thursday, November 11, 1976-, THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Doctors fail to save Morocco urges native deadf DENVER (A) - Linda Irene Culbertson, whose brain stop- ped two days ago, died yester- day and so did her unborn baby that doctors had tried to save. The doctors had agreed that to continue life support efforts was unwarranted but a hos- pital spokesman, Etic Munson, said the fetal heartbeat ceased before life support equipment was disconnected. Culbertson, whose brain died in a two-car accident Monday, was put on life support ma- chinery which, sustained her other bodily functions. Doctors studied the legal, ethical, moral and medical questions of trying to save the life of her 15-week-old fetus by keeping the 29-year-old, wom- an's body functioning for five more weeks, until the baby could be delivered. Colorado General Hospital an- nounced yesterday afternoon that extensive clinical evalia- tion and consultation by the medical staff had established that the fetus could not live outside the womb. Consequently it was decided to stop the ex- traordinary life support mea- sures, but the fetus died before the measures were halted. CULBERTSON died 49 hours after the accident. Her only child, 6-month-old Shannon, who suffered a fractured skull in the car accident, was report- ed in good condition. Doctors originally received Culbertson at general hospital as a potential organ donor, but the life support measures were undertaken after the fetal heartbeat was detected. Doctors said the fetus could THE MICHIGAN DAILT Volume LXXXVII, No. 55 Thursday, November 11, 1976 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109, Published d a 11y Tuesday through Sunday morning during the univer- sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, -Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 Sept. tbru April (2 semes- ters); $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tues- day, through Saturday morning. Subscription rates, $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.50 by mail outside Ann Arbor. nother' not be removed from her body until it became viable at 20 weeks of gestation and weighed at least 50 grams, or a little over one pound. "WE DON'T KNOW if the body can support the growth of the fetus," Dr. James Ogs- bury, chief resident of the sur- gical intensive care unit at CGH had said before the deci- sion to stop life support ma- chinery. fetus Earlier, discussing the doc- tor's dilemma, hospital spokes- man Ted Wrenn said "You have a, heart beating inside an- other body that for all intents and purposes is dead. What do you do? It raises a whole ser- ies of/problems." A spokesperson for the Amer- ican College of Obstetrics and Gynecology in Chicago told CGH officials the college had no record of such a case. Jews to return home Groups want Kool-Aid ban RABAT, Morocco (A) - The emptied, many synagogues clos- Moroccan government - act- ed and kosher food become un- ing alone in the entire Arab available in many places be- world - has embarked on a cause no one was left to pre- campaign to persuade some pare it. 230,000 Moroccan-born Jews to The departure of many Jew- return from Israel, France, the ish technicians left a harmfult United States and other coun- gap in Moroccan industry. Re- tries to share in the future pros- placing the departed Jews with perity of their "real homeland." American or'European techni- The invitation, first addressed cians proved a serious drain on last March to Moroccan Jewish the Moroccan economy. communities abroad by King Officials explained they were Hassan II and Premier Ahmed not only interested in the con- Osman, has resulted in a small tribution the Jews were expect- but steady flow of Jews back to ed to make to the Moroccan Morocco. Officials said about 1,000 Jews have returned this economy. year and several hundred more "We think we are also con- are expected early in the New tributing to a solution of the Year. Middle East problem by prov- IN THE YEARS following the ing that Moslems and Jews can end of French colonial rule in -1956, all but 17,000 of an