INDIRA CONFONED Sir Dait~ HUMID High70-7 Vol. LXXXVI, No. 12 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesdoy, September 17, 1 975 Ten Pages p1 us Supplement Ten Cents Ten I *1 'r'~rA~s HAPfNcALLZDM1Y Football traffic There's more to a home football game than 11 big Wolverines rushing to carry a pigskin into the end zone. First, you've got to get about 90,000 fans into the stadium, and that may not be easy this Saturday. Construction on the Saline Rd. bridge over 1-94 near Briarwood has been held up by heavy rains. That entry-exit route is prob- ably the city's most vital for game traffic coming and going. A police department traffic spokesman said the brdge would handle about 65-70 per cent of the 90,000 spectators expected at Saturday's game. However, he said the highway department assured police yesterday that construction will be com- pleted in time for the game. Want to place bets? T hat's politics. The controversial city law that permitted Rich- bedreplaced by Fhrank Shoic htsi lastyApril's gen- eral election was repealed by City Council Monday. The law provided that a candidate could be re- placed by another party member with consent of the person beng replaced. After. Shoichet lost to Ankli in the HRP primary by only four votes, Shoichet charged Democrats with engineering the vote against him. The law was then passed by Council allowing Shoichet, to replace Ankli in the general election. But the last laugh was on the HRP as Shoichet lost overwhelmingly to Democrat Carol Jones. So much for politics. No hone ymoon Dennis O'Brien has been trying to take a honey- moon since June. But it's hard to visit romantic places with your new spouse when you're locked up in the county jail. O'Brien, 19, of Ann Arbor, was married in June to Molly Vincent. At the time, he was in jail awaiting trial on an armed robbery charge. Unable to post the $20,000 bond, the sus- pect was returned to his jail cell after the wedding and he's been in jail since then. O'Brien this week entered a guilty plea and sentencing is set for Oct. 3. Meanwhile O'Brien sits in the county jail. Con- victon for armed robbery can bring a prison term of one year to life. Council squares Square dancing's been temporarily canned in Ypsilanti. The town was all set for some lively swinging Friday night until City Council sounded a bad call. The Depot Town Association and the Ypsilanti Free Concerts Committee thought the shindig rated at least a major street for its dance floor. But some City Council members suggested the dance be held elsewhere - in a city-owned parking lot. The Association got fed up wth City Council and called the whole thing off. Happenings . . . ...are miserably slim today. At 4 p.m. the philosophy dept. will elect representatives to the executive 'committee in the Angell Hall commons rm. and all divorced or separated students are in- vited to an open meeting at 7:30 p.m. in the lounge of the Wesley Foundation, First United Methodist Church. Some friend! Martin Butel believes in playing it safe. But, the 34-year-old law clerk from Los Angeles may have lost a good friend with his latest display of caution. When Butel found a strange briefcase in his car, he drove to the Hollywood police station and asked officers there to open it. But they refused. This is a job for the bomb squad, they said. So, the experts were called and the area was sealed off for a block in all directions. Slowly, the squad opened the case. Inside were . . . two plastic bags of marijuana and some papers indicating the case was owned by a good friend of Butel's. Investiga- tors said they will seek a complaint against the friend for possession of the weed. £3 the in~side *. ...Paul Campbell takes a look at Stanford, Baylor, and Missouri football on the Sports Page ..the Arts Page features a review of Ted Nu- gent and the Amboy Dukes by staff writer Rob Meachum . . . and on the Edit Page Richard Kim takes a look at the political situation in South Korea.. On the outside ... 