page three J4E £id~ri!grn ai , IRREPROACHABLE High--SO Low-55 Warm, mostly sunny News Phone: 764-0552 Wednesday, June 7, 1972 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN f +n Y S. Viets said to push communists '~Out of Kontum ' K SAIGON (---South Vietnamese field officers said yes- terday that communist troops hake been pushed back from ' the provincial capital of Kontum after 12 days of assults. The city has been under heavy aftack by hoth Sout~h and North Vietnamese troops. The U.S. Command announced that American fi ghter- bombers on Monday launched the most devastating raids on the canals, rivers and lakes of North Vietnam since full- scale retaliatory bombing resumed two months ago. The U.S. planes reported shattering more than 100 supply boats. U.S. pilots flew more than 220 strikes over the North, concentrating on crippling Hanoi's inland waterway trans- -1portation system to prevent war supplies from moving south, officers said. A SOUTH VIETNAMESE soldier hurls a grenade at communist positions during fighting recently along Highway 13. The road leads to the beseiged provincial capital of An Loc, north of Saigon. SUCCEEDS VAN WYLEN: Lavid Ragone nam r eddear of 'U' engineer Ing. diviio By JIM O'BRIEN July 1. David Ragone, dean of Dart- An expert on the problem of mouth C ol11e g e 's engineering automative pollution, Ragone school, yesterday was named has served on numerous panels dean of the University's College discussing the environment, in- of Engineering, succeeding Gor- cluding the Committee on Ad- don Van Wylen. vanced Automotive Power Sys- Ragone, who taught here pre- tems for the Council of Environ- viously from 1953 to 1962, will mental Quality. . return this fall to assume the After leaving the University in deanship Sept. 1, President Rob- 1962, Ragone headed the General ben Fleming announced. Atomic Division of General Dy- Outgoing Dean Van Wylen will namics. There he helped design take over the presidency of Hope an efficient type of nuclear re- College in Holland, Mich., next actor which minimized the prob Local anti-war leaders tplanupcoingprotests Plans for continuing anti- war protests were formulated last night at a meeting attend- ed by about 50 people in the Student Activities Bldg. Scheduled over the next cou- ple of weeks are: -plans to confront President Robben Fleming Monday after- noon to demand that he drop charges resulting from the dig- ging of symbolic bomb craters on the Diag May 19. Five per= sons have been charged with malicious destruction of pro- perty, -the immediate establish- ment of picket lines around Fleming's house if he should refuse to drop the charges, -another bomb crater dig- in on the Diag, organized by the Tribal Council, June 17. This dig-in will include workshops and speeches plus music, and --a Nuremburg type trial charging the University, Flem- ing and Vice President Geof- frey Norman with war crimes. During this time plans will be formed to organize a mass militant action after the trial's verdict. A working meeting will be held tomorrow at 8:00 to work out the details for the various actions. Much of the discussion last night centered upon the Uni- versity's "complicity in the Viet- nam war" and its pressing charges against the five persons arrested for digging the simu- lated bomb craters. "We have to show that ma- licious destruction of a Univer- sity lawn is nothing compared to the University's malicious de- struction of Vietnam," said one woman at the meeting. SI Bus makes By CHRIS PARKS A silver and blue University bus, loaded with local VIPS and residents of the Northwood area went on a "dry run" to Fuller Rd. pool yesterday afternoon. The mission, according to Harlan Mulder of the Univer- sity Transportation Depart- ment, was to "show all those in- terested some of the problems we're confronted with" in try- ing to provide bus service to the pool. North campus resi- dents have been pushing for bus service to the pool since last fall. The bus loaded up and left at 4 p.m. --- about ten minutes late, lem of heated waste seater. or thermal pollution. "In those days, nobody gave a damn." he recalls. Ragone said that the public is currently reacting against the idea that "technology is good because it is technology." -"Engineers in particular have the burden to ask themselves what their work will be used for," he maintains, Solving the problems of the cities is another area in which he sees a need for "good old fashioned guts engineering." The importance of this under- taking was emphasized for