Y AMERICAN AUTOS MUST REFORM See Editorial Page c I , 4c it 43ZU ~4aitV SPRIGHTLY High-s2 Low-38 For details, see Today Vol. LXXXIII, No. 136 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, March 23, 1973 Ten Cents Ten Pages y Y Yokes on you George Glassman, a freshman in Markley, decided yester- daykwould be a good day for a political joke, and the Michigan weekly lottery gave him the perfect ammunition. Sometime in the morning, Glassman called up a radio station to get the numbers, which he subsequently put on his wall in large print. Later in the day, he asked a friend down the hall to call The Daily and get the numbers. When the caller saw that the num- bers, 890 and 246 matched the numbers on Glassman's wall, he went absolutely beserk. For a brief time Glassman's room was jammed with people eager to congratulate him on his new- found fortune. After watching the scene for a while, Glassman spilled the beans. At last report he was still alive. Worse than Welby Roaches-those little black creatures that wreck havoc wherever they go-have apparently been on the rampage in the Med school's animal experiment lab. As is often the case with the scientists, the people in the labs have divided into two schools of thought on the problem. Some feel the use of insec- ticides by exterminators could prove harmful to the elaborate and expensive experiments being conducted. Others are of the opinion that the cockroaches carry filth and must be eliminated. Presently pest-control experts on the scene are concentrating their efforts on reducing the roach population to an acceptable level. Intermural news The Advisory Committee on Recreation, Intramurals and Club Sports (ACRICS) has decided to seek authority to con- struct not one, but two new intramural buildings-one on North Campus and one on Central Campus. According to plans laid out by the committee's site and program sub-committee, em- phasis will be placed on the Central Campus building which is slated to receive two of every three dollars spent on the two structures. ARICS is requesting interested groups and individuals to contribute their ideas in writing to the ACRICS site and pro- gram committee care of Rm. 427, Michigan Union. A correction In our story yesterday about a projected tuition increase at the University we reported that Governor Milliken has yet to make a budget recommendation for the 1973-74 school year. The Governor has, in fact, made a recommendation but the amount of state money to be given to the University remains uncertain as the legislature has yet to make its decision. Happenings .. . . . . today are topped by a prestigious academic event, the initiation of 178 University students into Phi Beta Kappa. The ceremony will take place at 7 p.m. in the Michigan League. Prof. Kenneth Boulding, a University of Colorado economist will deliver the main address of the evening . . . another big academic happening will get underway today at 420 Hutchins Hall. The event is a conference dealing with various aspects of Communist China. China specialists from this University will be joined by scholars from around the country for the discus- sions . . in less highbrow circles, the Human Rights Party is giving a film benefit at the Fifth Forum at 11:30 p.m. The film is Joseph Heller's Catch 22. Tickets are $2 and are on sale at the HRP office, 516 E. William and the Fishbowl from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Tickets must be purchased in advance finally there will be a night of International Folk Dancing at Barbour Gym beginning at 8 p.m. One step closer OLYMPIA, Wash.-Washington yesterday became the 29th state to ratify the Equal Rights Amendment. The amendment which guarantees women equal rights in employment, govern- ment and other areas must be ratified by 38 states before it becomes law. After initial success, the measure has been run- ning into trouble of late. The trouble has come in the form of a well-organized women's lobbying -group which has . been working to defeat the amendment. They argue that passage of the bill will subject women to the draft and will destroy the American family as we now know it. End of an era LONDON-Rolls Royce Motors-the most famous of all the luxury limousine builders-was put up for auction yesterday. Whoever buys the company under terms of the contract will be obligated to change its name. Reports are circulating that either an American or Japanese company will take over the failing enterprise. On the inside .. . . . . the 'Arts Page has its Cinema Weekend and a dynamic photo of Katherine Hepburn . . . Editorial Page readers can hear the pros and cons on the issue of volun- tary funding for SGC . . . on the Sports Page Leba Hertz gets us in the mood for baseball season with a feature on Michigan's hurlers. The weather picture Temperatures today will be a bit more springlike with highs in the low 54s. Skies should oe relatively clear. All in all a good day not to go to class. By AP and Reuter SAIGON - North Vietnam said last night the Communists will release tomorrow the last group of 138 American POWs, if all U.S. troops are with- drawn by Sunday, three days ahead of the dead- line set in the Paris cease-fire accord. The Communists had declared earlier yesterday they were suspending prisoner releases because the United States went back on a deal to with- draw U.S. troops by