SUNDAY MAGAZINE See Inside LL L ,t ~~ :43 it DITTO Hiigh--9 Low--4 See Today for details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVII, No. 87 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, January 16, 1977 Ten Cents Eight Pages .--- h-' rYWSEE NE APPECALLO DAJLY' Delhey denies Washtenaw County Prosecutor William Delhey yesterday denied charges that he withheld infor- mation that could have exonerated convicted mur- derer John Norman Collins. Collins, who is serv- ing a life sentence for the 1968 murder of East- ern Michigan University freshwoman Karen Sue Beineman, also said in an interview this week that police pressured witnesses to give testimony against him. "If we had withheld evidence," said Delhey, "I'm sure it would have been brought up during the lengthy appeals process." It was Delhey who prosecuted Collins and obtained his August 1971 conviction. Happenings ... .Begin at 3 today with this week's Gay Dis- cussion at Canterbury House, on the corner of Catherine and Division. The topic is "The Nature of Love" . . . At 7, the Church of the Good Shep- herd, 2145 Independence, holds a special service celebrating the "Living Spirit of Martin Luther King, Jr. . . . The Baha'i Association sponsors a World Religion Day Celebration at 7 in the Inter- national Center, 603 E. Madison . . . Faye Dukes speaks on "Head Trips and Human Potential Movements: An Analytical Survey," 7:30 at the Wesley Foundation, at the corner of State and Huron . . . On Monday, anthropologist Vern Car- roll speaks on "The Natural History of the Con- cept of Culture," at 4 in Rackham's East Con- ference Rm . . . The A Squares Dance Club pre- sents free beginning lessons at 7 in the Assem- bly Rm. of the Union. No partner is necessary . . . Exiled Soviet dissident Andrei Amalrik speaks on Detente and the Soviet Dissident Movement," at 7 in the Rackham Aud...... Close calls An off-duty Beverly Hills, Calif. police officer escaped death Friday night from a gun that mis- fired five times while pointed at his face, au- thorities said. The 48 - year - old officer, whose name was not released, has been off duty with a disability and wears a back and neck brace in addition to walking with a cane. After visiting the police station Friday night, the officer walk- ed out to, his car. As he entered the vehicle, two men emerged from a nearby clump of bushes, opened the passenger door, pointed a gun in his face and pulled the trigger five times. The gun misfired and the officer opened his door and rolled out to the ground as the sixth shot was fired. The bullet pierced his back brace below the neck, going in one side and out the other. The two men fled, but not before the officer got off six shots, hitting one of the assailants. The officer was not injured. " The Russians are gumming Chewing gum, that old symbol of Western de- cadence, has gone into production in the Soviet Union. The first Soviet-made gum appeared in stores in Armenia and Estonia at the start of the year, and another gum factory will open in Moscow in 1978, a Soviet newspaper said yester- day. The story praised the new gum as "color- fully decorated and good tasting, and good for the human organism." The chewing of "zhevatel- naya ryezinka" - literally translated as chewing rubber - has long been considered an "uncultur- ed" American vice. Customs inspectors have been known to confiscate it, and newspapers have lec- tured about the bad habit. But after an intense battery of tests performed by the All-Union Scien- tific Research Institute of Medical Equipment, the gum was finally certified for chewing. " Argentine anti-semitism The bombing of an empty movie theater featur- ing "Victory at Entebbe" and the robbery of a Jewish-owned bank are apparently part of an anti-Semitic camnaign in Argentina, police sources said yesterday. Both incidents occurred Friday in the city of Cordoba, 450 miles north of Buenos Aires. Police said four men broke into the empty Cinerama movie theater in a shopping arcade at dawn and placed two charges of more than 30 pounds of TNT each. They fled and the bombs exploded, badly damaging the theater and 100 surrounding shops.- Two hours after the blasts, six armed men kidnaped the security chief of the Cordoba Israeli bank from his home, took him to the bank and forced him to let them in- side, where they made off with $100,000. Antais in Author and diarist Anais Nm died in a Los Angeles hospital Friday night, it was announced yesterday. Details were being withheld until rela- tives were notified. The Paris-born Nin wrote criticism, fiction, and essays, but the larger part of her literary reputation was based on her six volumes of diaries. In them, she recounted a life that stretched back to the days of the so-called "Lost Generation" of writers and artists that con- gregated in Paris durine the 1920s and 1930s. On the inside... . . . Tom O'Connell takes a look. at legalized ' eyes BLANCHARD By BRIAN Come