LONG AUTUMN FOR WOODCOCK See Editorial Page C I 4c 3k iAau 43A6Ftt NFVy AUTUMNAL High-70 Low-43 See Today Eighty-Three Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXIV, No. 12 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, September 19, 1973 Ten Cents W ASH. POST REPORTS Ten Pages iFYCUSEE NvS [APPEN CALL7rDLtY Thank you A young man came up to our offices yesterday morning and told us the following story. At around nine in the morning, a small dog was struck by a bicyclist in front of the UQLI. The force of, the blow broke his leg and severed an artery. As throngs of students passed by, too busy to stop, the dog lay bleeding on the Diag pavement. Finally, a young student stopped and despite the early morning chill,, removed his shirt and wrapped it around the damaged leg to stop the bleeding. He then arranged to have someone call a vet, and waited with the wounded animal until help arrived. The student probably missed his nine o'clock lecture. He also probably ruined his shirt. The young man who stopped by here wanted to thank him. So do we. 0 Chilean radio Janes Maharg, University professor of Romance Lan- guages, and a 'D-Xer'-a person who merely listens to shortwave broadcasts as opposed to a ham operator, who broadcasts as well-reports that he heard Chilean short- wave broadcasts' for the first time since the coup Monday night. Maharg says that radio stations are no longer broadcasting under their pre-coup names, but under the designation "Radio Network of the Armed Forces." Monday, he heard the hours vWhen the curfew would be lifted yesterday broadcast-between noon and 8 p.m. Tuition strike meeting A meeting of persons interested in the tuition strike has been called at 7:30 p. m. tonight in Room 126 of East Quad. The ad hoc Student Action Committee says that at the meeting, demands to implement the 1970 Black Action Movement and adequate financial aid to those who need it, will also be discussed. Happenings ..*. . . .include a range of meetings of various campus groups . . . the Ann Arbor American Youth Hostels group will have a mass meeting for new members at 8 p.m. in the Union ... Rackham Student Govt.'s Exec- utive Board will meet at 7 p.m. on the second floor of Rackham . . . and the undergraduate Political Science Association will convene at 2402 Mason Hall at 7.30 p.m. on the lighter side, both the Ann Arbor and New World Film Co-op's are featuring Fellini's Satyricon and Cinema Guild is showing Whelan's Clouds Over Europe ... Summerhill, What's New At School? is at Aud. B at 4 p.m. . . . and free pool lessons will be given from 5 to 7 p.m. in the Billiards Room on the Union's second floor. Amnesty decree Jordan's King Hussein declared a general amnesty yesterday in a bid to reconcile Palestinian guerrillas he ousted from the country three years ago. The amnesty decree affects all guerrillas, political detainees and want- ed persons in and outside Jordan, including some 300 guerrillas in Jordanian prisons. Not included in the list of guerrillas - who will be released from prison or not sought by the government-are common murderers and persons convicted of espionage. ! Bhutto arrives President Nixon gave public assurance to Prime Min- ister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto yesterday that "independence and integrity of Pakistan is a cornerstone of U. S. poli- cy". The statement came during a ceremonial greeting for the Pakistani leader on his arrival at the White House for a two-day visit, and went farther than pre- vious U. S. pledges of support for the dismembered na- tion. 0 Sextuplet failing The health of one of the sextuplets born Sunday night in Denver deteriorated yesterday as doctors planned a blood exchange transfusion in an attempt to stabilize her condition. The condition of Julia Stanek dropped from fair to poor yesterday afternoon, said a spokes- woman at Colorado General Hospital. Julia's sister and four brothers remained in fair to good condition. Analyst reinsta ted An Air Force cost analyst who was fired after he disclosed a $2 billion Overrun on the C5A aircraft pro- ject, was ordered reinstated yesterday with full back pay. The U. S. Civil Service Commission ruled that the Air Force acted improperly in dismissing A. Ernest Fitz- gerald. The commission held, however, that the firing had been for purely personal reasons and not in retalia- tion for his CSA testimony. 0 On the instde Co-editor-in-chief Chris Parks rakes the city adminis- tration over the coals on the Editorial Page , . . Marcia Merker gives a rundown of this year's cross country squad on the Sports Page . . . and on the Arts Page, a review of Rosalie Sorrels' Ark concert is featured. GOP Kissinger approved by Senate committee WASHINGTON (Reuter) - The Senate Foreign Relations Commit- tee yesterday approved-with only one senator dissenting-the nomi- nation of Henry Kissinger to be secretary of state. But the committee, following up the controversy touched off by Kis- singer's role in the wiretapping of several members of his staff, passed unanimously a resolution calling for an examination of the use of electronic equipment con- cerning foreign policy activities. The full Senate is expected to give final approval tomorrow or Friday to Kissinger's nomination. THE ADMINISTRATION is an- xious that Kissinger, the first for- eign-born citizen to head the state department, take up his new post as soon as possible. He is due to address the U.N. General Assembly next week on the Middle East crisis and has al- ready postponed another trip to Peking. The post of secretary of state will provide little new for Kissin- ger. As a senior presidential ad- viser, a post he retains, he has played a leading role in foreign affairstduring the past four years; negotiating the Vietnam peace agreement intParis, visiting Peking and Moscow and preparing for the administration's 1973 "Year of Europe."