Unemployment Bill See Editorial Page j IO Daiti, SLITHY 4High-40* Low-20* See Today for details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVI, No. 120 Ann Arbor; Michigan-Thursday, February 19, 1976 10 Cents Eight Pages t L 1r1VSE 1f.,S APM iCALLA 'AIL Sociology protest A group of about 15 graduate students picketed the LSA Bldg. yesterday to protest the dearth of black professors in the literary school's sociology department. Only one professor in the department is black, and just one of the 18 persons hired since 1972 was a minority, the protesters said. "We've done a lot of talking and a lot of waiting, said Shirley Hatchett, chairwoman of the Association of Black Sociology Students. Yesterday's protest and similar action last year were designed to "embarrass (the school) into some action," she said. Sociology Dept. Chairman Bill Gamson main- tained yesterday that "we regard our current efforts as fully consistent with affirmative action," although he did admit the department may not have followed strong affirmative action proce- dures in the past. " Dope note The State House yesterday threw up its collec- tive hands yesterday and avoided a vote on a bill easing the penalty for marijuana use by sending it into the potentially hostile House Judiciary Com- mittee. The bill would have reduced the maxi- mum penalty for marijuana use or possession from a year in jail and a $1,000 fine to 90 days and $100. Many legislators however, challenged whe- ther first offenders should go to jail at all, and minutes before putting that question to a vote, a Detroit representative moved to have the bill sent to the Judiciary Committee. Those who favored sending the bill to the Judiciary Committee said it had been changed so many times on the floor that it was full of loopholes and lawmakers no longer understood what it would do. " Happenings:... ... kick off at noon with Prof. Frank Miller of Wooster College lecturing on "Constitutional Theorists in Japan Today" in the Commons Rm. of Lane Hall . . . Demonstrations of "Music and Dance of the Pacific" are at the Pendleton Arts Center of the Unuion at noon . . . The Washte- naw Child and Family Service holds the first meeting of a six-week, discussion group for wo- men with families who have recently moved to Ann Arbor at 1 in the Broadway Drop-In Center . .. GM chairman Thomas Murphy will speak .at 4 p.m. in Hale Aud. at Tappan and Hill . . . The Classical Studies Dept. offers a lecture titled "Doctus Sermones Utriusque Linguae?" by Lon- don Professor Nicholas Horsefall at 4:10 in An- gell Hall Rm. 2009 . . . The Ski Club meets at 7:30 in the Kuenzel Rm. of the Michigan Union . . a meeting for students interested in forming an undergraduates psychology organization will be held at 7:30 in Rm. K108 at West Quad . .. Steph- en Berry and Dan Fouke read their poetry at Guild House, 802 Monroe, at 7:30 . . . and the Varsity Band presents their winter concert at 8 in Hill Auditorium. Animal impulses Apes have probems, too, and it turns out the causes are strikingly similar to our own. Re- searchers at the Yerkes Regional Primate Center have determined the sexual aggressiveness of the male orangutan may be traceable to childhood rejection by their mothers. "A female might reach puberty and remain in relative close rela- tionship with her mother," says orangutan expert Dr. Ron Nadler, but males are "rarely seen, so it's assumed they are chased away by their mothers." Young male gorillas and chimpanzees, whosemothers are a bit more effectionate, don't seem to have the orangutan's problem, he added. And here's a' tidbit to slip into the back of your Susan Brownmiller book: Nadler says the orangu- tan is characteristically a rapist, although man was previously believed to be the only animal so aggressive. juggled emplo ymento The AFL-CIO yesterday accused the Bureau of Labor Statistics of using "seasonal adjustment gimmickry" to make it appear there was a dra- matic drop in January's unemployment rate when there was actually no substantial decline. The union said if the bureau had used the same un- employment formula it used throughout 1975, last month's drop-from 8.3 per cent in December to 7.8 per cent in January - would have been only, half as large as reported. The Labor Dept., which routinely uses seasonally adjusted figures in its monthly employment figires, acknowledged that in compiling the January rate, figures of jobless teenagers "were revised to a much greater ex- tent than in previous years," a move the union said makes the .5 per cent drop "exaggerated." v On the inside.... . The latest records are reviewed on Arts Page's weekly Side One . . . The Editorial Page offers a PNS review of camnaign law loonholes and Snorts writer Paul Campbell stidies the women's Big Ten swimming championships Prof. comments on Nigerian coup By STEPHEN HERSH General Murtula Muhammed, the army officer at the head of the Nigerian government, 'was killed last week in an abortive coup d'etat, and replaced by his second-in-command. The new man will not make any important policy changes, according to a University expert in African affairs. Prof. Godfrey Uzoigwe explains that Lieutenant General Alu- segun Abasanjo, the new Nigerian leader, was Muhammed's "right hand man." ,"OBASSANJO managed the day-to-day affairs of Nigeria for seven months, ever since Muhammed's government took power," said Uzoigwe. "The policy they've been pursuing so far is really his. There- fore, I do not see any significant deviations from Muhammed's policy." Abasanjo rose to the head of the government after the sup- pression of last week's coup, attempted by a group of officers calling themselves "young revolutionaries." Muhammed . was killed in his car by a burst of gunfire. "THE INFORMATION I have from my friends in Nigeria," Uzoigwe said in his office earlier this week, "suggests that the coup was organized by the younger officers of the army. They are officers predominately from the middle belt of Nigeria. "Their complaint was that they had not been promoted, as the senior officers had been, after the overthrow of (former Niger- an leader Yakubu) Gowon." Muhammed took power at the end of 1st July, in a bloodless coup which overthrew Gowon. See PROF, Page 2 'Nigerians feel that they should not kill each other for any kind o f military leader. If you taIke over power, they will say "Bravo." Then