DEA CRACKDOWN See Editorial Page Y 41 A6F A6F r4 t g an A6F 4:3 t t a JL CLEARING High-62 Low-45 See Today for details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVI, No. 21 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, September 27, 1975 Ten Cents Eight Pages i i . IrrtU E tUS 1ApfecaDily Ford no-show Thanks to Sara Jane Moore and "Squeaky" Fromme, Blue will be missing a rooter from Wash- ington for the MSU game. You guessed it, ol' Jerry is apparently afraid some beer-crazed agriculture student from Moo U might take a pot shot at him, and has cancelled plans to travel to the big intra- state rivalry October 11. Now Bo can always tell his boys, "Go outyand win this one for Jerry. He'd be here if he only could." a Old Germans never die A tradition of student life has been saved. For years, University students had trekked to the cor- ner of Washington and First streets to drink beer and enjoy old-fatherland style food at the Old Ger- man restaurant. But a fire last winter gutted the eatery, leading to speculation that the doors would never reopen. But a building permit was issued this week to the owner, Bud Metzger, and accord- ing to people at the restaurant, the doors should reopen before the end of the year. Guten essen. Happenings ... . . . The Institute of Labor and Industrial Re- lations will sponsor a workshop on Women and Work in room 2320 of the Education Building at 9 a.m. until 3:30 . . . The Go Club will meet at 2 p.m. in the Frieze Building . . . enjoy the football game . . . 0 Too pooped to participate? Either students at the University of South Caro- lina are taking a mass vow of celibacy, or they all own copies of the Joy of Sex. Those are the only two explanations, because lack of interest has forced the cancellation of a course on lovemaking there. When the course was started, "Students started coming in droves," according to William Bryan, who has taught the course for five years. At first the course would draw 300-400 each night, but recently, that number has dwindled to a hand- ful, causing it to be cancelled for low ratings. Maybe they just did their homework too often. I'm coming, Lord They say God works in the strangest ways. May- be so, anyway, the Trinitarian Fathers say they have ruled out any legal action against Playboy magazine for using the Roman Catholic order's name in a recent advertisement. But they will send a strongly worded letter of rebuke to Hugh Hefner and his cronies for their ad which said, in part, "When the order of the Most Holy Trinity needed new recruits, they called on Playboy to do God's work." Over the head of a man in priestly garb were the words "I read Playboy and found God." A Playboy spokesman said the ad was never in- tended to imply that the Church sanctioned the skin mag. He added that the ad was "tongue in cheek." The order called it a "cheap shot." Any- thing for the Lord's work, we guess. e Unhappy hero Oliver Sipple, the ex-Marine who figured promin- ently in stopping the recent assassination attempt on President Ford, is upset over reports that he is gay. While he does not deny them he said, "My sexuality is part of my private life and has no bear- ing on my response to the act of a person seeking to take theslife of another." Sipple reports that his mother in Detroit is now afraid to leave her house, because of. nosy neighbors who want to know about him. On the inside .. . ... Sports Page has Marcia Merker's preview of the Baylor game . . . The Editorial Page has a re- port on ex-Nazis in Interpol .. . And the Arts Page features James Fiebig's review of the University Symphony Orchestra. as) By ANN MARIE LIPINSKI and JIM TOBIN City Republicans have set wheels in motion for the repeal of Ann Arbor's $5 marijuana ordi- nance in the wake of Wednesday's arrest of 36 persons in a $4 million drug raid. The GOP has called a special session of City Council for Monday evening to introduce two resolutions which would effectively place the city's charter amendment regarding marijuana penalties back on the ballot in April. EACH resolution-one dealing with specific wording for a new amendment and a second concerning the actual date for placing the ques- tion on the general election ballot-require seven affirmative votes from the 11-member body be- fore the issue can be returned to the electorate. The city's liberal marijuana ordinance, which . repeal of Dems, HRP call move political pot fine passed in April 1974 with just over 50 per cent of the vote, redaced the penalty for possession of less than two ounces of the drug to a $5 fine. State law provides for a maximum jail sen- tence of 90 days and a fine of up to $100 for possession. "WE NOW have sufficient data to show that when you isolate a community and single it out as different, you attract problems," Councilman Roger Bertoia (R-Third Ward) said yesterday in reference to the city's unique marijuana law. "You cannot single out Ann Arbor as somehow being a nation apart, because what you do is attract people whose attitude is much stronger towards the use of all drugs."