Tuesday, September 23, 1975 Judge orders delay.. on ending girl's lie MORRISTOWN, N.J. (,P) -- courtroom that had been locked Attorneys arguing whether med- to prevent overcrowding, said ical devices keeping Karen Ann the attorneys should be pre- Quinlan alive should be discon- pared to answer the following nected were given four weeks questions: yesterday to answer unprece- -"Is this court to place its, dented legal and medical ques- stamp of approval to medical tions raised by the case. procedures that may result in Superior Court Judge Paul the termination of life for Kar- - Muir ordered the lawyers to re- en Quinlan, or may result in turn Oct. 20 to help him de- death or damage to some of cide whether he should grant her vital organs that may the "extraordinary relief" place her life beyond redemp- sought by the comatose wo- tion?" man's adoptive father, Joseph -"Should this court, in the Quinlan of Landing, N.J. absence of applicable law, leave the definition of death to QUINLAN filed suit 10 days doctors, Karen's parents, or ago asking the court to order both?" St. Clare's Hospital in Denville "Does the present conditionK to disconnect the respirator that of Karen Quinlin, in light of has kept his 21-year-old daugh- present medical practice, quali- ter alive since last April. Doc- fy her for the extraordinary ac- tors have said the woman would tion sought in her name?" die "within minutes" if the re- -"Assuming the proof shows spirator were unhooked. that Karen Quinlan is legally The suite quoted doctors as dead, is the only relief available' saying the young woman al- cessation of the extraordinary4 ready suffered irrerarable devices?" brain damage with no hope of Paul Armstrong, Quinlan's at- I recovery. torney, said he also wants to Miss Quinlan has been in a argue constitutional questions coma since April 15 when she related to the case, including Tired did not awaken from a night's the right of privacy and free- sleep. Sussex County prosecu- dom of religion. He said Karen A Jackson, Michigan, man stands atop a pil tor George Daggett, who investi- herself had indicated to her years. He is ready, willing, and obviously gated at Muir's request, report- parents that she opposed pro- ----------- edlast week that her condi- longing vital processes in a SCHOOLS S TA Y OPEN: tion probably was the result of terminal illness. * "inadvertant ingestion and in- The Quinlans, who have two1 teraction of a tranquilizer and natural children, said their de- I alcohol." I cision to file the suit was the result of many hours of discus-j DAGGETT said Miss Quinlan sion and reflection. They said o s o e and some friends had been they consulted two Roman Cath-; drinking the night before her olic priests, who agreed the re- BOSTON (I) - Teachers in i ton Teacher condition developed. He said lief they are seeking is "God's Boston walked off the job yes- school coma the apparent mixture by Miss will." terday, compounding problems Among the Quinlan of alcohol and tran- M e d i c a l bills for the faced by the city's newly inte- the strike ar quilizers was innocent and he woman's treatment already grated schools. The strike left committee d ruled out criminal conduct in have exceeded $100,000 and many classrooms in the system ers work an the matter. may be nearing $200,000, hos- of 76,000 pupils open but empty. week and a Muir, addressing a packed pital sources say. The Boston School Committee teacher job -__ordered schools open yesterday, ment continu Idespite the teachers' decision Two union O((Sunday to strike. i had been su Eloisebatters u THE STRIKE came at the in Suffolk Su outset of the third week of Last week, school, despite marathon week- ams issued a Send bargaining between the Bos- the strike. 1 SQtr-n e SCHL THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Nixon not at fault for tape gap, says lawyer WASHINGTON (j) - Richard Court, and Carl McGowan and* Nixon's lawyer said yesterday that the former president has denied under oath any "person-; al responsibility" for the 18 -1 minute gap in one of the White House tapes, one of the few re-{ maining mysteries in the Water-I gate scandals. Attorney Herbert Miller Jr. said Nixon made the denial be- fore Special Watergate Prose- cutor Henry Ruth and two mem- bers of a grand jury who ques- tioned him for 11 hours last June 23 and 24.