CONCERT GRIPE See Editorial Page -I - ,t t1 :43k t STABLE High-28° Low-26* See Today for details Latest Deadline in the State Y Vol. LXXXVI, No. 77 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, December 11, 1976 Ten Cents Eight Pages ... . . .... Eioht anesVVi ,,, f .F YUSCE Nv lfPQ CL.L lgfLY Well how about Foghorn Leghorn? The droves of tired, exam-obsessed students who filed into the Nat. Sci. Auditoium last night look- ing forward to an evening of Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Porky Pig and other Looney Tunes charac- ters were, well, ripped off. The People's Bicenten- nial Committee (PBC) plastered the campus this week with three-color flyers featuring Bugs and Dafy and the Warner Brothers emblem, promising an "All New Collection of Warner Brothers '40's cartoon classics." But what you saw wasn't what you got. There was,/ instead, a collection of mildly amusing MGM cartoons from the creators of Bugs Bunny-but they just weren't Looney Tunes. The audience at the 8:30 showing hooted the house down af er being informed by a sheepish and contrite PBC spokespersonthat the offerings were "identi- -cal" to Looney Tunes. Amid the howls for refunds, the spokesperson said, "Well how about Foghorn Leghorn?" Well how about him? There wasn't a sign of Warners favorite rooster among the ten or so cartoonS shown. Perhaps next week PBC will show Warners' Version of Gone With the Wine, and no doubt it'll be identical to MGM's original. Hart-felt dedication In honor of retiring Michigan Senator Philip Hart, a visitors' center was dedicated at Sleep- ing Bear Dunes National Lakeshore and a special scholarship fund was started at Lake Superior State College yesterday. The visitors' center, named after Hart, was dedicated in Leland by Gov. William Milliken, who called the 18-year veteran of the Senate "one of Michigan's finest servants." "Senator Hart's long and distinguished career contributed substantially to a better Michi- gan, and this visitor center will long stand as a landmark of his contributions and achieve- ments," the governor said. Plans for the scholar- ship fund have yet to be decided. Happenings ... are sparse today. An open house and pot- tery sale runs from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Andree Valley, 2855 Gross Rd. ... a non-denominational "Children's Holiday Celebration" begins at 11 a.m. at St. Andrews Church on the corner'of Catherine and Division. Call 665-2565 for details ... The Michi- gan Youth Band performs at 7:30 p.m. at St. Thomas High School ... and the choir of St. Mary's Chapel offers "A Procession with Carols on the Third Day of Advent" at 8 p.m., 331 Thompson. " The bionic corpse (cont'd) That ghoulish amusement park "wax dummy" we told you about yesterday - the one that turned out to be a human corpse '- has been identified as a man who was shot to death, prob- ably around the turn of the century. A coroner's examination of the body, discovered in the Long Beach Pike "Laugh in the Dark" fun house dur- ing filming for an episode of "The Six Million Dollar Man," found the fatal bullet in the man's chest. "The body was professionally embalmed," said the coroner, employing a type of hardening compound used in 'the early 1900s. He added that it appeared the victim had been medically ex- ami ed after being shot, but "how the body be- came available for display is unknown." i i Carter calls jobs his tax WASHINGTON (A my Carter said yes programs are his fi ence if the economy next year, supplem tax cuts if necessai While making it cl hasn't made any fina the President-elect t conference on the steps: "The first r mains, jobs. "I'D LIKE TO mov ly as I can with put jobs, job-training pro also public works pr Carter said. "What with job opportunitie, total amount of st quired would be deriv a tax decrease." Carter spoke with after visiting the Pen cret war room with first priority; cuts posnsible P) - Jim- dent-elect Walter Mondale. Both fort to move or silencet terday jobs were briefed on how it operates. But Gen. George Brown,c irst prefer- Carter said Defense Secretary man of the Joint Chiefs,g needs help Donald Rumsfeld and the Joint ed at them occasionally ented with Chiefs of Staff told him how to a frown. ry. order the use of atomic weap- ear that he ons. WITH RUMSFELD, B l decisions, and the other servicec old a news AS THE FUTURE command- standing nearby, Carter sa Pentagon er-in-chief walked out of the reply to a question that he priority re- Potomac River entrance to the believes a $5 billion to $ Pentagon after the briefing, two lion cut is possible in the small groups of demonstrators tagon budget. ve as rapid- chanted: "Disarm now, disarm He said anew that the cu blic service now," and "A future for our is possible through econon grams and children, Jimmy Carter." Carter had said during thet ojects . . ." The President-elect gave no paign that such savings I can't do indication that he heard the possible without endangerin s to fill the demonstrators, who identified tional security. imulus re- themselves as a Jonah House Carter said he and Mon ved through antiwar group from Baltimore, ate lunch with Rumsfeld Md. the Joint Chiefs. The inco i reporters