SO. AMERICAN TEACH-IN See Editorial Page I S ir 43UU~ :4Ia ity MIMSY High-43* Low-30* See Today for Details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVII, No. 59 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, November 16, 1976 Ten Cents Eight Pages ,: a.romu .,. ... ~_ __ _. _ ., . a : k . ~W arrrrrrrrerr Shoot me, you swine You've heard all about the fears of a swine flu epidemic and the mass immunization pro- gram designed to counter it; now's your chance to get innoculated. The Washtenaw County Health Department is offering free and (relatively) pain- less shots at four campus locations today and to- morrow. The schedule is as follows: Today, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., innoculations are available at the Union, the Central Campus Recreation Bldg. and at North Campus Commons. Tomorrow, you can get your shot in the arm at the Union, the Central Campus Recreation Bldg. and the IM Bldg., again from 9 to 5. " Happenings ... are of a scholarly sort today. Claudia Sheck- Kselman addresses a brown bag lunch at the Cen- ter for Continuing Education of Women at noon; her subject is "Family Law in France Under The Third Republic" ... The Ecumenical Campus Cen- ter, at 921 Church, competes with a noon brown- bagger on "The History of the Thanksgiving Cele- bration in the U.S."; the speaker is A. K. Stevens ... Geography concentrators and Gamma Theta Upsilon are sponsoring a geography department "open house" from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. ... The Go Club meets at 7 p.m. in the usual place, 2050 Frieze ... Isabel Letelier, widow of slain ambassa- dor to, the U.S. from Chile Orlando Letelier, speaks on "Political Repression in Latin America" at 7:30 p.m., MLB Aud. 3 ... and the Gay Libera- tion Front meets at 8 p.m. at 3410 in the Union. U.N.U. The university has no campus, no degree stu- dents, no courses of study, and isn't looking for any. But, on its first birthday, the United Na- tions University is already having financial trou- bles, not to mention an identity crisis. "We are still in a time of difficult financial condition," said James Hester, the American rector of what was formally created as a world problem-solving agency. He said the cash flow of coni"butions from nations hasn't gone far beyond Japan's pledge of $100 million and a possible $10 million from the U'S Hester also said at a news conference yes- terday that use of the word "university" is con- fusing some people. The U's purpose is not to teach but to examine international problems from a scholarly, nonpolitical viewpoint, coordinating the work of worldwide, specialized institutes. In oth- er words, no tuition, either. 0 Santa Claus unmasked If an Owensboro, Ky. ordinance is enforced to the letter this Christmas, sidewalk Santas may. be swept from the streets on charges of con- cealing their identities. City Atty. Larry Harring- ton said he is asking the city commission to re- vise the 1924 statute, enacted with the Ku Klux Klan in 'mind, which bans any "assemblage of persons" to gather or march in public "with masks over their faces or other covering device." Harrington fears the most recent invocation of the law - when two young persons dressed as Mar- tians were hauled into court - may have set a precedent that will bar Santas, trick-or-treaters or even characters in a parade. Christmas without Santa? Poor little Virginia would have a fit. 0 Can't fight City Hall The windows at the Auburn, Wash., City Hall don't get opened much nowadays, because they tend to fall out onto the sidewalks. Council mem- bers avoid the second floor because its ceiling beam is held up by a chain. An emergency door is +permanently locked because it would take a sledgehammer to open it. Now the 96 employes who earn their living in the 53-year-old brick build- ing are trying to scrape up the estimated $3.8 mil- lion needed for a new structure, having failed in a bond issue in the Nov. .2 election. The council planned to consider alternative fund-raising ap- proaches (sell Tootsie Rolls, maybe?) yesterday, but only a few dozen spactators are allowed in the meeting chamber - it's partitioned to pro- vide a permanent office for the building inspec- tor.[ Fruit of the future It is a drab, even ugly fruit, covered with hair and a thin brown skin. But the emerald green pulp underneath the kiwifruit has a tangy, straw- berry-like taste, and even the pinhead-sized black seeds can be eaten. "It's the fruit of the future," says Ted Shurtleff, who is distributing the kiwi from his 20 acres in San Luis Obispo County in California. "It's delicious, can be stored for weeks in home refrigerators and makes a spectacular jam." Growers say they expect production to sky- rocket in the next few years. as the twisting vines, which first took root in the United States 40 years ago, finally come of age. Most plant- ings are small, and there's a four-year wait for the first crop, but the kiwifruit pays off at up to $5,000 a ton. On * the iside... - Karen Paul reviews the Sunday performance of Bernard Haitink's London Philharmonic for Arts Page ... Jon Pansius treads that fine line Carter may use tax to 7- cuts, rebates boost eco PLAINS, Ga. (AP) - Presi- dent-elect Jimmy Carter said yesterday