-i1 page three im4c Sft riitn ttii NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0554 Thursday, May 7, 1970 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three the news today by The Associated Press and College Press Service Ii! =J WASHINGTON, D.C. OFFICIALS yesterday turned down a request for permission for an anti-war demonstration in front of the White House on Saturday. * Demonstration leaders said it would be held there anyhow. Ron Young, project director of the New Mobilization Committee which is planning the march said "We'll rally in front of the soldiers or police, or whoever is there on the north side of Lafayette Square, the nearest point to the White House." Mayor Walter Washington said an alternative site was being made available on the Washington Monument grounds "in full view of the White House." He also said the Justice Department would move' in court for a waiver of the 15-day notice required prior to, the issue of demonstration or parade permits. * * * BRITISH FOREIGN SECRETARY Michael Stewart pressed his. quest for Indochina peace talks yesterday after apparently defying Cabinet policy toward President Nixon's extension of the Vietnam war. After a controversial' speech Stewart made on the crises in Indochina in Parliament Tuesday, a large number of Laborites were pursuaded to vote against the Labor government's policy. Stewart has been severely criticized for exceeding an understanding within the Labor government concerning the expression of strong opposition "to American expansion of the war into Cambodia. Stewart and British diplomats arouna the world have set out to rally support for Secretary-General U Thant's proposal to convene a conference of all contending parties in Indochina within the context of the United Nations. * * * IRELAND'S PRIME MINISTER won a vote of confidence from his ruling party last night in a dispute over the use of force against Protestant violence in Northern Ireland. Prime Minister Jack Lynch won approval for the ouster of three cabinet ministers who had advocated aid to the Roman Catholic minority in Northern Ireland even if it, meant armed intervention. The crises, the most serious in the 44-year history of the ruling Fianna Fail party, was said to involve the illegal smuggling of arms into Northern Ireland by what were called "influential people." * * * NORTH VIETNAMESE AND VIET CONG representatives boycotted the 66th session of the Vietnam peace talks yesterday in Paris. They said they would return next week, but the United States and South Vietnam said they had not decided if they would return then. A spokesman for the North Vietnamese told a news conference his delegation refused to attend the session because of what he called continued U.S. bombing raids on North Vietnam.# The Nixon administration, he said, would have to "bear full responsibility for all the serious consequences arising from its acts." * * * PRESIDENT NIXON met yesterday for nearly an hour with x six Kent State University students to discuss what might be done to prevent a recurrence of the confrontation which left four students dead on their Ohio campus Monday. The students had driven to Washington to see their congressman, Rep. William Stanton (R-Ohio) about the killings. They ended up conferring with Nixon on the causes of student unrest and the ad- ministration's efforts to investigate the shootings. Col. Harry Finley of the Guard said the troops which left yester- day would be deactivated imme- diately. Another 400 Guardsmen were to be removed by tonight, he said. °aTo insure order on the campus, empty of its 19,000 students, Fin- ley said a force of Ohio Patrolmen would remain. A university spokesman said there was no immediate decision -Associated Press on whether to continue an injunc- MR. AND MRS. ARTHUR S. KRAUSE and daughter Laurie, 15, tion which closed the school until mourn the death of their daughter and sister, Allison, 19, one at least May 10. of the four students shot Monday At Kent State University. The spokesman said Kent State Funeral services were held yesterday in Pittsburg, Pa. President Dr. Robert I. Whitewas _ .--__~to issue a statement later. Major General Sylvester Del WA L CE IN R UN-OFF: Corso, one of the officials who is- sued the earlier statement, said he had heard reports of a sniper on a rooftop, but that "there is no evi- Primary upsets occur Brig.Gen. Robert Canterbury, comander of the guard units in " ® o Kent, said, "In my opinion, the in ioAla electionsfact that there is or is not a sniper is unimportant." "I think the reason the people By The Associated Press yesterday that he plans to make fired was because they were being In the Alabama Democratic the black "bloc vote" which voted assaulted with rocks and con- gubernatorial primary yesterday, against him an issue in their June crete," the general said. In any neither George C. Wallace or Al- 2 run-off election. situation, whether in combat or bert Brewer received a majority A strong showing by a third anything else, the decision to use of votes, while in Ohio, voters candidate, - Charles Woods, kept a weapon must be reserved to the chose Republican Robert