Neither Pentagon security of- chief executive said the tagon's se- ficers nor Secret Service agents and coffee were far better Vice Presi- guarding Carter made any ef- when he was familiar witht them. chair- glanc- with rown, chiefs aid in e still 7 bil- Pen- utting mies. cam- were g na- ndale and ming food1 than them t Kissinger pleads for a code of restraint' By AP and UPI BRUSSIFLS, Belgium - Secre- tary .of State Henry Kissinger, t leaving his last meeting of the North Atlantic Treaty Organiza- tion (NATO), appealed yester- day for "a code of restraint" between East and West to keep the world from sliding into "an unimaginable catastrophe." Kissinger addressed a news conference following a two-day meeting of NATO foreign minis- ters, then flew to London to discuss the deadlocked Geneva conference on Rhodesia. AT THE NATO meeting, the United States and its allies voted to reject a Soviet proposal that NATO and the Communist War- saw Pact agree not to be the first to use nuclear weapons. A joint statement said the West must be free to use any weapon against an aggressor. U.S. leaders distinguish be- tween "first use" and "first s'rike" my many missiles in talking about nuclear weapons. First use might be defensive, they say, as in a nuclear land mine used against a tank ad- vance. The meeting, which was Henry Kissinger's last foreign mission. -as secretary of state, also voic- ed concern about the current Soviet military buildup and warned the Kremlin not to take - advantage of situations like An- gola to seize opportunistic ad- vantages. THE WESTERN allies also re- jected a Soviet proposal to freeze the membership of NATO and the Warsaw Pact. The rejection leaves the way open for Spain to join NATO, a move long ad- vocated by the United States. Kissinger said at the news conference that NATO has two tasks - to improve its security to neutralize the growing Soviet strength and to work for peace. "In a nuclear age." he said, "there can be no question we have a direct responsibility to prevent any temptation on the part of those countries that con- inue' to multiply armaments to believe that they can achieve political or economic solutions by the use of arms." AT THE SAME time, he went on, "the future of world peace and perhaps the survival of hu- manity depends on whether, in relations between East and West, we can find a solution to our problems and a code of re- straint lest we slide-again, as has happened so often in history. to a series of miscalculations to seek the accumulation of mar- ginal advantages and into, per- haps, an unimaginable catas- trophe." Kissinger left with tributes from the other Western minis- ters. NATO Secretary-General Joseph Luns said, "We in the alliance have been privileged to as a young Navy oticer. IN HIS REMARKS about the national economy, Carter ap- peared to be moving away somewhat from the recommen- dations he has received over the past 48 hoursrfrom a $15- billion tax cut to stimulate the economy. The large tax reduction has been urged by nearly all of his economic advisers and some of the nation's top business lead- ers. However, Carter's -advisers argued for a temporary tax re- duction while the businessmen want a permanent cut. In making it clear his first preference would be to create jobs, Carter said Congress al- ready has enacted legislation that can be used in such an effort. Already-enacted jobs pro- grams include the Comprehen- See JOBS, Page 8 Is yourber fake?' Daily Photo by PAULINE LUBENS We don't know who the fat guy is, but the charmer on the left is Brenda Cornett, 7, whose Christ- mas list is long and varied. By KEN CHOTINER The two-year-old boy paused a moment and looked at the rotund man hidden behind the flowing white beard, took two steps forward, then burst into tears. The li tle girl next in line eyed the red suit skeptically and asked, "Is your beard fake?" For Santa, it's all in a day's work. The jolly old elf, known as Warren Anthony eleven months of the year, spends his time from Thanksgiving through Christmas at Briarwood Mall listening to the wishes of good little boys and girls-of all ages. He breaks his list of those who are likely to be naughty or nice into age groups. Anthony's best behaved visitors are infants, who usually have lit le to say and don't know what's going on any- way. Between that age and three years, the children tend to frighten easily and usually scream or cry. But it's the post-adolescents who give him fits. Three London stewardesses. recently dropped by for a ,stay on Santa's lap, and Anthony found them "a little overly friendly.' A sixty-five-year- old who brought her grandchild ended up staying to get her picture taken with Santa. The kids ask for toys, sure, but Anthony says they usually ask a personal question or two as well: Do you really live at the North Pole? Where are your reindeer? Is your beard real? BGS thIves4 By BRIAN BLANCHARD Bachelor of General Studies - BGS. Once the degree pro- gram was the weak sister of a Bachelor of Arts or Bachelor of Science concentration. People said "Oh, he's a BGS" in the same way they'd say "Oh, he's from out of town." Now, the BGS program is thriving. One of every five LSA students