SUNDAY MAGAZINE See Inside t it~zrn Ten Cents BRRRRRR! High--2a Low-12 See Today for details Eighty-Four Years of Editorial Freedom Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, January 12, 1975 /ol. LXXXV, No. 85 Eight Pages ' _ .; IfMU SEE W.16 HAPPE A T NY T ake that, Vic In the struggle for sexual equality, two local women caught a number. of men with their pants down-literally. The paddleball courts at the Vic Tanny Health Spa on Washtenaw Ave. are reserved strictly for male members. The reason: they are in full view of the men's dressing room. On Friday night, however, two female spa members decided to test the validity of this sanctuary. The women, Chris McBride and Cathy Deffenbaugh, were escorted from the area by three county sheriff deputies after a brief, ten-minute stay on the ;ourt. They were not arrested. McBride said that she and Deffenbaugh are considering legal action against Vic Tanny's because, though they pay the same amount as male members of the spa, "We can't use all the facilities." Spare change? Starting March 1, a platoon of state investigators will check hotels, bars and restaurants to make sure they are complying with a new law banning pay toilets in establishments selling liquor for on- the-premises consumption. Any business failing to comply with the measure faces the loss of its liquor license. So leave that change as a tip instead. " Happenings . . . . . are sparce today. They lead off with the annual intercollegiate bridge tournament regional semi-finals which will be held in the Union's Assembly Hall. Registration is at 2 p.m., and play begins an hour later. The competition is open to full-time 'U' students . .. later, there is a benefit for the Human Rights Party beginning 9 p.m. at Mr. Floods Party . . . things pick up somewhat on Monday. At' 7 p.m., the Michigan Association of Gerontology Students is sponsoring a forum on "Political Lobbying for Nursing Home Patients" which will be held in Rackham's East Conference Room .. . the local Common Cause chapter will hold a meeting at 8 p.m. in the 4th floor con- ference room of City Hall . . . Irish folk singers Gerry O'Kame and Noel Lenaghan will present a benefit concert for Clonlara School. The festivities get under way at 8 p.m. in Schorling Aud., in the School of Education . . . beginning lessons in square dancing will be offered free at Barbour Gym from 8-11 p.m. . . . and for a quick bite to eat, drop in at the brand new "Vegetable Union" inside the Union Station. The cafeteria-style res- taurant, featuring natural foods, is. open from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Crap out The Bahrain government yesterday denied re- ports that it was buying thousands of tons of cow manure from a United States firm to turn their desert into pastures. But Norman Siebens, vice president of R.J.B. Export, the firm which had previously announced the sale, said that the deal was still on as far as he knew. He declared that the company would send 50,000 tons of liquid manure each month to Bahrain. The three year plan will cost $1.2 billion. 0 Space junk A large section of the Saturn V rocket which boosted the May '73 Skylab into orbit apparently fell back to Earth early yesterday morning, ac- cording to U.S. space officials. But they didn't know exactly when the 83,000 pound hunk of metal re-entered the atmosphere-or, for that matter, where it landed. The reentry area, they said, stretches from the Azores across Africa to the Indian Ocean. 0 Lard to get Police yesterday stormed a dilapidated chateau near Montauban, France, and ended the two-year siege of a baroness. The 49-year-old baroness, Anne-Marie Portal, refused to pay family debts and barricaded her family in their home with her husband's unburied body. A court had ordered the family out of their mansion for failing to pay debts and property taxes totaling $33,600. Police moved in after two agricultural workers, sent by the mansion's new owners, were shot. The baroness and her daughter were arrested. 0 Alas, poor D.l. A skull found near a weathered parachute in Oregon's'Mt. Hood National Forest is the newest clue in the three-year search for the infamous skyjacker "D. B. Cooper." A man calling himself by that name parachuted from a low-flying jet- liner on Thanksgiving Eve, 1971, with $200,000 in ransom money strapped to his chest. Neither he nor the money was ever seen again. The state's medical examiner yesterday said his department believes the skull might be Cooper's. The FBI, however, has downplayed the likelihood that the skull is that of the mystery man. On the inside .,. Today the Sunday Magazine takes a long look at the Red scare of the 1950's with Howie Brick writing on the case of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg. . ,. The Sports Page details yesterday's basketball game between the Wolverines and arch-rival MSU. (n theip t idpi.1. . U.S. Court to rule on Crestwood