the weekend. Whether the two sides had resolved their dif- ferences in time for tomorrow's prisoner release was unclear late last night. The 138 prisoners had been scheduled for re- lease in two groups tomorrow and Sunday in Hanoi in exchange for the accelerated U.S. troop pullout. The United States first agreed to the plan, pro- posed by North Vietnam and the Viet Cong. But OW rele( later, on orders from Washington, the Americans reversed themselves. A U.S,. spokesman said the United States "need- ed additional time to move U.S. troops out in an orderly fashion." The speedup-pullout initially agreed to represented the opinion of the U.S. Command in Saigon that the troops could move out fast enough, he added, but word from Wash- ington changed that assessment. The U.S. representatives also imposed new con- ditions for final U.S. troop withdrawals, including demands for a list of nine Americans captured in Laos and the date and place they will be released. U.S. officials said they would not start the final troop pull-out, which is tied to the release of the last group of U.S. POWs, until they received a list of the remaining prisoners held in all of I se may Indochina--including Laos-and the first group had been handed over. But the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese said that, under the Paris peace agreement, the re- lease of seven American servicemen and two civilians in Laos must be negotiated with local pro-Communist Pathet Lao forces. The Communist officials refused to hand over a list of U.S. prisoners they were scheduled to deliver yesterday and said they would only re- lease the prisoners at the same time as the U.S. forces began their final departure. A White House spokesman agreed that the ques- tion of prisoners in Laos was not covered by the ceasefire agreement but said there were under- standings between the Americans and the North Vietnamese regarding their release. i it snag Spokesman Gerald Warren referred to a state- ment by President Nixon on Jan. 23 that the United States had received assurances American prisoners of war in Laos 'vould be released within the 60-day period. A Pentagon spokesman told reporters that U.S. officials in Saigon had insisted on a schedule for their release before resuming operation count- down-the Defense Department name for the troop withdrawal program. "All we know is that in raising the possibility of (a prisoner) release by Sunday, they (the Communists) were not prepared or not able to tell us that those held in Laos would be included," Defepse Department spokesman Jerry Friedheim said. See POWs, Page 10 DRUG ARRESTS RENEWED T hree dor residents busted First drug arrests in dorms In two years By DAN BIDDLE State and local police arrested three students yesterday morning at Bursley Hall, South Quad and West Quad in the first on-campus drug arrests here in at least two years. West Quad resident Richard Wood, '75, John roster, '76, of South Quad, and Lanson Carrothers, '75, of Bursley, were awakened in their rooms shortly after 8 a.m. and .charged with delivery as hashish, LSD, and marijuana respectively. Police refused to indicate the quantity of drugs involved. The charges stem from purchases of drugs made by state police undercover agents in the dorms earlier this year. The three arrests apparently, indicate a change of policy by University officials and/or state and local law enforce- ment agencies concerning the role of police on the campus,, where dorms have widely been -_ - c o n s i d e red interference - free i. "sanctuaries" for druge use in re-- cent years.A w e l d University Housing Director John Feldkamp claimed that "there has never been a hands-off policy on ' th vers concern- ing illegal activities" and that "the University does not interfere with' any action taken by the police." "If anyone believes there's been such a hand-off policy, they've got false information," he said in an interview last night. But Feldkamp added that he wasi "mildly surprised" by the arrests: and couldn't remember the last time a student had been arrested inside a dormitory. W h i l e Feldkamp maintained that there was "no University par- ticipation of any kind" in yester-I day's police action, West Quad Di- rector Leon West said police "had' informed a University official" but would not indicate which official. Police Chief Walter Krasny said the University had not "directly requested" any increased police involvement on the campus, but that "some officials did bring the Gray says By AP and Reuter WASHINGTON - Acting FBI Director L. Patrick Gray said yes- terday President Nixon's legal ad- viser John Dean III probably lied to FBI agents investigating' the involvement of a former White House aide in the bugging of the Democratic Party headquarters. The disclosure came when Sen. Robert Byrd (D-W.Va.) asked Gray if Dean had lied to an FBI agent last June in saying he would have to check to see if Watergate de- fendant E. Howard Hunt had an office in the White House, when in fact, he knew he had one. "After looking back and making a minute examinate of the record, I would have to conclude that AP Photo La guerre deferments est finie! Thousands of students clash yesterday with police in a Paris street during a demonstration against tpe end to student draft deferments. Police used tear gas grenades to disperse the stone throving mob