SUNDAY MORNING See Editorial Page LY 3k1 ~r a ii CHILLING T yigh-45 Low--23 See Today for details Vol.' LXXXllI, No. 150 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, April 8, 1973 Ten Cents Ten Pages IFYOU SEE NEWS HAMf~f CALI &DAJLY A ll-tenured By DAVID UNNEWEHR The controversial issue of tenure threatens to become further complicated in the literary college by a reported over-abundance of tenured faculty. Figures compiled recently by the LSA dean's office project an all-tenured LSA faculty in ten years if the presents rates of, promotion from non-tenured positions continue. Groups within the college fear that a heavily tenured faculty will reduce flexibility and adversely affect the general quality of education. Even if the college initiates a policy of replacing deaths, resignations and retirements at the assistant professor level only, the ratio of tenured to non-tenured positions will more than double in the next ten years. These figures are based on the assumption that the next ten facultyseei years will be a period of no growth in the college. "The'50's and '60's were years of tremendous expansion in courses and curricu- lum to accommodate increased emphas.is on higher education, the post war baby boom and new subjects like Afro-American history," says LSA Assistant Dean Ed Dougherty. "During the expansion period faculty members were rapidly promoted at an early age to tenured positions," he adds. "This would be all right if we continued to keep a constant flow into non-tenured levels.' "However, with substantial budget cuts and no growth, we face a glut of faculty in tenured positions." Department budgets were cut a flat four per cent across the literary college in 1971. Figures from the last three years show that after all replace- ments and promotions there has been a yearly increase of 10 in in decade Clues sought With the trail on the Melanie Fahr case growing colder and colder all the time, the Ann Arbor police have taken an un- usual step to try to scare up some new leads. The police have issued a flier containing pictures of Fahr, her car and Orville Davis-the man suspected of abducting her. The police believe Davis grabbed Fahr on the way to her room in Stockwell Hall sometime early on the morning of March 27. Anyone with rele- vant information of Fahr (6'1", in orange ski jacket and blue jeans), her car (yellow 1962 Chevy, license plate PNG-743) or Davis (5'8" white male, tan coat, dark brown pants) is asked to call the Ann Arbor police. Dems meet City Democrats met yesterday to -discuss the future of the party. Franz Mogdis, unsuccessful candidate for mayor summed up the theme of the generally dull meeting when he said, "The party must insure that the party remains open. That means that there must be a place for McGovern people, and that there be a place for disenchanted HRP people. The party must communi- cate twelve months a year." Wolf! Like the little boy who drief "Wolf!", it appears the fire alarm is no longer heeded by residents of West Quad. Early yesterday morning a fire - apparently arson - broke 'out in the dorm's basement. The fire itself was no problem: it was put out before the fire department arrived. But, what disturbs authorities was that no one in the quad bothered to climb out of bed when the alarm went off. Apparently, there have been so many false alarms that students don't bother to respond to them anymore. Happenings .,.. the biggest happening today is the biggest pizza in the world as baked by Domino's Pizza. The -pizza - allegedly 30 feet in diameter - will be available for eating at noon at the Open Bible Baptist Church at the corner of Geddes Road and Michigan Ave. in Canton township . . . there will be a concert, "Music for Renaissance Instruments: Collegium Musicum" at the Museum of Art, 2:30 p.m. ... and that's about it, folks .. . a good day to-stay home and read the N.Y. Sunday Times. Ah, love! SAN FRANCISCO - Louzell Haynes' love for his Vietnam- ese sweetheart may be higher than the highest mountain, but it is clearly not wider than the sea. Haynes set out for Vietnam Friday in a 16 foot rubber raft equipped with oar, a small sail and food In a determined effort to find his bride-to-be im. He, said he couldn't afford an airplane ticket. Haynes' odyssey, however, ended a mere three hours later when changing tides foiled him and he had to be rescued by the Coast Guard. He says he won't try it again. Dope note NEW YORK - Two arrests have been made and more may be on the way in a drive against New York cops who are alleg- edly stealing drugs from street peddlers and running a little racket on the.side. Special Prosecutor Maurice Nadjari has charged that a pair of cops arrested Thursday stole 4.5 pounds of cocaine worth $100,000 on the street. One of the two, Francis Reilly, was a member of a special elite anti-cri e force. Come again? SACRAMENTO, Calif. - They just do things a little different- ly in Calfornia. For example, the recently revised code 'of the Division of Consumer Services, Department of Consumer Af- fairs, Title 4, Subsection 2102 reads: "Tenses, Gender, and Number: For the purposes of the rules and regulations con- tained in this chapter, the present tense includes the past and future tenses, and the future, the present; the masculine gender includes the feminine, and the feminine, the masculine; and the singular includes. the plural, and the plural, the singular." And up is dow'n and black is white? Justice prevails LOS ANGELES - The Smothers Brothers, who first brought politics and controversy to the boob tube, won their breach of contract lawsuit -against CBS. 