I -T- Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, June 10, 1970 Wednesday, June 10, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Co ressman says quell Congressnrsay'squell violence with police guns the- news today by The Associated Press and College Press Service Indians battle on two fronts U WASHINGTON UP) - The chairman of a House internal security subcommittee said yes- terday police should have fired on some participants in the Nov. 15 antiwar demonstrations in the nation's capital. Rep. Edwin Edwards (D-La), the chairman, told a hearing on the demonstration that he saw "several instances where gun fire was not only justified but required." His c o m m e-n t came as a film of the demon- stration was. shown to the sub- committee. Edwards' comment drew a re- joinder from Rep. Louis Stokes, D-Ohio), who said that police during mass demonstrations should not be "judge, a jury, and executioner." Stokes said that once the nation has police chiefs and National Guard units who handle -demonstrations as the District of Columbia police did. "this country will'be in much better shape." Edwards then modified his earlier statement as saying that gunfire was justified in two in- stances in the film and "on spe- cific isolated individuals." He said he did not advocate firing into a crowd. Stokes said while he did not condone violence, the country should make an effort to get rid of the underlying conditions which cause it. Washington Police Chief Jerry Wilson said he saw no instances during the Nov. 15 rally in which gunfire by police was jus- tified to quell demonstration. During the November march two major incidents of violence occurred, one the night before the march at DuPont Circle, the other at the Justice Department, following the march and rally. In both instances, large am- ounts of tear gas were used, causing people blocks away to feel its effects. ILLEGAL SCHOOL DESEGRAGATION in the South will be -.. w .y w A .s.S ,. . , - A I - 1 e __ J ._ . virtually eliminated by this fall, according to the Nixon admin- SAN FRANCISCO (A') The istration's civil rights chief. order to cut off electricity to In- Asst. Atty. Gen. Jerris Leonard, head of the Justice Department's dian-occupied Alcatraz I s 1 a n d civil rights division, reiterated yesterday his earlier prediction that Icame from the White House, the 97 per cent of the 3.1 million black students in the 11 southern states Coast Guard says. would attend school in desegregated systems this fallSince occupying the former fed- oeral prison last Nov. 20 and claim- "For all practical purposes, the dual school system as it has ex- ing the land as their own, the In- isted in the South will be eliminated by Sept. 7," Leonard said in an dians had relied on power from a interview. cable to a lighthouse on the is- Leonard's 97 per cent estimate was originally contained in a land. It was shut off May 28. report delivered last week to Vice President Spiro T. Agnew's cabinet "The White House tord us to committee on school desegregation. deny electricity to the Indians," Capt. Charles Scharfenstein, local However, the report was recalled by the Justice Department. Coast Guard commandant, t o 1 d Attorney General John Mitchell said the report had been prematurely newsmen Monday, released and contained unverified statistics. It was reported that the cutoff w a s a preliminary step toward getting the Indians off the island HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESIDENT Nathan M. Pusey so that it could be made into a blasted youthful dissenters yesterday and likened them to the late national park. _ The Indians had a portable Sen. Joseph McCarthy. power generator working Monday In an address prepared for yesterday's baccalaureate service at night. Harvard, Pusey called McCarthy "A symbol of chicanery, deceit .... On another front, members of. and diabolical evil,"'and added that youthful dissenters are now using the Pit Indian tribe were arrested "fear, accusations. strife and excitement" to upset academic com- at Big Bend n30 milesano eao -Daily-Thomas R.Copi Kent, Jackson report finds no {{ I 1 DIG' OlGCA] - DUNI- CONTINENTAL There's a new boss boot onc tat TyroleansJ, designed in I hiking, have been taken over b as their own campus footgear. pie leathers, genuine Vibram 9 grrrreat in every way! MAST'S I 619 E. I trace of sniper WASHINGTON (A'-The head of a federal investigation into the fatal shootings at Mississippi's Jackson State College, and Ohio's Kent State University, said yesterday that the probe has not pro- duced evidence to substantiate stories of snipers. "At this time we do not have sufficient evidence to support the presence of a sniper at Jackson State or at Kent State at the time the firing by the state patrol at Jackson and the Ohio National Guard occurred," said Asst. Atty. Gen. Jerris Leonard. His statement directly contradicts the report released last Thurs- day by Mississippi Gov. John Bell Williams that said an investigation showed state troopers were shot at by a sniper before opening fire on a group of students outside a women's dormitory on the predom- inat3ly black Jackson State campus. Leonard is head of the Justice Department's Civil Rights Divis- ion and leader of a federal investigation into the fatal shootings by law enforcement authorities of the two youths at Jackson State, four students at Kent State, and six men in Augusta. Ga. The civil rights chief refused to comment on whether the probe, in the case of Kent State more than a month along, had identified the officers or guardsmen who fired the fatal shots. But he acknowledged, in the ease of Jackson State; that "pro- cedural problems" had hindered the investigation by FBI agents and Justice Department lawyers. Blaming what he termed a lack of cooperation by state officials in Mississippi, he said, "We are encountering some difficulty in our investigation of Jackson State." With clear implication a federal grand jury may be called in Jackson, Leonard added, "The Mississippi State Patrol has not given us the weapons that were used at Jackson State nor has the Miss- issippi State Patrol offered any of their patrol men for interview by the FBI." Gov. Williams said in reply to Leonard's statement: "There is no obligation on the part of, the state of Mississippi, legally, morally; or otherwise, to furnish hooks, lines, poles, bait, water and fish for Mr. Leonard's fishing expeditions." "Mr. Leonard has refused to submit any of his people to our Mississippi investigating authorities for interview. It's time he learned that co-operation is a two-way street," Gov. Williams said at a news conference in Jackson, Miss. s N 1 -Associated Press First aid at Kent State The Michigan Daily, edited and man day through Sunday morning Univer- aged by students at the University of sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second carrier, $10 by mail. Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- Summer Session published Tuesday .gan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, through Saturday morning. Subscrip- Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues-, tion rates: $5. by carrier, $5 by mail. munties dust as ccart iy uid. "Always they insinuate, distort, accuse, their aim being not to identify and correct real causes, but always rather, by crying alarm. intentionally to arouse and inflame passions in order to build sup- port for 'nonnegotiable demands' and, by this means, to enlarge their following and enhance the power.,", Pusey blamed the inroads of "deceitful talk and the tendencies toward coercive action" in part on those opposed to them who re- mained silent. NORTH KOREA AND THE U.S. continued yesterday to give conflicting reports of last Friday's gunboat incident in the Yel- low Sea.; U.S. Army Maj. Gen. James H. Skeldon repeated South Korea's claim that North Korean forces attacked a lightly armed South Ko- rean vessel south of the demilitarized zone, towed it into North Ko- rean waters. and are now "illegally detaining" it and its 20 crewmen. North Korean Maj. Gen. Lee Choon-sun said that the vessel was a heavily armed spy ship dispatched by the U.S. and that the North Koreans sank it north of the DMZ. The U.S. Navy has denied that any American ships were operat- ing in the area. Skeldon insisted that the vessel was South Korean and demanded a report on the condition of the crew members and the prompt return of the men and the boat. Lee countered with a demand that the U.S. apologize for "dis- patching the spy ship" into North Korean waters. trespassing on land of the giant Pacific Gas & Electric Co. The Indians say they own the land. Deputy sheriffs arrested 33 In- dians Saturday at a company campground and eight Monday. In court, at Redding, south of Big Bend, San Francisco attorney Aubrey Grossman argued for the Indians that in 1963 the federal Indian Claims Commission ruled a vast acreage in northeastern Cali- fornia that had been illegally tak- en from the Indians during the gold rush. a I F -A GET YOUR MAN WITH want Ad. Su bscri THE MICHI( _:: -W .'' - ' $ - V 5: e 'a .a. -Associated Pre s Patroling in Buenos Aires Argentine troops ride through Buenos Aires yesterday in an armored personnel carrier in support of the three-man military junta which seized power Monday, ousting President Juan Carlos On- gania. The generals who led the coup have promised to install a new president within ten days. 'BRAIN MISTRUST': University group investigating activities o U.S. industries Litter doesn't throw itself away; litter doesn't just happen. People cause it-and' only people can prevent, It. "People" means you. Keep America Beautiful. -edvertising contributed for the public good Student Book Service NOW OPEN EVENINGS 7:00-10:30 many nice books 1215 S. UNIVERSITY 761-0700 Open daytime beginning June 22nd DEMONSTRATIONS ARE IGNOR TELEGRAMS HAVE NOT WORKS THE WAR CONTINUES.. MAKE CONGRESS STOP THE WAR HELP ELECT PEACE CANDIDATES TO CONGF COME TO THE MASS MEETING MOVEMENT FOR A NEW C Wednesday, June 10 UGLI Multinurpose Room "MOBILIZE FOR PEACE" By ANITA WETTERSTROEM Is what's good for GM good for the world?" That is the question a campus group of re- searchers is asking of General Motors Corp., as well as of a number of other industrial giants. And its answer is an emphatic "No!" Calling itself the Brain Mistrust (BMT), the group of mostly graduate students was organized following the Dow Chemical forum in March. For that confrontation, in which Dow repre- sentatives defended charges leveled against them by a panel of faculty and students, various in- dividuals began investigating all areas of Dow involvement. These people became increasingly alarmed at the- extensiveness and character of the corporation's "anonymous" activities. Spurred by a common concern over the far- reaching power and practices of Dow, the hand- ful of individuals organized and continued their industrial investigation, expanding their ranks to about 20 and their focus to to include, at present, General Motors. Barry Bluestone, Grad., one of the founder t of BMT explained the goal of the organization: "A good part of the New Left has been arguing for quite some time over what happens when large companies in the U.S. control not onlyeconomic activities but political ones as well." "We hope the BMT will put empirical facts behind those statements and will show people what happens when the economy is dominated by two or three hundred companies and by no more than 3,000 to 4,060 people." - The main efforts of the group are expended in gathering such information as size, wealth, products, activities and ties of large companies, as well as to identify who controls them. "We want to document all kinds of informa- tion," explained Don Larkin, Grad., "abuses as well as good things, but so far, we haven't found many of the latter." Most of their data is found in periodicals such as the Wall Street Journal, Time magazine, Busi- ness Week and in the companies' own business reports. They examine practices of discrimina- tion, pollution, "imperialism," war support and political control. Of major concern to Larkin is the extent of power wielded by a small number of men. "In a large number of huge corporations, the power is in the hands of a very few me' who use it in their own self-interest," Larkin said. "And abuses are bound to happen unde- such circumstances." "Things like pollution are not 'costs' to a company," he explained. "They are never entered on a balance sheet," and until lately were never mentioned to stockholders, he said. "For GM, the ever increasing number of cars on the highway is of no interest," Larkin as- sertedL "as long as they can keep selling cars,. it's fine to them." The BMT works to make its findings public. "We're basically a fact-finding group," said Lar-, kin, "We hope people will make use of our in- formation." See GROUP, Page 10 We're in rare for ADVERTISERS, TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OU NEW TABLOID SHAPE. IT CAN MAKE YOU ADS MORE EFFECTIVE DUE TO: A. the same ad taking up a larger percentage of the page and thus bei more visible B. the lesser number of ads on each page causing readers to stop and ling over your ad OUR SALESMEN HAVE THE IDEAS; COME IN AND CONFER OR CALL 764-0!