OIL PRICES See Editorial Page Y Ifit g~ D4ai6ti UNGODLY High-34T Low-19n See Today for Details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVII, No. 55 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, November 11, 1976 Ten Cents E ight Pages tIJ SEE NWSAPPENCALL.A-tY Wheels Gov. William Milliken announced yesterday a new state transportation research program to be conducted by the University. With a $180,000 con- tract from the Department of State Highways and Transportation, the research is designed, in part, to evaluate the future of public and pri- vate transportation in Michigan and predict the state's needs in terms of industry and economic growth. The director of the program will be Uni- versity Vice-President for Research Charles Over- berger. Happenings... ... begin at noon with athlete-author Lynda Huey speaking on "A Woman, an Athlete: Elim- inating the Schizophrenia" for a brown-bag lunch at the Returning Students Lounge, 3205 Michigan Union ... Paul Stewart of the Art Faculty dis- cusses "The Arts of Lithographs" at noon in the Pendleton Center ... ACRICS meets in the Cen- tral Campus Recreation Bldg. Conference Rm. at 2:30 p.m. ... The Hopwood Tea (with cookies and coffee) runs from 3 to 5 p.m. in 1006 Angell Hall ... "The Bald Soprano" is offered at Arena Thea- ter in the Frieze Bldg. at 4 p.m. ... M.K. Dzie- wanoski speaks on "The Polish and Hungarian Revolutions of 1956 in Perspective" at 4 p.m. in the Rackham Assembly Rm. ... The Inter-varsity Christian Fellowship meets at 7:30 in the League, with Arthur Sanders discussing Daniel ... The Health and Sexuality Group of Gay Community Service shows free films at 8 p.m., 61, S. For- est ... A seminar of the craft of the fool begins at 8 p.m. in Rm. 126 of East Quad with Ken Feit ... The Sierra Club holds a general meeting on forestry in relation to national, state and local concerns at 8 p.m. in the public library ... and Hillel offers an evening of Israeli entertainment, music, arts and crafts at 8 p.m. in the Frieze Bldg. J0 Hole in none Ike turned golf into a virtual religion while residing in the White House. Kennedy was a good but impatient duffer who would head back to the Oval Office after about nine holes. Johnson and Nikon were both devotees, in varying degrees, to the game. And you know about Ford. But it seems as though the next resident of 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue is going to break, a long line of presi- dential putters. "Jimmy never took much to golf," says a Carter spokesman. "He's more of a soft- ball man. He plays tennis a bit, loves fishing and is crazy about auto racing. But golf? For- get it." In keeping with his family's image as just Plains folk, Carter might do good to -get Billy, the White House press corps and the Se- cret Service together for some softball on the South Lawn every once in a while. It might not be "presidential," but it would keep Amy off the streets and the tourists would love it. Spider Man vs. The Womb Having whupped the living daylights out of no-goods such as The Kingpin, Doctor Octupus and The Green Goblin, superhero Spider Man is now turning his altruistic attention to a villain which claims an estimated one million American victims a year: teen-age pregnancy. A new Mar- vel comic book being distributed by Planned Par- enthood pits the web-slinger in a classic good ver- sus evil battle against The Prodigy, a baddie from outer space who plans to trick earthling teen- - agers into .creating a population explosion. The birth control group's executive director, Hugh An- wyl, says the story is designed to show kids they have an option - "It's not pushing anything or saying it's wrong to be pregnant." The red-and- blue-suited hero, incidentally, does triumph over his foe and, presumably on the last page, gloats: "Never again will you mesmerize kids with your destructive propaganda!" Doesn't the good guy always win? Try, try agatu The N vy is a three-time loser. Its attempt to recover the F14 fighter plane that fell from an air- craft carrier deck into the Atlantic Ocean nearly- two months ago has failed for the third time-but they're not giving up yet. A spokesperson said yes- terday that the F14's landing gear broke from the plane while it was being dragged underwater, tak- ing with it the line pulling the plane. The aircraft is expected to be little more than junk if and when it is finally brought up, but the Navy wants to prevent it3 equipment from falling into Soviet hande 0 On the inside... If you think this front page is something, wait'll you see the inside: Former Daily Editorial Direc- tor Marie Heyn is back on her old page with a