THE SUNDAY DAILY See Editorial Page Y l6frA6 D~ali WHITE High-M5 Low-22 See today . .. for details Vol. LXXXIII, No. 78 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, December 10, 1972 Ten Cents Ten Pages I today..I. if you see news happen call 76-DAILY Food notes There are some things you will need to know if you are in the habit of going out to eat in the campus area. One of the few 24-hour eateries is no longer open around-the-clock. Biff's has been taken over by new management and according to one of the waitresses it features "smaller hamburgers, lower prices and no dinners." Hours are 7 a.m. to 11 p.m. . . . For those of you who eat at Betsy Ross in the arcade, they will be closed starting tomorrow until they clean up a few code violations. Free space To those of you who migrate to the UGLI this time each term: Student Government Council member Bill Dobbs has an- nounced free office desk space to anyone who wants it. Dobbs lists the central campus location, usually quiet atmosphere bookshelf and phone service among the SGC office's attractions. As a fringe benefit, "You can rub elbows with high level bureau- crats, and see sandbox government in action." "No one one uses my desk," says Dobbs, who works elsewhere. "The University pays high rent for these facilities. It should be used by the stu- dents who pay for it." Dobbs invites readers to call 763-3241 or 761-6096 and ask for "little" Bill. Volunteers needed Project Community needs volunteers for an income tax as- sistance program. Volunteers will be trained at the beginning of January to assist low income people in filling out their 10-40 tax form. The program will run from Jan. 18 to April 22 and will be located at the Model Cities Community Skill Center and the Community Center on North Main St. For information, call Pro- ject Community at 763-3548. Happenings.,.. . The University Karate Club is holding its exams and they are open to the public. Today at Barbour Gym . . . And this is the beginning of Gilbert and Sullivan Week, according to a mayoral proclamation. The University's G&S Society has been in existence 25 years and is the oldest in the country. Congratula- tions ... The Psych 171 Film Series is showing The Great Ameri- can Novel: Grapes of Wrath; Dorothea Lange: Under the Trees: (their punctuation, not Today's) in the UGLI Multi-purpose Rm. Monday at 4 p.m Death notes FLORIDA-The sunshine state has become the first state in the nation to restore the death penalty through legislative action. Gov. Reubin Askew signed the bill into law Friday. California voters in November restored the death penalty to certain cases that were already on the statute books. Florida is the first state to pass new death penalty stautes since the Supreme Court declared capital punishment as then applied unconstitutional on June 29. Pope notes VATICAN CITY-Pope Paul VI characterized "true" wo- men's liberation yesterday as recognizing women's essential role in life: to become a mother. He condemned abortions as{ "abominable crimes" calling it a "false and dangerous distor- tion of the otherwise proper desire of women to be emancipated." He was speaking before the Italian Catholic Union of Jurispru- dence. Nazi notes WEST BERLIN-Forensic experts here are waiting for the dental records of Martin Bormann, Hitler's powerful deputy, to compare them with the teeth of two skulls which could solve the 27-year mystery surrounding the fate of the worlds most wanted Nazi. Two days ago workers discovered two almost complete skeletons near the site where Bormann was last seen in May, 1945. Police say the bones are at least 20 to 30 years old. Bor- mann has been in the news because the London Daily Express has printed a series claiming Bormann is alive and well in Latin America. Dope notes HERMOSILLO-Authorities burned more than 27 metric tons of marijuana, 13 pounds of heroin and nearly 35 pounds of cocaine Friday. Assistant attorney general David Franco Rod- riguez, the top man in Mexico's antidrug force, presided over the bonfire. The drugs were confiscated during recent months by police agencies. WASHINGTON CONVENTION Strauss wills top Item position Westwood quits after surviving ouster vote By the Associated Press, UPI and Reuters The Democratic National Committee yesterday elected conservative Texas lawyer and former Democratic Party treasurer Robert Strauss to the post of national chairman. Strauss' selection came after former chairwoman Jean Westwood resigned her post after beating back an earlier effort to remove her from that position. The final vote tally read: Strauss 1061/2, George Mitchell of Maine 714, and Harold Manatt of California 26. Westwood, the party's first chairwoman, garnered 105 votes against the opposition's*- 100 in the initial attempt to oust her yesterday. However, she later announced to the committee signing to ity. that she was re- promote party un- Peace talky casualty A severely wounded South Vietnamese soldier