+ A DAATT T ^.2-F +.' YAi{A Edward Tamm, of the U. S. Court of Appeals, would rule I on the Nixon civil suit, filed Sept. 7, 1974. Whatever they decide, a Su- preme Court appeal was almost; I certain. The Justice Depart- ment is seeking to keep the' Nixon records under govern- ment control and Miller said in doing so department lawyers have cast doubt on Nixon's hon- esty. "They say Mr. Nixon is un- trustworthy, they say Mr. Nix- 0 1 AP Photc of work? A PANEL of court-appointed on will distort the record, they experts concluded before Nixon say Mr. Nixon created the 18 1 resigned the presidency that the minute gap," Miller said. gap was the result of at least "WITH respect to the 18 1 five and perhaps as many as minute gap," Miller continued, nine manual erasures of a cru- "Mr. Nixon was interrogated cial conversation between Nixon by the Office of the Special and his chief of staff H. R. Prosecutor." Haldeman. Of the Justice Department The conversation occurred lawyers, Miller said, "Let them June 20, 1972, three days after challenge that his Nixon's per- the original break-in at Demo- sonal responsibility for the tape cratic N a t i o n a 1 Com- gap was denied under oath." mittee headquarters. Halde- Asked after the hearing if man's notes show the subject Nixon had denied responsibility was Watergate. for the tape gap before the Miller referred to the tape grand jury, Miller said yes. gap yesterday during a three- IN A demonstration of her hour hearing before a special tape transcribing methods Nix- three-judge court which is con- on's secretary, Rose Mary sidering Nixon's attempts to Woods, has said she accident- regain ownership and control ally erased five or six of the of the White House tapes and 42 18 minutes of the tape, but no million documents accumulated more. during his presidency. In his argument before the THERE WAS no indication three judges, Miller said a nine- when the three judges, Aubrey month-old federal law making Robinson of the U. S. District the Nixon papers public prop- I erty "is facially unconstitution- al." The law violates Nixon rights to privacy and damages the rights of all future presidents who have a right to expect that their conversations with ad- visers will remain confidential, Miller said. FOR 200 years, Miller said presidents have had the right to control their White House papers after they leave office. Miller said the 880 reels of White House tapes "are inter- spersed with conversations of trusted aides, Cabinet mem- bers, his Nixon's daughter, and foreign leaders." Federal ar- chivists should not be the ones to segregate private, political and governmental policy tapes or papers, Miller said. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXVI, No. 17 Tuesday, September 23, 1975 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. Published d a 11y Tuesday through Sunday morning during the Univer- sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (campus area); $11 Local mail (Michigan and Ohio): $12 non-local mail (other states and foreign). Summer session published Tues- day through Saturday morning. Subscription rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus area); $6.50 local mal (Michigan and Ohio); $6.50 non- local mail (other states and foreign). le of tires he has accumulated over the past eight able to give them to anyone who can fine a use. ~ ichers strike, rs Union and the 1974 the school system had 94,- mittee. 000 pupils. Enrollment slipped e central issues in , to 85,000 last fall, and the pro- re salaries, a school jected enrollment for this year demand that teach- is 76,000. Attendance so far has extra 45 minutes a been around 70 per cent. union request for security if enroll- SCHOOL officials say some of ues to decline. those who formerly went to pub- officials said they lie schools in the city have bpoenaed to appear moved to the suburbs, some are uperior Court today. in private schools and others Judge Samuel Ad- simply are staying home. an injunction against Teachers picketed the opening of schools yesterday, but most 0i ne.m4...e..... n..4 4. ines to at.. te4s..... I li U i i i i Get Ready for JIM REMPE Winner of 10 Major Pocket Billiard Tournaments WEDNESDAY-4 P.M. and 8 P.M. UNION BALLROOM Pocket Billiard Exhibition NO CHARGE FOR ADMISSION i IN T-Inctnn hni7p ', L F CLJLJLJI MIAMI (A) - Hurricane Elo-h ise, with 42 persons already dead in its wake, aimed strengthening winds yesterday at what forecasters said would be a night-time landfall near Mobile, Ala., and Pensacola, Fla. Residents along a broad Gulf Coast strip