t SILVERSTEIN SAGA See Editorial Page SirA6 ~!Iaitj DULL High-69 Low-49 For details see today .. Vol. LXXXIII, No. 18 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, September 27, 1972 Ten Cents Ten Pages today 0 re Disaster? Not really yo;'re wandering about Buhr Park on the Southeast side at 1 p.m. this afternoon and you come across scenes of mass death and chaos, with ambulances and police cars dashing over the grass and press photographers wildly snapping pictures, don't panic. It's not really the end of the world, but a county- 'wide "Disaster Drill," aimed'at testing the effectiveness of local em4rgency services. School children will be the "casualties." Real cops and medics-will play themselves. City revenue share slice gressman Marvin Esch's office has estimated that the will receive $1,405,000 as a result of the federal revenue aring bill passed by Congress last week. Although Esch's estimate was characterized as "reasonably accurate" by Assist- ant City Administrator for Finance Kenneth Sheehan, the U.S. Treasury Department has still sent no official word on the matter. Not cheaper, clearer Not necessarily any cheaper, just clearer, will be Wrigley Supermarkets' new unit price system, to begin today in local outlets of the chain. Farmer Jack's and Chatham already have unit pricing; the Human Rights Party is trying to pass an ordin- ance making everyone else adopt the system, too. Blatant repression? Some graduate social work students are mad at their Dean. About 25 of them have started a course entitled "Radical Alternatives in Social Work" and they want Richard Kunnes, noted radical member of the medical school faculty, to be ap- pointed as one of the instructors - without pay. Dean Philip Fellin says there is already an instructor and no need to give Kunnes the title. The students say they will continue to fight against the 'blatant political repression." Happenings ...' include a report on the status of the BGS degree by counselling czar Charles Morris, 7:30 p.m., Modern Languages Bldg. lecture room two . . . a free movie, "The Great American Novel Moby Dick," in the UGLI multi-purpose room at 4 p.m. ...slides and discussion of Ghana and West Africa, at the Rive Gauche coffee house, 1024 Hill St., 9 p.m. . . . a grad coffee hour at 8 p.m. in the East Rackham conference room . . . the start of a two-day workshop seminar on the Opportunity Pro- gram, in Rackham lecture hall. Dope notes In Three Rivers, Mich., the coordinator of a drug abuse program was freed on a $5,000 bond yesterday following his arrest - on a narcotics charge. Robert Baughman, 22, of the St. Joseph County community mental health center, was accused of assisting a known drug dealer in delivering heroin from Lansing to Three Rivers . . . and in Monterey, Calif., the State Bar, of California announced it had endorsed the California Mari- juana Initiative, a proposal on the November ballot to remove criminal penalties for the personal use and cultivation of mari- Juana. Women's studies University women have asked the LSA Executive Commit- tee to appoint a search committee to find a person to coordinate women's courses and explore the possibility of developing a womens' studies department./ According to history Prof. Kitty Sklar, "We're still waiting for a reply. We want to hire a person for next fall, so we need to hear from the committee soon." HRP hits new jail The Human Rights Party said in a news release that it opposed the construction of a new and bigger county jail to re- place the present outmoded structure on Ann Street. "The bigger the jail, with more space to fill, the more reluctant judges will be to grant low bail," the release states. HRP said it prefers oth- er solutions to the crime problem, such as half-way houses and rehabilitation programs. Marcos orders 'reform' MANILA - President, and dictator, Ferdinand Marcos yes- terday ordered massive land reform, re-opened elementary schools, pledged to stabilize prices and announced yet more mass arrests and an investigation of the news media in the Philippines. A total of 92 persons are now being held under the terms of martial law, eight of them journalists. Yets aquitted NEW ORLEANS - A federal appeals court yesterday dis- missed contempt charges against four anti-war veterans who Were twice jailed in Tallahasse, Fla., for refusing to testify be- fore a grand jury investigating protest plans for the Democratic and Republican national conventions. The reason: The govern- ment would not deny it had used illegal wiretaps in their investi- gation. Poetic PM PEKING - Prime Minister Kakuei Tanaka wrote a poem yesterday celebrating imminent diplomatic relations between Japan and China and then embarked on his second round of summit talks with Premier Chou En-lai. The two-and-one-half-hour conversation touched on a wide range of subjects, from bilateral to international affairs and were conducted "very seriously and energetically," a Japanese spokesman said. U.S. sends electronic spy in POW p ack~ages, Hanoi Gromykio blasts U. S. war policy UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. IN) -The Soviet Union declared yesterday that