'LAST CHANCE' BOUNDARIES See Editorial Page j[17, 4c SirA6 :43 xit49 NORDIC High-40 Low-21 For details, see today .. . VA /\AXlI, No. 74 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, December 6, 1972 Ten Cents Ten Pages today... if you see news happen call 76-DAILY Rip this joint? Like Lazarus from the. dead, Student Government Council's Dope Cooperative proposal will be resurrected in the near future, according to SGC politicos. To avoid legal difficulties, Margaret Miller has suggested that SGC establish a separate, independent nation on the corner of Catherine and State Streets, with abolish- ed dope laws for the budding state. One wise student went a step further and proposed the entire city of Ann Arbor be levitated to the clouds, exempting it from earthbound regulations. Angered at a Daily reporter's skepticism, he announced that The Michigan Daily's building will be left behind. The press never has any fun! A rose by other names City Council Monday night approved the erection(?) of a new restaurant on Stadium. Elsewhere in this nation-wide chain, it is called Sambo's. However, after strenuous council objections to what they called the racist implications, the' owners agreed to change "their name. Despite extensive assurances as to the decor, however, Council member Norris Thomas (Dem-First Ward) insisted, "I still think those chairs are watermelon colored." Smoldering SAB A significant fraction of the Ann Arbor Fire Department responded to a report of smoke odor in the SAB yesterday aft- ernoon. According to Russell Downing, University Fire Marshal, the smell of smoke came from a wastebasket in which a fire had started and burned out several days before. The building was not evacuated, Downing said, because smoke odors often result from burned-out fluorescent tubes. Free West Quad In one of the most hotly contested races of the decade, West Quad members yesterday failed to elect a president to their dorm's council. Four parties, including the Quorum Party, the Joint Coalition and the "4 Q" party struggled with the electoral system, which finally shattered when Al Zeller's insurgent Camp- bell Filter Party took enough write-in votes to deny anyone a ma- jority. Run-offs will be held Monday, and meanwhile, the Fil- ter's keep fighting, pushing such-proposals as free ping pong lessons, free rolling papers, free anarchy and free Al Zeller. The quaddie air must do something to people.. .. School kids trip on out In one of the more extensive busing efforts of recent years, 16 children from Clonlara school, a private "experimental" school here, are going by school bus down to an on-the-scene classroom for a special lesson tomorrow: Watching Apollo 17 lift off from Cape Kennedy. The bus, plus a parents' car pulling a borrowed trailer, left over a week ago for stops in Kentucky, Alabama, Georgia, and finally Florida. Parents and students have been planning the trip for five months. Hmmph. The biggest elemen- tary school field trip today remembers having taken was to the state capital. Some people have all the luck. Happenings .-- Several places inside to be on this bitter day. For start- ers, try the Poli Sci coffee hour in 6602 Haven Hall, 3:30-5 pm If journalism's more your thing, take in Ben Bagdikian, the well-known media critic at 4 p.m. in Aud. C . . . Another coffee hour, this one hosted by the Grads, will take place at 8 pm., in Rackham's East Conference Room . . . Later, at 9 p.m., the Jewish Cultural League is sponsoring a Chanukah (or Hannuka, depending) party at Markley-the 4th floor Butler Lounge . And, if you want a real change, attend the meeting of the LSA Student Government (didn't know you had one, did you?) at 7 pm in the Union's Homer Heath Lounge. Henry scores again WASHINGTON - A worried administration received as- surances that it's favorite son, Henry the K, has been busy doing homework on the peace talks and not, he repeats, not, escorting a mysterious blonde the America press reports him as escorting. According to news sources, Kissinger "picked up" a blonde wo- man in the Paris Latin quarter Monday and drove her back to the residence of Jack Kubisch, acting U. S. ambassador, where Henry is staying. Dear Henry denied all in a transatlantic phone call to White House Press Secretary Ron Ziegler yesterday, and asked Ziegler to "make the point that he (Kissinger) worked well into the night" Monday. Worked well at what? We thinks the gentleman doth protest too much. Stamps, sexism and the Court WASHINGTON-The Supreme Court agreed to hear several cases as it went through the dockets on Monday. Among them is a case involving a challenge to the Pittsburgh Press by the National Organization for Women (NOW). The Press classifies its want ads as "jobs-male interest" and "jobs-female interest," which seems, at least to NOW members, discriminatory. In an- other case, the high Court has agreed to review a Congressional attempt to prohibit distribution of food