Nednesday, August 1, 1973 THE SUMMER DAILY Plane crashes in Boston Victims are scattered amid the debris along the runway of Logan International Airport in Boston, after the crash of a Delta Airlines DC-9 yesterday morning. The plane was on route from Burlington, Vermont when it hit a seawall in its attempt to land instrumentally in heavy fog. Eighty-eight of the 89 persons aboard died in the crash, and the last is in critical condition at at nearby hospital. State Rep. Bullard hits road, snagS ticket for hitchhiking Page Three One killed, 4 hostages in jail riot LEAVENWORTH, Kan.P) - A guard was killed and four men taken hostage yesterday by a handful of prisoners as violence erupted at the federal penitenti- ary here. Warden loren Daggett ordered all in- mates locked in their cells after an esti- mated 100 inmates went on a rampage just before noon, also injtrig a number of corrections officers. A COUNT earv yesterday afternoon es- tablished that five of the 2,176 inmates were missing It was believed at least four of them were hol ig the hostages, ap- parently uninitred, in the prison laundry. BULL E T IN LEAVENWORTH, Kansas-The four hostages held by two federal peniten- tiary inmates were released late last night, thus ending a day of violence. Grievance negotiations have begun. At midafternoon Daggett said he had indicated to the inmates holding the hos- tages that he would not meet their de- mands for negotiating their unstated grie- vances until after the hostages were re- leased. Daggett said the guard was stabbed through a cell door in cellblock A, an area described as housing "normal" in- mates. LAWRENCE PUTMAN, associate war- den, accompanied by Don Black, manag- ing editor of the Leavenworth Times, spoke through the laundry room door with the hostages and an iniate holding them. Black was summoned by Daggett after the warden was told the inmates wanted to see a member of the press. The newsman said the inmate lead each of the hostages to the door and demanded to negotiate with Daggett. The inmate saokesman did not specify grievances, Black said, bit said this was "not a beef against the guards." It was not clear if the man knew of the killing, Black said THE INMATE said his group wanted a meeting with "the new warden' and the press, Black said. Ie said Putnan re- plied, "Keep cool. This may take awhie. The inmate said, "ot just keep it cool, too," said Black. THE HOSTAGES were identified as Kenneth Holcomb and Marvin Berrv, cor- rections officers, and John sMitchell and icht-rd Williiims, civilian employes of the l'andr. Black said the hstPges were tied but v-ir ' were no signs of injuries. Ie said their shirts were rumpled and torn. Five guards were injured in separate in- cidents in the dining room, where the first incident reportedly occurred at about 11:30 a.m., and in the cellblocks, as gtards attempted to force men back to their cells, By DAVID STOLL State Rep. Perry Bullard (I-Ann Arbor), trying to hitch a ride home Sunday morn- ing, thumbed down more than he'd bar- gained for--a state patrolman, and an $11 ticket. It's not the first time Bullard has bent the laws, although it's his first bust since Ip Watergate wording Btough we are bombarded by it al- it constantly, the term Watergate only has a moderate chance of making it into the perimanent recordbooks of the Airer- ican languaoge according to University word historian Richard Bailey. Bailey claims that in its present form Watergate is being used largely as a verb, as in the expression, "Don't Watergate me out of imy mane'." Verbs, it seems, are rath- er unstable creatures. Prof. Bailey sug- gests we start using Watergate as a noun or see it perish from the language for good. Advocate-seeking MeIbers of Mecha, a coalition of Chi- cano groups on campus, plan to meet with Vice President for Student Services Henry Johnison tomorrow at 2 to request the hiring of a full-time Chicano advoctate. At present, there is a part-time udsicste on the University payroll. Happenings... . tiday sre itsppsed by another rec pl r istruictisn scssian. Thosetaerested shisild be as the Unisa tsit Glery it 5:ut pt . . . -Felhiii's "Satyricon" i be 1s.w isin Aud A, Asgell IAll at I7:15 atid 9:31 p . . '"'he Murder of Fred Hia " iill be presented at 8:00 and 1000 p t. in the Nsit. Sci. Aud. . . . ethi Puswer Center u-ill be the scene of the 'U' Players production of. Tennessee WA'-. lsams' "Cat on A iHot Tin Roofu" Curtain time will be 8:00 pm. A2's weather The gnstmes at the weather service re- port' more of the same for tomorrow. Cloudy skies with occasional rain are predicted. Highs should be in the upper 70s. becoming a state representative. The more controversial incident came April 1, when he smoked a joint in front of the television cameras at Ann Arbor's Sec- ond Annual Hash Bash. Bullard was busted at the notorious 1-96, 1-496 interchange south of Lansing, where there is absolutely no legal place frotn which to thumb and where many a poor hitchhiker has met an intransigient state police patrolman. State Rep Warren O'Brien (R-Warren), who introduced an unsuccessful motion into tse legislature to censure Bullard after the hash Bash, told The Daily he has no plans to po after Bullard for hitchhiking. O'BRIEN DID say, however, that he "can't understand why the goty perpetually and continuilly is breaking laws." Although Bullard said he will pay the $11 fine for "pedestrian on freeway" with- out protest, he vowed yesterday to push- at some indefinite time in the future-for "pull-off areas" at interchanges and "little heated and lighted booths" in which hitchhikers could wait for rides. "I think people should hitchhike more," Bullard said. "It's ecologically sound." IE SAID HE had been on his way back ylor, Burto annojunce s NEW YORK u'u -Elizabeth Taylor and I Burton, whose marriage grew out of an national scandal on the set of "Cleopatra years ago, have decided on an "amicab vorce, a spokesman said yesterday. The couple, who made eigt movies't including "'Who's Afraid of Virginia WoolfI "the VIPs," recently announced a separat had a tearfil public reunion in Rome on Ji THE SPOKESMAN, John Springer, sa Burtons are still in R.[one but she has ssis of the villa of producer Carlo Ponti, Sophia I husband, whre they had been stsiyiig sit short-lived reconciliation. Springer said Taylor and Burton had dete to take the necessary steps toward "legal cluding" their marriage and had asked attorney to file the necessary papers in S land, where they are legal residentts. Neither Burton nor Taylor was availat immediate comment. SPRINGER SAID the split was the resul series of personal disagreements" and hadt to do with another man or woman. to Ann Arbor from a county prosecutor's convention on Mackinac Island. Friends had driven him as far as the interchange where the police snagged hins. "I decided to play it straight," said Bul- lard. "I don't think they figured out I was anyone but Winston Perry Bullard." After writing the ticket, police drove hine to the Okemos exit just down the road and let him off at the top of the ramp. He got home two hours later. IN AND OUT OF radical causes around Ann Arbor for as long as memory serves, Bullard beat Human Rights Party candi- dhate Steve Burghardt for the seat in the lep-slature last November with a cam- paign which stressed his support for Dem- ocratic Presidential candidate George Mc- Govern. Since taking office, ie has championed prison reform, reform of the state's penal code --including the legalization of mari- juana--and the passage of a newsmen's shield law. Most recently Bullard participated in an unsuccessful attempt to quash a state loan to the classified research laboratories out at Willow Run. AP Photo BURTON AND TAYLOR in a picture taken last May in Venice.