that tax rebates and increased government spending may be needed to spur the na- tion's economy, and he discount- ed the likelihood of wage and price controls. Carter said at a news confer- ence that he believes that un- employment can be reduced to between 4 per cent and 4.5 per cent over a long period of time, which he sail\would be equiva- lent to 3 per cent of all adults over 20 in the jobless ranks. He said this would take two to four years. Currently unemployment is 7.9 per cent. THE PRESIDENT-ELECT al- so repeated his belief that in- flation can be held down by tar- geting federal programs to areas of highest unemployment rather than through a uniform national program. Carter said he cannot at this point be specific on details of his plans to decrease uneniploy- ment or the possibility that he might call for a general tax re- duction or one-time tax rebate. But he said that his posibili- ties for increasing the money supply include "tax rebates and spending." CARTER HELD- his second news conference since his elec- tion in the auditorium of an agricultural experiment station here and announced he will fly to Washington next week to meet with Federal Reserve Chairman Arthur Burns and some of President Ford's Cab- inet members, possibly includ- Cease-fire begins as Syrans enter Bei'rut BEIRUT, Lebanon (A) - Syrian tanks and troops silenced the guns of Beirut yesterday in a massive occupation that handed Lebanon its first real chance for peace in 19 months of civil war. Joyful Moslems slaughtered sheep in a traditional Arab ges- ture of welcome. Women sent up Arab cries of joy and dowsed Syrian soldiers with rose water and rice as columns of T62 and T54 tanks swept over the city from three directions. "Allah is great," shouted bystanders as the camouflage paint- ed tanks clanked by. "Arabs will be victorious." THE WELCOME was subdued in Christian quarters, where rightiest militiamen ordered civilians to stay off the streets. Chris- tian leaders seemed to feel more strongly the sting of Beirut's first foreign occupation since U. S. Marines landed to stop an earlier war in 1958. Only a few instances of resistance were reported as the 6,000 troops and 400 tanks took over, all in Moslem and Palestinian- controlled areas. The Syrians fired only a half dozen grenades and a few rounds of submachine gun fire in a six-hour sweep that began with the first light of dawn. By nightfall, they had established control over Beirut's battle zones, Palestinian refugee camps, radio stations, government build- ings, the airport and key intersections. The sound of gunfire died away for the first time since an earlier cease-fire more than nine months ago. "That's it, the war is over," exulted a Moslem Lebanese after driving the length of the front-line where thousands of his coun- try's people have been killed. See SYRIAN, Page 2 nomy ing Secretary of State Henry Kissinger. Carter announced also that Jody Powell, his press secretary as governor of Georgia and dur- ing his presidential campaign, will be White House press sec- retary as well. In a three-minute statement preceding the question-and-an- swer period Carter said his se- lection of Cabinet members and other top govermnent officials "The selection of cab- inet members will be slow, careful, cautious and deliberate.' -President-elect Jimmy Cartel- will be 'slow, careful, cautious and deliberate' and that he per- sonally will interview top con- tenders for each choice. HE SAID THOSE who are not selected for Cabinet rank may well be in line for other top government positions including ambassadorships abroad. "I have not made adecision up to this point on any one of the appointments," Carter said. He warned against specula- tion, saying that he will remain tight-mouthed and that "no one on my staff or in my family is authorized to speakfor me." HE NOTED that he plans a meeting soon with leading mem- bers of Congress and business and labor leaders in which he expects to discuss jobs and tax- es among other subjects. In response to a question, the President-elect said that only some sort of economic disaster would prompt him to call for wage and price controls. See CARTER, Page 2 AP Photo Klan smen, protest Bill Wilkinson, right, Imperial Wizard of the K'i Klux Klan tells the crowd outside the Plains Baptist Church Sunday of his disapproval of the church's decision to open its doors to all races. Wilkinson is from Denham Springs, La., as is Klansman Jim Morris, left. The church, where president-elect Jimmy Carter is a member, is in the background. MED SCHOOL BIAS: Supr eme Court, balIks WASHINGTON (P) - A Cali- fornia medical school won a temporary stay from the Su- preme Court yesterday against enforcement of a 'ourt order striking down an admissions policy giving preference to ra- cial minorities. The justices granted a request by regents of the University of California - Davis Medical School to delay enforcement of the order, which said the policy was discriminatory. - In a one-paragraph decision, the court granted a 30-day de- lay in enforcement, adding that if the regents filled an. appeal to the Supreme Court within 30 days the injunctive relief would remain in effect pending that appeal. TlE CALIFORNIA Supreme Court last month upheld