COMMON CAUSE HITS PRACTICE schi v DETROIT (UPI)' - Former Ann Arbor ;;Congressman Marvin Esch has earned $5,400 from investments made possible by a $55,000 campaign surplus from his 1976 race for the Senate, the Detroit 'ews reported yesterday. The investments were perfectly legal but have been strongly criticized by officials of the Common Cause political reform lobby, the News said. ISCH, 50,now a lobbyist for U.S. Steel Corp., used leftover campaign funds to invest in high-yield ,municipal and utility bonds, to rent cars, buy 'hirplane tickets, and pay his income.tax, according to ested campaign funds The Michigan Daily-Saturday, December 9, 1978-Page 7 Legislature OKs anti-bugprop'osa~l federal records checked by the newspaper. Esch, a Republican, called the investments a ".safeguard against inflation" and contended the other expenses were campaign-related even though some occurred two years after the election. "It's just plain wrong," said Fred Wertheimer," .Common Cause vice president for operations. "Even though it's legal, paying off present-day expenses with money raised for a past campaign just doesn't fit the spirit of the election law." RULES ADOPTED by the Senate and House this year forbid members from using campaign surpluses for personal expenses, but these do not apply to defeated candidates like Esch, who lost a race against Democratic Sen. Donald Riegle. Officials of the Federal Elections Commission said that in the case of losing candidates, the only stipulation regarding leftover campaign funds is that they not be spent for any unlawful purpose. Wertheimer said unsuccessful candidates should be bound by the same rules as winners. "Fo~r the sake of public confidence," he said, "we have to have better controls over people leaving the electoral system." (Cnnhinued from Paigel1) Womens' Hospital. Yet Hospital Director Neva Kuehn said the phone company must have made a mistake. "I know there is no monitoring system," she said. "I don't like them, and they aren't anything I wou""l ever want to work with." COMMUNICATIONS Center office manpger Janice Batalucco initially denied that her office, which supervises University information, employs a monitoring system. However, in a later conversation, Batalucco acknowledged, "We do have a monitoring system here - strictly for training -it is not used on a continuous basis. This means the supervisors sometimes listen in on calls, but do not record them on tape. Batalucco said she could not estimate how frequently calls are monitored. ;. Israel'i (continued from Page 1) strong and. free Israel-had been realized in her lifetime. "We pray that the second great dream of Golda Meir's life, for which she worked and hoped and prayed all her life, will soon be realized: a just and lasting peace in the Middle East," he said. In a message of condolence to the Israeli government, U.N. Secretary- General Xurt' Waldheim praised Meir for "her dedication to her country." The gray-haired elder stateswoman died at ,4:28 p.m. yesterday. The hospital said family members were at her bedside in the final hours. s Golda Meir dies, at 80 SHE HAD BEEN in and out of the hospital in recent months, being admit- ted to Hadassah ,for the last time Oct. 29. It was reported then she was suf- fering from back trouble caused by a slipped disc. Later it was reported she had developed a viral infection and was being treated for jaundice, a liver ailment. A hospital spokeswoman disclosed yesterday that the cancer had been detected 10 or 12 years ago, and she was first treated with radiotherapy and later by chemotherapy. There had been sketchy and uncon- firmed reports of such an ailment but Meir, objecting that she now was a "private person," had forbidden the hospital to issue bulletins on her con- dition. She allowed only her immediate family to visit her in recent weeks. DEATH CAME to Israel's fourth prime minister as this country stood on the brink of a lasting peace with Egypt, something that has eluded it for three decades. Some day peace will come, she said, "but I doubt that I will still be here to see it. "One of my faults is that I cannot deceive myself, and I do not see peace around the corner," Meir said when she was still caretaker prime minister after quitting. AS STUNNED as everyone else, Meir lived to see the president of Egypt-her long-time adversary-visit.Jerusalem last Noveiber to launch direct peace talks. Yet she opposed the emerging peace blueprint to the very end. Those who saw her during the final long illness before her death yesterday said Meir was informed of the progress of Egyptian-Israeli peace talks, although she asked not to receive of- ficial visitors in the