is carried to the rear by his comrades. Fighting intensified yesterday as the day's peace talks in Paris once again produced no results. CLOSE VOTE EXPECTED: as r nit lvote bef ore State LI "The fate of Gov. William Milli- would go to a proposed Trans- Jackson) which call ken's mass transit bill will pro- portation Fund within the State constitutional amen bably be decided this week when Highway Dept. question. the State Legislature convenes The bill suffered setbacks in The amendment, after a week-long recess. both the, House and Senate last be placed on the n The mass transit proposal is week, and insiders expect the ballot for voter ap part of a $83 million transporta- vote on the final measure to be limit the proportion tion package which would raise a close one. gasoline tax that c the state gasoline tax from sev- Chances for a compromise for mass transit f en to nine cents per gallon. Of were hurt when the House voted eighteenth of the t the two cent increase, one-half down a proposal by mass tran- same amount aske cent or one-fourth of the fund sit critic James Fleming (R- Milliken proposal. fiace fi egisIa ta Westwood ended her resignation [speech with a plea that the party hold fast to the controversial Mc- Govern Commission reforms which it adopted to democratize the dele- gate selection process. Westwood stepped down without attaching any conditions to her resignation. She had earlier pledg- ed to quit only if Strauss would also drop out and the committee could agree on a compromise can- didate acceptable to all elements of the party. AP Photo Westwood had said that she de- cided to fight the attempt to re- move her when Strauss emerged session of as the leading contender for her seat. Westwood, who was chosen chair- woman last spring on the recom- mendation of George McGovern, had criticized Strauss labeling him "a symbol of Democrats for Nixon." Other Strauss opponents said that his support was founded on anti-reform sentiment. Straluss, who worked otside the party structure in the Presidential campaign but continued to raise money for McGovern and the Na-' tional Committee, had been attack- Senate cast ed for his close alignment with rmula bill", former Treasury Secretary John transporta- Connally, chairman of Democrats vould set up for Nixon. es and pro- Throughout his month-long cam- funds. The paign to gain the chair position, h 20 votes Strauss insisted that he was com- mitted to the party reforms. and his After his election, .,Strauss told d hard on the committee: f the Legis- "I belong to no man and I am ebruary for owned by no group or organiza-j critics kept tion." te until last Strauss also pledged that he! would not tolerate "or condone a n the bill's turning back of the clock on re- ming, chair- forms" that have openedthe party ning chir-to more minority groups, women! ghway Com- and young people. bill was re- Strauss added, "I believe in in- effectively clusion and I believe in winning oughout the elections." bottled up In other actions, Basil Patterson; of New York stayed on as a vice ed to let the chairman and a second vice chair- e until both person post was created for a Senate had woman. Caroline Wilkins, national nt to place committee member from Oregon ount of gas was elected to that spot. be used for The struggle to elect a new )emocratic leader began even be-I tee ignored fore the election as Westwood be- ige 10 See STRAUSS, Page 10 Mer cli ants profit' by i By SUE STEPHENSON In the current City Council de- bate on the question of banning non-returnable bottles, a number of people, including Mayor Robert Harris have taken the position that reusable bottles are not economic- ally feasible. The credibility of that argu- ment has been dealt a severe blow, however, by the experience of the state of Oregon with this same is- sue. Despite predictions from busi- ness interests that mandatory de- posits would cut sales drastically, the state went ahead and passed a law October 1, 1972, requiring deposits on all beer, ale and soft drink containers. Contrary to the dire warnings, there was at47 perdcentrincrease in beer sales over figures for the previous October. "It's just simply working," said Rich Chalmers, a Salem, Oregon resident who has been working on the issue for approximately four years. "There's no hassle. You can walk into any store and buy any brand in returnable containers," he said. Also, added "Chambers, "Beer prices have not gone up, in fact, they've gone down." "Cheap beer is no longer avail- able in cans," Chambers explain- ed, "because it's too expensive. It costs over five cents to produce ia 12 ounce can, and only three and one-half cents to produce an 11 ounce bottle. Naturally the less expensive bottled beer is bought instead." Another interesting aspect of the Oregon situation is that "throw- away glass is a thing of the past," according to Chamber's. "The only reason for throw-away glass containers," Chambers con- tinued, "was to