GUN CONTROL NOW See Editorial Page AjbF A6F 4tj t r4 t A C"An :43 a t t BRILLIANT Iigh-68 Low-43 See Today for details Vol. LXXXVI, No. 5 c iF"1'W 0SEE 1$36HAPP]VCALL )NY Fee hike fight The Committee to Fight the Tuition Hike an- nounced tentative plans last night to organize a boycott of classes September 18 protesting the six per cent tuition hike. The group discussed other tactics, including plans to address the September 19 Board of Regents meeting and various methods of rallying support for the strike, including a pos- sible student-worker alliance. The meeting was ad- dressed by Leroy Washington, a spokesman from the American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employes local 1583 and Frank Cou- vares, a representative of the Graduate Employes' Organization. Both unions have pledged support for the committee, which has scheduled another meeting for tomorrow night. More brawls Police report no significant crime rise since students have come back to town with all their stereos, television 'sets and ten speeds. However, police said there have been more brawls reported at local bars and parking violations are way up. Yearbook The University yearbook needs you. Come to the mass meeting Wednesday at the Student Pub- lications Building, 420 Maynard at 7:30 p.m. to sign up. Anyone with a talent for photography, layout, writing or a desire to learn is welcome. Call 764-0561 for information. 0 Happenings-.ys.. .,.are down toh three events today. The Akido Association presents a demonstration of their mar- tial art in the IM bldg. wrestling room at 4:30; there will be a Project Outreach mass meeting at 7:30 in Hill Aud; and at 8 p.m. a film on Project Skylab and a documentary on Stonehedge will be shown in MLB, Aud. 3. Small jaws A Connecticut town remained calm Sunday after a wide-eyed youth reported sighting a shark. After all, police said, the three-foot sand shark was only "swimming" in the Danbury library fountain. The fish with the small jaws met anfate similar to its man-eating movie star counterpart. The city's dog warden "disposed" of the intruder. ! Assassination Senator Richard Schweiker (R-Pa.) introduced legislation yesterday calling for a new investiga- tion into the assassination of President Kennedy. He said new evidence had destroyed the credibility of the Warren commission. He said his research showed that the FBI had destroyed and suppressed evidence that could have affected the findings of the commission, set up to investigate the assassina- tion; which concluded that Lee Harvey Oswald was alone responsible for the 1963 killing. Dry up! The Women's Christian Temperance Union is determined to dry up the nation despite increasing liquor sales and a dwindling membership in their own organization. At a five-day annual convention which ended yesterday, the group said their long- range plan is for a federal prohibition law. Resolu- tions calling for the elimination of liquor advlertis- ing on television and for school programs to educate children "in the harmful effects of alcohol and other narcotics, including tobacco" were also adopted. !1 Million dollar baby Sir John Waller gained a daughter and lost a million dollars over the weekend. A cousin left Sir John a sum worth $1,050,000 but he gets only an income until he produces a male heir. After the disappointed father visited his wife and newborn baby, he toasted them a a nearby pub and ad- mitted, "It was unfortunate it was not a boy, but we will have another go." His wife felt differently. "She is perfect. I could not care less about the inheritance," she declared. Neigh .. . Italy's first kidnapped horse was released early yesterday after three weeks of captivity. Wayne Eden's trainer found him tied to a tree after an anonymous phone tip. American bred Wayne Eden was the most successful trotter of the current Italian season. It was not known whether the horse's owner had paid a ransom for the five- year-old bay. Wayne Eden's release left one other animal, a blackbird named Guido, in the hands of kidnappers. Guido, a trained bird and champion songster, disappeared from his cage near Venice a month ago. On the inside . . . . . A Jackson State prisoner outlines plans for prison health reform on the Edit Page; the Arts Page features a review of the film Rollerball; and Ray O'Hara writes about Michigan's defensive backfield on the Sports Page. i't k) !a I .7 t Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, September 9, 1975 Ten Cents Ten Pages plus Supplement Mother awaits return of two abducted sons By ANN MARIE LIPINSKI For Kathy Bodary, the tears were painfully familiar. Her two young sons were abducted last week by her ex-husband, a former Ann Arbor police officer, for the third time in as many years, and as she spoke of her children her voice was strained and weary. "THE CHILDREN don't hate their daddy," she sighed, "but they fear him because every time they see him he takes them away