FRANCE'S BLUNDER See Editorial Page Y Sir&14&U ,A6F ':43 a t " t CHILLS ! High - 19° Low -8° See Today for details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVI I, No. 84 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, January 13, 1977 Ten Cents Ei ght Pages t !'U SE - S NAE CAL -DNLY Professor Ford Rumors that the University hasn't seen the last of alumnus Gerald Ford continue to circulate Washington. Newsweek magazine reports in its current issue that the lame duck President has included our campus on a list of a dozen schools he will grace sometime after leaving the capital,' lecturing as a visiting professor of political sci- ence for a week or so. Ford has already dis- cussed his plans with University President Rob- ben Fleming, and may announce his academic career a week from today, the day he loses his current job. Newsweek said Ford intends to spend about three monthe-a year on the college lecture circuit, plus another twelve weeks annually mak- ing speeches. " Happenings. .. "Tapestry", a feminist counseling collective, offers a noon luncheon at Guild House (822 Mon- roe) with soup and sandwiches . .. The Pendleton Arts Center will feature Robert Logsdon and Michael Howard in a demonstration of painting and sculpture entitled "The Language of Color and Form" at noon on the second floor of the Union . . . the Inter-varsity Christian Fellowship meets at 7:30 p.m. in the League . . . the Michi- gan Men's Glee Club holds a mass meeting at 9 p,m. in MLB Aud. 3 . . .and there's a reunion were gracing. Then - President Richard Nixon threatened by investigations by Archibald Cox, ordered Attorney General Elliot Richardson to fire the special Watergate prosecutor in wht be- came known as "The Saturday Night Massacre". Richardson, refused and submitted his resignation, but Nixon pled with the Cabinet member to& stay in office, at least until the "emergency" with the Soviets had passed. Richardson, who con firmed this new account of the drama in an inter- view this week said he believes Nixon deliberate- ly exaggerated dangers of a U.S.-Soviet military confrontation "to shake my resolve" to quit. He related that the meeting that night with Nixon was low-keyed but tens, with a lot left unsaid. Told by his boss the resignation would harm "the national interest", Richardson says he renlied: "You, Mr. President, should have thought of that before." Like a Rolite Stone Rock star Keith Richard was conirted of non- sessg cocaine and find 750 nonds dra.ain in Aylesbury, England vestordav. The Rolli r Stones gnitarist, who had pleaded not gnilt, was accus- ed of hating coke in a the atnighed to a silxer necklace found i his Bentley limo"sine after an accident last May. Richard maintained the neck- lace did not belong to him, and that a small tan- tity of LSD is a piece of naner in his pocket could have been put there by a fan. He was cleared of the LSD charge, arguing that he would have dumped the evidence if he'd known it was there. Payien t in po k We think this item says a lot about government, justice and taxes: ideed, this is a story of Amern - c' itself. Richard Panza, a farmer in Pennsylvan- ia's Harmar Township, has run up a $133 bill in wage taxes, fines for the delinquent account and court costs since 1972, but has refused to pay what he believes is an unconstitutional tax. Too poor to settle the bill when township officials threat- ened him with 30 days in jail, Panza offered them Sarah-his pig-instead. District Magistrate Ar- thur Sabulsky, however, made it clear that "we aren't taking' payments in pigs" and threw the farmer in the pokey. Panza's dispute with the township erupted last September when he walked into a local government meeting wearing cover- alls and a straw hat with the terrified, squealing Sarah under his arm. Panza was forcibly remov- ed. "That pig was squealing so loud I couldn't think," grumbled one attendant. On the inside * Sports whiz Ernie Dunbar has a preview of the upcoming track season . . : the Editorial Page offers some comments from MSA member Mike Taylor . . . and the -Arts Page has a story on the year's nominations for the Grammy Awards. Ford tells of stronger America NOWN r. . .5 ::. .::.ter::. . :... -::::: "::::::. .. .. :.:... . . . . . . . . ....:::i>3:-. . . . . . . . . . Daily Photo by PAULiNE LUBENS ..ad.lppn University sophomore Gary Shifflet takes a dvantage of yesterday's glacial conditions to artake in a ittle frozen frisbee playing at Burns Park.4 M~msumasisessmmmassiummaas:mim~isMWM~iamamaisiMaamsaasazmaK}}g Congress hears President bid wonderful co By AP and Reuter WASHINGTON - President Ford told Congress last night that he leaves to Jimmy Carter a better world and a stronger America than he found, then bade his farewell with a.prayer for "this wonderful country," its people and its leaders. "Taken in sum, I can report that the State of the Union is good,", he said. IN EIGHT DAYS it will end, and the Congress assembled 'Taken in sum, I can report that the State of the Union is good.' - President Ford in joint session applauded the again. The applause sounded long and loud as Ford entered the House chamber in which he served forh25 years. It echoed again, as he wished to Demo- crat Carter "the very best in all that is good for our coun- try." Carter, who had planned to watch the speech on television, had no immediate reaction to Ford's statements. Congress reacts to Ford's address. See s'ory, page 2. THE OVATION when Ford ap- peared lasted 2 minutes and 40 seconds and his 45-minute, nationally televised address was interrupted by applause 25 times. Betty Ford, accompanied by son Jack and daughter Su- san, also drew a standing ova- tion