estimat- ed 250,000 Moroccan Jews fled in fear of persecution or po- grons. The Moroccan popula- tion is 98 per cent Moslem. The government has promised to help find jobs for Jews of Moroccan origin or assist them in reestablishing small busi- nesses. E live together in harmony despiteE the existence of a -state called Israel," one Moroccan sourcet said. Moroccan officials estimate that 145,000 Jews went to Israel, 50,000 to France, 25,000 to North America and smaller numbers to other countries. Un- like other Arab countries, Mo- rocco allowed Moroccan - born Jews to come back to visit - even with Israeli stamps in their passports. The government has always drawn a line, how- ever, at admitting persons with Israeli passports, which are not recognized officially as valid documents. ANN AUEICU? [ELA CC-D11 INGMAR BERGMAN DOUBLE FEATURE CRIES AND WHISPERS (In gmar Bergman, 1972) 7 & 10:30 Considered by many to be Bergman's greatest masterpiece. The imminent death of a woman brings her two sisters and faithful servant to her side. Bergman uses the delicate setting to hauntingly explore human relationships, love, pain, all of life, and its consant mingling with death. Harriet Anderson, Liv Ullman. Swedish with subtitles. THE TOUCH (lngmor Bergman, 1971) 8:45 ONLY Love comes in many forms. The ability for a person to express or receive love is endless in its variety. The implications of this mystery are once again explored by Ingmar Bergman in his first English language film. "A picture flood lit from within . , . transparently fond of its characters. The film is full of acting moments that are physically miraculous . . . like memories of everyone."-Penelope Gilliatt. With Elliott Gould, Bibi Andersonn, Max von Sydow, Sheia Rerd and Maria Nolgard. AUD. A ANGELLHALL SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-Kool- Aid makers are exploiting chil- dren and encouraging them to consume too much sugar by offering money to schools for empty packages of the powder- ed beverage mix, two nonprofit groups say. Consumers Union and the Committee on Children's Tele- vision asked the state Board of Education and the state schools' superintendent Tuesday to ban the Kool-Aid campaign sponsor- ed by General Foods Corp. from California classrooms. THE REQUEST was a supple- ment to a petition from the two groups last month criticizing Post Cereals, a subsidiary of General Foods, for an offer to trade sports equipment for cer- eal boxtops. The groups asked the board of education to keep the program out of public schools. After receiving the Post Cere- als petition, state schools Supt. Wilson Riles issued nonbinding guidelines including considera- tions such as benefits to a school, comparative expense, school objectives and school in- fluence in favor of one com- pany to the exclusion of others. The state school board is sched- uled to consider the matter" Thursday. General Foods in a statement Tuesday called the criticism of Kool-Aid "nonsensical and dis- torted." IN ITS STATEMENT, Gener- al Foods asked rhetorically whether the groups' next tar- get would be sales of cookies by Scouts - "Or possibly they will seek FCC Federal Commun- ication Commission action to prevent the producers of 'Se- same Street' from using the Cookies Monster character." The Kool-Aid program will be tested in Washington, D.C., ern Kansas City and St. Louis for fLr but nC J G Z T t ._ vw ":.o"..::::r:: +:" "." n .,qnv, ?:"'.:"}?.:;.v,":%SY.?"Y:"r: rl ::"3:<7r''r,'.ti:t;;.?: p: i;:?:K":"{::" :":r, :i {:%:%,: j ';G:7 j i G"? s+" ,'rS;:;bdw{}S{%ta:.?Q{':%'r'i} : :5:": :;'i:r:ii;:;:}fi::;':"!?i 47:v?:iiMi"?::isi."$:Cr :.... .. ............... .. .. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLE. .e:;.!iy.;."