THWARTING THE BOYCOTT See Editorial Page :Y Sir A Zti1y SOPPY High-64 Low-39 See Today for details Eighty-Three Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXIV, No. 61 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, November 15, 1973 Ten Cents Ten Pages Chinese attend seminar IrYO uSEE NEWS APPE U1L*'JLY Regents assemble In this month's administrative blitz, the University's executive officers will present the Board of Regents to- day and tomorrow with requests for re-allocation of the $3.75 million surnlus produced by the recent 24 per cent fee hike. The proposed distribution of the money, pre- pared by administration officials despite earlier claims that students would have a voice in handling the surplus, includes a grant of $2 million to teaching assistants in increased stipends and financial aid, appropriation of $60,000 to the Office of Financial Aid for personnel costs, and funding of a $150,000 payment toward construction of University recreation facilities. The. Regents' public meetings take place today from 2:30 to 4 p.m., with a public comments session until 5, and tomorrow from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Both sessions will be held in the Regents' Room, on the first floor of the Administration Bldg. Impeachment vote The College Young Democrats have added their voice to the swelling numbers advocating the impeachment of President Richard Nixon. The group voted unanimous- ly on a motion calling for immediate impeachment and sent a copy of the resolution to Rep. Marvin Esch (R- Ann Arbor) and to all members of the House Judiciary Committee. The group also announced it would sponsor a candlelight march to honor the 10th anniversary of the assassination of President John Kennedy. Arizona bound The sunny climes of Arizona have lured yet another 'U' staff member. Dr. Neal Vanselow, chairman of the medical school's department of post-graduate medicine and health professions education, has been named dean of the College of Medicine of the University of Arizona. Vanselow will assume his new post next June 1. Marvelous Marv On his way out of yesterday's GOP meeting with President Nixon, Rep. Marvin Esch (R-Ann Arbor) was pressed by reporters for the highlights of the President's message. According to Esch, Nixon, in speaking about the probable effect of any appearance before Congress on the Watergate question, quipped,. "The Democrats would say I'm a lying son of a bitch and the Republicans would say I'm probably lying but I'm their son of a bitch." Happenings .. . . wine, cheese and the mellow tones of the Marais Trio are available at this evening's session of the Bach Club, which gets underway at 8:00 p.m. in the Greene Lounge of East Quad . . . "Career Opportunities for Wo- men" will hold an informal lunch hour discussion in the International Center, Recreation Rm at noon . . . the film "Inside Attica," which depicts the riot at that pri- son, will b shown in Aud. 4, MLB at 1:00 and 4:00 p.m. . .. the Undergraduate Economics Association will meet at 7:30 p.m. in room 102 of the Economics Building .. . all those interested in talking with area delegates to the recent world peace Congress held in Moscow should meet in the Faculty Lounge of the Union at 7:30 p.m. . food from Israel will be served at the League Cafe- teria from 5:00 to 7:15 p.m. . . . Those interested in or- ganizing public debates and discussions on the issue of nuclear energy should attend a meeting at 7:00 p.m. in 1065 Randall Labs . .. the Hungarian Language Society will meet in Lane Hall at 8:00 p.m. Oops! Tuesday's Daily reported that Checkmate clothes has discontinued their line of Farah slacks at the request of customers. The story incorrectly said Owner Dave Horning did not support the worker's efforts to unionize the Farah company. Horning does in fact support the movement for unionization, but feels the stocking of his store should be determined solely by customer prefer- ence. " Credibility gap In a survey of California voters, thetField Poll dis- covered that a whopping 70 per cent of the people think former Vice President Spiro Agnew was guilty of some financial wrongdoing. Only nine per cent feel he was innocent with 21 per cent offering no opinion. On a re- lated question, 48 per cent of those polled expressed the view that the Veep got off too lightly. " On the inside .. . ... a review of the film "New Land" by Bruce Shlain appears on the Arts Page . . . Pol. Sci. TF Martha Dean writes about corporate involvement