DEBATE See Editorial Page K: 4 it 43zrn ~Iaiti UNINSPIRING See Today for details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVI i, No. 24 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, October 6, 1976 Ten Cents Eight Pages I FYOU SEE NEWSHAPPEN CAl.L 6ALtY Correction Yesterday's story under the headline "Women, minority agencies to combine" said that the Com- mission for Women and the Commission for Mi- nority Affairs are to be integrated to form a sin- gle affirmative action office. These two commis- sions will however be integrated into the already existing Affirmative Action Office. No plan has been devised yet. The Daily regrets the error. All the news that fits At least four American newspapers and two Lon- don dailies published former Agriculture Secretary Earl Butz' racist comments about blacks, but most papers either paraphrased the comments or did not publish them at all. The American papers us- ing the specific remarks were the Toledo (Ohio) Blade; the Madison (Wis.) Capital Times, The Daily Illini at the University of Illinois and The Daily. Elliott Maraiss, executive editor of the Capi- tal Times justified using the quote. "The first thing the public wants to know is what he said so they can judge if it is racist or obscene. Let the reader make that judgement." The New York Times stepped around the issue in its Saturday editions saying Butz referred to blacks, "as 'coloreds' and described as only wanting three things. The things were listed in order, in obscene, derogatory and scatological terms." The Washington Post and Los Angeles Times used partial quotes. When coming to the questionable language both papers said "First, a tight -- woman's sexual organ; second, loose shoes; and a warm place to -defecate." Happenings .. . are everywhere today, beginning at 4 p.m. with American Culture Prof. Martin Felheim's "Last Lecture" in Aud. A of Angell Hall . . . at 4:30 UM papers in Woman's Studies, a feminist journal, affiliated with the Woman' Studies pro- gram is holding a meeting for new members in 1058 LSA Bldg. . . . at 7 the LSA Student Govern- ment will meet in 3909 of the Union . . . the Resi- dential College lecture series, which was to be held tonight at 7 will be rescheduled for a later date . . . at 7:30 Friends of Hall and Tyner will hold an organizational meeting in the Michigan League Rm. 2 . . . also at 7:30 will be a meeting of the undergrad Econ. Association in Rm. 102 of the Econ. Bldg. . . . close out the day with the Carl Jung discussion group at 8 at Canterbury House, located at the corner of Catherine and Di- vision. The topic will be "Adapting to the World -Ego, Personna and Shadow." s Puff, puff, puff If you're divorced and have a Ph.D., chances are you smoke. The Center for Disease Control said Monday education and marital status have influence on cigarette smoking. The greater a per- son's education the more he or she is likely to smoke, and divorced or separated persons are far more likely to smoke than those who are mar- ried and living together. The survey also found that smoking rates were lowest for people who never attended high school. " Peacelo vers Neutral Switzerland, which has not been in- volved in a war for more than a century, moved yesterday to end the practice of jailing conscien- tious objectors. The National Council, or lower house of parliament, voted 99-50 to approve an amendment to the constitution that would permit alternative civilian service for those whom "con- science forbids any use of violence." The measure still must be approved by the upper house and a national referendum. Last year, more than 400 Swiss served several months in prison for refusing army duty, including those objecting on religious grounds. a Up her alley Julie McDowell, of Des Moines, Iowa, knew there was trouble when she saw a bowling ball bounding down a hill toward the glass door in front of her office. "I saw the ball coming, roll- ing under a truck," said McDowell, 19. "But I had this man on the phone and he just kept talking. l didn't know what to do." So, she did the only thing she could have done. She watched the ball crash through the glass door and thud into her desk. Police said the ball rolled down a hill between Van Ginkel Lanes and Des Moines Technical High School and may have been doing up to ten miles an hour when it crashed into the Hawkeye Cablevision office Thursday. No one knows if it was released intentionally. Oan the inside.. the Editorial page offers Frank Viviano writing on atrocities, politics and economics in Latin Americ . on the Arts nnea Karen Paul Ford, DETROIT (UPI) - Ford Motor Co. and the United Auto Workers (UAW) union announced late yesterday in the 21st day of a strike that agreement had been reached on a new contract that will give the nation's auto workers their first big step towards the four-day work week. The announcement at 10:40 p.m. EDT capped the opening round of auto industry contract