A MINICK See Editorial Page it * 471aA&t GOOSE BUMPED High--38° Low-28* See Today for Details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVII, No. 50 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, November 5, 1976 Ten Cents Ten Pages U .- ................ IF YtUSfE Nwtl5APP CALL*-DAILY Trial set Sheriff Fred Postill, defeated in his bid for re-election by Ann Arbor Police Captain Thomas Minick, will stand trial June 6 for an alleged assault on one of his deputies during a wedding reception this summer in Chelsea. He is accused of trying to choke Deputy Basil Baysinger with a pair of handcuffs. If convicted, he could face a four-year jail sentence and a $2,000 fine. Election picks We thought we had. safe guarded ourselves from a tie in our election pick contest. But alas,. due to the lack of a winner in the Pierce-Pur- sell race for the Second Congressional District we have a tie. The two contestants involved differ only in ^lTom they picked in that dead- locked contest. So sit tight and as soon as we know who our new congressman is, the winner of our contest will get two free meals at the Blue Frogge. Redneck chic It's already upon us. Jeff Raymond, an obscure country-and-western songster, has recordeda sin- gle entitled "Hillbilly in the White House" which foretells the events we're going to have to look forward to in the next four years. Among other things, fried chicken will be mandatory Sunday fare, Nashville will become the nation's capital, and "Green Acres" will return to television. That isn't all, either: country singer Dolly Parton, the song claims, will be sent to Spain as ambassadress (and her former partner Porter Waggoner will go to Portugal). "Freaks," one might add, will be made to cut their hair. Raymond has never had a hit before, needless to say. Happenings . . begin at noon, when the Anthroposophical Student Association sponsors a LecturDemonstra- tion on Eurythmy, a Modern Art of Movement by the London Eurythmy Group in the Pendleton Room at the Union ... at 3:30 International Cen- ter sponsors a program on "Working in Ann Ar- bor - A Program for Foreign Women" at the Madelon Pound House, 1024 Hill St. ... at 4, Prof. Otis Dudley Duncan will be speaking on "Energy and Society" in the Rackham Auditorium _,.then, at 7 p.m., Tyagi Ji, Cosmic Transmitter, will hold a session at the Friends Meeting House, 1420 Hill. Admission is free ... and from 7 to 10 p.m. the Central Campus Recreation Building will hold an International Family Night with fun,' games, and refreshments. A single student ID or user pass will get a whole family in ... at 7:30 there will be a seminar on "The Roots and Problems of the Lebanese Civil War" in the Kuenzel Room of the Union ... at 8 p.m. Pauline Cart will speak on "Healing of the Physical, Mental and Spiritual Aspects of Human Beings" at Canterbury House, Corner of Catherine and Division ... and a De- fense Disco will be held in the Law Lounge from 9 p.m. to 2 a.m. to raise money for accused VA nurses Narciso and Perez. Donations are request- ed. Idi Amin Avenue? No one is willing to admit it, but somebody in Toronto has been naming streets in honor of Attila the Hun, tle famous Fifth Century barbar- ian and hero of the working class. There they are, right on the city map: Attila Street and Hun Crescent. "I can see people objecting to Hitler or Stalin because they are more recent," said Richard Sasvari, Toronto city plannr. "But what is wrong with Attila the Hun? Everyone was a barbarian back then." Speak foreyourself. Rye-jacked A young Pole being deported from Dennark yesterday hijacked a Polish airliner, using a pis- tol fashioned from a piece of rye bread he took' with him from prison. The young man, 20-year- old Andrezej Jaroslaw Karoszinski, was given asy- lum in Denmark- in 1974, but was jailed and de- ported for theft. Security officials at Copenhagen airport ignored the hunk of bread he carried on boardl, but during the flight he chewed it into the shape of a pistol and told the crew to take him to Vienna. Just goes to show, you can get away with anything as long as you got a little bread, Revolt of the Smokers - The nicotine backlash has begun. A taxi driver in Madrid, Spain picked up four women who in- sisted on smoking in his cab, despite his pro- tests. When they refused to stop, he in turn re- fused to shut the window or turn on the car's heater. This did not cool the indignant women, who took a pair of scissors and cut up the driv- ers's suit, raincoat, and safety belt. They have been detained by Spanish authorities; we suggest they be made to smoke a dozen large cigars each. 0 Ot the inside ... ...'Editorial Page