battened down and began evacuating low-lying areas hurriedly as the storm re- gained hurricane intensity in the early morning, leaving them with less than 18 hours notice. RED AND BLACK hurricane warning flags fluttered lightly in an almost eerie calm from Grand Island, La., 350 miles eastward to Apalachicola, Fla. Eloise was a killer last week when it lashed into Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic, leaving 42 dead and thousands homeless. It weakened over Cu- ba's mountains and sloshed into Mexico's Yucatan peninsula over the weekend as a relative- ly mild tropical storm. Tropical storms carry winds of at least 39 m.p.h. They are classified as hurricanes when winds reach 74 m.p.h. Eloise won that reclassification at 8 a.m. EDT, only about half a day before it was expected to thunder ashore. "PEOPLE should take any ac- tion they're going to take by sundown," said Neil Frank, di- rector of the National Hurricane Center in Miami. "There are hurricanes and there are hurricanes," he said: "On a scale from one to five, Eloise is a one and could be a two by the time it reaches land ... Camile in 1969 was a five. But you can get killed in a one if you ignore it." Camile, which struck the Mis- sissippi coast, was one of the most devastating storms ever to h Daily Official Bulletin hit the United States. It killed D -i-: ::fm..,uei more than 300 persons and caused an estimated $1.4 billion Tuesday, september 23 in damage. Bay Calendar WUOM: Margaret Thatcher, lead- FRANK said Eloise's winds er of Britain's conservative Party, FonKinseddoEmoveistohehwrnat NPR, 40:30 am, continued to move into the hur- Commission for Women: Women's ricane's center Monday, a sign Conf. Rm., basement Ad. Bldg., of strengthening. 12:15 pm. Biophysics: S. Krimm, c'Mixed-{ Heavy rains were predicted crystal Infrared Spectroscopy," 618 for Louisiana, Mississippi, Ala- P&A Bldg., 2:30 pm. bama, Georgia and Florida. The Africa Week: "The Political Econ-! hurrcan cener aid posi-omy of the Sahel Drought," Hen- hurricane center said a possi- derson Rm., League - E. Berg, 10 bility of tornadoes existed in am-noon; E. Skinner, 3 pm; de- southeastern Louisiana and Mis- bate, Berg vs Skinner, 7-9 pm; film,, sippi, southern Alabama and Drought in Africa: Ethiopia, 1-2:301 1975 Edward Kraus Memorial Lec- Forecasters said tide would be ture: J. S. Millis, Nat'l Fund for five to eight feet above normal Medical Education, Case Western near or just east of the point Reserve, "Wanted - A National nere rste hurricane's eye Health Policy," Rackham Amph., whr tepm.j crosses the coast. Physics: L. Stodolsky, Max-Planck Inst, "Single variable Description of SCHOOLS IN at least five Inclusive Spectra," 2038 Randall Florida counties closed Monday Lab, 4 pm; W. Weber, Ford Sci- entific Lab, "Surface Plasmon Re- afternoon and students were told nances in Metal Films," 4 pm.- to return to their homes. MARC: Bocaccio Festival - N. In Alabama, low-lying sections Steneck, "Science and Popular Cul- of several fishing villages on the ture in 14th Century Thought;" H. eastrn soreof MbileBayA. Oberman, UJ. of Tubingen, "14th eastern shtre of Mobile Bay ury Thought and the Meideval- were evacuated. Mobile's port Renaissance Crisis," Rackham As- was closed to all shipping. Red sembly Hall, 3 pm; Symposium - Cross emergency equipment was "European Culture in the Age of rused ntoMobile from Birm- Boccaccio: Medieval Fruition or rushed into ambla., rand B ,Renaissance Crisis?" Rackham As- ungham, Ala., and Jackson, sembly Hall, 8 pm. Miss. R. C. College: Cutting Loose - Big meet filmmaker Jane Lipscomb, Big oil companies evacuated Aud. A, Angell, 7:30 pm. as many rigs and men as pos- Human Physiology Films: S. Lee. sible all along the Gulf of Mexi- Hall, Med Sci II, 8 pm. co's offshore oil area. General Notices CEW: Meetings every Tuesday, noon - 1:15 pm, 328 Thompson; series, "Reports from Returning Correction Women: Research and Prograss," begins Sept. 30 with discussion, The Daily incorrectly reported "The Emergence of Child Develop- Sunday that the Emergency mental Sciences, 1910-30," and Medical Technicians n call at meets every other Tues.; for fur- Meia -Tcncin-n- ala ther info, 763-1353. ' U~ 11 iosion nave, been generally peaceful since they opened Sept. 8 under an expanded desegregation plan, al- though there have been some minor racial conflicts. There have been frequent skirmishes at night between anti-busing demonstrators and