INPUT PUT OUT IN THE COLD See Editorial Page C I 4c gilt DIaitV POLAR Ifigh-4 s Low.-25 See Today for Details Eighty-Three Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXV, No. 54 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, November 7, 1973 Ten Cents Ten Pages NEW MAYOR s 4 r IF ICU SE N~WS [~PP ALL6-D4JtY TF decision today University President Robben Fleming will release a statement sometime today which informed sources say could head off an impending strike by teaching fellows. At a meeting of the literary college faculty Monday, Fl-i-g anno',aced that he would produce a definitive statement clarifying in-state residency criteria and sti- pends for. teaching fellows. The teaching fellows are pro- testing University decisions made over the summer which, together with the tition hike, have worsened their economic condition. The TFs meet tomorrow night at 8 p.m. in the UGLI Multipurpose Room to vote on their course of action, which could include a work stoppage or strike. The meeting will take place regardless of the content of Fleming's statement. Helmet option proposed State Representative Perry Bullard (D-Ann Arbor) wants to give city motorcyclists the right to decide whe- ther or not they wear crash helmets. He has proposed legislation that would repeal a present state law re- quiring persons operating a motorcycle to wear a state police-approved crash helmet. "There already are too many federal ,state and local laws and ordinances that tell people how to live. These statutes destroy individual rights without the necessary showing of benefit for the community." Bullard said. He quoted Thomas Jeffer- son, saying "The legislative powers of government ex- tend to such acts only as are injurious to others." 0 Hart's integrity cited Senate legislative assistants named Michigan Sen. Philip Hart the Senator with the "most integrity" in a survey conducted by Ralph Nader's Capitol Hill news service. The senatorial aides who perform much of the day-to-day back up work for Senators also chose Sen. Jacob Javits (R-N.Y.) as the "brightest" Senator. Javits and Sen. Warren Magnuson, (D-Wash.) tie for second place for "most effective" senator behind Sen. Henry Jackson, (D-Wash.). In the opinion of the legislative aides, the "hardest working" is Sen. Robert Byrd (D. W. Va.). 0 U profs to visit China University professors Harold Stevenson and Martin Whyte will be part of a 10-member team of childhood development specialists visiting the People's Republic of China Nov. 15 to Dec. 6. The team is the first in a series of eight American groups which will tour the Peo- ple's Republic in conjunction with a National Academy of Science exchange program between the two countries. The specialists will study Chinese institutions that deal with young children, including day care centers, pedia- tric clinics, homes and kindergartens. "The Chinese are interested in American ideas," Stevenson said, "but they 'will be primarily concerned with showing us what has been accomplished in their country." Stevenson is a psychology professor and former director of the Insti- tute of Child Development at the University of Minne- sota and past president of the Society for Research in Child Development. Sociology Prof. Whyte is a specialist in comparative social institutions and family systems in China and the Soviet Union. 0 Hap pen ings .. . . ..include a meeting of the UFO'Club in the Union's Anderson Room B at 8:30 p.m. . . . the Ski Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. in Anderson Room 0 . . . a Study Abroad Workshop convenes tonight at 7:30 p.m. at the Interna- tional Center, 603 E. Madison . . . earlier in the day, an informal lunch hour discussion entitled "Career Oppor- tunities for Women" will also be held at the International Center at noon . . . and Carol Hollenshead, chairwoman of the University Commission for Women's personnel committee, will present a slide and tape show dramatiz- ing sex role reversals in employment situations, at the Ann Arbor Public Library, at 12:10 p.m. T Tough porno lawy passed The small town of New Baltimore, Mo., has put into effect an anti-pornography law that could make even baby powder advertisements illegal. "I believe some of these ads show bare baby bottoms," said police chief Edward Reim. Under the law, passed unanimously Oct. 23, buttocks are among things classified as offensive. Already, drug stores, supermarkets, bookshops and other businesses have removed Plhyboy and other girlie maga- zines from their racks. Selling magazines or books show- ing parts of the body listed as offensive - or even giv- ing -way s ich materials - carries a maximum jail term of 90 days and maximum fine of $500. Why the tough ordinance for this town of about four thousand? "People here don't like that stuff," said Mayor Hermann Staff- horst. On the inside .. . ...'Terry Adams discusses legal services for the poor, on the Editorial Page . . . Sara Rimer reviews the Hans Hoffman exhibit at the University's art museum on the Arts Page . . . and on the Sports Page, Jim Ecker writes about former asst. basketball coach Fred Snowden's new career. Young carries Detroit election Cops nab two men in record pot bust By STEPHEN SELBST Federal, state, and city police collaborated Monday night in what is believed to be the largest mari- juana seizure in the history of Washtenaw county. 