Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesdoy, November 28, 1972 Year of calm shattered I (Continued from Page 1) ' "We flagged down a friend and. over the fence and just lay there got him to take Tim to the hos- with his hand holding his stomach." pital," Hahn continued. "Then we Apparently the bullet which ser- iously injured Williams passed I completely through his body. Five shot in Pontiac high school yard (Continued from Page 1) and talk between classes. None of those wounded knew the assailant - all five were merely walking between the buildings on their way to classes. "At this moment (we see) no motive at all," said Capt. Rayl Meggitt of the Pontiac police force yesterday afternoon. Meggitt said the weapon was aI revolver, presumed to be .22 cali- ber. At the same time as the shoot- ings, a scuffle broke out between students. Dale Miller, 16, said he was "jumped from behind" as he walked from one building to the other, but he said he didn't know the youths who grabbed and threw him to the ground, or why the in- cident occurred. Nor could Miller guess whether the scuffle was related to the shootings, although he said the shootings began shortly before he was attacked. Most students hurried on to classes after the shootings. Accord- ing to Linda Shaw, 15, the gun- shots "sounded like firecrackers," and although she says she saw the pistol she added that "most peo- ple figured it was a toy or some- thing." "There's fights around here all the time," added Shaw. Although officials dismissed school early and barred students from the building for the afternoon, they said thattthetransition to classes after the shootings was "very calm. At a news conference given by Pontiac school system administra- tors yesterday afternoon, Pontiac Central Principal Donald McMil- len said that the term had been "the quietest at Pontiac Central in ye.$Asked if he felt there were any way the shootings could have been prevented, McMillen replied no, and added "it's a little bit like a hijacking " Pontiac Central has about 2,000 students, 36 per cent of them black. The school will open as scheduled this moning~. athniuoh there wHi saw a friend of my uncle's and he gave me and Terry a ride home." The boys called their parents' and were taken to nearby St. Jo- seph's Hospital. Both said they did not know the gunman. One of the gunshot victims, 1S- year-old Nancy Worley did not even know she had been shot until she had reached her next class. According to Central Principal Donald McMillen, Worley sat in i her literature class for "a while" before she realized her arm was bleeding. After b e i n g shuffled through several offices she finally reached McMillen, who immediate- ly sent her off in an ambulance to a hospital. The other victim, 16-year--old Kathy Winton, came to McMilen complaining that she had been shot with a "BB gun." She too was rushed off to a nearby hospital. No motive has yet been estab-" lished for the shootings. Hahn said he saw two youths "squaring off," presumably to fight, just before the gunfire. But neither youth was the gunman, he said. Dale Miller, 16, walked through the courtyard as the gunfire was raging. He said he heard a sound "like firecrackers," and then was jumped from behind by an unknown youth and forced to the ground. Miller said while he was on the ground he was repeatedly kicked by a group of black students. He managed to get up, went to class, and heard nothing else of the in- cident until later in the day. Officials are openly worried about any far-reaching weffectsthe in- cident may have. Pontiac has long been the scene of racial conro- versy, and the attack on a pre-1 dominantelybwhite group of s-u- dents by a black gunman, can only worsen racial tensions. But school officials and police alike call the shooting incident an isolated one. They seem to think the gunman was firing indiscrimi- nately at the crowd of students, with no particular targets. The students, who remained calm throughout the day, seem to agree that the shooting holds no larger racial implications. When asked whether he held any animosity to- wards the school's blacks after being shot, Hahn replied that he really hadn't thought about it. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN I AM1;:Y" IJJJ^ 1. . , " ." S. Viet fighting flares Occult Books Mon. thru Sat. HUE (Reuters) - Fighting raged The battle is going on among early yesterday in a big battle in coastal sand dunes and lightly12No the northern coastal region of South jungled country further inland, o Vietnam, with heavy casualties es- along a three-mile front which is C8P.M. timated on both sides and 10,000 three miles south of the Cua Viet Communist troops reportedly hold- river. ing up a northward push by South The river is the last natural ob- Vietnamese marines. stacle before the demarcation line It is the biggest battle since the 10 miles further north. northern provincial capital of After heavy artillery