'U'to ask $ million budget slash By BILL TURQUE New belt-tightening measures designed to cut nearly $1 million from this year's operating 'budget will be presented to the Board of Regents tomorrow, University officials confirmed yesterday. The proposal will call for an across- the-board "enforced savings"' of approxi- mately one per cent for all schools, colleges and non-academic units, accord- ing to Richard Kennedy, University vice president for state relations. .FUNDING for utilities and financial aid, he added, will be excluded from this latest cut. The University's utilities bud- get has already experienced significant cutbacks this year, while financial aid monies will continue to be "consistently excluded" from budget reductions, ac- cording to Kennedy. The cut is necessitated by an eleventh hour trim in the University's state ap- propriation by the legislature last month. It left administrators here $1.6 million short of a tentative $109.8 million operat- ing budget' approved by the Regents at their July meeting. Kennedy said the remaining $600,000 in sthe deficit could be made up from accumulations in unpaid salaries. THE UNIVERSITY'S fiscal situation may deteriorate further if Governor William Milliken follows through with his intention to cut upwards of an additional one per cent from the state's higher education budget. Kennedy conceded that the University would then be forced into "a different mode" of 'cost reduction, meaning pos- sible layoffs, program cutbacks, another tuition hike, or all three. "Given no new sources of revenue," said Kennedy, the short term prospects are not good." VICE PRESIDENT for Academic Af- fairs Frank Rhodes said yesterday the current cut will "hurt very badly," par- ticularly in the areas of natural science engineering and basic medical sciences where laboratory supplies and other equipment are already insufficient to meet student needs. Rhodes also echoed Kennedy's warning that the University's fiscal back may be again.et the wall if the budget has to be cut again. He used the phrase of prom- inent American educator Kenneth Bould- ing when he said the administration was presiding over "the management of de- cline." "There comes a point where if the quality of student counseling services de-. clines, or the number of closed courses continues to rise, program cuts might be considered," said Rhodes. See 'U', Page 7 'I wil not be pos- sible, with cu r re nt revenues, to maintain a.quality program (It tili Uiersity.- -Economics Depart- ment Chairman Harold Shapiro CIA developed deady poisons CV eapon researc WASHINGTON (Reuter) -- The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) spent 18 years and $3 million dollars mak- ing daly poisons and tiny devices like fountain pen dart launchers to fire them into unsuspecting victims, it was disclosed yesterday. CIA Director William Colby, lead-off witness as the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence held the first open hearing of its eight-month long inquiry, said 37 lethal poisons were found earlier this year in an agency laboratory. INCLUDED in the vault were small quantities of shellfish toxin and cobra venom which, Colby said, middle-ranking CIA officers decided to save desnite a 1970 order by President Richard Nixon. AP Photo Highianders from Germany, Austria and Switzerland make breathtaking noises as they blowv aiphorns in the Alpine community of Scheidegg, Switzerland. DEMOCRAT WINS: CONCORD, N.H. IP) -- Democrat John Durkin won New Hampshire's overtime Senate election last night, trouncing Re- publican Louis Wynman and turning what had been history's closest contest into a landslide. "There's no need for a recount," Durkin said jubilantly as he celebrated victory with his cheering supporters in Manchester. AS THE count neared completion, Durkin held a 22,000-vote lead, a startling contrast to the last official tally of the Nov. S Sen- ate election which gave Wyman a contested two-vote edge. "I might not be the smoothest item to come down the turnpike, but I'm going to stand up, I'm going to speak out, and I'm going to rock the boat in a responsible man- ner until Washington starts listening to the people again," said the feisty 39-year-old Senator-elect. takes Nil. seat Wyman pronounced the obituary of the year's campaign he entered as a heavy fa- vorite two .recounts and two elections ago. "I WILL accept and I do accept the man- date of the people of New Hampshire," he said. - Ten months ago, the race was a virtual tie, but yesterday it was all Durkin by a surprising margin in an election that drew a far heavier turnout than the campaign strategists had expected. Both sides had said the count would be close, but it wasn't. Both camps had forecast a low voter turn- out, but more ballots were cast this time than last. Wyman's campaign manager said Dur- kin's most telling weapon was the fact that he could run against Washington, against