i. THE GREEN CASE, CONTINUED See Edit Page Y SwA6 Dal ti SNOW JOB High-43 Low--32 For details, see "today . .. Vol. LXXXIH I, No. 35 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, October 17, 1972 Ten Cents Ten Pages today.. . if you see ews happen call 76-DAILY CANDIDATES REACT Nixon aide tied t o GOP Detroit cop saga Daily Chief Photographer Terry McCarthy, allegedly beaten up two weeks ago by Detroit police at a violent celebration of the Detroit Tiger's victory in the Eastern Division pennant race, has been told by investigating officers that nothing can be done about his case. The reason: McCarthy did not get the badge numbers of the offending officers (McCarthy says he isn't sure they were wearing badges) and there were no witnesses to the event. Board for Student Publications Chairman Larry Berlin is not yet pre- pared to let the matter drop, however. Berlin said yesterday he will bill Detroit Police Commissioner John Nichols both for medical expenses suffered by McCarthy, as well as the cost of a roll of McCarthy's film allegedly stolen by the officers. Call 764-B ULL? The Human Rights Party says it is somewhat concerned at reports that Democratic State Representative contender Perry Bullard is spreading false, nay, malicious rumors, about HR'er Steve Burghardt, a candidate for the same office. HRP's solu- tion? They asked the telephone company to set up a special rum- or control line, phone number 764-BULL. Unfortunately, the person who had the number refused to relinquish it, so now HRP is having to make do with its regular phone number: 761- 6652. Campus police note We can all breathe a little easier now that the new Univer- sity unit of the city police is on the job. On Sunday, two stalwart officers from the unit confronted a small gathering of freaks on the Diag. They ordered the group to pour out the contents of the Boone's Farm Strawberry Hill bottle from which they were drink- ing - ostentatiously flaunting state liquor laws barring public consumption. No arrests were made, and the group got off with a firm reprimand. Goof dept. When The Daily incorrectly reported Sunday that LSA student government candidate Bill Cohen was a grad student, we got 10 (count 'em) calls informing us that Bill was really a freshman. The Daily apologizes for its error but wonders - if all those people go out and vote for him, how can he lose? The Daily also got it wrong when it reported SGC candidate Debbie Allen as a member of the class of '76. She is, in fact, a member of the class of '74. CATV report Those of you who paid their money to Michigan Cable Tele- vision and still haven't got your cable shouldn't be holding your breath, despite confident predictions from cable company offic- ials. The reason why there has yet to be any real action is a simple one: they can't make their system work. Apparently, the studio is now set up and the complicated transmitting equipment poised for action. The only problem is they cannot make the signal go down the lines. Happenings .. . if you're a member of the Economics Club of Detroit, you can see Sen. George McGovern at noon today in the Grand Ballroom of Detroit's Cobo Hall . . . locally, politics is also in the forefront with candidates' nights, candidates' appearances and just plain candidates almost everywhere you care to look. Politics before lunch is a bad idea, but -if' you don't mind politics with lunch, try the weekly Democratic Lunchbox Forum in the Union at noon. Majorie Lansing, contender for University Regent will speak . . . at 7:30 p.m. you have the choice of a candidates' night at the Arborland Community Center, located behind the Arborland Mall on Washtenaw, with Congressional and State Representative hopefuls or also at 7:30, a Human Rights Party open mass meeting at 304 S. Thayer . . . not everything's political, though, so you might want to check-out an exhibit and sale of original graphic arts at the Union Gallery, 10 a.m. to S p.m. and 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. . . . films of SKYLAB and Stonehenge take you from outer space to the good earth of Salisbury plain at the Astronomical Film series showing at 9 p.m. in the East Quad Aud. Reject anti-student move The Senate Assembly yesterday rejected a blatantly anti- student resolution aiming at cutting the number of student repre- sentatives on its Academic Affairs Committee from five to two. The reason for the proposal, according to its sponsor, was the erratic behavior of student members. The behavior cited was talking and passing notes during meetings, disrupting meetings and talking to The Daily about what went on. Stocks plunge, again NEW YORK - Stock market prices dropped sharply yester- day for their fourth straight session in a selloff analysts said was prompted in part by the Justice Department suit against Inter- national Business Machines. The Dow Jones average of 30 in- dustrial stocks fell 8.80 points to 921.66, bringing the loss over the past four sessions to some 30 points. Declines led advances on the New York Stock Exchange by about two to one. Big Board volume was a dull 10.95 million shares. Another recall DETROIT - Chrysler Corp. said yesterday it is recalling 2,000 new cars for a possible steering defect. The cars are 1973 model Plymouth Valiants and Dodge Darts. 0 More today . . . items are on Page 100i On the inside . . . I ... Daily reviewer Richard Glatzer writes on Jean I U.S. 'to request court break-up of IBM Corp.