'A federal grand jury Friday ordered the network to pay Dick and Tom Smothers $766,000 and rejected a network countersuit for $1 million. The jury had been hearing the case in US District Court for nearly two months. The Smothers had originally sought $10 million in damages. Morgue note JAKARTA, Indonesia The Mayor of Jakarta says thre are just too many corpses in his city, and he has called for a halt. According to recent surveys, roughly 70 per cent of the city will be a cemetery within sixty years if present burial rates continue. The mayor is calling for cremation as a possible an- swer. tenured. faculty and a net loss of 10 in non-tenured positions. At this rate there will be no non-tenured faculty in the literary college by 1983. Several administrators and department chairpersons are worried that an extre'mely high percentage of tenured faculty might bring stagnation to the college. "In order to generate new ideas you need .new inputs into a system, which can only come from new faculty members," says Dougherty. "A group which doesn't have a constant flow of new people tends to become a self-servicing group, one that is un- responsive to chance," he adds. An overabundance of tenured faculty may lead to a loss of flexibility in college curriculum, according to Roger Hackett, See FACULTY, Page 10 Peacekeep---ing- helicopter shot down in Asia By AP and Reuter SAIGON (R)-Two American-piloted helicopters carrying 11 members of the International Commission of Control and Supervision (ICCS) were lost yesterday and one was reported shot down by a ground-to-air missile, The peacekeeping helicopters were flying reconnaissance missions over Lao Bao in northwestern Quang Tri Province, the northernmost area of South Vietnam, near the border with Laos. Only four miles below the demilitarized zone, the sector is controlled by North Vietnamese and Viet Cong forces. A second ICCS helicopter, carrying one Canadian, two Hungarians,one Indonesian, two Viet Cong liaison officers and three American crew?_______ members landed at the Viet Cong controlled town of Hu- ong Hoa after the shooting and were apparently all safe and uninjured. AP Photo It was the first such incident Dogone water involving international truce ob- servers in South Vietnam since A pair of dogs anxiously await the receding of flood waters in West Alton, Mo. The dogs have their food shipped in daily by boat. they began monitoring the cease- fire 10 weeks ago. rTENDANCE HIGH: The last radio mesage received from the American pilot of the heli- copter which was hit said, "I've been hit by a missile and I'm go-W Women's Communi tyconfer ence inTheICCS delegation was to serve a border arms entry point A7 :I meets, holds feminist worksho By REBECCA WARNER An estimated 400 women par- ticipated yesterday in the day- long Women's Community Sym- posium held in Angell Hall. The conference culminated with a dinner and evening sessions at St. Andrew's Church. Women of all ages, including a number from outside the Uni- versity community, took part in workshops on topics ranging from sex role channelling in the pub- lic schools, sensitivity and body awareness, and women's medical concerns, td karate and youth lib- eration. The symposium was organized by a group of education school women led by Tara Fujimoto, who called the conference "very successful." Aside from its motive of bring- ing women together to discuss common concerns, Fujirroto said the conference was also Intended "to show that there's a need for a women's course in the Ed school." She cited the lack of a course on sexual identification for education stpdents. Other workshops were held on gay awareness, welfare rights, women and prisons, women in the Chicano movement, youth libera- tion, career choices for women, and rape. Women members of the Rain- bow People's Party (RPP) also held a ,discussion entitled "Wo- 'Meat boycott falls to drop highi price level NEW YORK (Reuter) -Housewives across the nation are planning to continue some form of long-term protest against the high cost of meat as their weeklong beef boycott drew; to a close yesterday without having lowered prices. Although sales have been reduced by more than 30 per, cent, costs for pound of steak or hamburger meat remained about as high as .they were when the boycott started last Sunday. The boycott which ended at midnight last night, .had. its origins in Los Angeles in February when three women atR a morning coffee chat got broiling mad over the price of oeef. They started a protest movement , which spread across the country under a variety of names. Next Wednesday, about 200 pro-I'Rpr test l nders are due to gather ine o r Washington to plan further cam- paigns aimed at slashing meat