Thursday, June 19, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Blue Magic band may cite all city officers in lawsuit By DAVID WHITING An attorney for Blue Magic, a rock group allegedly brutalized by two unnamed local police- men last month, said yesterday that he may sue every city police officer in an attempt to identify the two men involved. "There's more than one way to skin a cat," declared Ivan Barris. "I'll name every one of them (the city officers) as defendants to bring them into court so the band can identify the ones involved if we can't identify them before the hearing." BARRIS, a prominent Michigan criminal law- yer and former president of the Detroit Bar Asso- ciation, also said he would "subpoena all the police logs" in an attempt to get more informa- tion on the incident. The Blue Magic band was stopped May 10 by at least 10 county sheriff's deputies and city policemen, who suspected that one member of the group was carrying a concealed gun. Six band members later filed a $12 million law suit, contending they suffered physical and verbal abuse from two deputies and two city police officers. However, they could only identify the county officers by name. THE Philadelphia-based group, distributed na- tionally by Atlantic Records, was enroute from an engagement in Muskegon to another in Erie, Pa., when they pulled off U.S. 23 and stopped at Howard Johnson's, an all-night restaurant on Carpenter Rd., about 3:30 a.m. The 13 member all-black group, including seven musicians, five singers and a soundman, then went in the restaurant and, according to a waitress, ordered steak and eggs in a "courteous" manner. However, the usually casual employes' faces quickly tightened when Katherine Zimmerman, the cook's fiance, who often dropped in to chat, help out a little or have a bite to eat, leaned across the counter and told assistant manager Lynn Herman that one of the group apparently was carrying a gun. ZIMMERMAN reported that a man, who was seen sitting with the band while standing across from her, pulled a brown handled gun, with a clip out of his waistband above his left pocket, put it back and then pulled his upper article of clothing over it. The gun as described by Zimmerman has never been found. Herman then slipped to the back telephone where she called the sheriff's office at 4:30 a.m. See BLUE, Page 7 Somebody bail, quick! "Keep rowing," Mayor William Schaefer seems to say to his faithful crew, the Baltimore City Council. In an attempt to re- enact Washington's crossing of the Delaware, the group floun- dered about the harbor in the Patapsco River for 20 minutes. Arabian prince beheaded for Faisal's assassination RIYADH, Saudi Arabia UP) - A young Saudi price knelt at the chopping block yesterday and was publicly beheaded with one swipe of a gold-handled sword for the assassination of his uncle, King Faisal. Thous- ands chanted "Allah Akbar"- God is great - and "justice is done." Prince Faisal Ibn Musaed, 27, had been judged guilty by a Sharia, or religious court, of assassinating his uncle as the monarch celebrated the Moslem feast of the Prophet Moham- med's birthday last March 25. THE A M E R I C A N- EDUCATED prince was led out of the jail behind the gov- ernment palace into Dira Square. An official of the court faced him and read the guilty verdict, then invoked "heaven's mercy" for the convicted man. Prince Faisal appeared calm, His hands were tied behind his back, but he was not blindfold- ed. As the prince knelt, a secur- ity man prodded him in the side with a stick so that his head jerked upward. The execution- er, a black Saudi in a yellow Galabiya robe, brought the sword flashing down and de- capitated him. Blood spattered on the dusty pavement. THE ASSASSIN'S H E A D was hoisted briefly on a wood- en stake and displayed to the applauding crowd. Immediately afterward, the head and body were placed on a stretcher and carried away for burial in an unmarked grave - the same simple Is- lamic interment given to the assassinated monarch. A brief radio announcement said the "execution was carried out . . . for commiting the crime of killing His Majesty King Faisal . . . which was a loss to the Arab nation and to Islam." IT SAID the loss of King Faisalswas mitigated only by a verse in the Koran, the Moslem holy book: "And re- gard not those killed for the sake of Allah as dead, because they are alive beside him re- splendent in his favor." Theprincehwas the first member of the Saudi royal family ever executed in public. The only member of the royal family who witnessed the exe- cution was Prince Salman, younger brother of King Faisal. He is the governor of Riyadh. King Faisal, whose age was listed as 69 or 70 was shot at close range before a horrified group of Saudi officials and a visiting Kuwaiti delegation. He died almost immediately, though he was taken to a hos- pital in a desperate attempt to revive him., PRIME MINISTER Indira Gandhi, who was convicted for election irregularities last week, receives a petition from Punjab chief minister Zail Singh that was signed in blood by Pun- jabi youths declaring their allegiance to her. Administrator, students object to cutbacks, in dormitory services Balance of payments greatly improved WASHINGTON () - The na- count measures the movement tion's balance of payments of money across national boun- showed the biggest improve- daries. The latest figures m-ant ment on record during the first more dollars were staying home three months of this year, the to fuel the U.S. economy. Commerce Department report- In another report, the Com- ed yesterday. meroe Department said total The account was still in de- personal income of Americans ficit by $475 million but it was jumped by the biggest amount a marked drop from the $6.57 in eight months during M a y . billion dficit in the last three The increase amounted to $9.3 months of 1974. billion, or a seven-tenths of one THE balance of payment ac- See BALANCE, Page 7 :' 1 l a s t 3 i e t f 7 "t I By ELAINE FLETCHER A University dormitory direc- tor and a group of students have separately charged the Housing Office with operating in undue secrecy and failing to abide by a Regental decision ordering that the current standards of student dorm services be main- tained in the coming academic year. According to Richard Mun- son, director of Alice Lloyd Hall, plans to eliminate about $250,000 fromn the dorm service budget next year will "go against a Regental mandate" by signifi- cantly reducing services for students. MUNSON said yesterday he communicated this to John Feldkamp, director of housing, in a May 15 memo, but has re- ceived no response. The Regents voted at their February meeting to maintain the current dorm rates in spite of administrative pressures to raise the fees. However, the group also in- dicated that any operating cost increases should be covered by the dorm system's reserve funds so as to not cause any cuts in student services, said Munson. REGENT Robert Nederlander (D - Birmingham) yesterday agreed, saying, "It was not the Regents' intent to cut back any services at the time we held rates." But at the same time, a com- mittee on cost reductions has considered numerous proposals for cutbacks in student food and maintenance service that when finalized will total $210,000, ac- cording to Jim Anderson, Hous- ing Office administrative assist- ant. Feldkamp maintained that the cutbacks do not affect basic services and for that reason feels "that the Regents are in full accord with what we're do- ing." THE STUDENT members of the cost reduction committee and one Bursley RA plan to bring this as well as other hous- ing issues before the Regents at their monthly meeting sched- uled for tomorrow. "Our basic contention is that Feldkamp is pulling a fast one on the Regents. He's raising the rates by cutting the amount of services on which those rates were based," argued Kim Kel- lar, one member of the group. "The students are tokens on the committee," contended Kel- lar. "Feldkamp only wants us up there so he can say we are they come fall when the stu- dents complain of service." THE STUDENT group also plans to inform the Regents of numerous housing administra- tion refusals to publicly reveal re po r ts on their proposed budgets. Munson also requested that the members of the committee on cost reductions receive copies of a confidential report distri- buted to the Regents that dis- cussed excessive expenditures within the Housing Office. However, Feldkamp claimed that he knew of "no informa- tion that was given to the Re- gents that Dick Munson hasn't seen," adding that the report "wasn't a written one."