LOONEY 1TUNES See Editorial Page 5k 43zrn Y ~IAtII33 AMICABLE High--50 LoYv--32 s See TODAY for Details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVII, No. 61 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, November 18, 1976 Ten Cents E h e light Pages :r'itJUSEE NLStAN CALL D1Y Limp limbs According to local health authorities, the cam- pus swine flu innoculations were fairly innocuous, as most students simply rolled down their sleeves over slightly sore arms. A receptionist at the Uni- versity Hospital emergency ward said they had received several complaints but suspected the patients were just having bad psychological reac- tions. At the Union - where the immunization guns were shooting people up thick and fast - Dr. Atwater, director of the county health de- partment, said about one of every 1,000 fainted "from fright" either before or after getting the shot. His assistant, Richard Yarmain, shrugged, "Some people are just uptight." Happenings, will quench everyone's thirst for knowledge today. A 9:30 a.m. session opens the two-day Economic and Social Outlook Conference with a discussion on the Himans-Shapiro national fore- cast in Rackham Amphitheater. It will be fol- lowed by other presentations on the labor force and unemployment, and consumer attitudes . Two 1 p.m. lectures kick-off the final day of activities of the Teach-In on Terror on Terror in Latin America with Alberto Roldan speaking on Puerto Rico-U.S. relations in Rackham E. Lecture Rm., and Ken Langton, Tom Lobe, and Robert Matoon discussing "The Role of the U.S. in Latin American Totalitarianism,"Rackham W. Lecture Rm. They are followed at 2 by Peter Weber and Barbara Francisco holding a workshop on Amnesty International, and Charles Bright and others assessing the "Rise of Totalitarianism in Latin America" in Rackham W. Lecture Rm. A discussion on "Anti-Semitism in Latin America" with Judith Elkin in the same room at 4,..and an "Arts and Repression" talk by Louise Bernikow in Rm. 126, E.Q. at the same time wind up the afternoon sessions. ... From 3 to 5, the weekly Hopwood Tea is held at 1006 Angell ... at 4, Dr. Milford S. Lougheed will lecture on ''"e Biogenic Orign of Lake Superior Precambrian Iron Forma- tions" in 4001 C.C. Little ... at 7 Prof. Taniguchi of Kyoto U. will talk about the study and prac- tice of law in Japan in the Lawyers' Club lounge, sponsored by the International Law Society .. al- so at 7 is your last chance this term to attend the "first jump course" given by the U. of M. Skydivers, Rm. 1042 E.E. ... resuming at 7:30, the Latin America Teach-In will be climaxed by keynote speaker, Isabel Allende ... at the same time, Guild House will offer a poetry reading, 802 Monroe ... also, 2nd Ward Democrats will meet to discuss ward chairpersons and council candi- dates at Councilman Earl Greene's, 1553 Broad- way. All are welcome ... from 7:30-10, CEEW is offering a "Refreshing Math Skills" course, 328- 330 Thompson St. ... S.A.E. House will hold a pep rally at 8, 1408 Washtenaw ... also at 8, the R.C. Players will present "It is So! (If You Think So), East Quad Aud. ... at the same time, the New England Literature Program for Spring Half-term will hold a meeting for all interested students in 1007 A.H. ... and finally, the "Health and Sex- uality" discussion group meets at the Gay Com- munity Services Center, 612 S. Forest, B, also at 8. Tilting the scales The balance of terror is tipped significantly in favor of the Soviet Union, an American aero- space expert said yesterday. T. K. Jones, of the Boeing Aerospace Company, predicted that 98 per cent of the Soviet population could be saved from an all-out U.S. nuclear- attack, while Soviet in- dustry could recover in only two to four years. U.S. industry, on the other hand, not as well pro- tected as Russian industry, would need 12 years to get back on its feet. On the inside . . . ... Mark Whitney on the Editorial Page writes about the lack of intelligent life in Ohio ... Sports Page's Greg Zott takes a look at Ohio State's defense ... and Lucy Saunders praises Elly Ame- ling's performance Tuesday night on the Arts Page. On the outside . .. It'll be another pleasant day with highs be- tween 48 and 50. Clear skies will continue through the night as lows dip to 32. Winds will be 10-14 m.p.h. 'Ures By BARBARA ZAHS The lecture hall was silent last Mon- day night as students furiously scribbled formulas and figures for their Physics 240 exam. Suddenly, a scream pierced the air. "I can't take this test anymore!" a distraught student shouted as he ripped his exam and flung the shredded re- mains above his head. HE STORMED OUT of the room, ran down the corridor of the Physics and As- tronomy Building and crashed through a plate glass door. The student later admitted that the incident was a prank that backfired - he had intended to open the door, not )archer go through ity-but startled classmates initially believed that test anxiety had driven the student to an irrational act. Researchers say that test anxiety is a very real problem which plagues 10 to 20 per cent .of all colleges students, hindering their academic performance. OFTEN THE anxiety is characterized by rapid heart beat, perspiration, nau- sea, or headaches. Some students report that they simply "freeze" or "blankout" on exams and cannot recall material they have learned. Graduate student John Parker has launched a biofeedback-assisted relaxa- tion training program to relieve those exam-time jitters.