stamps to poor people living in communes. The question is: Can food stamp assistance be limited to those who are related? (related to whom, today wants to know) Approaching zero NEW YORK-Zero population growth (ZPG) proponents, re- joice! For the first time, the nation's fertility rate has dropped below the "replacement" level of 2.1 children per family needed to achieve zpg. If the 2.1 fertility rate were maintained for 70 years, the U. S. population level would stabilize at about 320 million (it is now about 209.3 million). The fertility rate decline it attributed to a variety of factors, including the desire of women for smaller families - or no family at all, the number of working wives, more effective contraception, and the slowly- liberalizing contraception laws. Deadline nears Remember the "folks who bring you Christmas" want your packages mailed by Dec. 10 and your cards sent out by Dec. 15. There will be some nine billion pieces of holiday mail this year, say postal officials. Don't let yours be last in line. On the inside ... Chris Parks comments on City Council's "last chance" to peaceably (sort of) redraw Ann Arbor's boun- daries, on the Editorial Page . . . Chuck Bloom compares Paris talks peace halted temporarily By AP and Reuters PARIS-Peace talks between U. S. Presidential Adviser Henry Kissinger and Hanoi's envoy Le Duc Tho were mys- teriously adjourned yesterday as President Nixon issued fur- ther instructions to his negotiator during the halt. Neither the U. S. Embassy nor the North Vietnamese dele- gation could offer any reason for the one-day break in the talks, now believed to be in their final phase. Kissinger and Tho, who held two meetings here Monday in the renewed round of talks on a cease-fire agreement, will hold their next meeting today, a U. S. official said. There had been some speculation that yesterday's cancella- tion might be a ruse to shake off the hordes of newsmen and television crews hounding the secret meetings. Eleven days ago d-ring the last' round of Kissinger - Tho negotia- tions, the North Vietnamese an- nounced that the two men would N ewthead not meet tthatay But they slip- ped off to a suiburban site and conferred for an hour. Kissinger and Tho resumed ne- ._ gotiations Monday after a nine-day recess. They met for a total of fiv hours amid a complete news black-frotBuofialinWsngn1 H U out. But officials in WashingtonfO rHD said the talks are moving to a climax. By AP and Reuters Daily Photo by ROLFE TESSEM Pullet-zer prize winner Winner of a chicken eating contest, sponsored by Delta Gamma sorority yesterday, was Lisa Finklestaedt (third eater from the right). She downed 46 pieces of chicken in 15 minutes. Each of the approximately 50 contestants had their own referee to keep track of the quantity consumed. 6-3 DECISION: Supre-e Court rulingproh1iits The protracted Vietnam peace WASHINGTON-Preside negotiations have known dramatic yesterday named James. ups and downs, and observers did 45-year-old lawyer and t not see yesterday's break as a sign pert, to be secretary of that the talks had hit new snags. and urban development( Prospects remained reasonably his new Cabinet. good for an agreement on a cease- He also re-appointed Ro fire, although not necessarily a ton as interior secretary. durable peace, in the next few The White House, in a days, they said.T W H , ent Nixon Lynn, a trade ex- f housing (HUD) in gers Mor- innouncing 'bacchanalian revelries' WASHINGTON )A- The Su- preme Court ruled 6-3 yesterday that states can shut down bars that feature nude dancing, sex films or other forms of "bac- chanalian revelries." Justice William Rehnquist, in a sexually explicit majority opin- ion, said the First Amendment freedom does not go beyond books and movies to "gross sex- uality" - real or simulated sex- ual acts - in public. Besides, he said, the 21st Amendment in ending prohibition gave the states broad controls over the sale of liquor in bars and night clubs. The ruling came in a case from Los Angeles where, officials said, "acts of sexual intercourse, mas- turbation, sodomy, bestiality, oral copulation and flagellation" were being passed off as "dancing" and entertainment. Justices William Douglas, Wil- Liam Brennan Jr., and Thurgood Marshall dissented while Chief Justice Warren Burger and Jus- tices Peter Stewart, Byron White, Harry Blackmun and Lewis Pow- ell Jr. supported Rehnquist. The decision reverses a three- judge federal court ruling of April, 1971 which found the regu- lations to be unconstitutional in a suit brought by a group of bar owners. Rehnquist said customers in California bars engaged in sex- ual acts with women entertain- ers and thattprostitution involv- ing some of the dancers flourish- ed. Based on the evidence, he said it was not irrational for s t a t e liquor officials to conclude that "the sale of liquor by the drink and lewd or naked dancing and entertainment should not t a k e place simultaneously in bars