RATE HIKES See Editorial Page C I he Sir gui DztitF ESOTERIC High-3S Low-12 See Today for details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVI, No. 113 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, February 11, 1976 10 Cents Eight Pages sI uSEE IFS HAPPOI cAL LY y China note A headline in yesterday's Daily may have led readers to believe that University Profs. Michel Oksenberg, Allen Whiting, and Albert Fuerwerker view Teng Hsiao-ping to be the most likely suc- cessor to Mao Tse-tung as Communist Party Chairman. Oksenberg, however, emphasized yes- terday that no one was trying to predict Mao's successor, but merely mentioning his name as one possibility, among others, in attempting to explain why Hua Kuo-feng, and not Teng, became Pre- mier. Happenings... . . . are the standard fare. There's a Latin- American luncheon at the International Center in the Union from 12-1, with Amaury de Souza speak- ing on "Working Class and the State in Brazil" ... There's also a brown bag lunch at the Center for Western European Studies, at 202 S. Thayer, where Dennis Paz will lecture on "Politics and Bureaucracy: Educational Policymaking in 19th Century Britain" . . . A Library Value Seminar on the third floor of the UGLI at 1:30 p.m. will discuss "Problems of Minorities and Foreign Stu- dents in U. S. Higher Education" . . . The Resi- dential College lecture series presents Prof. Dennis Baker on "Modern Methods of Weather Predic- tion" at 7 p.m. in the Greene Lounge of East Quad . . . The Marxist Forum and the Young Workers Liberation League are presenting a tri- bute to Paul Robeson, 7:30 p.m. at the Trotter House, 1443 Washtenaw . . . The Spartacus Youth League will be holding a class called "Out of the Classrooms and into the Class Struggles," 68 Greene, East Quad, at 7:30 p.m.. . . and there will be a meeting of the Sociology Undergraduates As- sociation, 8 p.m. at the Union Station. " Bye, bye, Bentsen Sen. Lloyd Bentsen (D.-Tex) withdrew as a national contender for the presidency yesterday, saying he would confine any campaigning to his home state. Bentsen, 55, was unable to gather more than two per cent of the delegates in the Mississippi caucuses on January 24. Last week in Oklahom he finished third among four choices with less than 12 per cent of the delegates. Cam- paign sources have said Bentsen plans to run as a favorite son candidate in his state "to give Tex- as a bargaining chip" at the Democratic conven- tion in New York next July. ISpy The New York Times and CBS have denied supporting the CIA's refusal to give the Senate Intelligence Committee the names of U. S. jour- nalists and news organizations who had worked for the agency in the past. Yesterday's Washing- ton Post reported that newly appointed CIA Direc- tor George Bush had "found support" for the agen- cy's position after a meeting with executives of The Times and CBS last week. Arthur Sulzberger, publisher of The Times, said yesterday that the subject of disclosing such names to the Senate committee never arose in the meeting with Bush. Times managing editor A. M. Rosenthal said that both he and the newspaper supported complete disclosure of the names of any of its correspond- ents who had worked or cooperated with the CIA. " Vocal Valentines A quartet of women from Michigan State Uni- versity's chapter of Sigma Alpha Iota, a profes- sional music sorority, are finding Valentine's Day to be highly marketable. For a quarter, they'll croon the sentiment and tune of your choice to that special someone. Their most popular re- quest is sung to the tune of "Five-Foot-Two" and goes, in part, like this: "Eight-foot-three, bow- legged knees, 0, you cutie, what you do to me, so won't you be my valentine?" Their repertoire includes 18 different selections. "You can't buy a Valentine card for 25 cents anymore, and then there's 13 cents postage," says Judy Evans, who is plugging the project. Last year 500 vocal Valen- tines were delivered by the sorority. Billboard bard There's a budding poet working for the Texas Department of Highways and Public Transporta- tion. The department has been posting rhyming safety messages along construction sites. One reads. "Your Car May be Sporty/But let's Hold it to Forty." Another uses lingo from Citizen's Band radio, now very much in vogue: "You've Been Warned/So Don't Complain;/Old Smokey's Taking Pictures/And He's in Your Lane." Engineers say the signs have attracted so much attention that some motorists are suggesting their own rhymes. On the inside... . . . Edit page offers Jeffrey Selbst and Mitch Dunitz writing about their mad efforts to get an interview with Bette