NEW MINIMUM WAGE .PROPOSAL See Editorial Page Y L *rx 43 U Da3 it9 POLAR High-40 Low-23 See Today for details Vol LXXXIII, No. 153 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, April 12, 1973 Ten Cents Twelve Pages // s. Viet f IF" YOU SEE NEWS HAPPEN CAIL-76-DN1y army may aid Bullard blasted According to 'U' football mentor Bo Schembechler the 'Vic- tors' may not be victorious for lng if State Rep. Perry Bullard continues his dope-smoking exhibitions. Speaking at a luncheon recently, Bo told his audience that Bullai'd's participation in the Hash Bash could mean the difference betweep getting or losing a top-notch high school star. Parents reading about such events, Bo warned, might decide their offspring are better off else- where. Thus if the Michigan football team falls apart in a few years, we'll all know who to blame. Trost leavin David Trost, deputy superintendent for operation of the Ann Arbor school district was named superintendent of schools in Jackson yesterday. Trost, who has served the city's schools since 1960, recently turned down an offer to take the top school post in Ann Arbor. The local board is still on the lookout for a new superintendent to replace retiring Bruce McPherson, Women's advocates Kay Weiss and Belita Cowan of Advocates of Medical In- formation, leaders of yesterday's book-burning, are on their way to Houston to speak before the Planned Parenthood Physic- ian's Conference. The women will speak on the need for patient reporting of the adverse side-effects of birth-control mechan- isms. They claim such warnings have been ignored by the medical profession and drug companies. Happenings .. . . ..are topped today by the opening of the Future World's Festival. The festival, which will -run until Sunday, will feature a number of futuristic happenings you should find entertaining. Today the spacemobile from the NASA will be in the Colloquium Room of the P&A building at 1:00 p.m. and 3:00 p.m. . . . an unusual folk musical, "Jesus of Nazareth" will be presented at Miller Manor, 727 Miller Avenue at 7:30 p.m. . .. Peter Eckstein, an economics professor at Western Michigan University will speak to the Democratic Lunch Box Forum at noon today in the International Center 603 E. Madison. His topic, Reform of Michigan School Finance . . . Claire Jeanette, women's advo- cate, will speak at noon to the Women's Forum in the Homer Heath Lounge on the third floor of the Union . . . at 8:00 p.m. in the Union Ballroom the Israeli Student Organization and Jewish Student Union will hold a celebration for Israel's 25th anniversary. Hopwood time Awards totaling $23,700 have been given to 36 winners in the annual Avery and Jule Hopwood Contest in creative writing. At a ceremony last night, Marie Fucci Gaenslen, Grad, walked away with the biggest prize, $1500, as she won in both the novel and short story division. Stephen Bluestone, Grad, won the single largest award of $1400 in the essay division. PIRGIM results The Public Interest Research Group in Michigan (PIRGIM) selected nine people to sit on their Board of Directors in a recently held election. Elected were John Farley, Mark Gold- smith, Steve Gurevitz, James Pistilli, Mike Roth, Joan Ander- son, Steve Blumrosen, David Boyer, and Mike Peisner. Results of a survey on the ballot indicated that students feel consumer and environmental protection projects should be accorded the highest priority. Bormann buried FRANKFURT, Germany-The ever-elusive corpse of ex-Nazi leader Martin Bormann may have been buried once and for all yesterday. Horst Gauf, attorney general of the city of Frank- furt, called a news conference to announce that a recently un- earthed skeleton was indeed the infamous Bormann. Officials were able to verify the finding by the use of certain medical data including .dental records and skull measurements. Chief Nazi hunter Simon Wisenthal attended the news conference and commented that he was 99 per cent sure the claim was accurate. Ever since the end of the war, people have reported seeing Bor- mann in various parts of the world. Another Michigan morning newspaper recently claimed that Bormann was, in fact, alive and well in South America. 'Harmful' med books set afire By DAN BIDDLE About 150 curious students looked on yesterday afternoon as white-coated members of Advocates for Medical Infor- mation (AMI) set fire to "dan- gerously sexist" literature on the Diag. The protest, which included sev- eral speeches and a guerilla thea- ter production in addition to the book-burning, focused its attack on Obstetrics and Gynecology, a standard medical text co-authored by Dr. J. Robert Willson of the University Medical School. AMI organizer KaybWeiss de- clared that Willson's book, which is used in several med school classes, contains "health-damaging and criminally sexist material used to teach the psychological oppres- sion of women." Onlookers reacted with a mixture of cheers and hisses as Weiss and others set fire to a trash can con- taining Willson's book, Dr. David Reuben's "Any Woman Can," sev- eral other paperbacks on female and homosexual psychology, a number of Blue Cross and hospital admission cards, and two decks of "Mr. Eve" playing cards that fea- ture photos of nude males. AMI spokespeople contended that all the objects in the blazing trash- can were "tools of sexual oppres- sion." In the speeches preceding the book-burning, "Herself" editor Bel- ita Cowan and others attacked the med school and the .medical