i FUGITIVE JUSTICE See Editorial Page NPL *fr 43au Iait33 R IEGRETTABLE Low--28 High-40 See Today for details Latest Deadline in the State r Vol. LXXXVI I No. 36 w Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, October 20, 1976 Ten Cents Eight Pages Bitter IF YOSE W HAMNCALL DALY South bound express A man jumped aboard an empty 37-passenger Greyhound bus parked behinda terminal in Toledo yesterday and took off. He headed south. The Ohio highway patrol said it caught up with the bus and David Washington near Bowling Green and charg- ed the Detroit man with possession of stolen goods. Police quoted Washington as saying he was tired of unseasonably cold weather and wanted to go south for the winter. It looks like the only place he will be going now is down the river. Happenings ..-. at noon the Wesley Foundation is holding a meeting with the nurses arrested in connection with the VA Hospital murders at 602 E. Huron S.. from 3-g p.m. in the International Center will be a meeting to provide "Travel tips to Off Beat Places Abroad" . . . At 4 p.m. Prof. Henryk Sko- limowski of Humanities Engineering will give his "Last Lecture" in Aud. A of Angell Hall . . . The University of Michigan Papers in Women's studies meetsmeach Wednesday at 4:30 in 1058 LSA bldg., new members welcome . .. At 7 the U of M Sky- divers are offering their first jump course, Rm. 1042 E. Engineering . . . The film "Harvest of Shame" will be shown in Rm. 24 of East Quad . . at 7:30 the Association for Self Management will hold a meeting on "Worker's Participation and Control in America" Rm. 3209 of the Union .. TheRUndergrad Econ Association will meet 7:30 on Rm. 103 of the Econ Bldg . . , At 8 p.m _ the topic of the Carl Jung discussion group will be "The Eye of the Beholder-Psychological Types" at the Canterbury House, corner of Division and Catherine . . . starting at 9 the Mojo Boogie Band will be playing at the Road House located ol North Territorial Rd., one block west of O.S. 23 . . . at 9:30 there will be a poetry reading in East Quad's Green Lounge by Bob, Clifford, and Bill Milroy . . . and keep your eyes peeled for the Gargoyle, it is armed and dangerous and has been seen lurking around campus buildings. Smoking in the boys room When the Hume, Mo., high school principal caught three teen-aged boys" with cigarettes in their pockets, he gave them a choice of punish- ments: take a paddling or eat the cigarettes. Two of the boys chose to eat a total of 18 cigarettes and have developed health problems as a result, their parents claim. When the boy's parents pro- tested the punishment to the local school board, the board voted to uphold the principal's actions. One board membersaid the principal's authority would be damaged unless the board supported him. The boys, after eating the cigarettes began to vomit, and one of the youngsters soon began to spit up blood. Doctors say the tobacco irritated a small ulcer, which existed prior to the incident. Health officials around the country have express- ed shock at the nature of the punishment. "That's a very dangerous form of punishment," said Dr. Paul Larsen, a pharmocology expert who studies effects of tobacco at -the Medical College of Vir- ginia. "I bet they were very, very sick." What's in a name Officials in Minds County, Miss., are receiving complaints after mailing out 1,000 license plates with the prefix "GAY" ahead of the numbers. J. W. Howell, director of the state Motor Vehicle Comptroller's tag division said "nothing offen- sive was meant." He added, "No one in this office ever thought of it in another term." County Tax Collector Jake Richardson -said he would be "glad to take them back if recipients don't want them." He added that "not everybody wants a car labeled GAY." More name games A New York state supreme Court justice believes he did a Long Island feminist and the English lan- guage a favor by rejecting her request to change her name from Ellen Cooperman to (you guessed it) Ellen Cooperperson. "The use of the proposed name would demean the woman's liberation move- ment and expose is to ridicule," Justice John Sci- leppi said in his opinion. Cooperman stated in her application that the name Cooperperson "more properly reflects her sense of human equality than does" . . . her present surname. The judge noted in his opinion "I fail to see how the beneficent goals of the woman's liberation movement are advanced one iota by the fetish of some people over the use of these words." He went on to point to possible repercussions of approving the name change, such as efforts to change "Jackson" to "Jackchild," or "Manning" to "Peopleing." On the inside .