when she took her place in the visitors' gallery. See FORD, Page 2 departing President again andW Teng restored to power in, China, rumors claim HONG KONG (AP) Teng Hsiao-ping has been restored to favor and named premier of the Chinese government, a Hong Kong Chinese language newspa- per reported today. It quoted unconfirmed reports cir- culating at Canton, the nearby metropolis of south China. The Ming Pao, politically independent, quoted an arriving traveler from Canton as saying that a Com- munist official reported that Teng's appointment was, contained in "an internal document" from Peking and that Teng has already started his duties as premier. THE NEWSPAPER said the traveler reported that an official announcement of the appointment will be made late this month. The paper, respected for its China coverage, said the report could not be confirmed. DAOUD'S RELEASE PROTESTED: Israeli anger mounts By AP and Renter TEL AVIV, Israel - Israelis angered by France's release of a suspected Palestinian terrorist massed outside the French em- bassy yesterday, hurled eggs, denounced the French president and demanded that France's ambassador be thrown out of Israel. Israeli television said Foreign Minister Yigal Allon was to meet his top advisers today to discuss fur her steps in response to Tuesday's release of the Pal- estinian, Abu Daoud, who was flown to Algeria. Daoud was suspected of plotting the mas- sacre of Israeli athletes at the 1972 Olympic Games in Munich. ISRAEL'S recalled ambassa- dor to France, Mordechai Ga- zit, returned home yesterday. He held discussions at the air- port with Shlomo' Avineri, direc- tor general of the Foreign Min- istry who had returned to Israel two hours earlier from Ro- mania.. And in Washington yesterday, the State Department confirmed Bell By AP and Reuter WASHINGTON - Griffin Bell, the attorney-general designate, promised yesterday to replace Clarence Kelley as FBI direc- tor "before too long." Testifying at the second day of his confirmation hearing be- fore the Senate Judiciary Com- mittee, Bell signalled for the first time that the Carter ad- ministration has decided to let Kelley go. BELL ALSO pledged that as attorney general, he will not authorize electronic surveillance against American citizens with- out court warrants. That would carry the current 'Justice De- partment policy a step further toward protection of individual rights. Bell, an Atlanta lawyer and former federal appeals judge, also said he will personally go into courts to urge judges to impose prison sentences against roaxEF- convicted price fixers. Bell again was questioned closely about his role in the school desegregation turmoil in the late 1950s in his native Georgia, where he was counsel to then Gov. Ernest Vandiver. MEANWHILE, a black civil rights leader accused the Sen- ate Judiary Committee yes- terday of kid-glove treatment in its questioning of Bell, and said it .would be a tragedy if he were confirmed as Attorney General in the incoming Carter administration. In an impassioned attack on Bell's civil rights record, Clar- ence Mitchell, an official of the National Association for the Ad- vancement of Colored People (NAACP), declared, "the Pres- BIls Ke y that it has formally told France of its dismay over the release of Daoud. State Department spokesman Robert Funseth did not disclose the content of a U.S. note hand- ed to French diplomats here, but he said it contained the same U.S. feelings expressed publicly Tuesday. FOLLOWING Daoud's release Tuesday, the department said it was dismayed over the French action and Secretary of State Henry Kissinger said later in New York: "We are outraged." Outrage in Israel over the French action was certain 'to heighten with reports yesterday from Paris that France has sold 200 Mirage F1 fighter-bombers to Egypt. It was widely specu- lated the impending sale was one reason for the French haste in freeing Daoud. Israeli Foreign Ministry offi- cials had no immediate com- ment on reports of the Mirage sale. ALMOST 1,000 noisy demon- strators gathered at the French embassy in Tel Aviv and vilified, French President Valery Gis- card d'Estaing with obscenities and chants of "Giscard terror- ist." Relatives of Munich victims demanded that French Ambas- sador Jean Herly be expelled. Allon planned to nieet today with the widows of the 11 slain athletes. See RELEASE, Page 8 ident of the United States should not make him the watchman of the jewel of freedom." During his hearing, Bell pro- fessed pride in his past record, insisted that he acted as a mod- erating influence to keep pub- lic schools open, and claimed he has become more sensitive to the rights of racial minori- ties in the years since. Bell was a federal judge from 1961 to 1976. SEN. EDWARD Kennedy (D- Mass.), asked Bell about Kel- ly's future. "We'll look forward to having a new director of the FBI be- fore too long," Bell responded.. "I can't give you a time frame, but it would 'not be long." Bell disclosed that in inter- viewing candidates for other jus- tice posts, he also has been con- sidering their qualifications to lead the FBI. FORMER PRESIDENT Rich- ard Nixon appointed Kelley in July 1973 to head the FBI. He has presided over the bureau during a period of major dis- closures about wrongdoing un- der his legendary predecessor, the late J. Edgar Hoover. Though Kelley has brought some major changes to the FBI, he has been criticized for 'fail- ing to move fast enough to cor- rect past abuses. Bell noted that Kelley at 64 is near retirement age and that many ranking bureau officials must leave this year because See BELL, Page 2 %:CS:: "}i::::'r:4'r: ii:"i}:d".:"i::"::ti'}::':: }:':'::".