FORD VETO See Editorial Page I~r ztta :43 titis HEAVENLY High-68 Low-47 See Today for details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVII, No. 20 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, October 1, 1976 Ten Cents Ten Pages I I jjijf-- ifYCAJSEE NEWS HAPCALL tDAIY A better way Two elderly mountain men from way down south in Cottuh country say you can't trust the moon anymore for predicting weather now that the astronauts have been messing with it. "I used to rely on the moon pretty good, but they done knock- ed some chunks out of it and they might even have parked some junk cars on it," professes Paul Westmoreland, a 78 year-old native of the north Georgia mountains. Anyway, Westmoreland predicts a "doozy" of a winter down in Georgia while 62 year-old Harley Brady says the moon has been a problem ever since the astronauts made off with chunks, presumably moon-rocks, for scien- tific scrutiny. The way the Daily has been predict- ing Ann Arbor's weather as of late, maybe we'll give these two gents a call. Kepone The company accused of contaminating the James River in Virginia by dumping the toxic insecticide Kepone into a sewer system was ac- quitted yesterday by a federal judge. U. S. District Court Judge Robert Merhige dismissed all charges against the Allied Chemical Co. due to insufficient evidence to sustain a guilty verdict. Allied was ac- quitted of nine counts of aiding and abetting Life Science Products, a Kepone manufacturer, in dumping the dangerous chemical from its plant into the Hopewell, Va. sewer system and one count of conspiring with Life Science to perpetu- ate the pollution. Life Science Products was closed by the state last year after many of its employes became ill with Kepone poisoning. Kepone was later found in marine life in the James River and the Chesapeake Bay. Happenings ... . . . will satisfy your hunger pangs today. There's a noon luncheon with two members of the U.S.-China Peoples' Friendship Association at Guild House, 802 Monroe. For 50c, you get home- made soup and sandwiches . . . You can wash all that down at 3:30 by attending the Coffee Hour at the International Center, 603 E. Madison. Coffee will be brewing until 5 . . . If soup, sandwiches and coffee isn't enough for you, how about a Senega- lese dinner at 6? Well, you can sample traditional Senegalese fare for $1.75, at Guild House. Reser- vations are necessary, so call 662-5189 for any information. By the way, both the noon luncheon and the Senegalese dinner are sponsored by the Guild House Campus Ministry . .. Now that you're sufficiently stuffed, there's nothing better after a meal than Tyagi Ji, the cosmic transmitter. He'll be doing his thing at the Friends Meeting House, 1420 Hill, at 7. Admission free . . . At 8, the U.S.- China Peoples' Friendship Association and China Study Club are sponsoring a lecture by Susan War- ren, an expert on China, in celebration of the 27th anniversary of the founding of the Peoples Repub- lic of China. Books, magazines, posters and art prints will be on sale before Warren's talk in the Henderson Room of the Michigan League . . . To- day is the last day to register for interviews for LSA College Committees. Sign up is in Room 4001 of the Union . . And, finally, applications will be available today for scholarships provided by the Center for Continuing Education of Women (CEW). You can pick them up at CEW headquar- ters, 330 Thompson ... Have a nice day! 0 The mnail goes throttgh That little Postal Service jingle about rain, hail and gloom of night not being enough to stop deliv- ery of the mail doesn't say anything about earth- quakes, which presumably lets them off the hook for 11 undelivered letters found in Anchorage, Alaska recently. They were postmarked March 27, 1964 -- the day the city was hit by a devastating quake - and were found in dismantled mail cases. Two of the communiques were apparently per- sotnal, including one sent to a woman in Brooklyn. Quipped the Anchorage Postmaster, Robert Opin- sky: "Let's hope the letter from the Anchorage boy to the Brooklyn girl didn't contain a proposal of marriage." la ha ha. Ott the inside.. Jon Pansius spoofs Jimmy Carter on the Editorial Page . . . Arts Page offers a preview of the Benny Goodman Concert by Loran Walker . . . and Sports has some inside scoop on the Wolver- ' uI -GEO talks halt; strike looms Walk-out depends on r _ membership mood By SUSAN ADES Six months of contract negotiations between the Graduate Employe Organization (GEO) and the Univer- sity Administration collapsed yesterday leaving Univer- sity bargainers dead in their tracks and union leaders talking strike. It is obvious that the administration is not going to respond to anything less than action," said GEO bar- gainer Barbara Weinstein after the fifth unproductive mediation session. LAST TUESDAY, GEO presented a set of revised pro- posals which the University yesterday emphatically re- jected, an action Weinstein la- beled "the last straw." "On most issues they only introduced some new language so that now we're even further apart than we were before mediation," explained Chief University bargainer John For- syth. "We're just not at all in the same ballpark - no where even close to being agreement and our imagination has run out," he added. Meanwhile, imaginations are stirring in the GEO office and although discussion sometimes turns to recourses such as bind- ing arbitration and fact find- ing, strike talk is favored. The alternatives will not come un- der membership scrutiny until the actualcontract negotiation deadline, Oct. 5th. STILL, despite bogged-down talks and reverberations of the 1975 GEO strike, many Uni- versity administrators are not ready to throw up their hands. "I think GEO has a little way to go yet and we look forward to a settlement," commented Vice President for Academic Affairs, Frank Rhodes who is not anticipating a strike. He suggested "really getting down to baraaining," as a solution to the problem. However, University Presi- dent Robben Fleming too be- See WALK-OUT, Page 6 Life on Mars is unlikely PASADENA, Calif. (AP) - The Viking mission's chances of find- ing life on Mars were dealt a blow yesterday when latest data from the Viking 2 robot showed no sign of organic material in the Martian soil. Life as we know it is not pos- sible without organics -. tiny chains of carbon atoms -- and neither of the Viking landers have found organic matter in their probes of Mars' red soil. GENTRY LEE, director of the mission's science analysis, said there was still the possibility of life on Mars but admitted that it was difficult to "explain