The Michigan Daily Vol. LXXXV, No. 12-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, May 22, 1975 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Laotian youths seize U.S. AID installation VIENTIANE, Laos (P) - Laotian troops guarded the gates of an American housing compound yester- day after about 100 youths took over the U.S. Agency for International Development (AID) headquarters in Vientiane and painted "Americans go home" in red on the walls of build- ings. The Americans were free to go in and out of the housing area, which is known as Kilometer 6. But the troops did not let them take any of their belongings out with them. MEANWHILE, in the south Laotian town of Savannakhet, a dozen Ameri- cans and six other foreigners remain- ed under house arrest for the sixth day. But they appeared to be in no dange' Pathet Lao troops on Tuesday occu- pied the town, which had been a stronghold of the now powerless right- ist faction and its army. The chief American official in the town, San- ford Stone, 58, told a newsman from Vientiane: "We are just fine. We are confined to our houses, but we have food. .. . We have never been asked to leave and we have never been threatened." The seizure of the Vientiane head- quarters of the U.S. AID was the second anti-American demonstration in the Laotian capital since the Com- munist Pathet Lao began taking con- trol of the government two weeks ago and followed similar attacks on the AID headquarters in Savannakhet and Luang Prabang, the royal capital. THE U.S. EMBASSY in a statement Monday night said it was ready to See LAOS, Page 5 Pentagon updates Mayaguez figures An e vening with Young and Ko ttke WASHINGTON IP) - The Pentagon acknowledged yesterday that 23 Americans killed in a helicopter crash in Thailand nine days ago were on a mission related to the capture of the U. S. cargo ship Mayaguez by Cam- bodian gunboats. But an Air Force spokesman said the role was "only tenuously connect- ed" with the Mayaguez and therefore they were not heing counted as com- hat casualties in the operation. M I L I T A R Y OFFICIALS said 18 of the crash victims were Air Force security police being dispatch- ed from another base to Utapao air base in Southern Thailand to form part of a commando force to attempt recapture of the ship. Questions about the helicopter crash had been asked of the Penta- gon two days ago but it wasn't until yesterday that an official answer was provided. MI L I T A R Y SOURCES fami- liar with the episode said they. were at a loss to explain the delay in pro- viding information that clearly was known at the time the big Air Force C-153 helicopter went down, reported- ly from mechanical failure, on May See MAYAGUEZ, Page 5 BULLETI N DETROIT (UPI)-State Supreme Court Justice John Swainson has stepped down from the court pend- ing the outcome of a federal grand jury's investigation of bribery alle- gations against him. Tuition refund process faces court settlement By JEFF RISTINE The process of returning massive tuition overpayments to past and present stu- dents - which would cost the University millions of dollars-remained undetermined and seems likely to be settled in a court- room. The two principal lawyers involved in the tuition refunds disagree on the rules to be applied in determining who shall be repaid. Arthur Carpenter, a local attorney representing more than 9,000 nonresident students enrolled between May 1972 and May 1973, advocates more lenient stand- ards than does Roderick Daane, general counsel to the University. "IT'LL BE a battle all the way down the line, I suspect," says Carpenter. The need for tuition rebates stems from court action dating back to the spring of See 'U,' Page 10Roderick Daane JESSE COLIN YOUNG (above), and Leo Kottke (below) perform to a full house at Hill Auditorium last night.