CBI arrests Patty Hearst Roundup also brings in Ha By AP and Reuter SAN FRANCISCO - Fugitive newspaper heiress Patricia Hearst and three radical comrades were arrested yesterday, end- ing one of the longest and most bizarre searches in American history. Hearst, first the captive and then the zealous comrade-in-arms of the Symbion- ese Liberation Army, was arrested with- out resistance in a house in the city's Bernal Heights district along with fugitive Berkeley artist Wendy Yoshimura. THE FBI SAID a 27-year-old house- painter also was arrested at the house where the two women were apprehended. Stephen Soliah would be charged with harboring a fugitive, agent Frank Perrone said late yesterday. The FBI said it had been watching the house for two days before the arrests. A San Francisco policeman who accom- panied FBI agents said she opened the door of the house herself and, despite a vow never to be taken alive, the slender woman surrendered without a fight. "O.K., YOU'VE got me," she said. About an hour earlier, police and fed- eral agents arrested SLA members Wil- liam and Emily Harris when they spotted them jogging on a street a few miles away. "Thank God she's all right," Hearst's mother, Catherine, said in a barely audi- ble voice when informed of her daughter's arrest. "PLEASE CALL it a rescue, not a cap- ture." FBI special agent-in-charge Charles Bates said the arrests "effectively put an end to everyone we know who was in the SLA."4 Hearst's arrest came less than 10 miles from the Berkeley apartment where she was kidnapped by SLA members Feb. 4, 1974. rris pair HEARST AND the Harrises were ar- raigned before U.S. Magistrate Owen Woodruff on a variety of state and federal charges and held on $500,000 bail each pending further hearings today. Yoshimura was released to the custody of the Alameda County Sheriff's office, where she is charged with possessing ex- plosives. Hearst, 21, appeared pale as she was arraigned in a crowded courtroom on fed- eral charges of bank robbery and firearms violations. See FBI, Page 7 Before kidnapping After capture FACULTY SALARIES See Editorial Page Y iAa 47Iaiti MUGGY1 Hligh--74 Low-SO See Today for details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVI, No. 14 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, September 19, 1975 Ten Cents Ten Pages Wheeler recall drive readied If't SEE 4.6 APPE CL S N Y Root of all evil It was a moment reminiscent of Scrooge gone berserk in his miserly counting house: Could it be that financial doom-and-gloomism has finally ren- dered the University's leadership so hysterical as to consider borrowing cash from Student Govern- ment Council? Don't look now, but at yesterday's Regents meeting, President Robben Fleming was so delighted with SGC Treasurer Elliott Chikof- sky's accounting of SGC monies that he declared, "You know, I think we should think about taking out a loan!" Regent Gerald Dunn suggested hiring Chikofsky. Or maybe SGC should hire Fleming. Or maybe SGC and the University should hire Abe Beame, and . . . well never mind. Happenings .. . . . .looks like there's more going on at the downtown bars. East Wind plays volleyball at the IM bldg. at 7:30 p.m.; there will be an Israeli Folk Dance workshop at Barbour Gym; at 8 and also at 8 the International Center hosts Puerto Rico Orientation. Pot and potency Men who smoke a lot of pot, take note! A new study of men who smoked marijuana daily under controlled conditions has show that the drug can interfere with production of reproductive hor- mones, in some cases suppressing the male sex hormone testosterone to levels that could result in impotence or infertility. Although earlier re- ports linked pot use to lowered testosterone levels, the new study clearly indicates that the drug is the actual cause of this hormonal effect and that the effect can be reversed within two weeks of stopping marijuana use. No thanks! The government's etiquette chief tries to be nice and what does he get? Someone recently sent him a telegram that read, "You aren't doing a lot for your country by going around stuffing your face and swilling whiskey." Henry E. Catto, the chief of protocol, grimaced, "That's the impression peo- ple have of my job." Catto is invited to almost every official party of note in the capital. It's his job to make sure Jews aren't served pork, that dinner partners speak common languages, and that Moslemsaren't served alcohol. He gets Golda Meir her Chesterfield cigarettes, King Hus- sein his late night hamburgers, and keeps the sea- food away from the Shah of Iran. " Prudish Pat? Pat Nixon could never be as candid as First LadyBetty Ford was on television recently, said daughter Julie Nixon Eisenhower yesterday. The former president's daughter said she could not imagine her mother talking about her daughter having an affair as Mrs. Ford did. On NBC's To- day Show, Julie was asked whether her father had "repented" mistakes made during the Water- gate affair. "He's honest with himself and he knows he's made mistakes," she answered. But she added, "I'm not going to repent for him. He's a great man. He can admit his mistakes." " On the inside . . . Cathy Reutter writes about the selling of the Bicentennial on the Edit Page . . . the Arts Page features Cinema Weekend . . . and Al Hrapsky writes about freshman quarterback Rick Leach. 