SUNDAY MAGAZINE See inside Y Eighty-Four Years 6f Editorial Freedom P~ail MELTING High-4s Low-40 See Today for details Vol. LXXXV, No. 64 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, November 17. 1974 i Ten Cents Eight Pages i I IFYOSEEtrwS PAPT CALL 6MLYt Day the ' stood still It was a frame right out of the science fiction classic The Day the Earth Stood Still. All over central campus, from Alice Lloyd Hall to Burton Tower to the Engin Arch, the clocks stopped at 1:53 a.m. yesterday morning. Well, relax: no metallic disc has landed in the Di g,noxalien creature resembling actor Michael Rennie will ask to "crash" at your house tonight. Time stopped due to a short-circuited master fuse that controls and synchronizes nearly 100 clocks on the campus. According to a staffer at University Safety, the hands won't start moving again until tomorrow since "we don't consider this important enough to bring in the guys to work overtime." Which leads us to wonder what would happen if alien creatures did land on the Diag. " Happenings .. . . . are barely visible today. From 5 to 10 p.m. Al Davaron's band will present a program of black contemporary music at Trotter House History Prof. Marilyn Young will discuss "Demonstrations I Have Known," as part of the Residential College Lecture Series at 7 p.m. in East Quad's Greene Lounge . . . Things pick up tomorrow, beginning at 10 a.m. when the Union Gallery will sponsor a special exhibition and sale of original Oriental art. The sale will continue through 5 p.m. tomorrow and Tuesday . . . at 8 p.m., students interested in the New England Literature Program for spring term will meet in Rm. 1007 of Angell Hall . . . the Department of Epidemology will sponsor a lecture on "Lassa Virus: Facts and Fancies" at 4 p.m. in the Vaughn Public Health Bldg. on Observatory. Dr. Wilbur Downs, an international expert on tropical diseases and virus infections, will speak . . . if you're health-minded, the Michigan Hospital Test Panel Laboratory will offer free diabetes tests all week. That's on the third level of the Outpatient Bldg. between noon and 3 p.m. . . . Personal Planning Workshops will offer a free introductory session at 7 p.m. in the League's Henderson Rm. . . . the Men's Raps will discuss "Trusting Men: Relating to Other Men as Competitors, Friends and Lovers" at 7:30 p.m. in the Guild House .. . and the University Square Dancers will meet at 8 p.m. in the Barbour Gym. " Commies and hippies Commies, black extremists, the Socialist Workers Party, the New Left and even white i hate" groups will have top billing in the FBI's latest report, supposedly scheduled for release tomorrow. The Washington Star-News announced yesterday that the agency has conducted a 15-year investigation of these groups with the authorization of the late J. Edgar Hoover. Some of the activities of Cointel- pro, the project's code name, included the use of civic and religious leaders and organizations to exert pressure on state and local governments, employers and landlords to disrupt the groups, leaks to newspapers and reporters about arrest records of individuals and groups, and establish- ment of sham organizations for disruptive purposes. Dissidents publish While you're waiting for the remaining volumes of the Gulag to be published, Alexander Solz- henitsyn's Paris publisher has announced that the Russian writer has compiled a new book of essays on life in the Soviet. The book, written by seven dissident intellectuals,, will appear at the end of the month. It will first be published in Russian, then in English, German and Italian translations. The book, titled "Out From Under the Boulders," will deal with "problems of social and spiritual life in the Soviet Union," according to the YMCA press, a Russian-language publishing house. Al- though three of the authors wish to remain anony- mous, the other three (besides Solyzhenitsyn) are mathematician Igor Shafarevich, art historian Evgeny Barabanov and historian Vadim Borissov. Write who? If you're thinking of ripping off an angry letter to your senator, maybe you'd better hold off awhile. Odds are pretty good that he or she won't be there. A quarter of the Senate is now in Europe. At last count by the U.S. embassies in Europe, at least 24 of the 100 senators were on the other side of the Atlantic yesterday. Don't try your Congress members, either - they could be in Europe too. The period between election and the day a new Congress convenes have always been ripe for junkets-or rather, fact-finding tours- and this year has been no exception. On the inside .. . . . Daily reporter Stephen Hersh discusses the questionable practices of Maxey Boys Training School in the Sunday Magazine . . . and on the Sports Page, Marc Feldman examines yester- day's Michigan football rout. On the outsi de . . . tia wiaihv ;) t P ovu A4n ivir-r z _flpr Michigan snowballs to victory Ford to leae on world journey WASHINGTON (P)-President Ford departs today for Japan and South Korea and a meeting in the Soviet Union that may deal with the arms race and the Middle East war threat. He will be the first U.S. president ever to visit Japan and faces a threat of street demonstrations like those that forced cancellation of a 1960 Japanese visit by President Dwight Eisenhower. Radicals already have firebombed both the U.S. and Soviet