SUNDAY, MAGAZINE See Inside Y Eighty-Four Years of Editorial Freedom Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, February 9, 1975 tiia BITTER High- Si Low- -7 See Today for details Vol. LXXXV, No. 109 Ten Cents Eight Pages r i U SEE NEWS HAPPM CALL 7:rNLY Hearst hassle The former fiancee of kidnaped Patricia Hearst has won a court order halting publication of a book which he co-authored with ex-Daily Editor-in-Chief Roger Rapoport. Steven Weed, who was engaged to Hearst when she was kidnaped just over a year ago, now contends the book would sensationalize certain aspects of the case. "We had promised the publisher nothing would be left out," Rapoport said after the-ruling Friday. "The book is very candid about drugs and sex. But Steve got cold feet." Rapoport was ordered to return notes and source material to Weed but has filed a counter lawsuit. Happenings .. . . . . East Wind sponsors an Asian American Literature workshop at 11 a.m. in the Angela Davis Lounge of Mary Markley hall and two hours later in Mosher-Jordan's main lounge there will be an Asian American History workshop. Refreshments will be served at both . .. from 1-3 p.m. Discount Records is holding a free concert with coffee and donuts at its South University store . . . "Baha'i Faith as the Foundation for World Civilization" will be the topic of a talk to be given by Dr. David Earl, an EMU history professor. He will speak at 2 p.m. in the Village Green Clubhouse on Packard . . . the local Student Committee Against Racism will sell tickets to the National Conference Against Racism in Rm. 4001 of the Union from 2-4 p.m. and sales will continue tomorrow in the Fishbowl from 12-3 p.m. and from 6-8 p.m. at the Union location. The conference is scheduled for Feb. 14-16 in Boston . . . there will be an opening reception in the Union Gallery from 4-6 p.m. for the drive to publicize the re-opening of the Juliusand Ethel Rosenberg 'case. At the gallery will be their son Robert Meeropol . . . tomorrow's happenings begin with the University student Blood Bank to be held in the Union Ballroom from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. It also will continue on Tuesday . . . at high noon in Conference Rms. 4 & 5 of the League the Career Planning and Placement Office will present a pro- gram on Career Opportunities for Women in Phar- maceuticals and Banking . . . the state Association of Gerontology Students will hold a forum on "So Who's Going to Hire You?" in the E. Conference Rm. of the Rackham Bldg. at 7 p.m. . . . the University Council meets at 7:30 p.m. in Rm. 2056 of the Frieze Bldg. . . . and the University square dance club will be having a hoe-down for those who have been regularly attending the meetings at 8 p.m. in Barbour Gym .. . Ford's follies Nearly two thirds of the people interviewed for a Harris poll still believe that President Gerald Ford was wrong in pardoning his predecessor Richard Nixon, according to the survey results realized Friday. Just as many also believed that the coun- try's system of justice failed with respect to Nixon's involvement in the Watergate coverup. In other aspects of Watergate, however, the poll of 1,532 Americans showed a majority in favor of the way the case was handled. Old tricks Police uncovered a brothel for senior citizens during a raid on a building in Marseille, France, the gendarmes reported yesterday. The raid turned up two prostitutes in their 50's and eight clients whose ages ranged from 60 to 77. The establish- ment was opened several months ago by a 63-year- old madam. The prostitutes said that they charged about $10 for their services. Doomed dentists Dentists die young and have the highest suicide and divorce rates of any profession because they are burned out by the emotional trauma of dealing with fearful patients, according to Dr. Omar Reed, director of the Amprican Society for Preventive Dentistry. The strain of treating people who mis- understand dentistry is one reason why the average American dentist dies at the age of 52, Reed said. Labor pains In three years of marriage, an Englishwoman from Nottingham failed to become pregnant, so she wrapped towels around her stomach and pre- tended to be expecting. Then she stole a seven- week-old child and claimed it was her own. For this hanky-panky, a judge last week sentenced her to two years in prison on kidnaping charges. But the case against her husband-for harboring a stolen child- was dropped for lack of evidence. On the inside .. . .. the Sunday Magazine features a personal look at the Gradziate Employes Organization writ- ten by Daily staffer Ann Marie Lipinski and a graphic history of Campus Corners drug store done by Debborah Chesney . . . Jeff Schiller's analysis of the Michigan-Michigan State basketball game graces the Sports Page. On the outside .. . A good day to stay inside. As intense arctic air ayoi Ford hurt By AP and Reuter WASHINGTON - President Ford's proposed budget will deal a stunning blow to urban Amer- ica, spokesmen for the nation's cities charged yesterday. "If his 1976 budget is a head- ache for President Ford, it is a concussion for the cities," the U. S. Conference of Mayors and National League of Cities said in a 90-page budget analysis. THE REPORT said local gov- ernments are being forced to increase their taxes while the federal government cuts taxes as an economic