings are also varied. Political events range from the Democrat's lunch box forum in Union Station at noon . . . to the Senate Assembly I meeting at 3:15 in Rackham (see your faculty in action) . . . to the 7:30 p.m. City Council meeting, where Human Rights Party members have called for a 7 p.m. mass show of support at City Hall for their motion to hold public hearings on the police department. Flu blues ATLANTA - The National Center for Disease Control (CDC) officially declared Friday that the nation is in the midst of a London flu epidemic, with 908 deaths attributable to influenza and pneumonia through January 20. CDC said the West coast has been hardest hit, with the most deaths reported in California, Oregon, and Washington state. The total of states reporting London flu cases now stands at 27, but a CDC spokesperson says the outbreak may not become as severe as last year's Hong Kong flu epidemic. Groups join in formalit ies By AP, UPI, and Reuters PARIS-The United States, North- and South Vietnam, and the Viet Cong yesterday- signed the treaty bringing an uncertain peace to Vietnam after a generation of war which killed more than two million people and left immutable scars on the Vietnamese and American societies. The official cease-fire began in North and South Viet- nam at 7 p.m. EST, amid reports of continued fighting as both sides attempted to hold as much territory as possible. Almost immediately after the truce began, Cambodian President Lon Nol announced suspension of all offensive ac- tivities by Cambodian troops. However the status of the con- flict in the rest of Indochina remained unclear last night. Foreign ministers from the four warring parties in Viet- SECRETARY OF STATE William Rogers signs the cease-fire agreement at a formal ceremony in Paris yesterday. Participating are, from left: Undersecretary of state for Southeast Asian affairs William Sullivan, Ambassador William Porter, Rogers, Assistant Secre- tary of State Marshal Green (partly hidden) and acting chief of the U.S. delegation to the peace talks Hayward Isham. Laird early By AP, UPI and Reuters WASHINGTON - Only a few hours after the cease-fire agree- ment was signed yesterday, De- fense Secretary Melvin Laird announced an immediate end to the draft, more than five months before the June 30 cutoff date provided by law. Laird told top defense depart- ment officials that following the cease-fire announcement and a report on manpower needs from the Secretary of the Army, "the Armed Forces hence forth will depend exclusively on volunteer ends military 0 in a soldiers, sailors, airmen and ma- rines. Use of the draft has ended." Laird's sole qualification ap- plied to conscription of "health services personnel" - doctors and dentists, who will still be drafted, he said, in small num- bers. The announcement cancelled the defense secretary's earlier plans to order draft calls for 5,000 men in the four months of March through June. There were no draft calls for January or Febru- ary. irprise But Laird warned that unless Congress approved legislation giving incentive pay bonuses to volunteers, it would be "ex- tremely difficult, if not impos- sible to maintain the National Guard and Reserves - and also keep up military medical serv- ices - at the required levels." Laird conceded in a report to Congress earlier this month that "no one . . . can guarantee ab- solutely that the United States will be able to maintain an all- volunteer force for the indefinite future." draft move The draft law itself does not officially expire until the orig- inal June 30 date, and local boards will 'continue to require 18-year olds to register and re- port for pre-induction physicals for the next five months. Congress will presumably be asked to extend the President's authority to draft young men past Junt 30 as a backup mea- sure in the event volunteer en- listments fall below service man- power needs. The annual draft lottery, held to establish the or- der of call by birth dates, will continue. The indefinite suspension of the draft, barring a national emergency, means that the last draftees apparently will be the 2,500 who were inducted in De- cember for two years of active duty. They were the last of 51,800 who were drafted last year. At the height of the Vietnam War buildup in 1966, draft calls reached a peak of 364,000 men. Except for a 13-month lapse after World War II, the draft has af- fected millions of American young men since 1940. Pentagon officials said there were no plans now to draft medi- cal personnel, but Laird retained _ . See LAIRD, Page 6 nam took just 30 minutes in two separate ceremonies to sign an official end to the war which lasted 13 years. Mme. Nguyen Thi Binh of the Viet Cong, Nguyen Duy Trinh of North Vietnam, Secretary of State William Rogers, and Saigon For- eign Minister Tran Van Lam, signed multiple copies of inch- thick leather - bound documents comprising the "Agreement On Ending W a r and Restoring Peace," in a solemn diplomatic ceremony yesterday morning. As the treaty was signed, the United States acted on one of the settlement provisions by formal.