*. Sports page has the details of the world series By JIM TOBIN Special to The Daily SOUTHFIELD - Senate candidates Marvin Esch and Donald Riegle tried to get back to policy issues in a debate here last night, but were not able to shed the animosity and personal charges that have stained their campaign in recent weeks. Speaking before a largely Jewish audi- ence of 850, both congressmen called for the ousting of Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff George Brown, who is reported to have said recently that Israel is a strategic burden to the United States. ESCH SAID HE wired a recommenda- tion to President Ford yesterday that Brown be forced from his post, and Riegle called Brown "the Earl Butz of the Pentagon. He ought not to be asked to resign; he ought 'to be fired." "ness hi The debate was sponsored by the Jewish Community Council of Metropolitan Detroit In opening statements, both candidates pledged to talk about policy and they clari- fied their differences on energy, housing, defense spending, and tne economy. But when Esch called into question Rie- gle's voting record, on crime, the Flint Democrat angrily said that Esch's charge was a "malicious distortion that's being used by Republicans across the country in an attempt to make Democrats look soft on crime. Make no mistake about it - it's Nixon-style politics .. . "WHEN I WAS IN ISRAEL . . . when I was in the Memorial for the Six Million, I saw examples on the wall there, in (Nazi propagandist) newspapers, of exact- ly the kind of thing that has been di- rected against me in recent weeks. That's iges Set how it started, and let me tell you some- thing, if they're able to destroy my can- didacy with those kind of tactics then no one in this state is going to be safe. You'll see in future elections more and more dis- tortions and I think it's important that those kind of tactics not be allowed to work." Riegle's anger was apparently part of a new strategy to put Esch on the de- fensive after a devastating few days for the Democrat. On Sunday, the Detroit News reported an extra-marital affair con= ducted by Riegle with an unpaid staff member in 1969. Riegle admitted the af- fair, called it a "foolish mistake," and said he held Esch "personally responsible See PERSONAL, Page 8 gate race Rieg le Esch ............... .......... ........... gon ofra todsint his room a shyh a aers eammasms Student sacrifcshml r Jayp arrmore a gryve h ipsisbdt Egn raooi i justlike any the r dobe in th a. McCarthy. He has also given his desk, his sprawling complex. S chair, in fact, his entire Bursley Hall room to FQR THE MOST part, Barrymore said "It McCarthy's presidential campaign. doesn't make much difference" where the Barrymore, 19, a sophomore majoring in headquarters are. People who are interested political science, is the city co-ordinator for the enough in the candidate, he added, won't be McCarthy campaign. Tucked awaVy on the turned off by the humble surroundings. fifth floor of Bursley's Douglas house in room Barrymore said there was no Students for f 5020, is the local McCarthy headquarters. But McCarthy headquarters at all in the city about with the exception of a handmade sign and a See CAMPAIGN, Page 2 .E.UTE..C....E..C.ITICI.. REFUTES CARTER-is-v.:CRITIIM GEO votes new contract deadline By KEN PARSIGIAN Over 300 members of the Graduate Employee Or- ganization (GEO) braved rain and cold weather last night to attend a mass meeting at the League Ball- room, and voted unani- mously to extend their contract deadline one more week, to Oct. 26. The union also decided that if a settlement is not reached by the 26th, a meeting will be held to decide whether or not to initiate a strike referendum. If a strike referendum were initiated it would taketthree days to conduct, and the re- sults would most likely be re leased at a mass meeting on November 1. THE DECISION to extend the deadline was prompted by the University's return to the bargaining table earlier this week. The two bargaining teams met Monday and again yesterday in their first face-to- face session in nearly two months, and both sides report- ed that some progress was made. "I was somewhat disappoint- ed in how much we got done," said Chief University Bargainer John Forsyth, "but we did agree on one point, so there was some