~ THE ONLY ONE of the 17 com- mittee members to oppose Kissir- ger was Sen. George McGovern, last year's defeated Democratic presidential candidate, who said he was casting a symbolic vote against the Nixon administration's policies in Indochina and Bangla- desh. The one possible obstacle to Kis- singer's approval by the Senate committee came when members insisted on being given a full report of the wiretapping by 13 govern- ment officials, including the Kis- singer staff members, and news- men, in connection with leakages of information early in Nixon's first presidential term. Attorney General Elliot Richard- son refused to hand over the re- port but agreed to allow two senior committee members to study it. Sen. J. William Fulbright (D-Ark.), the committee chairman, said yes- terday the committee had general- ly concluded that Kissinger's role was peripheral. But the committee unanimously passed a resolution calling for a "full examination of the use of electronic and other means of sur- veillance of American citizens in connection with alleged intelligence gathering or other activities re- lated to foreign policy." FULBRIGHT SAID the commit- tee felt strict procedures should be set up to insure there is more supervision over wiretapping in national security cases where court approval is not needed. He and several other committee members said the committee will also study way to provide more effective congressional scrutiny of foreign policy in general. The lack of White House consul- tation with the Senate, which has the constitutional role of giving advice and consent on foreign See APPROVAL, Page 2 source expects VP to quit W hite House refuses comment on Post claim WASHINGTON (Reuter)-A spokesman for Vice-President Spiro Agnew yesterday described as just a rumor a report that Agnew is "991,> per cent certain to resign-probably this week." But the spokesman refused to flatly confirm or deny the report which appeared yesterday in a Washington Post story by Pulitzer-Prize winning correspondent David Broder. Broder attributed the remark to a "Republican party leader." THE REPORT came as government prosecutors in Baltimore were AP Photo SEN. GEORGE McGOVERN (D-S.D.), who yesterday cast the lone vote in opposition to the nomination of IHenry Kissinger as secretary of state, explains his vote to newsmen on Capitol Hill. McGovern said his vote was a protest against the administration's policies in Indochina and Bangladesh. U.N. grants membership preparing to begin presenting to a Agnew, while ggvernor of Mary- land, accepted payments from con- tractors in return for state con- tracts. Agnew's resignation at this time would be a serious blow to Presi- dent Nixon, already' battered by the revelations of the Watergate scandal. The White House, which early yesterday disclaimed all knowledge of the report, later refused to dis- cuss it. To a barrage of reporters' questions, presidential spokesman Gerald Warren said: "My position this morning, after talking to- a number of people, including the President, is that the Vice-Presi- dent is just not going to comment. A REPUBLICAN party leader, who was said to have spent two hours late last week trying to argue Agnew out of the decision, was quoted by Broder as saying he was "991/2 per cent certain he (Agnew) will resign-and probably this week." The unnamed Republican was quoted as saying Agnew was de- termined to prove his innocence of the allegations of bribery, ex- tortion and tax law violations being investigated. Thes54-year-old Agnew has al- ready dismissed the allegations as "damned lies." TOLD BY a reporter that his refusal to comment could be in- terpreted as a "kiss of death" for Agnew, Warren said yesterday he refused to comment no mattr how the questions were phrased. Warren, who said Nixon had seen the Washington Post report, re- fused to reply when asked to re- peat previous White House state- ments that the President had full confidence in Agnew. But Warren repeated another earlier statement in which he de- nied there was a contingency plan for naming .a successor to Agnew. UNDER THE Constitution, when the vice-presidency is vacant Con- gress has to approve a nonination submitted by the President. The newspaper report apparently took Congress by surprise. Minor- ity Whip Sen. Robert Griffin (R- Mich.), who has close ties with the See AGNEW, Page 2 grand jury evidence alleging that Dorms to boycott* lettuce Dormitory food services will once again be a bad scene for lettuce lovers this year: students will be eating leaf spinach, esca- role, and romaine, but not so much as a shred of non-union ice'berg