page three t Sfr~it1n aitij PORTENTOUS High-s5 Low-60 cloudy, possibility of thunderstorms Thursday, July 22, 1971 Ann Arbor, Michigan News Phone: 764-0552 news briefs By The Associated Press, URBAN AND TRIBAL INDIANS jammed a Senate hearing room yesterday urging repudiation of a 1953 federal policy aimed at freeing Indians from their ward status. Leo Vocu, executive director of the national Congress of Ameri- can Indians, told the Senate Interior Committee that for some per- sons in the 1950s, the policy meant getting Indians off what they saw as the public dole; for others it was a chance to force insophisticated Indians to sell their land and resources wealth. Robert Jim, chairman of the Yakima Tribal Council in Washing- ton, said the termination policy sent thousands of Indian youth into an urban society for which they were unprepared and that urban areas were even less prepared for them. This has been partly responsible for some of the dreay statistics1 of Indian life, he said: 90 per cent live in improper housing, 40 to 75 per cent of the adults are out of work and the average age of mortality is 43 years, compared to 68 years for whites. BRITAIN'S PARLIAMENT began debate yesterday over entry into the Common Market with an oratorical clash between Con- servative Prime Minister Edward Heath and opposition Labor" leader Harold Wilson. Heath hailed the promise of a single market in Europe as a way for European science and industry to match achievement of the3 U.S. and the Soviet Union., Wilson challenged entry, saying the benefits of membership inr the Common Market had been undermined by the government's, acquiescence to unfavorable conditions. 4 A GROUP OF HOUSE DEMOCRATS trying to turn President Nixon's $1.5 billion school desegregation bill into a broad general school aid program, reportedly reached tentative agreement yester- day on a $6.8 billion package. If the tentative agreement holds up when the final decision is U , S Army d made today on whether to support it, the bill should win-narrow ap- Walter Botis, 71 the model f proval over united Republican opposition in the subcommittee. ing poster i 1931, ho the $ Besides being opposed by the Republicans, who warn that it would be tells newsmen that he's bet be vetoed by President Nixon, the bill raises the issue of aid to paro- soldiers pension. The army r chial schools that has killed all previous general aid bills. of the minimum required. It is also being viewed skeptically by civil rights groups, who don't want the proposal to help schools desegregate caught up such a VIET CONG SNI controversy. COVERED BY U.S. AIR POWER, a 10,000-man South Vietna- mese force moved across a large section of eastern Cambodia yes- Y ou th e terday in a new drive to check North Vietnamese infiltration, but have so far met no Communist units. One South Vietnamese field commander said the North Vietna- mese may have pulled out in the face of heavy allied air and ar- tillery strikes that preceded the operation. MOSCOW (A-Va Thin has 38 kills to his credit. F SMALL GROUPS OF TELEPHONE WORKERS in scattered in the Vietnarese jungle. areas of the country, apparently dissatisfied with a tentative settle- Vietnamese. ment designed to end the week-long strike against the Bell Tele- phone System, remained off the job yesterday, defying a back-to- Vo Thin is only 15 yea work order by the international president of their union. this summer he traded in In another labor development, Wheeling-Pittsburgh Steel Corp. a fishing rod and swimsuit said yesterday it has been unable to reach an agreement with the a Russian holiday camp on United Steelworkers of America and will begin shutdowns on Sunday The young guerrilla is that will eventually affect nearly all the firm's 17,500 employes. who have bean rewarded, Student store blacklists books Soesn't want him or the famous "I Want You" recruit- med drawing of himself yesterday as en trying unsuccessfully to get an ex- eports his service was 10 days short PER: ht oida an riviera Trung is a Viet Cong sniper. He or. years he has lived and fought s against Americans and South ars old and he needed a rest. So his rifle and black pajamas for and is now playing in the sun at the Black Sea. one of 10 Viet Cong teen-agers for valor and efficiency on the battlefield, with a summer vacation in the Soviet Un- ion. "They have come from reg- Buckley says Review story was a hoax' NEW YORK {A - With a broad grin, editor William F. Buckley Jr. revealed yes- terday that publication in his National Review of so- called s e c r e t Vietnam documents was a hoax. Buckley said the documents were composed by editors of the magazine "ex nihilo"-out of nothing. The intended purpose, Buckley told a news conference, was to demonstrate in regard to the ear- lier Pentagon papers "that the Pentagon and the CIA are not composed of incompetents . . . that forged documents would be widely accepted as genuine pro- vided their content was inherent- ly plausible . . . that the chal- lenge in Southeast Asia was an aspect of the global challenge to the West, not a local affair." Later, Buckley told a reporter at his Manhattan apartment: "If the advice given in the magazine had been followed, we wouldn't be in Vietnam today. The point is that the papers, or something like them, must have been writ- ten. Therefore, one