compete with the can. That competition no longer exists." Presently, ; a tri-partisan com- mittee of Ann Arbor's City Coun- cil is "ironing out the difficulties" of a similar proposal to ban non- returnables. The measure was introduced Oct. 2 by council members Jerry See REUSABLES, Page 10 led for a state dment on the which would ext statewide proval, would n of the state ould be used unds to one- total tax, the ed for in the Activists Hayden, Fonda linked in surprise conspiracy to wed The next day, the a tie vote on the "for the section of the tion package which w the spending prioriti vide for allocation of vote was 17-17, wit needed for passage. Although Milliken aides fought long an ai d off the floors of lature since last F passage of the bill, the bill from any vo week. The major wall i path has been Flem man of the Senate Hip mittee to which thet ferred. The senator opposed the bill thr summer and kept it in committee. Fleming had refuse bill out of committee the House and the' passed his amendme a ceiling on the am tax funds that could1 mass transit. Fleming's commit See MASS, Pa By DAN BIDDLE and Wire Service Reports Politics makes strange bedfel- lows, and the radical left is no exception. Activist - actress Jane Fonda, known for her ability to make headlines, announced yesterday her plans to marry radical leader and former Daily editor Tom Hayden. Fonda broke the good news from Roeros, Norway, where she is on location for the filming of Ibsen's "The Doll's House". On the inside .. . The Arts Pa e features a review of the Junior _] c t Light Opera's production of Hello Dolly! . . . An in-depth Fonda's spokesman, Michael look at Portugal graces our Editorial Page . . . and the Maslansky, said the couple plans to marry early next year in the Sports Page brings you all the details of last night's bas- United States, following Fonda's ketball game. divorce from French film direc- The weather picture tor Roger Vadim. If the picture outside your window is a little fuzzy it is Hayden, who is presently with because of what the National Weather Service calls a Fonda at the mountain resort town, "Heavy Snow Watch". Expect three to five inches. The has been active in such diverse high today will range from 30 to 35 and the low tonight will enterprises as Students for a Dem- be in the high teens to low twenties. ocratic Society, which he helped found, the Chicago Seven, and The Conference probes sexuality Daily, where he was editor-in-chief in 1960-61. Hayden was one of the five Chi- cago Seven members to be con- victed three years ago of cross- ing state lines to incite riots at the 1968 Democratic National Conven- tion. Last month a federal appeals court reversed the decision. Fonda, while unable to boast of any exploits at The Daily, has had an equally lively career. She won an Oscar for her portrayal of a nervous prostitute in "Klute" and an Oscar nomination for "They Shoot Horses, Don't They?" Fonda's acting achievements are matched only by her outspoken role in the anti-war movement. Follow- ing her visit to North Vietnam this summer, both she and Hayden were active in the Indochina Peace Campaign, an effort directed largely at the Nixon administrat- tion's Vietnam policies. Fonda and former U. S. Attor- ney General Ramsey Clark who travelled to North Vietnam last summer, provoked a storm of con- troversy with their statements on. American bombing of the dike system in North Vietnam, which Fonda labeled "a disaster of the worst kind" for the North Vietna- mese people. She has also spoken at a number of anti-war demonstrations over the past few years. Hayden, 32, and Fonda, 35, met six months ago and appeared to- gether at a Human Rights Party fundraising cocktail party earlier this year in Southfield. was editor of The Daily, and they do have a bit of a reputation, you know. Of course, I wish them both well." Neither Fonda's father, noted actor Henry Fonda, nor Hayden's mother, who lives in Royal Oak, could be reached for comment on the forthcoming marriage of their offspring. By MERYL GORDON A sexuality conference held yesterday in St. Andrews- Episcopal Church opened some new questions and tried to erase a lot of old stereo- types among its 60 male and female participants. Changing negative sexual experiences to posi- tive ones, learning cues and erasing the guilt associated with masturbation were among many topics discussed at the conference, sponsored by Feminist House, a local group that co-ordinates area wnmen's activities. tragic because of its implications. It's always pop- ping up, and class and race affect it also. If you belong to one class you can be fucked or balled, and if you're in another class you can be made love to." "As an object," she continued, "you're ex- pected to be acted upon. It's still a common thought, a male fantasy, that women like and want to be raped." Women's "object" status also puts her in the nnitinn of heina nicked hy men and as a result WON