The Michigan Daily-Thursday, October 6, 1977-Page 3 Murder trial won't hear Savalas -4 C . " Tootle on down Budding musicians and pied pipers arise! You are needed at a workshop with jazz violinist Leroy Jenkins tomorrow. Eclipse Jazz, organizers of both the workshop and Jenkins' Friday night concerns, want to put together an impromptu ensemble consisting of violin or viola, clarinet, flute, french horn and baritone or tenor sax to accom- pany the Revolutionary Ensemble musician. The workshop is tomor- row at 2 p.m. in the East Quad RC auditorium, but a spokesperson for Eclipse says if you want to be in the ensemble you must sign up with the jazz group's office by 5 p.m. today. You must be able to read music and improvise to participate. So get out there and show your stuff ! For those who prefer just listening, Jenkins will present two performances Friday, at 8and 10:30 p.m. Have a seat The coveted Walgreen Chair is up for grabs. That's right, that most distinguished honorary professorship in the literary college, the Walgreen Chair, is being vacated, and a search committee headed by Philosophy Prof. Richard Brandt is combing the campus for the best and the brightest. The chair was donated by Charles Walgreen Jr. with the stipulation that it "be donated to the cause of human understand- ing," so if you have a nominee you'd like to have sit on it, send their name in now. We hear it'scomfy. I~appenings ...' ....get off to a literary start today with the American Association of University Women's annual booksale. The sale, which boasts 30,000 volumes, runs from noon to 9 p.m. in the Union Ballroom ... if you get to Room 4001 C.C. Little by 3:30 p.m. you can have coffee, but if you don't make it until 4 p.m. all you get is Prof. Stephen Kesler speaking on "Mexican flourite deposits - economics and origins" ... Prof. Paul Mendes-Flohn discusses "Martin Buber and the moral dilems of Zionism" at 4 p.m. in Room 2029 Angell Hall ... the Department of An- thropology presents "Sacred Texts; secular interpretations" from 4-6 p.m. in the Rackham East Lecture Room ... the Pound House is holding registration for grade school French lessons from 4-5 p.m.... the University Players present Noel Coward's "Hands Across the Sea" at 4:10 p.m. in the Anderson Room of the Union. Admission is zilch ... Prof. F.T.,Barwell, from the University College of Swansea, United Kingdom, discusses "Advanced ground transportation tech- nology applications to urban environments" from 4:30-5:30 p.m. in Room 229 West Engineering ... the Physical Therapy Club meets at 7 p.m. in the Assembly Hall of the Union ... the Union of Students for Israel meets at Hillel, 1429 Hill Street, at 7:30 ... the Guild House, 802 Monroe, sponsors a poetry reading at 7:30 p.m. with William "Geng- his" Kincaid ... Ann Lyons, from the Asian-American Student Services Office will discuss problems facing the Asian American in this country at 7:30 p.m. in Alice Lloyd's Blue Carpet Lounge ... David Israel, assistant administrator of the Energy Research and Development Administration,- will give a free public lecture on Carter's energy program at 8 p.m. in Rackham Auditorium ... the Organizing Commit- tee for Clericals will show "Salt of the Earth" at 8 p.m. in the Wesley Foundation, °corner of State and Huron; $1 donation ... finally, St. Mary's Student Chapel sponsorsda sexuality seminar at 8 p.m. at the church, corner of Thompson and William ... Phew! MHenry thehumorous From the wish-we'd-said- that-first department, came these gems from Henry Kis- singer (remember him?) re- cently: Speaking of Bert Lance at a dinner for Sen. Charles Percy in Chicago, Kissinger said: "You have to give him" credit." And when the con- versation turned to the Senates filibuster over deregulation of y natural gas prices, Kissinger " ' remarked: "When 100 senators talk for 37 hours enough natural gas is pro- duced. "He oughta know. On the outside.. .. Our heavenly informant has a frosty outlook for us. It'll be clear and a bit windy today, with/a high temperature of only 550 and a low - get this - of 30. Same story tomorrow. But pity the poor folks in the U.P. - they should be getting the beloved white stuff very soon, which means we're not far behind. MIAMI (AP)-Defense attorney Ellis Rubin