3 Four anti-Klan protesters arrested in minor scuffle From AP and UPI SOUTHFIELD, - Four robed Ku Klux Klan members, led by Im- perial Wizard Bill Wilkinson, dodged eggs and rocks as they pcketed briefly yesterday outside the offices of subur- ban Detroit television station. The four white-robed and hooded Klansmen protested outside the offices of the Southfield-based WXYZ-TV because the station - under public pressure - had cancelled a debate between Wilkinson and a former Black Panthers member. As the Klansmen approached the gates surrounding the studios, about people, some hurling rocks and eggs aid shouting obscenities, rushed the group and began beating them with fists until police disbursed the crowd. THREE ANTI-Klan protesters were Scharged with assault and battery and with resisting and obstructing police of- fices, while a fourth was charged with assault and resisting police. All four were released on $100 bond. "We had one officer slightly injured," policeman Mike Martin said. "Everybody, including the Klan mem- bers, were just bruised and shaken up a little bit." Wilkinson said he would press assault and battery charges against those arrested. KLANSMEN warned police they would protest at the station. "They will be in there full regalia, or as Wilkinson puts it, 'with their pointy hats on,' " Southfield Police Capt. Jen- nings Shaver said after meeting with Wilkinson earlier. "He (Wilkinson) said they intend to try to get some attention but the media has blacked him out so far and he doub- ts if he would get any," Shaver said. "WE WANT TO put a little heat on WXYZ, and the best way to do it is to let them know who's out there picketing," Wilkinson said. "Obviously, that's (the hats) our identification. We'll be wearing our robes. When the priests go out to demonstrate, they wear theirs." The demonstration lasted less than 1 hours, ending at 2:20 p.m. when Klansmen left in a pair of cars amid a chorus of blaring horns and insults shouted by pasuersby. I Car crash kills three agents issigned to protect royal party YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK, Calif. (UPI) - A head-on car crash yesterday killed three Secret Service agents assigned to protect Queen Elizabeth II as the royal party headed irto the snowy Sierra for the weekend. The queen and Prince Phillip went to Yosemite National Park to relax after hosting a wedding anniversary dinner that turned into an intimate late-night champagne party for President and Mrs. Reagan on the royal yacht in San Francisco Bay. 10 THE DEAD agents were part of the detail assigned to protect the queen and Prince Philip during a weekend in the national park. The accident did not in- volve the royal motorcade, which passed through the area about 30 minutes later, the California Highway Patrol reported. The identities of the dead agents were withheld pending notification of their families. There were at least two other in- juries, including a sheriff's deputy. A HIGHWAY patrol spokesman said a Mariposa County sheriff's patrol car -HAPPENINS Sunday Highlight Their name might suggest otherwise, but with its clear, crisp picking, The Hot Mud Family is one of the hottest midwest bluegrass bands. The group will be performing at The Ark, 1421 Hill St. Doors open at 7:30 and the show begins at 8 p.m. Tickets are $5. Films AAFC - Nran Guin, Color of a Pomegranate, 7 p.m., Aud. A. CG - Hiroshima, Mon Amour, 7 & 10:15 p.m., Lorch. Hill St. - Modern Times, 7 & 9 p.m., Hill St. CFT - Dressed to Kill, 7:30 & 9:30 p.m., Michigan Theatre. Performances Trumpet Recital - Robert Sullivan, 2 p.m., Recital Hall. Oboe Recital - Vi Huffman, 4 p.m., Recital Hall. Clarinet Recital - Doug Storey, 6 p.m., Recital Hall. Piano Chamber Music Recital - Heasook Rhee, 8 p.m., Recital Hall. Choral Conducting Recital -Joseph Line, 4 p.m., Rackham. Musical Society - Dresden Staatskapelle, 8:30 p.m., Hill Auditorium. PTP - "The 1940's Radio Hour," 2 p.m., Power Center. Miscellaneous Aikido - Practice, teacher T. Blackburn, 6 p.m., Wrestling Rm., Athletic Bldg. Racquetball - Practice meeting, 9 a.m.-noon, Courts 1 through 5, NCRB. Women's Athletics - Basketball, Mich. vs. Minnesota, 2 p.m., Crisler Arena. Matthaei Botanical Gardens - Exhibit, "Ikebana - Japanese Flower Arranging," lobby. William Monroe Trotter House - Exhibit, 110-piece photographic exhibit depicting the fampus personalities and confrontations of the civil rights movement, 6-10 p.m., 1443 Washtenaw, free. Monday Highlight The University Activities Center kicks oiff Michigras festivities with a free film festival at MLB 3. Films include Ride the Wild Surf, Head, at 8 p.m., and The Last Picture Show at 10 p.m. Films CG - Japanese Film Series, 7 p.m., Lorch, free. Creation Science, film by Students for Origins Research, 7 p.m., Univer- sity Lutheran Chapel, 1511 Washtenaw. Performances Trombone Recital - Gordon Good, 8 p.m., Recital Hall. Poetry Series - Will Cares and Chuck Cares, 8 p.m., The Guild House, 802 Monroe. Academy of Early Music, "Seicento Transalpino," featuring Concerto Castello, 8 p.m., Pendleton Rm., Michigan Union. Speakers Women's Research Club- Mary Crichton, "The Image of Male Beloved in Women's Love Poetry," 7:45 p.m., West Conf. Rm., Rackham. Computing Center - Introduction to Tell-A-Graf, Forrest Hartman, 3:30 - 5 5p.m., 176 BSAD. Department of Chemistry - "Synthetic Routes to Dimetallocycloalkanes," John D'Errico, 4 p.m., 1200 Chemistry Bldg. Young Workers Liberation League - "Apartheid in South Africa: Who Supports It? Who Fights Against It?" Goeffrey Jacques, 7:30 p.m., Trotter House. Women in Design-"Trends in Illustration," Les Miller, 7:30 p.m., School of Art Rm. 2104. Meetings Parents & Friends of Lesbians & Gays - 7:30 p.m., First Methodist Chur- ch. 120 S. State St. Washtenaw Committee Against Registration and the Draft - Planning