as it attempted to march on the Defense Ministry. PIONEER STUDENTS BATTLE: Racial tiehits hi*eghscol l.s. . . threearres ted, seven injured By DEBORAH GOOD and JONATHAN MILLER Pioneer High School suffered a second day of strife in a week yes- terday when a fight broke out between black and white students. In another racial eruption Wed- nesday, four, teachers were in- jured, one hospitalized. Police arrested three students in yesterday's battle. Seven students were reported injured. The brawl broke out in a student smoking lounge and spread to various stairwells and corridors in the building, according to various observers. Teachers on the second floor of the building locked the classroom doors as a precautionary measure. Earlier, students had come into a class in progress and attacked a student. When the class' teacher attempted to break it up, she was hit and her hearing aid ripped off. The number of students involved in the conflict was unclear. A spokesman for the Ann Arbor, School System said that there werej 75 students in the hallways push-I ing and fighting. Another report from David Abe deen, Deputy Superintendent, sa that only a dozen students werei volved in yesterday's melee a that most of them were "chron troublemakers." The fighting took place after t school's Black Student Union mr with Ann Arbor Schools Super: tendent Bruce McPherson. T students expressed grievances co cerning the school's discipli policy t o w a r d s black studen claiming blacks were usually d er- ciplined first and more severely than whites. increasing drug traffic problem to our attention." "Obviously there was a need de- veloping for a more concentrated effort in this area," Krasny said last night.4890 While not indicating whether the arrests had been made with prior are this' week's winning knowledge by the University, Kras- lottery numbers ny said the police department "had a number of people working close- ly" with University Safety Direc- that's probably c o r r e c t," said tar Frederick Davids immediately Grywhisekngcfrmto before the action. Gray, who is seeking confirmation as permanent FBI director aftter Davids could not be reached for serving nearly 11 months as acting comment on the arrests last night. director. Krasny denied a report in the Dean told the FBI agent during Ann Arbor News stating that "fur- an interview with White House ther arrests in connection with the aide Charles Colson he would try three" might occur, but added that Ito determine if Hunt had an office, more arrests were "certainly not! at the White House. out of the question." See GRAY, Page 6 aid At the same time, white students3 in- .talked to other administrators nd about the way they were handling uic racial tension.! Pioneer High Principal Joseph he Pollack called a police patrol carl et to the school, fearing a rehash ofj in- Wednesday's violence. he When the meetings ended, thej an Students in the smoking lounge be lne gan to fight. A black student:_ ts, claims that the fight was not a' is- result of what occurred at the meetings. Med school entry Nixon not to attend annual ash Bash By MARTIN PORTER A spokesman for President Nixon yester- day denied all rumors that the President will be attending the second annual Ann Arbor Hash Bash to be held on the Diag April 1. In a belligerent tone, a White House spokesman said, "The President is not planning to attend any type of bash in Ann Arbor . . . even if he was I wuldn't but the weather looks good and there are large supplies of Morroccan and some Black Primo hash in town." Activities proposed for this year's gala event include an artist's chalk contest, a yo-yo contest, and a community, record swap. information tables for the city elec- tions on April 2 may also be set up. Al- though it might be assumed that the event would have little effect on the city elec- tions. some candidates are not taking a to attend since it will be "a good chance to remind people to vote." D1avid Hornstein, the famous power- crazed Emperor of the Student Govern- ment Council Bullshit, Party contingent, looks at the event from a different per- spective. Of course the Hash Bash will reinforce and further the goals of the Bullshit party, but this is not that important; the Hash Bash will he instrumental for furthering More police were called. The faculty meanwhile met yes- in the halls to vacate within seven minutes. When a few students re- mained, they were threatened with arrest. One student was then arrested and charged with trespassing. Two other students were arrested on charges of assault and carrying a concealed weapon. School will reopen today for Pio-. neer students with shortened per- iods and without snack breaks. Pol- lack said that the "staff will con- tinue to try to convince the stu- tougher for most By ANGELA BALK Though the University medical school has increasingly accepted women and blacks in recent years, the road to admittance for the bulk of its applicants is annually getting rockier. Medical schools nationwide-after admitting half of their appli- cants between 1950 and 1970-admitted one third of their applicants in 1972, according to Dr. Colin Campbell, assistant dean for student affairs. Campbell predicted that "in a couple of years, the percentage of students accepted could get as low as 30 per cent." Th Trnivr.itu medical scnoo itself accents less than one tenth