the United States is carrying on an "un- precedented expansion' of the Vietnam war and demanded the withdrawal of all Ameri- can troops. Foreign Minister Andrei Gromy- ko told the U.N. General Assembly, "The Vietnamese people cannot be defeated. Their staunchness will not be broken either by heavier bombing, or by the blockade of their ports, or by damage to their hydro-technical installations." It was the strongest speech Gro- myko has made here on the sub- ject of Vietnam in at least four years. Gromyko said that despite U.S. promises to get out of Vietnam and stop the war, there was "in fact an unprecedented expansion of the acts of war, and of their cruelty and inhumanity." He said if the United States wants the Paris peace talks to succeed it should give a "positive reply" to the Vnt Cong proposal for a tripartite government in South Vietnam. "If, however, it is pursuing some other goal, the negotiations in Paris cannot fail to end in dead- lock, the war will go on and all the responsibility will rest with the United States," 'he said. U.S. Ambassador George Bush said Gromyko had reiterated the Soviet position "with which we certainly cannot agree." "Our position is well known on Vietnam and is in contradiction of the Soviet views," Bush added. Gromyko condemned as criminal the Palestinian commandos' Munich massacre of Israeli ath- letes, but he supported "the just struggle of the Arab people of Palestine for the restoration of their inalienable rights." He submitted a resolution to have the assembly declare "the renun- ciation of the use of force and the permanent prohibition of nuclear weapons" on behalf of all 132 members. The resolution would al- so have the Security Council man- date all U.N. members to respect the declaration. Gromyk6 said the renunciation of force would not prevent "states and peoples subjected to aggres- sion to rebuff it by employing all possible means so long as the aggressor continues to use force." "Who, indeed, could venture to contest the incontestable fact that crude force has been, and is being used against both the peoples of Indochina and the Arab states, and that they are entitled to use all the necessary means to rebuff the aggressor?" he added. Gromyko noted that less power- ful nations are concerned that nu- clear weapons might be used against them and that his proposal would remove that threat and strengthen the security of all coun- tries. gear say s Devices in food gifts displayed By PETER ARNETT AP special Correspondent PEKING-American antiwar activists, here with three prisoners of war released by North Vietnam, disclosed yes- terday a charge by Hanoi that U.S. packages mailed to POWs have contained spying devices. The Pentagon called the charge ridiculous. Cora Weiss, leader of the four Americans who went to Hanoi to receive the released servicemen, said, "It looks to us an unmis- takably professional job." The charge was first made broadlysonthedAmerican delega tion' s second day in Hanoi, Sept. 17. Hoang Tung, editor of the of- ficial Communist party newspaper Nhan Dan, said his government was "extremely upset by electronic devices hidden in packages regu- larly sent to prisoners." The activist delegation-Weiss, David Dellinger, the Rev. William Sloane Coffin and Prof. Richard Falk-said they asked for evidence to back up the charge. This evi- dence, they assert was displayed Monday shortly before the group left for ' Peking and afterwards, Moscow, en route to the United States. Their schedule calls for a fur- ther stopover in Copenhagen and arrival in New York tomorrow night. The antiwar delegation said this route was chbsen to keep the three released pilots out of U.S. military hands on the way home. As described by the delegation, the nearest thing to an "electronic device" seemed to be material for a radio receiver. This correspondent did not see the display. I had accompanied the antiwar group from New York, and had attended various' heetings with the three released POWs and See N. VIETS, Page 6 CAPTURED AMERICAN PILOTS, most of whom were shot down over North Vietnam this year, speak at a press conference in Hanoi Monday. The pilots met with members of an American peace group, who were there to escort three other POWs home. From left: Cmdr. Eugene Wilbur, Lt. Karl Lugan, Capt. George Allan Rose and Capt. David Hoffman. DUE TO CIRCUMSTANCES *** Cable By DEBRA THAL First in a series Cable TV-a revolutionary idea in television-was scheduled to begin transmitting in Ann Arbor Monday. It didn't. The current obstacles to the inception of cablecasting involve construction and technical diffi- culties. It will be at least an- other two weeks until cablecast- ing begins.,a TV de laye d "The system just doesn't work right. Unfortunately, we don't know what's wrong," says Robert Shaw, general partner of Mich- igan Cable TV. He explains that there are bad splices and connections which could rust during the winter. However, they are difficult to locate within the 90 miles of feed- er cable which have been strung on telephone poles in the south- east part of Ann Arbor. The first 500 subscribers were supposed to be "on line" by La- bor