KKK MENTALITY See Editorial Page Y Sir igani :43a it QUIXOTIC See Today for details Vol. LXXXVI No. 7 Ann Arbor, Michigon-Thursday, September 11,1975 Ten Cents Eight Pages I , - IrYUSEE EW SPP CA.LL', V Join the Daily! For any and all of you who wish to write news stories, sports, editorials, magazine , features, or arts page reviews, tonight is the night to start. There will be a Daily mass meeting for new peo- ple at 7:30 tonight on the second floor of the Stu- dent Publications Building, 420 Maynard, behind the LSA building. Bring your friends. Custody granted Kathy Bodary, the 25-year-old Ypsilanti mother allegedly assaulted by her former husband last week before he abducted their two young boys, received permanent custody of the children yester- day. Judge Ross Campbell awarded Bodary custody following three years of legal battles with Robert Irvine, Bodary's former husband. Bodary says Irvine, a former Ann Arbor policeman, abducted Andrew, 5, and Alexander, 6, Sept. 2 for the third time since 1972. Ypsilanti police, who are conduct- a state wide search for Irvine on charges of felonious assault, believe him headed for Arlington, Texas where his second wife lives with their child. " More coming It looks like a record breaking year for Michi- gan Stadium attendance. The 28,000 Michigan stu- dent season tickets ran out at 2:30 yesterday after- noon near the end of the first-year priority group. Al Renfrew, ticket manager, reports that 2,000 more sets are on their way and will be available Tuesday at 8:30 a.m. in the Athletic Administra- tion Building lobby. This year 3,500 more student and six to seven thousand more regular tickets have been sold than last year. However, two prob- lems arise with the incoming tickets. Individual tickets for the Ohio State game have already been sold in some student sections and on Band Day, some high school bands will have to be removed. Happenings ... Are picking up today. The Human Rights Party (HRP) is holding a mass meeting at 7:30 tonight on the fourth floor of the Michigan Union. The agenda consists of electing a new party co- ordinator and a steering committee, a discussion of the HRP petition drive for public ownership of utilities and the direction of the party . . . A Tae Kwon Do (Korean Karate) demonstration will be held at Barbour Gym at 7 p. m. . . . An open meeting of "Students for Harris," a committee or- ganizing campus support for Senator Fred Harris of Oklahoma for the Democratic nomination for president will be held at 7:30 tonight in 4303 of the Michigan Union . - . and a dramatic workshop en- titled "Why Men's Lib?" will be held at 7:30 p.m. in East Quad, Room 4, Tyler House. Progress? In the beginning there was the roll-on deodor- ant, then the spray-on. Now Chemist Tyrone Vigo is looking for the zip-up deodorant. Vigo and other scientists at the U. S. Agriculture Department's southern Regional Research Center are trying to develop cotton clothing with a built-in deodorant. "We're talking about shorts, possibly tee shirts, socks, thing like that," Viga explained. But there are some problems. One is how long the deodorant drawers would keep their guard up. Vigo's goal is to find a treatment that will stand up to 50 laun- derings. It is also necessary to prevent skin irri- tation, itching and other miseries and to decide how tightly the garments should fit. Progress marches on. Calley William "Rusty" Calley Jr., the man who brought America the true meaning of the word Nuremburg, had his Army court-martial convic- tion for the My Lai bloodbath reinstated by a fed- eral appeals court yesterday. Calley's lawyers, who say they'll appeal the ruling, contended that pretrial publicity made jurors too biased. The ap- peals court disagreed, but Rusty will remain free on bail and the Army has said that even if Calley lost the appeal he would immediately be paroled. "It would seem cruel and inhuman to confine him again," one of Calley's lawyers said. Cruel and inhuman .. we've heard those words before; we're not quite sure where. Dope note You may not always get what you planned on, as Mr. and Mrs. Cheraka discovered this summer. They thought they bought 13 tomato plants from a mail order firm that advertised the plants would grow 20 feet high. Mrs. Sheraka said that she watched a television program showing plants which looked exgctly like her innocent tomato plants in the back yard. She checked, and sure eno'ieh, they had been growing one tomato plant and 12 marijuana plants. Some people have all the luck. On the inside... Take a look back at Chile on the Editorial page, and Ed Lang writes about the Wisconsin Badger defense. ... On the outside Former prof By BILL TURQUE contests dismissal "I'm putting my career on the line if I lose this case," Karina Niemeyer quietly explained. "There is a certain stigma attached to people who litigate against their employers, and I have heard it