Midler . . . on the Arts page Joan Borus reviews Bob White at the Ark . - . and Sports features Marcia Katz on the women's basketball Rame. arents ac By PAULINE LUBENS Parents of a black city youth shot by C i police late Sunday evening after an al- leged robbery attempt have accused the Edwards suf officers of "murdering" their son, the back of the "It was murder, that's what we feel" sustained a gui said Viola Edwards during a gathering BULLOCK, of friends and relatives at her Pear rently being he Street home, last night. "It was senseless Charlene Ric coldblooded murder." there were s LARRY EDWARDS, 18, died early Monday should be rais morning of gunshot wounds after he and a com- questioned why panion were shat by police while fleeing the why Edwards Pump and Pantry store on Broadway. Accord- merely tryingt ing to police, they were called to the scene by using a "riotg an employe who said there was a robbery in While Polic progress. were no warni Police said the officers fired their guns after officers were u: chasing the youths and ordering them to stop. call the weapo _MPLA ]i Flem1g asked to quit -new post By JIM TOBIN Leaders of the campus's largest unions Monday demanded that University President Robben Fleming resign the chairman- ship of a special committee to advise the Departments of Labor and Health, Education, and Welfare (HEW) on affirmative action matters. Fleming was appointed to the committee about two weeks ago with several other university presidents and deans. The panel, which will first meet on February 27, is to advise the two depart- ments regarding federal guidelines for the recruitment and hiring of minorities in the field of higher education. THE STATEMENT calling for Fleming's resignation from the committee was authorized by Joel Block, President of the Ameri- cuse police of murder e discrepancies in report I fered wounds in the shoulder and e head, while Richard Bullock, 18, unshot wound in the buttock. LISTED in fair condition, is cur- eld by police on a $75,000 bond. hardson, Ms. Edwards' niece, said everal crucial questions she felt ed about the incident. Richardson y there was no warning shot fired, was shot twice if police were to stop him, and why police were gun." e Chief Krasny admitted there ng shots fired, he denied that the sing a "riot gun" but preferred to n a "shotgun" and said it was "a .ar 12 gauge pumpgun. Krasney said the other of- ficer used a .357 magnum service revolver. "THEY SHOULD not be allowed to get away with it," said Richardson. "They do it to a black kid, they'll do it to a white kid too." "I can't see when anyone is running why you should just gun him down. You wouldn't do that to an animal," said Rev. Albert Lightfoot, who baptized Edwards and is a long time friend of he family. Both Richardson and Edwards raised doubts as to whether there actually was a robbery at- tempt and implied that police fabricated the in- cident after intentionally shooting the youths. EDWARDS cited loopholes in police reports as See PARENTS, Page 2 ~nooa I can't see when anyone is run- ning why you should just gun him down. You wouldn't do that to an animal.' Rev. Albert Lightfoot, a friend of Larry Edwards lottery torngl it By CATHERINE REUTTER The University will hold its second annual dorm lottery at 7:30 tonight to determine which students will be allowed to re- apply for 'U' housing spaces next fall. Slightly more than 40 per cent of the dorm spaces have been reserved for returning students. The admissions office expects that 4475 freshpersons, 100 fewer than last year, will enroll next September. Fletcher, Oxford, Baits and the traditional resi- dence halls will allow 3835 stu- dents to reapply for the remain- ing spaces, THE LOTTERY, dubbed a 'drawing' by Housing officials, makes 'categorical exceptions' for groups such as students who will not be 18 by September 1 and sophomore football players. Those who qualify as cate- gorical exceptions must parti- See HOUSING, Page 8 can Federation of State, Coun- ty, and Municipal Employes (AFSCME) Local 1583; Bazel Allen, co-chairman of the Fair Practices Committee of the Graduate Employes' Organiza- tion (GEO); Gary Richwald, former official of the House Of- ficers Association (HOA), the union which represents the Uni- versity's medical interns and residents. "That Fleming would even have the guts to accept the chairmanship of the committee without f i r s t rectifying the abuses and injustices at Mich- igan only points out how lightly he intends to take his assign- ment," they said. "Fleming's own house is not in order," said GEO Fair Prac- tices Committee co-chairperson Donna Gabaccia