lettuce. The lack of the crunchy light- green salad supplement in dorm diets is not the whim of some lofty bureaucrat with a lettuce allergy: it's the result of a decision by the University Housing Council (UHC) ,last night to continue the food serv- ice boycott of non-union lettuce, UHC voted to forbid purchase of any lettuce not grown and pick- ed by the United Farm Workers (UFW), who are currently fighting to attain union contracts from sev- eral produce firms and major food chains, including A&P. Under the leadership of Cesar Chavez, UFW has organized thou- sands of previously unprotected farm workers on the West Coast. Chavez, himself came to the city over the summer for a benefit to raise money for the UFW cause. UHC, a group of students elected to advise the University's Housing Policy Board, voted 3-1 approval of the -continued lettuce boycott, which had been in effect on the campus for several years. The policy board is expected to give quick approval to the boycott. Claudia Evans, a member of the ill-defined Mad Hatters' Tea Party, cast the solitary "no" vote. She urged fruitlessly that the council "find out how the students feel" before proceeding to remove let- tuce from the menu. UHC also voted unanimously to - seek a campus-wide referendum on the boycott in November's Stu- dent Government Council election. to East, West Germany UNITED NATIONS (Reuter) - The United Nations (U.N.) General Assembly, opening its 28th session yesterday, admitted the two Ger- man states to full membership in a history-making action that em- phasized the growing trend to- wards East-West detente. The Bahamas also gained entry, bringing U.N. membership to 135 countries. Dr. Leopoldo Benites, U.N. am- bassador from Ecuador since 1960, was elected president of the As- sembly, succeeding Polish Deputy Foreign Minister Stanislaw Trep- czynski. The Assembly was convened little more than an hour after the Security Council shelved a com- plaint lodged by Cuba against the Chilean military junta, which the Castro government accused of hav- ing attacked the Cuban Embassy in Santiago and a Cuban merchant ship. No resolution was offered in reply to Cuban Ambassador Ricar- do Alarcon Quesadas' bitter attack on the Chilean regime and what he called the "seamy scum" of the U.S. C e n t r a 1 Intelligence Agency and defense department. Council President Lazar Mojsov of Yugoslavia adjourned the debate for an indefinite period to allow for "p r i v a t e consultations." Diplo- matic sources said this was a po- lite way of disposing of the issue. No further meeting on it is ex- pected. Admission of East and West Ger- many to membership was not achieved without some controversy, despite the unanimous recommend- ation transmitted to the Assembly by the Security Council. Israeli Ambassador Jyosef Te- koah, voicing "regret and repug- nance" that East Germany had ignored responsibiilty for the Nazi holocaust in which millions of Jews died, asked for a separate vote on the two applications. But after stating his objections to East German membership he said it was clear there was no pos- sibility of bringing about a vote, because this might "open up a pandora's box, upset the scenario agreed upon and result in a great- er number of countries voting for the admission of East Germany than for the admission of the Fed- eral German Republic." He did not, therefore, press the point and the Assembly was able to proceed to the admission of the German states by acclamation. But not before Guinea Ambassador Jeanne-Martin Cissee had express- ed reservations about West Ger- many's qualifications and Saudi Arabian Ambassador J a m i l Ba- roody had delivered a lengthy at- tack on Israeli policy. 'U' grad sees expanded use of acupuncture By JO MARCOTTY A year ago it was called "quackupuncture", but now there are eighty University research projects trying to find out how acupuncture works. Dr. Martin Rossman, a practicing acupunc- turist and a graduate of the University's Medical School, called acupuncture a "miracle cure", and believes it has a firm future in American medi- cine. He was present in Ann Arbor for the Blues and Jazz festival as the resident physician and acu- puncturist for the artists and their crews. "THERE'S ABSOLUTELY no denying that it works," he said. "A doctor treats you for twenty years with no results, then some fool sticks a needle in you, and the pain goes away." A year ago Rossman started working with a team of American and Chinese doctors studying acupuncture at Hawthorne State Hospital in North- ville, Michigan. "We stuck pins in about 600 medical rejects, (those the medical profession has given up hope for) and approximately 60 per cent showed signs of improvement," he said. Police crack down on posting handbills By DAVID STOLL The posting of handbills on build- ings around the city has apparently been added to the growing list of crimes city police have decided to crack down on in recent days. In the last four months members ordinance. He also said that en- forcement was "without concern for political affiliations." However, reports from organiza- tions whose members have been repeatedly warned against posting handbills indicate that the heat _...._ . ., .r",,.>:";: .. .... .. ... Nw.: _ .ice