. . , .n . . =Page 2-Wednesday, April 16, 1980-The Michigan Daily CLAIMS LAST RECOURSE FOR OPPRESSED AFRICANS Revolutionaries call for violence BY KEITH RICHBURG Namibian black revolutionary leader :Theo-BEn Gurirab, speaking to a small crowd at Shorling Auditorium Monday night, called the Patriotic Front victory in his neighboring Zimbabwe a "vin- dication" for the use of violence in over- throwing white minority regimes of 'Southern Africa. Gurirab, and three other African 4 4 SUMMER JOBS CAMPa TANVUGA Located in beautiful Northern Michigan. Interviews Friday, April 18 at Career Planning and Placement. Call 764-7456 to arrange appointment. revolutionary leaders from neighboring Zimbabwe, have been touring the state this past week garnering U.S. public support for the use of violence in the struggle against white minority regimes in southern Africa. VIOLENCE AND armed struggle, Gurirab said, is justified as a last recourse of oppressed peoples, and then only when coupled with a political and diplomatic offensive that must not end when the shooting begins. Gurirab's South West Africa People's Organization (SWAPO) has been engaged in just such a multi-front war, trying to free Namibia from its protec- torate status under South Africa's military occupation. SWAPO was for- med in 1960, and for six years tried to peacefully attain black majority rule for Namibia before turning to violence. "The objective of SWAPO was to regain our land, and after that to 'establish control over our own natural resources," Gurirab said. That objec- tive, he said, has been waged on three fronts. "The first and the primary front is Namibia,, itself. It is the objective to mobilize the people, to educate them, to teach them" that they are their own liberators," Gurarib said. THE SECOND front, he said, is "to establish contacts and communicate with. progressive nations - to galvanize the international community." "Having tried all channels to peaceful solutions to the Namibian problem, having petitioned the United Nations repeatedly, we decided on 26 August, 1966, to advance the struggle to the third front - the armed struggle." Gurirab said armed struggle "was something that was thrust upon us." He added, "We have always carried out the struggle concurrent on these three fronts. Diplomacy and military action are not contradictory, but must always be carried out concurrently." Gurirab himself has lately been waging the diplomatic war as SWAPO's representative to the United Nations, where the liberation movement has ob- server status. Having traded in his fatigues for more diplomatic pin striped suits, the guerrilla leader said, "I have been condemned to live in the jungle of New York." AT SHORLING Auditorium Monday night, SWAPO's Gurirab shared a panel with Ernest Simela and Andrew Mtiwa, both of Zimbabwe's recently victorious Zimbabwean African National Union (ZANU) of the Patriotic Front coalition of black liberation movements. Their Ann Arbor stop was sponsored by the Committee on Southern Africa, a cam- pus organization headed by Political Science Professors David Gordon and Ali Mazrui. Simela emphasized to the supportive audience that the patriotic front's hard- fought victory "does not mean an end to the struggle" in Zimbabwe, which will formally transfer to black majority rule Thursday. A story in yesterday's Daily concern- ing the city's proposed 1980-81 budget should have said the proposed budget includes an 8.5 per cent cut in the city's property tax levy, rather than a cut in the smaller lelvy that supports the city's general fund. Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Knifethrower says he tried to kill Ghandi NEW DELHI, India-The man accused of throwing a switchblade knife that narrowly missed Prime Minister Indira Ghandi admitted he intended to kill her, police said yesterday. They also said that they arrested five more people in an effort to uncover an assassination conspiracy. Ram Bulchand Lalwani, 37, who allegedly made the attempt on Ghandi's life, was taken into court yesterday and will remain in police custody until April 24 for further questioning. His lawyer told the magistrate that police had beaten and tortured the suspect and were forcing him to say things he did not want to say. Courtdecides warrants needed for in-home arrests Thursday, April 17, 1980 IRO BLOCK Department of Neurology Cornell Medical Center Regulation of Neuronal Development MHRI Conference room 1057 3:45 to 5:00 p.m. TEA 3:15 p.m. MHRI lounge V (Continued from Page 1) our traditions since the origins of the republic," Stevens said. BUT WRITING for the dissenters,- Justice Byron R. White charged that the decision "ignores centuries of com- mon-law development and distorts the historical meaning of the Fourth Amendment." Yesterday's decision did not attempt to define what kind of emergency "would justify a warrantless entry into a home" to make an arrest. Presumably, police pursuing a fleeing suspect would not always have to stop as soon as the suspect ran inside his or her home. Stevens' opinion also left unanswered whether the warrant requirement exists when police want to arrest a suspect in someone