SEGREGATED DEMONSTRATION See Editorial Page Yl r e *6f rila A& a t SPARKLY High-45 Low-35 For details see "today" Vol. LXXXIII, No. 65 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, November 21, 1972 Ten Cents Eight Pages today. .. if you see news happen call 76-DAILY Union break-in Four people went for a prowl around the fourth floor of the Union Sunday night, forcing entry into at least seven rooms. But they didn't steal anything, according to Union Manager Stan- field Wells. The prowlers were reported by a startled Union resident and apparently got scared away before they could get anything. A number of student rooms and the Legal Aid office were broken into. University unit police are checking it out. Children behave! President Robben Fleming and Ohio State President Harold Enarson are worried about what Michigan and Ohio fans will do to the stadium, referees, football players and each other after Saturday's big finale in Columbus. They issued a joint state- ment yesterday urging fans to keep the mayhem in the stands from exceeding the mayhem on the field. The statement reads, "we hope that all our fans . . . will be good sports either in victory or defeat, and that we will be as proud of them as we are of our respective teams." Fashion show Something's, going to happen at Northville State Hospital today that generally doesn't happen at mental institutions. There's going to be a fashion show. Kay Baum of Ann Arbor is provid- ing the clothes and models for the show as a part of the psychology department's Outreach Program. According to pro- gram spokespersons, the idea is to give the patients - parti- cularly women soon to be released - an up-to-date understand- ing of the world outside the institution's walls. Diag assault Two thugs, described as teen-aged white males, assaulted and attempted to rob a 14-year-old Ann Arbor youth on the Diag Sunday night. According to police reports, the two knocked the youth down and slashed his arm with a knife. For an as yet unexplained reason, the assailants fled without taking any money. The police are investigating. Happenings ... . . . Slim pickings for today, but if you're into history go to the LSA Coffee Hour, 2549 LSA from 3 to 4:30 . . . at night you can go to the Women's Studies Film Series which features High School (a really great flick, from all reports) at the UGLI Multipurpose Room at 7 p.m. . . . you can hit the Rive Gauche for Spanish Language night at 9 p.m. (1024 Hill St.) . . . or you can just stay at home and call in your questions and gripes to President Fleming, Daily editor Sara Fitzgerald and Jean Cobb, chairperson of the University Alumnae Council. They will appear on WUOM's "Symposium '72" on 91.7 FM at 8 p.m. (call 763-9210 or 763-1550). USO scandal WASHINGTON-Officials of the USO-a supposedly non-profit organization which runs clubs for servicemen overseas - have been raking in profits from black market operations, accord- ing to a Pentagon report. The secret report-released by the Washington Post-reveals large scale corruption with some USO officials suspected of clearing as much as $1 million and deposit- ing it in foreign banks. USO is supported mainly through public fund raising efforts. Dirty campaign WASHINGTON-The head of the Fair Campaign Practices Committee says the 1972 election was the dirtiest in recent his- tory. Sam Archibald, the committee's executive director, says complaints this year were up 25 per cent over 1968. A significant percentage of the complaints, according to Archibald, concerned abuses of the free mailing privilege given to members of Con- gress. Gerrymander obsolete? NEW YORK - Ann Arbor Ward Boundary Commission take note! The New York Academy of Sciences says computers will make the gerrymander extinct. Participants in a recent academy conference met to discuss various ways computers can be used to draw non-partisan and hopefully equitable voting districts. Military suit WASHINGTON - The National Prison Project of the Ameri- can Civil, Liberties Union is suing the Army and Air Force for violating the constitutional privileges of inmates in military prisons. The suit-filed on behalf of inmates in the U.S. Disci- plinary Barracks in Fort Leavenworth, Kansas and at military stockades throughout the country-alleges unlawful censorship of inmate's mail and racial discrimination. Mineral cheating? DENVER - Spokespersons for the American Indian Move- ment (AIM) say documents stolen from the Bureau of Indian Affairs building earlier this month show that five major U.S. corporations have been cheating Indians in order to obtain min- eral rights. Phillips Petroleum, Standard Oil of California, Phelps Dodge, Peabody Coal, and Sinclair Oil are all accused. All five companies have denied that they cheat Indians. Mexico