INCASE OF FIRE See Editorial Page al rP Sirtga :4a iA CLAMMY High-T71 Low-61 See Today for details Eighty-Four Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXV, No. 49 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, October 31, 1974 Ten Cents Twelve Pages I CONDITION STILL CRITICAL ERIM action The Ad Hoc Committee to Stop ERIM War Re- search will attempt to place the ERIM (Environ- mental Research in Michigan) bonding proposal before the voters if the plan is approved by the County Board on November 6. The committee will have 45 days to gather nearly 7,000 signatures in Washtenaw County in order to place the proposal on the ballot. In addition to the ballot proposal, the committee has decided to investigate the pos- sibility of legally challenging ERIM's tax exempt status. The committee plans to hold a rally against ERIM on November 6 at 6 p.m. at the County Building. Halloween rain It was raining pumpkins on I-23 Tuesday night, according to state police from the Ypsilanti post. Troopers said they are searching for vandals who dropped the overgrown vegetables from bridges in Pittsfield and York Townships. At least three motorists claimthey were bombarded by the pumpkins, but no one was reported injured. Olops! We incorrectly reported yesterday that the Human Rights Party candidate for state repre- sentative, Bob Alexander, supports the m a s s transit bonding issue appearing on the November 5 ballot. He actually opposes the measure. Happenings .. . ... are almost as scarce as green leaves today. Search, an organization interested in an equitable settlement in the Near East dilemma, is spon soring a 4 p.m. -lecture on "Approaches to a Just Peace in Palestine" in Lane Hall . .. B. R. Washington will be speaking on the "Racist At- tacksinBoston" at 8 p.m. in Trotter House Cleveland Amory will be lecturing on "The Incred- ible War on Wildlife" in the Union at noon as part of the Future World lecture series . . and Edith Green, Democratic Congresswoman from Oregon will be speaking in the School of Business Administration Ad. at 4 p.m. Bangladesh visitor Henry Kissinger arrived in Bangladesh yester- day for his first look at the starving country he predicted three years ago would become an "in- ternational basket case." Bangladesh officials were expected to use Kissinger's 20-hour visit to put forward a case for emergency economic and foo aid. Foreign Minister Kamal Hossain implied the request publicly, telling the American Secretary of State bluntly at a banquet: "Our people are prey to starvation." Record-breaker The Guiness Book of Records, heading for a best-selling record of its own, came of age yester- day with a 21st edition listing new marks in every- thing from pizzas to parenthood. They claim is it now poised to overtake Dr. Benjamin Spock's "Baby and Child Care", as the world's all-time top-selling copyright book. The new edition is ex- pected to sell close to a million copies over the next 12 months. It all began in the 1950's when two bosses of the Guiness brewery agreed that a trustworthy book was needed to settle the kind of arguments that tend to break out in bars late at night over record performances in a constantly record-breaking world. On the inside... . . on the editorial page, Dan Ruben discusses the present cooperation between the Human Rights Party and the Democrats . . . Doug Zernow re- views Stephen Stills performance at Chances Are on the Arts Page . . . and Marc Feldman takes a look at Indiana Football and Coach Lee Corso on the Sports Page. On the outside ... Could it be summer is trying to make a come- back? No end is in sight for our current warm Nixon hangs on, gains slightly t Tricky treats terrif toddlers' By BARBARA CORNELL and WENDI POHS If trick-or-treating isti t your bag, but you're still searching for the spirit of Halloween past, then the Ann Arbor Jaycees' haunted house is for you. It has everything you always wanted in a haunted house - screaming children, horrifying monsters and a bathroom dequip- ped with inviting nooses. "PATTY WAS so scared, she,;;: : ""b/yr had to go to the bathroom," said one young visitor of her shivering friend. "They just kept jumping out at us all the: time, Eand everything was so gross."4 But her brave male escortq didn't agree. sI didn't think it gtbsh was scary . I would just say it ssCr was weird," he commented, ha e . arms folded in ostensible mas- culine disdain for his squeamish girlfriends. Y >,~.r Visitors to the house are greeted with flashing lights and4 startled screams. The tourguide, seeing that one little girl looked apprehensive, did his best t.o appease her by hissing "Ahi, a F. little girl. We have someone here who just loves little girls.. in white sweaters."' v AFTER THIS fine job of con- 7 soling, the guide cautions the group to cover their heads, and the harrowing experience be- .5.. .. ------- After witnessing the tomb- . r{..;.. . "stoe o a hadlss Iorthe THE MAN WITH THE HUMAN LEG in his han d is your friendly local phlebitis surgeon, stand- skeletons, and a shost of es other ing over the operating table at the Ann Arbor Jaycees hraunted house. In this admittedly horrors, into an operating room. tasteless parody of current events at a hospital in California, the doctor proceeds to munch on See JAYCEES, Paige 2 the afflicted leg. WATERGATE TRIAL: Doctorsunw ingto 0 0 give prognosis yet LONG BEACH, Calif. QP-Former President Richard Nixon almost died after going into shock following sur- gery for phlebitis, his former White House press secretary revealed yesterday. "There is no doubt that we almost lost President Nixon yesterday (Tuesday) afternoon," Ronald Ziegler told an impromptu news conference at the hospital where Nixon is being treated. NIXON'S DOCTORS have side-stepped questions as to whether Nixon's life was in danger during the crisis on Tuesday. Nixon was still on the critical list yesterday. f Dr. John Lungren, Nixon's personal physician, said the former president had shown improvement. He said internal bleeding, which triggered the shock, had apparently stopped. Blood for transfusions was set aside in case bleeding recurred. Lungren said that although Nixon's vital signs were stable, it was too early to make a prognosis on his condition. ZIEGLER said, "I know that President Nixon has not lost his will to live . .. he's a man of great strength and great cour- age, and he will pull out of it." Ziegler said Nixon's condition after he went into "vascular shock"-collapse of blood cir- -"ation-for three hours was so serios that "I think it's for- tnnate that President Nixon was in the intensive care unit. "It's also fortinate that the dotors were handy and could go tsrongh the necessary proced- dres to deal with the president's Anr'dition and pull him out of what was n .a very serious condition." NTXON was originally placed in the intensive care ward, on tyre ton floor of,the hospital, for hiq security and privacy. Zieluer said neither he nor any other aides have been per- ngtted to visit Nixon, who has been isolated from everyone but hi family and doctors. The crisis occurred soon after Ziegler left the hospital Tues- day, "and the doctors were so busy dealing with the presi- dent's condition that I did not receive notification until Ap.m. when I happened to call the hospital," Ziegler said. OF NIXON'S wife Pat and daughters Tricia and Julie, who flew here Tuesday night, Ziegler said, "I think the best way to describe the family's state of mind is as one of very deep concern." He said the three women were staying at a private residence near the hospital on the advice of Lungren, "so they would not be separated from the hospital by a one-hour drive from San Clemente." Earlier yesterday, President Ford said he was praying for Nixon and asked to be kept abreast of Nixon's condition. FORD will be in Los Angeles for a campaign appearance to- night, but a White House spokes- See NIXON, Page 7 RICHARD NIXON almost died Tuesday when postop- erative shock put the for- mer president in critical condition. The extreme dan- ger passed, it was report- ed yesterday, but Nixon's condition remained critical. S. Aftri ca. rescu~ed from U.N. eXpulsion UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (A) - The United States, Britain and France saved South Afri- ca's seat in the United Nations by vetoing a resolution last night that would have recom- mended expulsion. It was the first triple veto in U.N. history. The resolution asked the coun- cil to recommend expulsion of South Africa to the General As- sembly, where the African and Third World sponsors had the votes to assure its passage. A VETO by at least one of the three Western permanent members of the 15-nation Sec- See SOUTH AFRICA, Page 2 Magruder tells cover-up role WASHINGTON (AP)rJeb Mag- ruder testified yesterday that early in the Watergate cover-up he was assured that then Presi- dent