hospital. SHE REPORTEDLY planned to make a strong statement against the Camp David accords when she was released from the hospital. In recent months,. Meir let it be known at party meetings that she did not like the direction Prime Minister Mfenachem Begin had taken in his peace talks with Egypt. She opposed Israel's withdrawal from all of the Sinai Peninsula, including giving up a belt of Sinai settlements that were built during her five years and 78 days as prime minister. A year ago, however, when Egyptian President Anwar Sadat made his peacemaking visit to Jerusalem; his meeting with Meir and their exchange of jokes and small presents was one of the warmest moments of that historic weekend and an emotional signal that peace was possible. Sadat sent messages of condolence yesterday to Israeli President Yitzhak Navon and to Meir's family, a Sadat spokesman said in Cairo: The messages' contents were not disclosed. AFRICAN QUEEN James Agee did the screenplay, HUMPHREY BOGART won the Oscar, and KATHERINE HEPBURN supplies the romantic interest in this enduring adventure set on location in Africa. Bogart as a boozing-cynical riverboat captain who rescues prim missionary Hepburn from WW I Germans is a job to watch. "We love those two silly people on thatboat" Bogart has admitted-and it shows in every scene. In jungle color and sound. Sun: THE WRONG BOX & MY MAN GODFREY JOHN HUSTON'S 1951 CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT AT 7:00 and 9:05 OLD ARCH AUD. $1.50 AlLY EARLY BIRD MATINEES -- Adult: $1 .25 DISCOUNT IS FOR SHOWS STARTING BEFORE 1:30 MON. thru SAT. 10 A.M. ti1 I:36 P.M. SUN. & HOLS. 12 Noon til 1:30 P.M. EVENING ADMISSIONS AFTER 5:00, $3.50 ADULTS Monday-Saturday 1:30-5:00, Admission $2.50 Adult and Students Sundays and Holidays 1:30 to Close, $3.50 Adults, $2.50 Students Sunday-Thursday Evenings Student & Senior Citizen Discounts Children 12 And Under, Admissions $1.25 An entertaining, yet vacuous Pippin debuts (Continued from Page 5) by Benjamin Webber was, to be blunt, ;embarrassing with respect to both pitch and cues. The cast, too, varies widely. In the title role, Jon Zimmerman sings quite well, acts with verve, and dances with heretofore undisclosed ability. Bill Boyd as the Leading Player has his ups and downs. Boyd moves well and sings :rpassably, but is seriously hindered by the often repetitious and unnecessary movements given to him by Ganiard. One grew tired of his repeated jump- .kicks and step-ballchanges (particularly during "Simple Joys"). ,.In addition, it appeared that the director and choreographer never t TICKET SALES 1. Tickets sold no sooner than 30 minutes really decided whether or not to have the Leading Player engage in continuous motion. At times Boyd slid from position to position; at other times he engaged in a series of unconnected and unrelated dance steps. In all fairness, though, it must be noted that the opening-night audience loved him. There are various other minor roles, some of which are well-portrayed - David Goldstick is notably amusing as King Charlemagne - others of which are not. Perhaps most important, the chorus carries out its considerable duties with impressive precision and energy. Basically, Pippin is fairly mindless stuff, but quite enjoyable. prior to showtifne. 2. No tickets sold later than 15 minutes "1I MEDIATRICS presents THE PAPER CHASE (James Bridges, 1973) A highly dramatic story of a first year law student who strives for the approval of an iconoclastic taw professor-god. He-also develops a passion for the pro- fessor's daughter at the same time. By the end of the film; the student, Timothy Bottoms, decides that a Harvard law degree can only buy things-not happiness. JOHN HOUSE- MAN won an Oscar for his role as the hard-assed prof. It's a must for every student. Sat., Dec. 9 Nat. Scl. Aud. ADMISSION $1.50 7:00 & 9:00 °t f ""^"' : ,.".;; ": c ".... '- ~ . .... ti staring (Charles Delmer Brgtte I dss}, ie NdI Borgeaud Genevieve Fontanel and Leslie Caron From Cinema 5 Angell Hall Aud. A 7:00 & 9:00 TONITE ONLY at CINEMA 11 ..j SEE Abbott & Costello Curse... SEE Mr. Spock Laugh. . SEE Red Skeltons Cow drop a load onstage... All this and more at Never Before Shown Censored Scenes From Movies & T.V.! Featuring Outtakes You'll NEVER See on Television! 1nCluding " JOHNNY CARSON * STAR TREK ABBOTT &COSTELLO ,*BORIS KARLOFF *WC FIELDS G RICHARD BOONE * SAMMY DAVIS. JR " JAMES ARNESS e "'ORIGINAL" LAUGOHIN * DON RICKLES " DON ADAMS *CRAZY COMMERCIALS * RED SKELTON " W'I LLIAM'CONRAD *OLD TIME MOVIES * THE BEATLES *JACK BENNY MIDNIGHT SHOWS FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ONLY Tickets on sale at I ICKeTs VO vn joie r:vv rrxi