CriP 13fr tigau Daji Vol. LXXXII, No. 11-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, May 24, 1972 Ten Cents Twelve Pages 3 x3 regon,R.. contests won byMc Govern From Wire Service Reports Sen. George McGovern (D-S.D.) won both the Oregon and Rhode Island Democratic primaries last night. McGovern said a victory in the crucial California pri- mary two weeks from now could enable him to go to Miami Beach with the party's presidential nomination wrapped up. McGovern had been favored in both winner-take-all primaries. Senator Hubert Humphrey (D-Minn.) was third, nar- rowly behind Sen. Edmund Muskie (D-Me.) in the Rhode Island primary, and was running third behind Alabama Gov. George Wallace in Oregon. McGovern was the only major Democratic candidate fixing a hole' The University lost no time filling in the bomb craters dug by anti-war protesters last Friday. Ob- servers report that at 5 Monday morning two bulldozers and two police cars filled in the cra- ter in front of the Economics Bldg. in ten min tes. EXPANDED BOMBING: U.S. hits power plants, cuts bridges in North to campaign in Oregon. The expected victory gave him Oregon's 34 votes at the Democratic National Conven- tion for at least two ballots. To- gether with the 22 votes he won in Rhode Island, his total rose to 491' of the 1,509 needed for the Democratic presidential nomination. With 42 per cent of the Ore- gon's 2,361 precincts reporting late last night, the vote totals of leading candidates in the Democratic presidential pri- mary were: -McGovern 50,230-49 per cent" -Wallace 20,583 - 20 per cent -Humphrey 13,493 - 13 per rent President Nixon swept to vic- tories in Republican contests against the same token opposi- tion in both slates. In Rhode Island, with all pre- cincts counted, the vote totals were: -McGovern 15,484 or 41 per cent. -Muskie 7,799 or 21 per cent. -Humphrey 7,655 or 20 per cent. -Wallace 5,794 or 15 per cent. Four other entries divided the balance of the vote there. Sen. Edward Kennedy (D- Mass.) who asked supporters not to vote for him after losing a court tight to have his name taken off the ballot, polled 3 per cent of the vote. In the Rhode Island Republi- can presidential preference pri- mary, vote totals were: -Nixon 5,011-88 per cent. See rgcGOVERN, Page 7 By The Associated Press U.S. jets have heavily dam- aged a power station near Hanoi and destroyed six bridges on the rail line to China in three days of intensive air strikes on North Vietnam, the U.S. command on- nounced yesterday. The Pentagon indicated the attack on the power station which supplies electricity to mil- itary installations around the North Vietnamese capital sig- naled a widening of bombing targets in the North. U.S. planes "will be hitting some of the other targets such as power plants and some fac- tories which support the enemy's war effort, said Pentagon spokesperson Jerry Friedheim. Previous strikes have concen- trated on petroleum storage de- pots and transportation facili- ties. Most of the action in the three-day-old operation center- ed around the mountain of Chu Pao, about nine miles south of virtually surrounded Kontum. Allied sources said the govern- ment's six-battalion armor and infantry task .force face about four North Vietnamese battal- ions at Chu Pao, including one that has been pounding the road with sporadic fire to discourage vehicles from pushing north. Initial reports indicated both sides suffered se-eral troops killed and wounded but no com- prehensive casualty reports were available. Elsewhere, fighting tapered off along the northern front where Saigon government forces claimed they killed about 300 of the opposition and damaged 18 tanks Sunday and Monday. In South Vietnam's central highlands, a South Vietnamese task force trying for the second time in three weeks to reopen the highway linking Kontum and Pleiku ran into stiff op- position. On the southern front field reports said North Vietnamese infantrymen and tanks smashed into the rubble that six weeks ago was An Loc the provincial capital 60 miles north of Sai- gon and were encircled by South Vietnamese forces still en- trenched in the battered town, The reports claimed 13 North Vietnamese tanks destroyed. In Laos informed sources said government irregulars beat back a heavy attack 13 miles east of Pakse the country's second lar- gest city and a regional military