sees the advantages of the program - a lack of dis- tribution and concentration requirements - as outweighing the disadvantages - the skepticism of friends and possible em- ployers towards a BGS 'degree. "THERE JUST ISN'T a stigma anymore," says Isabel Reade, a counselor's secretary at Angell Hall. "No one cares what your degree is called." Reade, a staunch defender of the BGS pro- gram, knows several Medical School students who graduated with the BGS. The degree requires English Corpposition and 120 semester 4m leibiit hours with a 2.00 grade point average. Half of those hours must be upper level work with a minimum grade of "C," and no more than 60 hours in any one department. Fourteen students formed the first group of BGS majors in 1969. Now, approximately 3,000 students call themselves Bache- lors of General Studies, though Honors and Residential College students are still ineligible. MANY OF THE BGS majors like the program because it gives them the opportunity to dodge the language requirement of a BA or BS. "I don't like languages," says senior Paul Shore flat- ly. "I've applied to Dental School, and they don't care about languages." Some University officials have reservations about a degree without a language requirement. Ed Dougherty, assistant to the Vice-President for Academic Affairs, Frank Rhodes, says students students should take a language simply because they can't forsee See BGS, Page 5 Musical cops What's happened to baton-wielding, head-bash- ing police at the University of Wisconsin in Madi- son now that the days of student radicalism are over? They've gone 'soft. "The new policy is not to aggravate people-," says officer Hugo Tiedt, who helps patrol the campus area. Even jay- walkers are getting a gentle, I-want-to-be-your- friend treatment. One officers rides a squad car equipped with a hi-fi system and a loudspeaker, playing music and exhorting students not to take chances: "Hello, everybody. Watch your step. Pro- tect yourself. A wise person crosses only at an intersection." Ghostly goings-ont The British Medical Association (BMA) says its headquarters in London are haunted, possibly by the ghost of Charles Dickens' wife. The current edition of the BMA News Review says three clean- ing women have spotted the shimmering, veiled figure since it was first seen in the building's library several years ago. "The part of the li- brary where the physical phenomenon is associa- ted is the part which is built over Charles Dick- ens' garden and is the nearest point to the house in which the author lived," the magazine re- ported. On the inside .. The Meg Christian concert a few nights ago was No Man's Land as far as the audience was concerned. Jim Shahin describes his fruitless ef- forts to get inside for the Editorial Page ... Les- lie Brown brings you all the action of the Michi- gan-Michigan State Hockey game for Sports ... and the Arts and Entertainment page has its handy-dandy Happenings calendar for the week See KISSINGER, Page 8 ,. i ANTI-HOSTAGE RESOLUTION: U.N. p UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (A") Third World and Western nations joined forces in a' rare display of unity yesterday to approve, at the committee lev- el, a plan for an international treaty against the taking of hostages. A resolution sponsored by West Germany and 37 other nations was adopted by con- sensus in the legal committee of the General Assembly. Sub- sequent passage by the full as- sembly is largely a formality because all 146 member nations sit on the committee. THE RESOLUTION calls for establishing a 35-nation panel to draft a treaty committing governments to prevent the taking of hostages and to pun- ish those who take them. The treaty, not expected be- fore the end of 1978, would be the first U. N. - sponsored anti- terrorism measure seeking jurisdiction over the entire world's population. A West German diplomat hailed the decision as the "fin- anel OK's pact only to "innocent" hostages. The United States and other Western nations objected on the grounds that the word might be used to exclude Jews or white South Africans from treaty protection. In return, the West Germans and their 37 other cosponsors agreed to delete a provision saying that the taking of hos- tages should be condemned, prohibited and punished and that those involved should be prosecuted or extradited for prosecution. BUT THEY SAID the delega- tion from the mandate given the treaty - writing panel would not compromise the final product. Agreement was sealed Thurs- day when more than 100 mem- bers of the Group of 77, the most powerful bloc of develop? ing countries in the United Na- tions, gave their endorsement. The Soviet Union and other Communist countries followed suit. The resolution represents a ee NATIONS, Page 5 Judge calls cocaine laws unconstitutional BOSTON f) - A District Court jusdge said yesterday that cocaine is far less dangerous than cigarettes or alcohol and declared the Massachusetts law banning its use unconstitutional. Jldge Elwood McKinney dismissed the case against a defendant { charged wi h possession in Roxbury District Court. However, court officials said his decision does not set a precedent and has no k f