Prosecutors call Newton a OAKLAND, Calif. (AP)-Prosecutors claimed yesterday that Black Panther leader Huey Newton's arrest in a gun- fire-punctuated barroom brawl shows he is a threat tosociety. Assistant District Attorney Ed Orloff urged an immediate increase in bail from $80,000 to $200,000 while Newton awaits trial on four-year-old murder and assault charges. Orloff said he has "deep concern for the public safety every minute this defendant is on the street." ButAlameda County Superior Court Judge Martin Pulich gave the 36-year- old Newton one week to prepare a case opposing the bail hike. Newton was freed Thursday night on $50,000 bail in the Santa Cruz County bar brawl case. The murder case involves the death four years ago of a 17-year-old prostitute on an Oakland street. He is charged with assault for allegedly pistol whipping his tailor in his pen- thouse apartment. Newton, chief theoretician of the Black Panther Party, returned to Oakland last year to face the murder and assault charges. He had jumped Program menance bail and spent 2 years of self-imposed exile in Cuba. Santa Cruz officials refused yester- day to release the names of witnessea to the barroom fight, saying some of them already have received telephone calls threatening them if they testify. M age Sov der vey T bor Chi a d the rea T) this citi: 0 Hsit sold they wou rout pro H aloe Chi nor tier clan Chi T rest with The for Pek J. cap then pre: T Ma: me The Michigan Daily-Saturday, May 13, 1978-Page 13 T ass confirms Cin ese fight LOSCOW (AP)-The Soviet news border guards, mistakenly taking the ncy Tass confirmed yesterday that Chinese border for the Soviet Krestov- iet troops violated the Chinese bor- skiye islands, landed and penetrated an and that official regrets were con- insignificant distance into Chinese ed to the Chinese government. territory. he agency said a group of Soviet "No actions against Chinese citizens der guards mistakenly crossed into were committed by the Soviet troops, nese territory Tuesday in search of and, realizing that they inadvertently angerous criminal but returned to found themselves on Chinese territory, Soviet Union as soon as they immediately departed from it. lized the mistake. "In connection with the incident, regrets were expressed to the Chinese ASS DENIED Chinese reports that side," the statement concluded. Tass was a provocation and that Chinese did not say to whom or in what form the zens were harmed. Soviet regrets were expressed. n Thursday, Peking's official IN A DISPATCH from Peking, the nhua news agency said 30 Soviet Japanese news service Kyodo quoted iers intruded 21/2 miles into nor- an unidentified Soviet Embassy official ast China on Tuesday, shot and Friday as telling a foreign diplomatic nded a number of residents and source that "the Soviets could not ac- ghed uip 14 others in an "armed cept Chinese demands ... calling for vocation." punishment of the Russians involved." sinhua said the incident took place Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Yu ng the Ussuri River that forms the Chan on Thursday handed a strongly nese-Soviet border about 1,000 miles worded protest note to Soviet Am- theast of Peking. This disputed fron- bassador V.S. Tolstikov in Peking that area was the scene of armed said: "It was only due to the restraint of shes between the Soviets and the Chinese side that the incident did nese in 1969. not develop into an armed conflict." HE KREMLIN two weeks ago The note demanded punishment of umed eight-year-old negotiations those responsible. h China over the boundary problem. Kyodo also quoted Western sources in talks, which had been suspended Peking as saying the Soviet troops had 14 months, continued yesterday in crossed the sensitive border to rescue ing. the crew of a Soviet helicopter that was apanese reports from the Chinese shot down or forced to land by the ital Friday said the Soviet embassy Chinese after it inadvertently wan- re confirmed the intrusion and ex- dered into Chinese airspace. ssed regrets. Hsinhua said a Soviet helicopter he Tass statement read: penetrated 2%12 miles into .Chinese ON THE NIGHT of the 8th to 9th of territory in the same area, but did not y 1978, in search of a dangerous ar- say the helicopter had been forced d criminal, a group of Soviet marine down. ivewtun t court aims to help students write (Continued from Page 1Y ECB CHAIRMAN Dan Fader stressed that the new program has two "unique dimensions" since it will affect all departments in LSA, high schools and junior colleges as well as upper- level instruction in each department. Fader explained that the rigorous writing assessment will encourage high schools to better prepare their students for college-level writing courses. He said communities should start putting pressure on secondary schools to decrease the teachers' normal load from 150 students to 100 to give pupils more individual attention. Next year will be an "experimental year" for the ECB program. Students with writing disabilities will be recom- mended for tutorials taught by specially-trained teachers, but not required to attend. Barbra Morris, assistant director of the ECB, ex- plained that under the new program the tutorials will be mandatory for Univer- sity students placed in them, because "those students who need tutorial help most tend to seek it least." JOHN RUSS, director of the Coalition for theUse of Learning Skills (CULS), a program which gives academic support to disadvantaged and minority studen- ts, said many CULS students who haven't had proper writing instruction in high school will attend the optional tutorials this fall. According to Michael Clark of the English department, members of the ECB will spend this summer deciding "what makes the best essays better than others," so that the faculty will have some standard criteria for judging students' papers. The program has essentially five par- ts: assessment, tutorial, introductory composition, writers' workshop, and upperclass writing. Barbey Dougherty of the English Department's Writing Workshop, a service which provides in- dividual writing help to students of any level, said the philosophy of the workshop is "developmental, as op- posed to the remedial." Dougherty explained that the technique used in the workshop is one of asking the student questions about his or her writing, helping students help themselves. "A writer has to focus attention on the process of writing as well as the product," said Dougherty. "Writing is a social act where the writer tries to reconstruct for the reader his image of theworld." Fader said he blames society for many students' poor writing. "What television has done to students is made them social isolatgs," declared Fader. "When you are unfamiliar with the social act, you are unfamiliar with language. Dayan: 'I'm STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) - Moshe Dayan stormed out of a news conference yesterday after a questioner implied the Israeli foreign minister could be labeled a terrorist. "I am no terrorist. No one ever told me I'm a terrorist," Dayan retorted af- ter a journalist from the radical London newspaper Time Out referred to charges that Dayan and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin engaged in terrorist acts in their early years. no terrorist' Both were members of Jewish un- derground organizations in the 1940s before the end of British control of Palestine and Israel's independence. After that question, Dayan took one more - telling a reporter Israel seized the West Bank of the Jordan River "because King Hussein of Jordan en. tered the 1967 war despite our war- nings. There was no alternative" - then cut short the news conference saying, "Thank you and goodbye," and stalked out. mixed League Gowling SIGN UP NOW MICHIGAN UNION LANES Wednesday Night-50C per game OPEN 11 AM Mon-Fri, 1 PM Sat and Sun "ALTERNATIVES" * in Energy Studies " in Environmental-Agriculture Studies " in Education Practice " in Style and Reason for Living Contact: Jordan College 360 W. Pine Cedar Springs, MI 49319 Attn. Alternatives Coordinator serving the reli iousYornrnunit" a 4 +tRl '..^* . a