is very easy to blacklist people," she added. Niemeyer is suing the University for reinstatement to her post as assistant professor of French, a job she held for eight years, until the spring of 1974. Niemeyer claims the University has violated a committment to provide her with tenure, a form of job security unique to the academic world which, when acquired, makes dismissal possible only under extra- ordinary circumstances. FOR NEARLY 16 months Niemeyer, jobless and liv- ing from savings and unemployment checks, has struggled to continue a career which she and some of her colleagues feel has been unjustly disrupted. Niemeyer's basis for claiming tenure is two-fold. sustains Sues 'U' on tenure ruling In February, 1970, she received a letter from then- Romance Languages Chairman James O'Neill stating that she "appeared to have de facto tenure." The tenure, according to the letter, was contingent upon the LSA's acceptance of the American Associa- tion of University Professors (AAUP) guidelines re- garding tenure. The rules counted experience at other institutions toward the acquisition of tenure at the University. THE LETTER, which Niemeyer considered "a solid committment from the University," was the end-pro- duct of a muddled and confused series of communica- tions between then-LSA Dean William Hays, Vice Presi- dent for Academic Affairs Allan Smith, Associate Dean Hayden Carruth, and Chairman O'Neill. A faculty support committee formed on behalf of Niemeyer reported that Hays issued an October, 1969 directive announcing that AAUP tenure guidelines were to be followed. Carruth contacted O'Neill two months later advising him that Niemeyer had de facto tenure. Carruth said yesterday he has no record of such a letter in his files. He added that Hays' guidelines could not possibly have been binding. "I think that some people got a hold of it and lunged at it like it was the law of the land," said Carruth. THE SUPPORT committee's report also claims that Smith informed Hays his directives conflicted with See PROF, Page 2 Niemeyer S enat( Ford* price W A S H I N G T O N (Reuter) - Congress failed yesterday to override a veto by President Ford of a bill to revive price controls on most domestic oil for six months - despite warn- ings from the Democratic majority it could cost an American family an extra ; $600 a year. The President hailed his victory as a signal to for- eign oil producers that the , United States was starting; veto of oil bill on the road to energy inde- pendence and held out hope he and Congress could compromise on the issue of controls. FORD HAS said he would ac- cept a 45-day extension of the controls to allow time to seek a compromise. But when Con- gress upheld the veto he ask- ed for legislation to ease the transition to no controls in case a compromise was not reached. The Senate voted 61-39 to ov- erride the veto, but this was six short of the necessary two- Education bill passes over President's veto WASHINGTON (MP-The Sen- ate overrode President Ford's veto of the $7.9 billion education .appropriations bill yesterday, enacting it into law. It was the second Ford veto to be overturned this session out of 10 which he has submitted. The vote was 88 to 12, twenty- one votes more than the two- thirds necessary to override. THE SENATE vote came just an hour after it supported Ford's veto of an energy decontrol bill, the fifth time that has happen- ed. Three other vetoes were left standing by congressional in- action. The education measure was the first fiscal 1976 appropria- tions bill to be vetoed by the President. THE BILL exceeded by $1.5 billion Ford's budget recommen- dation for educational expendi- tires this fiscal year. However, much of the money authorized in the bill would be spent in future years. The newly-created Congres- sional budget committees esti- mated that the actual spending in the current fiscal year re- sulting from the bill would be $400 million more than the Pres- ident proposed. THEY SAID that this increase was $500 million less than Con- gress had invisaged for educa- 7ion in adopting its own fiscal 1976 budget plan in May. In this budget the legislators proposed increases above Ford's recommendations for education, health and other social pro- grams, but vowed to make up these by cuts mostly in military and foreign aid spending. The President in vetoing the education bill said the outcome would offer a test of Congres- sional willingness to accept fis- cal discipline. THE TOTAL in the bill con- tinued "the trend over the past several years-a little more for every program," he said. Sen. Edward Brooke (R- Mass), urging his colleagues to override the veto, declared the President submitted education budget figures "that were not realistic and not adequate, par- ticularly in this period of high unemployment and high prices." "For the poor and handi- capped,, a good education can mean avoiding