* NEW YORK (N-The government announced yesterday, its long-range goal in an anti-trust suit against International Business Machines Corp. (IBM)-the break-up of the vast multi-billion dollar firm into separate, competing units. In the latest move of the three-and-a-half year old government lawsuit against IBM, the Justice Department sent a memorandum to federal judge David Edelstein describ- ing the suit's goals. If the government wins the suit, the memo said, it would seek to "dissipate the enormous marketpower of the current IBM computer manufacturing and marketing structure." se c H B thi ha eq ge p1 (c er sp Pa th to th m wi a off sp ha, Computer operations were the dxep. Bmain source of IBM's $8.3 billion' in revenues last year. IBM at present is the world's largest com- puter manufacturer and the na- P tion's fifth largest corporation- with 266,000 employes in 117 coun- I tries. To replace the present IBM structure, the government said it would seek "formation of the total ANCHORAGE W)-An Air Force domestic and international com- earch for a missing small planeputer systems facilities of IBM archn foaissingmajll laner into several separate, independent arrying House Majority Leader and competitive balanced entities ale Boggs (D-La.) and Rep. Nick capable of competing successfully egch (D-Alaska) continued in domestic and international mar- rough last night. kets with one another and with' By shortly after midnight, there other domestic and foreign com- ad been no sign of the plane, due petitors. i Jnea ealy eserdy eenig, IBM attorney Thomas Barr said Juneau early yesterd eveniang the memorandum contained the quipped with electronic detection first mention of IBM international ear stayed out while other rescue markets in the history of the suit, anes were called in until dawn. which has yet to come to trial. "It all shows that the govern- "We assume that the airplane ment just doesn't have a case," arrying Boggs) is down," a Fed- Barr told Edelstein. al A v i a t i o n Administration The government says it is seek- okesman said last night. ing a more thorough and detailed Boggs and Begich were cam- analysis of IBM markets here and iigning in Alaska yesterday when abroad, and this will require ad- ey left from Anchorage en route ditional pretrial hearings over an Juneau. The flight plan followed indefinite period. eo rugged Alaska coast, lined with In demanding a prompt trial, eouggain s ka00-7,000astidh Barr pleaded on behalf of IBM for ountains 5,000-7,000 feet high. "The fundamental right to protect There had been no radio contact its good name and reputation and ith the plane since the pilot filed to vindicate its business conduct! flight plan 12 minutes after take- against an unnecessarily prolong- T from Anchorage, the FAA ed, dilatory and misinformed pros- okesman added. The plane would ecution by the federal govern- ve run out of fuel at 8 p.m. ment." spies Post story 'reports on comlicit Sen. George McGovern ac- cused President Nixon's cam- paigners yesterday of mQunt- ing "some of the shabbiest Un- dercover operations in the history of American politics." McGovern, speaking to union members in Los Angeles, quoted a Washington Post story accusing White House appointments secre- tary Dwight Chapin, "who is at Mr. Nixon's elbow every day" of, having direct contact with persons hired to disrupt Democratic cam- paigns. The Post reported that a Los Angeles attorney named Donald Segretti has been identified by federal investigators as one of 50 "undercover operatives engaged since 1971 in an apparently un- precedented sying and sabotage effort by Nixon aides against Democratic presidential candi- dates." The Post quoted another Cali- fornian, Lawrence Young, as say- ing Segretti told him "Dwight Chapin was a person I reported to in Washington." Time Magazine reported that Segretti was hired by Chapin and Gordon Strachan, another White House aide, to "subvert and dis- rupt Democratic candidates' cam- paigns." "I will not dignify with comment stories based on hearsay, char- acter assassination, innuendo, guilt by association," White House Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler said. "I will not dignify such stories with a comment. That is the White House position. That is my position."~ Ziegler refused to comment on the content of stories in Time Magazine and the Post that Se- gretti, was one of those hired for the alleged disruption activities and a Post story that Segretti said he made reports to Chapin. Ziegler said Nixon has confi- dence in Chapin, who has termed the Post story hearsay and funda- mentally inaccurate. Clark MacGregor, Nixon cam- paign director, described the break- in and alleged bugging of Demo- cratic headquarters in the Water- gate building as the work of "some obvious volunteers who were al- legedly spying . .." Benjamin Bradlee, the P o s t ' s executive editor, responded to MacGregor's charges by saying: "'Time will judge between Clark MacGregor's press release and the Washington Post's reporting of the various activities of the Committee for the Re-election of the Presi- dent .. "MacGregor and other high ad- ministration officials have called these stories 'a coalition of ab- surdities' and the post 'malicious,' but the facts are on the record, unchallenged by contrary evi- dence." Presidential aide John Ehrlich- man said Sunday that published re- ports purporting to link Nixon's appointments secretary to a po- litical spying and sabotage are "hearsay about four times re- moved." Ehrlichman said he had no knowledge of the purported under- cover sabotage campaign so that "I can't affirm or deny" any Chapin role. But he said it ap- peared to him it was an instance of "a lot of charges" and not much proof. N Bzsides Boggs and Begich, the As it has consistently, IBM re- plane carried a pilot, Don Jonz, newed its claim of innocent to and Russell Brown, administrative anti-trust charges. It has cited 60 ... o assistant to Begich.G computer systems manufacturers' I n e - e f and 4,000 firms engaged in com- A In