no organics." Scientists said Viking 2 will conduct furtherdsearches for organics - including a dig un- der a Martian rock -- but there was not much hope here at Jet See SCIENTISTS, Page 10 Daily Photo by ALAN BILINSKY Impasse The University and GEO are not the only forces on campus waging a tug-of-war these days. Yesterday, residents of Mark- ley's third and fourth floor Reeves went at it, with fourth floor (shown above) eventually emerging victorious. No word on a rematch. (ALLS GOLF ' TRIPS PROPER Ford WASHINGTON U)-President Ford declared yesterday that "no money ever went to me personally" from past political campaigns, and said his con- science is clear in connection with past campaign finances and golf outings with corpora- tion officials. In an abruptly convened Oval Office news conference, the President said he is confident two federal investigations now in progress will show he is "free of any allegations" of impro- 'priety in handling campaign finances and golfing with busi- ness executives. AT ONE POINT the President said flatly that congressional business had never been dis- cussed with corporate officials on the golf course. Later he cor- rected himself, saying he may have discussed official matters "in a casual way." But he added that none of the executives ever sought any special favors from him. With the two probes under way in the midst of the election campaign, Ford told reporters he thinks "it is vitally important that any aspect of either one of these matters be fully resolved as quickly as possible." denies Campaigning in Boston, Demo- cratic challenger Jimmy Carter said he accepted Ford's state- ments at face value. "Does that end it?" Carter was asked. "As far as I'm concerned it does," he replied. CARTER AND his running mate, Sen. Walter Mondale, had begun to show interest in the investigations as a campaign misconduct issue in recent days, with Carter saying on Wednesday that Ford should submit himself to "tough cross-examination" by reporters. Ford expressed "full confi- dence in the integrity" of Water- gate special prosecutor Charles Ruff, whose office is studying Republican party financial rec- ords from Ford's home district in Kent County, Mich., reported- ly to determine whether Ford converted contributions from maritime unions to his own use or to any other illegal purpose while a member of the House. A separate inquiry is under way by the Securities and Ex- change Commission (SEC) into corporate entertainment of fed- eral officials, including Ford. See FORD, Page 10 U.S. hits Russia on S. Africa UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (A) - Secretary of State Henry Kissinger declared yesterday that southern Africa is on a course toward peace and racial justice but outside powers "fuel- ing the flames of war and racial hatred" could "doom opportuni- ties that might never return." Kissinger, making his annual speech before the U.N. General Assembly, peppered the review of world affairs with thrusts at the Soviet Union. HE SAID the United States is disturbed by the continuing ac- cumulation of Russian arms and, in an obvious reference to Angola, "by recent instances of military intervention to tip the scales in local conflicts in dis- tant continents." The future of mankind re- quires coexistence by the super- powers, Kissinger said, and re- straint must be reciprocal and global - "There can be no selective detente." Besides the evident irritation with Moscow, he jabbed at the Third World for bloc voting and a widespread tendency "to come here for battle rather than nego- tiation." If these trends persist, Kissinger said, "the hope for See U.S., Page 10 Congress reverses social welfare veto By AP and Reuter WASHINGTON - Congress yesterday easily overrode President Ford's veto of a bill providing 56.6 billion dollars in funds for health, education and other social welfare programs. The bill now becomes law over the President's objections that it was inflationary. It was only the 12th time in the past two years that the Democratic-controlled Congress has been able to upset a veto by President Ford. CONGRESSIONAL ACTION on the measure was completed when the Senate voted 67 to 15 to override. A few hours earlier, the House of Representatives voted 312-93 for the bill. Earlier, Congress passed a compromise revenue-sharing meas- ure, an action which should clear the way for adjournment for the year today. Ford issued a statement saying passage of the revenue sharing bill was "a most significant accomplishment," although, he said, it "is not all that I and the mayors, county executives and governors had hoped for." "GENERAL REVENUE SHARING has proven to be a triumph of the conviction that state, county, city and local government can be far more responsive and flexible in serving citizens than See CONGRESS, Page 10 Kissinger . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ......... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ............ S. ...~.. ..* .. .~.* * .* . ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .*..* ..*..........* Esch, Riegli Esch makes appeal for centrist support By JIM TOBIN Marvin Esch has spent ten years in Congress keeping rea- sonably happy the strange mix of liberal and conservative voters that comprise his 2nd Congressional District. Representing both the conservatives of Livonia and the liberals of Ann Arbor can- not be easy, but Esch has managed since 1966 to tailor his record into a package that can suit almost anybody. But now he is the Republican nominee for the U.S. Senate, and he is running against a popular Democrat, Donald Riegle of Flint. No longer can Esch afford to be all things to all peo- ple, for he must solidify the state's Republican constituency and , to rnneal to Michipon indenendents - a group widely con- e" La n it on te r. Riegle appea to : . ~ ...... line progressive voters By PHILLIP BOKOVOY Throughout his year-and-a-half quest for retiring Senator Philip Hart's seat, Flint Congressman Don Riegle has attempted to style himself as a capable, visionary, yet pragmatic legislator. He says his ten-year stint in the U. S. House of Representa- tives has prepared him to meet the greater responsibilities of the Senate, where he plans to make Congressional reform and the economic recovery of the Great Lakes states his highest priority. But Riegle promises more than just the replacement of septuagen- arian committee chairmen. "THERE'S a multitude of things that have to go on essentially simultaneously. First of all there's a problem-solving role in terms ofnninslnn itanainnlic P Tar, nn r vnmcrn,. _.____,.____.......... ta. ....... ::t