VOTE YES ON MILLACE See Editorial Page Y r e A6F .dhh. t D~aitP POMPOUS High-24° Low-14* See Today for details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVII, No. 92 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, January 22, 1977 Ten Cents, Six Pages F You{fSE NE M AN" CA.L':ILM Y Dateline: Daily ANN ARBOR, MICH. - The Michigan Daily, long known as a sanctuary for journalism-crazed University students, and a pretty good paper, too, re-announced its intentions yesterday to hold its annual mass meeting for new persons next Tues- day, Jan. 25, at 9 p.m. "We want you! We want your talents, your dedication, your ability," said one anonymous editor. "Besides, where else can you drink dirt-cheap Cokes, track down elusive sources, hob nob with the campus brass and choose from news, sports, arts, photography and business careers all at the same time?" Accord- ing to sources, the meeting will be held in The Daily's spacious second floor quarters in the Stu- dent Publications Bldg., 420 Maynard. Students are also urged to watch this space for announce- ments of dormitory meetings, or to drop by The Daily newsroom anytime. "If you pass up this opportunity," said the anonymous editor, "then you're passing up life!" 0 Cancellation The folks from UAC'Mediatrics have cancelled tonight's movie, "Deliverance," which was sched- uled for viewing at 7:30 and 9:30. So if you plan- ned on attending, don't. Police note Police in Oakland County believe the body of a young girl found yesterday in suburban Berk- ley is that of 10-year-old Kristine Mihelich, who has been missing since Dec. 26. Although police refused to confirm the body's identity, Oakland County Sheriff Johannes Spreen said, "Evidently, they have found the girl who has been missing, on 13 Mile 'Road and Telegraph Road ... it ap- pears to be her." Mihelich was last seen on another major road in Berkley purchasing a magazine at a party store. Neighbors had amas- sed a reward fund of more than $12,000 for in- formation in the case. Ford tees off Gerald Ford was teed off yesterday - but it wasn't because of his recent unemployment blues. Playing in the Bing Crosby Pro-Am Gold Tourna- ment at Pebble Beach, Calif., Ford swatted his first ball 40 yards off course, and into a crowd of onlookers. But barring his usual spurt of clumsiness, Jerry seemed to be enjoying his first full day as Citizen Ford after almost 30 years of government service. "I feel great, I got a good night's sleep," Ford said as he practiced before teaming up to play with golf great Arnold Palmer. Meanwhile, it was reported yesterday that the Ford's - accustomed to posh living condi- tions after a 2 -year stint in the White House- will move next month into a secluded home in the ritzy Thunderbird Heights section of Rancho Mirage, Calif. They have taken a one-year lease on a beige, five-bedroom ranch-style house, which is surrounded by a concrete fence and has a rectangular swimming pool in the rear. However, the Ford's are reportedly planning to buy or build a permanent home in another desirable area - Palm Springs. e Happenings... ... today are singular, rather than plural. Dr. Jerry Kotler and Rabbi Baruch Runds, director of Jewish Education of Toledo, will speak on "Hasidic Lore and Music" at Chabad House, 715 Hill. Event begins at 7:30 p.m., and they'll be re- freshments and a slide and sound show. There's no charge, so y'all come, heah? ... Have a nice day! 0 Johnny's John You'd think he'd be flushed with apprecia- tion, but "Tonight Show" star Johnny Carson doesn't exactly think a Michigan firm's "Here's Johnny" line of portable toilets is a good idea. In fact, attorneys for Carson have filed a 1.1' million dollar lawsuit against Earl Braxton of Utica, whose outhouse firm tried to capitalize on the phrase used each night when Ed McMahon introduces Carson to a television audience. At- torneys contend that Carson had suffered em- barrassment from the toilet exposure, and that it was "disparaging" for the entertainer's cloth- ing company, Johnny Carson Apparel, Inc. Brax- ton, who vows to fight the suit, said that Car- son should be glad his name was associated with the portable toilets. Carson should be able to get at least one good monologue out of this, anyway. On the inside. .* .:. Are we a republic or a democracy? Michael Beckman examines this question on the Edit Page ..Our friends from Arts have prepared for you next week's Happenings ,.. and Patrick Rode has the scoop on the Blue Wrestlers' match with pow- Rape suspect ca ght in Miss. _......