ALIENABLE RIGHTS? See inside p . CJ sit Dull1; ARCTIC High 27 Low 20 For details see Today Eighty-Three Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXIV, No. 83 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, January 10, 1974 Ten Cents Eight Pages Mur1er City, U.S.A. The record setting Detroit homicide toll for 1973 has been broken already. Detroit police originally announced 750 homicides for the city last year, but revised that to 751 following an autopsy of a man who died on Dec. 31. Police said Walter Perry, 73, was beaten to death. The autopsy revealed he suffered a broken neck when at- tacked by a pair of assailants outside of a Detroit bar on New Year's Eve. The broken neck was listed as the cause of death. His attackers made off with $65. The devil made him do it A Mount Clemens, Mich. man, who said he struck his wife and children to save them from the devil, was sentenced to life in prison Tuesday for beating his wife to death with a baseball bat. Jimmy McDonald, describ- ed by his 13-year-old daughter Clara as a "religious nut" who made the members of the family kneel and pray for hours, testified he decided to kill his family May 2 after reading the Bible for several hours. Mc- Donald told them the Bible "lit up" and warned him his family would come under the influence of Satan. "This was a senseless, brutal and vicious killing," said Circuit Court Judge Frank Jeannette. "Nothing I can do is punishment enough." Woman burned up A Laketon Township woman is burned up over a tele- vision announcer's advice. And so is part of her car. Muskegon County sheriff's deputies said the woman followed an announcer's tip to put a blanket and light bulb under the car hood for better starting on cold mornings. Deputies said the light bulb apparently ig- nited the blanket, causing about $50 damage to her car. Happenings ... include a meeting of the Secretaries Subcommit- tee of the Commission for Women at 12 noon in the Faculty Club Lounge of the Union . . . a mass meeting of the Human Rights Party at 7:30 p.m. in the Ann Arbor Public Library (corner of William and Fifth) . . . an orientation and placement meeting of Project Com- munity, a child care and development program for stu- dents wanting to do volunteer work in child care cen- ters. The meeting is at 8:00 p.m. in the Faculty Club Lounge and course credit is available . . . and a couple of good flicks, Ashby's Harold and Maude at 7:00 and 9:00 p.m. in the Nat. Sci. Aud. and David Copperfield at the Arch. Aud. at 7:00 and 9:05 p.m. .Tha'spunity! The 27th annual convention of the Society for the Re- vival and Preservation of the Pun is over, and as the carpenter once said, "it wasn't awl bad." Aspiring and practicing comicsturned out Tuesday night for a comedy workshop at New York's New School for Social Re- search celebrating what one wag called "Attila the Pun." The workshop was originated by former gagwriter George Q. "for Quip" Lewis, who said he wants to es- tablish a pun library "where one can groan to his heart's content." Touted as the convention's choicest groan-producer was the line about a Navajo electrical engineer who lost his job and wound up repairing on-the- blink'lights in lavatories back home. The engineer thus became "the first Indian who wired a head for reserva- tions." The 'Duke' at Harvard The college humor magazine Harvard Lampoon says John Wayne has accepted a challenge to answer ques- tions from students at the campus. The Lampoon dared Wayne to "have it- out, head on, with the young whelps here who would call the supposedly unbeatable John Wayne the biggest fraud in history" in an open letter Dec. 6, The magazine said Tuesday Wayne has accepted and announced a number of activities, including a cere- monial saloon slug-fest. It also said his arrival would be marked "by a stampede ofomammals of some as-yet- undetermined species, and a running gun battle be- tweens cowboys, Indians, and syndicate triggermen, all in their native dress." Heat wave So you're feeling c-c-c-cold. How about a trip to Ant- arctica to warm up? The Tass news agency said Soviet scientists at Russia's usually frigid Vistock Antarctic station registered a record high temperature Tuesday of 56 degrees. By comparison, the Tuesday high in New York was 29, Des Moines, Iowa, 8, and Spokane, Wash- ington, 3. Tass gave no explanation for the Antarctic thaw. "Such warm weather has never been registered there before," it said. The previous record at Vostock was not even close-minus 6 degrees. " On the inside . . Ken Stein writes about the significance of the Israeli elections on the Editorial Page . . . The Arts Page fea- tures a review of the Steve McQueen--Dustin Hoffman movie "Papillon" by Dan Borus . . . and the Sports Page previews the Big Ten basketball season. DAILY FIGHTING M ideas t cease-fie becoming shalier By JOSEPH W. GRIGG UPI Foreign News Analyst LONDON - The two and a half months - old Egyptian - Israeli cease - fire along the Suez Canal is becoming increasingly precar- ious. Fighting is erupting almost daily with mounting violence. BOTH EGYPT and Israel have reported not merely exchanges of small arms fire but also tank and heavy artillery duels. Israel has admitted casualties. Egypt has said nothing, but Western military men say losses on her side too are likely in this scale of fighting. What is striking, however, is that the United Nations peace- keeping force on the spot has charged Egypt with responsibility deny this. On the contrary, Egyp- tian military leaders continue to boast of their readiness to resume full scale war. ately to be keeping the Middle East cauldron