barrages, ManardnSalvation) Quang Tri was recaptured by the both sides are locked in close fight- South Vietnamese from Communist ing among the dunes and patches hands more than two months ago. of jungle - the South Vietnamese Elite South Vietnamese marines believed to be under specific orders have been pushing northward in from their president to press on- THE DEPT. OF GEOLOGY AND THE CENTER FOR ave en us ig nr wa in ardSOUTH AND SOUTHEAST ASIAN STUDIES the last few days. Observers say ward. their objective appears to be a bid President Nguyen Van Thieu has to re-establish control near the stressed in commenting on current 'The Conquest of Mt. Everest" demilitarized zone between the two peace negotiations that the demili- Vietnams before any ceasefire. tarized zone must be made effec- A Slide Lecture by The battle, which began Sunday, tive again, which would mean push- is the first determined attempt by ing the Communists back to the MR. BARRY BISHOP the North Vietnamese to halt the line. Research Geographer, Nat. Geographic Society; Member Amer- government drive. Air support in the past few days can Mt. Everest Expedition; 'First American Team to Reach Field reports said an estimated has been hampered by bad wealher Summit of Everest May 22, 1963. North Vietnamese division, normal- although heavy strikes of high- 4P M W .N d ov. 29O D-Ikhm Amphitheatre ly about 10,000 men, had been flying B-52 bombers have been 4",' . . .'J EWhIUI AipIiuieI1U% thrown into the fight, and military flown against Communist positions. sources said the Communist troops.:,. .. ..., 4:aw eared to hav.e..v h{alted the ma- :: .::.T:": : . :.. .::: . 4:'l4"h" 41 unzi 111VS l*A, QlAAluugib11tAAl: c .TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 28 be increased security in additionDAY CALENDAR to the police officer normally as- school of Music: Trumpet Student signed to cover Pontiac Central. Recital, SM Recital Hall, 12:30 pm. _- Biophysics Seminar: B. Price, "More About Polyproline," 618 Physics-As- tronomy, k 1 pm. Tnthropology Museum Lecture: A. J. lKS start on Jetinek, Univ. of Arizona, "Prehistoric Cultural Development at the Cave of Tabun, Israel," Rackham Amph., 4 pm. C uba -Physics Seminar: J. Constable, OSU, "Rotational Excitation & Thermal Pro- perties in Solid Hydrogens," P&A Col- s loquiuin Rm., 4 pm. ]ij cko Physics Seminar: C. H. Woo, Univ. hij ack accor of Md., 2038 Randall Lab, 4 pm. Residential College Renaissance Dra- ma Film: "Volpone," French, 1939, R. WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The C. Aud., 7 pm. United States is studying a report GENERAL NOTICES UfromteStesisstdmbssep December 1972 Teacher's Certificate from the Swiss embassy in Havana Candidates: All requirements for teach- on talks to work out a U.S.-Cuba er's certificate must be completed by treaty on aircraft hijacking, the Dec. 4; teacher's oath should be taken State Department said ye soon as possible in 1225 Sch. of Edu- dyesterday.:cation; Placement Office material can The meeting, between Swiss Am-, be obtained from that office in the bassador Silvio Masnata and Cuban SAB. foreign ministry officials on Satur-, SUMMER PLACEMENT da asthefistof n X ete ATT E N T ION: Washington day was the first of an expected Post, washington, D. C. Juniors, Sen- series of meetings on the problem. iors and graduate students-deadline Cuba, the destination of numer- for applying for summer positions is ..i s a Dec. 1. Work for national, state, or ous aircraft hijackers, has said it local, in sports or at business desks,j would be willing to work out a pact etc. with the United States. I State of Michigan: Open Competitive The talks are being conducted Examination Announcement for Bridge Workers 05 and Park Rangers 03 and 05 through the Swiss in the absence deadline is Dec. 18. Info and applica- of diplomatic relations between the tionavailable. United States and Cuba. -. S t ate Department spokesman John King declined to discuss a news report that the Cubans had presented a draft of a treaty onJ hijacking but he indicated that the talks would continue. UNICEF XMAS CARDS on sale-Starting Nov. 28 AT FISHBOWL-8 a.m.-5 p.m. RIVE GAUCHE-8 p.m.-mindnite Sponsored by: International Students Association (if you want to help sell cards sign up at Fishbowl. (Proceeds go to UNICEF) ...... ~ .rines for the moment. SNixon to see 76-GUIDE is a number to remember So Viet envoy , -when you need to know where to go. (Continued fromPage 1) -when university red tape trips you up. Hanoi negotiators. Reports from Paris have various~- when classesget VOU down. ly described the talks as dead -g locked, paralyzed or at a stale- -re lonely or confused. They suggested there had been. a major shift in U.S. policy to sup- -w hen your relationships arent working ou. port Thieu's insistence that a Northyrk Vietnamese troop withdrawal from -when you jUSt want someone to tal to. the south be written into a cease- . . fire settlement. However, with Hanoi refusing to we're student counselors and students are our first concern. AP Photo accept any major changes in the nine-point draft, analysts believe To RZLussia wit h love Nixon might advise the South Viet Remember 76-GUIDE namese tR e m e m b ero anoinforD E A Houston longshoreman watches as grain pours into the hold of namese to agree to an informal the freighter Defender. When loaded, the ship will head for the pledge of partial withdrawal or face the prospect of an indefinite n ,2 Soviet Union. It will be the first ship chartered for the recent war, which the United States could we're open 24 hours a day to help you help youself and controversial U.S.