Page Ten 4 0 tIU THE MICHIGAN DAiLY Friday, August 14. 197( Friday, August 14, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Life to the life culture: 7 Troops hunt White Pan ther commune kidnapers MONTEVIDEO. Uruguay (M - Student demonstrations a n d bombings added to the tension yesterday as thousands of police and troops, ignoring the protests of home owners, continued a house-by- house search for two kidnaped foreigners. But the kidnapers, niembers of the leftist Tupamaros national liberation moveient, remained silent about their plans for 65-year- old Claude Fly. a U.S. agriculture expert from Fort Collins. Colo.,! and Brazilian Consul Aloysio Dias Gomide. A third captive. Dan Mitrione. a U.S. adviser to the Uruguayan police. was killed by the kidnapers Monday after the government re- fused a demand to release all political prisoners in return for the captives. An estimated 500 leftist students defied the government and po- lice in staging a demonstration in downtown Montevideo in memory of a young Communist leader killed two years ago in a street clash with police. Firebombs. believed to have been tossed by Tupamaros, caused heavy damage but no injuries at two bank branches in the suburb of Pocitos. The demonstration and bombings occurred as more than 12.- 000 heavily armed police and army troops carried out a house-by- house search for the kidnap victims. The search, which gave this capital of a million inhabitants the appearance of an occupied city, was authorized under a 20-day sus- pension of individual civil rights, approved by the Uruguayan Con- gress. Troops appeared suddenly yesterday morning in a commercial area of downtown Montevideo. stopped traffic and checked identity documents of disgruntled drivers and pedestrians. searching auto- mobiles. briefcases and shopping bags. Nerve gas on it's way Longshoremen load steel encased coffins containing poisonous nerve the Lebaron Russell Briggs, Wednesday in Sunny Point, N.C. The nerv being placed aboard the ship to be towed 283 miles out into the Atlantic feet of seawater. Meanwhile in-Washington, a federal judge was urge Counsel for the Environmental Defense Fund argued that there are beti Patrolman testifies AFSCME dispi claim of neutre about Jackson State Commune members share cooking and baby care. JACKSON, Miss.. (W A Mississippi Highway Patrol official said yesterday that law officers were justified in firing into a women's dormitory at Jackson State College May 14. but he conceded there was no need to fire into a crowd in front of the dormitory. Inspector Lloyd Jones. the ranking state trooper on the scene the night two young blacks were killed and 13 injured. said he saw a sniper fire two shots from the third floor of the dormitory. Jones told the President's Commission on Campus Unrest he was preparing to attempt to disperse the crowd of 250-300 black students with tear gas when his men opened fire. Jones said he saw no need for disciplin- ary action against his men although he did not give the order to fire. Jones insisted that officers opened fire only after being fired on from the dor- mitory and from their rear. One of the black youths killed was near the dormi- tory, the other across the street behind the troopers position. Chicago 7 refused CHICAGO ( - A federal appeals court denied yesterday a motion seeking summary re- versal of the convictions in the Chicago 7 trial of five persons found guilty of crossing state r lines to incite rioting during the week of the 1968 Democratic National Convention.- Their appeal on other grounds remains pending. Defense attorneys contended. that the convictions were ob- tained through the use of il- legal electronics surveillance of telephone conversations by Bobby Seale with his attorney, Seale. Black Panther P a r t y chairman, was severed from the trial. The three judges of the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that surveillance 1o g s submitted to them contained no evidence of eavesdropping on Seale,the other defendants, their attorneys or their staff. A statement that the crowd began moving toward officers just before the shooting had been disputed earlier during the three days of hearing, by Jackson Police Lt. W. Magee who said the crowd was moving away. Jones said no one on his all-white force held ill feeling toward blacks. "If we had wanted to hurt anybody or shoot anybody or kill anybody we could have left 200 or 300 of them lying there." he said. Two members of the commission. which finished its hearings here shortly after noon, were sharply critical of a highway patrol policy brought out in tes- timony allowing the use of privately own- ed weapons and ammunition. Charles Snodgrass, administrative as- sistant of the highway patrol refused to answer questions about the all-white make-up of the patrol on advice of his lawyer. He said this was because of a pending lawsuit attacking the all-white nature of the force. By ROB BIER The University in a position paper released yesterday said it will remain neutral in -the contest between the Teamsters' Union and the American Federation of State, County and Muni- cipal Employes (AFSCME) over who shall be the bargaining agent for most of the University's service and main- tenance employes. However, AFSCME President Charles McCracken said the University was not being neutral and accused the admin- istration of restricting the efforts of AFSCME representatives to talk to their members while Teamsters organ- Izers are given no such resistance. In another development, McCracken, whose union presently represents about 2,400 University employes, said that an AFSCME petition drive to counteract the Teamsters' effort had met with "very good" response. Since Aug. 5, Teamster organizers from Local 614 in Pontiac have been working on tures of A] designating bargaining Teamsters' said Wednes the State E mission by de-certifica If AFSCA the Teamst ficial barga ently in AF a de-certif must have per cent 01 unit, and C have those of hundred Howe v AFSCME b tion petitior terday. "I in already, wi out." Mil gOn fen oft Def per cen a.n Rot Pta Kre she Ie! are con Political posters are on every wall from the central kitchen to the house's 14 bedrooms.