880 pounds of marijuana, with an estimated street value of over $125,000, was confiscated in the arrest. The two men arrested in con- nection with the raid are John Hecht 26, of San Diego, Calif., and Eugene Cunningham, 31, of Rich- field, Wash. THE ARREST occurred Monday night around 8 p.m. in the parking lot of the Arborland shopping cen- ter on Washtenaw Ave. Police Chief .Walter Krasny said that "police undercover agents made arrangements to make a pur- chase with these men. When they delivered the stuff, we arrested them." When the pair was arrested po- lice also confiscated their van, which had California license plates. They also seized a quantity of co- caine, and a number of handguns. ACCORDING TO Krasny,'federal agents had the two men and their van under surveillance during its trip to Michigan from the west coast. Commenting on the raid, police information director Lt. Richard Hill said, "It's obvious that these are no small time guys here to sell a few pounds." He believed the pair were part of a larger organiz- ation involved in transporting drugs into the state. KRASNY CONCURRED, saying, "Yeah, these guys are big time." Following their arrest the pair were bound over to federal authori- ties in Detroit. They were arraign- ed yesterday morning in Federal District Court. Demo rats victorious in N.Y. New Jersey By The AP, UPI and Reuter State Sen. Coleman Young became Detroit's first black mayor last night as he " defeated former police commissioner John Nichols in a close contest. Unofficial figures showed Young capturing 51.8 per cent of the vote. With 96 per cent of the vote tabulated the figures were Young 213,449 and Nichols 215,791. MOST OF THE unreported precincts were predominantly black districts where Young is the near unanimous choice. Elsewhere in the nation, Democrats fared well. How much of that success was attributable to President Nixon's troubles as opposed to local issues was not immediately clear. Photo by ANDY SACKS DENIS LEE makes some final adjustments on an artificial ear he has constructed for one of his many patients. Using skills he acquired as an artist, Lee designs body parts for victims of illness and accidents. Des Lee:.Cra tsman .p i By JEFF DAY Denis Lee has a drawer in his workbench filled with noses. Rubber noses, plaster noses and even a spare finger. Lee, however, is no simple make-up man. His subjects are not actors, but ordinary people, who have lost parts of their body as a result of some illness or accident. HIS JOB IS to replace those missing parts with artificial structures-a task known in the science world as prosthetics. Though he serves as director of medical illu- strations at the University Medical Center, Lee views himself primarily as an artist. Each piece that he does is molded individually to best match the original. Working from pictures, plaster molds and in the case' of fingers or ears, an impression of the corresponding part, Lee sculpts a model of the replacements in clay. From there he uses silicone to make the replacement part, painting in blemishes and skin tone. "EVERY DENTIST takes a course in pros- thetics," says Lee from his office in the basement of the North Outpatient Clinic. Often, he adds, they must make the artificial parts simply be- cause no one else can. "I don't like to knock anybody," Lee quips, "but lost of people make ball point pens too. The question is, which one would you prefer?" Lee got into the field several years ago when Dr. Reed Dingman, head of the University Hos- pital's plastic surgery department, asked him if he could come up with an alternative to the poorer quality parts being produced. AFTER A YEAR of work in his basement, Lee See ARTISTIC, Page 10 "Detroit has shown' the country that we are perpared to move ahead," Young told cheering sup- porters last night. "Thisis a vic- tory that belongs to all-the people, I didn't win. We won. All Detroit won." He said his administration would not show racial favoritism. "I'M NOT GOING to punish any- body but I'm going 'to insist on equality for everybody," Young said. "That's what a mayor's race is all about." Nichols took an early lead in the ballotting with votes from pre- dominantly white precincts. As the evening wore on, however, Young closed the gap and eventually went ahead on the strength of his per- formance in the city's black areas. Only an estimated 42 per cent of the city's 815,000 registered voters went to the polls on the cold, clear day in the Motor City. THE ELECTION caps one of the most bitter and racially polarized camnaigns political observers can recall. Nichols ran primarily on his law and order image acquired during his 31 year police career. He tried to link his opponent with the city's lawless elements, but the voters apparently rejected that appeal In New York, Democrat Abe Beame won a landslide victory in, that city's race for mayor. The 67-year-old Beame won an esti- mated 61 per cent of the vote in a four-man race. SO SWEEPING was his victory that one of his three opponents, Liberal Albert Blumenthal, con- ceded defeat just 40 minutes after the polls closed-a possible record. Beame becomes the first Jew to be elected mayor of New York, which has the largest Jewish popu- lation of any city in the U.S. and more Jews than Tel Aviv. Not surprisingly, he swept an estimated 66 per cent of the Jewish vote but also did extremely well in Puerto Rican and black areas of the city. Beame carried in a slate of viC- torious Democrats including long- time liberal activist Paul O'Dwyer. ATTACKED BY many as a lack- luster candidate, Beame apparent- ly impres'sed New Yorkers with his lengthy service in city government and his untarnished record of in- tegrity. See YOUNG, Page'7 Attorney. delineates anti-Nixonf Civil suit By