d Page 2-Wednesday, February 3, 1982-The Michigan Daily Tax exemption status protested a WASHINGTON (AP)- More than half the lawyers n the Justice Department's civil rights division have igned a letter protesting the Reagan ad- inistration's decision to grant tax exemptions to acially discriminatory private schools. ' The reversal of the 11-year-old policy of denying uch exemptions was also opposed by the depar- ment's tax division, solicitor general's office and Of- rice of Legal Counsel, said department sources who declined to be identified. Sources also said the Inter- nal Revenue Service opposed the change. ON JAN. 8, the Justice and Treasury Departments announced that the administration was granting the exemptions, reversing the administration's position in Supreme Court cases involving Bob Jones Univer- sity and Goldsboro Christian Schools. After a storm of protest, the White House announ- ced four days later that it would seek legislation denying tax exemptions to schools which racially discriminate. The Associated Press obtained yesterday a copy of a letter sent to Assistant Attorney General William Bradford Reynolds, head of the civil rights division. THE LETTER said granting tax-exempt status to the schools "violates existing federal civil rights law, as expressed in the Constitution, acts of Congress, and federal court interpretations thereof." "Many of these schools were established for the purpose of perpetuating racial segregation in com- munities which were in the process of desegregating their schools pursuant to the requirements of federal law. Their existence demonstrates approval, if not encouragement, of racial prejudice," said the letter. In congressional testimony Monday, Deputy At- torney General Edward Schmults and Reynolds repeated administration denials of any hesitancy to enforce civil rights laws They argued that Congress had never authorized the IRS to deny such tax exem- ptions and said new laws are needed to prevent the IRS from making social policy by administrative fiat. SCHMULTS acknowledged in his testimony that initial legal briefs for the court cases prepared by the tax division and the solicitor's office supported the policy of denying the exemptions. Schmults also said he and Reynolds were the chief Justice officials who argued for the change. Department sources said that Reynolds consulted only his assistants before making his decision. The sources said the department's Office of Legal Coun- sel argued vociferously up until the day the decision was announced that it would violate existing court decisions. Opponents of the change have noted that the IRS denied the exemptions in 1970 when ordered to do so by a federal court and that those decisions have since been upheld by the U.S. 4th Circuit Court of Appeals. Bloodstains link Williams to other victims. ATLANTA (AP)- Bloodstains found in the back seat of a car driven by Wayne Williamsmatch the blood of two. slain young blacks, witnesses testified. yesterday at Williamds' murder trial. Three forensic serologists from the G orgia Crime Laboratory testified tht the bloodstains in the car matched the' blood types and blood enzyme gropings of slaying victims John Por- ter mnd William Barrett. I E 23-YEAR-OLD Williams, a bla k free-lance photographer and spring talent' promoter, is charged with murdering Nathaniel Cater, 27, n( Jimmy Ray Payne, 21, two of 28 yog blacks whose deaths over 22 rnoths have been investigated by a sp- special police task force. Williams had denied knowing any of the 28. Prosecutors, who are expected to wind up their case this week, are presenting evidence in 10 additional slayings in an effort to show a pattern that may fit the Cater and Payne deaths. One of the serologists, Linda Tillman, acknowledged it would be "impossible" to determine that bloodstains came from a specific individual. THE TESTIMONY was the first time evidence about bloodstains had been presented at the trial. Most of the 12 victims, including Barrett, were asphyxiated, but earlier testimony in- dicated Porter was stabbed to death and Barrett's body has been stabbed in a ritualistic style shortly after his death. . Defensr lawyers objected to part of the serologists' testimony,'calling it "a Hollywood show." Judge Clarence Cooper overruled the objection. Tillman, the 10th witness in 17 days of testimony, said she found the stains un- derneath the material covering the back seat of Williams' white station wagon. The stains were not visible on the surface of the material, she said. SHE SAID the stains matched Barrett's blood, which was type A and enzyme group 1, and Porter's, blood, which was type B and enzyme group 1. Tillman said Williams' blood type is 0, but she admitted she did not know the blood type of Williams' parents or his aunt and uncle, who also had been known to drive the car. Another serologist, John Wegel, said one in four people have the same blood type and exzyme group as Barrett, while seven out of 10 have the same blood type and enzyme group as Porter. WEGEL ALSO testified that type 1 enzymes last only eight weeks outside the body, meaning the stains in Williams'. car were less than, eight weeks old when they were found during a June 4 search. Barrett's body was found May 12 and Porter's was discovered April 12. Under cross-examination, Wegel said the eight-week figure was only ap- proximate. Earlier, Canadian fiber expert Barry Gaudette testified that the possibility that Williams did not have contact with Cater, Payne and 11-year-old Patrick Baltazar is "so remote as not to be wor- th considering." "I'M NEARLY certain there was some sort of association between the victims and the environment of Wayne Williams," he said. With one exception, "we had no major differences in our opinions," said. Gaudette, INBRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Fr ench Communist Party PARIS- The French Communist Party opens its 24th congress today trying to preserve its fragile unity while