-Soviet grain deal. not accept. The White House has taken pains SPONSORED BY: to emphasize that the nine-day re- cess in Paris was not a breakdown COUNSELING SERVICES $415 MILLION IN RED: or anything more serious than aM io timely opportunity to review the 304M ichigan Union " ° " 'progress so far. T rade deficit up againmPWlitialobservers believe the.. . . .. W h t o s s anxious not to let ",,,s v &.....cu ...,.,.e". 0 I ,.! ->".... . . . . . ...... the Democrats capitalize on the -_____ _____ _____ By The Associated Press and Reuters States to correct its balance-of- delay in reaching a settlement. WASHINGTON-The U. S. trade payments problems. Organized la---- deficit increased by $415 million bor has said also it is contributing in October, the Commerce Depart-'to a loss of jobs. Couples P~ ment announced yesterday. The department said exports ex-' c ~u .k uu"o "aanouhedomre eatt aodprmea adexot xREAD TH S AD: I ts Good Bread Savers It was, however, the smallest panded by 5 per cent last month' TUESDAYS monthly increase in the key eco- to a seasonally adjusted 04,364 bil- nomic indicator since January. lion, while imports increased by RAPHAEL SOYER: Self-Revealment, A Memoir. 190. MAGIC AND SUPERSTITION. By Douglas According to Commerce Depart- only 2.3 per cent to $4.779 billion. *American cities and moods. His writings and Hill. A history of man's beliefs and the presence met analysts, the rate proves the Last year the United States notes with his drawings. Color illus. A fine book of magic throughout, from the caveman to the nation has reversed the trend to- turned in its first annual trade de-j c at a fine price. $12.50. NOW $4.95. touching wood, avoiding ladders, etc. Over 20 wardsn larersedthe tradeeeficits ft of his centry$ a blltrod, bt modern primitive's secret rites: Crossing fingers, wards larger trade deficits, ficit of this century, $2 billion, but AFRICAN ART. 48 color plates. Some stunning photos and engravings. 40 FULL COLOR plates. The trade deficit adds to pres- this year so far the red ink has plates. African Art is coming and this is a good ONLY $2.98. sure on the dollar overseas .and climbed to $5,2 billion with two start. Pub. at 4:95. NOW $2.98. makes it difficult for The United more months to count._ THE BOOK OF THE ZODIAC by Fred Gettings. THE WOMAN IN INDIAN ART. by Heinz Mode. A historical anthology of astrology, sumptuously McGraw-Hill publishe.d this at $12.95. Color is illustrated. In spite of its commercial look, some good. Text is too. A fine speciality item tracing good info therein. Pub. at 7.95. NOW $3.98. WOMAN through the ages of Indian Art. 40 (50 percent off) - color, 89 b/w. Also THE WOMAN IN EGYPT- IAN ART, same series, by Steffen Wenig. NOW CARPETS OF THE ORIENT. by Kybalova. We've o, $5.8 ,om Bodes,,had it before and finally got it again. The color plates are plush enough to curl up on. One of TREASURES OF PRE-HISTORIC ART. by Leroi- the best books out, considering the plates. I 1 Gourhan. I could say a lot but won't. Pub, at haven't read it. Publ. at $12.50. BARGAIN AT $45 by Abrams. A cornerstone in any serious $5.98. 4I student of Ancient Art. 79 illus., 121 full color, innumerable maps and diagrams. Get one GIBRAN, KAHIL. Three titles available in a FOR $24.98. fine leather-looking edition. SPIRITS REBELLI- 380. PERSIAN ARCHITECTURE: The Triumph OUS, BROKEN WINGS, TEARS AND LAUGH- of Form and Color. By Arthur U. Pope. First TER. You expe.ct to pay $10 from the looks of C E work to present the, riches of Persian architecture it. Publ. at $4.50. Borders price $2.50 WEO. in a single volume. Over 400 illustrations, 33 FULL COLOR, and brilliant accompanying text O.K. Cookbook Freaks. Come early because we provide a comprehensive study. Includes fully didn't get enough of them. INTERNATIONAL annotated text, historical summary, selected bib- COOKERY IN COLOR by M. Patten. 341 recipes, liogrphy, index. Pub, at $25.00. SALE $9.98. every last one illustrated in color! The 12.50 19 PU C A EBd Th price shrinks to 5.98 at Borders. Also NATURAL "s 1392. PAUL CEZANNE. By John Rewld. The FOODS COOKBOOK and FONDUE COOKERY. ~~ ~ ~ . great pa~~~~inter's life from his early experimental F O S C O B O n O D E C O E Y Sgreat pantrsiffrmhseryxprmta Clear handy, illus.-practical. 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