MEDICAL CARE IN DANGER See Editorial Page Y S1 i 1aut DAli WINTERY High-38 Low-2 s See Today for details Vol. LXXXIII, No. 131 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, March 17, 1973 Ten Cents Eight Pages W'YOU SEE NEW~SUHAPPEINCALL76DAJ1.y SHRI By JONATHAN MILLER j and DAVE BURHENN One year ago, the Human Rights party astounded the es- tablishment and elected two young radicals to city hall. In retrospect, it was not a surprising victory. The new party had everything going for it-the magic of novel- ty; a youthful, tightly disciplined organization; unity; and money. But that was a year ago. To- day, HRP is a deeply divided and financially poorer organization. Since last August the party has s truggles for political Internal wrangling, money woes hurt campaign - Suit filed SGC attorney Tom Bentley has filed suit in the Michigan Court of Appeals asking that all meetings of the Regents be "open to the people." The suit, which is co-sponsored by .Daily editors Eugene Robinson and Christopher Parks, was announced earlier in the week. First hearing on the case will be April 3. The Court of Appeals will also hear a joint Daily-SGC suit on publication of salary lists, next Tpesday. Mayor .Bob's plan Democratic Mayor Robert Harris has announced his support for funding of a low-cost abortion clinic run by women. However, rather than fund the Community Women's Clinic as the Human Rights Party and many women are requesting, Harris wants to fund Family Planning Medical Services, Inc., which is run by long-time local Democrat Eugene Power. Harris says Family Planning could be revamped so it can be run by women, with services on an "ability-to-pay" basis. Supporters of the Commun- ity Women's Clinic are interested but suspicious. More money madness And what hath befallen the $2875 given to SGC ex-Treasurer Dave Schaper to fund the nonexistent Temptations concert? As of yesterday afternoon, Council President Bill Jacobs was still convinced it was safely deposited in "an outside account," but Vice President for minority affairs Lee Gill declared with equal self-assurance that his Committee for Black Concerns (CBC) possessed the money. CBC had originally planned to co-sponsor the Temps concert back in September, but the plan fizzled, and Gill says no one's asked him to give the $2875 back to SGC yet. Has Jacobs been misled? Says Gill, "What the hell does Bill know anyway?" Jacobs couldn't be reached for comment on that remark. The Harvey Saga In today's chapter of the Harvey Saga, Doug is confronted with a spectre from his past, as though his current troubles weren't eiough. Just as he was getting over the shock of his unfriendly reception in Indian River, an old nemesis-Sheriff Fred Postill-has cropped up to cause more trouble. Postill says Doug destroyed personnel records and was responsible for the illegal disposal of 12 county-owned guns. Doug sez it jus' ain't so. The Daily flunks Yesterday, in quite a show of mathematical ineptitude, we computed the increase in campus crime between 1971 and 1972 to be roughly 20 per cent while the increase, in fact, is closer to 25 per cent. Our mathematical experts, who only survived high school algebra through shameless cheating, arrived at the erroneous figure by computing -the -increase-against the larger rather than the smaller figure. Happenings.. .. Sports Editor Dan Borus tells us today is "the dullest day ever in sports." To tell the truth, things don't look much brighter elsewhere either . . . there is, of course, the World's Fair '73 which is going into its second day today out at Burns Park Elementary School on Wells St. from noon to midnight .. and there are a couple of unusual parties in town one of which is the "Bullshit Party" at Sigma Chi's St. Patricks Day Explosion (next door to the Union) with draught beer. Admission is $2 per person with refund if you don't have fun . . . so relax, unwind, and go to a party, or make your own party. Correspondent injured Peter Kalisher-well known Paris correspondent for the Columbia Broadcasting System-suffered a fractured skull in an auto accident yesterday. Kalisher was on the way to Le Bour- get Airport to cover ,the departure of Viet Cong Foreign Minister Mme. Nguyen Thi Binh whan his car was hit by a truck. He is reported in serious condition. Nicotine notes America's suicidal smokers just keep puffing away. Recently released Department of Agriculture statistics show cigarette con- sumption up to a record 565 billion smokes last year. In case you're interested, that works out to an average of half a pack per day for every American adult .. . and from Bonn, we learn that German males are also smoking more than ever before, despite doctors' warnings that smoking can result in impotence State Senator John Decamp of Nebraska is trying to pursuade his colleagues to make the death penalty in that state mandatory for such crimes as murder, arson, robbery, kidnapping, hijacking and burglary., Decamp's proposal does have its humanitarian side, however. It would give the condemned prisoner the right to choose suicide rather than being executed. Killer Snow White Thirty-year-old Svetislava Kusakovic gave birth in a most unusual way in Valjevo, Yugoslavia yesterday. Kusakovic, who was eight months pregnant, was walking home through five foot snowbanks when she began having birth pains. Unable to call for help, she gave birth to a healthy baby girl alone in the snow. The girl was named "Snezhana"-Serbo-Croation for Snow White. Last Tango in Sardinia? IGLESIAS, Sardinia - Italian sex education has taken a fruity twist. School teacher Emma Gallozzi was sentenced to 25 months in prison for giving sex lessons to young boys in exchange for oranges from nearby groves. Police collared five youths looting the forbidden fruit, which they explained was