Taft Jr. Wallace or Brewer from winning individual. and Democrat Howard Metzen- the nomination without a run-off. The Guardsmen at Kent were baum to vie for a U.S. Senate seat Unoffical returns, with approxi- armed with M-1 rifles, fully loaded in November. mately 93 per cent of the ballots with a round in the firing cham- I tallied, gave Brewer 382,016 votes, ber. That means the troops were Guard leaving Kent. campus;, sniper denied KENT, Ohio (ff-Convoys of National Guardsmen, bleary- eyed from lack of sleep, continued rolling awdy from the Kent State University campus Wednesday, but security precau- tions remained tight in the wake of the shooting deaths of four students by Guardsmen Monday. Some 400 citizen-soldiers activated to quell student and antiwar demonstrations last weekend were transported in trucks to their respective headquarters. * In connection with those deaths, Ohio National Guard officials reported Monday that they had found no evidence of sniper fire, the reason originally released for the Guard's firing which resulted in the deaths. Guard officials now say the troops opened fire because they feared for their lives as students threw rocks at them.; IReserveour' I Plce withth SunI ADMITTANCE CAN ONLY BE GUARANTEED WHILE TICKET SUPPLY LASTS . Order tickets direct from: KICKAPOO CREEK INC. BOX 606, HEYWORTH, ILLINOIS 61745 Advanced Ticket Name $15 At Gate ' Name... .... ........................t.......... Addcrmanidss ma............... Address .......... .................. ..................... .... City......State........ Zip..... Chool............................ Ae.....I School........................ ......Age * I enclose $........for.......tickets. Mail order ticket sales close Midnight May 15th, unless accompanied by mail order or bank draft Law.r ,... .. . .. .... - -..a..- Wallace, running beIincd Gov. Albert Brewer in the primary, said Top Ann Arbor city officials approve grievance officer plan By HARVARD VALLANCE Top Ann Arbor officials gave their endorsement last week to a proposal to establish the position of a "grievance officer" or "om- budsman" to hear complaints reg- istered by citizens against police- men and other city employes. Mayor Robert J. Harris, City Administrator Guy C. Larcum, Jr., and Police Chief Walter E. Kras- ny gave their approval last Sat- urday to part of the recommenda- tion made by the citizen's Ad Hoc Committee on Police-Community Relations. The city officials re- jected, however, the committee's proposal that would allow a citi- zen the option of filing his com- nlaint with a three-man grievance board. The city council will h o ld a public hearing on t h e proposal May 25 and will take final action at its meeting on June 1, Harris! said. Harris added that if the pro- - r posal passed the council, citizens could begin to file complaints as soon as an ombudsman could be appointed by the council. While the proposal does not specifically prohibit the appointment of a city employe to the position, Harris indicated that the position would be filled by someone "outside of city government." The proposed grievance officer would have no disciplinary powers but would determine whether a police officer or other city em- ploye had acted wrongly in a giv- en circumstance and could rec- ommend changes in the opera- tions of the appropriate city de- partment to prevent further of- fenses. Following an investigation, the grievance officer would submit his findings to the city adminis- trator or department head involv- ed and allow 10 working days for response. A final public report which would include this response would then be released and would state the reasons that corrective action was or was not taken in a particular case. If the proposal is accepted, the mayor said, the three-man tri- bunal of the City Administratorm, City Attorney and the Human Re- lations Department D i r e c t o r which presently hears complaints lodged against policemen will probably be abolished. In a state- ment released by Harris, Larcum, and Krasny endorsing the propos- al, it was noted that the tribunal "is hopelessly bogged down with citizen's complaints due to lack of time and staff." The statement also pointed out the advantages of a single grievance officer over a panel. "An ombudsman speaks with a single voice, and over a period of time he can, by wise decisions, build confidence in himself among both city employes and citizenry" according to the statement. "A panel, on the other hand, must either write stilted opinions which represents a compromise among three viewpoints or else h a n d down two or three clashing opin- ions." While t h e grievance officer would be charged w it h hearing complaints against any employe of the city government, Harris in- dicated that he expected most of the complaints filed would involve alleged misconduct of policemen. Wallace 362,325 and W o o d s 131,458. Wood, a multi-millionaire who campaigned on a promise to shift the state tax burden from the working man to big industry, withheld a statement and has not said whether he will take a stand in the run-off election. Brewer carried most of the pre- dominantly black counties, along