if you're over- thrown, again they'll say "Bravo." -Uzoigwe Uzoigwe BANS FOREIGN ASSASSINATIONS Ford restricts domestic spin Mal opening permitted By AP and Reuter WASHINGTON - President Ford yesterday ordered strict limits to spying on American citizens but at the same time proposed new powers for a centralized intelli- gence community, including court-ordered mail opening and a secrecy law. Except for a ban on political assassinations, Ford placed no limits on covert operations abroad. "There are no restraints on the conduct of covert operations . other than congressional oversight," White House aide John Marsh told reporters. FORD PROPOSED secrecy legislation that would make It a crime to reveal-intelligence sources and meth- ods and ordered government employes and contractors with access to intelligence secrets to sign an agreement not to disclose those secrets. bring a civil suit against any person breaking the agreement, while anyone ,violating the pro- posed law would be liable to a maximum penalty of a $5,000 fine and five years in jail. Reacting to disclosure of abuses by U. S. intelligence ag- encies, Ford issued a 36-page executive order yesterda'y, ex- panding on his statement the night before at a news confer- ence. With certain "limited excep- tions," Ford's order, effective March 1, places the following limits on intelligence activities: -NO ELECTRONIC eaves- dropping by the CIA inside the United States; -No interception by the Na- tional Security Agency of com- munications to or from the United States. -No collection of information on the domestic activities of American citizens, corporations and organizations; -No physical surveillance of break-ins directed against U. S. citizens; and -NO INFILTRATION of do- mestic groups for the purpose See FORD, Page 2 The attorney general could Ford UNNECESSARY DEATH? Daily Photo by PAULINE LUBENS Secret files Report suggests police shot too soon By DAVID GARFINKEL and RICK SOBLE The two city police officers involved in last week's fatal shooting of a black youth had probably not exhausted all other means of apprehension before they fired, according -ta City Administrator Sylvester Murray, Councilwoman Eliza- beth Keogh (D-First Ward) told The Daily yesterday. Murray was unavailable for comment. "The officers (George Anderson and Thomas Pressley) should have pursued the chase further before using fire- arms," according to Keogh's account of the report, which was issued to council members yesterday. THE REPORT pointed out that city police officers are authorized to use firearms only when all other means of apprehension have been attempted unsuccessfully, said Keogh. The controversial incident occurred after dark on Sun- day, Feb. 11 when the officers shot and killed Larry Ed- wards, 18, and wounded his companion, Richard Bullock, 19, as they were fleeing from a gas station The officers gave chase and yelled "Halt!" before firing, according to the report, Keogh said. See INVESTIGATION, Page 2 Everything is a mystery to a child, including the file cabinet in a newspaper office. This young lady is already getting the hang of investigative reporting by reading secret memos while dis- tracting onlookers with her innocent smile. Diggs 'calls for recognition of MIPLA control of Angola By MIKE NORTON Rep. Charles Diggs (D-Mich.) yesterday outlined his intention to push for immediate U.S. recognition of the Soviet-backed Popular Movement (MPLA) as the legitimate government of Angola, and blamed a "stub- born, arrogant" Secretary of State Henry Kissinger for de- lays in that recognition. "We might as well do it now," Diggs said. "It's going to come sooner or later-they've already admitted that-we might as well stop acting as if we're going to have to be dragged in kicking and screaming." DIGGS, a prominent member of the U.S. House of Represent- atives Black Caucus, attended the January meeting of' the Or- ganization of A f r i c a n Unity (OAU) in Addis Ababa, Ethio- pia, at the invitation of the OAU secretariat, and has made two trips to Angola. He is firmly convinced that recognizing the MPLA is in the best interests of the United States. "We have nothing to lose and everything to gain," he de- clared. "France has recognized the MPLA, and the Scandina- vian countries can be expected to follow by the end of the week. There is a viable, recognized government in Angola. We just don't have any reason for hold- ing out-no intelligent reason, that is." DIGGS accused Kissinger of standing in the way of MPLA recognition for personal rea- sons. ,"Nothing is holding us back but stubborn arrogance on the part of the Secretary of State," he claimed. "And I say the Secretary of State because this is hishbaby, because President Ford has done nothing but fol- low him blindly. " Kissinger's reason for deny- ing MPLA recognition, charges Diggs, stems from the Secre- tary's growing chagrin at hav- ing backed a losing side-the weakened UNITA faction. "Kis- singer rode on the wrong horse," he said, "and he came in second this time." ACCORDING to Diggs, Kis- singer's remarks concerning An- gola during his Latin American tour have not been aided U.S.- MPILA relations. "I can't say what kind of progress we're go- Fleming defends continuing CIA, NSA campus recruiting earst tells jury of treats after arrest By MICHAEL YELLIN President R o b b e n Fleming last night defended Central In- telligence Agency (CIA) and Na- tional Security Agency (NSA) job recruitment on campus be- fore a standing room only crowd in the Michigan Union Ballroom. Despite charges that the Uni- versity is collaborating with the "intelligence community" by its action, the administration has refused to bar the two agencies from holding interviews with students. "IT IS A matter of individual judgment, whethera student seeks employment with one of these agencies or not," asserted Fleming in a debate with the Coalition to Stop CIA/NSA Re- cruitment on Campus. "The coalition does not claim SAN FRANCISCO (A-Patri- cia Hearst wound up her three- day chronicle of life in the ter- rorist underground yesterday and said she still feared death from her onetime captors. 3 n t;ismnmr that reneatedlv amination of the young heiress, charged with taking part in a San Francisco bank robbery af- ter her abduction by the Harris- es and others in the StA.* Asked by her attorney if, as she st on the witness stand, she