near the boiling point. The most obvious answer, and the one generally accepted by Wes- tern officials as well as by Is- rael herself, is that Egypt is stok- to fit r at least 75 per cent of cease- All this has touched off wide- re violations, spread speculation as to the rea- EGYPT HOS NOT bothered to sons why Egypt appears deliber- WASHINGTON (Reuter) - Secretary of State Henry Kissinger will fly to the Middle East tomorrow amid signs of an imminent agreement on a disengage- ment of Egyptian and Israeli troops along the Suez Canal, it was announced yesterday. The White House and State Department said that Kissinger, making his second trip to the Middle East in less than a month, would confer with Egyptian President Anwar Sadat, who is recuperating from bronchitis at Aswan, and then fly to Israel. The trip is expected to last less than a week. No other stops are planned, State Department spokes- man George Vest said, but other destinations could not be ruled out. Kissinger's voyage was seen as part of an all-out attempt being waged by the Kissinger and the State Department to patch up the uneasy truce that was obtained in the Middle East. ing up the military pressure in or- der to back her negotiating posi- tion at the Geneva Middle East peace talks. EGYPT HAS taken a consistly tough stance there. She has flatly rejected Israel's proposals for mutual withdrawal of Egyptian and Israeli forces to opposite sides of the canal. She appears to be demanding that, even as a first stage, Israel should pull back behind the Giddi and Mitla passes 20 miles from the Suez Canal without any corres- ponding Egyptian withdrawal. AT A LATER STAGE, Egypt de- mands complete withdrawal by Israel from the whole Sinai Penin- sula. Western officials say Egypt ap- parently reasons that by keeping on the military heat and inflicting casualties she may convince Is- rael there is no hope of holding out for better terms. Some Western military experts believe Egypt's aim is to keep Israel off balance, to keep her mo- bilized - something her economy can ill afford - and to weaken her by continued bloodletting. Some Western officials do not even rule out the possibility that Egypt is preparing for another round if the Geneva talks fail. 4,000 Thais AP Photo Thi tuetsbunefige o Jpnee eevsinSonxy baloney, Angry Thai students burn effigies of Japanese television sets and other products yesterday in Bangkok, in protest of the two-day official visit of Japanese Prime Minister Kakuei Tanaka. The students were demonstrating against Japanese economic domination of Thailand. HRP BLASTED: stage ps BANGKOK, Thailand (M - Shouting, jeering Thai stu- dents demanded the ouster of the United States Ambassador and angrily protested a visit by the Japanese prime minis- ter yesterday in a new show of their political muscle. More than 4,000 students, professors and other Thais massed outside the U.S. Em- bassy here demanding that U.S. A m b a s s a d o r William Kintner and the U.S. Central i Intelligence Agency get out of the country. Student marshals kept order and the demonstration, organized by the People for Democratic Action group, broke up after about two hours. Kintner was visiting Chieng- hai in northern Thailand. THE DEMONSTRATIONS were --- some of the strongest since stu- dents toppled the former military regime in October and became the country's only significant organized political force. Japanese Prime Minister Kakuei Tanaka, on a five-country South- east Asia tour, gave a hastily re- vised speech at a dinner in his honor given by Prime Minister Sanya Thammasak after being de- layed by a crowd of 2,000 students who had barricaded exits to his hotel. ut Tanaka said the demonstrations, 10in which thousands of students jeered his arrival and thumped on ig his limousine, made him aware of ae "the concern of the Thai people d about the role of Japanese influ- ut ence." nt THE PROTESTS against Kintner 15 and the CIA were touched off by 4. reports Saturday that an American CIA agent sent a phony letter to n Sanya purporting to be an offer S from Communist insurgents for a °ycease-fire in exchange for auton- omy in rebel areas in northwest e- Thailand. en For the second straight day, he faced student demonstrations. A us U.S. Embassy spokesman said ot about 70 students gathered at i- Chienghai University where Kint- a ner was talkin with faculty mem- on hers and one student broke into the room and burned a paper s American flag. ve SPEAKERS AT the Bangkok ,n- demonstration accused the CIA of an See STUDENTS, Page 2 rote sts CIA Democrats deny 'deal' with GOP over Second Ward council contest By GORDON ATCHESON Charges that the Democrats and Republicans have conspired to eliminate the Human Rights Par- ty (HRP) yesterday drew a strong denunciation from a high-level Democrat who demanded any proof of such a deal be made public. Democratic Second Ward chair- man Thomas Wieder termed the allegation made earlier this week by HRP City Council member Jerry DeGrieck (First Ward) "to- tally and completely without sub- stance." HE CHALLENGED HRP to pro- duce evidence to support the charge. DeGrieck yesterday said no concrete evidence existed and that he had never claimed a "di- rect deal" between the two par- ties ever took place. The council member alleged that the failure of the Republicans to run a candidate in the student- dominated Second Ward in next April's municipal election'resulted from a scheme to "destroy" HRP, of which Democrats had prior knowledge. The Second Ward is HRP's strongest ward, although the party lost a close election to the Demo- crats there last year. Many HRP leaders