in real estate de- velopment on the Editorial Page . .. Chuck Bloom pens a piece on the Big Ten and the Rose Bowl on the Sports Page. " on pain at By SUE STEPHENSON Clad in dark-colored, loosely-fitted suits, a four- member delegation of medical specialists from the People's Republic of China were special guests at a conference on pain held yesterday afternoon at the University Medical Center. Earlier in the day, the Chinese delegation, composed of two women and two men, had ob- served a stereotaxic operation-where a probe is placed in the brain to destroy a portion of it and alleviate the individual of pain-performed by Dr. James Taren, a neurosurgeon at the Univer- sity hospital. THE PHYSIOLOGISTS who visited the city are part of an eight-member delegation from China which is on a 35-day tour of U.S. medical centers in 11 states. Dr. Kenneth Casey, associate professor of physi- ology, hosted the delegation for the two days they were ir the city. He said that the Chinese group visit is part of Med. Center an intensive effort in China "to discover the physiological basis for anethesia achieved by acupuncture." "Chinese physicians in clinical trials have made great progress in refining the use of acupunc- ture," Casey said, "However, no one yet has discovered precisely how it works." Dr. Casey has done research with animal tissue and recorded pain impulses received by a single brain cell. DURING THE conference the delegation was asked how they treat patients with cancerous tumors. Through an interpreter, they said they use herbal therapy combined with Western ther- apy using analgesic agents. "It sounds as if we have more to learn from our guests," commented one doctor present at the conference. Through an interpreter, Ku Yun-hui, deputy head of the delegation, expressed the hope that our two countries can come to understand each See CHINESE, Page 2 Daily Photo by TOM GOTTLIEB KU YUN-HUI, DEPUTY head of the visiting Chinese delegation of medical experts, listens intently at yesterday's conference or. pain study. In the background are Henry Yu, a University senior who served as interpreter, and Lou Ai-lin, a member of the Chinese delegation. REINSTATEMENT NOT ORDERED Judge r-7ules f iring of Cox illegal WASHINGTON (Reuter) - President Nixon yesterday re- ceived an unexpected rebuff when a federal judge ruled he il- legally fired Archibald Cox as special Watergate prosecutor last month. The ruling came almost a month after the Oct. 20 "Saturday Night Massacre," when Cox was dismissed, Attorney General Elliot Richard- son resigned rather than carry out a presidential order to fire him, and Deputy Attorney General William Ruckelshaus was fired for re- fusing to obey a similar order. U. S. DISTRICT Court Judge Gerhard Gesell said Cox was not nominated by the President and did not serve at the President's plea- sure. He was an appointee of the attorney general, the judge ruled, and was subject to congressional rather than presidential control. The dismissal of Cox and the removal of the two top officials in the Justice Department in one swoop did more than any other recent incident in the Watergate case to undermine President Nixon's popu- larity in Congress and with the American people. Judge Gesell's ruling, however, did not have any immediate prac- tical effect because it did not order the President to dismiss the new special prosecutor, Leon Jaworski, and reinstate Cox. The judge said his conclusion did,not necessarily indicate that the appointment of Jaworski, a Texas trial lawyer, was in itself illegal. This was because Cox's evident decision not to seek reinstatement called for the prompt appointment of a successor to carry on the im- portant work in which the dismissed prosecutor had been engaged, the judge said. ON THE President's orders, 'Cox was finally dismissed by Solicitor General Robert Bork, who was named acting attorney general. Bork yesterday said he hoped Judge Gesell's railing would not have any impact on Jaworski's operations. In a related development, Watergate Judge John Sirica refused to accept an offer by President Nixon to give non-subpoenaed tape record- ings of his own recollections and documents to the court. The President on Monday announced he would make available the material dealing with conversations for which original tape recordings did not exist. JUDGE SIRICA said he did not want his court to become a deposi- tory for non-subpoenaed matters but added that the President was free to make any material