MASSAGE PARLOIR RETROSPECT See Editorial Page Yl e 5k&43UU :Iaitil CHILLING High-45 Loy.-22 For details see "today .. Vol. LXXXIII, No. 37 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday,i October 19, 1972 Ten Cents Ten Pages - -------- - - - today... if you see news happen call 76-DAILY Blacks hide books Angry East Quad blacks have checked out and hidden every book in the dorm library-a protest against quad librarian Jim Murphy. The blacks' complaint is that Murphy has failed to re- place a $600 collection of records on black themes stolen over the Summer. Their next move: the presentation of a list of de- mands to the Representative Assembly of the Residential Col- lege. The demands include the establishment of a separate black lounge. McGovern- favoirtc here Sen. George McGovern may be trailing in the national polls, but he is still a clear favorite with students at the Uni- versity. According to a poll released yesterday by the McGovern/ Shriver people, McGovern leads Nixon by a whopping 38 per cent -54 to 16 per cent. But "undecideds" and "others" make up a large 30 per cent of the students - three times the national av- erage. The poll was conducted by Student Government Council. Day of reckoning It's a big day for Sheriff Douglas Harvey. County prosecu- tor William Delhey says he will announce the result of his in- vestigation into LIarvey's rather questionable methods of dis- posing of recovered stolen property. Word of Harvey's fate - he could be charged with misuse of his power - will come at a 2 p.m. press conference in Delhey's office. Harvey 'hurt' In other sheriff's election news comes the report that Ameri- can Independent Sheriff Harvey is "hurt" at his Republican opponent Undersheriff Harold Owings' assertion that, if elected, Owings will not give Harvey a job. Harvey said yesterday that he certainly will allow Owings to keep his job if he is elected. The third contender, Democrat Fred Postill, is not thought likely to keep either of them. Tall tale Who knows what evil lurks in Tower Plaza? Responsible Alternative Party(RAP) honchosBrad Taylor, BillThee and Bill Krebaum think they do. At least, they thought they did early yesterday morning when the three of them, armed with a camera, camped outside the monolithic apartment building con- vinced that a top-level conspiracy against them was underway. Well, as it turned out, GROUP leader and SGC President Bill Jacobs, GROUP elections maestro John Koza and Credentials and Rules Committee member Dave Schaper were within the tall walls, but it isn't quite clear they were conspiring. Schaper ex- plains that they had gotten together to write an article for The Michigan Student News. Bullard and HRP In our little item about Perry Bullard this week - the one that mentioned the Human Rights Party's effort to set up a Bullard rumor control line - we neglected to mention the "rumor" that so infuriated HRP. As we have been accused of slandering Bullard without evidence, we print here the rumor in question: According to an HRP member Bullard told an East Quad resident that he (Bullard) had helped to draft the local $5 pot ordinance. HRP says this is "obviously not true." Bul- lard explains: "What I said was that I helped draft the Michigan Marijuana Initiative petition."J HRP and Bullard When we were researching the above item we were informed in strong, terms by Bullard and his law partner, Don Koster, that HRP member Frank Shoichet was conducting a "smear campaign" against Bullard. As evidence they pointed to an anonymous leaflet circulated around campus before the primary which attacked Bullard and concluded that Bullard was really "Bullshit." "A vote for Bullshit is a vote for Bullshit," the leaf- let proclaimed Shoichet yesterday admitted he was responsible for the leaflet, and defended it as "all true." 0 More today . . . items are on Page 100 Congress pollution passes bill, kills limit pres..I WASHINGTON (P)-Anxious congressmen adjourned and headed home for neglected re- election campaigns last night a f t e r overriding President Nixon's veto of a $24-billion water-cleanup bill and reject- ing his $250--billion spending limit. bundget I Daily Photo by ROLFE TESSEM Sen. George McGovern waves to members of the Detroit Economic Club yesterday who gave him a rousing welcome. Seated next to him is Detroit's dashing mayor, Roman Gribbs. Nixon policies assailed by Mc Govern in Detroit By ERIC SCHOCH Special To The Daily DETROIT - Sen. George Mc- Govern' again attacked President Nixon's economic and defense policies yesterday in a speech to the Economic Club of Detroit in Cobo Hall. Recalling f o r m e r President Dwight Eisenhower's warning that the United States "must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence by the military-industrial complex," Mc- Govern said that Eisenhower "must be stirring uneasily in his grave." After his speech, McGovern endorsed Atty. Gen. Frank Kel- ley, who is challenging incurn- bent Republican Robert Griffin in this year's Senate race. He then quipped that he hoped the endorsement wouldn't "be too damaging." McGovern spent much of his speech criticizing Nixon's pr)- posed $250 billion budget ceiih'-g Apparently the speech had not been updated since yesterday's congressional action dropping the ceiling. budget" woild not be cut, but that "the slashing" would come in education, health care, job.; and training programs. McGovern also accused :he Nixon administration of having "carried out a deliberate policy The 92nd Congress finished its business and adjourned after two years of work highlightedrbyen- actment of a $30.2-billion revenue sharing bill, giving 18-year-olds the right to vote and a standoff on the Vietnam War. With the elections only three weeks away, many of the congress- men didn't wait