progress made." A tentative agreement was reached on the definition of a GSA "in good standing". "I AM somewhat encouraged by A it (the tentative agree- ment)," said GEO Treasurer Barbara Weinstein. "I am hop- ing that they will get down to some serious bargaining before next week's deadline." But, both sides were quick to point out that the GSA good standing issue was a minor one, and. Weinstein added, "We're still far apart on the issues that are really important." - The "really .important" is- sues that remain undecided in- clude salary, tuition, affirma- tive action, non-discrimination and class size. GEO vice-presi- dent Nancy Kushigian labeled any of these as "strikeable is- sues." IN, THE only other action at last night's meeting, a motion was made that the union ac- cept the Administration's eco- nomic offer of a 5 per cent raise, under the condition the University would agree to GEO's demands for affirmative action, non-discrimination and smaller class size. The motion was defeated by nearly a two to one margin on the grounds that the University would never ac- cept. Peace plan slackens i ghtingin Lebanon By The Associated Press and Reut-er News Service BEIRUT - Fighting appeared to slacken in most of Leb- anon yesterday after announcement of an Arab plan for end- ing the civil war, but Palestinian and left wing forces battled with rightists fo'r a village in the south. Most Lebanese political- leaders were cautiously optimistic over the plan, drawn up by six Arab leaders at a summit con- ference in the Saudi Arabian capital of Riyadh. PRIME MINISTER RASHID KARAMI, a Moslem who was unable to find a way out of Lebanon to attend the Riyadh meet- ing, said: "Some groups may have reservations about the re- sult, but it is the best that could be done." The plan calls for a ceasefire starting at midnight today (EDT), backed by a 30,000-strong Arab peacekeeping force. Leftist leader Kamal Junblatt said that if Egypt, Iraq and Algeria join the proposed force then "we have reached safety." FALANGIST. LEADER PIERRE GEMAYEL, head of the See PEACE, Page 2 Kissinger st diplomacy' By AP and Reuter Synagogue Counci Secretary of State Henry Kis- singer, often an issue in the 1976 campaign but rarely a participant, defended the Ford administration's record on hu- man rights yesterday, saying .quiet diplomacy" is often more effective than a "public crusade." Kissinger did not mention Democratic presidential candi- date Jimmy Carter by name in the text of his speech to the The secretary ref self as "detached debate." BUT it was clE singer was respo peated Carter atte foreign policy as1 up to the nation moral standards. "It is our oblig world's leading d dedicate ourselves tys 'quiet. 1s effective 1 of America. freedom for the human spirit," erred to him- Kissinger said. "But responsi- from partisan bility compels also a recogni- tion of our limits." During his foreign policy de- ear that Kis- bate with President Ford on nding to re- Oct. 7, Carter said the United acks on U. S. States "ought to be a beacon failing to live for nations who search for 's traditional peace, and who search for free- dom, who search for individual ration as the liberty, who search for basic Democracy to human rights. We haven't been to assuring lately. We can be once again." ME A N W H I L E, as the campaign entered its final two weeks, the two presidential can- didates stuck to familiar tactics, each accusing the other of ne- glecting e ss en t ial1nar an tional needs. Campaigning in Miami, Car- ter told the American Public anent Western Health Association that the Nix- rld resolution on and Ford administrations binding arms were responsible for "slashing W Afr,.a one essential 'health care pro- U*S. jI1nS in Vet S. African arms UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (A) - The three perma members of the Security Council vetoed a Third Wo yesterday that would have had the council declare a arnh ran -an ;,.-.n ., A .-;-. to fr.a ^ t ,irt- a Qo nn Doily Photo by CHRISTINA SCHNEIDER Human Rights Party candidate Eric Jackson discusses the issues during a debate between sher- iff's candidates at the Michigan Union last nig ht. Other candidates participating in the debate were (left to right) Republican Tom Minick, Democratic incumbent Fred Postill, and Libertar- ian Craig Smith. * i Union influence, drug control m--ark sheriff caminpaign debate By LANI JORDAN Minick, a 15-year veteran of the Ann Arbor Po- lig lr~strani la tbme f2 2, r~if;"