else's home. THE DECISION overturned the con- victions of two New York City men. State authorities must now retry the men or set them free. Theodore Payton was convicted in the 1970 slaying of a service station manager. Police, believing Payton was home, broke into his Bronx apartment while he was out. They found evidence that helped'convict him. If a new trial is held, that.evidence will not ,be ad- inissible. Obie Riddick of Queens was convic- ted of possessing heroin in 1974, after police arrested him at his home and found some of the drug there. If Riddick is retried, the seized heroin found by the arresting officers will not be admissible as evidence. THE RULING carries immediate impact for at least 24 states-including Michigan-in which police have been allowed to make warrantless arrests in criminal suspects' homes. Eleven states have no formal position on the issue, while the remaining 15 states already prohibit such arrests. THE SUPREME COURT ruled in 1976 that police do not need a warrant to make arrests in public places when they have "probable cause" to believe. the person committed a crime. But Stevens' opinion drew a distinction between a public place and an in- dividual's home. Stevens pointed to the Constitution's exact wording-"The right of the people to be secure in their . . houses"-and the "unequivocal endor- sement of the tenet that a man's house is his castle." His opinion was joined by Justices William Brennan Jr., Potter Stewart, Thrugood Marshall, Harry Blackmun and Lewis Powell Jr. JOINING IN White's dissent were Chief Justice Warren Burger and Justice William Rehnquist. IN OTHER decisions yesterday, the court: * Ruled by an 8-1 vote in a Washington, D.C., case that judges may impose stiffer sentences against convicted criminals who refuse to tell authorities about others involved in the crime; and, " Ruled that a $100 million lawsuit in which the Quinault Indian Tribe in Washington and individuals living on allotted tribal lands charged the federal government with mismanagement of timber was filed under an unap- propriate federal law. The case now returns to the U.S. Court of Claims, where the government could be forced to pay damages under some other law. Kennedy gets endorsement from Philadelphia mayor PHILADELPHIA-Senator Edward Kennedy plunged back into the. Pennsylvania campaign on the upswing yesterday with an endorsement from Philadelphia Mayor William Green and a concession from the Carter camp that Kennedy could win the state's April 22 presidential primary. "I believe it's possible for Sen. Kennedy to win in Pennsylvania," said Mayor Green, the second of a large American city to endorse the senator for president. Meanwhile, Kennedy also won the endorsement of the 600,000-member Service Employees International Union, whose president previously supported California Gov. Edmund Brown for president. Ford to shut Dearborn plant DEARBORN-In a drastic manpower and production cutback, Ford Motor Co. anndunced yesterday it will close three plants, including one in Dearborn, and will cut production in four others, including one in Wayne. The shutdowns and cutbacks will eliminate 15,000 jobs. The cuts, designed to save $1.5 billion a year, will reduce Ford's assembly capacity by 14 per cent, or 448,000 vehicles a year. They mean layoffs for 8,900 blue-collar workers-including 965 in Canada-by the end of summer. An additional 6,100 salaried positions will be terminated by a combination of layoffs, resignations and retirements by the end of 1981, said Harold A. Poling, executive vice president in charge of North American Automotive Operations. "It is very tough medicine and we regret doing it, but there is no other way," he said. Milliken: Japan automakers ready to locate in U.S. 4 Subscribe today for spring-summer term SUBSCRIPTION RATES: $6.50 for spring and summer ($7.00 by mail outside Ann Arbor) $3.50 for spring or summer ($4.00 by mail outside-Ann Arbor) R ESUM ES SEND TO: THE MICHIGAN DAILY THEES- DISSERTATIONS Student Publications Building COVER LETTERS 420 Maynard Street REPORTS Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109 SOFT COVER BINDING Phone: 764-0558 24-HOUR TURN AROUND Name: THE TYPING POOL 612 SOUTH FOREST Address: ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN 48104 (313) 665-9843 OFFICE HOURS Phone: __ Student ID No.: MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10:00 A.M. - 5:00 P.M. HOUSING DIVISION FOR 1980-81 ACADEMIC YEAR POSITION OPENINGS FOR RESIDENT DIRECTOR AND RESIDENT ADVISOR BAITS HOUSING-NORTH CAMPUS POSITION OBJECTIVE: To generate a staff team capable of building active support networks in a residence hall housing upperclass, graduate and international students. JOB RESPONSI- BILITIES: Providing leadership in a house of approximately 150 students. Working to strengthen community and support networks for house residents. Designing and implementing educational, cultural, and social programs for residents. Serving as chair on special interest committees. Serving as a peer counselor and referral agent. Advising house government and student special interest groups. Orienting students to Baits and