The Michigan Daily Vol. LXXXV, No. 3-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, May 9, 1975 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Cambodian govt. plans rural society By DENNIS GRAY Associated Press Writer BANGKOK, THAILAND - Cambodia's vic- torious Khmer Rouge leaders are moving to forge a classless society of peasants, sealed off from all foreign influence and interference --according to reports given from a group of about 500 foreigners who arrived in Thailand yesterday. An unknown number of westerners, including at least two Americans, are still believed to be inside the country. "THEY ARE reconstructing society from a commercially-oriented one to a simple, agri- culturally-based revolutionary concept," one American who returned said. "They're going to readjust people's values and they're going to redistribute the agricul- tural and material wealth of the country. The Khmer Rouge will drag down the former elite and there will be hard times for those wo fat-cattedit," he said. Many of the foreign evacuees and observers in Thailand see Cambodia as well on the road to becoming an Asian Albania - a nation sus- picious of foreigners and foreign influence and choosing instead to rely on its own resources rather than risk outside interference. See related story Page 10 IN ONE of the few official communiques out of Cambodia, the new regime said last week that it opposed all forms of foreign "subver- sion and aggression" whether they were "mili- tary, political, economic, cultural, social, dip- lomatic or under the forms of so-called hu- manitarianism." This communique, issued by a special na- tional congress, appeared to be a rejection of aid that other countries, especially in the West, might be planning to offer. t appeared certain that North Vietnam, as well as mainland China, would exert some in- fluence over Cambodia. Both countries sup- plied the insurgent army with weapons and know-how during the five-year war and Pe- king harbored the exiled government of Cam- bodian leader Prnice Norodom Sihanouk. BUT THERE were already indications that the new leaders in Phnom Penh would seek to ward off any undue influence from even their allies, esnecially from the Vietnamese who have been traditional enemies of the Khmers and uneasy allies at best with the insurgents. The communique last week said it would forbidall foreign military installations on Cam- bodian soil, a possible reference to North Vietnamese troops that have been stationed- and still presumably are - in eastern Cam- bodia for more than a decade. See KHMER, Page 10 BULLETIN ANN ARBOR (UPI) - The Washtenaw County Board of Canvassers has agreed to a recount of the city Mayoral election results requested by deposed Republican James Stephenson. Meanwhile, Democratic Mayor Albert Wheeler asked Jackson County Circuit Judge James Fleming to order the city to pay $20,000 in legal expenses he incurred fighting Republican lawsuits that tried to keep him from taking office. AP Photo AThai soldier directs French citizens around barbed wire at the Cambodian border as the last foreign refugees ar- rived. According to the refugees major cities have been vacated by the new Khmer Rouge government. 'U' HIT ON AFFIRMATIVE ACTION: Cobb case stirs anger By SARA RIMER tive Action Committee's probe for its Black officials and faculty members "depth and impartiality", concluding, yesterday zeroed in on the literary col- "Cobb's experience represents only one lege (LSA) deanship crisis as clear evi- isolated case pointing up the weak-to- dence of the University's "weak to non- nonexistent affirmative action practices existent" progress on affirmative action. and policies at the University." Pointing to an investigative panel's As the controversial Cobb probe con- sweeping review of the University's fail- tinued to stir mixed reaction yesterday ure last January to hire noted black edu- with speculation about whether acting cator Jewel Cobb, Affirmative Action Di- LSA dean Billy Frye would allow him- rector Nellie Varner declared yesterday, self to be reconsidered for the deanship "The Cobb case epitomizes what hap- rippled through the University. pens generally at the University. There Frye, who has received overwhelming hringminoritioresfacst th respecto support from the faculty, conceded yes- istrative positions.', terday that he had given the matter "some thought, but hadn't decided yet." THE BLACK Faculty and Staff Asso- ciation (BFSA) commended the Affirma- See MINORITIES, Page 7 Nellie Varner No blues fes t forseen By GEORGE LOBSENZ Despite an apparently favorably disposed City Council, it appears there will be no Ann Arbor Blues Jazz Festival this September. Last year's major problem for the promoter Rainbow Multi-Media was the site of the Fes- tival. This year's concert finds itself without a sponsor at all. RAINBOW Multi-Media, the organization which has arranged the event 'for the last three years, has no plans, and, no capabilities for launching the massive jamboree this year. Crippled by last year's disastrous "Ann Arbor Blues 'Jazz Festival in Exile, Rainbow is, "in- active" and "tremendously in debt" because . 2of the '74 event, according to Peter Andrews, a prominent figure in previous Festivals. Andrews maintains that last summer's "last minute surprise rejection by the Republican- dominated City Council" was responsible for the Festival's downfall. Daily Photo by KENFN Last year's Windsor, Carada Festival, L t a' Bluthough it remained an artistic success, turned See PLANS, Page 6