presents W. L. Scheller's column, Perspective ... On Arts Page, Keith Tosolt Daily Photo by ANDY FREEBERG THIS WOMAN watches in studied anxiety yesterday as Sa nurse prepares to draw blood for Alpha Phi Omega's student blood bank in the Anderson Room of the Union. The drive runs until S today, wvhen they ho~pe to have accumulated a thousand pints of blood. AlpaPi mg By PATTY MONTEMURRI Giving blood can be fun. Since M~onday, the response to the student blood bank sponsored by Alpha Phi Omega, a coed service frater- nimty, has proven that donating blood isn't so bloody aw- ful. AS -OF WEDNESDAY NIGHT, students had donated 529 pints of the life-giving fluid. Today, the last day to donate, between 11:00 to 5:00 in the Anderson Room of the Union, fraternity members hope enough .jtudents will overcome their fears of needles and the sight of blood to rah the 1,000-pint goal o rea ,See ALPHA, Pag 10 R Carter may propose maj o: By AP and Reuter PLAINS, Ga.- President- elect Jimmy Carter said last night there was strong possibility he would pro- pose a tax cut aimed at aiding average wage earn- ers if the U.S. economy did not pick up by the time he takes office in January. Carter was speaking at a nationally - televised press conference near his home in this southern Georgia hamlet, his first news con- ference since winning Tues- day's presidential election. ASKED ABOUT campaign statements that he was consid- ering a tax cut, something that President Ford promised more strongly, the President - elect said it was "a strong possibili- ty if' the economy is still stag- nant next January as it is now." He added that such a cut would be aimed at the middle income wage group, saying: "If6 any tax cut comes it will be to stimulate the purchasing pow- er of the average American family." Lawrence Klein, a University of Pennsylvania economist who is a top Carter adviser on .the economy, has recommended to Carter a $10 to $15 billion tax cut or a quick increase in fed- eral spending to stimulate the economy at the start of the new administration. ONCE AGAIN, Carter thanked '"77 Ford for his offer of coopera- tion and support in the transi- tion to the new Democratic ad-. ministration. He said he hopes to meet with Ford and the President's top advisers for a briefing on foreign policy ques- tions. THE PRESIDENT - ELECT, flanked by members of his fam- ily and vice president-elect Wal- ter Mondale, fielded questions from reporters on the platform of Plains' old wooden railway tax station, Carter's first campaign headquarters and now mainly given over to selling Carter souvenirs. Among his ma or points: O There will be "substantial continuity" in American foreign policy, toward U.S. allies and also toward potential adveisar- -ies. * He will not name members of his Cabinet before Decem- beir, and will choose them for merit, after personal interviews, cut. and in "a careful, very slow and methodical process." He ;said he will try to achieve geo- graphical and other balance in his Cabinet. E He is concerned about a possible increase in the price of imported oil, but can do nothing about it except say so. Carter said he doesn't want to mislead people into thinking that he can influence U.S. poli- cy or decisions until Jan. 20, See CARTER, Page 7 President-elect Jimmy Carter held his first news conference" yesterday; and after announcing possible plans for a tax cut and pledging to keep his campaign pledges, Carter introduced his vice presidential running mate, Walter Mondale. Pursell By GEORGE LOBSENZ A recount of the Washtenaw County vote yes- terday tentatively moved Republican Carl Pursell into a 347-vote lead over Democrat Edward Pierce in their seesaw battle for the Second Dis- trict Congressional seat. After some 40 hours of nail-biting 'uncertainty, Pierce. and Pursell sat down with Washtenaw County Clerk Bob Harrison yesterday morning to once again total up the county vote that had thrown the contest into doubt. When they emerg- ed, Pursell had forged a slim advantage by way of a 300-plus vote error in Pierce's favor, dis- covered in the previous count. The new tally left Pursell with 95,393 votes to Pierce's 95,046. THE WASHTENAW county vote was the focus of a raging controversy Wednesday as varying Israeli woman pilot aceideta By LINDA WILLCOX Yael Rom was the first woman pilot in the Israeli Air Force, and one of the last. She became a pilot almost ac- cidentally; but those kinds of accidents don't happen anymore, she said, during - a recent visit to the Hebrew House. "I didn't know how to fly. I didn't r even know what a plane loo'ked like," Rom said. Still, she began her flight training in 1950, earning