Nixon was pleased at the way Magruder was keeping the true story of the scandal from coming out. In the second day of his testi- mony as a prosecution witness at the Watergate cover-up trial, Magruder said he was promised financial help if anything went wrong for plans for him to lie to federal grand juries in the summer and fall of 1972. MAGRUDER, formerly the deputy director of Nixon's 1972 re-election campaign, said he once volunteered that he'd take the blame for the June 17, 1972, break-in at Democratic National Committee headquarters but was turned down by senior of- ficials at the White House and the re-election committee. Magruder now is serving a minimum 10-month prison term for his own part in the cover-up. Generally, he recounted a story told before in testimony before the Senate Watergate committee and in his book, "An American Life; One Man's Road to Watergate." MAGRUDER told of prepar- ing an elaborate cover story for federal investigators to account for $250,000 approved for use by Watergate burglar Gordon Liddy, then an official of the re-election committee. Magruder said former White Housecounsel John Dean came to his office shortly before Ma- gruder was to give his perjured testimony and told Magruder: "Everyone at the White House and the committee, particularly the President, the President was particularly pleased at my ef- forts at keeping the truth of Watergate from coming out." L 0 0 K I N G vigorous and healthy for a man coming out of prison, Magruder quoted Dean as saying that if any- thing went awry, he would be given money just like Liddy, Watergate burglar E. Howard Hunt and the other five original Watergate defendants. Magruder said he was later given similar assurances from defendant and former Atty. Gen. John Mitchell Besides Mitchell, the other defendants in the trialdare for- mer White House aides John Ehrlichman, H. R. "Bob" Hald- See MAGRUDER, Page 9 Liberals dominate low-key races for COunt commission Miliken runs on By STEPHEN SELBST Young, liberal-minded candi- dates and reluctant Republicans have been the highlights of this year's 14th and 15th district Washtenaw County Commis- sioner campaigns - two races that haven't exactly prompted voters to fistfighting. Students and other segments of the University community iredominate in both districts - a tact which is reflected by the youthful "reform" image that the county candidates have tried to project before next Tuesday's vote. campaign profile Republicans have conceded altogether in the 15th district, where Democrat Cathy McClary is considered the likely winner over HRP hopeful Marty Weg- breit in what may be a close race. The district's present commissioner, Liz Taylor, chose not to seek re-election. Fojtik has run largely on her record as the 14th district's commissioner, emphasizing her role in improving county health care facilities and transportation systems. HER campaign literature boasts of Fojtik's successful ef- forts to get the county its first free venereal disease clinic, the first Ann Arbor-Ypsilanti bus system, and a county-wide bike 0 image of By CHERYL PILATE Unlike many Republican officeholders, Governor William Milliken has not been tainted with the Watergate plague. In- stead, during his six years in the state's top post, he has acquired a reputation for being faultlessly honest and ethical. Running for re-election against Demo- cratic gubernatorial h o p e f u 1 Sander Levin, Milliken is now fighting to keep his head above water in the tight race. The most recent polls give Levin a slight edge over the Republican incum- bent with about 10 per cent of the voters still undecided. 'decency reer by contractors whom he later sup- ported with his votes for contracts as a Troy city official: ALSO, IT WAS learned earlier this month that the governor's top campaign official attempted to violate the state code of ethics by asking state employes to urge their friends to sell tickets to Milliken's $50-a-plate fundraiser in Cobo Hall. The Governor's campaign is centered around his accomplishments in office and his positions on the state ballot propos- als. Stressing his accomplishments in the areas of consumer protection, the en- vironment, and tax* relief, Milliken has proudly touted the record which Levin so vociferously attacks. RESPONDING to most of the Demo- cratic candidate's charges in his typical campaign profile 4a-~FOR BOTH candidates, this contest is I - --I - C- - - I