a low- er court's ruling that the medi- cal school's admission policies discriminate against whites. It ordered the schools to include Allen Bakke in its next enter- ing class. Bakke, a 36-year-old white civil engineer from Sunnyvale, Calif., sued the university's re- gents after his application for admission was turned down. He charged that 16 lower-rated minority applicants were ac- cepted over him, denying him equal protection under the law. The state court agreed that Bakke had been a victim of a kind of reverse discrimination, and ordered the medical school to dismantle its affirmative ac- tion program which admits "special students" each year. The California court said that a special admissions program for the disadvantaged might be permissible if it included poor whites and was not based on race. IN SEEKING Supreme Court relief, the regents said, "These actions threaten to bring about the admission of virtually all- white entering-classes to the graduate and professional schools of the University of Californiaafor the next aca- demic year." The regents indicated that they interpreted the state court's order to be binding on all professional and graduate See HIGH, Page 2 Separatist party wins majority in Quebec' I I Arson ruled out as Postill fIre cause By PHILLIP 'BOKOVOY Fire Department officials yes- terday ruled out arson as the cause of the fire that destroyed Washtenaw County Sheriff Fred- rick Postill's home early Satur- day evening. Fire Chief Fred Schmid said the department had determined the cause of the fire was eith- er a lamp that tipped over and ignited a sofa or a cigarette dropped accidentally on a chair. Bob Tomson, spokesman for the family and Postill's cam- paign manager this fall, said See FIRE, Page 2 MONTREAL, (Reuter) - The Parti Quebecois, which wants independence from Canada for Quebec, won a staggering elec- tion victory last night and even province premier Robert Bour- assa lost his seat. Three hours after the polls closed in the election for the Quebec National Assembly - viewed as crucial for the future of Canada - the separatist party had won 56 of the 110 seats and will be able to form a majority government. It was leading in 14 other constituen- cies. B O U R A S S A' S Liberal Party, which went into the elec- tion with 96 seats, won only 20 yesterday and was leading in eight' other constituencies. A third party, the Union Na- tionale, won seven seats and was leading in three. Two other seats went to candidates of mi- nor parties. Bourassa, had warned during the campaign that a separatists victory would threaten the sta- bility of both Quebec and Can- ada. TN THE LAST election, in 1973, Premier Bourassa made a strong pitch to the voters to reiect the pro-independence partv, playing on fears of what wouild happen if Qiuebec split awav from the rest of the coun- trv. His appeal worked well.' This time, however, he has had trouble deflecting the focus of the campaign from his gov- ernment's unpopular record and bringing it to bear squarely on the independence issue. It was an amazing triumph for Parti Quebecois leader Rene Levesque. Although opinion. polls had shown him in the lead before the vote, many politicl observers hesitated to predit that he would do well enough to unseat the government. Last night's victory was ac- complished with only some 39 per cent of the popular vote. This was just nine points bet- ter than the party's perform- ance during the last provincial elections. IN THAT ELECTION, the- Parti Quebecois carpe second in 32 seats. This time the stronger presence of the Union Nationale made the diffef ence by draining votes away from the Liberals. At the headquarters of the Parti Quebecois here, people hugged each other, shouted and wept as the trend developed early in the evening. Three members of Bourassa's cabinet were trailing opposition candidates. ANALYSIS of the early re- sults showed that the resurgent Union Nationale, once almost omnipotent in Quebec politics See SEPARATISTS, Page 3 Daily Photo by BRAD BENJAMIN SHERIFF FRED POSTILL's home stands gutted following a Saturday night fire. Fire of- ficials speculate that the blaze began when a lamp overturned in the living room. Letters say AlIAs work in Vietnam MOUNT CLEMENS (UPI) - A local newspaper yesterday quoted letters from an American engineer working in South- east Asia who said he knows of 250-300 Americans listed as missing in action who are working in Vietnam. The revelation in a copyrighted Macomb Daily story was based on letters from the unidentified engineer to Nelson Ams- lies in Vietnam," the newspaper quoted. one letter as saying. "What I'm trying to say is that most of the MIAs aren't miss- ing. They are working in and around Hanoi and other cities close to the Chinese border." That revelation in the letter to Amsdill backed a similar claim made before a House committee last September by Mike Committee on Missing Persons in Southeast Asia, said in Wash- ington that the panel placed "absolutely no credence" in the report. "We got a letter but no names no details and when we wrote back, there still were no names or details," he said. MacDonald said that inirestigations so far indicate that all Americans listed as missing in action are in fact dead although