bargaining that began in mid- July. Before the strike began at midnight, Sept. 14, Ford had estimated its proposal to the union was worth better than $1 UAW billion over its three-year life. DETAILS OF THE new pact covering 170,000 workers were withheld pending ratification and the UAW now must decide between Chrysler and General Motors as the next company to come to terms. Sources said Ford workers will receive in their new three- year contract 13 more paid days off a year, improvements in the layoff fund that gives idled workers up to 95 per cent of their regular take-home pay and continued cost-of-living benefits that give them better protection against inflation than most industrial workers. Their wage package will in- clude a 3 per cent annual wage increase plus an additional reachJ amount in the first year of th contract that comes to 16 cen an hour for an assembler, th most common job in auto plant THE NO. 2 auto firm's 38,0 retirees reportedly will receiv a single lump sum paymentc $600 during the life of th agreement to help cushion th effect of inflation on the pensions which were frozeni an agreement that runs un 1979. "The agreement with th UAW establishes Ford Mot Co. workers among the be paid and best protected indu trial employes in the country Ford Labor Vice Preside Sidney McKenna said at a bri news conference following a nouncement of the agreemen tentative he First word of the new pact, Ford, w' ts which was close to final in the da he agreement Monday morning car sale s. before a "snag" developed over one-half non-economic items, leaked a year 00 from the second floor negotiat- 15,000 cal ve ing suite at Ford world strike. of headquarters in suburban Dear- Details he born in the early evening, were b he UAW uni ir UAW PRESIDENT Leonard 26-memb in Woodcock emerged first with ecutive 1 til UAW Vice President Ken and to ti Bannon to read a brief two- Ford Coy he paragraph statementbbut re- then mus or fused any comments on the ne- ly by th st gotiations, the strike or the set- personsz s- tlement. tion wor ," Even with the three - year nt agreement, Ford probably will IT WA ef not begin rolling cars off its that the n- assembly lines for another breakthr t. week to 10 days. Analysts said goal in Sextend agreement which reported earlier tional 40-hour work week ay that September new standard since the Grea s were off less than pression. Its "toe-in-the- of one per cent from is a plan to give workers ago, has already lost paid days off in additi ar sales because of the the 3212 days workers nc ceive each year in holiday of the agreenient vacations. eing withheld by the The UAW said any settl til it is presented to the in the United States would er International Ex- to apply in Canada, alt Board Wednesday night separate negotiations are he 175-member National there for Ford and GM )uncil on Thursday. It ers. st be ratified separate- The Ford settlement e 25,000 skilled trades- serve as a spur to settl and the 145,000 produc- strike the UAW called kers. week against John Deere - the t De- -door" extra on to ow re- ys and ement have hough e held work- will e the last e and AS learned, however, union scored a major ough in its ultimate shortening the tradi- votek4 Company, the farm implement firm headquartered in Moline, Illinois. It has 27,000 workers in six states. See UAW, Page 3 C ontract AP Photo The last cutting These rolls of hay on John Fyffe's farm outside Albany, N.Y. signal the last cutting of hay before the Indian Summer days ore over and winter casts its frosty hand over the land. PROPOSAL CALLED 'INSENSITIVE': talks By SUSAN ADES and KEN PARSIGIAN In a meeting which drew some 400 members, the Graduate Employe Organi- zation (GEO) last night voted overwhelmingly to extend the expired contract negotiation deadline two weeks in order to "go back to the (bargaining) table while mobilizing for the strike to come." And in the final mom- ents of the three-hour ses- sion, the crowd, which had dwindled to a mere 122 participants, decided to of- fer entry into binding arbi- tration with the Univer- sity. Should the adminis- tration accept the terms, an arbitrator will be hired to review both sides and hand down an irreversible decision. "I THINK the University would refuse (binding arbitra- tion)," said Chief University bargainer John Forsyth after GEO's gathering. "They re- quested that last year and we refused - I think it would be a grave mistake . . . to bring in a third party." Also last night, the union's proposals were oncetagain indi- vidually subjected to member- ship debate and many of the most crucial positions - eco- twos- nomics, affirmative action, non-discrimination and class size - were left unchanged. University officials, however, were not encouraged by the prospect of more talks even on GEO's modified terms. BOTH UNIVERSITY Counsel William Lemmer and Chief Uni- versity bargainer John Forsyth insist more "dramatic changes" Traffic By