- ytackle "By reducing the anxiety levels that actively inhibit production, we hope to improve performance level," he ex- plained. PARKER IS sympathetic to the stu- dents plight. "When you think of all the pressure on you, when it's (the course grade) focused on the midterm and final, it's small wonder that you get anx- ious," he said. The seven-week, experimental pro- gram is the subject of Parker's doctoral dissertation, and is a joint effort of the University's psychology denartment and the Reading and Learning Skills Center. Now in its third week, the program test anxiety combines the techniques of biofeedback and systematic desensitization. "SYSTEMATIC desensitization is tried and true. Biofeedback is tried and true," Parker said. "What's novel is putting the two together in this particular situa- tion." Parker said anxiety can be reduced qgicker and easier when the two tech- manes are used together. Biofeedback, Parker explained, is used to pick up pieces of physiological infor- mation of which a person is not normally mware, amplifv the information, then feed it back to the nerso min another form, us'iallv vislal or auditory. See RESENRCHERS, Page 8 ''hen yoUir hiniIyof ril the pressure onc you, when ~ iiit's focused.Ion thae rn £dteram ad fina~l, it's sma(l Ul yderthat Youi gr"t IlXli Hunt for local rapist continues Gilmore s condition tmproved SALT LAKE CITY, Utah (Reuter) - Gary Gilmore, who says he wants to die before a firing squad but instead tried to kill himself Tuesday, yester- day ripped out of his veins a tube supplying him with medi- cation, hospital officials said. A spokesman for the Utah University Medical Center said he was not sure that Gilmore had again attempted to kill himself on the day when the Utah Pardons Board was to have ruled on the condemned killer's wish to be executed. T H E SPOKESMAN said Gilmore, 35, had almost fully recovered after his joint suicide attempt with his 20-year-old fi- ancee, Nicole Barrett. She is in critical condition at another hos- pital. They were found uncon- scious after taking drug over- doses. . Medical Center administra- tor Jerry Smith said the hos- ital was preparing to feed Gilmore by muscular iniections if he continued to resist taking medication through the tube. "That often happens with people recovering from an over- dose. They don't act in a very rational way. He couldn't have done much damage to his life with that particular gesture," Smith said. THE HEAD of the five guards watching over Gilmore round the clock at the hospital, Lieu- tenant Rex Richis, said he told Gilmore late yesterday of Bar- rett's critical condition. "lie asked me if I could find out how Nicole was, so I as- sumed he had heard some- thing," Richis said. "I talked to the doctors and they said medically there was no reason why he should not know. So I told him." THE HOSPITAL bulletin is- See GILMORE's, Page 3 Group asks U' to prVie 1)1S1 service for OxFord Housiing By LAURIE YOUNG P o I i c e are continuing their search for the man they believe is responsible for a rash of ten assaults on local women during the past month - at least two of which were rapes. The attacks, often at knife-point, have occurred all over the city, and fol- low no discernible pattern. They have ranged from a mugging in front of Uni- versity President Robben Fleming's home on South University to various stab- bings in the Kingsley Street area. TWO RAPES at knife point have occurred in the South University and Oxford area. One woman avoided an attack near the corner of Oakland and Church streets by screaming. Police believe that the same person-a black man of" me- dium buildbinhis early 20's- is responsible for all the as- saults. Despite the lack of any apparent pattern to his at- tacks, according to Ann Arbor Police Major Howard Zeck, their belief is based on "de- scriptions and method of oper- ation and the fact that he uses the same weapon." The latest assault, which oc- curred early Wednesday morn- ing at South University and Ox- ford when an Oxford housing resident was raped at knife- m point, has created much tension ne and has forced the University eir to search for an immediate so- lution to ever-nagging problems rig of security. nt, THE UNIVERSITY is provid- in ing an escort system for those ed dorm residents who need rides ral from central campus to resi- dence halls at night. The Uni- ith versity offered this service to Oxford residents three weeks ago, after the first rape, but is today opening the service to the University community at large. Women students should go to the 525 ChurchStreet parking structure where University se- curity officers will be taken off their regular patrols in. order to escort women home. But at a tense meeting at Oxford Housing, over a hundred angry students told David Fo'ilke, manager of Housing security services, that this is not a satisfactory solution. "HOW MANY people have to be raned before the Univer- sitv will really 'do something?" asked one male in the audience. "What people want here is a bus system similar to that of. North Campus. A bus that will pick people up and drop them off," explained Oxford Resident Director Paul Laza- roff. 