appeal DETROIT (UPI) - A state Court of Appeals panel will rule today on 'an appeal by Crest- wood school officials trying to block the return of dismissed teachers to their desks. A court spokesperson said a decision is expected about noon. EARLIER, there were reports the appeals court might not take up the case until tomorrow after 186 fired teachers return to their jobs in the Crestwood district under court order. But the court said it would accept a legal brief today at 10 a.m. in response to the Crestwood appeal and then take up the case in an unusual week- end session. Judge Vincent Brennan will preside over the three-member panel, which also includes judges George Bashara Jr. and Michael Kelley. THE SCHOOL board filed its appeal at 5:14 p.m. Friday, a few hours after a three-member Wayne County circuit court panel refused a Crestwood school board request that would have delayed the return of the fired teachers. T h e s a m e three-member Wayne County panel one day earlier ruled 2-1 that Crestwood officials illegally dismissed 186 teachers Dec. 27 and ordered them to return to their desks tomorrow. Lawyers for the Crestwood district appealed that decision to the state Court of Appeals. A COURT spokesperson said See COURT, Page 2 jets reported over Indochina By AP and Reuter SAIGON, South Vietnam-American sources said yes- terday that U.S. planes are flying reconnaissance missions over Indochina, but the U.S. Embasy dismissed as "non- sense" North Vietnam's charge that American planes are guiding bombing raids. A Defense Department spokesperson in Washington said he had "no comment" when asked to confirm the reconnaissance flights. Asked about Hanoi's claim that U.S. planes directed South Vietnamese bombers against the Viet Cong capital of Los Ninh, 75 miles north of Sai- gon, the spokesperson said: "We just don't respond to North Vietnamese propaganda." In Cambodia, military sources said U.S. planes have doubled munitions runs into Phnom Penh from six to 12 daily. Associated Press correspondent Matt Franjola reported the planes were unloading their 15 tons of munitions, in a few minutes without shutting off their enginges. Phnom Penh's main economic life- line, the Mekong River, was cut by the insurgents early in their New Year's dry season offen- sive, making the increased mu- nitions flights more urgent. Meanwhile, the Saigon com- mand said yesterday it needs more American B-52 bombers as South Vietnamese air force planes made more heavy strikes against Communist positions north and east of Saigon. In excess of .100 sorties were flown yesterday, most against Provisional Revolutionary Gov- ernment (PRG) territory to the north but some about 75 miles to the east where a major con- frontation is under way, mili- tary sources said. The question of U.S. flights in Indochina was raised when the official Hanoi paper Nhan Dan said that "manned and pilotless reconnaissance planes from U.S. bases in Thailand" guided South Vietnamese bomb- ing runs against Loc Ninh. The PRG say those runs have caused heavy casualties and damage. The Nhan Dan report was of- ficially denied by the U.S. Em- bassy. But sources acknowl- edged that American planes have been flying reconnai sance missions along the North "Jet- namese coast and over South Vietnam and Cambodia ever since the Paris cease-fire a;ree- ment two years ago. Hanoi further charged that U.S. reconnaissance planes flew over Hanoi and "many other localities" yesterday in "brazen violation of the Paris peace agreement." The U.S. sources said Ameri- can planes do not actually fly over North Vietnam, which is prohibited by the agreement, but high-altitude SR71 planes fly along the North Vietnamese coast with cameras that can peer far inland. The Paris agreement says nothing about flights over South Vietnam or Cambodia. The Pentagon acknowledged last No- vember that U.S. planes fly over Cambodia and pass "items of interest" along to the Cam- bodian command. M cCartly Daily Photo by PAULINE LUBENS THE BROWN JUG was picketed yesterday by r oughly 20 people who were indignant over the Crestwood school board's firing of the district's striking teachers. George Paron, the restaurant owner, is a member of the Crestwood school board. WILL ASK TAX CUT: F'ord to attack WASHINGTON (AP)-President tion, administration sources Ford will unveil his top-priority have said. program to fight the recession and energy shortages in a State "THE DECISIONS are all of the Union message Wednes- made," Press Secretary Ron day, a White House spokes- Nessen told reporters. President person said yesterday. Ford will deliver the address The package will include a $15 personally at a joint session of billion cut in income taxes and Congress at 1 p.m. EST Wednes- a program to drive up gasoline day, he said. prices to discourage consump- Rep. Al Ullman (D-Ore.), the Severe we ater ravages Michigan Fierce winds, heavy snow and sub-zero