from me.'' Divorced from Robert John Irvine since 1972, Bodary, 25, has been trying to construct a stable family life for five-year-old Andrew and six-year-old Alexander with her present husband Michael. But Irvine's frightening insistence on repeatedly flee- ing with the children and his unwillingness to cooperate with the Bodary's attempts to gain permanent custody of the boys, have created constant anxiety for the family arrests, Daily Photo by PAULINE LUBENS KATHY BODARY holds pictures of her two children. The boys were abducted for the third time Tuesday by their father Robert Irvine, Bodary's former husband. Busi ngS National Guard on Louisville buses LOUISVILLE, Ky. (1P - Armed National Guardsmen and police with firm instructions to prevent any violence rode school buses here yesterday, but attendance still dropped in Jefferson County schools. Supt. Ernest Grayson said that 66,728 of 118,000 youngsters eligible were present for classes on the third day of school deseg- regation. A total of 80,238hadoenrolled. JEFFERSON COUNTY schools have an estimated 20 per cent black enrollment. About half those being bused are black. Grayson also said 84 of the approximately 6,300 teachers were *urS of four. IRVINE, 30, made his latest abduction of the children from their Ypsilanti home last Tuesday morning, this time assaulting his estranged wife, before fleeing with the children. Mr. Bodary, who had returned Sunday with his wife and the boys from a 10-day New Hampshire vacation, left the family's large home near the EMU campus shortly after 7:30 that morning to return to work after the Labor Day weekend. FOLLOWING her husband's departure, Bodary tried to fall asleep again but was disturbed by noises she heard coming from the living room. After first dismiss- ing them as groans attributable to the ageing house, she became concerned when the noise did not cease, and left the bedroom to investigate. See MOTHER, Page 7 tension Busing advocates arrested in Boston BOSTON («M - Crowds in the white Charlestown sec- tion pelted police with bot- ; ties, and 80 demonstrators, most of them favoring bus- ing, were arrested as city schools opened yesterday under a new integration program. The yellow school buses delivered students through- out the city without serious incident. However, school attendance was only half the projected level as par- ents kept thousands of pu- pils home. NO schoolchildren were in- jured, and city officials said AP Photo they thought the opening day hern High School in had gone relatively well despite nonstrators and were disturbances in Charlestown. "We are generally pleased with what happened today," - said Police Commissioner Rob- ert diGrazia. "Things went well at the schools. Any difficulty we had happened away from the schools." In the Irish working class neighborhood of Charlestown, crowds of white youths roame through the narrow streets, t Wednesday the sys- overturning cars and setting at overloaded as about least one on fire. ents showed up for MOST OF the arrests were in E on each day. South Boston, another Irish hired and Morris said neighborhood where 74 members hie anthMorritsaidof a militant pro-busing group rsome of them either called the Committee Against r left to attend classes Racism were picked up near the as down to 13 and the neighborhood high school. Most waiting s t u d e n of those arrested were white. out the doors of the Officials tried to avert trouble itecture and Design with a massive show of police power. Patrolling the streets [INISTRATOR, Page 2 See BUSING, Page 7 absent, or more than twice the days of school. Drug rap sends HA packing By TIM SCHICK A resident advisor (RA) in West Quad's Rumsey House has been fired for allegedly being seen with his hand in a bag of marijuana. He was reportedly turned in to the dorm director by a resi- dent director (RD) who has promised to strictly enforce housing policy, including prohi- bitions against marijuana use. STEVE Kelly was fired last Thursday by West Quad Direc- tor Leon West after a report was supposedly filed by RD Philip Royster indicating Kelly had placed his hand in a bag of what appeared to be mari- juana. Kelly, as an RA, supervises one floor in the house. Royster, as the RD, supervises the whole house. West's letter to Kelly explain- ing the firing states the RA ad- mitted to West he smoked mari- juana. Kelly denies ever saying this to him. Royster refused to comment on the firing itself saying "there is a grievance committee look- ing into the matter. I will not comment until a decision has been reached." IN THE meantime, Royster told a house meeting Sunday night he will crack down on students taking bicycles into their rooms, the use of unau- thorized electrical appliances, cohabitation, oversized refrig- erators and dope smoking "if it becomes apparent violations are See WEST, Page 7 number on each of the first two He did not say whether the pupil absenteeism was related