angry MEXICO CITY - The Mexicans are getting pretty angry with the U.S. and the issue is an old one - foreign investments. According to the National Bank of Mexico, 35 per cent of that country's most important corporations are partially foreign-own- ed, and the Mexican government is starting to crack down on further foreign investment. Feelings south of the border were hardly soothed by an article in Barron's magazine - a Wall Street-oriented publication - which said Mexico's restrictions on foreign investment are "killing the bird that laid the golden egg " On the inside .. . ... guest writer Mickey Matus writes on King Dick and the land of Asu on the Editorial Page . . . Don Sosin reviews the Paniagua Quartet on the Arts Page . . . and the Sports Page you'll find an Associated Press feature U.., N. Viets renew talks By The Associated Press and Reuters PARIS-Presidential envoy Henry Kissinger met for five and a half hours yesterday with North Vietnamese negotia- tor Le Duc Tho in the first of a series of secret talks that officials say will bring a ceasefire to Vietnam. There was no formal announcement of their meeting from either side, but the two men were seen at the villa by television reporters. Kissinger, Tho and their advisers lunched in the villa, presumably together. They left the villa to return to their respective residences at 4 p.m. They were driven to and from Gif-Sur-Yvette, the site of the talks, under strong police escort. At various times of the day, Kis- singer and Tho could be seen strolling separately indthebgarden of the villa, accompanied by their When they emerged, they smiled and waved at the camera crew but refused to answer questions. The site of the Kissinger-Tho talks had been kept secret by both. sides and there was no indication1 where the two men would hold I.. their next meeting, set for Tues- day afternoon. WASHINGTON, Reuters - Cuba As Kissinger, President Nixon's has told Washington it will put national security adviser, and Tho, three U. S. hijackers on trial and a member of North Vietnam's has proposed a starting date for Politburo, finished their first day negotiations on an anti-hijacking of talks, the Viet Cong issued a agreement, the state department statement here accusing the United said yesterday. ABOUT 90 University black students yesterday marched down city streets as part of campus protests of the two student deaths at South- ern University at Baton Rouge, La. 0 4 Commission BATON ROUGE, La. (A)-Louisi- are not yet willing to admit the ana Atty. Gen. William Guste, yes- pellets came from police shotguns.' appoin ted to udntdeaths States of taking preparatory steps, toward sabotaging agreements al- ready made about a ceasefire. "The massive introduction of arms and other war materials in South Vietnam, the increase of U.S. air forces in Taiwan and the' Indirect talks conducted through the Swiss government, which rep- resents U.S. interests in Cuba, may begin in a matter of weeks, de- partment spokesperson Charles Bray said. terday announced the appointment They claim some type of h of a 12-member commission to in- made grenade thrown by stu vestigate the turmoil at Southern could have been responsible University that led to the deaths the killings. of two students. The incident occured at the The commission will consist of of a three week period of sti an equal number of blacks and unrest, in which students wer whites including two students. manding greater control over Guste told a news conference the versity policy as well as the r commission will initiate its investi- nation of university presidentI gation Nov. 2F. He said the panel Netterville. will call law enforcement officers, city and state officials, university A story printed in the Los administrators and newsmen be- geles Times quotes Louisiana hind closed doors to testify about Edwin Edwards as saying, "I1 last Thursday's violence at the no doubt it was a deputy whoI university, the largest black col- the shot." The Times story lege in the nation. The attorney general said the panel would meet in -private, like a grand jury, because the evidence 3 5 0w p ro obtained may lead to criminal charges. He said he will use his office's subpoena powers and thea witnesses will be under oath. The two students killed, Denver Smith and Leonard Brown, both 20 year-old black men, were shot By GORDON ATCHESON in a confrontation with Baton and DAVID BURHENN Rouge deputy sheriffs and Louisi- Protesting the killing of ana State Police last Thursday. black students at Southern Un Medical reports show that the sity in Baton Rouge, some 250 men died from head wounds caus- sons rallied yesterday at the ed by a number of small pellets. versity's Administration B The pellets closely resemble the while an estimated 90 