Anchorage, a spokesman for puter-related work as evidence in A photographer peers through his the National Transportation Safety its opinion that the business is the autumn sunset on the railroad t Board said "some have suggested "open and strongly competitive." because it was a campaign trip IBM was sued Jan. 17, 1969, on( they may have stopped along the the last business day of the John- way, but we have no reason to be- s t bsinsay of the John -E T AIZED ID: son administration, in the biggest Ji.4dfUiL lieve that and really don't." antimnnly ntin bV~ hrnf Doily Photo by DAVID MAP2GOLICK rth a thousand words old-fashioned view camera yesterday as he seeks to capture racks along ile Huron River. A search of airfields where the plane might have landed turned up no sign of the aircraft. Boggs, 58, began his congres- sional career in 1941 when he be- came, ath26, the youngest Demo- crat in the 77th Congress. In 1946, New Orleans voters re- turned him to the House where he began a steady move up the lead- ership ladder. In 1962, Democratic House members made him the party whip, the number three job, and moved up a notch to majority leader, second-ranking to Speaker Carl Albert. As Boggs' congressional career continued, he was one of the few Southern congressmen who sup- ported civil rights legislation. a munopoy acnon ever oroug t by the government. At the time, IBM already was the target of private antitrust suits by computerj industry rivals. The government charged that IBM discouraged competition in violation of antitrust laws by shav- ing profit margins in some areas; to obtain business, or even taking a loss. IBM was accused of achieving computer dominance in the edu- cational market by offering excep- tional allowances to universities and schools, The Justice Department began its investigation into IBM in 1965. Since then the firm's share of the multibillion dollar sales and lease: market for computers has been estimated as high as 74 per cent. { i Med center to offer community health care] Student composition on unit reviewing Gi By MARILYN RILEY Maintenance Organization (HMO) Those who are tired of high at a recent reunion of the Medical medical bills, rushed medical at- Center's Alumni Association. tention and long vigils in doctors' According to Carpenter, the HMO offices will be relieved to know would provide "one stop shopping" about a new pre-paid health care in terms of medical care for about program designed to eliminate 7,000 f a m i l i e s in Washtenaw these problems. County. Dr. Robert Carpenter, director of This would mean that a family Community Medicine in the Uni- which paid a yearly fee to join versity's Medical Center, outlinedwhhpdgr a l bee tojob- plan fo th proose Helththe program would be able to ob- plans for the proposed Health tain free medical care from a team of specialists located in one build- " ing near the Medical Center. Extra cost of the program and the specific benefits involved have not yet been determined. Carpenter explained, however, reen c sethat the cost per individual would be about $200, which is compar- able to the cost of hospital in- rad.-were selected by the chem- surance coverage for one year. it's Graduate Student Council and He also explained that the bene- uate affiliate of the American fits included in the HMO would probably be similar to those in- y. cluded in similar programs across s technically should have been the country. These cover most iterary college's Student Govern- medical s e r v i c e s-office calls, according to LSA-SG President emergency visits, inoculation, X- rays and laboratory tests-in addi- we have the right to pick sti- tion to regular hospital care. Optical and dental work, long- >n all such academic committees, temnrigceadvroud- >term nursing care and various de- vices such as wheelchairs would went on to say that the Green not be covered. There also may bef penter stresses that the program is open to individuals as well. "We want single people to feel wel- come," Carpenter added. However, Carpenter isn't expect- ing much participation from stu- dents, since "most students don't want pre-paid health care." He cited the expense, the avail- ability of a student health service, and the fact that students are cov- ered by their parents' insurance as possible explanations. "I'm sure, though, that there will be some married students with See MED CENTER, Page 10 'Ozone' group to reign on homecoming parade By EUGENE ROBINSON The review committee set up to investigate the case of chemistry Prof. Mark Green-sus- pended last week after using classroom time to show an antiwar slide show-yesterday held the first of a series of lengthy meetings scheduled daily this week. The unit met, however, amid brewing dissatis- faction over the manner in which the commit- tee's three student members were chosen. Green was suspended Oct. 9 after he showed his three classes an Interfaith Council for Peace slide show on the Vietnam war. He was rein- ford Bedford, G istry departmen the undergradu Chemical Societ The student picked by the l ment (LSA-SG) Jay Rising. "Technically, dents to serve o he said. But Risingv By DAVE BURHENN . The traditional U n i v e r s i t y homecoming parade, with its multitude of high school bands and fraternity floats, will not be held this year due to lack of interest. But another procession, sponsored by a group of Ann Arborites, has been planned to fill the void. John Tonkovich, Events co- group affiliated with Ozone Music Company, a California music publisher (no relation to Ozone House, a local drug help ser- vice). According to Ann Weher, an Ozone spokesperson, "We were outraged when the University intrafraternity council cancelled the homecoming parade due to lack of interest and apathy.