him during his term as associate dean of Carnegie - Mellon Uni- versity's School of Urban and Public Affairs, he said. Ragone anticipates a revers- al of the current slump in re- cruitment and hiring of engin- eers, especially in the area of improving the quality of the environment. When he returns to the Uni- versity Ragone hopes to in- crease cooperation between the engineering school and the po- litical and social sciences, call- ing those departments "among the finest in the country." WIMMERS DEMAND ST( 'dryrun' to As it pulled out, University Transportation D e p a r t- ment Director John Ellsworth explained "you should consid- er it a regular bus trip." At 4:30 p.m. the bus ap- proached the pool, swung into the left turn lane and moved smoothly into the pool's park- ing lot. Grins from the Northwood tenants, blank looks from the transportation bureaucrats. Within 2 minutes the bus pulled out of the pool parking lot and proceeded to the North- woods area. Then it was back to the pool on the return run. Once again the scene was repeated--in and The strikes also knocked out eight bridges scattered across North Vietnam. they added. Sporadic communist pressure continued on highways and fire bases elsewhere in the high- lands. Three rounds of fire fell north of the air base at Pleiku, 27 miles below Kontum, but no casualties were reported. Paratroopers on the northern front above Hue battled a North Vietnamese force of unknown size, killing 35, a spokesmat said. The action took place about a mile south of the My Chanh River defense line, several miles from another fight Monday which killed 27 communists and two Saigon troops, he reported. Ground fighting was light elsewhere. North Vietnamese troops around An Loc fired fewer than 300 rounds of artil- lery in 24 hours, the lowest number in the two-month siege on the provincial capital 60 miles north of Saigon. The intensified bombing cam- paign over North Vietnam was described as successful by one senior U.S. official. The advances in Kontum fol- lowed days of probes around three key positions in the town's north and southeast sectors held by the communists. There were indications snipers remained in an area just north of the air- strip. But South Vietnamese spokesmen in Pleiku reported Kontum cleared of communist troops by late afternoon. South Vietnamese units at- tacked a Konturn military hos- pital and the former armored cavalry compound before dawn. Moving behind American air support and ground artillery, they reported killing 16 com- munists. U.S. sources estimate the Sai- gon command has lost 1,000 dead and wounded while killing 3.000 to 5,000 North Vietnamese since fighting started in Kon- tum on May 25. OP Fuller Pool. out, no problem.. The bus returned to the Washtenaw Ave, bus stop by 5. Nervous joking all around, but no one seemed happy. Northwoods tenant Ron Beck, who initiated the struggle to get the buses to stop at Fuller Pool last October was clearly- unimpressed with what he had seen. Did the University prove its point? "Not at all," Beck said. And how about Ellsworth? Was he now ready to put in a new stop at the pool? Appar- ently, not yet. "Pool use will be up consid- erably in a week when the high See 'U, Page 7 speaks on By PAUL RUSKIN After warning about the dan- gers of a "backlash of bigotry and bias that is occuring throughout the couttry," State Sen. Gilbert Bursley (R-Anti Arbor) went on to urge members of the local chapter of Zero Populationt Groeth ZPG to make cottcerted efforts to en- sure passage of the abortion re- form referenda. The issue will be on the ballot in November's election as a re- sult of a successful petition drive. The abortion reform referen- dum calls for legalization of abortion for all women" if the period of gestation has not ex- Sen. Bursley ceeded 20 weeks." The abortion must be performed in a licensed hospital or other facility ap- proved by the Department of Health, according to the refer- endurt. The validity of the 300,000 signatures collected during the petition drive, however. is being challenged in court by abortion reform opponents, The case wilt be acted on July 24. Bursley also discussed specific organizational plans which are being made to gain support for the abortion reform. The Coordinating Council . for Abortion Reform, which is lead- ing the fight to obtain reform, has hired a public relations firm to plan a strategy for the pro- reform campaign. Bursley also discussed several other family planning bills which are being considered or See BURSLEY, Page 7