a lifetime of de- pendence on others," Brooke said. The $7.9 billion measure con- tains $414 million more than Ford proposed for aid to school districts with large numbers of children of federal employes, and $368 million more for col- lege student aid than he recom- mended. thirds majority needed. Its failure ended further congres- sional action on the legislation. Seven Democrats crossed party lines to join 32 members of Ford's Republican party in voting to uphold the veto. An equal number of Republicans voted against the President. THE SENATE decision gave the president a boost in his con- tinuing battle with Congress over energy policy and increas- ed the pressure on Congress to come up with a plan suitable to him. He wants controls phased out over 39 months. Several members of the Sen- ate and House of Representa- tives said they planned to push for a 45-day extension of the price controls, which are on oil from wells drilled since 1973. This so-called "old" oil ac- counts for 60 per cent of U. S. output. The controls lapsed on August 31 but domestic oil producers have held off increases pend- ing the outcome of the struggle between the President and Congress. AFTER THE Senate vote, the President sent billsto Congress to ease the transition to de- control if no compromise is reached and to lighten the short- age of natural gas expected this winter in the eastern Unit- ed States. At a briefing later, Federal E n e r g y Administrator Frank Zarb said if a compro- mise could not be worked out, the President would remove his two dollar a barrel fee on im- ported oil. Zarb said he thought chances for a compromise were better now. HE ADDED that he did not think gas prices would increase at all over the next few weeks and would only go up about three cents a gallon during the next several months. Before the vote, Senate Dem- ocrats said oil companies would reap staggering profits and con- sumers would be hit with big increases in their fuel bills if oil companies are free of gov- ernment price regulations. Senator Gaylord Nelson (D- Wis") charged that Ford's plan for a free pricing policy was a "prescription for disaster" that See FORD, Page 8 Daily Photo by PAULINE LUBENS Coming (lownt Lynn Wiersema, a junior in ROTC demonstrates rapelling, a technique used by. mountain climbers to traverse cliffs. Lynn is working her way down the side of the Dental School. MANSON INVOLVED? Panel indil By AP and Reuter SACRAMENTO, Cal. - Lynette "Squeaky" Fromme, a follower of murder gang leader Charles Manson, was formally charged by a grand jury yesterday with the attempted assas- sination of President Ford last Friday. The charge carries a mandatory sentence of life imprisonment. GOVERNMENT Prosecutor Dwayne Keyes re- fused to tell reporters whether more indictments would follow, claiming this would violate the se- crecy of the grand jury proceedings. Immediately after the incident, there was spec- ulation that Fromme acted on orders from Man- son, who after his conviction for master-minding the murder of actress Sharon Tate and six others in 1969 is being held in San Quentin Prison. One witness, who asked not to be identified, said he and other witnesses sat in an anteroom of the courthouse, talking about the assassination 12 years ago of President Kennedy. "WE ALL thought about none of the witnesses of that shooting are alive today," he said. Fromme's trial is expected to start in 60 days. Daye Shinn, a Manson trial attorney who visited Fromme yesterday, said she told him she never intended to kill Ford. "WHAT ARE they mad about? The gun didn't go off," he quoted her as saying. Shinn said Fromme told him she only was seeking attention for Manson and three women followers who she said were unjustly convicted of the ritualistic 1969 Tate-LaBianca murders in Los Angeles. "I wasn't going to shoot him. I just wanted to get some attention for a new trial for Charlie and the girls," Shinn quoted Fromme as saying in their jail interview. FROMME HAD no known source of income. Miss Good 'said they got money from friends. One witness was Harold Boro, a 66-year-old grandfather who reportedly befriended Fromme and owned the gun seized by the Secret Service. See GRAND, Page 8 ...... .... ........ ....... ....... .. r.:.r .. .... ...... _ ... ..... ... ... ....... .... .. ...... ....... .... _ .... . . i.eS .................. .:::.: .... a:... ...._. ....................................... 'I'm not a virgin anymore' Book exposes celebrities' sexual secrets NEW YORK (Reuter)-Author Clifford Irving was deflowered ACTRESS Dyan Cannon, best known for the sexy movie, "Bob on a toilet seat. and Carol and Ted and Alice," tells in the book how she was Mae West lost her virginity at age 13 while standing on the traumatized about losing her virginity and turned to frigidity, back stairs of her house. drugs and religion. She became a religious zealot and went to a