- By LAURIE YOUNG A 26-year-old man has been arrested in Mississippi and charged with one of the muggings which took place during a rash of 17 assaults on local women in two months last semester. Robert Finklea, a native of Mississippi; was charged only with a Jan. 2 rape, which Police Chief Walter Krasny said was not re- lated to the recent rash. KRASNY WOULD NOT link Finklea to the other 16 assaults - including three rapes and one attempted rape - but speculated that they "could be connected." Descriptions given of the assailant are similar to Finklea's, Krasny said. Finklea was arrested in Pascagoula, Miss. on Jan. 12 by local police acting on an unarmed robbery warrant sworn out in Ann Arbor on Jan. 7. FINKLEA AGREED to a waiver of extradition in Mississippi and Ann Arbor police returned him here last Wednesday. Finklea, who is being held on $120,000 bond, apparently left Ann Arbor shortly after the Jan. 2 rape, Krasny said. Howard Biggs, the Pascagoula arresting officer, said was apprehended in a Pascagoula shipyard, where he h work on Jan. 10. He was staying in motel-like temporary provided by the shipyard, he added. FINKLEA WAS ARRESTED for an Oct. 13 unarmed of a woman near South University and Oxford Streets. TI was grabbed from behind as she carried two bags ofg The assailant allegedly tried to drag the woman across t but fled wi~h the bags when two men approached. Finklea was a'so charged with the rape of a local w knife-point on Jan. 2. The rape occurred in the 2500 Emerald Avenue. Biggs reported Lhat Finklea served time in a Missis eral penitentiary for armed robbery until September, 1976 released after five years of a 15-year term. BIGGS SAID familiarity with Miss. was one possib why Finklea would have returned to the state in January. J Finklea ad begun housing robbery he victim groceries. he street woman at block of sippi fed- . He was le reason Biggs added that Finklea, who had relatives in Ann Arbor, came here directly upon his release from prison. The assailant in last term's rapes and assaul s has been de- scribed as a black man of medium build and medium complexion with a mustache. ACCORDING TO court records, Finklea is black, S'11", and weighs 171 pounds. He has a medium build and medium complex- ion, black hair, a mustache,. and a goatee. He has a tattoo on his right arm and his forehead. Police have checked hundreds of leads in the two-month search for the person or persons responsible for the assaults. Attacks have included a mugging in front of University Pres- ident Robben Fleming's South University residence and various slashings in the Kingsley Street area. Two rapes of -Oxford Hous- ing residents occurred in the Oxford 'area and a 74-year-old wo- man, robbed of less than $10 in a parking lot, was the victim of an unsuccessful rape attempt. raft Carter's action favored l ,ocall By EILEEN DALEY A spokesman for Ann Arbor's American Legion post said they would fly their flag at half mast, but overall campus reaction to President Carter's pardon of Vietnam era draft evaders was favorable. George Harms, a member of the American Legion's national public relations commission, said yesterday, "To us it's a day of mourning, not a day of cele- bration. I'm sure you'll see our flag at half mast tomorrow. We raise our flags, we don't burn them." "IT'S A CRYING shame for people who took the responsibil- ity and served. What are you go- ing to say to the parents of these kids who went and were killed or wounded?" he asked. But a fellow Legionnaire, Ray- mond Chauncey of the Ypsilanti post. disagreed with Harms. "I think (the pardon) is something Ford should have done a long time ago. It's the best thing Car- tercolild have done. I'm glad he stuck to his campaign promise.," Another Vietnam veteran, for- mer MSA president Calvin Lu- ker, said he thought the pardon was not sufficient in scope. "It's a start, but only a start," he said, "There is an unknown number of people who decided to obey federal law and allowed themselves to be drafted, who later in good conscience, could not allow themselves to support the U.S. military and were kicked out or dishonorably dis- charged." LUKER BLASTED Carter's pardon for not taking into ac- count the people who disobeyed military law because "It seems +o snggest to me that military law is more sacred and more s-creme than federal law." Barbara Fuller. dieector of the Interfaith Council in Ann Arbor echoed Luker's' dissatisfaction with the pardon. She said there were 800,000 men with dishon- orable discharges who are han- dicapned in the job market be- See LOCAL, Page 2 Carter orders desertion study From Wire Service Reports WASHINGTON-President Carter yesterday uncon- ditionally pardoned Vietnam era draft evaders and or- dered the Pentagon to study the possibility of pardon- ing deserters, too. Press Secretary Jody Powell, in announcing Car ter's first executive order - which became effective at 9:30 a.m. yesterday - estimated that "up to hundreds of thousands" of draft. resisters might be affected by the order. The only exceptions are a "very few" whose actions involved force or violence, and Selective Ser vice employes who, for in- '=" stance, may have sold draft-exempt status. .