4 a The Michigan Daily-Sunday, March 23, 1980-Page 7 Investigator expects 1I more Klan WASHINGTON (AP)-A longtime Anti-Defamation League investigator predicts an increase in violence this spring and summer as a growing and heavily armed Ku Klux Klan plans stepped-up activities. Irwin Suall, who recently was called in by the U.S. Civil Rights Commission to give a private briefing on Klan activities, said he foresees four types of violence: " Clashes with new, militant leftist groups; " Attacks on black civil rights workers; * Random violence against minority group leaders; and, " Isolated terrorist incidents like cross-burnings by individuals mimicking Klan tactics. SUALL CALLED for better law enforcement intelligence to avert such incidents as the slayings last November of five Communist Workers Party members in Greensboro, N.C. Fourteen Klansmen and Nazis have been indicted in connection with the Greensboro shootings. Suall warned particularly of potential danger in a planned April 19 Klan and Nazi rally in Raleigh, N.C., in support of the defendants in the Greensboro case. HE EXPRESSED similar concern violence over the plans of the New York City- based Committee Against Racism, an affiliate of the far-left Progressive Labor Party, to demonstrate May 3 outside the headquarters of the Texas Klan in Pasadena, Tex. Suall, head of the fact-finding department of the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith, a national Jewish organization, was called in last Tuesday to present his findings to the Civil Rights Comrpission. The league has been monitoring Klan activities since 1915 when Leo Frank, the president of the Atlanta B'nai B'rith Lodge was lynched. Suall has been in charge of that effort since 1967. IN AN INTERVIEW with the Associated Press, he recounted what he told the commission. Suall cited four reasons for the increased potential for violence, including the Klan's new membership gains, the season, rivalry among competing Klans, and decisions .by some Klans and far left groups to seek out confrontation. Meantime, he said the Klan is growing from a low-point of 6,500 members in 1975 to an estimated 10,000 members in four major and some isolated Klan organizations. p.' r A oto HEAVY RAIN in the Northeast left many motorists and homeowners stranded 20 in Westfield, Massachusetts where the Westfield river overflowed its banks. yesterday. Above, Massachusetts resident George Herzig plows through Route Five die in violent storms on east coast MINORITY STUDENT SERVICES presents: ETHNIC THEATER FESTIVAL SATURDAY, SUNDAY, MARCH22 MARCH23 tVa Gray Word and Pt h e u u b a w o r k s h o p E cQb w k From the Associated Press The newborn spring threw a tantrum yesterday, assaulting the Northeast with roof-ripping winds, heavy snows, and driving rains that built the worst floods in 25 years in some areas. Communities were awash across New York and New England, where up to nine inches of rain fell. Many bridges were gone, and water was waist deep across some roads and highways. Hundreds of families abandoned their homes, while others were isolated. At least five persons were killed in weather- related accidents Friday and yesterday. They in- cluded a 26-year-old Maryland woman blown into the path of an oncoming car in the suburbs of Washington, where winds were clocked at more than 60 mph. WHILE GALE-FORCE winds pounded the Eastern states from Virginia to New England, two feet of snow was dumped in parts of western New York State near Buffalo, and the Massachusetts hilltowns of Savoy and.Windsor got up to 12 inches. "We've got people stranded all over the place," said Sheriff Thomas Mayone of Ulster County, N.Y., one of the regions under a state of emergen- cy. "It's a heck of a mess." The town of Middleburgh in Schoharie County, N.Y. was cut off from the outside world as floods blocked two state highways. But many of the residents had been evacuated Friday when the creeks started to rise. ALL ROADS in Kingston, N.Y., were closed and 60 to 80 families were evacuated. Also hard hit by flash floods were the New York towns of Wood- stock, Saugerties, New Paltz and Shandaken. The National Weather Service said the flooding in parts of New York and New England was the worst since 1965, the year of the last major flood in the Northeast. The town of Tannersville in southeastern New York state had received 9 in- ches of rain since Friday morning. In Massachusetts, where the Westfield River surged over its banks after 3 inches of rain fell, Westfield Police Chief Gerald O'Connor also said the water was the highest it has been in his city since the 1955 flood. Students attending a dance at a high school in Huntington, Mass., found their routes home blocked by water. While state police led some of them home in a convoy, 23 students and a dozen adults spent the night in the school. At 3 a.m. they were playing basketball in the gym. Massachusetts police closed several.stretches of U.S. Route 20 between West Springfield and the Berkshires hilltown of Becket. 