with big city districts. Wallace, in a television interview, said the black vote went "overwhelmingly" to, Brewer. Wallace promised to "say noth- ing in the runoff to indicate that I am against anyone because of color" but added "I do not think people who vote in a solid or block vote are acting in the interests of good government." No candidate for governor of Alabama has ever come from be- hind in a Democratic primary and won in a runoff election. In Ohio, both Taft and Met- zenbaum were upset victors in yes- terday's primary elections. Met- zenbaum beat former astronaut John H. Glenn Jr., and Taft de- feated Ohio Gov. James A. Rhodes. Taft, 53, grandson of William H. Taft, 27th president of the United States, has been a member of Ohio General Assembly and is in his second term in Congress. He is a supporter of President Nixon's Vietnam policies. Metzenbaum, 52, a lawyer and businessman from Cleveland, cam- paigned on an anti-war plank. He has served as a state representive and a state senator. ready to fire immediately, without pumping a round into the cham- ber. The Ohio Guard described this as standard procedure and said the troops were under standing orders to take cover and fire if fired upon. Such orders are contrary tor standard American military prac- tice which stresses fire discipline and normally requires weapons to be loaded only on an officer's or- der and fired only upon command. A report in yesterday's New York Times from a reporter who witnessed the shootings said about 20 pieces of concrete and rocks were thrown in all at the Guards- men. Canterbury, at his news confer- ence Monday, put the number of Guard involved in the action at 100 and claimed every man had been injured. The injunction closing t h e school was obtained by Portage County Prosecutor Ronald Kane immediately after the shootings. In a copywright story in the Akron Beacon Journal Tuesday, Kane as- serted that Ohio Gov. James A. Rhodes refused to heed his warn- ings to close the school on Sun- day, the day before the Guards- men opened fire with M-1 rifles, killing four and injuring eight othergstudents during an antiwar demonstration. Kane said he met with Rhodes Sunday morning and was told not to ask for an injunction "because it would be playing into the hands of the SDS and the Weatherman," the newspaper said. House edges on Cambodia WASHINGTON -) - In a sur- prise turnabout, the House voted down all efforts yesterday to re- strict use of U.S. troops in Cam- bodia - thus taking no stand for or against President Nixon's mil- itary penetration into that coun- try. An amendment-favored propos- al by Rep. Paul Findley, (R-Ill.), backing the President's decision to send troops into Cambodia to protect lives of U.S.. t r o o p s in South Vietnam was approved 171 to 144 - and then immediately voted down in a parliamentary switch, 221 to 32. Had the proposal supporting the President's decision been allowed to stand, opponents contended it would have given Nixon the same congressional authority to wage war in Indochina that the Ton- kin Gulf Resolution gave former President Lyndon B. Johnson in Vietnam. The opponents, led by Rep. Og- den R. Reid, N.Y., pressed an amendment to bar J.S. combat troops from Cambodia, Laos and Thailand with no exceptions. They demanded two days of debate be- fore putting the issue to a vote. The Findley amendment also would prohibit use of U.S. combat troops in Cambodia, Laos or Thai- land--except when the President determines such action is neces- sary to protect lives of American troops remaining in South Viet- nam. Calling the Findley amendment "another Tonkin Gulf Resolution," Reid argued it would give the Pres- ident congressional authority to launch U.S. strikes throughout Cambodia and into Laos in the name of protecting U.S. troops in South Vietnam. But while the Tonkin Gulf Resolution approved by Congress in 1964 gave Johnson authority to "take all necessary measures to repel any armed attack against U.S. forces and to prevent further aggression" in Vietnam, the em- phasis of the Findley amendment is on banning U.S. troops in Cam- bodia except to protect lives. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the. University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier, $10 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5. by carrier, $5 by mail. II THE MICHIGAN DAILY NEEDS EXPERIENCED AND ENTHUSIASTIC PH TOGRAPHERS MUST BE BRAVE AND FLEET-FOOTED BRING ANY SAMPLES OF WORK AVAILABLE MEETING: 7:00 P.M. THURS. IN DAILY BUILDING 2nd floor if unable to attend: Leave name on Photo Board in Daily . R EXCITEMENT ADVENTURE BLOOD GUTS THE OAK STREET BEACH- a great place to study v Summer school isn't what it used to be. We've compressed over 330 courses in fully accredited graduate and undergraduate programs into easy-to-take day or evening sessions. Over a short two month period. Because the staff at Roosevelt has planned-your courses won't interrupt what you have planned (work or mellow moments). The sun feels great on your back 4vhile reading at the beach. An interesting way to get something accomplished-we think. II .... __ . 1 :: \\ V l '-I ' 11 In