concludes that the difficulty was not that the Pentagon and the CIA gave LBJ bad advice, but tliat BJ didn't take good advice" Buckley's revelation of the hoax came after suspician arose when several persons listed as au- thors of the printed documents couldn't recall writing then. One flatly denied authorship credited to his name. Buckley founded the National Review in 1954 to further his po- litical outlook, which he de- scribed as radical conservative. "We mentioned a lot of people we didn't have to mention," Buckley said. "In that sense, we invited discovery. We wouldnt have been surprised if within two hours after it appeared it had been called a hoax. We were more surprised than anybody at reading . . . that not even Dean Rusk had been able to deny what was printed." Ecology unit sets up can recycling site A permanent site for the recy- cling of metal cans has been opened by the Ecology Center. Establishment of a permanent site, according to Ecology Cen- ter director Bill sopper, repre- sents a move toward "compre- hensive recycling in Ann Arbor." As part of the program, a permanent collection container will be located at the Westate Shopping Center, net to Ar- iana. Area residents can bring cans to this location every Saturday starting July 31. from 10 am. through 6 p.m. Newspapers can also be de- posit.d at this location, Cans brought to the collec- tion area, however, should be cleaned and crushed with labels removed, according to center officials. Glass can be brought to this site- Sunday through Thursday from 10:00 am. through 5:30 p.m. With the establishment of the the new metal can center in addition to the glass recycling center, "it is now possible for area residents to dispose of most of their solid waste in an ecological way," according to Kopper. (Continued from Page 1) consensus reached at a meeting of the board earlier this year. Bulkley said he is presently drawing up a proposal for a per- manent policy on the question of censorship to be presented to the board at its August meeting. He added that his proposal is "not meant to do away with un- derground newspapers or stifle differing views on life styles or political questions." Despite - the store's ban on "sexist" books, Rock said, many books considered to be "sexist" are ordered and sold, including works by Henry Miller and D.H. Lawrence. These books are excepted, Rock explained, because they have what he termed, "redeeming so- cial value." However, the Cellar does not apply its "redeeming social val- ue" criteria to books which con- tain passages which deal with firearm use. "Steal this Book," Rock ad- mitted, "has only 41/2 pages" which discuss bombs and fire- arms. "If the thgory is that we should carry whatever students want," Rock stated, "we'd be carrying the Sensuous Woman-I could have sold 250 copies of that book." In a survey conducted yester- day afternoon by The Daily, Ul- rich's Slater's Centicore and Follett's bookstore spokesmen all stated that they had carried Steal This Book but were out of copies pending the delivery of new or- ders. Only Centicore had copies of The Anarchist Cookbook in stock, but an Ulrich's spokesman said that his store would take orders for that book from their cus- tomers. "All printed materials should be made available," Cohen said. A special meeting of the execu- tive committee of the board has been called for Saturday to dis- cuss whether to lift the ban on Steal This Book, according to board members. Acting board chairman W.W. Taylor, grad, said in response to the questions of a reporter yes- ions where even now the soil terday that "in an open society, is smoking from bomb and shell censorship is inappropriate. The blasts," Pravda reported today. board has never involved itself The Soviet Communist party in that. organ said that in choosing the Taylor said he has reordered would-be vacationers, physical the book in the interim, although endurance was as necessary as he "abhorred books which in- combat excellence. struct readers how to use wea- "In order to reach Hanoi," pons." the paper said, "many of them Taylor added it was: "Time to spent more than a month slip- get this issue out in the open." ping through enemy-occupied Another student member of the territory, hiding themselves in board, Bob Palmer, law, said he jungle trenches and bomb too was "opposed to prior censor- shelters during raids by Amer- ship." ican aviation." Other board members could not Once they reached the North be reached for comment yester- Vietnamese c ap i t al, the VC day. were flown to Moscow, and then The 10-member board is com- to the Black Sea. posed of six students, three fac- Another V.C. soldier now ulty members and one adminis- playing at the resort is Chun trator. The student members are Van Chuong, 15. He replaced appointed by SGC, the faculty his father on the front, Pravda members by Senate Assembly said, and "was decorated f or and the administrative represen- blowing up an American tank tative by University President with a mine of his own manu- Robben Fleming, facture." Highly reliable sources close The young Viet Cong are" to the board have informed The spending their summer "R and Daily that the board is suffering R" at Artak, the Soviet Union's from "a great deal of personality most prestigious children's conflict." camp.