headquarters. But some Americans fear the North Vietnamese and Pathet Lao may soon overrun the pro- vincial capital in Southern Laos. Meanwhile the top North Vietnamese official in Paris, Le Due Tho, said yesterday U.S. mines sown in North Vietnam's harbors are being cleared. He scoffed at U.S. efforts to cut off arms shipments to North Vietnam from the Soviet Union and China. Late last night, U.S. military sources reported that Navy and Air Force fighters shot down four Soviet-built MIGs in a dog- fight deep in North Vietnam. Radio Hanoi claimed eight U.S. planes were shot down over the North. TRIAL JULY 27 Senate cuts anti-busing amendment WASHINGTON (1') - The Senate yesterday rejected an attempt to send the $21.3-bil- lion higher - education bill back to Senate-House conferees with instructions to accept stringent House anti-busing provisions. The lopsided vote against the move by Sen. Robert P. Drif- fin (R-Mich.) indicated that the Senate will pass the com- promise version of the legisla- tion when it votes at 3:30 p.m. EDT today. The House has not yet voted. Griffin, the Republican whip, noted that the conferees had accepted only one of the tough House riders aimed at school- busing orders and had water- ed down the other two. Supported by Southern sena- tors, Griffin said he wanted the Senate conferees to capitulate and take all three of the House provisions, However, Sen. Claiborne Pell (D-R.I.) declared that Griffin's move could kill the entire high- er - education package. He moved to table and thus kill Griffin'stmotion, and this was adopted in a 44-26 vote. The bill contains a new sys- tem of student assistance de- signed to assure every needy high-school graduate in the na- tion a chance at a college edu- cation. In addition, it would estab- lish for the first time a pro- gram of general federal grants to aid all U.S. public and pri- vate colleges and universities. When the conference finished last week, members estimated the total cost of the measure at $18.5 billion over four years. But the official report, filed yesterday, showed the total to be $21.3 billion. The one anti-busing House rider accepted by the conferees would prevent any court bus- ing orders from taking effect over the next 19 months-until all appeals had been exhausted. The other two riders, which were softened, would have bar- red use of any federal funds for busing to d-esgregate a school and would have directed federal officials not to require or induce a school district to use state or local funds for that purpose. The conftrees instead accept- ed Senate language which would permit use of federal funds in these cases if requested by the local district and when the busing is required by the Constitution. Tomato juice 'litterer' arrested By CHRIS PARKS Controversial University psy- chiatrist Richard Kunnes sur- rendered himself to police yes- terday afternoon on charges of littering, The charges resulted from the splashing of tomato juice in the lobby of the Administration Bldg. during an anti-war dem- onstration last Friday. Kunnes was arraigned yester- day before District Court Judge Sandorf Elden. He stood mute and requested a jury trial. Elden set the trial date for July 27, and Kunnes was released on a $100 personal recognizance bond. The warrant for Kunnes' ar- rest was arranged by local at- torney Don Koster and the police department. Kunnes, a staff psychiatrist at University Hospital and the Crisis Walk-in Clinic gained na- tional notoriety when he threw tomatoes at Sen. Hubert Hum- phrey (D-Minn.) during a meet- ing of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in Philadelphia last February. Kunnes is also known for his book "Your Money or Your Life," a biting attack on the medical establishment in Amer- ica, Meanwhile, there was little progress against those involved 'in digging "symbolic craters" in the Diag during Friday's pro- test. According to Ann Arbor Police Chief Walter Krasny, the matter is still "in the discussion stage with the University and the County Prosecutor." Krasny said yesterday the dis- cussions should be completed and arrest warrants ready by early this afternoon. "The Uni- versity wants to go ahead," he said, "so it's up to us the police department) to get the evidence together." See WAR, Page 7 RICHARD KUNNES and law- yer Perry Bullard leave police headquarters yesterday.