'GRADE B' GRADING See Editorial Page 20WAM (i lorr 4' r togi Daiti RELAXING Iligh-T73 Low-48 See Today for details Latest Deadline in the State t Vol LXXXVI, No. 27 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, October 4, 1975 Ten Cents Eight Pages IF'vcAJS;E 05w ktAPPET L UtlW LY Just desserts Some said it was only a matter of just desserts - but they fought for it, and they won. Steve Hibsh- man, Bursley RA, and his 12 trusty followers will go down in history as one of the few groups ever to thread their way through the University's bu- reaucratic maze and, miracle of miracles, to ac- tually change a policy. Due to protests from the Bursley group, and presumably other students as well, the University Food Service has announced a change in the new and much-hated sack lunch policy in the dorms. Now, students can not only get four slices of bread, they can also get three coldcuts to put between them . . . and they can have an apple as well as a cookie . . . and not one, but two milks. Queen for a dafy Mickey Bakst, a senior at Eastern Michigan Uni- versity in Ypsilanti, is running for homecoming queen this year to commemorate an attorney gen- eral's opinion issued this week declaring the Equal Rights Amendment valid in Michigan even though it was passed only by voice vote in the state legis- lature. The student body will elect the queen on October 17 and about 20 candidates are in the running. Pondered Bakst: "If I win, do I bring a man or a girl." We wonder: will sexism ever die with remarks like that . 0 Profs upset The Association of Michigan Collegiate Faculties at its meeting yesterday in East Lansing con- demned Governor William Milliken's recent budget cutting. "Michigan appears to be initiating a pro- cess of dismantling a fine system of higher educa- tion and a state of demoralization is spreading .. . We are convinced that the state can provide the funds needed to avert the impending catastrophe," the group said in a statement. Happenings .. . . . . are mighty sparse . . . leading off is the University's Artists and Craftsmen Guild Fall Art Fair which gets underway at 8 a.m. across from the Farmers' Market on Fifth and Detroit St. It runs until 6 p.m. . . . batting second is the UAC sponsored quad and stereo show on the third fl. of the League from noon 'til 10 p.m. . . . catch the Wolverines (maybe with their pants down) against Missouri this afternoon. Over and out . . . Paper chase Within hours after he passed the state bar exam- ination in Arizona, Douglas Martin was eager to try out his skills as a fledgling lawyer. Martin drove 80 miles to Gila Bend to defend himself Wednesday against a traffic citation charging him with driving 35 miles per hour in a 25-mile-per- hour zone. But to Martin's disappointment a part- time Justice of the Peace told him he intended to dismiss the case. The judge admitted there were 1:5 m.p.h. signs as well as 25 m.p.h. signs on the road. "But judge," Martin cried, "I had such good arguments." Move over,. F. Lee Bailey. 'Reddie' or not? Russian spies have "absolutely infiltrated" the country and there may even be some on Capitol Hill, according to Senator Barry Goldwater (R- Ariz.). He said he will ask Senate intelligence in- vestigators to look into a finding that the Soviets have agents in "seven or nine" Senate offices. That information was deleted from the Rockefeller Commission report on the Central Intelligence Agency, he said. What about little green men from Mars? Newsmakers Doing some of the fanciest footwork since it broke the Watergate story, the Washington Post got out a newspaper yesterday despite a strike by its pressmen who allegedly sabotaged some of the printing facilities. The Post helicopter airlifted the news copy from its own building to the printshops of several sympathetic newspapers up to 150 miles away. The abbreviated 24-page edition - about a quarter the normal size-hit the streets four hours late. But the publishers vowed to continue the oper- ation until they can get their own presses rolling again - probably within a week or so. O On the inside.. Edit Page is highlighted by a Pacific News Serv- ice feature on "Fascism in Spain" . . . Cathi Suyak reviews the Michigan Theater presentation of a classic Lon Chaney silent flick complete with live organ music for the Arts Page . . . Sports Page has Enid Goldman reporting on the women's tennis team.. Ypsilanti blaze Suspect turns himself in; cites revenge as motive claims two lies By JEFF RISTINE YPSILANTI - A 43-year-old man was ar- raigned on murder charges yesterday after he confessed to starting a fire here which killed two men and left ten other persons homeless. The suspect reportedly lived at the de- stroyed house and, according to one account, set the fire "to get even with a buddy." THE FIRE early yesterday morning gutted an old, seven-unit apartment house at 420 S. Washington St. which a fire department of- ficial said did not conform to building safety standards. Jesse Lee Wright, who turned himself in to the city police less than an hour after the fire was reported, is being held in the county jail without bond for the murder of Joseph Thomas, 45, and another man whose name is being withheld until his family is informed of his death. Police said none of the 20 persons evacuat- ed from the two-story, wood frame rooming house during the blaze were injured. FIREFIGHTERS received a "frightened, confused call" shortly before 4 a.m., accord- ing to Lt. Michael Philbin of the Ypsilanti Fire Department, but only one word - "help" - could be understood. A few minutes later, a woman inside the house called reporting smoke and was able to give firemen her address. About 26 firefighters and six trucks were sent to stop the blaze, according to the fire FBI - departs et Veterans Hopital By ROB MEACHUM The FBI pulled its entire force out of Veterans Hospital yester- day, according to Jay