prices. Meanwhilentariouseah meat on Tuesdays and Thursdays. men in a Politicized Commune- Role and Participation." A Mexican dinner at St. An- drew's Church was followed by a discussion of the "Psychology of Men and Women: Communi- cating - Understanding" a f t e r which the participants broke up into small discussion groups. Morning activities at the syin- posium were highlighted by a workshop in African Dance and "Sensitivity and Body Aware- ness" during which participating women put together an extemp- oraneous dance in the Fishbowl. A crowded afternoon session organized by the Advocates for° Medical Information was chair- ed by Kay Weiss, a local re- searcher whose investigation in- to the side-effects of the morn- ing after pill led to consumer ad- vocate Ralph Nader's condemna- tion of the estrogen drug DES (diethylstilbestrol). DES has been linked conclusively to vaginal cancer in the daughters of users,. "It's really up to women to investigate the use of their bodies by doctors and drug companies," Weiss told participants. S h e claimed that 94 per cent of the women given the morning after pill don't need it, because they have not conceived. Weiss claimed the process of menstrual extraction, a simple kind of first-month abortion dif- ficult to obtain in this country, renders the morning after pill un- necessary: "You say check up on y o u r See WOMEN, Page 10 'You say check u your doctor, but, C( we do? You where the Viet Cong's Provisional pS Revolutionary Government (P.R.- G.) is building facilities for an IC CS team. The flight path of the helicopters had been cleared with the P.R.G. and two P.R.G. liaison officers p on were aboard to facilitate com- what munication with Viet Cong ground forces. t ask Viet Cong officers attached to a ceasefire negotiating team in Sai- sayS, gon sent a message to their jungle your headquarters requesting urgent in- formation on the incident. t it, Meanwhile American bombers' pounded the banks of the Mekong Skill River to clear the way for a con- voy now poised to try and break through a communist stranglehold ipan* on the Camb'odian capital of Phnom Penh. See PEACE, Page 10 hitm and he "Don't worry pretty head abou and you want to -a partic Miami mayor hit with charge of conspiracy in court case PIRGIM to hold elections All members of the Public In- terest Research Group in Michigan (PIRGIM)-students who donated $1.50 at registration-can vote Mon- day and Tuesday to determine the group's University board members. Five polling places will be operat- ing varound campus between '10 a.m."and 3 p.m. both days. Ten . candidates are contending for nine positions with responsibili- ties of allocating PIRGIM's local funds, implementing projects,, and representing the University at state board meetings. Four current PIRGIM board members are running for re-elec- tion to the one-year post. They are Joan Anderson; David Boyer; Mike P e i s n e r, PIRGIM's first state chairperson; and Steve Blumrosen. Other candidates include John Farley, a former PIRGIM board member; Mark Goldsmith; Steve Gurevitz; Mike Roth; Bob Schetter; and Jim Pistilli. PIRGIM was formed last year as a student extension of Nader's Raiders, the Washington based consumer a d v o c a t e research team. The state group received its student funding by an SGC refer- endum and has centered its at- tention on local environmental and consumer problems. MIAMI (UPI)-Miami Mayor David Kennedy yesterday claimed he was indicted for bribery conspiracy because he met a "poor woman" who told him her son had been mistreated. Kennedy, Mina Boulton Pinto Davidson, Circuit Judge Jack Turner and Frank Martin were indicted Friday night in Daytona Beach on charges of conspiring to use bribery to reduce the jail term Davidson's son Pinto is serving for selling 500 pounds of marijuana. Martin, a 72-year-old grade-school dropout known as the "mayor" of Miami's produce markets, was the central figure in the corruption probe. The bulk of the evidence in the so-called'"Market Connec- tion" case was gathered by two taps on Martin's telephone. Gov. Reubin Askew had no immediate comment, but he is expected to suspend Kennedy and Turner tomorrow. The grand jury said Kennedy arranged a meet- ing between Martin and Davidson after Turner sentenced Pinto to 18 months in jail. After the meeting, Turner allegedly met Martin at his marketplace service station. Several days later, Turner vacated Pinto's sen- tence in what an appeals court described as a "whimsical" exercise of judicial authority. says Pentagon giving On the inside ... . .the Arts Page features a story on the essential weirdness of Alice Cooper by Mike Harper . .. Sports Page carries an account of the Tiger's dismal opening day per- formance, . and the Sunday Morning feature is ravel in Africa. prized military aid "We'll continue some kind of boy- ' WASHINGTON (/P)-The Defense Depart- cott until prices are rolled back, ment has given away large amounts of sur- 20 per cent across the board," I _,-- -,_4 of .Chairman William Fulbright (D-Ark.) who made public the congressional watch- The GAO found that military aid to 65 foreign countries totaled $38.3 billion for I E ,~