the federal government. Durkin did that with a vengeance, saying his victory should send a message to the Capital to listen to the people and get to work. WITH ALL but 18 of New Hampshire's 299 precincts reporting, this was the vote count: Durkin 125,585 or 53 per cent; Wyman 103,210 or 43 per cent; third party candi- date Carmen Chimento 8,319 votes, or four per cent. Chimento conceded, too, but it was evi- dent that the conservative American party candidate had captured votes which other- wise would likely have been in the Wyman column. "THE PEOPLE have spoken," said Wy- man. He said he had tried all year to get the decision returned to New Hampshire for a rerun election, and accepted its ver- dict. "There is a decision here that is a clear decision, and I accept it in the spirit of the American way," he said. A little under half an ounce of shellfish toxin was saved, but even this, Committee Chair- man Frank Church said during the hearing, was enough to kill at least 14,000 people and possi- hE' as many as hundreds of thousands. Colby displayed a black, bat- tery - powered dart gun capa- ble of spurting poison into a victim from 100 yards away. O T H E R devices develop- e cude aontain pen dar stance when heated," he said. He added that the agency had developed a plan for carry- ing out undercover attacks on subway systems and had tested it surreptitiously in the New York City subway. . In other developments during the daylong hearing: -Colby said records on de- velopment and possible use of the poisons were dstroyed in CdIA's bTechnical Services Divi- sion, Sydney Gottlieb, who was in charge of the program. The poisons were developed by the agency at an army biological center at Fort Detrick, Mary- land: and -Dr. Nathan Gordon, ex-chief of the technical division' s chem-. ical branch, said he and the two other colleagues were the people who decided to secretly store the shellfish toxin. He See COLBY, Page 2 Congress WASHINGTON (IP) - Despite President Ford's pleas for fast ation, congressional approval be delayed anote twcor wek as various members of House and Senate press for full dis- closure of related U.S. commit- ments. Secret agreements include a U.S. promise to supply Israel 'with advanced F16 jet fighters an ormssil Peshing missiles, HOWEVER, Ford said at a news conference yesterday that this country has made no firm commitment to supply the fight- ers and missiles. Ford added that they do in- volve negotiations between the United States and Israel-"They are on the shopping list, and t'hey will be 3discussed with rep- resentatives of ,the Israeli gov- See SINAI, Page 7 Fordhis cour busing ruln g WASHINGTON (AP) - President Ford said yesterday he be- lieves the federal courts apparently have not taken sufficient no- tice of 1974 legislation that would make forced busing of school children a last resort tactic. .In discussing school busing controversies in Boston and Louis- ville, Ford expressed the opinion that federal courts apparently had not taken into proper account an August, 1974 amendment to the education laws that he said listed seven alternatives to be tried before resorting to forced busing. REMINDED that he, in a series of speeches last week, kept stating there was a better way to bring about integration than busing, Ford was asked if other approaches wouldn't cost more money. He said he believed additional federal money already had been provided to Boston and Louisville. In his public discussions of alternatives to busing, Ford has emphasized improved school facilities, hiring better teachers and lowering student-teacher ratios. ASKED about prospects that his administration would seek an extension of the 1975 recession-fighting tax cut, Ford said he would do so "if additional stimulus is required." However, he indicated that if the economy gave promise of Friendl vendors selfri By ELLEN BRESLOW Doug Shapiro and Michael McCready have a lot of faith. On these balmy autumn after- e noons they stand at their fruit - 1 and natural food stands by the 4: .~.Engineering Arch, confident ., that a few passers-by will i pause, peruse their goods, and select a choice piece of fruit '~/~ ~ "or perhaps a chapati - a con- -~ ' ~ ~coction of whole wheat dough surrounding vegetables and cheese. ? THEY offer radically alter- native foods from local fast food joints, like Burger King or Mc- . Donald's, and so Shapiro com- ments, "We're friendly; we ~t ****.**. don't try to comoete."