embassies in Tokyo. WORLD ATTENTION will be focused most sharply, however, on Ford's 24-hour stay in Si- beria next weekend, when he will confer with Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev. Ford and Brezhnev differ sharply on ways to promote a Middle East peace-a summit topic certain to escalate in im- portance against the backdrop of new war fears. The United States and Soviet leaders also must wrestle with the sluggish search for a new accord on limiting offensivenu- clear weapons, a quest that reached a stalemate when for- mer President Richard Nixon visited Moscow last June. BY HONORING a Nixon com- mitment to visittJapan in 1974, Ford is flying to Tokyo at a time when Premier Kakuei Tanaka is under heavy fire at home because of questions rais- ed about his personal finances. Street demonstrators are op- posing Tanaka as well as the Ford visit. While acknowledging Tanaka could fall in the near future, Japanese diplomatic sources here argued a successor govern- ment almost surely would be controlled by members of Tan- aka's Social Democratic party. GLOBAL OIL problems will be a major topic on the Ford- Kissinger agenda for Japan, a nation 99 per cent dependent on foreign oil, most of it from the Persian Gulf area. Ford's nine-day journey also will take him to South Korea, a stop that has aroused con- troversy because of substantial world opposition to the repres- sive regime of President Park Chung/Hee. Bell nets 166 yards leads rushing attack By GEORGE HASTINGS' At long last, all the preliminaries are safely out of the way. The Michigan Wolverines completed another perfect pre-Ohio State schedule in stunning fashion yesterday afternoon at Michigan Stadium, overwhelming the Boil- ermakers of Purdue in every facet of the game for a 51-0 win. THE VICTORY means that Michigan will at least tie for the Big Ten title for the fourth straight year and for the fifth time in Bo Schembechler's six-year head coaching reign. The Wolver- ines now stand at 10-0, one game ahead of Ohio State's 9-1 mark. Doily Photo by PAULINE LUBENS SPLIT END JIM SMITH (37), vaults high in the air to haul down a Denny Franklin pass in the first quarter of yesterday's action against Purdue. Smith beat Fred Cooper (42) on this re- ception, one of two he made in the game. The other was an electrifying 52-yard TD pass and run play. Yesterday's killing was truly bechler desired for his squad in the final tune-up for the big battle with the Buckeyes in Co- lumbus next Saturday. Michi- gan overcame a few first-quar- ter problems and blew the Boil- ermakers right out of the sta- dium in what might have been its finest performance of the season. The Wolverine offense found the precision. that had been missing for the past two weeks, rolling up 581 yards and 29 first downs. The Blue defense looked as impenetrable as ever against the usually effective Purdue at- tack, yielding only 185 total yards and never really coming close to being scored upon. MICHIGAN quarterback Den- nis Franklin had one of his bet- ter days as he underwent his final game-situation practice for the Buckeye clash, connecting on seven of 12 tosses for 149 yards and a pair of touchdowns, and adding 30 yards on the ground. Franklin twisted his problem ankle late in the third period but will definitely be ready to play next week. Tailback Gordon Bell seemed to have nailed down the starting berth next week at this posi- tion, as he twisted and sped for 166 yards in 23 carries through and around the inept Boilermaker defenders. Receivers Gil Chapman and Jim Smith also had fine, after- noons as Chapman hauled in five of Franklin's aerials includ- ing a touchdown strike. Smith nabbed the other two, one of which was a 52-yard, bomb for another score. MEANWHILE, all five Michi- gan . defensive linemen turned in magnificent efforts as they totally stymied the Boiler rush- ing attack and put on a big rush that often thwarted Pur- due attempts to go to the air. The defensive secondary of the Wolverines did its part, too, effectively containing t h e "world's greatest receiver," sprinter Larry Burton. Michigan seemingly had little trouble with a Purdue offense that had been averaging about 400 yards per contest. It was the final home game for a star-studded cast of 20 Wolverine seniors, including both Franklin and All-Ameri- can safety Dave Brown, and the decisive win means that in their term at Michigan they were never beaten at home. THE EVENTUAL lopsided See DEFENSE, Page 8 the kind of preformance Schem- World o Council created By AP and UPI ROME-The World Food Con- ference declared last night that the battle against hunger is the "common responsibility .of all countries" and agreed to set up a U.N. agency to direct the fight. A resolution on thetagency was approved in committee and went to the full 123-nation as- sembly for certain approval in a late wind-up session. "EVERY MAkN, woman and child has the inalienable right to be free from hunger and malnutrition," the conference said in the final debate of the 11-day assembly. The new agency, to be called the World Food Council, would be formed by the U.N. General Assembly in New York and have its headquarters in Rome. Agreed upon after intensive negotiations between industrial- ized and Third World countries, the council would be an um- brella group directing aid and investment