public at any time he chose. One tape that the President could not find was a recording he claims he made of his recollections of a meeting with ousted White House Counsel, John Dean, who has alleged that Nixon was aware of the cover- up of the Watergate Affair. It was the third presidential tape recording promised to the court which, the White House claimed, had not in fact been made. Princess hitched in gal1a affai LONDON (A) - Princess Anne and her dashing cav- alry officer were married in a glittering ceremony in Westminster Abbey yesterday, while the world watched on television. Then they drove through cheering Lon- don crowds in a horse-drawn coach, feasted on lobster and partridge - and slipped away into the countryside. Informants at Buckingham Palace said Anne and her groom, Capt. Mark Phillips of the Royal Dragoons, were spending their first honeymoon night at the home of her cousin, Princess Alexandra, in the center of the 2,285-acre Richmond Park in South London. THE YOUNG couple leave today on a flight to Bar- bados where they will board the royal yacht Brit- tania for an 18-day honeymoon cruise in the Caribbean and the Pacific. Married in one of the most public royal weddings ever, the young couple paid a postmarriage visit to the Royal Hospital Chelsea and slipped out a back en- trance. The royal wedding was the sensation of the British press yesterday - except for Britain's Communist newspaper, The Morning Star, which carried one sen- tence on the wedding under the headline: "Traffic Dis- rupted." Egypt, Israel agree t rs n re c a g to prisoner exchange during desert talks AP Photo All in the farail y Despite his current problems, President Nixon found time Tuesday night to sing and play the piano as first lady Pat Nixon clapped in time. The occasion was a birthday celebration for Utah Senator Wallace Bennett, and was held at the Congressional Club in Washington. ,Forme] By JEFF DAY A former University psychiatric instructor, his wife and two others were freed on $10,000 personal bond yesterday following their Monday night arrest for illegal possession of explosives. Dr. Richard Kunnes, his wife Ju- dith, and another couple, Kenneth and Margaret Ford, were arrested Monday night' southwest of Ann Arbor after being held at gunpoint U' instructor for explosives by sheriff's deputies of the Kunnes' home at 230 Buena Vista Ave. pro- duced a quantity of explosives. In- cluded in the haul were 28 pounds of gun powder, about 20 blasting caps and two detonating devices. Kunnes denies any guilt, saying his arrest was due to a lot of "un- fortunate circumstances." "WE DID NOT have explosives in our possession," he said. "We might mean the field was being used as a testing ground for bombs to be used elsewhere. "THESE WERE not just kids out for a thrill. The inference is, that these bombs were going to be used someplace." But he said that if it were part of some larger plan, the department had no way of know- ing. Kunnes maintained that he was in the area for other reasons, and Hearings on bottle siut go on, By MARNIE HEYN Hearings continued yesterday on the suit filed by a group of area merchants against the city's non- returnable bottle ordinance. Plaintiffs, led by John Kokales, owner of the Capital Market, have claimed that the bottle ordinance enacted by City Council violates By The Associated Press Egyptian and Israeli generals agreed in a desert meeting on a prisoner exchange and other issues, with the prisoners to begin going home this morning. The generals sealed the deal by shaking hands and swigging whisky toasts straight from the bottle. The prisoners are to be carried on direct flight between Egypt and Israel, according to a United Na- tions spokesman in Cairo.' The ex- change is expected -to 'take six to eight days. ISRAEL APPARENTLY h o 1 d s about 30 times as many prisoners as Egypt does. The accord, reached yesterday in a tent on the road to Cairo, wrap- ped up five of the six clauses of the U.S.-sponsored truce agreement signed last Sunday. The two sides have yet to agree on starting talks regarding pro- posed withdrawal to the cease-fire lines of Oct. 22, the date the first U.N. call went out to stop shooting. OTHER POINTS settled yester- day, according to the U.N. spokes- man in Cairo, were: Meir ! Shipments of nonmilitary sup- plies to Egypt's 3rd Army, encir- cled on both banks of the canal ift the area of the city of Suez; and * Strict implementation of the cease-fire. Despite the headway, an Israeli I