AUTO LAYOFFS See Editorial Page YI rL Afri at' D~atF IMPROVING High-38 Low-22 See Today for details Eighty-Four Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXV, No. 75 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, December 5, 1974 Ten Cents Eight Pages i National ills hurt local health care "--' r,>' _ .,ki.,, ' ... r, Goodbye my sweet Detroit's Faygo Beverages Inc. announced yes- terday a rebate program for consumers buying sugar-free rather than sugar-sweetened soft drinks. Faygo President Morton Feigenson said current sugar prices, which are "more unconscionable than inflationary," sparked the decision to pay five- cent-a-bottle rebates to persons buying sugar-free pop. All pint bottles of Faygo sugar-free pop will have neckbands that consumers can mail to the company to receive 50-cent refunds for 10 bands. " Stop that truck! While firemen were extinguishing a blaze in Raymond Clemens' car, Detroit police said someone stole the fire truck. The man they charged was Raymond's cousin, Darrel Clemens, 22. Firemen said they chased the $10,000 truck two blocks on foot over icy, slushy streets before reclaiming the vehicle. Clemens was charged with interfering with a fire truck. " More snow jobs In Monroe, a would-be sculptor carved a very realistic, life-sized Volkswagen out of Superstorm's snow. It was so realistic, in fact, the police chief ordered it towed away. The copy, complete with delineated doors, windows and bumpers in the familiar Beetle style, was carved into a mound of snow that plows had left in a downtown parking space. Chief Paul Peters ordered patrolmen to remove the "car," which he said appeared to have Ohio license plates. A patrolman identified it as a small foreign car. Another identified it as a pile of snow. "I don't care what it is," the chief bellowed. "If you have to, get a wrecker over there and have it towed away." Sure. " Happenings .. .. .are snowballing today. Wendell Barry, visit- ing poet from Kentucky, reads his poems at 4 p.m. in Aud. 3, MLB . . . noted lawyer and author William Springfellow speaks on the "Crisis in the Nation" in the Law Club Lounge at 4 p.m. . . . Concerned Clericals for Action/UAW are holding an interim steering committee meeting at 7:30 p.m. upstairs at 771 N. University . . . the Student Nu- trition Action Committee sets plans for Food Day, 1975 at 8 p.m. at Thomas Francis Aud., School of Public Health ... the Women's Community Center presents a concert to benefit the women's cul- tural center, featuring feminist singer-songwriter Meg Christian at 8 p.m. in the Hussey Room, Michigan League . . . and in keeping with the white stuff outside the Washtenaw Ski Touring Club is meeting on the top floor of the Old Heidelberg at 8 p.m. Down the hatch The Soviet Union has gone gourmet for its first international dinner in space when Soviet and U.S. astronauts dock their craft in a joint venture next July. They announced yesterday that the four star meal will begin with a choice of soups, in- cluding a Ukrainian borscht made from beetroot, a heavily-spiced Georgian mutton soup and a Rus- sian sorrel soup. Next, the hungry spacemen will have a selection of meat and then finish the feast off with prunes, nuts, cake and fruit juices. It beats the traditional fare of Tang and space food sticks. O Season's greetings The Dayton, Ky., city council passed a measure Tuesday night to require that Christmas carolers obtain free city permits after one group of seasonal singers burned a woman's porch when she refused to donate money. 0 Befouled sidewalks In Paris, more than 1,000 dog owners this year have enriched the city's coffers because their dogs befouled Parisian sidewalks. On - the - spot fines ranging from 20 to 40 francs ($3.60 to $7.20) were imposed on 1,303 Parisians for their dogs' offenses during the first nine months of this year, police said. The gendarmes did not, however, explain what the range of fines was based on. 0 On the inside... .ay the Editorial Page features an article by Mary Harris on the planned "food days" coming up in March . . . the Arts Page sports a review of last night's George Harrison concert in Detroit . . . and on the Sports Page the Daily's resident Canadian, David Wihak, writes about his country- men Tom and Doug Lindskog. On the outside ... By JO MARCOTTY First of three parts When Kathleen arrived at a local hospital emergency room with severe abdominal pains, she waited for two hours before a doctor diag- nosed her discomfort as psychosomatic and sent her home. The bill for her brief visit came to $25. Three days later, partially in a coma, she was admitted to another hospital with kidney failure, thyroid failure,'and a urinary tract infection. THIS KIND of incompetence is rare, but in Ann Arbor, known to some health professionals as the "medical mecca of the Midwest," such seemingly incongruous events are nevertheless a reality. According to Spencer Maidlow, assistant ad- ministrator at St. Joseph's