yesterday dropped his attempt to get "Kojak" star Telly Savalis to testify in the television murder trial of 15-year- old Ronny Zamora. Rubin released Savalis from his sub- poena, saying earlier decisions by the judge in the case would make a fight to hear from the star of "Kojak" fruitless. "I SEE NO reason to bring Telly Savalis," said Rubin, citing a Tuesday ruling that excluded a psychologist's testimony. Judge Paul Baker ruled at the close of Tuesday's session that psychologist Margaret Hanratty Thomas could not testidy as an expert because she could not cite a specific past instance of homicide caused by obsessive viewing. "This is the premise for our whole simple defense," said Rubin in arguing to admit her testimony. Dr. Thomas, an assistant dean at Florida Technological University in Orlando, said,, she has published 15 professional papers on media violence and its relationship to aggressive behavior. "EXPOSURE to television violence can shape a child's conception of what is right and wrong," she told the judge in arguments with both the jury and the defendant excluded. Darrell Agrella, 14-who, along with Zamora, is charged with first degree murder in the shooting death last June 4 of Elinor Haggart, 83-is to be tried separately. Dr. Walter Reid, a clinical psychologist who examined Zamora, testified the teen-ager "may be able to tell you why something is wrong, but it doesn't seem to keep him from doing it." Under cross-examination he con- ceded Zamora "can distinguish right from wrong." Defense psychistrist Michael Gilbert, in a disposition, says he questioned Zamora in jail two weeks ago while the defendant was drugged. The deposition quotes Zamora as saying, "I took the gun and I went to the coffee table and I started fooling around. I could have even killed myself, I should have." Za mora is reported to have said that Agrella handed him the gun whig collecting money, jewelry and othdr valuables from the woman's house. "One minute I held it (the gun) real tight. I don't know why, I was scared; and before I knew it.. it happened o' fast ... the gun shot her. i "I saw her fall back, no screams or' blood. I just didn't believe I shot her.-It' happened." The trial is being covered by a public television station. Still photographs- also are being allowed in the cour- troom. Baker had forbidden the jurors from watching television, but revised his or- der to allow them to watch anything but news shows and taped excerpts of the;trial. PRESIDENT SUGGESTS RECONSTRUCTION PLAN Carter makes unscheduled tour NEW YORK (AP) - President Carter, accompanied by his housing secretary and New York Mayor Abraham Beame, made an unsched- uled visit yesterday to the South Bronx, an area as bleak as any blighted neighborhood in the nation. Carter, who came to New York on Tuesday to address the United Nations General Assembly, made the morning auto tour of the area devastated by arson and crime with the mayor' and Patricia Harris, secretary of housing and urban development, at his side. THE OFFICIALS emerged from the presidential limousine twice. At the second stop, Carter stood in the rubble of what once were tenements and ordered that a study be made as to what in the South Bronx "ought to be salvaged and what ought to be torn down." He told Harris to "get a map of the whole area and show me what should be done." Carter told Bronx residents that blocks that were beyond rehabilita- tion could be converted into "recrea- tional institutions." The President's first stop was on Washington Avenue, near 168th Street, in the Claremont section of the Bronx where he talked with tenants who are rehabilitating a six-story tenement with the aid of federal funds. ONE TENANT, Claude Briley, said, "Hi, Jimmy. Glad to see you in the Bronx, checking out conditions." "How do you think you are making out?" Carter asked Briley. "Fine," Briley said. "We hope to make more progress on a wider level." As the motorcade, accompanied by 20 police cars and motorcycles, all with sirens wailing, moved through the city's northernmost borough, Carter saw the blight that has destroyed entire neighborhoods. The police precinct in the neighbor- hood near where Carter toured is known as Fort Apache because of the siege atmosphere of the area in recent