GREEN AND HIS CRITICS See Editorial Page LY G lflir :43 a t t NOT BADI High-57 Low-40 For details, see "today.. Vol. LXXXI1I, No. 32 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, October 13, 1972 Ten Cents Ten Pages today. .. if you see news happencall 76-DAILY REVIEW COMMITTEE CHOSEN 400 protest Green Supporting Green Students of suspended chemistry Prof. Mark Green who wish to express their support for his reinstatement are encouraged to write the chemistry department, according to LSA Dean Frank Rhodes. The department's office is 2035 Chemistry Bldg., 930 N. University St., Ann Arbor. The letters, Rhodes says, "do make a difference." Supporters of Green have also urged students and faculty to wear green armbands to show their concern for him. Where are they now dept. Jack Garris, ultra-conservative head of the Concerned Citi- zens of Ann Arbor and one-time mayoral candidate, is playing political games again - this time as legal advisor for Sheriff Doug Harvey. Garris accompanied the sheriff to the office of County Prosecutor William Delhey, who is conducting an investi- gation of Harvey's methods of disposing of stolen property. Del- hey says his report will be ready about next Tuesday or Thurs- day. 'Unimportant people?' After Perry Bullard, state representative candidate, dismissed members of "Democrats and independents for Burghardt" as "unimportant," members of the group are considering a new name. Taking a cue from Perry, it's - surprise - "Unimportant People for Burghardt." Happenings ... . . .are overflowing. Leonard Nimoy (minus his pointy ears) will be speaking at a McGovern rally tonight at Mt. Clemens' VFW Hall at 7 p.m. Although campaign workers can't verify rumors about McGovern and Shriver paying a surprise visit, they're sure that pizza and beer will be served. Admission is free. . . . a Friday the 13th smoke-in is scheduled for noon on the Diag to protest Judge S.J. Elden's recent ruling on the city post law. . . . Maceo Dixon, Sodialist Workers' candidate for the First Congressional District, will speak at the UGLI at 12:30 p.m. . . . check out the Best of the First Annual New York Erotic Film Festival, Natural Science Auditorium, 7:30, 9 and 10:30 p.m. Muskie may sue WASHINGTON - Maine Sen. Edmund Muskie said yesterday he is exploring the possibility of suing President Nixon's re- election committee and White House aides for violating his civil rights through political espionage and sabotage. The Muskie staff has prepared a memorandum detailing examples alleging stolen campaign documents, stolen Muskie polls, and the use of forged Muskie envelopes. Revenue sharing passes House WASHINGTON - Legislation to send to states, cities and other local governments more than $30 billion in federal money over the next five years was passed by the House yesterday. The bill, a compromise between a version passed earlier by the House and Senate, now goes to the Senate for final action. What's a nice girl like yo... STIRLING, Scotland - It ain't easy being a queen these days. Students at Scotland's Stirling University shouted obsceni- ties at Queen Elizabeth yesterday when she visited the school. Chanting "Monarchy out," some 400 students protested the use of university money to fund an expensive reception for the queen. Meanwhile, Prince Phillip, famed polo jock and husband of the queen, urged parents to expose their children to adventure by encouraging them to seek new experiences. (What does that mean?) Phillip's comments came in a magazine interview. Billie's Bungalow NEW YORK - Secretary of State William Rogers has a $400-a-day suite in the Waldorf Astoria big enough to play basket- ball in. It has gold-colored antique furniture, wall-to-wall carpet- ing and a bust of Abraham Lincoln. Aides call it an "excellent investment in diplomacy" though they admit Rogers doesn't even sleep there. Who's who in the holy land When George McGovern turned up at Wheaton College, he was confronted by a leaflet that read: "Choose not George Mc- Govern but Jesus Christ." McGovern took the situation in stride, declaring, "I assure you when you're running against Richard Nixon, you aren't running against Jesus Christ." On the inside . . . . . the Sports Page scouts out Michigan State . . . the Editorial Page includes the diverse views of economics Prof. Gardner Ackley, conservative State Representative candidate Alan Harris, and Daily writer Bill Leavitt . plus everything you've always wanted to know about movies on campus this weekend on the Arts Page. The weather picture Well, folks, it looks like there's still hope for a weekend in the great out-of-doors. According to the weatherpersons, a slight warming and clearing trend will start today and (we hope) carry over into Saturday and Sunday. It'll still be a little chilly today, with a high of between 55 and 60 degrees, and a low around 50. The probability of precipita- tion hovers near zilch today and tonight. I suspension ' Students given parit in Cdem1 dept. probe By TAMMY JACOBS Managing Editor Over 400 persons marched from the Diag to the Chemistry Bldg. yesterday to protest the suspension of chemistry Prof. Mark Green and demand his immediate reinstatement. Although Green's suspension remained, at least one of the demonstration's demands-student parity on the com- mittee to review Green's teaching record-was granted later in the day. Also during the afternoon, more than 100 persons marched into LSA Dean Frank Rhodes' conference room to demand that he reinstate Green. Rhodes refused. Parity on the review committee was granted late yester- day afternoon by the three - faculty members of the com- mittee, who met in private tos st guso s tion,and the gosb oibing discsand the possible rein- statement of Green pending A ., AP Photo THE VICTORIOUS Oakland A's whoop it up after smashing the Detroit Tigers 2-1 yesterday. Vida Blue, left, is embraced by Blue Moon Odom, back to camera, while Sal Bando, glove to face, and Gene Tenace rush off to Cincinnati for the World Series. .Odom, Blue stifle Tigers. 