February, the University faculty's Sen- ate Assembly will vote on a Civil Liberties Board (CLB) recommendation that the Univer- sity drop two clauses from its job recruitment policy - one barring from campus companies without affirmative action guidelines and anoth- er excluding companies located in foreign coun- tries where the government sanctions discrim- ination. Prof. Brymer Williams, Chairman of the Sen- a e Advisory Committee on University Affairs (SACUA) which has already approved the CLB recommendation, calls the revision a "tidying up" of the 1971 statement on recruitment. ' IF THE REVISION is approved, people in the eased University Placement Offices generally recruitment on campus will not change ciably. The new provision would demand an a tive action program only of those compan quired to instate one by federal law. In addition, the section barring recru by multinational companies in coun'ries discrimination is legally enforced on the b race, color, creed. sex, religion or nation gin." would be dropped from the present "WE WANT IT (the policy) to be as o possible" explains Dr. Bruce Friedman, man of the CLB. "We can't judge degrees of moral culp The discrimination sta ement was origina recruitment agree, tended against South Africa, but it'.s unworkable," CLE and S appre- he added. mit some ( Director of the Engineering Placement John be discrimi ffirma- Young claims the present policy is impossible principles o ies re- to enforce and called the clause on foreign gov- Al hought ernment discrimination "a laughingstock." anti-discrim uitment ed, the prop "where FRIEDMAN also defends the new guidelines by ance proce asis of citing results of last year's student referendum by any cor ial ori- on Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and Nation- vestigated. policy. al Security Agency (NSA) campus recruitment. In that advisory vo'e, the students supported the MOST PL pen as right of the intelligence organizations to recruit taking the chair- at the Universiy. Friedman interprets the results 'This re as an affirma ion of free speech. re ative to ability. The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) ally in- printed a statement in 1968 which supports the ACUA stand: ". . . a decision to ad- companies) and exclude others would natory and an incursion into the basic of academic freedom." the mandator affirmative action and ination stipulations may be eliminat- posal, if approved, will include a griev- dure whereby alleged discrimination mpany, while on campus, will be in LACEMENT office administrators are proposed changes without worry. evision will mean no major change industry" predicts Jim Klee, director See 'U', Page 7 rules Judge denies plea b,y to execution foes save Gilmore From Wire Service Reports POINT OF THE MOUN- TAIN, Utah - Capital punishment oppo- nents said yesterday it ap- peared unlikely they could stop convicted killer Gary Mark Gilmore's execution by firing squad at sunrise tomorrow. "Obviously we've used our best shots," said Shir- ley Pedler, director of the local American Civil Liber- ties Union (ACLU) affill- ate. ATTEMPTS BY the ACLU and n*',"rs to have Gilmore's ex '' staved by state and feder-1 'rirts failed on Fri- day. Althoigh unlikely, a reprieve remained conceivable if law- years could find a judge willing to grant it. David Lewis, chief justice of the 10th U. S. Circuit Court of Apneals, upheld a decision yes- terday of federal Judge Aldon Anderson who had rejected ar- guments Friday that Gilmore's execution would hurt others on death row. It was the fifth stay effort in the last two days. Attorneys representing other death row inmates had sought EDITOR'S NOTE The state-ordered execution of convicted murderer Gary Gilmore is an act of barbar- ism and at dawn tomorrow, the appallina precedent will be set. See Editorial, Page 2. a stay of execution for Gil- more. M E A N W H I L E, Attor- ney Gilbert Athay indicated that he would seek a stay from U. S. Supreme Court Justice Byron White on today. Attorneys for the ACLU filed a taxpayers suit in Third Dis- trict Court asserting the exec- ution was a wrongful ;use of public money. Judge Dean Conder said he lacked jurisdic- tion tbecause Gilmoredwas convicted in another district court, and a state supreme court justice also declined to intervene. Then the ACLU lawyers souight a stay from Gov. Scot'. Matheson, but the newly-elect- See JUDGE, Page 2 Daily Photo by ANDY FREEBERG Dizzy Dazzles Dizzy Gillespie, one of the inventors of 40's b op jazz, blows his horn before fans Friday night in the Michigan' League Ballroom. The sixty- year-old trumpet player, who calls himself a "living legend," also staged a jazz clinic for lo cal musicians and music buffs yesterday. 