in food production in needy nations. It would also supervise a data-sharing plan to keep nations up to date on weather, crop information and agricultural price fluctuations. AGREEMENT on the council, considered hopeless earlier in the conference, was seen as the major acheivement in attempts to map global strategy in the war on hunger. "There was s o m e compro- mise, but it's an effective plan. We are satisfied," said Edwin Martin, deputy chief of the U.S. delegation. The plan will give teeth to other food accords already ap- proved. These include a resolu3 tion to map out aid pledges of 10 million tons of food grains a year, a resolve to set up inter- national grain banks and a data-sharing plan to provide na- tions with information on crop conditions, weather and agri- culture price fluctuations. ISRAELIS MOBILIZE: Kissinger guarantees Syrians will not fight By AP and Reuter WASHINGTON-Secretary of State Henry Kissinger told Is- raeli officials yesterday he had assurances from Syria that it would not attack Israel. Israeli Ambassador Simcha Dinitz met for about 90 min- utes with Kissinger at the State Department and told reporters afterward: "I'M HAPPY to say that the assurances that I received from the secretary of state as con- veyed to him by our neighbors indicate that the other side does not have aggressive intentions." Dinitz appeared to be joining with the secretary in trying to downplay speculation that re- cent developinents in the Middle East were extremely dangerous Observers challenge 'U' reasons for lack of blacks and might lead to war at any time. In Havana, however, Pales- tine Liberation Organization (PLO) leader Yasir Arafat ac- cused Israel of preparing what he c a 11 e d a "pre-emptive strike" against its Arab neigh- bors and warned of a possible fifth Middle East war. DINITZ CLAIMED that re- ports of an Israeli mobilization "are highly exaggerated and do not reflect the real situation." Hebwould notrdiscuss specific numbers with reporters; how- ever, State Department officials had said the Israeli mobiliza- tion amounted to a few thou- sand troops. Meanwhile, urgent letters from Washington and Moscow. were reported delivered to Presidents Hafez Assad of Syria and An- war Sadat of Egypt, but the contents were not disclosed. DINITZ CONVEYED d e e p concern about Syria's apparent decision not to agree to allow U n i t e d Nations peacekeeping troops to remain in the demili- tarized zone on the Golan Heights. On the occupied West Bank of Jordan, Israelietroops charged young Arabs engaged in street demonstrations. The clash left a young woman dead, scores injured and at least 50 persons arrested, officials said. By ANN MARIE LIPINSKI Although the University c 1 a i m s that "the general state of the economy" is the cause for a dip in black enrollment this term, black ob- servers point to apathy, poor recruitment efforts, and failure to publicize financial opportunities for minorities as the real causes for the drop. At Thursday's Board of Regents meeting, Op- portunity Program Director George Goodman revealed that black enrollment at the University has declined from 7.3 per cent of the student body a year ago to 7 per cent this year. GOODMAN ATTRIBUTED the drop partially to an inflation-propelled movement of black fami- lies into income brackets above the program's ceiling. In spring 1970, after a massive student strike led by the Black Action Movement (BAM), the Regents agreed to raise black enrollment to 10 per cent by 1973. When enrollment was dis- covered to be at 7.3 per cent last year, the board promised an improvement in the following year. "Essentially, the University has renegged on its promise," says Henry Clay, once executive secretary for the Black Student Union and as a liaison between BAM and a white students' strike support group. CLAY ALSO questions the University's claim that economic conditions have partially caused dwindling black enrollment. "I'm sure economics could play some part in the black enrollment decrease, but it's not hard to find economic See OBSERVERS, Page 2 FUNERAL CAUSES DELAY WASHINGTON (/) - United Mines Workers (UMW) leaders yesterday put off consideration of a new nationwide pact until next week, pushing the coal strike into at least a third week. UMW contract negotiators and the bargaining council of re- gional leaders recessed their talks to attend funeral services in Bessemer, Ala., for union postpone possibly for a redistribution, that t rather than fattening, of bene- open t fits. ment.' A memorial service was held The in Washington yesterday for ering: Littlefield, who was killed when wageh he walked in on a hotel room the fir robbery of two other union in eac men. Police said the gunman years, shot Littlefield in the back of and in the head. No arrests have been Miners negotiations he companies "are not to renegotiate the agree- tentative agreement cov- 120,000 miners calls for increases of nine per cent st year and three per cent ch of the following two plus cost-of-living raises mproved fringe benefits. now make between $42 present it to the rank and file for approval. Even if the bargaining coun- cil approves the pact on Wed- nesday and the rank and file follow, the first full work day would be Monday, Dec. 2, under the ratification timetable. The strike began last weekend. ::' . { X'.. } 1 1'4