TAKING DOUG TO TASK See Editorial Page :Yl r e f A6F A& r4 :43 att WICKED High-53 Low-35 For details see "today Vol. LXXXI11, No. 39 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, October 21, 1972 Ten Cents Eight Pages today...! if you see news happen call 76-DAILY Uberal abortion r ling There's oil in dem hills Yesterday's Regents meeting was hardly a spicy affair. Much of the discussion'revolved around such dry subjects as land deals and property evaluations. But sometimes even the Regents can be humorous, and yesterday was Regent William Cudlip's (R-Det) turn to crack a joke of sorts. Cudlip asked, with evident concern, whether the University was retaining the mineral rights on a 1.15 acre patch of land it was selling in Northern Michi- gan. There, "might be oil" on the land, Cudlip speculated, and he didn't want the University to be sold short. University Financial Officer Wilbur Pierpont replied, with a slight, but businesslike, smile, that he would look into the matter. Decisive decision dept. The Regents yesterday approved the appointment of Thomas Easthope to the position of Assistant Vice-President for Student Services. Easthope was formerly Assistant to the Vice President for Student Services. It only took the Regents two months to remove five letters from Easthope's title. Beasts beware Meanwhile, the Eastern Michigan University Regents are concerned about other things-namely pets. At a meeting earlier this week, the board passed a rule banning "dogs, cats, or other animals and reptiles from the campus." Guess the birds will have r to fly South. Mistaken identity Mr. Daniel Davis, 30, of our town, called to inform us that he is not the same Daniel Davis, 28, that was arrested at the American Massage Parlor this week. Daniel Davis the elder says he has been caused serious embarrassment by the whole affair and would like us to point out that he is actually a reput- able businessman. We hereby point this out. Community High controversy Ann Arbor Community High School students and faculty are upset over the removal of William Casello as the school's coordinator of community resources - the liason between stu- dents and area people with whom the students work. Instead, Casello will serve as a science teacher and counselor. Michael Harrah, local representative for the Ann Arbor Education Assoc- iation said the faculty is filing a protest over the decision. One student said yesterday, "If not for Casello, many students wouldn't be at the school today." Neither Casello nor a Board of Education spokesman would comment on the matter. Happenings :. . . .no football game today so you can sit at home and cry, or else get involved with something more stimulating, such as a "Beer With Ben" tonight from 8-12 midnight at 1910 Hill St. Ben is Dr. Benjamin Spock (who probably had a lot to do with your childhood) and he's speaking on behalf of his People's Party presidential candidacy; it'll cost you a buck and a half ..The Women's International League for Peace and Freedom celebrates its 25th anniversary this evening with a festival in Ypsilanti at the Unitarian Church, 1917 Washtenaw. The price of peace has gone up: this event costs a buck and a half also ... The Rive Gauche bicycle trip and volleyball game (are these simultaneous events?) are at 4:30 p.m. at 1024 Hill . . . there's no doubt that the highlight of the weekend's, attractions is a Sino-Tibetian Language and Linguistics Conference in the Union. Plan to attend if you have a Tibetan midterm coming up. Have a nice weekend and remember, if you're out tonight and you're on your bike, wear white .. . good morning all. Pun off the hook ST. IGNACE - Rainbow Party leader Pun Plamondon yes- terday had his two-year-old charge of carrying a concealed weapon dismissed by a district court judge. The judge said the delay in prosecuting Plamondon had violated his right to a fair trial. Plamondon said he had expected the ruling. Boggs search continues JUNEAU - Air-sea search operations for missing House Democratic Leader Hale Boggs continued yesterday, but without finding a trace of the missing congressman and his three com- panions. The Air Force threw one of its super-secret SR-71 spy jets into the search for the small plane in which Boggs was travelling: Our Aviation-Expert-in-Residence says that if anything can find Boggs, it's the SR-71. "The plane can locate a pack of cigarettes from 100,000 feet." Strike news, part 1 CHICAGO - All surface deliveries of REA Express except medical suplies were stopped yesterday when 1,500 clerks, freight handlers and drivers struck for higher wages. The walk- out by members of the AFL-CIO Brotherhood of Railway and Airline Clerks affected freight shipments by some retail outlets and threatened to disrupt the movement of canceled checks among the nation's Federal Reserve banks. The United Parcel Service, another private agency, and the U.S. Postal Service picked up some of the slack but their size limitations on parcels required other shippers to consider alternatives for the move- ment of larger containers. Strike news, part 2 The UAW yesterday continued its hit-run strike calls against General Motors with a strike authorization at an assembly plant in Lakewood, Ga. So far seven strikes have been called or planned, but none of them have been in GM's home territory - Michigan. Patriotic rubber WASHINGTON -- The United States is sending millions of condoms in many colors to Asia and Africa in the expectation the unusual nature of the birth-control devices will