'Basically, somebody as gotoIe fi WASHINGTON (UPI) - Gary Gilmore's execution by a Utah firing squad tomorrow wiil end a 10-year moratorium on capital punishment in the United States. Merely ending the moratorium is worrisome for the approxi- mately 350 persons on death rows in 20 states, many of whom are too young to remember the decades when executions were almost routine. FOR THEM, Gilmore's highly publicized dea h at the hands of government may reduce some of the typical jailhouse optimism about "beating the chair' and prove that legal execution once again is a reality. An important question likely to be resolved by Gilmore's exe- cution and those which follow is how many of the nearly two-thirds of Americans whom polls show favor capital punishment might change their minds once the practice is resumed. "We're dealing wi h a potent psychological force now - the first execution in 10 years - and I don't know which way people will think," laid Deborah Levy, who lobbies against death penalty See BASICALLY, Page 2 CHARGED WITH MISUSE OF GOVT. DOCUMENTS: Sorensen nomination in trouble By AP and UP] The nomination of Theodore Sorensen to be head of the Cen- tral Intelligence Agency ap- peared yesterday to be running into serious and possibly fatal trouble. Sorensen called "totally false" allegations of impropriety stem- ming from a newspaper report that he took secret documents as his own, used them for a book before donating them to the government for a tax de- duction and leaked classified material to reporters. SORENSEN, in a statement read by his law partner, Mark Alcott, said he talked yesterday with President-elect Carter, who "reaffirmed his strong deter- mination that I serve as director of central intelligence and I ex- pect to do so." Earlier, Senate majority lead- er Robert Byrd- said without elaborating that he believes Sor, ensen's chances of confirmation are "questionable," and Sen. Strom Thurmond, (R-S.C.), said his name should be withdrawn. Alcott, asked whether Soren- sen would withdraw, said, "Ab- solutely not." SORENSEN goes before Sen. Daniel Inouye's intelligence committee for confirmation hearngs tomorrow. Suspect confesses murderiIng reporter; two others arrested By Al and UPI PHOENIX, Ariz. - A man accused of killing investigative reporter Don Bolles pleaded guilty to a reduced charge of second-degree murder yesterday, three hours after two other men were arrested and charged with murder and conspir- acy in the case. John Adamson admitted to Pima County Su- perior Court Judge Ben Birdsall in Tucson that he placed a bomb under Bolles' car in a mid- town Phoenix hotel parking lot last June 2. THE BOMB exploded as Bolles drove from the hotel. and the reporter died in a Phoenix hospital 11 days later. Adamson originally pleaded guilty and was tried in Phoenix, but a mistrial was declared because of massive publicity surrounding the case. A new trial was begun in Tucsan, and jury se- lection was under way when Adamson pleaded guilty to the reduced charge in exchange for in- Adamson said he would be paid $50,000 for the three killings, according to Sellers' affidavit. Adamson confessed as part of a plea bargain- ing agreement in which he would be sentenced to 20 years and eight months in prison under the reduced murder charge, and receive state and federal immunity from prosecution in return for testifying about the Bolles killing and other crimes. BIRDSALL SAID he ;would rule Wednesday on whether he would accept the sentencing deal but said he was pleased with the overall plea bar- gaining agreement. No charges were lodged against Marley, who was not available for comment on the affidavit. Authorities refused to comment on Marley's al- leged involvement in the case or to say whether any charges were planned. Adamson reportedly called Bolles, who was working on articles exposing fraudulent land The main trouble appeared to' be the affidavit Sorensen gave duing the 1972 Pentagon Pa- pers trial of Daniel Ellsberg on the defendant's behalf, appar- ently trying to show that re- leasing some classified papers should not have been a crime. The affidavit was circulated to committee members, and a re- port of its contents - by the Long Island newspaper, News- day - came on top of rumblings of discontent about Sorensen on other grounds, namely his lack of intelligence experience, his ties to the Kennedy family and his conscientious objector status. IN THE affidavit, the news- paner said, Sorensen admitted that: "He took seven cartons of classified material from White Jlowse files and later, without nermission. used the informa- tion to write a book about Pres- idet Kennedy. "He received a tax break for donaing the classified material as his own oroperty to the Na- tin,'al Archives. "He reneatedly leaked ciase- fied information to the n-ws media and used secret informa- tion to write sna-hes when he Sprvir1 at the White Ho;se. "ANY ('H AR(E that I have P "tnd imnrorsnerly with respect to c1nsifiod information or White -hose napers is totally false." Sor--sen said in his statement. "My affidavit, which is tie source of the current cf ntrrrirsy has been a matter of n-hlic record and knowledge }Z