0 On the outside *. . Get out and enjoy today's warm weather . . . GOP issues challenge By ROB MEACHUM City Republicans warned Mayor Albert Wheeler yes- terday that if he goes through with a threatened veto of a GOP-Human Rights Party (HRP) reve- nue sharing compromise, he faces a recall campaign. Ten thousand signatures on a petition will be re- quired to force the recall election. If, the GOP gets them, the recall vote would most likely happen in Feb- ruary. "I'M going to veto it - and I'm not going to be intimidated by them," Wheeler said last night, "they might as well start (circulating the petitions) now." City Councilman Robert Hen- ry (R-Third Ward) confirmed the ultimatum saying, "My own feeling is that we will do it if he vetoes the compromise." Henry said that the final deci- sion would be left up to the members of the city Republican party, however. The latest dispute stems from a long and heated battle, gen- erally along party lines, over the allocation of some $2.4 mil- lion in Community Development Revenue Sharing (CDRS) funds - money designated by the Housing and Urban Develop- ment (HUD) to aid low and moderate income families in the city. The Republicans support al- locating the funds under the guidelines of a citizen's com- mittee headed by former Re- publican Councilman William Colburn while the Democrats and HRP want to overhaul the committee proposal, placing See MAYOR, Page 10 Doily Photo by KEN FINK Wheeler Daily Photo by PAULINE LUBENS Strauch and his pet rooster Rojo City police call fowl play By ANN MARIE LIPINSKI Neither Bill Strauch nor his rooster have much to crow about these days. The Ann Arbor police are trying to silence the boisterous ol' bird, and Strauch is facing a November court date for his recent foul play. HARD TIMES for Strauch and his pet roost- er began Sept. 1 when city cops received a call from irate neighbors who were furious with Rojo's midnight serenading. Upon answering the call at 700 Madison Place, police found the Mexican rooster croon- ing away in Strauch's parked Buick. Acting on a city ordinance which prohibits the raising of "fowl, horses, goats or farm animals," po- lice slapped Stauch' with a misdemeanor for "chicken being raised in auto," and posted a $35 bond on the citation. Strauch paid the ticket, but kept the bird- temporarily. He's taking his case to court No- vember 24, at which time the law will decide the fate of Strauch's feathered felon. "I'M PLEADING not guilty to the charge," said 59-year-old Strauch, a self-proclaimed ec- centric. Rojo was not being raised in my car. See ROOSTER, Page 7 War, stats distorted -ex-CIA official By AP and Reuter WASHINGTON - U.S. estimates of National Liberation Front (NLF) strength before the 1968 Tet offensive here were halved in an effort to deceive the American public, but the result was to fool U. S. officials instead, a former CIA analyst said yesterday. Samuel Adams, whose job was to estimate the strength of the South Vietnamese insurgents, accused former and present high military and civilian intelligence officials of taking part in what he called a deliberate deception. IN TESTIMONY to the House of Representatives Intelligence Committee, he said: "Although our aim was to fool the Ameri- can press, the public and the Congress, we in intelligence suc- Regents warned of isca crisis By BILL TURQUE Vice President for Academic Affairs Frank Rhodes warned the Board of Regents yesterday that the University faces "a state of steady and discernible decline" unless additional funds can be, og found to relieve a steadily deepening financial 'crisis. ceeded best in fooling our- selves." Adams released to the com- mittee cables from former U.S. Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker and the U. S. Vietnam com- mander at the time, Jim Creighton Abrams ,to support his assertion. The cables showed both Bun- ker and Abrams wanted offic- ial estimates of the NLF force kept below 300,000 - despite intelligence estimates of 600,- 000 -- to show, in Bunker's words, that U. S. forces were "grinding down the enemy." Adams said he was a CIA analyst for 10 years and its only analyst on Vietcong strength figures dur- ing the two years preceeding the Tet offensive. He said he resigned the day of the Tet of- fensive, calling the NLF strength estimate in his resig- nation memorandum "a mo- ment of deceit." SGC approves allocation policy By GLEN ALLERHAND Following up on action taken last week, Student Government Council (SGC) last night unani- mously passed a nine-point al- location policy intended to regu- late funds given to student gbroups. According to the main terms of the policy, an Allocation Re- view Committee will be estab- lished to look into any request by student groups for SGC mon- ies, and the total amount allo- Rhodes formally proposed a budget reduction of up to one per cent for all schools, colleges, and non-academic units with the ex- ception of monies earmarked for utilities and financial aid. RHODES said the cuts would be administered on a selective basis, in consultation with the various deans, vice presidents, and members of the Budget Priorities Committee. He called the re- duction process "a time consuming and thankless process" which will be finalized in three to four weeks. The cut will yield an enforced savings of about $958,000, neces- sitated by a last-minute 1.5 per cent slash in the University's state appropriation last month. >;. :; -~ A m