Hospital, the national population averages one doctor for every 1,000 people. In Ann Arbor, there is one doctor per 40 citizens. But in spite of its relatively plentiful supply of physicians, the city suffers from the same health care problems that plague the rest of the country. Soaring medical costs, difficult access to health care, impersonal treatment, and incompetence are common here. COMPLAINTS of over-specialization are heard around the country, but in Ann Arbor, they are especially relevant. "This is a specialty community. There is' no one you can go to if you are generally sick," explains Dr. Sidney Smock, director of Univer- sity Hospital Emergency Services. "There are not enough family practitioners," he adds. "The ratio of primary care physicians in Ann Arbor is only 45 doctors per 100,000 population," Maidlow says. "There is also a higher demand on doctors here because of the sophistication of the community." The term primary care physicians includes general practitioners, "family emergency care specialists. . ACCORDING TO fourth-year University meJi- cal student Paul DeWitt, "Ninety per cent of what specialists do does not require the amount of training they have. "People are beginning to realize that there are too many specialists, and we need to train more family practitioners to help with 90 per cent of the problems," DeWitt contends. Advocates of family medicine claim it could cure many of the ills of the local overspecialized health care delivery system. The family doctor would not only provide treatment in routine cases, they say, but would also make patients' entry into the world of specialists easier and smoother. "THE FAMILY doctor will greet them at the door of the system," DeWitt says. "He takes the doctors," and position of team leader, and when he can't take care of the problems, he can send them to some- one who can. He doesn't lose control of what's happening to his patient." But how can medicial students be attracted away from the lucrative specialty practices and into the new fields of family medicine? "Financial incentives," suggests Dr. Ed Pierce, director of the Summit Street Medical Center. "The answer to the problem is government-paid subsidies to work in family practice." OVER-SPECIALIZATION adds to anothzr, big- ger problem in the medical world-the rising cost of staying healthy. "The U.S., as a specialized country, has a great medical ego, and this adds to cost," Pierce says. Cost inflation is especially prevalent in Ann See HEALTH, Page 2 Mineworkers ratify new pact Coal strike to end Monday By AP and Reuter C HA RLE S TO N, W. Va. - The United Mine Workers (UMW) has rati- fied a new contract for 120,000 coal miners, unof- ficial returns showed yes- terday, paving the way for an end to a three-week-old strike. With 65,000 ballots count- ed, about 80 per cent of the anticipated total, the three-year agreement was approved by about a 56 per cent majority, sources re- ported. UMW PRESIDENT Arnold Miller scheduled a news con- ference in Washington this morning to announce the re- sults. And Miller and coal in- dustry officials planned to for- mally sign the agreement im- mediately following his an- nouncement, according to in- dustry officials. With ratification, most UMW members would be expected to return to work in mines pro- ducing 70 per cent of the na- tion's soft coal on the shift beginning at 12:01 a.m. Monday. However, some industry of- ficials said it is possible that some mines could be reopened earlier, but added that would depend on the union. THE RETURN to work would end a strike which began Nov. 12 and has forced the layoff of more than 25,000 workers in coal consuming or transport- ing industries. The agreement with the Bitu- minousCoal Operators Associa- tion provides for a 64 per cent increase in benefits and wages over three years. Wages, ranging from $42 to $50 a day in the last year of the old contract, would go up 10 percent in the first year of the new pact and a cost of liv- ing increase would be figured quarterly. IT ALSO would provide for the union's first sick leave, in- crease from 20 to 30 the num- ber of paid holidays and vaca- tion days and greatly improve pension beneifts. The return to work could be affected by negotiations still go- ing on between the UMW and the Association of Bituminous Contractors, whose members do construction work for the coal industry. Should that contract not be settled, workers covered by that jet withi contract c o u 1 d conceivably picket coal mines and keep them from opening. HOWEVER, the coal operators could be expected to exert pres- sure on the contractors for a rapid agreement. And sources in Washington reported that pro- gress was being made and a settlement could come this week. Mills Albert AP Photo A buss from Brezhnev LEONID BREZHNEV bends down to kiss a young Russian girl who presented the Soviet Com- munist Party leader with flowers at Orly airport, outside Paris, on his