stimulus, to fire employes while the federal gov- ernment is creating public ser- vice jobs, and to cut back on public services for those hard- est hit by the economic crisis. Instead of coordinating feder- al and local attacks on the country's economic ills, the re- port said, "The budget would force local governments to take budgetary action that could work at cross purposes with na- bu tional econom tegies." The city lea the budget cut federal servi delivered by c time recession employment an "THE budg unemployment cent in 1975 an 1976, which m; unemployment rate among th norities andi members of th tend to livei drawn to them search of wor said. The city le would be for those throwno they are faced help and their er has reache "In short, pounded byi cession at hor contend dget will icrecover ic recoverystra- and insensitive federal policies in Washington," the report said. ders charged that "Hence the conclusion. It will s back money for take more than aspirin to cure ces traditionally it." ities at the same M E A N W H I LE, union n is boosting un- leaders are demanding that the nd welfare rolls. government take action on the high rate of unemployment as get projects an the powerful Teamsters Union rate of 8.1 per called an emergency economic nd 7.9 per cent in conference here for next week. zay translate into Top administration and congres- t five times that sional leaders have been invit- e young, the mi- ed. other vulnerable AFL - CIO leader George ie work force who -Meany said "the nation must in cities or are have job-creating programs" in hard times in because the unemployment rate rk," the analysis was tragic for Americans and the economy. eaders said they Democratic Presidential can- ced to care for didate Henry Jackson yesterday out of work while accused ' President Ford of with less federal gross mismanagement of the own taxing pow- economy. d its limits. "NO ONE knows who's in the cities are charge of the economy," Jack- inflation and re- son told a Washington Press me and by inept See MAYORAL, Page 2 Daily Photo by PAULINE LUBENS SENIOR CO-CAPTAIN Joe Johnson rises to the occasion in a one-for-one confrontation with Spartan Benny White in Michigan's impressive victory, yesterday. "Little Joe" turned in one of his finest performances at Crisler Arena, collecting a game and season high 28 points. B-'lue darm Sp rtan. co-captains By BILL STIEG came after that Senior co-captains Joe John- early in the s son and C. J. Kupec combined Kupec canned for 53 points yesterday as the ers in a five-m Michigan basketball team re- keep the Spar vived its faltering post-season distance. tournament hopes with a solid "We looked 96-84 victory over intra-state the last game," rival Michigan State. gan coach Johr pacewa was five points econd half, but five long jump- inute stretch to tans at a safe at the films of explained Michi- rnny Orr, "and Daily Photo by PAULINE LUBENS Paperwork Joyce Yukawa teaches the art of Origami to hur young audience at East Wind's Children's Workshop. Other activities included Gyotaku, or fish printing, Chinese calligraphy and story- telling. The workshop was one of many events sponsored by East Wind yesterday as part of their Asian-American Awareness Week. SECESSION DENIED: Ethiopia headed for wr. JOHNSON scored 28 and Ku- pec 25 to lead the Wolverines to their highest loint total of the season. Teammates Wayman Britt and Steve Grote held Ter- ry Furlow, the Big Ten's lead- ing scorer, to one field goal in eight attempts. Michigan's win left both teams with 6-5 records in the Big Ten, and 13-6 overall marks. Each club is fighting to stay in contention for a post- season tournament berth. "Michigan played extremely well," said State coach Gus Ganakas after watching his team play its fourth road game in eight days: "They were fast- er, quicker-in every facet of rthe game they were better." State carried a five-game win- ning streak into yesterday's contest, but was forced to play without starting guard Pete Da- vis, who was suffering from the flu. Benny White played in his place. M I C H I G A N also started a new lineup, with freshman Dave Baxter at guard in place of Grote. Baxter played nearly thirty minutes, scoring only five points, but turned the ball over just once, and notched six as- sists. The Wolverines offset a fairly slow start by outscoring the Spartans 20-6 in the last six and a half minutes of the first per- iod, to take a 49-38 halftime lead. Included in the spurt were seven points by starting for- ward John Robinson, who finish- ed with 17, and three-point plays by Grote and Johnson. The closest Michigan State saw that Lindsay (Hairston, MSU center) didn't come up and guard C. J. out there:We were hoping he (Kupec) could go out there and hit." H A I R S T O N provided the Spartans' only offensive punch of the second half, scor- ing 17 of his 27 points in State's futile comeback at- tempts. The 6-8 senior captain hit 12 of 18 shots in the game. Kuped's impressive shooting display helped push Michigan from a 51-46 lead to a 63-48 ad- vantage. State came no closer than 11 after that. When Michigan s win became increasingly apparent, the Spartans changed their strate- gy. After a time-out with 7:48 remaining, State fouled a Michi- gan player nearly every time the Wolverines came down court, hoping for some missed free throws to help the Green