weekly column, "Distaff": this one's about the politics of abortion . . David Keens reviews "Burnt Offerings" for the Arts section . . . and Brian Martin previews the gymnastics season for ;nors Has GEO lost the will to fight? By SUSAN ADES and KEN PARSIGIAN A Daily News Analysis The University administration and the Graduate Employes Organization (GEO) may be going through the motions of bar- gaining but it became apparent little more than a week ago when the union's members decisively rejected a walk-out - that any settlement would have to be on the University's terms. Negotiating only its second contract, GEO enjoyed little clout at the bargaining table, its only tactical leverage pro- vided by the threat of a strike. But when the time came to make good on that threat, the young union failed to rally the needed support, dooming itself to a submissive role in contract talks. AFTER THREE MEMBERSHIP meetings attended by over 300 graduate, student assistants (GSA's), union activists were falsely encouraged to push for a strike. And when a straw vote taken at a membership meeting in October revealed that those present favored a strike by a two-to-one margin, GEO leaders deluded themselves into believing that this group rep- resented a microcosm of the entire rank and file. They were wrong. The actual strike referendum, conducted over a three-day period during the last week of October, confirmed that beyond the confines of the Michigan League ballroom, where the mem- bership meeting was held, support for a walkout was virtually non-existent. There were 167 persons favoring a strike at that member- .. ..GEO enjoyed little clout at the bargain- ing table, its only tactical leverage provided by the threat of a strike. But when the time came to make good on that threat, the union failed to rally the needed support . . *. ship meetinig but only 47 additional yes-votes were cast by the remaining 1,700 GSA's at large. APPARENTLY GSA's WERE NO LONGER willing to fight for the rights of women and minorities or for the quality of undergraduate education. They were not even willing to fight for a more just contract for themselves. The climate simply was not right for such a progressive movement. It is hard to believe that only 21 months ago, over 1,000 members of GEO, full of high hopes and ready to fight for what they believe in, walked off their jobs in an attempt to force the University to deal with them seriously. They stayed out for over four weeks and finally won a contract they could live with. They didn't get everything they wanted - they didn't even come close - but it was a surprising show of strength for a young union that no one thought could succeed. GEO not only won a good contract for its members, but it also showed the GSA's were to be trifled with, no longer. They had a strong, Union now - over 1,200 members out of 1,900 GSA's - and they expected to be treated like legiti- mate employes, not just students getting a financial break from the University. UNION OFFICIALS COULD BE ACCUSED of wallowing in the past. They entered the first bargaining sessions last sum-l mer confident that they could win the issues they had lost the See GEO, Page 2 granted Kille plea for firing squad By AP and Reuter SALT LAKE CITY-The Utah Supreme Court ruled yesterday that condemned murderer Gary Gilmore be granted his wish and allowea ±, "die like a man" be- fore a firing squad next Monday. The four-to-one decision was handed down six hours after Gilmore, shackled hand and foot, made a personal plea be- fore the court yesterday morning. HE TOLD the black-robed judges he had a fair trial, a fair sentence and asked that he be allowed to "die like a man". The judges dismissed an appeal for a stay of execution by two of his former lawyers, at the same time revealing its own stay of execution granted on Monday. Barring any further delays, Gilmore will face a firing squad of five-men, each armed with a 30-caliber rifle, at the Utah state prison 20 miles south of here on Monday morning. HE WILL BE the first person to be executed in the United States since 1967 when Louis Monge died in the Colorado gas chamber. Utah and some other states passed new laws AP Photo Mv furry friend Have you ever seen anything this cute? Mandy the chimp proves that size is no boundary to friendship as she cuddles up with Socks the cat. Both critters are the property of Bernard Loeb, of Valley Forge, Pa. ENDS ISLAND VACATION: Carter names transition staff death permitting execution after a 1972 U. S. Supreme Court ruling thatthe death penalty was uncon- stitutional as applied in some states. ; Gilmore, who has spent 18 of his 35 years in