and cocktail lounges.." He added that prostitution, in- decent exposure to young girls and rape flourished near Cali- fornia bars and night clubs in which "live entertainment" was featured. Marshall, in dissent, said even if there was a link between sex- related entertainment and sex crimes "it would hardly justify a broad-scale attack on First Amendment freedoms." He said there is not one word in the history of the 21st Amend- ment to indicate that Congress meant to tamper in any way with First Amendment ights. Similarly, Brennan said "noth- ing in the language or history of the 21st Amendment authorizes the states to use their liquor lic- ensing power as a means for the deliberate inhibition of protected, even if distasteful, forms of ex- pression." The landmark ruling is likely in bars to have an impact reaching be- yond California to bars and night- clubs in all states that sell liquor by the drink while displaying real or simulated sexual acts. Since the California regulations upheld by the court specifically prohibit the display of genitals, authorities everywhere would ap- pear to have a green light to ban bottomless dancing. The decision also established a legal precedent because it sep- arates sexual exhibitions in pub- lic bars from movies and books which are protectedby the First Amendment from suppression by officials unless they contain what the court has defined to be ob- scenity. As Rehnquist put the distinc- tion: ". . . as the mode of ex- pression moves to the printed page to the commission of public acts which may themselves vio- late valid penal statutes, the scope of permissible state regula- tions significantly increases .. . Reacting to the high C o u r t decision, spokespersons for San Francisco's topless - bottomless night clubs predicted a wave of censorship and court cases be- cause of the ruling. "The Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control (ABC) is going to end up being a censorship board in every topless and bot- tomless night club in California," said Dave Rosenberg, a repre- sentative for six nude night clubs along San Francisco's gaudy Broadway. The Court's decision allows the California ABC to suspend or re- voke a liquor license when of- ficials conclude there is con- duct "contrary to public wel- fare or morals," he said. "With the investment tied up on on Broadway we would have to go to court and fight it," Rosen- berg said of any attempts to implement the court ruling. He maintained the bars he re- presents feature only nude danc- See HIGH, Page 10 Some observers thought the mys- the choice of Lynn, said the Presi- tery break might be used to draft dent believes that the current ur- new clarification clauses to be ban crisis can be overcome. added to the basic nine-point agree- Nixon, during his second term, ment reached between Kissinger expects the kind of dramatic prog- and Tho during their round of talks C ress in domestic affairs that was EMISSARIES VISIT Student mood dismays Israelis here in October. Earlier yesterday, Tho and North Vietnam's r e s i d e n t negotiator Xuan Thuy conferred with Nguyen Thi Binh, head of the Vietcong delegation to the semi-public peace talks, keeping her posted on the' latest talks withethe U.S. Presi- dential envoy. Kissinger, who also keeps in close contact with Saigon's chief negotiator Pham Dang Lam after every secret session with the North Vietnamese, conferred with his chief aides. He was not seen to leave the U.S. residence where he stays in Paris. In Washington, White House Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler1 said Nixon was also in frequent touch with Kissinger by cable. In other Indochina developments yesterday, Viet Cong main force and guerrilla units are under or- ders to continue fighting if the United States signs a separate cease-fire agreement with Hanoi and the Saigon government refuses to go along, captured documents show. "Listen regularly to both friendly and enemy broadcasts," these documents advise the Viet Cong, "If the Americans announce cease- fire and the puppet government does not, friendly forces are to continue fighting." Meanwhile, in Saigon, Sen. Char- les Percy (R-Ill.) said South Viet- nam had been made aware of the possibility of a cut in U.S. aid if it refuses to accept a United States- North Vietnamese peace agree- ment. He told reporters he had a full discussion on the aid topic with South Vietnamese Foreign Minister Tran Van Lam Monday. The meeting between the Foreign Minister and Percy, which was also attended by U.S. Ambassador Ells- worth Bunker, was squeezed be- tween two special sessions of South See PARIS, Page 10 made in international affairs in his first four years in office, the White House said. Sources also indicated that Com- merce Secretary Peter Peterson would be shifted to'fa new post as overseer of international economic policy. The Washington Post and, the New York Times reported- that South Carolina textile manufacturer