years. Because of the ravage by arson there, the Fire Department refers to the area as Gasoline Alley. ABOUT 150 persons, mostly black and Hispanic, were gathered at the rehabilitated apartment building when Carter arrived, having been told only moments earlier that the President was en route. They cheered and waved at Carter, who told Harris, "This is a beautiful building. I hope the whole area can be turned around." Carter told Ramon Rueda, execu- tive director of the group rehabilitat- ing the building, "What a surprise! of Bronx I'm proud of what you are doing. I wanted to come down here and see what you all are doing." Rueda told Carter that if he woul4. assist them in getting more federal money, "we could show a serious d dent in the South Bronx" by improv- - ing substandard housing. The Department of Philosophy The University of Michigan presents SOCIAL ISSUES AND SOCIAL THEORY A Series of Lectures OCTOBER 7 THOMAS NAGEL, Princeton University "EQUALITY" 3:30 P.M., Amphitheatre, Rackham School of Graduate Studies OCTOBER 25 HUGO A. BEDAU, Tufts University "CRUEL AND UNUSUAL PUNISHMENT" 8:00 P.M., Amphitheatre, Rackham School of Graduate Studies NOVEMBER 18 JULIUS SENSAT, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee "MARX AND HABERMAS ON HISTORICAL PROGRESS" 8:00 PAM., Amphitheatre, Rackham School of Graduate Studies *** ROBER T PAUL WOLFF, UvECEMBER 2Massachusetts, Amherst "HOW TO READ DAS KAPITAL" 3:30 P.M., Amphitheatre, Rackham School of Graduate Studies A' Marxist party leader assassinated in Du-blin DUBLIN, Ireland (ap)-A lone gun- man shot and killed Seamus Costello, leader of the Marxist Irish Republican Socialist party, on a Dublin street yesterday, police said. The assassin pumped four pistol shots into Costello, 38, as he stepped out of his car in the city's North Strand quarter, a. spokesperson reported. The gunman ran off as Costello slum- ped dead on the sidewalk. The killing climaxed a bloody ideological feud between the IRSP and the Official wing of the outlawed Irish Republican Army. COSTELLO was one on the founders of the revolutionary IRSI in December 1974, disillusioned with the Officials' cease-fire with the British army in Nor- thern Ireland. Since then, the two factions have periodically shot it out in Northern Ireland and Dublin. There have been at least a dozen killings, plus countless shootings, kidnapings and other at- tacks. The IRSP, with an estimated 50 ac- tivists in Ireland, seeks to end British rule in Northern Ireland, like the IRA's Official and Provisional Wings, but also aims for a popular -uprising that will establish a Marxist republic. TH PARTY'S1 All too often, when the party ends, the trouble begins. People who shouldn't be doing anything more active than going to sleep are driving a car. Speeding and weaving their way to death. Before any of your friends drive home from your party, make sure they aren't drunk. Don't be fooled because they drank only beer or wine. Beer and wine can be just as intoxicating as mixed drinks. And don't kid yourself because they may have had some black coffee. Black coffee can't sober them up well enough to drive. If someone gets too drunk to drive, drive him yourself. Or call a cab. Or offer to let him sleep over. Maybe your friend won't be feeling so good on the morning after, but you're going to feel terrific. DRUNK DRIVER, DET.Y Y t BOX 2345 ROCKVILLE. MARYLAND 20852 I want to keep my friends alive for the next party. Tell me what else I can do. FRIENDS DON'T LET FRIENDS DRIVE DRUNK. 11 IflAI 4t.51I INA. &i. lN .Nl1h AIfi.Ut. ivaA11144t11'SAJII MINANS1AA 4 Daily Official Bulletin Thursday, October 6, 1977 DAY CALENDAR AAUW: 25th Annual USED BOOK SALE, Union Ballroom, noon. Guild House: Poetry reading, Wm. "Genghis" Kincaid, 802 Monroe, 7:30 p.m. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXVIII, No. 43 Thursday, October 27, 1977 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage is paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morning during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 September through April (2 semesters); $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Satur- day morning. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.50 by mail outside Ann Arbor. I . ' .. ;, r , 4