'People are very agitated now and they are in a posit'on of demanding that something be done by the University - some affirmative action done See POLICE, Page 8 Doily Photo by PAULINE LUBENS BOB RICE, a zoology student speaks on U.S. economic in- volvement in Latin America at the Teach-In yesterday at Rackham Auditorium. Panel'hints U.S. role- 0 ! in Latin America By PATTY MONTEMURRI The 60 people who filled the Rackham East Conference roo yesterday afternoon expected to hear-as it was billed in o flyer-"three U-M zoology department members discuss th encounters with American-supported government terrorism durin field studies in Central America." Instead, a zoology teaching assistant (TA), a zoology studen and a former student-none of v4hom conducted field studiesi Central America or ever encountered persecution there-discuss United States economic and military involvement in three Centn American countries. THE SPEAKERS conducted the workshop in conjunction wi the Teach-In on Terror in Latin America. See PANEL, Page 3 Jordan caims Iraq pIanned~hotel attack By Associated P-ess and Reuter News Service AMMAN, Jordan - Jordan accused Iraq last night of plan- ning an attack by four gun-wielding Palestinians on Amman's Intercontinental Hotel yesterday, setting off a battle with se- curity forces in which at least seven people were killed. An official statement issued in Amman said the four raid- ers, who burst into the hotel firing automatic weapons and briefly seized 150 hostages before being cut down by the Jordan- ian forces, were Palestinians from Arab territories occupied by Israel. THREE OF THE GUERRILLAS, two hotel employes and two soldiers were killed during the raid, a Jordanian government spokesperson said. The fourth guerrilla was seriously wounded. Also wounded were three guests, a hotel employe and a soldier. One wounded guest was identified as Dr. Fouad Kanda- la t, an American of Jordanian extraction. The dead guerrillas were identified as Abdulla Ibrahim, Nidal Mohammad Jawi and Samir Mohammed Hassan. THE GOVERNMENT STATEMENT said the surviving terror- ist, identified as Tewfik Omar, confessed that the group had been instructed to take hostages in the hotel, then demand release of imprisoned Palestinian guerrillas in Jordan and a renuncia- tion of Arab summit agreements for ending the Lebanese civil war. The statement said it became clear after interrogating the omar that the group was trained in "subversion and sabotage with other terrorist groups in Iraq under the supervision of the Iraqi authorities." According to the statement and witnesses to yesterday's at- See TERRORISTS, Page 3 Last electio, By LANI JORDAN This term's Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) all-campus election could be the last for the fledgling student govern- ment. On Nov. 30, Dec. 1 and 2, students will vote on a new constitution which would dis- solve MSA, replacing it with the Michigan Student Govern- ment (MSG). MSA replaced the former student governing unit, the Student Government Coun- cil (SGC), last January. ALSO ON THE ballot is a non-binding referendum to de- termine student opinion on sev- nfor eral methods of distributing tick- ets for athletic events. Thirty- six candidates are also vying for 11 vacant MSA seats. If approved, the new consti- tution would institute several basic changes in student gov- ernment structure. Representa- tives to the new government would be elected from within schools and colleges, one rep- resentative per 1,000 students. The president and vice-presi- dent of MSG would be elected at large from the entire stu- dent body. In MSA, half'of the 36 mem-, bers are elected at large. The other half are appointed by the governments of individual schools and colleges. Officers are elected from within MSA. BRIAN LASKEY, an MSA member and author of the new lISA? calls for students to pay a man- datory fee of $1 to fund MSG. Students voted to abolish a sim- ilar funding system last spring. MSA PRESIDENT, Calvin Lu- ker said, "There is no reason td believe that each school and college would be able to find candidates to run (for office). Schools could conceivably be unrepresented." Students will also vote on five possible systems for distributing tickets to athletic events. MSA developed the alternatives fo1- Slowing recent problems with ticket lines. The systems in- clude: * Computer - students will indicate on computer cards whether they want tickets and preference of individual, small group of block tickets. The com- puter will then assign tickets RANKS IN TOP 10 PUBLIC UNIVERSITIES: 'U' rates among most expensive By BOB ROSENBAUM The University this year remains among the top ten most expensive public institutions in the United Stat- es, according to the National Asso- tenth on the list of state supported universities. Heading that list are the state- operated colleges of Cornell Univer- sity in Ithaca, N\Y., charging resi- Aait Tn , n r wp 4r".riln-upti b THIS YEAR'S 9.7 per cent tuition hike, coupled with increases in hous- ing and other fees did not significant- ly affect Michigan's position in the "top ten." \(i i:-- hnc r. tfr rlwh Patn in