intended for the 50-year-old Gallozzi, a housewife. On the inside .. . . . . reviewer Alvin F atz takes a look at the University Player's production of King Lear on the Arts Page - the Editorial Page features New York Post writer Pete Hamill who suggests some unusual applications for the death penalty . . . and Sports Pale is highlighted by nnf~a Irir c Ir f.th ric n hnlrt,}1 cn n b been beset by internal wrangling between three seperate "cau- cuses." Then in November, HRP suf- fered a demoralizing defeat to liberal Democrats riding the coat- tails of Sen. George McGovern. With only two short weeks to go before April's city council elec- tion, HRP's very future is at stake. Should the party be de- feated now, it could sound the death knoll for a third party in One c the city. People's At the heart of the ideological illusioned wrangling are the three major yet to ai caucuses which comprise the party tic party. The Ra While they agree on most as- resentati pects of the detailed HRP plat- mittee re form, which calls for wide-rang- Anothe ing social reform on socialist formerly principles, they spend much of monds", their time bickering over details. Mayoral Regents caucus, the Rainbow Party, is now so dis- d by HRP that it has nnounce support for the ket. ainbow People's two rep- ves on the steering com- signed earlier this week. r caucus, the Debs- the "Chocolate Al- - is openly attacking candidate Benita Kai- mowitz and Second Ward can- didate Frank Schoichet for run- ning a campaign based on per- sonalities rather than issues. Kaimowitz and Schoichet, both of whom are identified with a third caucus called the Militant Middle-a caucus which ironically denies being a caucus at all-are convinced that HRP's future lies with a broader base of commun- ity support, and they are frankly lf appealing to independent liberals and Democrats for support. These ideological d is p ut es, which have attracted a damaging share' of attention from the me- dia, threaten to ruin the party's chances in April's election, even if a shortage of funds does not. But ideological disputes and a shortage of cash are not the only elements of the HRP problem. The party is facing a concerted effort by the Democrats to drive it out of business. As HRP candidates are trying to See HRP, Page 8 rules Peking offers massage parlor withno extras By JAMES PRINGLE Reuter PEKING-Peking has its own massage parlors, but a visit to one, situated inside a Chinese bath- house, provides quick reassurance they bear no resemblance to the lurid establishments flourishing throughout Asia and the United States. The most popular bathhouse here, both for Chinese and foreigners, is the "Rei King," opposite the "Red Flag" movie theater in busy Dung Dan street near the center of the city. A visit to the "Rei King" with two members of Peking's foreign community, both attractive Cana- dian girls, reveals-to no-ones surprise-that the 'kind of titillating diversion often found in bathhouses and massage parlors in Bangkok, Manila or Hong Kong is missing here. In fact, the total lack of prurience and the unself-consciousness in contemporary Chinese so- ciety usually leaves the foreigner feeling mildly ill at ease. Though foreigners are stared at by Chinese everywhere else in China, no-one seems to take any notice in the bathhouse. Having bought a ticket for 1.50 yuan (about 80 cents) the visitor is escorted through a hall lined with large mirrors where Chinese girls comb their long tresses. In the. drying room, the girls mingled with Chinese women clad only in short towels. "They accepted us completely," one said. "Maybe being without ones clothes makes everyone more relaxed.' A visit to the men's section, screened by a wooden partition, revealed similar bathrooms, obviously from a more luxury-conscious age, and there was also a communal shower. In the massage room, where sexes are not segre- gated, the girls matter-of-factly shed their slacks and, clad in tights and blouses, were swathed in towels. The masseur, Chiang Yu-lin, has been kneading See PEKING, Page 8 approve for University conduct By REBECCA WARNER The Regents yesterday approved a new set of conduct rules for the University community, thus ending the two-year tenure of the controversial harsher Interim Rules. _ The rules, passed by a 6-2 vote, were drafted by the Univer- sity Council-and were almost three years in the making. In other action, the Regents: ! Passed a compromise subsidization of the University Cellar, voting the store two years of continued funding by rolling assessment with a possible one-year extension, instead of the five- year continuation the Cellar had requested; * Voted down 5-3 a long-standing proposal to request racial identification on University job application forms; and 9 Squelched by a vote of 7-1 the Student Government Council proposal requesting that its president and vice-president be granted non-voting seats on the Board of Regents. The UC conduct rules detail offenses punishable by the Uni- versity judiciary system. They will replace the Interim Rules imposed by the Regents during the Black Action Movement strike in the spring of 1970, at the height of campus protest activity here. At that time the Regents appointed the student-faculty UC to draw up the conduct rules, but the code has been in the process of construction and ratification for three years. The code has been approved by SGC and the Senate Assem- bly - the faculty governing body - ratified it last month by a vote of 42-3. However, the strdent judiciary designed to imple- ment the code, under process of organization for the past two years, cannot operate until it names its officers. The officers must then be approved by Assembly, SGC and the Regents. The judiciary consists of a student-faculty Court of Appeals all conduct