GO BLUE! See Editorial Page W- Sir iauF D~ali 1 AMA IZEING\ See ',frHigh - 42d Low -220 See Today for details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXViI, No, 63 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, November 20, 1976 Ten Cents Eight Pages Why are people from i a C" P l IOU SEE NEWS EtAM.CALL 75-DAILY Columbus so strange? 'Open doors shut The Ann Arbor Free People's Clinic will be closing its doors to the public on December 16, 1976 for an undetermined time period. Recently renaming itself the Ann Arbor Community Health Center, the clinic will be forced to vacate its present'225 E. Liberty location in January be- cause of building renovation. Presently hunting empty office space, they hope to eventually set- tle down in a neighborhood as a community clinic. Go Blue! Gov. Milliken will be fighting his own battle this weekend with the 1977-78 state budget, but he found the time to make an unofficial appoint- ment with Michigan coach Bo Schembechler - for Jan. 1 in Pasadena. Aides said Milliken phoned Bo Thursday to wish the Wolverines well in their Big Ten title tilt today with Ohio State. "I wish you well in this crucial game," said Milliken. "If I don't see you before, I'll see you -in Calif- ornia." Aides also said that Milliken reported the Wolverine coach sounded confident, and said his, team was showing "great spirit." Happetgings... Its all on the line today, as Bo's Boys take on The Forces of Darkness in Columbus. If you're watching on the tube, kickoff time is 12:50 .. Otherwise, everything comes out after the sun goes down. Tonight is your last chance to catch "It Is So! (If You Think So)" in the East Quad Aud. at 8. Tickets are a buck ... Tb "e's a berle- fit concert for Ozone House, 761-HELP, Commu- nity Switchboard, and all that other good stuff from 8-1 in the Michigan Union Ballroom.. It'll run you $2.50 at the door. Doublespeak The State Department has eased ahead of Sen.- elect Daniel Patrick Moynihan for the Doublespeak Award of the National Council of Teachers of Eng- lish. Daniel Dietrich of the University of Wiscon- sin, chairman of the council's doublespeak com- mittee, cited a State Department announcement that put the striped panted boys over the top: The coordinator will "Review existing mechan- isms of consumer input, thruput and output and seek ways of improving these linkages via the consumer consumption channel." Moynihan, New York's new Democratic senator, got on the map for a promise he made when he resigned as a U.S. delegate to the United Nations in 1975: "I would consider it dishonorable to leave this post and run for any office, and I hope it would be understood that if I do, the people, the voters to whom I would present myself in such circum- stances, would consider me as having said in advance that I am a man of no personal honor to have done so." It makes you dream of Ron Ziegler. By STU McCONNELL Special to The Daily COLUMBUS, Ohio - This city and Woody Hayes, it has been said, deserve each other. Normally a mild-mannered and somewhat gritty industrial town, every autumn Saturday it slips into a nearby phone booth aid-presto-Mania City. Saying that football is popular in Columbus is somewhat akin to saying that ice is popular in Alaska - there's just no getting away from it., BUT FOR THE ANNUAL showdown against arch-rival Michigan, which kicks off at 12:50 this afternoon, the Buckeye fans reserve a special brand of zeal. One enterprising fan took the trouble to silk- screen "Wipe Michigan" on every sheet of , a roll of toilet paper; another cut up a massive computer printout into confetti which read: "Ohio State smells roses, Michigan sucks oranges" merchants or the main drag of com- pus High Street have taken to posting their own predictions of the final score in their shop win- dows. "I've been up for all of Michigan week," exclaimed scarlet-and-gray-clad Scott Kingsbury, a Buckeye fan for 11 years. "I've got a quad- rophonic stereo and I'll probably play all the Ohio State songs real loud the morning of the game." "FOR SOME PEOPLE, this is the highlight of the whole year," said a woman at Papa Joe's, a loud, beer-drinking bar which wds so full last night that the windows steamed up. "If OSU wins tomorrow, High' Street will go crazy," she added. After last year's dramatic victory, jubilant fans took over several blocks of Columbus, smashing parking meters, tieing up traffic; and turning over cars with Michigan license