pro- fession in general for "criminal" treatment of women and homo- sexuals in literature and actual practice. Weiss called on the women's movement to "take on new activi- ties to work in the direction of social change," but did not in- dicate whether she sees book- burning as such an activity. Members of the Gay Liberation Front joined AMI in a guerilla See 'HARMFUL,' Page 8 COURT RULING; Cambodia Haigto confer with Nixon on possibilty WASHINGTON (A - Gen. Alexander Haig is expected to ask President Nixon to consider the viability of a South Vietnamese attack on Communist-held areas of Cambodia when he returns from Indochina today. Administration sources say such use of South Vietnamese units is not necessarily what Haig, Army chief of staff, will recommend. But they say it is certainly a live possibility if President Nixon decides some strong, dramatic action is necessary. In Saigon, Cambodia's president, Lon Nol, was reported by South Vietnamese sources to have asked Haig for the help of South Vietna- mese troops and warplanes in defending the capital of Phnom Penh. Haig, the former chief deputy to national security adviser Henry Kissinger, has been on a fact-finding trip to Indochina to assess the status of the cease-fire and the situation in Cambodia. The White House yesterday said no time has been set for a Haig- Nixon meeting, but officials said it would be soon. However, the White House said the session would not necessarily be during a National Security Council meeting set for this morning at the presidential mountain retreat at Camp David, Md. There have been reports that President Nixon is considering some strong action to back up his previous warnings that he will not tolerate continued North Vietnamese violations of the Vietnam cease-fire and understandings reached with Hanoi concerning Cambodia. When asked if South Vietnamese troops are already operating in Cambodia, presidential press secretary Ronald Ziegler said yes- terday he could not speak for the actions of another government. Other administration sources said this was not a denial that Saigon would agree to using either ground or air forces against the Communists in the neighboring Indochinese state. Other possible options for Nixon in Cambodia range from continu- ing the present level of B52 bombing attacks in Cambodia to extend- ing the air raids to cover North Vietnamese supply lines such as the Ho Chi Minh trail through Laos, Cambodia and South Vietnam. At this state, sources say there is little chance of the resumption of American attacks on North Vietnam itself and the President is pre- cluded from sending American ground troops into Cambodia. See HAIG, Page 12 Doily Photo by JOHN UPTON 'Jangerous' books burn Members of the Advocates for Medical Informatio-i yesterday set ablaze selected pages of University im-dical Prof. J. Robert Willson's "Obstetrics and Gynecology" textbook. Speakers at the noontime Diag book-burning labeled Willson's controversial book ad others chosen for destruction as "dangerously sexist." Nixon'S dismantling of ruled illegal by federal WASHINGTON (4P) - A federal ing out orders to shut down the the E c o n o m i c Opportunity judge, holding that the Presi- agencies, ruling in a suit filed Amendment of 1972 forbids Phil- dent has no power to shut down against Phillips by West Cen- lips to terminate funding of programs enacted by Congress, tral Missouri Rural Development CAAs, and that the termination ruled yesterday that the dis- Corporation and a number of of CAA functions is illegal be- mantling of the Office of Eco- government employe unions. cause the terms of the act were nomic Opportunity is illegal. The suit raised a basic issue not complied with. U. S.JDistrict Court Judge that has been argued by the The plaintiffs also argued that William Jones said the proposed President and. Congress for Phillip's directives were illegal termination of OEO and Com- months=- whether the President because Phillips failed to pub- munity Action Agencies (CAAs) may halt programs enacted by lish them in the Federal Regis- could not take place until the Congress and mandated by the ter. funds run out or Congress de- legislative branch to be carried The judge dismissed Phillip's cides to end 'them. out. argument that the court had no Jones restrained Acting Direc- The plaintiffs argued that Phil- jurisdiction in the batter be- tor Howard Phillips from carry- lips actions were illegal because cause the issue is political. SGC will i nCs t te recent fradulent all-camlupus election, OEO judge Phillips also claimed that the President's assessment of' the needs of the country requires him to exercise his responsibility despite the congressional man- date to continue the program. Disagreeing, the judge said that "if the power sought here were found valid, no barrier would remain to the executive ignoring any and all congres- sional authorizations." "The argument by Phillips is that the Constitution confers dis- cretionary power on the Presi- dent to refuse to execute laws passed by Congress with which he disagrees," Jones added. He said the Supreme Court has found that this "would be cloth- ing the President with a power entirely to control the legislation. of Congress and paralyze the administration of justice." Until Congress decides to ter- minate the CAA function of OEO, the ruling said, "historical pre- cedents, logic and the text of the Constitution itself obligate the defendant to continue to operate