f Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, March 2, 1973 Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY RUMP CAUCUS CHARGED Trost selection sparks angry debate before Board of Ed Indians release 11 at Wounded Knee (Continued from Page 1) C,-tholic church in Wounded Knee. By DEBBIE GOOD R. Bruce McPherson officially submitted his resignation as Super- intendent of Ann Arbor schools last night at a Board of Education meeting marked by praise of Mc-{ Pherson and angry debate about the selection of his successor. Reading from a letter of resigna-' tion McPherson, who is taking a job with the Ford Foundattion inr Chicago, said, "I believe I haveF accomplished most of what I was asked to do by the Board. It ist time for new administrative lead- ership." Trustee Cecil Warner commented * that, "Bruce was the kind of guy tion of McPherson's replacement. who isn't afraid to go out on a Johnson claimed that the job had limb even if its been cut off be- been offered to David Trost at a hind him. . . If I had to categorize rump caucus of the Board's con- Bruce I'd put him in a category servative members. with General George Patton." The board's liberals were appar- Trustee Henry Johnson added he ently not informed about the meet- too would have resigned, if he ing. had been faced with the "meddl- Johnson added that the job open- ing" McPherson encountered. John- son said, "This Board must wake ' others an opportunity to apply. He up to the fact that it is not a re- further charged that the decision pository of wisdom, but a decision- was made with no input from the making body with an elected con- community.h stituency." cmuiy Johnson also charged the Board Defending the action Warner ex- with dishonestly handling the ques- plained that the Board was not going to pursue a national search kota senators. She talked by telephone to a "We went down to Wounded newsman after the hostages' re- Knee to the Gildersleeve's home lease was arranged. and talked to all 11 hostages," McGovern, Abourezk and Jo- Abourezk said. "Although they are seph Trimback, FBI special ag- free to go, they don't want to ent in charge of operations at Pine leave because they consider Ridge during the disturbance, left' Wounded Knee their home." Pine Ridge by car last evening Clive Gildersleeve and his wife and headed toward Wounded Knee, Agnes, the operators of the trad- about 20 miles northeast of Pine ing post, were among the host- Ridge. ages. The car passed through a road- "All 11 indicated they are free," block set up about seven miles said McGovern. "We offered to outside Wounded Knee, but all take them with us, but under the cars carrying members of the news circumstances they preferred to media were stopped. stayhethere. Thetwo senators met with AIM The Indians had asked to talk to leaders in a pasture, halfway be- the senators about Indian civil tween a roadblock set up by au- rights and treaty rights. thorities and one manned by In- _.--_- dians outside Wounded Knee. WINNIPEG, Man. (P)-A man's Earlier last night, AIM spokes- $70atfca'eg tlnatrh woman Sarah Platro said about $700 artificial leg, stolen after he 200 armed Indians had gathered , took it off in a hotel lobby, was inside the Sacred Heart Roman; found later in a nearby alley. t t' , ,; , E i i f 7 4 JERZY KOSIN SKIs latest fiction, THE DEVIL TREE, will be on sale for $5.90 through Saturday, March 3, 1973. ._ ___.. ,« ' a r R. + . .. ' , at your University Cellar 9-10p.m. weekdays 1 I-5 weekends U.S. officials seized for a replacement, "because there isn't enough time and we have negotiations and a budget to cut." "S o m e o n e from the outside It (Continued from Page 1 . ernment in a difficult position be-3 cause of its past stands on kidnap-I ings of American diplomats. Although it has never publicly admitted it, the government here has urged other governments, where U. S. diplomats have been seized, to yield to demands by their captors for release of priso- ners. The official U. S. policy, how- ever, has been to state that the government will not yield to black- mail and threats or demands for ransom in connections with terror- ists incidents. Bray saidta special state de- partment task force had been formed to follow the events in Khartoum. It is being directed byj the DeputyaUndersecretary of State for Management, William Macomber. According to the Sudanese news agency, the guerillas demanded the release of: Sirhan, who shot Sen. Kennedy in June, 1968, in Los Angeles. Sir- han, a Jordanian Arab, was sen- tenced to death but capital punish- ment was subsequently abolished in Calif. (Officials at San Quentin prison said they had received no word of the demand through of- ficial channels and that Sirhan had exercised normally with 15 other prisoners yesterday); --Abu Daud, a Palestinian guer-, rilla -leader who has reportedly been sentenced to death by a Jor- danian court for subversion. The guerrillas demanded that he and 16 comrades be released with 24 'hours; -Major Rafeh Al-Hindawi, who was arrested in Jordan last No- vember and convicted of plotting to kill King Russem; wouldn't be able to do a good job," -Members of the West German he added, "since he would not be Baader Mienhoff anarchist-terror- well acquainted with the com- ist gang, who the guerillas said were jailed because of their sup- port for Arab guerrillas; -About 50 people believed to be detained Arab guerrillas; and -All Arab women detainees in Israeli jails. 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