plates. Columbus cops are taking extra measures this year to prevent a recurrence, but students are skeptical. "That's a nice-looking car," said one, eye- ing a sparkling new car with Michigan plates. "Too bad it won't be after this weekend." See COLUMBUS, Page 5 AP Photo WHICH FINGER are these Ohio State fans raising to has-been head football, coach Woody Hayes? Ah, they must believe their team is still Number One. In fact, they are mistaken. The venerable Hayes' words in Columbus last night must have been poor persuasion indeed. Attacks s Route to serve 'Hill' area, Oxford.housing The person believed responsi- ble for a recent series of as- saults on women is described as a black male, 5'10" tall, with stocky build and smooth or medium skin texture. He usually wearsnsome kind of head apparel. In case of emer- gency, call 911. If you have in- formation concerning this man, call the police at 994-2880 or 994-2875. Hearst By LAURIE YOUNG The Regents yesterday ap- proved an emergency transpor- tation plan to serve Oxford Housing and the "Hill" area dormitories. The move is an ef- fort to provide extra protection to a University community shaken by a recent series of as- saults on women. The "Nite Owl" bus service begins today - only for days after the second Oxford homs- ing resident in three weeks was raved at South University and Oxford. BUSES will run every day on the half-hour from 7:00 p.m. to 1 a.m. The network origi- nates at the Undergraduate Library (UGLI) on South Uni- versitv. After 1 a.m., women may be escorted home by University Security officers from the 525 Church Street parking struc- ture. The bus service - which is a dunlicate of one first used six vears agn during the time of the so-called "Co-ed Killings." bht discontinued because rider- shin fell off - is being funded n-lv until the end of the term. An evaluation will then take niace to determine the system's fate. "WEF WILL find ouit how peo- rte are res=onding to it, said Fnrlnn M'ilder, assistant to the =ice-president for finance who estimates the service will cost ? 000. "We've gone 4-5 years without it so we are responding tl-e best we know how. If as- --Its vanish and the need for the'system vanishes, then we'll hame to see. Right now, we are rosnonding to the request of 't-cents and residents in the area." Rhit Harlan warns, "We feel tfi may be one method (to in- crease saf-tv), hut there are so many things that individials m"st use as well to give then- s-l--q the necessarv secirity." TTnijrersity Se-ilrity segests the fnlwing nreenlitions: w Stidents should walk in grnoins after dark and use only xv-11 - lighted, well - traveled routes. * When walking home at night, -ntifv someone of the time von are l ving, your exne-ted ar- rival time at vour destination See REGENTS, Page 5 -. ur CHhtlyTbusNE Frtsbee, iic hi ne, theatnd ym altman- By KEN CHOTINER I24~ . The mighty machine has tak-t; en over many of the tasks once< entruisted to mere humans, but } devotees of the Frisbee never:. dreamed that their sport was threatened by mechanical man- my: ipulation - until yesterday. Frisbees launched from home- made catapults filled the air of the Diag as Pi Tau Sigma, the honorary mechanical drawing society, staged its "Fabulous Frisbee Fling." The catapults had to weigh under 25 pounds, cost less than ten dollars, have a triggering device, and be able to stand free. The Frisbees could not be folded or mutliated. THE STAKES were high-the winner to receive a dinner for two at the Old Heidelberg, the runner-up a large pizza, and Doily Photo by BRAD BENJAMIN the third place finisher getting Two contestants proudly demonstrate how their machine works at yesterday's Fris- See MACHINE, Page 2 bee Fling. Despite their best efforts, this Frisbee was flung only 21.4 feet. UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICE FILED: GEO charges 'U with l 0 Chinese thrillsg Mao Tse-tung's widow Chiang Ching, a for- mer actress, and her discredited fellow radicals have come under attack not only for their politi- cal views but their alleged viewing of pornographic films. According to China's leading newspaper, The People's Daily, they were privately savoring the "yellow filmis" - the Chinese term for sexually explicit "blue movies" - as well as "kung fu" fighting and adventure films while advocating little fresh entertainment to the masses. "For these kinds of movies, no matter how much of the na- tion's money she spent, Chiang Ching