PANAM''A See Editorial Page :j'.I L 3k~ ti AFFAB3LE ' High-64. Low--42 See Today for details Vol. LXXXVIII, No. 39 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, October 22, 1977 Ten Cents Ten Pag i "I FEEL A KINSHIP WIT H YOU" Carter confronts urban poor in Detroi By GREGG KRUPA KEITH RICHBURG 'M. EILEEN DALE-Y Special to The Daily DETROIT - President Carter held another communion with the people yesterday, but this time his audience was more than a distant flock of television viewers - it was a group cof midwestern community leaders and poor people gathered in down- town Detroit. Carter, speaking at the Veterans' Memorial Building on Detroit's waterfront, listened to suggestions and comments on issues ranging from health insurance and unem- ployment, to the high cost of energy, and making the Washington bureau- cracy more responsible to the people. "THE PURPOSE of the meeting," Carter said, was to "learn in a human way about the special needs of people who have quite often been the most deprived and most alienat- ed from a soietimes distant govern- ment" The President also said he wanted to "see from a personal perspective how well-meaning programs that are poorly administered don't serve the needs of those who need the services most. Carter began with a brief opening, statement, in which he praised De- troit's recent accomplishments in reducing crime and unemployment, then opened the floor to comments and questions from the 13-member panel. THE PANEL included Lawrence Doss, the president of New Detroit *i At right, President Carter sits next to Graciela Olivarez, his liaison for community affairs, at a roundtable discussion with thirteen midwestern poverty activists in Detroit yester- day. The poor, Carter said, are often "alienated from sometimes distant government in Washington." At left, two unidentified spectators are anxious to ask questions during the open discussion portion of the meeting. The Detroit stop, the first leg of a three-day cross country tour, is Carter's second journey this month into a poverty-stricken area. Recent- ly, Carter has come under attack of black leaders for his neglect of the poor people who helped lift him into 4ffice. Inc., a Chicano mother of 10, a Catholic priest, an unemployed steel- worker, and a 20-year-old unem- ployed man. Carter told unemployed steelwork- er Lawrence Hall, "Many of us in government; when we see a six or seven per cent unemployment rate are quite pleased if a year; ago it was eight or nine per cent. We tend to forget the human suffering." Then President Carter pledged "Before this term of mine is over, we'll bring that unemployment rate down from 8.5% to less than 5% by 1981." CONSPICUOUSLY absent from the President's remarks was any mention of the pending Humphrey- Hawkins full employment bill. Press Secretary Jody Powell, when asked later about the omission, replied, "Because it wasn't brought up." Emma Molina, a minority affairs director with the Community Action agency in Findlay, Ohio, told Carter minorities, blacks and Mexican- Americans "are not given the oppor- tunities for the good jobs." Molina said she was appealing to Carter because, "you are the hope of the poor people," THE PRESIDENT announced no new policy plans, reiterating his old campaign themes "of health insur- ance, housing, and reducing unem- ployment. Carter also plugged his energy bill even as Congress was gutting its major taxation provisic The Senate Finance Commit gave final approval yesterday to energy bill stripped of virtw every tax proposed by Presid Carter. He also promised relief money those who cannot meet this winte heating costs. CARTER SAID ;last year's million relief oackage "came v effectively, very efficiently, in hurry, and too late. I promise yoi won't be too late this winte In response to a panel membe comments on substandard housi See CARTER, Page 10 Daily Photo by JOHN KNOX Daily Photo by JO] s. African blacks hit craekdow JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP) - Police arrested at least 150 blacks and Indians in South Africa yesterday as protests motnted against the government's sharp crackdown on black movements-and its closing of black newspapers. The United States announced in Washington it was recalling Ambassador William Bowdler for consultations on the events in South Africa. In Paris, the French Foreign Ministry issued a statement saying the crackdown "can pnly engender violence and complicate the search for a peaceful solution to the problems of southern Africa.", THE U.N. SECURITY COUNCIL in New York scheduled a debate on South Africa starting Monday at the request of the 49-nation African group in the world organization. At Sharpeville, a segregated, black township 3f miles south of Johannesburg, 54 students' were arrested in pre- dawn swoops on their homes. A police spokesinan said