developing a strategy to halt the worst electoral reverses in its 60-year history. After suffering a-setback in last spring's presidential and parliamentary elections, the pro-Soviet French Communists lost even more ground to the. ruling Socialists within their traditional working class constituency by backing the military takeover in Poland. Although there is some dissent over the pro-Soviet party line toward Poland and Afghanistan, the real dispute is over domestic tactics in the past five years-namely the leadership's inconsistent line toward the Socialists. Mubarak arrives in U.S. WASHINGTON- Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak arrived yesterday seeking acceptance by President Reagan and the American people as a wor- thy successor to the late Ahwar Sadat. The four-day visit is his first since he replaced Sadat after the Oct. 6, 1981 assassination. Mubarak's schedule calls for one formal Oval Office meeting with Reagan, that willbe held this morning. Polish crisis, 'far from over WASHINGTON- The risk of violence in Poland "will grow by the hour" unless, the martial law government relaxes its grip, Secretary of State Alexander Haig predicted yesterday. "The Polish ,crisis is far from over," Haig told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in his first Capitol Hill appearance since the Dec. 13 crackdown, which the United States says is backed by the Soviet Union. Haig told the committee that Western unity in opposition to the sup- pression has been an "unpleasant surprise" to the Soviet Union. Until Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelski, the Polish leader, eases up; "passive and not-so-passive resistance will probably increase," he said. .Deaf lawyer may be allowed to use. computer-in court WASHINGTON- The Supreme Court must decide whether to break its zealously guarded traditions by allowing a deaf lawyer to use an elaborate computer and video display system during oral arguments before the justices this sprg.g Michael Chatoff, representing a deaf schoolgirl in a key case involving the educational rights of the handicapped, has asked the justices to let him use the system in what would be the first proceeding of its kind before the high court. "He does not want to let someone else argue the case," Supreme Court Clerk Alexander Stevas said yesterday. "He points out in the letters to the court that it would enhance' the procedure in other courts" if the Supreme Court allows the system's use, Stevas added. Ford boss speaks at talks DEARBORN- Ford Motor Co. Chairman Philip Caldwell appeared yesterday at talks between his company and the United Auto Workers to wish the bargainers well and emphasize that Ford is striving to become more "people-oriented." Ford's chief bargainer, Peter Pestillo, said the appearance "was not an attempt to upstage the bargaining," but was prompted by "a serious in- terest"!in the negotiations to discuss the state of the auto industry and to ex- press "our intention to becone even more people-oriented." Negotiators trying to work out a wage and-beneit concession package met for more than an hour yesterday morning at the main bargaining table, then broke into eight subcommittees. Pestillo and Ephlin predicted the eight smaller sessions would continue at least through the end of the week and possibly into next week. Reagan proposes GSL cuts for grads 4. 4 4, :I 'I #! a 6 East Lansing 0 Troy (Continued from Page 1) other banks and savings and loans asked for, more information on the program before agreeing to take part. Both Sussman and Donald Deskins, the 'associate dean of the Rackham graduate school, said that the new cut- back of GSLs, if approved, would likely further erode the graduate schools enrollment, which they said has been - -.. declining for several years. Sussman said that if graduate and professional students become ineligible for GSLs, it is unlikely that the Univer- sity will be able to create new sources of financial aid because of its difficult financial situation. GROTRIAN SAID there were about 4,960 students in the Rackham graduate school, the law school, and medical school at the University who were receiving GSLs as of December. These students were receiving a total of about $21 million in guaranteed student loans, he said. Three students groups - the Michigan Student Assembly, the Rackham Student Government, and the Public interest Research Group inr Michigan. - are organizing student op-. position to the proposed elimination of- GSLs for graduatestudents. The three groups plan to hold a con- ference to organize opposition and are circulating a petition that criticizes the Reagan administration's cutbacks in financial aid to students and asks that the federal government maintain such aid at 1980 spending levels. Virginia Trowbridge, a member of PIRGIM who is working on the project, said that about 3,000 signatures have already beetl collected on the petitions. She added that the groups' goal for the drive is 10,000 signatures by March 1. State Rep. Perry Bullard (D-Ann Ar- bor), is sponsoring a House Concurrent Resolution that calls on Congress to reject the latest Reagan proposal'. "Colleges and .universities will have to raise their tuitions evenhigher-to ffset this loss," Bullard said. 1A76YJC40AN WouA N N ar Valentine's Da Page! -SPECIAL LOW RATS- ; . h} Ont sale in the Fishbowl Fob.4,r5I r . STUDENT RgrFs oo , * w 0 I PERSONALS (cash oily) 10 words for $1 .00 starting Feb. 1 ...find us in the FISHBOWL Feb. 3, 4, 5 and 9, 10, 11 ,Now Sirbtgan UaiI Vol. XCII, No. 102 Wednesday, February 3, 1982 The Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at The Univer- sity of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 49109. Sub- scription rates: $12 September through April (2 semesters); $13 by mail out- side'Ann Arbor. Summer session published. Tuesday through Saturday mor- nings:Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. 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