2-1; Oakland captures AL Pennant Special To The Daily the sliding Jackson was in there. By JIM ECKER The Oakland center fielder in- DETROIT-The sun finally set jured his groin on the play. When on the Detroit Tigers' 1972 season Oakland took the field in the bot- yesterday afternoon. The baffling tom of the inning, the inexperi- Bengals' failure to rally "one more enced George Hendrick had re- time" resulted in an American placed the A's All-Star outfielder. League championship for the Oak- He turned out to be more than a land Athletics. defensive replacement. IaCharley Finley's outfit nudged Hendrick led off thetfourth frame the Tigers 2-1 in the decisive fifth with a bounder to short. McAuliffe, game of their American League playing in place of the wounded playoffs. Both squads performed -_-___- below par under Detroit's chilly, blustering skies. e "'"n t Billy M artin's men broke from I1 RL1 R~ the gate in front, faded in the back stretch, and never recovered. In the first inning, a Dick Mc- ! A O T 0t Auliffe single and a Duke Sims a o e t walk placed runners on first and second with one out. Oakland's W catcher Gene Tenace's passed ball WASHINGTON /P)-The Senate advanced the runners a base shelved a House-passed antibus- apiece. ing bill yesterday after a third Bill Freehan's grounder to short attempt to break a filibuster by scored McAuliffe, sending bellig- Northern liberals failed. erant Tiger fans into temporary By a vote of 59 to 26, the Sen- delirium. It proved to be their last ate adopted a motion to put the chance for 1972. glee. bill aside and continue with other Oakland knotted the game the legislation. very next inning on the aggressive The bill would have barred base running of Reggie Jackson. busing for school desegregation Jackson walked, stole second and except as a last resort, and would advanced to third on a fly to Ka- have forbidden busing a child line. With two down and Mike beyond the school next to his Epstein on first as a hit batsman, home. the A's engineered a delayed dou- It also would have permitted ble steal. the reviewing of court orders for Epstein broke for second on the school desegregation to bring pitch. Jackson waited for Free- them into conformity with the han's peg to clear the pitching bill's restrictions on busing. mound before making his move The bill passed the House on homeward. Second - sacker Tony Aug. 18 by a 282-102 vote, with Taylor cut in front of the bag, its toughest provisions written on grabbed the ball and relayed to the floor in a late-night session. Freehan. Home-plate ump Nestar President Nixon had called for Chylak informed the highly-parti- Senate action on the bill before san 50,276 Bengal boosters that Congress adjourns. Ed Brinkman, pulled Norm Cash and jump before unleashing a bul- off first for an error. It was a let to the poised Freehan. Hen- costly miscue., drick hit the dirt, the ball popped Bando sacrificed the fleet-footed loose, and the A's had it. Hendrick to second. Epstein fan- The Tigers never threatened af- ned, but Tenace delivered with a ter the second inning. In fact, not single to left. Duke Sims, inserted one Tiger runner reached second. in Martin's lineup for his stick, base once Oakland had its 2-1 lead. corralled the liner on a hop. Hen- Vida Blue relieved Oakland start- drick rounded third. ing pitcher John "Blue Moon" Sims practiced his hop, step See TIGERS, Page 10 l-busing bill shelved end flibuster fails the review's results. No de- cision was made on reinstate- ment. Green was relieved of all teach- ing duties Monday by Acting Chemistry Dept. Chairman Thomas Dunn, after Green made use of an anti-war slide show in his Organic Chemistry 227 classes. Yesterday's protest started when the demonstrators marched from the Diag to the Chemistry Bldg., where the chemistry faculty were meeting to choose the review com- mittee members. It ended almost: four hours later, in the literaryI college dean's conference room. The group plans to discuss fur- ther tactics at a neeting in the Union tonight at 7:30 p.m. The demonstration was part of1 a growing wave of reaction over Green's suspension. The slide show that Green used has since been booked solid by professors for the next few weeks-many are showing it as a protest-and the faculty; executive body, the Senate Ad- visory Committee on University Affairs, has scheduled a meeting today to discuss the issue. When the protestors reached the Chemistry Bldg. yesterday, all but three student representatives and three reporters were barred from the faculty meeting. As the crowd waited in an adjacent room, Stu- dent Government Council President Bill Jacobs commuted from the meeting to the protestors, explain- ing what the faculty was doing and carrying demands back from Green's supporters. Both Jacobs and Jay Rising, lit- erary college student government president, spoke before the faculty, urging