JIM TOBIN City planners listened sadly at City Hall last night as com- munity residents blasted the newly - proposed traffic circula- tion plan. The plan, which would re- vamp the city's traffic patterns by 1990, calls primarily for widening and expansion of cer- veeks will have to emerge from union ranks before settlement predic- tions can even be chanced. "I think there's no question we're not going to have a con- tract," Forsyth said. "I'm disappointed if in fact they are just biding their time to mobilize for a strike," he added. See GEO, Page 3 plan blasted Fallout from China blast reaches U.S. WASHINGTON (U)-Light radiation from a Chinese atomic test is sprinkling parts of the eastern United States, prompting health officials in one state to warn residents to wash garden vegetables carefully before eating them. Pennsylvania officials were the first to report detection of the fallout from a blast at Lop Nor in western China on Sept. 26. Other areas reporting some radiation include New Jersey, southern Connecticut, Long Island, Delaware and South Carolina. THE ENERGY Research and Development Administration (ERDA) in Washington said that "the fallout is of low level and presents no cause of concern." However, a spokesperson added that specific data on radiation levels is still being collected. Nuclear fallout consists of vapor and dust from an atomic blast, including a variety of radioactive materials. These are sent high into the atmosphere in the familiar mushroom cloud seen after such an explosion. Winds can carry this cloud over long distances, literally around the world. And when these radioactive elements finally fall to earth they can enter water supplies or cling to vegetables or the grass eaten by cows, and turn up in cows' milk. See NUCLEAR, Page 8 tain important streets. While it advocates adoption of the al- ready proposed bus expansion plan, it makes no other provi- sions for mass transit. IT ALSO calls for five new parking structures downtown and expansion of the city's bi- cycle paths to a ninety-mile sys- tem. Marine force plagued by faulty information By AP and Reuter WASHINGTON - Faulty intelligence led to the deaths of 41 Marines when they attacked an island off Cambodia to rescue the container ship Mayaguez, according to a Congressional report released yesterday. U.S. pilots had already reported back to Washington that 30 to 40 white men, apparently the vessel's crew members, were aboard a fishing boat and not on the island of Koh Tang, the General Accounting Office (GAO), an investigating arm of Con- gress, said in the report. PRESIDENT FORD gave the order for the Marines to take the island and rescue crew members thought to be held hostage there by the Cambodians. See REPORT, Page 8 Among the plan's prime pr jects: -Rebuild and widen the Ful er St. bridge. -Widen Depot Fullert four lanes from Main St. t U. S. 23. -Widen Glen Ave. to fou. lanes between Huron St. an the Fuller bridge. -Widen State St. between th Eisenhower Parkway and Pac ard to four and five lanes. -Provide better links to ou lying areas by extending var ous "penetration" roads. -Convertto one-way all thre legs of the State, Hill, an Packard triangle. -Extend Fifth Ave. frog Hill St. to Hoover St., pr( sumably through part of th University's Wines Field an across the railroad. -Make Liberty St. and Wi liam St. one way in opposite d rections between First Ave. an State St. ALSO suggested, though wi a lower priority, is a widenin of Hill St. to four lanes b See TRAFFIC, Page 3 '0- [1- to to he k- .. . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . t- MacBride e 2floats over ,e- he- 1d political i- 2spectrum By JIM TOBIN e- Presidential candidate Roger MacBride yesterday brought to town the standard of the Liber- tarian Party, billing himself as an alternative to Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter who stands not exactly to the right or left, but hovers somewhere above the centersring of mainstream politics. MacBride, 46, spoke briefly 7 to a press gathering at the Campus Inn yesterday after- noon. A lawyer and television producer, he has campaigned { throughout the country since last year and now has his name on the ballot in thirty states and the District of Columbia - more than any other minor party candidate. G A C CORDING TiO MacBride, "We must rise_., Hunt for Arb suspect turns South; FBI may enter case By JAY LEVIN Authorities yesterday turned toward Florida and Georgia in their search for the 19-year-old transient suspected in last week's murder of University freshwoman Jeannine Boukai, who was found shot to death Friday in the Arb. A .- --- - 1 - . - - - - - - -- tion between the policy and Boukai's death. Meanwhile, Kerr requested yesterday that a fugitive war- rant be issued charging inter- state flight against Wilson, who is believed to be in possession of Bonkai's Yamaha motorcycle and in the company of another - - - T xurIC 4 - --b messasseum