black number four buckshot used by the dents m a r c h e d through sheriff's department. But officials streets. sCity denies airport ome- dents for end udent -e de uni- egis- Leon An- Gov. have fired also reports that Edwards plans to fire Netterville and accede to most of the student demands. In a statement issued in re- sponse, Edwards accused the author of the article of showing "a gross lack of regard for the whole truth" and said the reporter had attended only 30 minutes of a, two-hour meeting between Ed- wards and Justice Department of- ficials, then wrote "an irrespon-1 sible, inaccurate and unauthorized two-minute summarization, out of' context ... " Edwards denied he said he would fire Netterville, adding that in any event, that power rested with the state Board of Education. He noted' he had commented in the past that speeded deliveries of new arna- The three hijackers to go on many of the student demands had ments to the puppet forces of the trial have been identified as Hen- merit and could be implemented Phnom Penh government are view- ry Jackson and Lewis Voorebn, without delay, but added that he ed as further proof of preparations wanted in Detroit on assault char- did not intend to agree to all de- by the Nixon administration to sab- ges, and Melvin Cale, who escap- mands. otage the agreement already ed from a Tennessee jail. In other recent developments it reached," the statement from the They hijacked a Southern Air- was confirmed that Netterville had Viet Cong Foreign Ministry said. ways DC-9 to Havana nine days fired two professors for their al- After his talks with Tho, Kissin- ago after directing the plane on a leged encouragement of student ger held consultations wfth Pham 29-hour criss-cross journey across protests. Reliable sources indicated Dang Lam, head of ',outh Viet- the North American continent. that at least three or four other nam's delegation to the weekly T$ professors would also be excused Paris peace talks. The hijackers collected $2 mil- otest student opus rally an on the same grounds. While the secret talks continued,1 One of the fired professors, Dr. both Hanoi and Saigon kept up a Joseph Johnson of the physics de- drumfire of propaganda. partment called the action,,"a gro- One Hanoi broadcast in English tesque and perverted attempt to beamed to U.S. servicemen in deflect blame from this massacre." South Vietnam said, "One of the excuses for continuation of the war is that Nguyen Van Thieu, the, U.S. puppet in Saigon, won't ac-' cept what has been agreed upon slayngs orhVitnm between the United States and North Vietnam. "But to you, the very men who astill have to risk your lives in their game, you should know who that man in Saigon is that Nixon protesting Southern University tells you to die for . . . Is it students. Committees were set up worth it?" to raise funds for the parents of In Saigon, the newspaper Tin ion ollars in ransom money from Southern Airways before landing in Havana. The United States has asked for the return of the trio, but the State Department indicated it was pleas- ed with the Cuban decision to prosecute the men in connectiin with the hijacking. "We hope this step will serve to deter others who may have been contemplating hijacking," Bray said. Cuba's proposed starting date for the talks - the date was not revealed by the State Department -and the trial decision were con- two iver- per- Uni- Bldg. stu- city The demonstration began at 3:15 p.m. on Regent's Plaza. Student. Government Council President Bill Jacobs presided over the gather- ing rally, which had been called by a number of campus groups, in- cluding SGC, Students for a Demo- cratic Society, and the Black Unit- ed Front (BUF), a coalition of black campus organizations. Jacobs outlined the sequence of events that led up to the Southern University (SU) killings and then introduced the first speaker, Lee Calhoun, who read a statement the dead students, and to study Song, which reflects presidential tained in a diplomatic note receiv- the feasibility of a University-SU thinking, said Kissinger will tell ed from Havana during the week- exchange program. the North Vietnamese that South d Meanwhile at the Administration Vietnam's conditions for a peace Bldg., the remainder of the crowd agreement are unchanged and the Last week, both the Cuban and listened enthusiastically as speak- next move is up to Hanoi. U.S. governments signaled a gen- ers blasted the killings, and stress- The South Vietnamese Senate by eral willingness to conduct nego- ed what they considered the fail- a 36-8 vote, endorsed the basic tiations, and Cuba's proposed date ure of our University to fulfill pre- conditions laid down by Thieu. viously announced minority goals. These are a complete pullout of is taken here as a