arrival from Moscow yesterday. In the background, from left, are French President Valery Giscard d'Estaing; So- viet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko, wearing a hat; and Pierre Angles, French chief of pro- tocol. Brezhnev came for talks with d'Estaing. FIRM DENIES FRAUD: Official caims ter-m predicts Mills Will lose post WASHINGTON (A') - House SpeakeryCarl Albert indicated yesterday he believes hospital- ized Rep. Wilbur Mills' (D-Ark.) tenure as chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee is over. Meanwhile, a close friend, Rep. Joe Waggonner (D-La.) said he learned from a source he would not identify that Mills was under heavy sedation and was undergoing medical tests and treatment. WAGGONNER, a member of the Ways and Means Committee and a long-time associate of Mills, said the committee chair- man was not allowed to receive visitors or telephone calls at the See MILLS, Page 2 There had been expectations that two districts-No. 6 in Ohio and No. 29 in southern West Virginia - would produce a strong vote against the contract. But Washington sources re- ported that the vote in 'District 29, home of an organized cam- paign against ratification, was running about 50-50. Police nab ive, in pot sale By JIM NICOLL Police clamped the cuffs on five men Tuesday fight on North Campus, chargihg them with an attempt to sell 100 pounds of marijuana. The men's classic mistake was arranging a dope deal with undercover narcotics agents who had court- ed their friendship. Netting the five were officers from the Washtenaw Area Nar- cotics Team (WANT) and the State Police Intelligence Divi- sion. Since state police were in- volved, the five will face severe state laws rather than the city's token $5 fine. GARY MILES, 22, of Ann Ar- bor; William Murphy, 21, of St. Clair Shores; Daniel Mau- rer, 23, of Chelsea;DJeffrey Pe- cotte, 21, of Menomin3e; and Thomas Flook were nabbed af- ter a rendezvous with police at Plymouth Rd. and Murfin Ave. They had been in contact with the undercover agents for some time. Sources close to the case re- ported that the agents connected with the group in a distant city and had offered to finance the purchase of the 100 pounds of "Indiana Green." One agent had gotten close to the group by lighting up fre- quently with them. He accom- panied them to Ann Arbor to finish off the deal. THE GROUP contacted the local men and arranged a North Campus rendezvous. But he un- dercover agent tipped off price, and when the middleman ar- rived he was hit by the WANT team instead of his friends. board' f kill1ed papers By CHERYL PILATE The director of Minute Re- search, a Chicago-based firm that manufactures "research" paoers for college students, an- grily denied charges yesterday that his company knowingly sells term papers for classroom use. not for class "All you've got is hearsay evi- dence," said Bob Lincoln, re- sponding to a story in yester- day's Daily in which a Minute Research employe admitted that the papers were written suitably for submission in uni- versity courses. A U. S. CIRCUIT Court of Ap- peals ruled last year that com- panies can be found guilty of mail fraud if their members are aware that their research is being submitted in college co' T5C5. Altho-gh Lincoln admitted that the firm's research papers Washington attorney in the con- sumer protection division of the U. S. Post Office, believes that a successful suit could be filed against the firm. "What companies of thiis sort are dealing inaare intellectual narcotics, and the pusher has a higher measure of guilt than the user," he said. "If what the employe said can be prov- en, we've met the criteria for a successful case." A Minute Research employe, who would only identify herself as Paula, said that although the firm will guarantee a particu- lar letter grade, that the pap- ers are of a "very high quality" and could ready to be turned in. request just about anything." "BUT," HE quickly added, "anyone could also copy a few pages out of a book and turn it in. I would be surprised if See COMPANY, Page 2 Dutch 19-1 0o crashes; all presumed "I AM SHOCKED that she (Paula) said what she said," commented Lincoln. "She does not speak for the company." Minute Research, launched By AP and Reuter COLOMBO, Sri Lanka - A Dutch charter plane with 191 people on board crashed and burst into flames last night during heavy rain in central Sri Lanka (Ceylon) last night. Police said yesterday they feared there would be few, if any, survivors. THE CRASH, on a hillside 60 miles east of Colombo, could Rescue parties were rushed to the area near Maskeliya in the southern part of the island's central highlands. The Martinair charter company spokesperson said seven of the crew were Dutch and two were Indonesian stewardesses. SPEAKING at a news conference at Amsterdam's Schiphol Airport, Martinair manager Martin Schroeder said the flight was part of a large-scale airlift to carry some 45,000 Indonesian Mos-