police in South Boston and Charlestown. Police have maintained a vis-; ible presence around schools in those two white, predominantly Irish neighborhoods. School enrollment, meanwhile, has dropped steadily since inte- gration began under federal court orders. In the spring of of them left the lines to attend a midmorning rally at a crowd- ed union hall. Union President Henry Rob- inson told the cheering gather- ing of about 4,000 teachers that he hoped they would be able to vote on a new offer by tomorrow or Thursday. On Sunday, the teachers re- jected a school committee con- tract offer that would have giv- en them a six per cent pay raise, required them to work an extra 45 minutes a week and I provided job security for per- manent and tenured teachers in case of declining enrollment. I The Medieval and Renaissance Colleqium announces a one-credit hour mini course to be held in conjunction with the Fall, 1975, Boccaccio Festival. Requirements for the course are to attend 1 ) the Festival lectures (September 22 & 23; November 6, 7. & 8; and November 20 & 21, 2) four Festival films (October 24, 25, 26, and December 5 & 6), 3) the performances of "La Mandragola" and "Carmina Burana," and 4) a show of late Medieval and Renaissance art in the University Art Museum (November 21 through January 4). In addition, each student will be required to write a short (5-7 pages) paper. Further in- formation reaardinq times and titles of performances, lec- tures, and films may be obtained through the MARC of- fice, N-Entryway, N-12, Low Quad (tel: 763-2066). Students may register for the course in the MARC office. Reaistration must be completed by September 30, 1975. Course co-ordinator: Jeanne S. Martin, Associate Director, MARC. Office hours: MW 10:00 a.m.-12:00 noon. Ia- 4o Icary * Prescriptions 0 Patent Medicines 0 Cosmetics * Liqiuor & Wine ) SGC Needs Students Elections director; Responsible, enthusiastic and honest individual to organize all aspects at the fall SGC elections. ALSO NEEDED Assistants to the elections director. Interviews for these positions will be held Monday and Tuesday, September 29 and 30. Need more info? Stop by the SGC of- fices, ,3rd floor Union to sign up for interview and to pick up an applica- tion. I 1112 South University Ann Arbor, Michigqn 313/663-5553 U gtWest Side Book 5 _ O~ Used and Rare Books Bought and Sold hop , Opening Monday, Sept. 22 113 West Liberty St. Ann Arbor, Mi. 48108 (313) 995-1891 JUDAIC STUDIES PROGRAM invites I s the home football games are with University Hospital. The EMT's are with Fontana Taylor Ambulance, which has a con-. tract with the University Ath- I letic Department to provide medical assistance at the games. TUESDAY, SEPT. 23 12 NOON Lunch-Discussion "NUTRITIONAL PATTERNS AMONG THIRD WORLD CHILDREN" KWAMI KOFFI, Graduate Student in Public Health ISRAELI DANCING TON ITE, Sept. 23 8:00 p.m at HILLEL 1429 HILL ST. 663-3336 All interested Students and Faculty to a COFFEE HOUR in 3050 FRIEZE BUILDING Wednesday, Sept. 24, 3-5 p.m. There will be a discussion of the program, its offerings and future development. I ir wr e INTERNATIONAL CENTER - 802 E. Madison St. The Tuesday lunch-discussions are held weekly durinq Fall and Winter terms, and are sponsored by the Ecumenical Campus Center and the International Center. Lunch is provided and served by Church Women United of Ann Arbor. What a Rush! at PSI UPSILON I ofE MoaP rwt smr ~~~ w f I 1I Indan JewelrySecua 7 daJde Taup',ar.t "SHIMMERING WATERS" LIQUID SILVER AT ITS FINEST. THE NAVAJO LOOK 2 for 1 SPECIAL STUDENTS & FACULTY ONLY 0 LIQUID SILVER (SHIMMERING WATERS) strung with your choice of turquoise, corral, heshi or mother of pearl. ' REGULAR $12.95 SPECIAL 2 for 1 " SILVER & TURQUOISE RINGS REGULAR $29.95 SPECIAL 2 for 1 The above is genuine INDIAN JEWELRY not a cheap imitation. YES, genuine silver (not plated) with authentic stones. LIMIT TOTAL OF 1 SPECIAL PER CUSTOMER 0 THE PUKA & HESHI LOOK REGULAR $2.95 SPECIAL 2 for 1 2 LOCATIONS-OPEN 7 DAYS 0 Gift Shop in Marriott Inn and Win Schuler's Restaurant, Plymouth Rd, at 23 Expressway. Hours 7 a.m. to 11 p.m. ATTENTION LS&A STUDENTS! TIRED OF BORING CLASSES? WANT TO MAKE A CHANGE IN YOUR EDUCATIONAL ENVIRONMENT? WANT TO FIND OUT HOW THE BUREAUCRACY MAKES DECISIONS? The LSA STUDENT GOVERNMENT can help The Government is currently making appointments to the following College Committees: Student Faculty Policy Board College Curriculum Committee I I