Tuesday, Oe tober -26, 1976' THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, October 26, 1976 THE MICHiGAN DAILY i New York mayor orders .!l.'*.................:fl.*.............:."::::1.".'......1'x'. .1.a.1 .... ."1 .....,.: ..!: ..{...l..".:r . 1:::J}":rh:..... .ALYOFFICIAL MLE II investigation into club fire NEW YORK (AP) - Mayor Abraham Beame ordered a top- level investigation yesterday in- to the city's thousands of after- hour bottle clubs in the wake of a weekend club fire that kill- ed 25 persons in the South Bronx. The blaze in a licensed but overcrowded Puerto Rican so- cial club was described by au- thorities as the work of an ar- sonist. A search for him was under way, but police said there were no signs of a pend- ing arrest. "We don't know who set the fire yet," said Fire Commission- er John O'Hagan. BEAME CALLED O'Hagan and Police Commissioner Mi- chael Codd to City Hall as mem- bers of a five-member investi- gative panel and announced: "I have directed this panel to concentrate not only on the South Bronx tragedy itself but also on the problem of similar clubs and other gathering plac- es to determine whether appli- cable codes adequately meet the needs of public safety." O'Hagan said there were "lit-' erally thousands" of social clubs in the city, and that they were "difficult to identify or to con- trol." "4THEY ARE IN basements, lofts, any place that has room and people who want to drink after hours," a police depart- ment source elaborated. "That's all most of them are for - peo- ple who want to drink after hours when the bars close. We never hear about them unless Fugi ire wins full pardon MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP)- Forty-five years after it began, "Scottsboro Boy" Clarence Nor- ris won a full pardon from the State of Alabama on Monday and the right to live at last in full freedom. He had spent five years on death row, years more behind bars andf decades living as a fugitive, all for a crime he al- ways insisted he did not com- mit. "It's great to be free. There's nothing like being free," Norris said in New York, where he now lives. FIRST THE Alabama Pardon- Parole Board and then Gov. George Wallace signed a pardon for the 64-year-old laborer who, with eight other young black men, was accused of raping two white women aboard a freight train in Alabama in 1931. The case became one of the most controversial in the South. Because the alleged rape oc- curred near Scottsboro in north Alabama and the trial was held there, the defendants became known throughout the world as the "Scottsboro Boys." Norris, the last of the nine defendants known to be still alive, is working now as a la- borer for the City of New York. He fled from Alabama after be- ing paroled in 1946, and the state continued to list him as a parole violator. THE PARDON-PAROLE Board not only pardoned Norris, but in effect also recognized his inno- cence. By law, the board-could pardon him only if it felt their was proof of his innocence. Now that he is free to do ,so, Norris said he would go back to Alabama. "I'll go to any state because I'm free,"' he said. "I was born and raised in the Soith. It's one of the most beau- tifl places in the world." At a news conference at the New York headquarters of the NAACP, which represented him in pursuing the pardon, Norris said there was a lesson for black people in his pardon. "DON'T EVER give up hope," he explained. "Always fight for your rights. That's what I be- lieve in. Even if it kills you, stand up for your rights." THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXVII, No. 41 Tuesday, October 26, 1976 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. ;News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109 Publisbed d a ily Tuesday through Sunday norni'g during the Univer- sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 Sept. thru April (2 semes- ters); $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tues- day through Saturday morning. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.50 by mail outside Ann Arbor: Ii~ Ill there is trouble such as a shoot-I ing or stabbing or a free-for-allc fight."' Fire broke out in the Puerto1 Rican Social Club shortly before 3 a.m. Sunday while more than 50 partying guests drank and danced to a six-piece band. Of- ficials said the second floor pre-, mises had a Buildings Depart-" ment certificate limiting occu- pancy to no more than 20 per-1 sons. Of the 20-by-40 foot clubroom,+ a police spokesman said "it; was evident the place was over- crowded." IT WAS THE worst fire in} New York City since 1960, when, the aircraft carrier Constella- tion burned at the Brooklyn Navy Yard with a loss of 50 lives. A fierce flash fire was set with gasoline or some other sub- stance in the stairway of the club, its only regular means of, entrance and exit. Survivors reported that the, blaze erupted in fury some time? after a man had been thrown out of the club following an? argument over his wife's danc- ing with another man. IN THE IMMEDIATE after-; math of the tragedy, suspicion focused on one among 24 survi- vors of the fire, most of whom, leaped from windows of the club as panic swept the premises. However, this man denied he had set the fire and said he' never had left the club until his leap to safety at the height of the blaze. "From all our investigation so far, the likelihood that he is the culprit becomes less as we go along," said Commissioner O'Hagan. Tuesda,, October 26, 1976 DAY CALENDAR WUOM: 2 talks by 2 newspaper- men Charles Seib (mbudsman for WVashington Post) "Housebreaking c the watchdog," and J.F.terHorst (columnist for Detroit News) "Elec- tion & the Press: 1976," 10 a.m. Returning Students' Lounge, Com- misson for Women: , 3205 Union noon. Music School Pendleton Ctr.: "Mu- ss at Midday," Eric Dyke, string bass; PAIL, 2nd fl., Union, noon. Ecumenical Ctr.: luncheon, War- ren Miller "American Electorate in 1976." 921 Church St., noon. Arch. Urban Planning: Edward Steinfeld, (Syracuse Univ.) "The well-Ordered Building: Architecture as Social Reform," 2104 Art, Arch Bldg.. 12:30 p.m. Transportation Systems Ctr.: Ern- est T. Kendall (Prog, Management engineer. U.S. Dept. of Transporta- tion, Cambridge, Mass.) "Seminar, Urban & Regional Planning Grad tud:nts." 2038 Dana, 1 p.m.; "Grad Seminar or Energy Policy," 4217 MLB, 5 p.m. ACRICS: open meeting, Conf.Rm Cent. Campus Rec., 3:30 p.m. Ctr. Coordination Ancient, Mod- Pn Stud'es: "Democracy in the An- dent World," Kuenzel Rm., Union, 7:30 p.m. Page Three EDUCATION Finance your college" education without' see pp. 373.40 BUYING A CAR Get more out of your SN car-buying dollar" T 293-340 { i i OM'S 1.7 FMO EN HOUSE IS OCT.29 FRIDAY, 10 A.M.- 7 P.M. &0 M- P. SATURDAY. 1AM- 2 PN ETHICS and RELIGION WEDNESDAY LECTURES Gonzalo Castillo-Cardenas, Membe.r Church and Society Movement Latin America; World Council of Churches Program to Combat Racism; Action-Research among Indian and Peasant communities in Colombia. Oct. 27 "THE PEASANT-INDIAN STRUGGLE iN COLOMBIA: How can an outsider trained in the Social Sciences relate to it?" _ ' I i 7yI i i M VISIT WITH STAFF= TOURS * DISPLAYS REFRESHMENTS 5ut hklor of LSA Biqd UM Compu, Swk Sak Inwuko Borow k- And nL.hBeueryJurL& THE #1 BSSLE O -__$5.95,a _ ___ f r Nov. 3 "WESTERN SOCIETY AGAINST THE INDIANS IN SOUTH AMERICA: Government Policies, Foreign Corporations and Christian Missionaries-Threats to Indian Survival." 4:15 p.m. Wednesdays-Angell Hall, Aud. "A" DISCUSSION with the speaker and other faculty members INTERNATIONAL CENTER REC. ROOM THURSDAY NOON-brown bag lunch. ETHICS AND RELIGION, 3204 Michigan Union--764-7442 5 THE BOTH BEST OF I WORLDS F I Along with furnished apartmnents, weekly mnaid service, and con- venient location, "U" Towers offers you a congenial atmosphere conducive to your kind of College Life. University Towers HAIR STYLING 1 1 1 I