they would be charged follow- ing disturbances at three Sharpeville schools Wednesday when hundreds of students streamed out of classes and stoned cars and school buildings. IN QUEENSTOWN, 420 miles to the south, police said a black school was gutted by fire early yesterday. No arrests were reported. Police arrested 97 Indians taking part in a lunchtime open-air demonstration yesterday in Johannesburg's Lenasia Indian township. It was the first crackdown protest by Indians living in South Afr'ica... Under the country's emergency laws currently in force, open-air meetings without official permission are banned. AT PIEZTERMARITZBURG, 260 miles southeast of Johannesburg, }four white studepts, including 21-year-old Peter Maritz from St. Louis, Mo., were charged under the Riotous Assemblies Act and ordered held for a further hearing Nov. 8. Maritz, who said the similarity between his name and that of the town is pure coincidence, is a Princeton University student studying for a year abroad. He said he and the other three were picked up Thursday after a student demonstra- tion against the crackdown because they were known activ- ists in campus politics. He said the demonstration was peaceful and spon- taneous, involved only about 100 students, and dispersed vol- untarily after about an hour'and a half. He said the four were arrested after the demonstration had ended. GOVERNMENT LEADERS have brushed aside the storm of international and local opposition to the crackdown, saying it is vital for law and order. South Africa's initial public reaction to news of the recall of the American ambassador was calm. "At this stage it ap- pears as a logical and sound thing to do in these circum- stances," a government spokesman said. Prime Minister Jghn Vorster on Thursday dismissed as "totally irrelevant" a U.S. State Department comment that the crackdown could harm U.S.-South African relations. THE NETHERLANDS said itwas recalling°Dutch South African ambassador Rudolf Froger to discuss the situation. The Dutch- government information service also said last night that the cabinet decided at its weekly meeting to break off a cultural agreement with South Africa, many of whose ruling Afrikaners are of Dutch descent. In Johannesburg's huge black Soweto township tihe school boycott, previously confined to -27,000 high school students, spread to an additional 150,000 middle school and primary pupils. This brought to 300,000 the number of pupils taking part in the boycott, which began at the end of July. It started as a protest against the segregated black education system and has become the most concerted passive resist- ence campaign yet mounted by South African blacks. Regents extend student fun din By BRIAN BLANCHARD After a lengthy debate yesterday the Regents gave students another year to show their support at regis- tration for the Public Interest Re- search Group in Michigan (PIR- GIM), whose contract with the University ran out with the fall term CRISP process. In the final session of this month's meeting, the eight public officials, also heard a plan to shift the Speech and Hearing Sciences (SHS) pro- gram from the Medical to the Education School, tabled a proposal to allow a Detroit bank to make investments for the University with- out checking with the administrators first, and wrapped up the two-day gathering with a sunny report on University research progress. IN OTHER action, the Regents passed a 24.72 per cent insurance hike for employes to keep up the 84 1gor_ At their March meetii gents agreed to a temp tract with PIRGIM allow sumer advocacy organiz terms to prove it has the the students through t billing system. The contr from "negative" to "posi off, so that students now out a form to pull $2 per their tuition and put PIRGIM budget. The Regents stipulated third of the students regis PIR GIM ng, the Re- out the forms at CRISP, the contract porary con- would be continued. ing the con- ation three BUT IN THE change from nega- support of tive to positive, the percentage of he student students paying for PIRGIM's sup- act changed port fell sharply from 76- to 18. tive" check The two dissenting Regents in have to fill yesterday's vote to extend the fund: term from ing Through November, 1978 argued it into the that PIRGIM had not succeeded as an experiment. I that if one tering filled See PIRGIM, Page 10 _'.: d: f.. ' Y.. ,d"... 2ti , .. u:a ., .. .. mow. . . :.. z, " :x , t ,, , :ter ? . L . . l ; j .. ,. r . . 'a y S. wk } ' h.., .a G :Y.. .. a z; ; !'rx , ,, a' a. 1 /: .J ..r.r,.:';'E r ":;Yr:;:v'!; r.Nr::;. ;,"; r: f+".y'rk ," :: : tt ::;:: ,:?xc+d; ' ;{ 6C1 ttf ttuzu SHS unit salvaged, undergrad major cut By PATTY MONTEMURRI The Speech and Hearing Sciences (SHS) program may have an "enthu- speechpathology and audiology. IF APPROVED by the Regents in their November or December meet-