prisons, was convicted of killing a hotel clerk in Provo, Utah during a robbery on July 20. He is also charged with the first degree murder the previous night of a law student who was working part-time inha gas station. That case has not yet come to trial. ONE OF THE two attorneys who filed the ap- peal, Craig Snyder, spoke briefly and told the court it ought not to rule on such substantial questions without first looking at the record. He See UTAH, Page 2 P hilly hotel of sinister Legion Flu By AP and Reuter PHILADELPHIA - The famed Bellevue Stratford Hotel, center for the ill-fated American Legion convention last summer, yesterday became the latest victim of the mysterious "legionnaire's disease." The hotel closes its doors November 18 because of a drastic fall-off in business following the outbreak of the so-far un- diagnosed ailment, according to Bankers Securities Corporation, which owns the hotel. "SHE'S A grand dame, and she will be sorely missed," Philadelphia Mayor Frank Rizzo said yesterday, moments before the owners formally announced the phantom illness had proved fatal. "The Bellevue-Stratford has found it impossible any longer to withstand the economic impact of the worldwide, ad- verse publicity which has been associated with the 'legionnaires' disease' . . .," Wil- liam Chadwick, the hotel's vice president, told reporters. "Despite the lack of credible evidence that any casual factor existed, the contin- uous public reports linking the hotel to re- ports of the illness have been ruinous to its business." OCCUPANCY hovered at about eight per cent, he added. The hotel, which opened in September, 1904, has been the pre-eminent business hotel in the city, located a block from City Hall Ttz Hnt Room restnrant has been the ntetine .lace for Philadelohia's po- litical elite and visiting show business per- Sonqlitis. Linchtime at the Bellevne he- carne. a tradition and its aests represent- ed a who's who in the city. Its 750 guest rooms were constantly filled with conventioneers, and its death ST. SIMONS ISLAND, Ga. (A) -President-elect Jimmy Carter neared the end of his study- and-play vacation here with a flurry of announcements that included the names of 11 mem- bers of his transition team staff, who probably will eventually land jobs in the new administra- tion. In other moves connected with the impending change in gov- ermnent, it was announced that Carter will have daily intelli- gence briefings from the Cen- tral Intelligence Agency, that he will meet with Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, and that a U.S. Signal Corps communi- cations center is being set up at his home in Plains, Ga. CARTER AND HIS family are to leave the secluded island es- tate where they have been va- Fintpolice fyire Fletcher FLINT (UPI) - Madeline Fletcher, a black policewoman who was cleared this summer of criminal charges stemming from a shaotout with her white, male partner, was fired from her jpb yesterday. Police Chief Max Durbin told a news conference that Fletch- er was "unemployable as far as I'm concerned" because of her expulsion Monday from a training academy where she had been seeking recertification as a police officer. HE CALLED THE CONTINUING controversy surrounding Fletcher "a very distressing situation' that is coming to a con- cationing and return to Plains today. In a talk with reporters, Carter said the post-election es- cape had been satisfactory. "I got some rest, got some exercise, caught some fish, got reacquainted with my family and when I felt like it, did a little studying," Carter said as he displayed the two large tran- sition briefing books he has been reading from. 'The President-elect was in his usual off-duty garb of blue jeans, a sports shirt and a sweater as he chatted briefly with reporters in the living room of the rustic cottage he and his family have been us- in g. % CARTER SAID the communi- cations center being, established at Plains should be in operation by the time he returns there. He also said he will receive a comprehensive briefing by CIA Director George Bush, to be fol- lowedcby regular daily briefings. The study of the staff-written notebooks on foreign and de- fense policy have proved use- See CARTER, Page 2 Catiter clusion." Flint Police Chief Max Durbin told a The Teamsters Union local that represents police officers in the department said it would back Fletcher, 21, in any griev- ance or arbitration procedure she may wish to initiate. l)'irbin infarmed the one-year Syrian army sweeps into Beirut; hopes to quell war By AP and Reuter BEIRUT - Long columns of Syrian LEFTWING militiamen and rightwing nrivate armies melted awav before the I