8:00 p.m. Mendelssohn Theater Workshop 9:30-11:30 Room 124 E. Quad Students with I.D. $2.00 General Public $3.00 -Children under 12 admitted free 8:00 p.m. Mendelssohn Theater Children's performance Mendelssohn Theater 2 p.m Tickets available at Ticket Central, Michigan Union For more information: 764-5418 =Mod SOCIAL SECURITY TAX CUT COULD RESULT: Byrd wants to surpass a balanced budget INTERVIWS FOR STAFF POSIMONS AT NEW CAMP FARDAND "A CAMP THAT BuItDS MENCHEN" This is the NEW CAMP 120 acres of rolling, wood- FARDAND -0a ed hills, surround- Jewish camp for ed' by thousands of the 80's; scenically acres of state land located in the beau- and Oiozens of clear. tiful Wat>edoo Rec- beautiful lakes. reation area, on Our facilities are second to none-riding, sailing, sports, new waterfront, woodlore, camping, canoeing, and wilderness experience. At camp we learn about our. Jewish heritage by studying religion, history, and culture. HIGH PAYING SUMMER JOBS WITH A PROFESSIONAL STAFF TO PROVIDE TRAINING. For interviews starting Monday, March 24 call 764-7456 or 663-4471 WASHINGTON (AP) - Senate Majority Leader Robert Byrd (D-W. Va. ), raised the possibility of a 1981 tax cut yesterday and called it "a very good incentive" for Congress to go beyond a balanced budget and achieve a federal surplus. Byrd said Congress' main task now is to cut federal spending enough to balance the fiscal 1981 budget as a step toward reducing severe inflation. A surplus, if any, could be used to .'Violent' shoe display epapered in protest By NICK KATSARELAS Two women, protesting what they called the "violent" window display at the Roots shoe store on State Street, last night covered the window with newspaper and posted a sign on top of the window, reading "How does violen- ce sell shoes?" "We just think someone should object to this kind of advertising," explained Jenny Hoff, a freshwoman from Bur- sley. The window front displayed green toy soldiers fighting each other, some splashed with red paint. A woman's arm is tied with rope, and toy soldiers floated in vials of red blood-like liquid. Machine guns and shoes hung from white rope in front of a backdrop of white torn paper, upon which was sprayed in red paint, "Ruff & Ready." "It's things like this that encourage rapes, and violence against people," said Sheila Lummis, also a freshwoman from Bursley. AS THE women completed hold off a scheduled Social Security tax increase, he said, and that incentive "should encourage us to make cuts - even though those-cuts may hurt all of us." Reacting to reports of steadily clim- bing prices, President Carter and numerous members of Congress have called for a balanced federal budget. But that wold require substantial cuts in various programs and Byrd said, "We're already being barraged by special interest groups" fighting reduc- tions. "I hope the American people will do some lobbying, too," Byrd said. If Congress votes deep enough cuts, he said, "a surplus is possible." And if it can be achieved in the fiscal year that begins October 1, the surplus money could be. used to hold back the one per cent increase in the Social Security payroll tax that is scheduled to take effect next January, he said. Revenue from that tax increase - about $10.7 billion - is about the same as the anticipated revenue from Car- ter's proposed new fee on imported oil, but Byrd said no direct relationship should be drawn between the two. "The most important thing is to get inflation under control, and we're at- tempting to start to do that with a balanced budget," he said. Byrd said he will oppose one budget- balancing effort - a resolution scheduled to come to the Senate floor this week with the backing of Sen. Bill Roth (R-Del.) and more than 40 colleagues. t t The proposal, which would tie federal spending to the gross national product, is "an attractive idea but unworkable" because it would require impossibly deep cuts in existing programs, Byrd said. Democratic leaders will counter with a substitute proposal that will call for a balanced budget and also seek to defuse the Roth measure by spelling out just how badly Roth-resolution cuts would hurt government programs; he said. KEN GOLDSMITH, M.D. Executive Director GARY BASS, Ph.D. interviewer ._. ... It '1 gg WANNASUBLET YOURIEA. rrr4R 4 The Time, has Come for ?trQ,4 4rb you to place an ad in rv *a I UMMER UBLET U PPLEMENT I NAME (Actual size of ad) Please print or type legibly In the ADDR ESSspace provided, as you would like H the copy to appear. .P.ONE cost is $12.00) I = . aI I .1_ -a 144 1 1 ^A h r% A 11 V A Lenten Seminar on Conditions In, Alternatives For, and Christian Responses To Incarceration GABRIEL RICHARD CENTER Next To St. Mary's Student Chapel 331 Thompson St., Ann Arbor Monday, March 24, 7:00 P.M. TOPIC: Alternatives To Lockup SPEAKER: Marc Mauer, American Friends Service Committee,