- lv proposing in Washington that the 12-nation peace conference be- gin on Feb. 26 at a neutral city. A second provision, calling for a four-nation cease-fire supervisory commission, began to take effect as groups of military personnel from Canada, Poland, and Hun- gary departed for Saigon. Indone- sia is the fourth commission mem- ber. Also, lists of prisoners-of-war were exchanged by both sides and the Pentagon released the first several dozen names of American prisoners. The pact provides for all prisoners to be returned within 60 days, and for all American mili- tary personnel to leave South Viet- nam within the same period. World reaction to the truce di- vided along East-West ideological lines. President Nixon called the settlement an achievement of "peace with honor" for America, and Soviet leaders hailed the pact as "a great victory in the strug- See U.S., Page 6 U.S. starts Publishing POW lsts By AP, UPI and Reuters Military officers f a n n e d out across the country last night, bringing news to the waiting fami- lies of nearly 2,000 missing or cap- tured U.S. servicemen. The lists of prisoners held by both North Vietnamese and the For other stories related to the cease-fire, see Page 6. Viet Cong were released yesterday afternoon and phoned in to a wait- ing room at the Pentagon-center of t h e government's Operation Homecoming-in a three-hour call from Paris. There was no word last night as to how many names were on the lists. U.S. officials said they hoped the lists might contain more than the 591 military prisoners known to be captured. Some 1,334 service- men are listed in U.S. records as missing in action. Yesterday evening, also, a list of U.S. civilian prisoners-32 alive and 13 dead-was released by the communists, accounting for the re- See POW, Page 6 On the inside ... Throw away your suntan lotion and break out the frost- bite kit again. All you suckers who hoped the rest of the winter was gonna be like Tahiti had best use your Daily, for a headpiece, 'cause chances are about six in ten that it's snowing as you read this. You'll be lucky if the mercury hits 40 today, and even luckier if it don't go below 25 (aagh!) tonight. And tomorrow's supposed to be "cooler" but things may be balmy come Tuesday. Don't bet your overcoat on it though ... The weather picture A few members of The Daily's Washington bureau give their own inimitable views on the doings surrounding last weekend's inauguration of whats-his-name, on the Editorial Page . . . Alvin Katz reviews Professional Theater Program's version of Godspell, on Arts Page . . . and sports Night Editor Frank Longo, faced with the awesome responsibility for putting out Pages 7, 8, and 9, gibbers "we have stories on basketball, swimming, wrestling, and track oh yes, and gymnastics, too." 'U' dormitories begin battle to cut back on power usagye By DAVID BURHENN Dorm residents: If you find your- self groping blindly through murky, half-lit hallways in search of your room, take heed-you're experienc- ing the opening barrage of the Uni- versity's war against the power crisis. The energy shortage is a result of an interruption in gas service combined with a limited stand-by of fuel oil. With a severe cold snap, heat and lights could be curtailed in campus buildings. With this in mind, University ad- ministrators have been meeting this past week to try to find ways to alleviate the problem. Incon- junction, dormitory building direc- tors have been planning strategy for their respective structures. Housing Office Associate Director Claude Orr explained some of the underlyingsassumptions behind the discussions. "We're trying to get wholeheart- ed support and cooperation from all of the residents. We're not try- ing to do anything unreal. Z guess it's a matter of being thrifty with our utilities instead of enjoying all of the affluency we've past." had in the Heavy clashes occur By AP, UPI, and Reuters SAIGON-A long-awaited cease-fire went into effect at 8 a.m. Sunday morning (Saigon time) today, but was shattered by severe fighting in the Saigon area and near the Cambodian border. The cease-fire brought to a close 24 hours comprising the heaviest fighting of the entire war, and although all sides have vowed to uphold the truce, major land-grabbing battles were still underway this morning. President Nguyen Van Thieu, speaking last night, asked his troops to remain in the field, although all U.S. helicopters and planes had returned to base within 15 minutes after the cease-fire deadline. We do not know whether peace will last or not, or will be sabotaged bythetcommunists," saidhThieu, adding thathif the com- munists violated the truce, "we will have to break their heads open." The Saigon Command called yesterday's fighting the most in- See VIET, Page 6 S E E KS POLITICAL POWER Conference studies repression Orr added that each resident hall would work out its own response to the energy shortage. Measures taken in West Quad are typical of those being instituted or proposed in other dorms. On Friday, residents received a memo from building director Leon West, outlining his power-saving recom- mendations for the 33-year-old structure. Calling the situation "critical" West asked quaddies to: -Disconnect refrigerators and other appliances, such as corn poppers and hair dryers; --Close windows and dim un- necessary lights (hall lights are already cut to half strength); and -Use a minimum of hot water. West emphasized that the recom- mendations are just that, and not orders. "There's no way we could regulate the usage of power. But every little bit helps." University officials emphasized that if the weather between now mal no av >>nrv nttnnq te y 1 t t V' : By DENISE GRAY "All power comes out of knowledge." The words of Hank Bryant summarized 4 the theme of the first session of the People's Conference for Unity Against Repression last night, but the conference was less than unified. - Billed as "an attempt to organize the citi- zens of Washtenaw County into a strong nnlitical bodv aoainst onnression and renres- logical aspects of welfare organizing, defend- ing NWRO's efforts to "erase America's stereotypes of welfare recipients as ignorant, lazy, and uneducated." She referred many times to her own ex- periences with poverty. "My life has not changed significantly since I was a child," she said. "I was poor then, and I'm poor now." When Emersnn finished sneaking a rnn Organizers of the gathering predicted a crowd of 500, but fewer than 100 people at- tended last night's session. Other speakers included Dave Martinez, organizer of Ann Arbor's lettuce boycott, Lee Eskredge of the Gay Liberation Front, Rich- ard Kunnes of the Medical Committee for H'iman Rights (MCHR), Larry Mann of Ann Arbor Youth Liberation, and Mauree McKaen sneaking on Women's rights