Day, but various difficulties have necessitated several delays. The company has also had problems with the contractors in- stalling the various hardware necessary for the cable system. "At least they're consistent- not one of them ever comes through," says Shaw. So cable TV will probably not be available on central campus, where under- ground utility wires cause extra problems, until winter. All of Washtenaw County should be hooked-up within a year. Cable TV, also known as CATV (for coaxial television) is a sys- tem whereby the TV viewer is supposed to receive a perfect picture, regardless of location. This happens because the TV signals run through a cable, sim- ilar to a telephone or electric line, as opposed to being sent through the air. This permits a cable operator to bring in stations from fairly great distances with the use of one central antenna. The system being installed in Ann Arbor has the capabilityto carry up to 80 TV and/or radio stations at the same time, but only 20 television channels will be offered when transmitting be- gins. These will include all of the Detroit stations' (UHF and VHF), Windsor, Lansing, Toledo, a local station and four public service channels. Programming will include 24- hour news, weather and stock market reports. All Michigan football games will be shown on a delayed basis. Programming on the public service channels will be open to all community groups and indi- viduals. Free channels may be provided for local schools and government. There are questions to be answered, however, as to aigain how these channels will be regu- lated and financed. Cable TV became a real pos- sibility in Ann Arbor in June, 1970 when the City Council grant- ed a monopoly franchise to Mich- igan Cable TV. Since then, it has taken several years to raise the, necessary f u n d i n g, including more than half a million dollars, for the initial' hardware.' TOMORROW: Problems of pub- lic access CATV. AID BILL PASSED: Senate. vote crushes endtewrmeasure. WASHINGTON (0-The Senate yesterday voted down a four-month deadline for withdrawal of U.S. troops from Indochina and passed a $1.8-billion foreign-military-aid-bill on its second try. The 45-42 vote striking the end-the-war amendment from the bill reversed two previous Senate votes this year. The aid bill was passed 46 to 41 yesterday after adoption of an amendment by Republican Leader Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania increasing its total from the $1.55 billion approved by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee to $1.82 billion. Daily Photo by ROLFE TESSEM A worker installs a cable unit. The amount is still $431 million less than requested by the Nixon administration and $311 million less than voted by the House. The bill now goes to a House- Senate conference to work out compromises on the money author- ization, and a dozen other non- money differences. Sen. John Stennis (D-Miss.) led the fight against the Indochina troop-withdrawal' deadline and of- fered the motion to strike it from the bill. He called it "impractical, un- workable and a delusion." Stennis, chairperson of the Sen- ate Armed Services Committee, argued that under the Constitution "the power and responsibility of ending any war rests with the president." Sen. Edward Brooke( R-Mass.), chief sponsor of the fund cutoff for U.S. military action in Indo- china conditioned upon release of prisoners of war, countered that Congress has constitutional respon- sibility concerning war and peace. "We are still endangering the lives of 36,000 land troops in Viet- nam," Brooke said, "We are still 1nin ni.nte nnr nl nnPn W IATa or SGC paper, to report 'U'events A new campus information source, the Michigan Student News, has been established and will appear in your mailbox within a week. The weekly publication plans to "cover the major events within the various school' governments and councils and campus organiz- ations," said Editor Mary Conelly last night. "But we don't intend to become spokesmen for the factions within those groups." The -newsletter is financed by contributions from 18 governments and organizations with about 40 per cent of the initial funds com- ing from the Student Government Council. "Our major problem is the lack of staff," said Conelly last night after surveying the disappointing WUOM's 'SYMPOSIUM '72' Fleming discusses grading, child care On the inside On the Sports Pages you'll find Michigan's latest standings in the football poll, a feature on the Michigan line by sports writer Bob McGinn, and the infamous Gridde Pickings column; the Editorial Page today considers the saga of SGC member "at large" By CINDY HILL Questions fired at President Rob- ben Fleming by listeners during last night's broadcast of WUOM's "Symposium '72" covered a range of topics including pass-fail grad- ing, proposed child care centers, hospital expansion and his recent or federal government to help usI support child care centers." When Student Government Coun- cil President Bill Jacobs suggested that funds be drawn from the ROTC finances, Fleming responded that the action might cause a with- drawal of financial support from