sideswiped a Secret Service car on state highway 132 between La Grange and Coulterville, then continued down the road and crashed head-on into another Secret Service car. Although the royal motorcade was detoured around the crash scene on a parallel road, photographers in a van following the queen's limousine said the wreckage was clearly visible to the passing royal party. The queen's physician, traveling in the motorcade, offered his services but was told local authorities had the mat- ter in hand. The agents killed in the crash had been driving ahead to reach the hotel and sleep before going on duty at mid- night, a Secret Service spokesman said. The royal press spokesman, Michael Shea, told reporters the queen "was ex- tremely saddened by the news" of the accident. Mic higras fes t ivities to begin tom orro w (Continued from Page 1) the road will go toward financial aid, Grumer said. Saturday will feature a dance marathonsponsored by Zeta Beta Tau fraternity to raise money for the AmericanCancer Society. GRUMER SAID UAC will open an arcade and casino in the Union Satur- day night, which will include "jello snarfing," hairy legs, and poker con- tests. Chances to play ping-pong, billiards, and snooker will also be of- fered. The week's festivities will wind down with a champagne brunch at the Union beginning midnight Saturday, Grumer said. BOSTON (AP) - He is in his 20s or 30s, a little shorter than average, a little overweight. He prefers a firearm - usually a rifle - and is likely to kill his victims in their homes. More often than not, he sports a mustache. That, say two Northeastern Univer- sity professors, describes the American mass murderer, a killer who they say does not fit the popular perception of a gibbering madman who kills strangers from rooftops or performs mutilations. "THE TYPICAL mass murderer is extraordinarily ordinary," said Jack Levin, a sociology professor who, with criminology professor James Fox, has studied 42 mass killers. "He's the guy next door. He doesn't stand out in a crowd." Fox and Levin looked at cases in- volving murders of four or more people from 1973 to 1980, comparing them to single homicides. The cases of mass killings, involving: at least 500 deaths, provided the researchers with a strong impression of who is likely to kill and what factors lead to such deadly bursts of rage. "THE MASS murderer is a distinct phenomena that we should try to under- stand," said Fox. "What we understood until now was based on a few case studies which are biased." The researchers also say mass mur- der is on the increase, possibly because of the increasing pressures of society. Many of the killers studied had recently lost their jobs or undergone divorce. Others went on homicidal benders for money. In the past two months, the country has recorded two separate mass mur- ders. Twelve men and one woman were slain Feb. 19 in a holdup at a Seattle Chinatown gambling club. Two men in their early 20s have been charged with the crime. THIS WEEK six residents in remote McCarthy, Alaska, were shot and killed. Authorities have charged Louis Hastings, a 39-year-old unemployed computer programmer, with the deaths. No motive has been established in the killings. Fox and Levin say a mass murder is a masculine crime. Of the 42 cases studied, only one involved a woman. It is also a white man's crime. Fox said only eight of the mass murders studied were black. Geography also plays a role in mass killings. The researchres say such crimes are likely to occur on the East or West Coasts. They are more unlikely in the South, which Levin says has a higher than average homicide rate. "HOMICIDE USUALLY emerges out of a fight, over money, out of honor or love. You don't have that kind of fight with four people at once," he says. The researchers found that in half of the mass killings studied, the murderer knew his victims. More than likely, those victims were family members.. "Very typically, in these cases, the killer is a man who is trained in the use of weaponry, who has a gun in the house and who one day just kills his family," said Fox. LEVIN SAID these killings often have their roots in revenge. "There may be a divorce or separation involved," he said. "In or- der to get even the husband will come back and kill his wife and children as well." Levin said the other large percentage of mass killings take place during another crime, usually robbery. These types of murders are usually the well- planned acts of a sane person. "These people are not crazy in either a psychiatric or a legal sense," said Levin. "They are evil, but not crazy." . The researchers say only a small percent of mass murderers fall into the category they call "glassy-eyed, deranged killers." These crimes, they said, citing Ted Bundy, who was con- victed of slaying two sorority sisters and a child in Florida, are the most gruesome. Such findings, the researchers say, are an important step toward under- standing the causes of mass murderers and could possibly lead to ways of spot- ting potential cases. "Mass murder is an extreme form of aggression and we had better start trying to understand it," Levin said. Graduation Portraits from Experienced Professional Photographers Discounts for Quantity CALL KLINGER'S STUDIO 662-2359 A Southfield police officer (with cap) grabs a bystander provoked by a demonstration of Ku Klux Klan members outside Detroit television station WXYZ yesterday afternoon. Bill Wilkinson, imperial wizard of the Klan is second from the left. U.S.mass murderer s found very ordinary in new study Tomorrow there's something special brewing at Uno's - LABATT'S $250, PITCHER AFTER 9PM. 1 ...a timeless symbol of your achievements. TRADE IN YOUR GOLD HIGH SCHOOL RING* On any Josten's college ring GOOD FOR $91.00 SPECIAL OFFERING TODAY! A new white lustrium college ring