0 Page 6-Thursday, April 10, 1980-The Michigan Daily Civil rights protest erupts in violence 16 it r; Jeff M1 "FROM ,AGI Q STAGE" nine1 Iofginal ls WRIGHTSVILLE, Ga. (AP) - State troopers moved in to help restore peace yesterday in this rural Georgia com- munity where civil rights leaders claim the sheriff led a "mob of whites" in a club-swinging attack on black demon- strators. Gov. George Busbee ordered about 30 troopers into the town of 2,100 when black leaders vowed to stage another demonstration in their months-long protest over. jobs and political representation. BUSBEE SAID troopers would be on hand today to accQnpany deputies to Johnson County High School, which was closed yesterday as a result of the unrest. "We'll have enough assistance to make sure we have just students there and no outsiders or adults that would in- terfere," Busbee said. VIolence erupted Tuesday night when scores of singing and chanting demon- strators gathered outside the office of Johnson County Sheriff Rowland At- taway. BLACK LEADERS claim a group of 100 or more whites - including the sheriff and other law enforcement of- ficers - attacked about 75 demon- strators as they chanted for the sheriff to step out and meet with them. At least nine people were injured in the brief melee. Black leaders said that later during the night whites rode through black neighborhoods and fired shots at several houses. Attaway branded as "damned lies" the charge that he or other police of- ficers were involved in the violence. ATTAWAY yesterday refused to meet and discuss the problem with black leaders. They include state Rep. David Lucas, who was at the demon- stration; John Martin, local president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, and the Rev. E. J. Wilson. He said he wold meet only with local black citizens "with open minds." Lucas claimed Attaway personally led the attack. "ATTAWAY AND his deputies were calling the protesters 'niggers.' At one point, he huddled briefly with his chief deputy, then he led his deputies into the crowd," Lucas said. "The were swingingrtheir sticks and beating people over the head." Lucas claimed that whites in the crowd displayed pistols and other weapons before the violence occurred, and that Attaway refused to do anything about it. Lucas said he escaped assault himself by brandishing his own pistol during the fracas. "At one point," Lucas said, "the sheriff got in my face and told me I was a state representative and that I had no damn business being there, and that I'd better get out of town." 'P''ho"o WASHTENAW COUNTY HOMEBUILDERS parade their vehicles in Ann Arbor yesterday to protest the federal govern- ment's tight money economic policies which are causing a slump in the construction industry. Ann Arbor's protest was one of a number of similar parades around the nation yesterday. Home builders protest economic policies wth bulldozer parades U________________________ ANN ARBOR' POW WOW Featuring: Traditional Native American dances, dance contests, booths for arts and crafts & food. APRIL.12&13 Saturday - 2 p.m. & 8 p.m. Sunday - 2 p.m. Huron High School Donations: Adults - $3.00, Students (with I.D.) - $2.00 Children (12 and under) - $ .75 764-5418 or 662-0567 I Public invited! From AP and UPI Thousands of homebuilders wheeled their bulldozers and backhoes through city streets across the nation yesterday to demonstrate their anger over tight money policies and the depressed housing market. "We've got nothing else to do with the equipment. We might as well put it on parade," said John Mahan, president of the Fargo-Moorehead Home Builders Association in North Dakota. SPIRALLING HOUSING prices and record costs for borrowing money have sharply cut the demand for housing and threatened their livelihood, builders said as they staged protests around the country yesterday. The Commerce Department has reported new home sales in February fell by a five-year low of 9.5 per cent nationwide. Officials predicted the March figurewould be even bleaker. Homebuilders demonstrated in Con- necticut, Utah, Wyoming, North Dakota, Maine, jIissouri,. and Massachusetts. The North Carolina Home Builders Association declared yesterday "Saving Housing Day." MERRILL BUTLER, president of the National Association of Homebuilding, (NHBA), said projected losses in new housing could result in the loss of 1.6 million jobs. In Ann Arbor, about 900 Michigan members' of NHBA protested by mailing to the White House 1000 pieces of numbered two-by-fours emblazoned with the message, "Help - where will our children live?" THE BOARDS, which cost the group about $400, were mailed after a three- mile convoy of cars, trucks, bulldozers, semi-trucks and pedestrians made its way through Ann Arbor from the offices of Rep. Carl Pursell (R-Plymouth). "Well, I think we ought to hit him (President Carter) over the head with a two-by-four, and I think he'll wake up," Pursell said. IMMEDIATE CASH Students right now are earning money While studying! A 2?Plasma with py you #12.00 for each visit. Bring in this coupon and receive an x-tra $5.00. Gunman hijacks American jetliner to Cuba GRAPEVINE, Texas (AP)-A stocky man armed with a .45-caliber pistol scaled a wall at a Los Angeles airport yesterday, hijacked an American Airlines jet and ordered the seven crew members to fly him to Cuba. The plane took off, stopped for fuel at Dallas-Fort Worth and flew on to the Caribbean. The incident was the second hijacking by a man demanding to go to the Caribbean island this year. There have been more than 150 hijackings of U.S. planes since 1961. FRED FARRAR, a spokesman for the Federal Aviation Administration in Washington, said there were three A2PIASM4A Mon-Thurs 10-6 Fri-Sat 8-3 214 S. Fourth Ave. 662-7744 l Use Daily Classifieds FDA License Number: 77701 14 - I flight crew members and four