spark new interest in their use. Besides red, white and blue, the U.S. Agency for International Development is providing the pro- phylictics in black, green and pink in packages bearing a legend inviting the user to "embark on a new adventure." Ont the inside would you buy a used snowmobile from Sheriff Douglas Harvey? Staff writer Marcia Zoslaw wouldn't and she tell§ why on the Editorial Page . . . a bunch of record as state court takes on voi ed review Old law ' in ffect ®i I II I I I I I U I I 1 1 Esch talk on issues By LORIN LABARDEE S e c o n d Congressional District candidates Marvin Esch and Mar- vin Stempien escalated their verbal assaults on each other last night in a debate sponsored by the Ann Ar- bor chapter of Common Cause-the public interest lobbying group. Speaking on a number of topics, the candidates demonstrated for an audience of about 200 what one Esch campaign coordinator has called "an increasingly messy cam- paign." The issue of lobbyists and dis- closure of a congressman's private interests brought onslaughts from both candidates. Democrat Stempien lashed out at the University for its practice of wining and dining prominent legis- lators at a luncheon during the Michigan-Michigan State game. In rebuttal to Stempien, Esch said, "one party from Livonia (Stempien) brought eight guests to the luncheon. "It's alright to condemn the pr ac- tice but you shouldn't bring guests if you're going to condemn the luncheon," the GOP incumbent added. Another Common Cause question dealt with the matter of public fi- nancing for election campaigns. In what appeared to be motre of an attack on the Republican party than a response to the question, Stempienrsaid public'financing should be used so that all people can run for office and not just those who have the support of the wealthy. "I don't think we should have the situation where one party (the GOP) has enough money to run the greatest show on earth and on the other hand, have a party (the Dem- ocrats) that starts out $9 million in debt and soon becomes $11 mil- lion in debt." On congressional reform, Stem-, pien said, "We both (Esch and himself) support the concept in general of congressional reform but the difference is that I believe that the change niust come from the majority party in Congress (the Democrats)." Responding to Stempien, Esch' said, "Real reform won't occur in the Democratic party in the for- seeabel future. If anything reform See STEMPIEN, Page 8 LANSING (A4-The State Su- preme Court yesterday voted unanimously to take on a re- view of lower court rulings striking down the state's abor- tion law. The move temporar- ily puts the state's abortion law back into effect. The high court's action super- seded an almost simultaneous de- cision by the Appeals Court to suspend Wayne County Circuit Judge Charles Kaufman's ruling that the statute is unconstitutional. Appeals judges had acted on a request from Wayne County Prose- cutor William Cahalan to stay Kaufman's injunction outlawing prosecutions for illegal abortions. The state's century-old law gov- erning abortions permits them only when the life of the expectant mother is in danger. In taking on the abortion dis- pute, the Supreme Court acted on its "own motion"-that is, it was not requested to do so bye any outside source. Now under review are two cases involved in the Kaufman ruling and two others from an earlier August decision by an Appeals Court panel. Acting Chief Justice Thomas Brennan defended the body's de- cision. "In declaring the existing abortion statute unconstitutional," he said, "the lower courtshave raised serious questions of major significance at this time. "We believe that the public in- terest will best be served by a decision from the Supreme Court." In November, the state will vote on Proposal B, which would allow abortions to be performed by li- censed physicians during the first 20 weeks of pregnancy. It is not yet clear how the court's decision will affect the result of the voting, AP Photo Peek-a-boo It used to be all you'd see on the side of a barn was an ad for M ail Pouch Tobacco. But recently some Michigan State Univer- sity students dressed up this barn in Farmington Township with their own version of Leonardo da Vinci's enigmatic woman. JOURNALIST SAYS TR UCE NEAR: 0 Xon rejected cease-fire,I ano i Hano01 offer of 'hien reports By The Associated Press President Nixon has rejected a North Vietnamese offer of a cease- fire before the Nov. 7 presidential election, according to South Viet- namese President Nguyen Van Thieu. Several members of South Viet- nam's National Assembly reported that Thieu outlined the communist proposal for a cease-fire and tri- partite coalition government at a Thursday night conference of as- sembly leaders. Thieu repeated his position that coalition government is unaccept- able, they said. However, a French correspond- ent reported from Saigon that al "usually well informed source" had said elements of a cease-firet throughout Indochina would be pro-t claimed by all sides within the nextt 10 days. There was no confirma- tion. Marcel Giuglaris, a reporter for France Soir, said the cease-fire: "will cover a rather long period." 