wanted to import them," the newspaper said. Wonder if Deep Throat needed any translation. On the inside ... On the Editorial Page this week's "On the Level" has Mike Beckman replying' in kind to W.L. Scheller's treatise on capital punishment ... Sports Page's Rich Lerner takes a look into the crystal ball for his post season bowl match- ups. Patty's freedom By AP and Reuter SAN FRANCISCO-A vibrant. smiling Patricia Hearst was freed on $1.5 million bail yes- terday and went home, for the first time since her bizarre kid- naning 33 months ago.' T h e 22-year-old newspaper heiress, who has spent the last 14 months in prison, was re- leased by U.S. District Court Judge William Orrick on bail nending appeal of her bank rob- berv conviction. She also awaits trial in Los Angeles on state See HEARST, Page 2 By KbN PARSIGIAN know what to do - so bunted. yesterday filed an unfair practice charge against The grievances charg iversity withthe Michi- the University has failed Employment Relations sign the titles "Research ssion (MERC), claiming ant" (RA) or "Staff Assi ninistration is "delaying (SA) to psychology gr, ning of a contract over students Jeff Evans ant -mandatory bargaining Hencken. Thetwowork Psvchiatry Dept. of Unix~ Hgspital and at the Cour v are blackmailing us," Center of the Institute f ion President Doug Mo- man Adjustment. This is very obviously a busting tactic." SINCE THIS is the only block to reaching a settl TWO sides appeared and since GEO believesi :o settle the eight month "non - mandatory" barg A dispute late Thursday issue, the union wants t+ vhen the issue of two the contract retaining th grievances, filed by sent wording, and to 1975, suddenly halted through with its grievanc ions.The University, howeve y were on the one-yard- fuses to sign the contra eady to score a touch- til the matter is "clear said University Counsel either at the bargaining zLemmer. "They didn't or in court," reft dra-ma they e that to as- Assist- stant" "duate d Joel in the iersity nseling or Hu- road-,. ement it is a aining o sign e pre- follow es. er, re- ct un- ed up table "We can't resolve a contract until we know what the lan- guage means," said Chief Uni- versity Bargainer John For- syth. "And if we have to go to MERC to settle it, then we'll see them at MERC." THE TWO grievances have been scheduledgforarbitration three times over the past year, but each time the arbitration has been postponed. The griev- ances are now slated to be de- cided in January. stalling There is no way of knowing when the unfair labor practice charge will be decided by MERC, but, Moran said, "It will probably take between three and nine months." Neither side was optimistic about how long a settlement would be delayed while waiting for the two decisions. Forsyth said it "could be a long time", and Moran specu- lated, "the signing of a con- tract could be held up almost until the next expiration date." Mifistrike prompts GM-UAW settlement By The Associated Press and United Press International DETROIT - The United Auto Workers (UAW) and General Motors (GM) reached tentative agreement on a national con- tract yesterday, ending what one GM official called the short- est auto strike in industry history. The three-year pact for GM's 390,000 hourly employes was announced just 121 hours after the union struck 16 key plants, where 80,000 hourly workers walked off the job at midnight Thursday. THE STRIKE FOLLOWED round-the-clock bargaining that began Thursday morning. Pickets were withdrawn at most of the strike-bound plants soon after the settlement was announced, and local union officials said they were instructing second-shift workers to report to their jobs. The contract now goes to the rank-and-file, with ratifica- TU fires up By JAY LEVIN The Ann Arbor Tenants Union (TU), seek- ing to pump some adrenalin into its current rent strike dispute with Reliable Realty Management Company, took its cause to the Diag yesterday with a festival designed -drew a healthy response from the crowd of 80 Diag strollers. The crowd jeered the actors' dramatization of the stereotypical sinister landlord and reveled in the fes- tival's plea.for tenant power. "We want to show people who also live According to TU organizer Kim Keller, 13 of Reliable's 18 houses-encompassing about 70 tenants-are withholding funds from landlady Edith Epstein in protest of alleged- ly shoddy maintenance procedures and ex- cessive rent. They are also seeking a col-