around for Con- gress to quit. Sen. Jacob Javits (R-N.Y.) threatened at one point to snarl the adjournment rush by demand- ing a roll-call' vote, knowing a quoruim of at least 51 senators couldn't be mustered for one. More than two-thirds of the 533- member House had left town by that time, leaving the House with- out a quorum to act on the $6- billion highway bill, which also would have authorized $3.4 billion for mass transit. In other congressional action, a bill taking the first federal steps to muffle major sources of noise was sent to President Nixon after backers finally overcame the ob- jections of one congressman. The Senate approved the bill by voice voteshortly after the legis- lation cleared the House. Rep. Durward Hall (R-Mo.) after twice refusing to let the House give unanimous approval to an emer- gency maneuver rushing the noise- control bill to the Senate, gave up his objections when sponsors cut back the money-authorization level to 21 million over three years. As the Congress rushed toward adjournment, the Senate and House rejected the spending ceiling de- spite Nixon's assertions that such action would place the blame for inflation and a future tax increase on Congress. Both the Senate and House acted by voice vote. The House originally voted to give the President unrestricted authority to trim the budget by $7 billion to meet the limit. The Sen- ate had voted to prohibitcutting any one program more than 10 per cent. The Nixon administration has "carried out a deliberate policy of putting people out of work in the name of combatting inflation." George McGovern ........... :: ; :..................istig The Democratic presidential nominee labelled, the proposal "a cynical device to-;draw public at- tention away from the pain and cost" of presidential economic "mismanagement." McGovern charged that under the ceiling, "a bloated military HRP backers debate McGovern staffers On the inside .... . . . Herb Bowie, Daily reviewer extraordinaire, looks at Away With Words, the Beatle extravaganza . . . staff writer Charles Stein examines the schizophrenic reactions to panhandling on the Editorial Page . . . the inimitible Sports Page has the wet news of the scene in Oakland yesterday. The weather picture BULLETIN/FLASH/URGENT. At 7:32 p.m. last night the writer of this column was struck a not-so-violent blow on the cheek by a snow flake at the rear of the building at 420 Maynard St. The flake escaped but was observed to melt on the ground seconds later. THIS SHOULD BE CON- SIDERED A WARNING. More of this insidious stuff is reportedly on the way. Beware. Wear your long winter woolens and keep your head covered. That is all. By JAN BENEDETTI "The situation is urgent. It's not a question of how good Mc- Govern is, but how bad Nixon is, said Alan Crockett, city coordina- tor for the local McGovern cam- paign. "We must break the two-party, system to bring about radical change. McGovern is committed to the present system," said Eric Chester, co-chairperson of the Human Rights Party's (HRP) statewide campaign committee. I Chester and Crockett typified the two clashing sides last night of an informal debate on the best way to effect f u n d a m e n t a l : change. Much of the debate centered on George McGovern's candidacy. Crockett and Jacqui Hoop, an- other McGovern worker, stressed the "urgency" of the upcoming WARY LOCAL GROUPS I presidential election to the crowd of about 70 in Aud. B. "McGovern represents a prom- ise of change, through maybe not as much as we'd like, in the right direction," said Crockett. "He must be elected so some- thing canbe done.He would end the war, diminish spending, push for tax reform.' While both the HRP and the McGovern workers agreed that American society is "sick" and must be changed, they dis- agreed on the methods of accom- plishing that change. The two participating HRP workers emphasizedathe neces- sity for a radical third party and urged support for HRP. Though they did not reject McGovern, they said energy shoild be directed towards the b,>ilding of radical parties. Crocketttobjected, saying, "It will take ten, 20, 30 years to get a third party strong enough. We mu>st work now. The issues are so real, so urgent that I don't see how anyone can say Mc- Govern wouldn't make a differ- ence. "I don't understand how a radi- cal can't work against Nixon's defeat." he added. Chester however rebutted this con'tention. "'t'hisscare stuff about Nixon dicks the real issue. The real ouestion is whether you canare- form the Democratic party. Every four years we have a new pseudo-liberal," he argued. "In four years (assuming Nixon wins) it will be the same, maybe Kennedv vs. Agnew. We must work for fundamental change now." argued Chester. "HRP doesn't say what to do in the voting booth. We never tell people to vote for McGovern or not to vote for him," added Nancy Burghardt, coordinator of the Washtenaw County HRP. of putting people out of work in the name Hof combatting infia- tion." The senator promised to lower unemployment to four per cent by 1974 through creation of pub- lic service jobs, manpower pro- grams, and federal stimulation of the economy. He added that his welfare proposals would re- duce the number of people re- ceiving welfare. "I won't offer welfare recipi- ents a sermon on the work ethic, I will give them a job," he said. Reiterating his stand on tax reform,'McGovernpromised to close tax loopholes and tax "money made by money the same as money made by me1.' The Nixon administration} re- sponds on reflex against ordi- nary people, McGovern chargcd. He promised to "put the peonle first,"ncalling it the "soundest economics," McGovern received a standing ovation from the Economic Club as he entered the hall's Grand Ballroom. His speech was inter- rupted several