sign that Pre- Psych. Prof. Richard Mann first North Vietnamese troops from mier Fidel Castro's government re- asked what defined a racist insti- South Vietnam, Cambodia and gards a solution to the problem as tution and then said, "when we Laos, re-establishment of the de-ugr o to answer that basic question it be- militarized zone, and no coalition urgent. comes obvious that the University government. The Cuban government at first is still a racist institution." On his arrival here Sunday night, welcomed hijackers as political re- Mann cited examples of what he Kissinger said President Nixon had fugees, but officials here have considered campus racism, con- sent him here for what the U.S. known for sometime that some cluding, "White students as well President hoped would be the final as black students will have to fight phase of the negotiations to end hijackers who arrived later were See 350, Page 8 See KISSINGER, Page 8 kept in jail. runway growth plan By GORDON ATCHESON tion was the first definitive acti and DEBRA THAL since the 1969 failure. City Council last night voted Several minutes later the cou down any possibility of expansion cil passed a resolution to pla of the local airport. Model Cities Director Herb Wingo under the direct control By voting for a motion applying City Administrator Guy Larco for a Federal Aviation Adminis- De Grieck, cast the only disser tration (FAA) grant for a study of ing vote. "We already have t the airport, council eliminated the much power concentrated und possibility of air runway expan- the administrator - this will n sion at the present time. The only solve the problem," said I possible exception would allow for Grieck. safety standards on the crosswind or mior ruway.The resolution is intended as or mior runway. temporary measure only. In t The resolution passed 6-2, with near future council plans tor three council members absent. structure the model cities dire (HRP-First Ward)rwas the most torship. vocal opponent of the study . Just before the vote Wingo d "The deeper we get into this, clared "I support the resolution b the worse it looks," De Grieck cause I know of no other way said, "The study will just make the keep the council informed." May citizens refight old battles. The Robert Harris also strongly su !whole thing is a sham." ported the measure. The federal grant application In other action, council vot does not commit the city finan- tentative approval for three new cially. Council will meet with fed-; quor licenses. After final state a , eral authorities to determine poli- proval, licenses will go to t condemning the killings and racism at the University. The statement began, "Two black students were killed at SouthernUniversity in Louisiana on and black people must once again bury their dead." un- ce ert of nt- too er not Del a he re- ec- de- to 'or up- ed li- ap- he Reading on, Calhoun, stated that the demands of the Louisiana stu- dents "threatened the foundations of Southern University and the uni- versity chose to deal with this by opening fire. The fact that the two black men were killed for these reasons, emphasizes the vulner- able position of all black students on all campuses. "We realize that our position on this campus is equally vulnerable and questionable. The same ques- tions that they were asking there, (at Southern University) can and must be asked here." The statement ended by calling for the resignation of the President and Vice-president of SU, and the institution of a "black-controlled exchange program between the University and SU. Calhountcalled for all black stu- dents in the crowd to join in a march to the city's Community, Center, located in a black neigh- borhood- The marchers moved slowly MEMBERS FACE RECALL oss bidf By TERRI7 Student members of Services Policy Board (t their refusal last night Government Council pro allocate control of on-ca to an all-dorm-resident co student body at large. The proposal, passed last week, did not even r night's OSSPB meeting, President Bill Jacobs, board,-stops SGC )r housing power TERRELL way on the motion. "In the final analysis," he the Office of Student says, "I will vote to remove anybody who doesn't OSSPB) face recall for agree to vote for the motion, which was unani- to consider a Student mously passed by SGC." posal which would re- "Someone might c h o o s e to challenge the ampus housing matters authority to remove the members," he added. )mmittee elected by the "However, our authority in this case is totally unquestioned. There is no sound basis for such unanimously by SGC a challenge." eceive a second at last Schenk said later that she is "sure an attempt to the dismay of SGC will be made to remove us from OSSPB. When who considers council we accepted the post we realized the SGC had I