last night. "He's scarcely the person to be reviewing affirmative action in higher education." THE FAIR Practices Commit- tee was established to review the implementation of the GEO contract provisions on affirma- tive action and non-discrimina- tion. The group was chiefly re- snonsible for the complaint, which was sent to HEW, the Denartment of Labor, the con- gressional Black Caucus, and the House and Senate education committees. See FLEMING, Page 2 victory hbFaction (MPLAovit OAUtaper X"B} AP and Reutir Svet - backed troops of the Popular Movement for the Liberation of Angola (MPLA) last night appear- ed to be on the threshhold S~ of victory over rival na- tionalist forces in the An- golan civil war. They were reported to have seized the major ports >># of Lobito and Benguela and to be poised to capture the strategic Benguela railway in their thrust southwards. IN JOHANNESBURG, it was reported that South African troops had gulled back to the OTT ECCKER arid scrubland of Southern An- gola for a possible showdown with the Cuban-led forces smashing their way through former strongholds of the West- ern-supported Union for t h e aotal Liberation of Angola (UNITA). Meanwhile, the Organization of African Unity has recogniz- ed the Soviet-backed faction as Kozol added the sole government of war-torn ioards.''Angola, OAU chairman Idi Amin said yesterday. The move ator, author of handed Western-supported fac- work Death at tions a diplomatic defeat on top glasses and a of battlefield reverses. with his some- Amin, president of Uganda, announced at a cabinet meet- ing yesterday in Kampala that incing expres- his country had become the cts, Kozol en- 26th of the OAU's 46 members .e on what he to recognize the government tation" of the formed by MPLA. AMIN, in a broadcast by on't work well Uganda radio that was monitor- ed in Nairobi, said recognition to raise our by a majority of OAU member a one story states automatically settled the question of which faction legi- See MPLA, Page 2 Daily Photo by SC Kozol Award-wivnning author tel into U.S. educational syst By MICHAEL BLUMFIELD In the spring of 1965, ten days before the end of the school year, Jonathan Kozol was fired from his Boston teaching position for "curriculum de- viation." He had read a selection from black poet Langston Hughes' work to a largely black class. The school board was upset not because Hughes was such a radical poet, but "because he is an eighth-grade poet and I was teaching a fourth grade class," Kozol told a Future Worlds audi- ence at Hill Auditorium yesterday. SLOUCHING on the podium and glancing at notes on a legal pad, the Harvard-educated Rhodes scholar reported that this "rather in- glorious" start in his teaching career led him to agree with Mark Twain that "In the begin- ning, God created idiots." "That was just for practice," dryly. "Then he created school b The 39-year-old writer and educa the National Book Award winningv an Early Age, wore wire-rimmed United Farm Workers pin along w what scraggly black hair. WITH GRAPPLING gestures, wi sions, and a variety of vocal effe tertained his audience as he spok termed the "mandatory self-debili American school system. "The problem isn't that schools d -it's that they do," he claimed. "For twelve years we learned hands to 'go downstairs,' even in building." See AUTHOR, Page 8 VGreeks' encounter renewed popularity. By JIM TOBIN Steadily rising apartment rents and the im- pending dorm lotteries are proving a boon to the campus's 50 sororities and fraternities, which are experiencing their largest and most produc- tive rush in recent years. After nearly a decade of serious decline during which several houses closed and many more were seriously depleted, the Greeks are being flooded with students-mostly freshpersons-who are seeking an alternative to dorm and apartment living. THE NEW INTEREST is most dramatic among fraternities, where more than twice as many men went through rush this term as last term. The inrrne.,s ,vn ian,.ntr npr lnct r. C'ri mh nto able for rush all year long. WILLIAMS STRESSED that while fear of the lottery may have prompted many students to in- spect fraternities and sororities, they found more that appealed to them once they got there. "Despite the fact that they (Greek members) weren't all rah-rah frat-rat types they had trouble communicating that to people in the dorms," she said. "People are starting to realize that they really do need each other. It really meets the needs of some people who weren't quite ready to live on their own." SORORITY RUSH increased only seven per cent, but just nine of the 15 houses participated L116-l"i, L