DEBOR~AH GOOD A major civil liberties suit filed against Nixon and a number of his key offici-ls 'was discussed yester- day when Michael Aranall, national field secreta'ry for the Political Rights Defense Fund (PRDF), spoke at the Michigan Union. The PRDF, the organization fil- ing the suit, is an adjunct of the Committee for Dempcratic Elec- tion Laws, a national organization which has enkaged in suits against discriminatory election laws and practices. THE CURRENT suit against Nix- on and his Administration, filed on behalf of the Young Socialist Alli- ance (YSA) and the Social Work- ers Party (SWP), calls for agper- manent injunction restraining all government officials from imple- menting the White House spy plan" written in 1970. The plan, which was reviewed by the Senate Watergate commit- tee, outlined detailed sabotage and surveillance procedures to be used against political enemies of the Administration. After reading the document, Watergate Committee Chairman Sam Ervin (D-N.C.) charged that the authors of the plan showed a "Gestapomentality." THE LAWYERS representing the YSA and the SWP are Leonard Boudin-who defended Daniel Ells- berg, Benjamin Spock and the Berrigan brothers - and Herbert Jordan, a top constitutional law- yer. "The purpose of the snit," says Arnall, "is to establish clearly the illegality of. using enemy lists and spy plans by the public officials. The suit would set a strong pre- cedent for future administrations. Arnall cited John Ehrlichman's testimony before the Watergate See ATTORNEY, Page 7 N President's private secretary tQ te stify before grand j ury By AP and Reuter WASHINGTON - President Nix- on's private secretary, Rose .Mary Woods, was called by a federal judge yesterday to tell what she knows about the two missing Watergate tapes. At the same time, former attor- ney general Elliot Richardson ap- pealed for a presidential commit- ment to make available all rele- vant tape recordings, notes and other documents bearing on the case. WHILE THE COURTS and Con- gress continued investigations into the latest Watergate Developments, Nixon, firmly resisting pressure on him to resign over his handling of the bugging scandal, turned his full attention to emergency plans to meet an oil embargo imposed by Arab producers against the United States. The call to Woods, who has been with Nixon for many years and is one of his close confidantes, fol- lowed testimony before Judge John Sirica, ,who is presiding over grand jury inquiries, about a weekend last September at the presidential retreat at Camp David, Md., when Nixon, his aides Stephen Bull, and Woods reviewed boxes of the Presi- dent's secret tapes. Woods was officially summoned when Sirica interrupted the fourth day of proceedings to say: "AS LONG AS we're going into this detail, will someone please get word to Miss Woods that she will be called as a witness in this case?" Nixon's lawyers said Sirica's re- quest to Woods would be honored. The President reluctantly agreed on Oct. 22 to hand -over to Sirica nine tapes of his conversations with presidential aides bearing on the Watergate bugging scandal. a BUT LAST WEEK it was an- nounced that two of the tapes did not exist, resulting in a new furor over the President's handling of the Watergate affair and more de- mands for his resignation. Bull told Sirica he worked in a room of Miss Woods' personal cot- tage at Camp David, while, for most of the time there, she and the President worked together alone in another room. HE SAID THE three of them were the only White House per- sonnel at the presidential retreat over the weekend. He related one instance of hurriedly "obscuring" the tapes and papers when a Navy yeoman appeared suddenly at the cottage to make a delivery. . Bull said Woods began listening to the tapes and typing Sept. 29, and continued this work the next week in Washington and through the following weekend at Key Bis- cayne, Fla., where Nixon has a home. When she was -not working with the recordings, Bull said, the tapes were kept in a safe in her office and in a specially obtained heavy safe, guarded 24 hours a day, at Key Biscayne. BUT BULL REPEATEDLY re- fused to say whether Woods was making a transcript and said he didn't even ask. "I intentionally did not do this because it was not my business," he said. "I continued to line up tape for her review and the President's review," said Bull. HE TESTIFIED that he was sent to the presidential retreat at Camp David Sept. 28 to find portions of the tapes the President wanted to listen to. He had performed the same chore for Nixon last June 4, Bull said. Diring his review of the tapes, Bull said, he could not find two conversations. A telephone talk between the President and former Atty. Gen. EXTRADITION SOUGHT Fugi tive Vesco NASSAU, BAHAMAS - (AP) - Fugitive financier Robert Vesco wanted on a host of charges includ- ng an illegal $200,000 contribution o President Nixon's re-election ampaign, was arrested in Nassau 'esterday and served with a fed- ral warrant seeking his extra- ition to the United States. Vesco, 37, was picked up in the ffices of his Bahamas Common- Nealth Bank by Asst. Police Com- arrested Osadebay also confiscated the fi- nancier's travel documents and told him not to try to leave the Ba- hamas without official permission. The U. S. attorney's office said the arrest was based on a July 20 fraud indictment accusing Vesco of falsifying records of a firm he headed to cover up the embezzle- ment of some of the firm's funds. VESCO IS ALSO a codefendant with former U. S. Atty. Gen. John n