{.;""""rrf. }5s.":L:iyi}r:%"%::%:;;: :: :;:?;:;yr:; ;"{1i:'i,'v'r,}:':}:^:} S;?r" : : ",'.;:},"'r. fs};{;sasfi .r" yy;;::r::?:%r"r'ry ;:": r ti .",:;:<' 'r;:; t " ".;:%'r:n '::%%: Y". ti":%": j}:":?:":"i i:ioa..::w:::::::: ":: r:..:. r... n.: m rr:. n. S." . Thursday, November 11, 1976 DAY CALENDAR Ext. Serv.: Phase II How to Run a Game; League, 8 a.m. WUOM: Clifton C. Garvin (Chmn. & Chief Exec. Officer for Exxon Carp.) "Recognizing Today's Reali- ties," 10 a.m. Ctr. Human Growth & Dev,: Men's Lives; 1025 Angell, 11 a.m. Pendleton Ctr.: "Open Hearth," Paul Stewart "Printmaking," 2nd fl., 'Union, noon. Ctr. Japanese Studies: Tetsuro Nakamura (journalist, theatre crit- ic, Tokyo, Japan) "Yukio Mishima, His Views of Noh & Kabuki," Com- mons Rm., Lane, noon. Commission for women: Lynda Huey "A Woman Athlete: Eliminat- ing the Schizophrenia," 3205 Union, noon. Campus Editors, Publishers: Lar- ry Thompson "Paper Selection & Production Costs," 130 S. First, 1 p.m. Behavioral Set.: Roy A. Rappapoft "Culture & Religious Behavior," 231 Angell, 1 p.m. ACRICS: Conf. Rm., Cent. Cam- pus Rec., 2:39 p.m. Studio Theatre Series: Ionesco's "The Bald Soprano," Arena Thea- tre, Frieze. 4 p.m.' Microbioloy: Frederick Neidhardt "Pattern of Protein Synthesis Regu- lation in E. coli," S. Lee. Hall, Med. St. II, 4 p.m. Ctr. Russian, E. European Stud- ies: M. K. Dziewanowski (prof. of ! Hist., Boston Univ.) "The Polish &; Hungarian Revolutions of 1956, ini Perspective," Assembly.,Iall, Rack-4 ham, 4 p.m. Kelsey Museum: Wm. MacDonaldj (Smith College) "The Life of the Pantheon in Art," Aud. A, Angell, 4 p.m. Int'l. Night: Austrian menu; League cafeteria, 5 p.m. Univ. Club : "Sports 'n Smorgas- bord" with Dennis Brown: Univ.' Club. 6 p.m. Ctr. Japanese Studies: Kumagai- Jin 'Ya (Kabuki play) 200 Lane, Engineering, Humanities: Sympo- sium "Recombinant DNA Revisited: Assessing a Technological Assess- met," Rackham Amph., 8 p.m. Collegium Musicum: "English Ba- roque Music in Court & Country," SM Recital Hall, 8 p.m. MUSKET: Lerner & Loew's "Cam- elot," Mendelssohn, 8 p.m. Music School: Philharmonia; Hill Aud., 8 p.m. CAREER PLANNING & PLACEMENT SUMMER PLACEMENT Amrican Airlines. Opening for campus representatives. Must be available for a period of 2 years. Excellent position with good salary. Further details available by phone (763-4117) or in person. six months beginning ths Thursday, General Foods said. For each label or empty pack- age turned in a child's school; will get five cents, with the money to be used for class trips. or other school programs. The maximum reimbursement is $8 per child, representing the return on 160 envelopes or can- ister labels. "THEY MIGHT as well send in four rotten teeth, too," said Sally Williams of the Commit- tee on Children's Television, a nonprofit corporation that gives advice on television for children which filed the petition with Consumers Union, the nonprofit publisher of Consumer Reports. The groups complained that the program lacks educational value, turns children into sales agents through peer pressure and encourages them to con- sume too much sugar. They said a child who drank enough Kool-Aid to get $8 for a school could ingest as much as 65 pounds of sugar in six months. J" ... r :. Stt. TIN Lawrence Livermore Labs., Calif. Summer program for 'undergradu- ates/graduates in the fields of phys- ics, computer programs, chemistry, engr. (various fields), environment- al research. Details and appl. avail- able. Deadline, Dec. 1. Wayne County Community Col- lege - Openings for temporary sea- sonal positions cashier, computer terminal operator, warehouse aire, checker. Deadline for applying is Nov. 15 (received by then), call 763-4117. GENERAL NOTICES The 1976-77 Faculty-Staff Direc- tories are not yet available for dis- tribution. It is anticipated that they will be available in approximately 3 weeks.I Dia 1763-5100 November 13 beginning at 6 p.m. November 14 ending at 1 p.m. for 29 hours of fund raising over WUOM 91.1 FM Live performances Special Guests Premiums of: autographed books, records, pictures Gourmet dinners flying lessons tickets Coal $30,000 to support the Progrom Guide " to purchase new records' "'* anad topes 0"to fund coverage of specil concerts and news events Don't forget 153-51 00 Kin give ticu the age low M~, I SHIPMENT f HEA\J'r C) I Take a load off your mind and chew the fat with us. THAT'S RIGHT . .0. We want your corpulent accounts, your portly portrayals and your stout state- ments. 1I. R ni oor