and White's cause. UNFORTUNATELY for the visitors, Michigan enter- ed the bonus situation with 5:24 left, and hit 16 of 22 shots from the line. In that stretch, Spar- See CAGERS, Page 8 U.S. army vets ired to train Arab forces ADDIS ABABA (Reuter)-Ethiopia appeared to be heading for full-scale civil war yesterday after the military government here declared it would not consider granting independence to the secessionist northern province of Eritrea. Within hours of a toughly-worded official state- ment which accused the breakaway Eritrean Liberation Front (ELF) of atrocities against the civilian population, violence flared again n the Eritrean capital of Asmara, which had been quiet for three days. JUST AFTER midnight, Asmara residents re- ported three explosions in the city followed by machine-gun and small arms fire. After a lull in fighting, firing resumed and bazookas were brought in. In the last week of open fighting between government troops and guerrillas, the local power station and water supplies were hit by seces- sionists. Last night's statement by the provisional mili- tary government was issued a few hours after the return to Addis Ababa from Asmara of Major Mengistu Haile-Mariam, strongman of the mili- tary council which toppled Emperor Haile Selassie last September. RELIABLE Ethiopian sources said the major had gone to the battle area to take personal command after his army suffered reverses at the hands of the guerrillas. There were also reports here of disciplinary problems in the army and civilian evacuees from Asmara have claimed that troops killed civilians and looted indiscriminately. The government statement, publicly detailing for the first time the guerrilla action in Eritrea, accused the rebels of wanton acts of barbarity. Security forces had taken appropriate measures to ensure peace and security and maintain LOS ANGELES (A) - Several hundred former U. S. special forces soldiers and other retired Vietnam war veterans are be- ing recruited by a private American contractor to train Saudi Arabian troops to protect oil fields. The $77 million U. S. Defense Department contract, awarded to the Vinnell Corporation of Los Angeles in January, is the first ever given to a private American company to train a foreign army, the company said. P R I V A T E American concerns have often handled logistics and maintenance chores of armed forces of the United States and friendly for- eign governments. But showing foreign troops how to fire their weapons and fight wars has been the mission of U. S. mili- tary advisory teams, most re- cently in Southeast Asia. The troops to be trained over the next three years by a 1,000- man Vnnell Corporation con- tingent belong to the Saudi Ara- bian National Guard, the 26,000- man internal security force commanded by King Faisal's half-btother Prince Abdullah Bin Abdul Aziz. These troops are primarily responsible for guarding the country's rich oil fields and the petroleum export facilities. They also provide the key body- guard units for the Saudi Ara- bian royal family. Their pur- pose is also to supplement, if necessary, the rapidly modern- izing 36,000-man Saudi Arabian regular army. B E G I N N I N G in July, Vinnell is to train three newly mechanized infantry battalions of 1,000 men each, as well as a 105 howitzer artillery battalion See PRIVATELY, Page 2 Ethiopian territorial integrity, the statement said. U' officials, GEO resume negotiations Student housing: orrendu By GORDON ATCHESON Representatives of the Grad- uate Employes Organization (GEO) and the University ad- ministration re-established con- tract negotiations yesterday, as the rank and file union members continued their strike vote. Both sides met for about five hours yesterday afternoon and will again today, but in all like- lihood the union members will GEO earlier this week re- ported that the powerful Team- stems Union would support the strike by refusing to cross picket lines-a move that could be very significant because a wide range of University services depend on Teamster members. CONTRACT talks between the GEO andtheUniversity ceased about two weeks ago when an impasse was reached on certain By MARY DEMPSEY Hordes of students are once again searching for decent, cheap, off-campus housing, and once again, are complain- ing they can't find much. Like many college towns, Ann Arbor is short on housing and high on rents. Because the city's vacancy rate is about four per cent - well below the national average - nearly every inhabitable dwelling unit is occupied. CONSEQUENTLY, many students are knocking on its door over the past twelve months. Cameon Carrington, one of the ten- ants who turned to Legal Aid for help, lodged a complaint against Summit- aImilton for a myriad of alleged vio- lations -- including a small tree grow- ing through the living room floor. "We rented because there was no- where else to rent . . . we rented it with a million promises behind it,"tsays Carrington. for repairs were ignored a majority of the time. "It became obvious that the land- lord's idea of repair was to do the cheap- est, quickest job," she says. CARRINGTON and her two room- mates have recently moved and now plan to initiate court proceedings against Summit-Hamilton asking for' approxi- mntely $1000 in damages, part of which includes their security deposit, which was never returned.