fear that persons who might be expected to vote Repub- lican will instead cast their bal- lots for the Democrat, since no GOP entry is in the race. ALL THREE parties recognize that Democratic chances for vic- tory have improved with the lack of a Republican candidate. "Dem- ocrats are happy that the Repub- licans chose not to run in the desp ite more gas shortages By JEFF DAY "I've never seen gas this hard to get," says the TIhe owner of a downtown service station leaned owner who claims his downtown location com- over the motor of a battered Chevy, muttering, pounds problems. "I'll tell you something, as long "I been in the garage business since I was seven- as I can remember, gas was 38.9. But you could .. teen. But I don't know how kids today can make go to Dixburo and get it fourteen cents cheaper- za living on it." cheaper than I could get it." The oil companies he The gas shortage is affecting everyone, but those says, charged him more because he was down.- Swho may be hit the hardest are those in the gas town. business itself. Some of the owners are bitter "I couldn't sell no gas, because nobody could about thte shortage, somenused ,by it, and at afford it,"arhe says, "I still an' el eno gas, 7suffering at all. But none, it seems, are worried gas, I'd go broke." - about going out of business. BUT ONE OF the city's independent stations isn't ARVLE GOLDEN has been in the gas business having any trouble getting gas, and makes enough ..~for 30 years, 25 of which he has spent at 601 profit even though they are selling well below ~Packard, running Golden's Standard Service. His the price allowed by phase four guidelines. A monthly allotment of fuel has been cut back for "Business has been up," says Janet Carson, the nast two months, first by 10 per cent and now manager of the Supertest Station located on South by 20. Main. "If they come in with a 50 gallon drum, "I'm not worried about staying in business," he we'll fill it. Very rarely do we run out of gas, .saiid, "as long as people drive, I'll make a living." mostly on holidays or weekends." None the less, he admits his profit is dropping, and "The last time we ran out of gas was Christmas, has had to limit his sales, as well as lay off six the time before that was when the truck broke of his ten emnloves. down, and we didn't get any gas." v irr rut nri hiarm I lmi'p in mn c-..r g<.tinn. All the ,t tinne oP ct th.ir hnir inc li n Second Ward," Wieder said. "BL the Democratic Party was in n way involved in their decision." DeGrieck disagreed, chargin the Democrats with "colusion." B claimed certain Democrats ha said they were aware of the GO plans and were very pleased. Bi he would not name the person who allegedly made the remark The councilman also claimed th highest priority for both the Dem cratic and Republican partiesi the upcoming election is to destro HRP. ANOTHER HRP member, Fran Shoichet, commented that D Grieck spoke "for himself" whe he made the original statement. Shoichet added that varioi views on the GOP's decision n to put forth a Second Ward cand date exist, but that the party ha not yet taken an official positiono the matter. However, HRP apparently seen to believe the Republicans hav intentionally pulled out of the co test to reduce the possibility of a HRP win - whether the Dem crats influenced the decision t not. "AT THE VERY least the GO is purposefully not running an one because a party with their r sources could easily find a cand date if it wanted to," Shoichet di clared. The Republicans have strong condemned the notion of a deal b tween their party and the Dem crats. GOP city committee chai man Robert Foster labeled D Grieck's charges as complete without foundation. Foster said the GOP organiz tion simply could not find anyon willing to run in the Second War which the Republicans have n realistic chance to win. Last yea the Republican hopeful - who ha to be strongly coaxed befor Kent State president ugrand jury CLEVELAND, Ohio ,:P)-Robert White, president of Kent State Uni- versity when a 1970 campus protest led to four deaths, said yesterday he hoped a federal grand jury probe of the incident would "clear up the record." White, called to testify yesterday, pledged full cooperation, saying he would answer jurors' questions "as best I can." ASKED WHETHER he felt the record now was not clear, White answered, "No, but there are a lot of questions in people's minds. The grand jury should be able to an- swer those questions." The grand jury is looking into the May, 4, 1970, confrontation be- tween Ohio National Guard troops and student demonstrators pro- testing U.S. military involvement in Cambodia. The Justice Department ordered the jury investigation after a review late last year, reversing See FORMER, Page 2 0- or P y- e- C- ly e- o- r- le- ly a- ne d, no ar ad re Nixon calls an end to Watergate statements SAN CLEMENTE, California, Reuter -- President Nixon has no plans to further explain to the public his role in the Watergate scandal and related controversies lingering from the 1972 presidential election, the White House made clear yesterday. Nixon is now confident he has laid to rest all charges of wrong- doing made against him concern- ing the Watergate break-in and alleged granting of political fav- dential election, and "we have done that," Warren said. He said it was possible Nixon would address himself to Water- gate at some point in the future "if the need arises," but the spokesman indicated the Presi- dent had no plans to do so. THE WHITE HOUSE had been expected to produce other white papers similar to those already is- sued on Nixon's personal finances