to a boycott called by those pro- testing the busing of their youngsters. THE ONLY incident reported was the arrest of a 16-year-old black youth at Shawnee High School. Police said he was armed with a loaded .38-caliber revolver and charged the youth, who was not identified, with carrying a concealed deadly weapon. There were no pickets, ap- parently because of an order from U.S. District Court Judge James Gordon, who placed the schools "off-limits" to every- one but required personnel. Gordon also banned demon- strations after a weekend of violence which ended with near- ly 200 persons injured and about 600 arrested on various charges. GRAYSON said approximately 200 bus drivers did not report for work, including some who explained they were refused gas by service stations. The 577 buses are owned by the school system and private contractors. A check at two schools, which had experienced weekend trou- ble, showed low attendance. Attendance at Southern High School in southwestern Jefferson County was reported at 440 out of 889 pupils enrolled. At Shaw- nee High School, where 203 black pupils were picked up by buses for the trip to Valley High last Friday, only 129 were on hand for pickup yesterday. Val- ley was the scene of an anti- busing riot Friday night. Gray- son said some drivers reported they were threatened. He said some quit as they were about to begin their runs. JESSE SIMPSON, executive director of the Kentucky Gaso- line Marketers Association in Louisville, said the organization did not advocate withholding gas from school buses "but it's a personal decision on the part of each dealer." See NATIONAL, Page 7 A KENTUCKY NATIONAL GUARDSMAN walks past parked buses at Sout Louisville, Ky. Forty buses were damaged Friday night by anti-busing dem quickly repaired. 'MINOR DISASTER' 4U, dean hits CR1 By MARGARET YAO A University administrator called the new computerized registration system's perform- ance last week a "minor dis- aster" at last night's Literary College (LSA) faculty meeting. Associate Dean for Academic Affairs Charles Morris said too many students seeking to regis- ter and drop-add, combined with insufficient staffing, caused de- lays of up to five hours. BUT, MORRIS said he ex- pects the problem to ease this week as fewer students seek to make schedule changes. In other business, it was an- nounced that the LSA deanship search committee has begun a preliminary screening of candi- dates without its two allotted student members. Prof. Donald Eschman, a member of the LSA Executive Committee, said the students' absence stems from a dispute between University President Robben Fleming and the LSA Student Government (LSASG). Fleming requested a list of prospective student committee members last July, but LSASG asked for total control over the selections and submitted only two names. ZOOLOGY Prof. Billy Frye begins his second year this term as acting LSA dean. Last year, the Administration reject- ed the Board of Regents' choice of black woman educator Jewel Cobb for the prestigious post. The vacancy was created when Frank Rhodes moved from the dean's office to the vice presi- dency for academic affairs. Morris said that CRISP's problems were not due to tech- nical difficulties. The system's 30 terminals, he added, are de- signed to accommodate 1600 students per day. But, las tem was 3,000 stud processing THIRTY tors were that when resigned o the numb eration w lines of stretched old Arch Building. See ADM Ex- Godwater man changes his tune By GORDON ATCHESON Just over 11 years ago, Senator Barry Goldwater stepped to the podium in San Francisco's cavernous Cow Palace to the strains of a mighty brass band and the applause of a raucously cheering crowd. The arch-Conservative Republican had just been nom- inated for President - in a campaign doomed to defeat from the outset - but in the emotional intoxication of the moment, victory seemed obtainable. Work Study offers good pay; fewJ obs By LOIS JOSIMOVICH "Hit by inflation?" inquires the poster in the University's financial aid office. "Looking for part-time help? Hire a Work Study student." The poster is part of a search for more employers in the city and surrounding area who are willing to hire the approximately 1500 students eligible for this year's Work Study program. WORK STUDY, a division of the Office of Financial Aid, has been trying to find jobs for deserving students who would rather work than take out a loan to complete their studies at the Univer- "I WOULD remind you that extremism of liberty is no vice. And let me remind you eration in the pursuit of justice is no virtue," Goldwater de- clared boldly in his acceptance speech. Those words, which haunted Goldwater after the Johnson campaign began painting him as a man with a quick trigger finger when it came to nuclear weapons, were written by Karl Hess, a key GOP aide. Over the past decade, Hess has undergone a remarkable in the defense also that mod-