the CAA programs as was in- tended by the Congress and not terminate them." Ping pong room now silent after 57moisyyears, By BILL HEENAN Fifty-three years of ping pong at the Michigan Union have ended. The table tennis room, adjacent to the second floor billiard room, is undergoing conversion into an office area for student organizations. Renovation of the ping pong room, the second floor ballroom, a terrace, and part of the second floor kitchen began last week to clear the way for 5,000 square feet of office space. Some of the ping pong tables were sold-off for $5 apiece. Admist crumbled piles of wood, masonry and scaffolding, a few dusty ping pong tables are left. Ceiling-high panels of fiber glass close off the construction from the pool room. The current state of affairs results from an agree- ment between SGC and the Union's Board of Direc- tors. According to former SGC treasurer Dave Schaper, Union Manager Stanfield Wells violated a verbal agreement made June, 1972, to move the ping pong tables into the pool room. SGC responded to this alleged breech of agree- ment by purchasing two of the five bargain tables. "We intend to put them somewhere," Schaper com- mented. He sees hope for ping pong activity some- where in the building since "the Union has had tremendously inefficient space usage." Attendants in the pool room declared that mov- ing ping pong tables into the room would hurt business by forcing them to remove some of the money-making pool tables. The office move by student organizations from their office in the Student Activities Building to a new one in the Michigan Union (the reason for the displacement of the ping pong room) goes back to the revised 1968 Michigan Union Constitution. Ironically, the constitution's intent was to foster a more student-oriented Union. At the June, 1972, board meeting, Schaper sub- mitted the plan which is currently being enacted. He asserted that the ping pong room was "under- utilized, except on weekends. The Board, under pressure from the University which was short on office space, approved this plan. Pool room attendants claim that patrons, 90 per cent of them students, have complained about their lost pastime. "They've had this service for over 53 years, and they have no other place to play," one said. On the inside. Kathryn Racette writes about Andre Previn: The Man Behind the Music . . . the Editorial Page has a piece by Zachary Schiller about a recent foreign policy press conference . . . and the Sports Page, taking off where Penelope Ashe left off, has a story on opening day in Detroit from the collective pens of 15 Daily sportwriters. A2's weather Continuing the winter side of life. Old man winter con- tinues to send polar storms our way. Polar cyclone "Icon" is next on the agenda bringing more snowshowers our way. Icon will pass over us by noon today giving us snowshowers heavier than yesterday's. Even though the snow won't be significant the reinforcement of cold air will be. Highs today between 35-40 with lows tonight of 23-28. "ThisIr e q ite s I for' stteme~nits is only (a start." -Ken N\ew~ur'y FUND DRIVE STALLS By DAN BIDDLE Student Government Council moved yesterday toward a full investigation of the activities of personnel involved in last month's fradulent all-campus election. Election Director Ken Newbury has requested SGC mem- bers, candidates, officials, and all "unofficial" council per- sonnel to submit statements giving "a detailed description of events, people, dates, times and places" itemizing each person's involvement in the election process. In an unprecedented move last week, SGC ruled the March 27-28- 29 voting invalid and cleared the way for a new election during fall pre-registration later this month. Newbury yesterday described the tempt to determine the extent and c~ lh~ planned investigation as "an at- nature of the fraud, and to deter- mine who was responsible." The elections chief said a "select,, largely of "impartial outsiders" are f"impartial ison,''sider"p rather than SGC personnel, would Students shun Hanoi hospital By REBECCA WARNER The University a c a d e m'i c community, once nationally known for its radical anti-war senti- ment, has apparently lost interest in Vietnamese problems. Members of the local Nguyen Van Troi Chil- dren's Hospital Committee who are trying to raise little more than $100 worth. " The committee is part of the World Federation of Democratic Youth, a collection of organizations almost all of which. have pledged contributions towards building a children's hospital in Hanoi. The hospital will be built exclusively by youths and will be named after Vietnamese electrical WuS By The AP and Reuter WASHINGTON - Environmental Protec- tion Administrator William Ruckelshaus yesterday granted a one-year extension of the 1975 anti-pollution standards for auto- mobiles, but established interim standards requiring some use of new anti-pollution devices. Ruckelshaus announced the decision to delay the standards nationwide, but to require 'the use of expensive, metal-based catalyst systems to avoid "the risk of failure" in testing and production. He told a press conference that imposing the standards, which call for a 90 per cent reduction in harmful exhaust emissions, might have caused the shut down of Chrysler Corporation, the nation's third biggest car producer who claimed it would be unable to meet the deadline. California. car buyers, accounting for 10 per cent of all domestic cars will be faced