- i... Draft evaders who are now o erseas may return home un- der Carter's action. AP Photo DRAFT EVADER STEVE GROSSMAN of Chicago works on the next edition of Amex-Canada in Toronto after hearing of President Carter's pa rdon. Amex-Canada is a publication for draft dodgers in Canada. eserterscallpardon'face THOSE WHO HAVE become citizens of another, country can come home to visit families "without fear of prosecution," but if they wish to regain Am- erican citizenship they will have to apply under the same terms and conditions as any other alien, Powell said. A Pentagon official concern- ed with former President Ford's conditional clemency program, said that as of last November 1 there were 10.643 draft viola- tors. But that figure could in- crease greatly if the govern- ment is able to identify large numbers of unknown men be- lieved to have failed to reg- ister for the draft. Carter said he had expected no criticism of his pardon. He said he had decided on today's action two years ago, "and I approved the executive order two weeks ago." Nevertheless, the pardon has triggered sharp criticism from veterans groups and some members of Congress who said it would make future military mobilization more diffi- cult, as well as by groups who protested thatathe pardon did not extend far enough. T. COOPER HOLT, executive director of the VFW's Washing- ton office, said: "This is prob- ably one of the saddest days in the history of our country, even surpassing the Watergate days. President Carter will have to accept the responsibility of See CARTER, Page 2 GOLDWATER: 'The most disgraceful thing a president'' ever done.' By AP and Reuter t TORONTO -Spokespersons for Vietnam War resisters and deserters here and in Stockholm rejected President Carter's selective pardon to draft dodgers as a "farce" and called for uncon- ditional amnesty yesterday. Jack Calho-n, co-editor of Amex-Canada, a Toronto-based magazine for Americans living in exile in Canada, said the pardon was unaccept- able because it excluded deserters, draft evaders who committed vio'ent acts to protest the war and about 203 000 who were dismissed from the armed forces with less-than-honorable discharges. MICHAEL POWERS, one of more than 1,000 Americans who deserted or otherwise tried to avoid military service by 'fleeing to Swenden after 1967, said in a statement: "Our demands, supported by a large seg- ment of the American people, are for an un- conditional general amnesty for all draft eva- ders, deserters and 800,000 veterans dishonor- ably discharged from the armed forces. "These people are still being denied their rights in employment, medical care and edu- cation. Carter's so-called amnesty is an insuly to the millions of Americans who by their acts expressed opposition to America's offensive war against the people of Indochina." See EXILED, Page 2 KENNEDY 'A major, impressive and compassionate step.' Abortion in Italy on the brink of approval R 0 M E - (P) --'The Italian Chamber of Deputies approved one of Western Europe's most liberal abortion laws yesterday, despite Christian Democrat at- tempts to block the measure and Vatican protests that it was the product of "demagog- ic pressures." The proposal gives women the final choice on abortion xih n+- - F ++ ne v nlo n in the Italian parliament for years. One factor in the fall of the 'government last year was a coalition of Christian Demo- crats and Neo-fascists to block liberalization moves. The bal- ance of power shifted to the left in last June's national elec- tions, with the Communists gaining 49 seats to hold 228 out of the 630 total in the chamber. The kev nassage of the new Mum's the wor on C p: p s ht of, presidenti*al papers By PATTI MONTEMURRI Nine vans loaded with sealed crates containing 19 mil- lion pages of Gerald Ford's papers and memorabilia, ar- rived without fanfare on campus late Thursday under heavy guard. The materials are for the Ford Presidential Library to be built on North Campus. Tempo'rarily stored in warehouse . r~nn hoh,,. tha L? vin m1.. r n n a_e nil n rr