times by applause. United Auto Workers President Leonard Woodcock introduced McGovern, praising the senator for "waging a gallant campaign under sometimes extraordinary circumstances." In response to a question aficr his speech, McGovern said he was puzzled by the lack of pub- lic response to such issues a the Watergate bugging and charges of Republican political sabotage. AP Photo The man from'Maine Sen. Edmund Muskie discusses a Senate vote that overrode Presi- dent Nixon's veto of a $24.6 billion bill aimed at ridding America's waters of all pollution by 1985. RENNER ON TOP: tate rep candidates Earlier, the House joined the Senate to enact thetwater-pollution reveal contributions control bill over the President's veto. Nixon had vetoed the $24-billion, By CHRIS PARKS 1 Burghardt listed $1,203 in contri- three-year anti-pollution bill after b butions, Bullard $1,196. calling it a "staggering, budget- Republican state representative wrecking" measure that included candidate Mike Renner said yes- Conservative P a r t y candidate $18 billion morethan he requested. terday he has collected $4,200 in Alan Harris, who has not released The Senate overrode the veto campaign contributions - probably a list of his contributors, said yes- 52-12 and the House 247-23. more than the combined totals of terday he is "looking into the T h e n e w anti-pollution law his other three opponents. matter." authorizes $18 billion over the next Renner, who has yet to produce The bulk of Burghardt's money three years in grants to states and a complete listing, estimated his came from small contributors giv- municipalities to pay 75 per cent campaign earnings at $5,700 -in- ing an average of $16 apiece. Such of the cost of building sewage and cluding $1,500 collected during the contributions accounted for $803, waste treatment plants. primary. or roughly two-thirds of the total. It also calls for strict limits on industrial discharges into inland Both Human Rights Party (HRP) .The rest came from four "big- and coastal waters. By July 1, ! candidate Steve Burghardt and gies" who contributed $100 apiece. 1977, plants will have to meet Democrat Perry Bullard, however, They were Phillip Carroll, a Uni- limits based on the "best prac- a versity highway research engineer; ticable technology," and by 1983, released detailed lists of campaign'Zolton Ferency, HRP's state su- limits based on the "best avail- donors and the amounts of their preme court candidate; Susan Sae- able technology." contributions. gart, a resident of Brooklyn and a former University student; and * Marshall Burghardt, Steve Burg- .U/"C1 -] - " I T hardt's brother. T T .-,. A4-, .mmL,% Referral agencies still advise N.Y. abortions reversed, says U.S. physician By MERYL GORDON Although abortions are now legal in Michigan, local referral agencies are still sending pregnant women to New York for abortions. Since Wayne County Judge Charles Kaufman's ruling striking down all abortion laws went into effect Oct. 10, clinics have been springing up in Detroit. The Office of Religious Affairs, however, is not yet recommending that people go to the clinics. "We don't know enough yet about the clinics to feel comfortable referring people there," says Counseling Director Leonard Scott. men have been requesting information on the De- troit clinics. "I haven't heard from any women who have gone into Detroit for an abortion yet," he comments. Ann Arbor Planned Parenthood isn't sending people to Detroit because they are unsure about the legality of Kaufman's ruling. "What with all the appeals going on, we're wait- ing until Nov. 7 to consider Detroit clinics," says a spokeswoman. "We want to see what happens on the abortion referendum'' If the referendum passes, it would legalize abortions by physicians up to the 20th week of NEW YORK - A surgeon here reported yester- day he has performed operations which have re- versed vasectomies in 18 out of 19 men he has treated. A vasectomy cuts the tubes in the penis, the vas deferens, through which sperm cells pass. Once performed, it has been considered to make men sterile forever. But the tubescan be rejoined in surgery performed under a microscope, Dr. Julius Jacob- son of Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York told a conference in Vienna, Austria. The microscope vision makes the tiny severed tubes appear 25 times larger than they actually are, so the surgeon can sew the ends together again and make sure the tubes are open once on whom he operated. More may have been born, he said in an interview before leaving for Au- tria. In 1970, some 750,000 American men had vasec- tomies, and there now ate about 350 clinics or hospital facilities where vasectomies are being performed, says the Association for Voluntary Sterilization. Vasectomy does not interfere with ability to haxe sexual relations. It simply means no sperm are ejaculated. But some men may wish to have fertility re- stored if they decide they want more children, if their existing family is lost or if they remarry, Dr. Jacobson said. More men might have vasectomies, a relatively A r o u n d $443 of Burghardt's money came from donors outside the district. Of that, $260 came from out of state. The lion's share of Bullard's funds came from various Demo- cratic Party and union organiza- tions. The largest of these contributions was from the Lansing-based Demo- cratic Legislative Campaign Com- mittee which gave $400. Stan Fedeway of the committee said yesterday the organization is giving contributions of between $200 and $400 to candidates' "in what we consider tough races." Speaking about the 53rd district race he said, "with HRP siphon- ing off normally Democratic stu- dent votes, people in Lansing fear the Republican might get in." The Michigan AFL-CIO gave Bul-