flight attendants aboard the jet. Their names were withheld by the airline. FAA spokesman Dick Hallen said the plane was seized at Ontario Airport at 7:58 a.m. PST and took off for Texas about a half hour later. It had been scheduled to depart at 8:15 a.m. PST for Chicago with 74 passengers. The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) cleared the plane for takeoff without specifying a destination, FAA spokesman George Burlage said. BURLAGE SAID the plane would "go where the guy wants it to go." "If the guy's got a pistol, I guess that's enough clearance," Burlage said. As about 25 FBI agents and numerous other law enforcement officers stood watch, two fuel trucks met the hijacked 727 and one serviced it. Under the direction of the FBI, officials at the airport tried to stall the takeoff by putting another aircraft in front of the plane and saying wind conditions were unfavorable. BUT THE HIJACKER began to reach Medieval and Renaissance Colegium MARC Student Housing Fall and Winter1980-81 Would you like to live in an elegant neo-Tudor mansion (East Quad)? Dining hall, library, cultural events, interestinq asso- ciates, old-world ambience. The Medieval and Renaissance Collegium is now accept- ing reservation for student accommodations in the MARC Residence House, effective September 1980. If you are a MARC con- centrator or if you are interested in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, you are eligible to live in the Marc House. For information or to reserve a room for the Fall, call BOTH the Housing Office (763- 3164, 1011 SAB) AND the MARC office (763-2066, 206 Tyler, East Quad) with your name and address. Act now on your reservation. Only a limited numberof places are available. a "panicky stage," Watson said, and the plane's captain askead that the stalling attempts cease. The hijacker apparently calmed down after that, Waton said. "As far as we know the hostages are OK and the plane is going directly to Cuba," said American spokesman Paul Haney. "Of course all of that is subject to change." "We follow a strategy of obeying the gunman until we get the aircraft on the ground. Then it's in the hands of the FBI," said American Airlines spokesman David Lobb, adding, "Our paramount interest is the safety of the crew. That's all we care about." - Farrar said . the U.S. State Department had been in contact with the Cuban government about the hijacking, and that Cuban officials had agreed to allow the plane to land there. The hijacker was identified only as a young black male armed with an automatic pistol. Fred Reagan, an FBI spokesmanin Los Angeles, said the FBI was looking into the possibility that the hijacker was a man wanted in connection with the kidnapping and slaing of 10-year-old Ronald Tolleson of West Covina, Calif. "We are investigating that possibility, among others," Reagan said. Tolleson was found dead Friday in a garage two doors from his family's home. There have been three arrests in the case, but authorities are still seeking a fourth man who was last seen in the Fontana area near Ontario. The Los Angeles Department of Airports said it planned a investigation of security at Ontario airport. Department spokesman Jack E. Francois said investigators "will be trying to find out how this happened and to cose any gaps there may be." Cuban troops fire at Peruvian embassy crashei. TACKSĀ® LIMA, Peru (AP) - Cuban troops fired shots yesterday at a man who tried to crash his car into the Peruvian Embassy grounds in Havana, where an estimated 10,000 Cubans have jammed the embassy compound in search of asylum, Peruvian Foreign Ministry sources said. The sources, who asked not to be identified, said a bullet grazed the hand of a child inside the embassy. A clinic said the wound was not serious. THE SOURCES said the man, not immediately identified, smashed his car into the iron fence surrounding the embassy grounds but did not succeed in getting through.- The troops opened fire, the sources said, and the man's car crashed into x< (7N another vehicle parked outside the em- bassy. The man was seized and taken away by Cuban troops, the sources said. The foreign ministers of Peru, Venezuela, Ecuador and Bolivia and the deputy foreign minister of Colombia held a closed meeting in Lima yester- day to discuss a coordinated program for helping the refugees. These nations comprise the Andean Pact, a regional common market grouping. The ministers were to meet again today. PERU SENT three diplomats and two policemen to Havana to reinforce the five-member embassy staff that has had to cope with the flood of humanity in the 20-acre compound in a Havana suburb. The sources said embassy personnel had begun registering the Cubans, who want Peru's help in leaving the come munist-ruled Caribbean island. They said embassy personnel are asking the Cubans for their names, personal backgrounds, and why they want to leave the country. Peruvian Foreign Minister Arturo Garcia y Garcia said before the Lima meeting that once final arrangements are made with the Cuban government, relief officials should be able to quickly evacuate the Cubans. He said there were "good , possibilities" th4 evacuation would begin soon. CANTERBURY LOFT presents -U STATEMENTS AFTER AN ARREST UNDER THE IMMORALITY ACT and THE ISLAND by A THOL FUGARD~ I April 10, 11, 12, 17, 18 and 19 4 Bass Tacks have more fun Take it from Bass. Fashion can be a lot more fun in the comfort of Tacks. The all-leather flats that always look right. as part of the - FESTIVAL of SOUTH AFRICAN CULTUREr For further Festival information call 665-0606 These productions are for mature audiences, nudity is. involved. B, CANTERBURY LOFT-332 South State Street, second floor ti HOUSING DIVISION OXFORD HOUSING EMANUEL CO-OP (French House) Onenina for Resident Director-1980-81 Academic Year Aul mik M LII