'U's Flint brancl expansion to downtown passed by Regents Meanwhile, Henry Kissinger and Thieu had a second day of confer- ences yesterday. Kissinger stayed in Saigon overnight indicating the likelihood of further sessions today. While the talks were going on, the North Vietnamese reaffirmed their position that the Saigon boss must go as part of any peace agreement. "Our position is unchanged," a Hanoi spokesman said in Paris. "NguyensVan Thieu must resign." In Washington, the Pentagon acknowledged that a U.S. Nagy bomb was responsible for the de- struction of the French Mission in Hanoi and the death of a French diplomat last week. The diplomat, Pierre Susini, died in a Paris hospital Thursday night. The Pentagon blamed the inci- dent on "the failure of ordinance to release properly." It was the first formal admission that U.S. bombs were responsible for .he destruction. In the war itself, the pace of fighting quickened yesterday es- pecially around Saigon. Saigon government forces clashed with communist infiltrators in the defensive belt around Saigon, but officers continued to insist there is no threat of a substantial ground attack on the capital. The hottest fighting in the Saigon region was north and east of the capital. By ROBERT BARKIN St. Joseph's should concentrate on The Regents voted yesterday to out-patient services for the com- move the University's Flint cam- munity. pus to a new downtown location, University administrators said highlighting an otherwise routine the arrangement is similiar to meeting. agreements the Medical Center Approval was also given to for- maintains with other community mal affiliation between the Univer- hospitals around the state and sity's Medical Center and St. merely formalizes a long-standing Joseph Mercy Hospital. agreement between the two in- The Flint campus will be moved stitutions. P to a new 38-acre riverfront site In other action, the Regents es- near the city's downtown district. tablished a community participa- The old site-several blocks from tion session during the Thursday downtown-will not be disposed of afternoon session of their monthly and may be used for interim ex- a- pansion until the new site is ready. The move is still contingent on, approval for construction of a office-classroom building on the site. Approval must come from the Ellsberg I House-Senate capital outlay com- mittee in Lansing. The committee has postponed action due to in- ability to reach a quorum.t The City of Flint is required to 'put up $1.2 million to purchase the 'f site and another $6 million between r 1975 and 1982. An additional $9.75 million is ex pected to come from private' sources. / Following the vote on the Flint< construction, the Regents turned to the Medical Center-St. Joseph Hos- pital merger-an agreement which | Ten rockets hit a market andj meeting. According to the resolution, the "general community" will be al- lowed to make comments with a limit of ten minutes per speaker, and thirty minutes per topic. The Regents themselves will not re-' spond to the comments. The final action of the day was to pass a new budgeting proposal presented by Vice President for Academic Affairs Allan Smith. According to the terms of the plan, departments will be able to See UM-FLINT, Page 8 local administrative office at Bung but heavy court loads will probably Cau, 16 miles north of Saigon in prevent action on the review until the Viet Cong's traditional "Iron sometimes in December. Triangle" stronghold. Two militia- Ann Arbor attorney Jean King, men died and five were wounded. co-chairperson of the Michigan Further north in the "Iron Tri- Abortion Referendum Committee, angle," U.S. and South Vietnamese favors the high court's move. fighter-bombers were reported to "Everything about the abortion have killed 115 communists in question -was getting confused," Bshe said, "and nobody knew where fighting four miles south of Ben we were at." Cat. Government losses were put King explained that since Kauf- at six dead, 37 wounded. man's ruling, there has not been Just three miles out of rocket a clear legal guide for doctors who range of Saigon's presidential pal- are asked to perform abortions. ace, where Thieu conferred with In addition, she said, Cahalan had Kissinger, government t r o o p s I threatened to ignore the judge's chased an enemy force out of the ruling in Wayne County, thus fur- village of Bung. ther clouding the situation. I wielng swying- Suuulnlthat's belly dancing - - ---- By LAURA BERMAN The middle-aged woman sway- ed rhythmically to the strains of exotic Turkish music. "I'm going to take flying lessons next," she shouted to 20 gyrating compan- ions, "and then maybe I'll learn to ride amotorcycle." iIt was the first night of a course in the ancient art of belly dancing and the women were earnestly kicking off their shoes n'and rolling up their shirts to bz- Igin learning. "I'm driving in from Lansing every Thursday night for this class, Mary Oakley revealed. "I thought it would be fun and everyone thinks I'm crazy any- way-my boss even offered to get me an industrial diamond for my navel." Most of the belly dance trainees . drive shorter distances but dis- play equaltenthusiasm. Pioneer 4 High School senior Debbie Grus- chow is taking the class at her boyfriend's r e q u e s t and has promised to give him a recital in costume when she is through. .:| EMU SPEECH looks ahead to 1984 By ROBERT BURAKOFF and JOHN GLANCY "The Nixon administration, if re-elected will have American society wired up like a pinball ma- chine," Daniel Ellsberg said last night. ..: Speaking to a crowd of three hundred people at Eastern Michigan University, Ellsberg predicted the. growth of a " 1984'-type government" in America. "The day can come when the methods of sur- veillance that the United States has developed for international espionage will be turned inwardly to