- Democrat and Human Rights Party (HRP) council members have indicated they will not vote for the Republican's resolutions, and some have expressed extreme anger with what they term a "highly political" move on the part of the GOP. "People are acting as if the election is two. days away," said Jamie Kenworthy (Fourth Ward). "This is a political game they're (the GOP) is playing. "THIS CAN'T be taken seriously, because it's so overtly playing to the galleries," he said. Congress 50-day ol control e t1y AP and UPI ing higher inters WASHINGTON - Con- free of federal c gress overwhelmingly ap- The Senate's7 proved a brief extension of favoro ut xteNdi oil price controls yesterday, compromise wor creating a 50-day grace President and period for President Ford leaders Thursda and Congress to seek agree- Sen. Edmund ment on a long-range en- Maine), and Rej ergy policy. (D-Mich.), chai ergy plicy.House energy a Presidential approval was committee, stres assured. A White House be a bit too ear spokesperson said it was -=----- - - "possible but not likely" Ford would sign the exten- ' u sion into law today. THE MOVE to restore the controls, which expired Aug. 31, ciiitoi came days before a possible hike in domestic oil prices. Oil companies, voluntarily kept prices stable in September, but some reportedly were consider- It's really a ing an October increase if con- canine communi trols were still off. Take the re D e s p i t e the compromise he has control oi agreement extending controls OR THE ta until Nov. 15, there were clear coming or not?" signs Congress and Ford are far cmigont? from endingtheir nine-month actions make th battle over a long-range policy. in the other to c Ford served notice he will in- words are called sist on eventual, gradual de- Promise is f control of domestic oil prices, reunite, same p Some House Democratic leaders What is it t vowed to fight Ford's plan. Some would ans "THE extension itself is less "THE BEST important than what we do with she's one of m the next SO days," said Federal attend classes t Energy Administrator Frank we know each v Zarb.Antehu "If ... the next 50 days does Another hun not produce legislation which system. honestly faces up to the fact I don't see that inaction in the past has part. "I see tha placed American consumers at but for the most the mercy of other nations, then THE OWNE we will have only wasted more tighter between time." (another dog)." Administration officials also days off now," h said the government has done On entering all it can to head off a winter is somewhat su natural gas crisis. They said the burden now rests on Con- portion of the w gress to pass new laws allow- The controversy was touched off by a series of dope raids made Wednesdaydby federal, state, and local police. Four million dollars worth of cocaine, heroin, hashish, barbituates and other drugs were seized or purchased during the four- month-long investigation leading to the raids. Officials called the locally-based drug ring "a drug supply center for seven states," and termed the Ann Arbor area a "virtual supermarket for heroin, cocaine, hashish, marijuana," and other drugs. THAT STATEMENT, contained in a press re- lease signed by regional director of the Drug Enforcement Agency Theodore Vernier and city Police Chief Walter .Krasny, provoked a bitter reaction from Mayor Albert Wheeler Thursday See GOP, Page 2 [ passes price xtension state gas prices controls. 