reinstatement of Green and parity on the committee. The chemistry faculty chose Profs. Peter Smith, David Curtis and John Groves to form the ad- visory review committee. Rather than making a decision on. the par- ity issue, they gave the review unit power to enlarge itself as its mem- bers deem necessary. Smith later said that three stu- dents will sit as full members on ht ecommittee, and will be chosen jointly by the 'graduate and under- g r a d u a t e chemistry students' groups. No one presently in Green's class will be eligible, het said. The hemitrv fnniilt-rc n whnc ocI U.S. says SAIGON (P) - U. S. planes at- tacked North Vietnam again yes- terday but they were reported to be operating under restrictions governing raids in the vicinity of Hanoi after the heavy damage and death in the French diplomatic mission there. Meanwhile, the regular Vietnam peac etalks remained in deadlock after the unprecedented series of secret talks this week between President Nixon's national secur- ity adviser Henry Kissinger and North Vietnamese negotiators. Kissinger flew to Washington yesterday after a final, mysterious day in Paris. There was no word whether he again met the Hanoi Politburo member, Le Duc Tho and the North Vietnamese dele- gation chief, Xuan Thuy. U. S. Command sources confirm- ed that the air blitz was continu- ing d e s p i t e the international storm whipped up by damage to the French, Algerian and Indian missions during a bombing raid Wednesday. The targets will not be disclosed until sometime today. The U. S. Command refused to say whether any were in the Hanoi area. While conceding that Navy planesfrom the carrier Midway attacked targets on the fringe of Hanoi, the U. S. Command has im- plied that damage to the, foreign missions may have been caused by stray enemy surface to air mis- siles. "The whole matter is being look- ed at very strongly and the Navy is trying to get pilot interviews of results," said a U. S. military spokesman. Michael Maclear, a Canadian correspondent, r e p o r t e d from Hanoi that he had seen two bomb craters at the French mission, and the evidence was "overwhelming" that it had been hit by bombs. "Virtually no diplomats here be- lieve the stray-missile s t o r y theory," he added. The Algerian ambassador td At a news conference a week ago, Nixon reiterated that he is against busing and said it was one of the clear-cut issues in this year's election campaign. Sen. George McGovern (S.D.), Nixon's Democratic presidential rival, was campaigning in Bos- ton and was not present for the showdown vote in the Senate. Backers of the antibusing bill predicted the issue would be back before Congress next year, with chances improved for passage of legislation or a constitutional amendment to halt what they called excessive, court-ordered busing. "If ever there was a case where Congress was not respon- sive to the people, this is it," said, Sen. Robert Griffin (R-Mich.) after efforts to bring the bill to a vote in the Senate were stymied. The bill's opponents, led by Sen. Jacob Javits (R-N.Y.) and Philip Hart (D-Mich.) said its passage would turn back the clock on the school desegregation achieved s i n c e the Supreme Court's 1954 ruling striking down the doctrine of separate-but- equal schools. Majority Leader Mike Mans- field (D-Mont.) moved to put the bill aside and take up other legis- lation after the Senate defeated, for the third day in a row, an effort to close out the debate. The vote was 49 for invoking the Senate's anti-filihuster rule and 38 against, or nine short of bill's opponents for using. Earlier in the session, Congress attached a weaker antibusing amendment to the higher educa- tion bill. The measure postpones federal - court desegregation or- ders until all appeals have been exhausted, or until Jan. 1, 1974, when the legislation lapses. President Nixon signed the bill but said the busing provisions were too weak. So far, four Supreme Court judges have refused to delay court orders on the basis of that legislation. ms10 lIH iy aCUILy as a wnote s fu se odi t h North Vietnam, Aderazak Bouhara, sibility of reinstatingGreen im- was quoted as saying he was in mediately. the courtyard of his embassy when During the two-hour chemistry it was hit by bomb fragments, one meeting, most of the protestors landing about six feet from him. 'See 400, Page 10 _s - MORNING-AFTER PILL CITED DESstudies show cancer link By LOIS EITZEN From 1946 to 1953, doctors used a syn- thetic hormone known as diethylstilbestrol (DES) to avert miscarriage in their fe- male patients. The treatment involved tak- ing a pill once a day throughout the course of the pregnancy, and in most cases the miscarriage was avoided. That was twenty years, ag'o. Todav the Since then, DES has also come under fire for its uses as a morning after pill and as an additive to cattle feed. "It is impossible to estimate the total number of women who took DES to pre- vent miscarriage," Bander says. "There are no exact figures on the number of women who took it, but a conservative es- timate would h in the hundaendso thcnn_- the usual rectal examinations and culture tests fail to indicate any problem.. Known as adenocarcinoma of the vagina, this rare form of cancer is usually found in women over the age of fifty The ::ases de- tected in connection with DDS, however. have all been found in women between the ages of 15 and 22. Since there have been no recorded cases of two daughters of the