cases. Once the conditions for implementation of the conduct rules are met, President Robben Fleming must declare it operative. If not, the Interim Rules can remain effective indefinitely. Actions prohibited by the code include "physical force", "in- terference" with any person engaged in University activities, arid continuing after an order to desist activity which the President has determined on "clear evidence" may "imminently violate" any of the rules. Penalties to be imposed on convicted violators by the judic- iary include warning, censure, fine, probation, suspension, work assignment, restitution or expulsion. Turning to another area of business the Regents turned down See REGENTS, Page 8 SENIOR MEMBERS ONLY: enate panel to see FBI Watergate file By AP and Reuter WASHINGTON - Attorney General Richard Kleindienst yesterday agreed to provide Senate investigators with the full file of the FBI probe into the bugging at the Democratic National Committee Head- quarters last year. But access to the files will be limited to senior members and senior staff aides of the special Senate Select Committee which is investigating the break in at the Watergate Hotel and alleged political espionage against Democrats during the 1972 Presidential election campaign. The arrangement was, worked out with the committee chairman, Sam Ervin (D-N.C.), and Sen. Howard Baker of Tennessee, the senior Republican. U' evicts 2dorm fresidents By CINDY HILL Two more students have been evicted from their dorms for in- volvement in drug-related robber- ies, The Daily has learned. The lease terminations follow fast on the heels of the recent eviction of East Quad resident Chris Hoitt for the same reason. The newly evicted students - Greg Lichwardt from Bursley and an unidentified student from East Quad-were served with 24-hour eviction notices late Thursday and early yesterday, according to Uni- versity Housing Director John Feldkamp. Both were victims in the same Feb. 27 Bursley robbery in which $150 worth of marijuana was stolen at knifepoint. Lichwardt, according to Feld- kamp, has had no previous record of complaints for drug use or dealing. The East Quad resident, whose name Feldkamp last night refused to disclose, has also had no pre- vious recordalthough his former roommate was the victim in a November drug robbery also in East Quad. Feldkamp says the unidentified student admits to drug dealing, but claims he had no role in the earlier robbery. Norman Snustad, coordinator of East Quad, offered no comment, saying he "did not know" of the recent eviction. Lichwardt was not available for comment, atlhough earlier this I week he refused to discuss the situation and any action he may be taking. The newest rash of hard-line stands concerning evictions seem- ingly contradicts statements made by Feldkamp in January. -At that time, Feldkamp encour- aged students to report the rob- beries, and claimed actioni taken against students would be minimal. "In terms of the police, it would probably be nothing. At the dorm, it would probably be nothing also, except a warning," Feldkamp had said. Snustad said, "I don't think anyone wants to come down that hard on the students." When asked to explain the ap- parent administrative about-face, Feldkamp claimed the original Daily report "did not have it accurate." D.ay care to lose many HEW funds' By DAVID STOLL Local day care centers are about to have their funding cut in what appears to be another round of the Nixon administration's campaign to slash social welfare expendi- tures. Changes in the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare (HEW) guidelines, due to become law this Monday and operational by April 1, will curtail the flow of federal money to day care centers across the nation. Although the new guidelines are scheduled to go into effect at the end of the month, the county's De- partment of Social Services, which administers the funds locally, says that it hasn't received any offic- ial word on their implementation. "President Nixon told a press conference Thursday he did, not wantthe FBI's raw files shown to a full Congressional committee in~ case possibly slanderous material leaked to the press. The agreement was worked out when Kleindienst visited Congress this afternoon for a meeting with the two senators. The senators said in a statement the Senate Select Committee on Presidential activities "will have the full benefit of the results of the FBI investigation concerning See SENATE, Page 8 Daily Photo by ROLFE TESSEM Martian invader Calling himself only "New," this curious figure put in a surprise appearance on the Diag yesterday afternoon. Nem, who said he came from a distant planet, gave out leaflets saying, "Help me take over the world," called "conceptual activism." asked: "Is this planet always this cold?" He explaining he was part of a new movement Mercenaries suspected in MANILA (Reuter) - Foreign troops are fighting alongside Filippino rebels in an uprising on the southern island of Min- danao, the government said there yester- day. But Information Secretary Francisco Ta- tad told a press conference that the mili- tary had the situation under control and had no intention of asking for U. S. or other foreign help. Tatad said the government did not know the nationality of the foreigners, who might be mercenaries. informed other Southeast Asian Treaty Or- ganization (SEATO) countries - Britain, the United States, France, Thailand, Aus- tralia and New Zealand - that the rebels were foreign-trained and armed with foreign-made weapons. But he stressed that the Philippines had no intention of asking for SEATO help. Tatad said the situation in the south had developed into an insurgency in which the Moslems had joined up with Christians with Maoist leanings. Violence in the southern islands has in-