her wings in 1951. She served the Air Force, chiefly as a non-combat pilot, until 1960. CONTRARY TO POPULAR misconcep. tion, Rom said that women do not share ' military duty equally with men in Israel. "It is very sad that the girls don't avail themselves of the opportunities r that they have. If a woman wants o make something of herself, nobody will stop her," said Rom, now a university professor in Israel. The official reason the women are intentionally given non-clerical or nurs- ing jobs, she said, is that combat posi- tions require a lot of training for co- paratively little time spent in the ser- vice. cree s a, figures were tossed about by the Pierce and Pursell camps as well as the county clerk's of- fice. By late Wednesday afternoon, thorough re- checking and comparison of precinct counts with the official county clerk figures revealed large discrepancies. Even after yesterday's re-count, the cause of the discrepancies remained unclear. In one in- stance, absentee ballot votes from Augusta Township were incorrectly phoned in as the tal- lies of certain precincts. Also, it is now suspected that Pierce and Pursell votes may lave been transposed, some Pierce tallies being put in Pur- sell totals and vice-versa. Finally, delays in ob- taining and tabulating absentee ballots from sev- eral Ann Arbor precincts contributed to the prob- lenm. Ai !iead.,.in Whatever the reasons for the mix-up, each county (Washtenaw, Wayne, Munroe) will now conduct a canvas to officially certify the vote. Some observers say the canvassing should be done by next Monday or Tuesday. A C C 0 R D I N G L Y, both candidates yesterday received the new results with a grain of salt, reserving any final judgements until the outcome of the canvassing. N E V E R T H E L E S S, the atmosphere at each candidate's headquarters belied the bland, guarded official statements. At Pursell's Ann Arbor base on Wednesday, the mood was one of barely restrained euphoria. "I feel pretty good," said a raspy-throated Pur- Cina' Ga to Stand s By Reuter had succeededi PEKING - China plans "a China wouldf state trial of Mao Tse - tung's "chauvinistic widow, Chiang Ching, and oth- eign policy" a er members of the Shanghai principle of e "gang of four" accused of plot- nations great a ting to seize power in Peking, Tan mainta Chinese officials told a visiting per cent of Chi delegation here yesterday. people weres Observers said a secret trial to the "gang o of the four leftist radicals ap- the remaining peared more likely than a pub- supported the lic hearing, said. IN ITS 27-year history, Com- munist China has never staged an open trial of purged leaders. An informed source said the Chinese officials told a dele- gation from Finland that the four former Politburo members were under house arrest and would eventually stand trial on charges of plotting a coup in the aftermath of Chairman - Mao's death nearly two months The Michig ago. I (SQB) conducte At another me.eting yesterday, revision of the. according to the source, the Finnish delegation was told that While atten investigators were trying to came), SOB re find out whether the four dis- graced leaders had "illicit rela- current policy, recount sell, "I'm sort of cautiously jubiliant." AS EXCITED voices rose in the background,. Pursell added, "my staff is very high. They think we've already won it." Despite all the enthusiasm, Pursell acknowl- edged that the election still' hung on the verdict of the 3 county canvasses totals and official cer- tification. "It's still an open ball-game," conceded the Livonia state senator, "but it looks pretty good for us." PURSELL termed his apparent victory a come from behind effort. "Our campaign was jelling that last week . .." See PURSELL, Page 10 - 1ng of,.Four' >eeret trial in seizing power, have adopted a big - power for- and scrapped its equality between and small. ined . that 99.99 hina's 850 million strongly opposed of four" and only 0.01 per cent m, the source A N I N V E S T I G A T- ING commission headed by De- fense Minister Yeh Chien-ying is now examining the activities of the four - Chiang Ching, Wang Hung-wen, Chang Chun- chiao and Yao Wen-yuan. The official people's daily newspaper jrinted more attacks yesterday on the radicals, who are believed to have been un- der house arrest since October See RADICAL, Page 10 de nts review By LANI JORDAN gan Student Assembly Student Organizations Board ed a sparsely attended-,hearing last night to discuss Athletic Depar.tment's ticket sales policy. ndance was light (only three non-board members eceived a variety of suggestions for revamping the ranging from computerized ticket distribution to