Re gistere d to vote? Deadline s October 6th SECRECY VS. McGOVERN See Editorial Page Lilt ig au A& :43 a t I CHANCY F igh-73 Low-48 For details, see today . Vol. LXXXII I No. 23 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, October 3, 1972 Ten Cents Eight Pages today... aculty gives RC confidence vote ___ The mysterious LPF If you applied recently for a job at the Union Station, the garish new fast food joint in the Union basement, you may have been rated on your LPF. LPF, say several workers at the eatery, stands for Looks, Personality and Figure. LPF is measured on a five point scale. Dead not coming You may be at Hill Aud. Oct. 29th for the Grateful Dead concert. Don't be surprised if the Dead aren't there. UAC finally admitted yesterday that the San Francisco based rock combo woild not be coming here. No word is yet in on when the concert may be rescheduled. Happenings .... ... There will be an Ann Arbor Planning Commission meet- ing tonight at 7:30 in City Hall . . . Democrats will hold a Box Lunch Forum at noon in Dining Room 3 of the Union. Featured speaker will be University economics Prof. W. Geoffrey Shepherd . delivering her monthly prediction on the State of the Cosmos, University astronomer Hazel M. "Doc" Losh forsees that October will bring shorter days, lots of moonlight and meteor showers . . . tonight marks the beginning of the Resi- dential College Astronomical Film Festival, at 9 in the East Quad Aud. Feature film is "Apollo 16: Find out what the net- works wouldn't show you." Pigs lose The most exciting football game here over the weekend had nothing to do with the victorious Wolverines.,' The annual Pig Bowl game between the Washtenaw Sheriff's Pigs and the Ann Arbor Police Goats reaching a thrilling climax before 4,500 fans at Holloway Field near Pioneer High School Sunday. Trail- ing 7-0 with a little over a minute left in the game, Goat quar- terback Patrolman Gary Severinsen scored a touchdown and the fired-up Goats ran over a two-point conversion to win 8-7. The cops estimate they made over $5,000 in toys and cash for the county's underpriviledged children. The record in the grudge match now stands at three games to the Goats, one to the Pigs. Oops, we goofed Sorry folks. "today . . ." erred when it reported Sunday morning that it was China Day in Ann Arbor. It was China Day in China, but the local celebrations were held Saturday. Maybe next year... Double take dept. WASHINGTON - Asked yesterday whether presidential ad- viser Henry Kissinger's latest round of international talks indicate an imminent compromise on the Vietnam War, Vice President Spiro Agnew replied: "I wish I could answer that I did. I'm glad I don't have to answer that I don't." Come again? Bella wing NEW YORK - Controversial Rep. Bella Abzug was selected Sunday night to replace Rep. William Ryan as Democratic candidate for Congress. Abzug was chosen by an overwhelm ing vote of the county D e m o , cratic committeepersons. T h e Democratic nomination virtually assures the flamboyant Abzug another term in Congress. Briefly noted .. . . . the 95-day Northwest Airlines strike ended, with most flights to resume by the end of the week . . . the president of the American Medical Association criticized the U.S. Public Health Service for withholding penicillin from a group of Ala- bama black men used in a federal syphilis experiment . . . the People's Food Co-op, evicted from their South State location Saturday to make room for a delicatessen, said they hope to be in operation again soon, perhaps sharing a storefront with the Ann Arbor Produce Company. Dope notes SKEGNESS, England-Llincolnshire police committed some- thing of a faux pas when they arrested five Indians on suspicion of smuggling dope into England. One constable thought he over- heard the word "hashish" when the Indians described the con- tents of a box they were carrying. Later, however, it was found that the box contained the ashes of a cremated relative and the Indians were escorted to a river to -scatter them. Hashish to ashes, so to speak . . . meanwhile in Tehran, astute narcs seized a monkey yesterday carrying eight grams of heroin stashed in a bag tied to its legs. The brave ape seemed to know the value of its contraband cargo: It reportedly scatched and bit at the government agents when they tried to untie the bag. Don't cry WASHINGTON - We hope you're getting what you pay for. A survey released yesterday by the National Association of State Universities and Land-Grant College shows that the University's out-of-state tuition is the third highest in the nation for state schools. Compare that with in-state fees, which aren't even in the top ten. Don't cry, non-residents. On the inside . . Associated Press special correspondent Peter Ar- nett reports on his journeys through the North Vietnamese countryside on Page 2 . . . Sports Editor John Papanek re- flects on the Wolverines' victory Saturday over Tulane . staff writer Zachery Schiller takes an Editorial Page look at military -intelligence files . . . the Arts Page features a review of this year's Contemporary Directions Series. Budget hike deferred; four year review slated By JUDY RUSKIN The University's Residential College (RC) received a vote of confidence yesterday when the literary college faculty voted to continue the program despite heavy criticism. The passage of the proposals is in effect a milestone for RC, ending the college's experimental status. Dean James Robertson, director of the Residential College, says he feels the college is no longer on trial. The faculty approved a series of proposals concerning the administration of RC's programs. However, no decision could be reached on the issue of the college's increased bud- get request. Although the original motion was to be a decision on whether or not to accept the proposals of the LSA executive committee on the RC, a motion -- - - was introduced to completely phase T out RC. P 17 /