the University. Organizing and coordinating house events. Handling house administrative functions. Staff application forms are available starting April 16, 1980 in Charlene Coady's office, 1500 SAB. DEADLINE FOR APPLICATIONS: 4:00 P.M., April 30, 1980 A NON-DISCRIMINATIVE ACTION EMPLOYER Daily Official Bulletin WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16,1980 Daily Calendar: Psychiatry: Paul E:Chodoff, "The German Con- centration Camp-The Ultimate Stress?", CPH Aud., 9:30 a.m. WUOM: Harold Deutsch, "TheRole of Intelligence Services, 10:10 a.m. Center for AfroAmerican & African Studies: Charles Long, "The InteraCTION Between Religion and Politics in the Black Experience," Whitney Aud., SEB, noon. Center for Russian & East European Studies: Joseph McCadden, "Between Georgia and Turkey: The Meskhi and Their Deportation," Lane Com- mons, noon. Academic women's Caucus: Peg Lourie, Dorothy McGuigan, and Louise Tilly, The New Scholarship on Women and A Proposal for a U-M Center for Resear- ch on Women, 3050 Frieze, noon. Museum of Art: Louise Jackson, "Jean Lurcat's Tapestry, Wings," Museum, 12:30 p.m. Hopwood Awards: A. Alvarez, "The Myth of the Artist," Lecture Hall, Rackham, 4 p.m. Chemistry: Tom Kelly, "Measurement of Trace Nitrogen Compounds in the Lower Atmosphere," 1200Chem., 4p.m. Physics/Astronomy: D. Axelrod, "Motion of Molecules at Biological Surfaces," 296 Dennison, 4 p.m. SUMMER JOBS CAREER PLANNING & PLACEMENT 3200 SAB ON-CAMPUS INTERVIEWS: CAMP SEQUOIA, Adrian, MI. Needs counselors with the following skills: arts and crafts, WSI, western riding, archery and riflery, nature lore. Also needs a cook. Sign up for interviews on April 16. CAMP TAMARACK, Ortonville & Brighton, MI. All types of camp positions. Sign up now for interviews on April 17. MICHIGAN DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC HEALTH. Needs student assistants for inspection of agricultural labor camps. Completion of sophomore year and biology or environmental health coursework required. Sign up now for interviews on April17. CAMP TANUGA, Kalkaska, MI. All types of camp positions. Sign up now for interviews on April 18. SIGN UP PROCEDURES: Call 764-7456 or come to Room 3529 SAB. For more details about these organizations and others offering summer employment, check the information in the Summer Jobs section of Career Planning & Placement, 3200 SAB. LANSING-Gov. William Milliken,. preparing to leave for Japan on Friday, said yesterday he believes that country's automakers are finally receptive to locating plants in the United States. "The Japanese are now getting to the point where they are actively considering the United States as a base for manufacturing operations," he said. Milliken hopes to convince the Toyota Co. to locate its operations in Michigan. He has scheduled a meeting with Toyota Co. officials as part of his eight day tour. Carter extends mandator temperature controls WASHINGTON-Americans can get ready for another hot summer with President Carter's decision yesterday to extend mandatory temperature controls covering 2.8 million offices, shops, and other non-residential buildings for the next nine months. In addition to extending the program through January 1981, administration officials said Garter would ask Congress to pass a law making the controls permanent. The regulations require setting thermostats in non-residential buildings at 780 in the summer and 65 in the winter. (USPS 344-900) Volume XC, No. 156 Wednesday, April 16, 1980 4 The Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 sMaynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48109. Subscription rates: $12 September through April (2 semesters); $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday mornings. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. The Michigan Doily is a membr of the Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service. Los Angeles Times Syndicate, and Field Newspaper Syndicate. News room: (313) 764.0552 76-DAILY: Sports desk: 764.0562: Circulation: 764.0558; Classified advertising 764-0557:Display advertising: 764.0554:Billing: 764s0550Composing Room:764-0556. Editor-in-Chief..................MARK PARRENT Managing Editor.................MITCH CANTOR City Editor....................PATRICIA HAGEN University Editor............ TOMAS MIRGA Editorial Page Editors.JOSHUA PECK HOWARD WITT Magazine Editors--------------ELISA ISAACSON R.J. SMITH Arts Editors...................MARK COLEMAN DENNIS HARVEY Sports Editor..... .............ALAN FANGER Executive Sports Editors...............ELISA FRYE GARY LEVY Business Manager... . . ROSEMARY WICKOWSKI Soles Manager.................DANIEL WOODS Operations Manager..........KATHLEEN CULVER Display Manager...........KRISTINA PETERSON Classified Manager................SUSAN KLING Nationals Manager..,........ .ROBERT THOMPSON Finance Manager...............GREGG HADDAD Circulation Manager ..... .......... JAMES PICKETT Ad Coordinator..................PETE PETERSEN BUSINESS STAFF: Patricio Barron, Maxwell Senolle'. Joseph Broda.. Courtney Costeel. Randi Cigelink. Dnno Drebin, Aida Eisenstat. Barbara Forslund, Alisso " "~ Q I