temperatures punished much of the state early yesterday morning, taking the life of one Oakland County woman and leaving dozens of others injured. The National Weather Service in Detroit has issued blizzard, flood and high wind warnings for the northwest lower peninsula. The Detroit Edison office in Ann Arbor reported 400-500 homes in the southwest and southeast sections of the city without electricity due to trees blown onto power lines. "THE DAMAGE wasn't extensive," said a power company spokesman. Michigan Bell Telephone reported 800 customers af- fected by the storm. WINDS HIT 70 miles an hour in Traverse City and Rogers City and the weather service said its wind-measuring equipment failed at Oscoda when gusts hit 63 miles an hour. In Detroit, police warned drivers that trees, felled traffic signals and debris blowing from the tops of tall buildings made driving hazardous. IT SAID that more than six inches of snow was likely in the northern lower peninsula by early today with temperatures dropping to around zero. High wind warnings were issued for the lower part of the state and flood warnings were issued in the Detroit area, where the weather service said the Rouge River might go two feet above flood level near Garden City. ailing economy McCarthy, Harris to' run in ''76 By AP and UPI Two liberal former senators, Eugene McCarthy of Minnesota and Democratic Fred Harris of Oklahoma, announced yesterday that they would seek the presi- dency in 1976. McCarthy,the poet-politician whose 1968 presidential cam- paign on the Democratic ticket helped topple the administra- tion of Lyndon Johnson, an- nounced that he would seek the White House as an independent candidate. The former senator, announc- ing his candidacy while attend- ing an Episcopal church confer- ence in Columbus, Ohio, said that his former party is so frag- mented that it is unable to con- duct party business. Citing Democratic divisions on foreign trade and foreign aid, the economy, militarism and civil liberties, he said it would be "pretty hard to reconcile See McCARTHY, Page 2 prospective chairman of the House Ways and Means Com- mittee that initiates all tax legislation, already has pledged speedy action on Ford's forth- coming recommendations for cutting taxes to spur the sagging economy. The President previewed his program for the two top Re- publican leaders of Congress yesterday and won their basic agreement on the broad-scale package. Ullman, after meeting Friday night with Ford, also said Ford's plan "encompasses much of what I support," al- though he predicted Congress will want to make some re- visions. SENATE GOP leader Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania and House Republican chief John Rhodes of Arizona spent more than an hour with Ford yesterday morn- ing, going over details of the President's blueprint that Ull- man reported was "wider in scope that I had anticipated." Congressional Democrats plan to unveil their own economic program tomorrow and there had been speculation Ford might try to beat them to. the punch. But Nessen said the President "has made no deci- sion on any presentation" apart from his State of the Union message, which will be broad- cast live. HERE ARE some of the key features of the economic-energy program Ford will unveil, a c c o r d i n g to administration sources: * An income tax cut of about $15 billion designed to pump added spending power into the economy in the early months of the year, probably through re- bates on 1974 taxes that will be due April 15. If the plan is ap- proved by Congress, individuals would be expected to find their taxes for last year cut by about 10 per cent. * Imposition of a tariff of $3 on imported crude oil and a similar excise tax on domestic crude. The purpose would be to discourage oil consumption by See FORD, Page 2 Male dancer pleas for. By MARGARET YAO The women's rights movement has been occupying its place in the sun for so long that a male's plea for equality sometimes goes unheard. This is precisely Micnael Mears' problem. Soon to gain the distinction of being the first male to get a masters degree from the University Dance De- partment in its 25-year history, he is finding the distinction neither glamorous nor advan- tageous. MEARS BELIEVES that his masculinity has been detrimen- tal to his dance career, spe- cifically in his pursuit of a de- gree in Dance Education. He says that the dance department is rather apathetic towards its male dancers, who constivite eight per cent of the dance en- rollment. The press was sensational, the government corrupt and the populace bloodthirsty when Julius and Ethel Rosen- berg were put on trial in 1951 for being the ringleaders of an "atom spy ring" during: World War II. In the eyes of the country, their left-wing political beliefs were enough evidence to condemn them.a However, to many, then and now, the Rosenbergs were executed as a result of a