75 to 5 vote in ig oil price con- .15 followed a ked out by the Congressional y. Muskie (D- p. John Dingell irman of the nd power sub- sed that it may ly to determine if the deep differences between Ford and the Congress can be resolved. However, Muskie added that "the country cannot afford to have prolonged disagreement and said it is incumbent on both Ford and the Democratic-con- trolled Congress to work for an agreement. Senate-House conferees are to meet sometime next week to be- gin to work out differences be- tween energy bilks1 passed ear- lier by both chambers. Doily Photo By PAULINE LUBENS Bubbling with jazz Chick Corea blew more than just minds at his Hill Auditorium concert last night. The jazz pianist, who performed with his "Return to Forever" band, is shown at the keyboard as he blows a bubble from his gum. NOW AT 12.1%: py love' wild ig U'students By BARB KALISEWICZ a dog's world, or so the members of the city's ty seem to suggest. d setter rounding the corner-in a taxi. Looks like ver his life and where it's going. n Heinz 57 romping across the Diag. "Are you shouts the owner in distress. Apparently not, as e answer plain-dog headed in one direction, owner lass. "Alright, see you later," defeatedly, the last d, fulfilled two hours later when animal and master lace, at the sounding of a simple whistle. hat makes people like dogs and dogs like people? wer instinct, but observations suggest more. r way to describe my feelings about my dog is y best friends," explains one proud owner. "We ogether, play together, and sleep together. I'd say ery well." nan-canine relationship functions on a looser "buddy much of my dog," explains the human counter- t he's fed and has a place to sleep in the house, part he goes his own way. R continued though, that the ties were growing the two due to the death of he dog's best friend "I try to spend some extra time with her on my e added. the Mosher-Jordan resident's room, the observer rprised at the spread of photographs covering, a all. See HUMAN, Page 2 Local j By MARGARET YAO Unemployment in Washtenaw County has "gone down appre- ciably" and will continue to de- crease at least until Christmas, according to an official of the Michigan Employment Security Commission (MESC). The unemployment rate fell from 12.6 per cent in July to 12.1 per cent in August, the latest MESC figures indicate. This represents a strop to 14,500 persons out of work, 800 fewer than in July. HOWARD Barricklow, Em- plovment Service Supervisor of MESC, said yesterday that this month's jobless rate will de- cline to ten to 10.5 per cent. He based this prediction on the VA staff hitsFB probe Employes at the local Veteran's Administration hos- nital last niaht claimed that the jobless rate dips smaller numbers of persons cur- rently claiming or filing for un- employment compensation. Barriklow expects the decline will continue, but said; "I ser- iously doubt that it will go much below nine per cent before the first of the year." The 1 o w e r unemployment rates, which compare to the na- tional average of 8.4 per cent, reflect the callbacks of lid-off personnel in the auto industry and hiring in medical services and some goods industries, ac- cording to Barricklow. "MOTOR PLANTS have call- ed back just about everyne and are even hiring some -people. Inventories in industries have dronned quite a bit" so that in- d~istries are hiring again, he noted. "It's been fairly evident" that the jobless rate decline in the county is indicative of a na- tional trend, said Barricklow. Professor H a r o 1 d Shapiro, chairman of the Economic De- partment, agreed that national unemployment is -definitely drop- ping. Although he "wouldn't ex- pect anything dramatic," Sha- piro expects the jobless rate will continue to "decline slowly through the end of 1976." ACCORDING to Shapiro, na- tional unemployment reached ployment rate of 12.1 per cent is a record for that month. IN JULY of 1974, only 6.9 rer cent of the county labor force was out of work, according to MESC figures. However, the county's current jobless rate is less than that of the state of Michigan where un- employment this July hit 11.3 per cent. ~U'prof designs 3wD photos, TV By JEFF RISTINE "I love images," says Lester Fader. "I live for them. This attraction to the visual effects everyone else takes for granted led Fader, a University professor of architecture, to imaginative breakthroughs in three-dimensional photography and television. His inventions reach far beyond old methods of creating "3-D" pictures and leave the viewer with strong depth sensations. FADER'S PRINCIPAL creation is a new kind of photo- graph with depth characteristics. "It's a more natural, aesthetic type of image," says Fader. The image, he adds, is more compelling" than those employing special glasses or other viewing gimmicks. The professor, who designed an entire room for visual s