PHILA gage an 'd'ed yest ";re, offi said. He Cause kattribute MOSTE ,_performa Roof," w -productio ad miss ois week: ""esides in "Fidd distinguis U"lysses eros" 7Boadwa Funny Th the Forun dii ero Mostel DELPHIA (AP) -Veteran He won Tony awards for "Rhin- d screen actor Zero Mostel oceros" and "Forum," and a New erday at Jefferson Hospital York drama critics award for cials of the Forrest Theater "Fiddler." vas 62. of death was tentatively HE WAS BORN Joel Mostel on d to cardiac failure. Feb. 28, 1915, in Brooklyn to a family headed by ,a rabbi. He graduated L known for his stage from the City College of New York' nces in "Fiddler on the and married Kathryn Harkin, a vas in Philadelphia for a dancer, in 1944.=They had two sons,. n of "The Merchant," but including Joel, also an actor. sed several performances The genesis of Mostel's nickname because of illness. was never clear, but he said he ihis appearances as Tevye picked it up early in his school days. ler," Mostel's career was Before going into the theater, hed by his performances in Mostel worked in a factory and as a in Nighttown" and "Rhin- dock worker. He found stage work in off-Broadway, and in the Greenwich Village clubs and made y musical and movie "A his Broadway debut in a vaudeville ing Happened on the Way to production, "Keep 'Em Laughing," n." in1942. Confessed murderer of city doctor wants extradition to Colo. imp troller' d not clear LCoatinued from Page 1) 's report Lance By BARBARA ZAHS; A man who faces life imprisonment for the shooting death of an Ann Arbor woman physician has asked authorities for extradition to Col- orado so he may face the death penalty for another murder he says he committed in that state. Gordon Wingard, 28, of Lapeer County, said he would rather die than spend the rest of his life in jail. WINGARD pleaded guilty Tuesday before Oakland County Circuit Court Judge Richard Kuhn to the slaying of Dr. Cynthia Miller, medical director at the Detroit House of Correction's (Dehoco) Women's Division. Miller, who had been shot twice, was found slumped behind the wheel of her car on July 17, 1976, on the shoulder of a freeway in Southfield. But Wingard asked Kuhn to permit his return to Colorado so he could face execution for the July, 1976 murder of Samuel Hudson. Unlike Michigan, Colorado allows capital- punishment for certain crimes. Oakland County Prosecutor L. Brooks Patterson said Colorado auth- oritiesshave begun the extradition process. PATTERSON declared Wingard "full of surprises" and expressed fear that he might try to escape if returned to Colorado. Wingard escaped from Jackson State Prison in June, 1976, while serving a three-to-five year sentence for attempted murder. He was arrested in Sacramento, Calif. on July 22 with his girlfriend, and later charged with Miller's murder. Wingard and his girlfriend, Gail Oliver, a former Jackson Prison nurse, met Miller while she was a staff physician there, before moving to Dehoco. BEFORE SHE was slain, Miller Join The Daily Arts Staff. had withdrawn $5,000 in cash from her savings account at Huron Valley National Bank. The money was not on her person when her body was found. Authorities have concluded that Miller agreed to pay Wingard the $5,000 in exchange for help in obtaining the release of another convict with whom she was reported- ly romantically involved. The Michigan Daily-Friday, September 9, 1977-Page 13 MARSHALL'S LIQUORS BEER-IMPORTED 8 DOMESTIC WINES-IMPORTED 8 DOMESTIC CHAMPAGNE-ICE COMPLETE LINE OF PARTY ITEMS DRUG ITEMS-COSTEMICS OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 9 A.M.-11 P.M. - SUNDAY 11 A.M.-7 P.M. NO 2-1313 235 S. STATE AT E. LIBERTY banking activities have only covered their legality, not their ethics. Heimann said that although Lance's banking practices in Georgia were faul- ty, he would have recommended Lance. as budget dirfector as long as the problems were corrected. "Lance was a very successful banker. His attention to detail leaves something to be desired," said Heimann, who took office in July. HEIMANN'S Aug. 18 report said he had uncovered nothing that "warrants the prosecution of any individuals," but it raised questions about multi-million dollar personal loans Lance obtained from banks in New York and Chicago, and repeated overdrafts by Lance and his family on their checking accounts. The report also invited Congress to re-examine existing banking laws in light of Lance's case. PRESIDENT CARTER yesterday at- tributed a 17 percentage point drop in his national popularity rating, in part, to the controversy over his handling of the Lance affair. The President said anew that Lance ought to have a comprehensive hearing before Congress. Across the country, more newspapers called for Lance's resignation in editorials and others stopped at saying his ouster is now in- evitable. The new open-mar dorm (Continued from Page 1) to move them into dormitory "It's really a mess," said Sue Camerena, a freshwoman from De- troit who is temporarily living with a Markley RA. "The worst thing is looking at all the other people's rooms and seeing them all settled and comfortable already. I like the girl I'm livinfg withbut I'want to get to know my real roommate." "It's not that bad now, but it's going to be bad when classes start,' said Nancy Berke, a Markley RA who has opened her room to 'a freshwoman from-Portsmouth, Va. "Lots of social functions are starting and she doesn't know whether or not to take part in them, or even where she's going to live or how she's going to move. It's a bad way to start four years in college." THE TEMPORARY students are paying two dollars per night for their accommodations and paying for their meals as they eat them. The housing office is providing a van and a driver to move the student's belongings as they are relocated into their permanent rooms. For students living off campus, the predicament is just as bad. Greg Hesterberg, treasurer of the Coalition for Better Housing, told of one couple who joined the tent-pitch- ing after they found their newly rented house lacked a kitchen. Some participants found it nicer to spend two nights in a tent than on a couch somewhere, he said. GROUP MEMBERS cite recent statistics which show Ann Arbor housing to be consistently harder to find, harder to afford and in worse condition than in most other U.S. cities. Gesturing toward his office win- dow, in the direction of the tent camp, departing Housing Director John Feldkamp smiled when asked about the unique protest. "There's really nothing useful I can say. . . The past five or six falls have all been tough in terms of housing." Newly published Two landmark studies in anthropology from University of Michigan faculty Raymond C. Kelly Etoro Social Structure A Study inbStructural Contradiction Foreword by Marshall D. Sahlins ... fit to stand in the top ranks of modern field- work monographs.... an important and original contribution to the study of New Guinea social systems ...., y-Meyer Fortes, King's College Cambridge University $12.00 Gary Witherspoon Language and Art in the; Navajo Universe "The ef ort is to bring Navajo thought within the range of Western discourse, so that we might have some concept of its nature and some apprecia- tion of its power." -From the Foreword by Clifford Geertz $14.00 paperbound $ 7.95 Raymond C. 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