Frederick Dent is being considered for nomination to succeed Peter- son as commerce secretary. Lynn-the fourth new appoint- ment in the President's Cabinet- has been serving as under-secre- tary of commerce, where he played a leading role in negotiations with, the Soviet Union on trade. He will succeed George Romney, who resigned after stating priv- ately he felt he had not been given enough administration support for his program, which included ef- forts to re-house the poor and re- build decaying cities. Lynn conceded he had no back- ground in the housing field, but said he was trying to learn as much about the industry as pos- sible. A World War II Navy man, Lynn was a corporation lawyer until joining the Nixon administra- tion in 1969, and served in the government first as general coun- sel and then as number two man in the Commerce Department. Nixon praised Lynn's "impres- sive combination of youth and en- ergy" and said his proven mana- gerial abilities would accelerate the "many strides" made at HUD by Romney. At a session with newsmen after his selection, Lynn read a brief statement saying, in part: "The goal set forth in the housing legislation for over 20 years has been 'a decent home and a suit- able living environment for every American family.' "Challenges' to make substantial See NIXON, Page 10 By LAURA BERMAN Two Israeli emissaries left their New York offices early this week and unobtrusively checked into an Ann Arbor hotel. Their mission: Feel out sentiment towards Israel on campus and open communica- tion networks to students interested in the country. Exactly what did these Israeli foreign agents discover? "Apathy," said Yaacov Levik, of the Israeli Foreign Service. "Perhaps some- thing closer to pacifism?" Shulamit Bahat, of the nationwide Israeli Student Organization, suggested. "They are one and the same," said Levi. Both seemed dismayed at the lack of interest students displayed, not only in Israel, but in world affairs generally. They were par- ticularly disheartened at the stu- dent non-reaction to the killings at Southern University. "There is a feeling of who cares? Let them live, let them die, it makes no d if fe re n ce," Levi asserted. As for Israel, the officials said they found "more ignorance than any real anti-Israel feeling," al- though they did observe extremism "here and there." Their purpose is to try to change that. "We are here to generate interest 'in Israel within the American uni- versities, specifically by providing' films and speakers, organizing con- ferences, and getting interested students-Israeli and American-in touch with each other," Bahat ex- Bahat and Levi's visit to Ann Arbor lasted just one day, during which they spoke with professors, students, and the directors of' Hillel. They admit there is littlej they can accomplish on any one campus other than making sug- gestions and leaving behind trails of information. But they were impressed by the University's Judaic Studies Pro-j gram and at the variety and qual- ity of other programs in the com- munity at-large, particularly the offerings of Hillel. "Schools like this serve as ex- amples. When we travel to schools with judaic studies programs, we can point out the success you have had and say, 'see, it is working' there,' " Levi said. From Ann Arbor, the Israelis will head for Kent State and Case Western Reserve in Cleveland be- fore returning to New York. Later they expect to visit several schools in the south. Although they are not actively recruiting, the Israelis try to en- courage students to immigrate to Israel. They believe student re- sponse indicates Israel remains the '"promised land" to many Jewish youths. "Here we advertised 'Israel Now' and 500 people came, many just seeking information. Many American students have come to live in Israel and most are quite satisfied," Levi said. "We say, come to Israel and we will welcome you and live with you and share with you. Come to Israel." POLICE RAID Cops get wrong number in suspect hunt By DAN BIDDLE "We were all terrified," said one oc- cupant. "We thought it was a robber or a rapist", another said. The only warning had been heavy foot steps on the porch. It was 10:45 p.m. Monday night. Suddenlynearly a dozen heavily-arm- -. . - -- I; . ......1.'.'. "I can understand their difficulty in reading the street number at night, but they could have checked it out a little better before breaking the door down and coming in with all those guns." u m ~m ~ e g g s m W w a m sa m m s..mE.*.*,*.*.*.*..... .*.* .'E ** the police action "a clear violation of rights guaranteed by the Fourth Amendment," which protects against un- warranted search. Goldstein said he may file charges against both state and local police for their actions in the raid. Ann Arbor Police Chief Walter Krasny refused to comment on any aspect of the break-in, but said that "whatever the -4 .,,,+-A- -A tbo hnnea ixrac thnrn>>ah_ frnmthe"right" address - 217 Pacrk-