Bailey, the agent who runs the FBI's Detroit office. But the move "is not a de- emphasis by any stretch of the imagination," he asserted. THE agency had continuously occupied the entire west wing of the third floor since they be- gan an investigation into a mys- terious rise in respiratory and cardiac arrests between July 1 and August 15. In all, there were over 50 such failures and 11 deaths - and of- S ficials believe that someone poisoned the victims with Pav- ulon, a powerful neuro-muscular relaxant normally used on pa- tients requiring a respirator. THE probe will continue, but willnow be handled out of the FBI's Ann Arbor office. "THEY didn't comolain, but we were taking up space at the hospital. We conducted a num- ber of interviews in the hospital< and we'll have follow-up inter-; views - but it'll be handled through the Ann Arbor office now," he added. Meanwhile, the agency's hunt for clues in the series of attacks is now centered on four bodies that were exhumed last week. Tissue samples from the dead 6. men, three of whom died within" 19 hours of each other on Aug ist 14 and 15, will be sent to the FBI laboratory in Washington for analysis, according to Bailey. Jim Da When asked when the test re- Jm sults would be known, Bailey steps o would say only that "we are his thre continuing our investigation - common we don't set any timetables." of move department. The firemen rescued at least eight persons from the building and two others escaped by jumping out of a window. Fire trucks stayed at the scene for nearly five hours, he added, and one was called back later in the afternoon to extinguish mi- nor embers in a wall. Philbin said 70 per cent of the house was destroyed and that the structure cannot be rebuilt. He said the house, which was in- sured for only $10,000, had been "added to" several times since it was constructed. THE HOME had asbestos siding, which helred contain the flames, contained many exits, but had none of the fire stops - wood he'ween the studs which support the build- ing - reo'iired under current building codes. "As far as being built now," Philbin said, the hr:use "would not be allowed." Because of the absence of fire stops, he added, the blaze "shot right un into the attic very (P;rklV" and then snread. The two bodies were discovered at about 5:30 a.m. on the second floor of the dwell- ing, according to nolice. At 4:35 a.m., Wright walked into the city unlice denartment, about ten blocks from f - hlae. ° 'nd sk-(d whether a fire had been -°-'r'e-q. When the desk officer resnonded fir ,tirelv. Wright said that he had set He was arrested and arraigned in 14th Dis- trict Court yesterday afternoon. AP Photo Two Ypsilanti firemen descend a ladder during a fire which killed two men early yesterday morning. A 43-year-old Ypsilanti man has confessed to setting the blaze and is being held without bail on two counts of murder. Turkey will n-ol *0 Us. ins By AP and Reuter though A N K A R A - Turkey main ur yesterday said the parital come. lifting of the U. S. ban on T h e arms supplies was not fully said C( satisfactory and made no penetrat immediate move to reopen of theve American bases on its soil. positive commor Turkey closed some 26 on the U. S. bases in July in retali- ests of ation for the arms embar- the oth4 go imposed last February BUT by the American Congress. made c CONGRESS passed a bill per- mitting Turkey to take delivery of 185 million dollars worth of1 arms it had already paid for, but prohibiting additional arms aid until an overall U. S. mili- tary aid bill was approved lat- i m er this year. A Turkish government state- ment said the bill included "certain positive elements," but added it was difficult to con- sider the decision "fully satis- factory." SAN" Turkish Foreign Minister vestigat Ihsan Sabri Caglayangil told about tf the state-owned radio there the Pat would be no immediate reactiv- targets. ation of the bases. The ventory INFORMED Turkish sources liam an said only a complete lifting of heiress the embargo would give Ankara enough room for maneuver to ONE make concessions of Cyprus typed p without feeling it was acting un- "M der duress. myself American officials said, how- and tha ever, that the vote had taken adetham some of the tension out of Tur- co - American relations, even says t L reopme alai they were likely to re- ineasy for some time to government statement ongress had "begun to te into the real aspects problem" which was "a start regarding our in interests with the U.S. one hand and the inter- the western defense on ier." THE STATEMENT clear that future Turco- American relations would be inked to a total lifting of the embargo. Meanwhile in Athens, the Greek government said yester- day it regretted the resumption of U. S. arms shipments to Tur- key as approved by the U. S. Congress. But a Greek government statement said that the resump- tion was supported bypeople who believed it would help find a just solution to the Cyp- See TURKEY, Page 2 31 secures SLA formation fom irri s'apartment, N FRANCISCO (AP) - The FBI disclosed yesterday that in- .tors have uncovered a virtual gold mine of information he Symbionese Liberation Army, including a recollection of ricia Hearst kidnapping and fresh clues to SLA terrorist material was described in brief entries in a 20-page in- of items taken from the apartment of SLA members Wil- d Emily Harris, arrested with the once-fugitive newspaper Sept. 18. ENTRY on the list described the beginning paragraph of a age that read: y life really changed a year ago. On Feb. 4, I proved to and we all proved to each other that we were guerrillas t the revolution will be made by determined people who do ined things and don't let anything stand in their way." See HARRIS, Page 8 AP Photo Caulking tall vis, a Freeport, Ill., plastering company co-owner, ut of the conventional method of reaching a ceiling on e-foot aluminum stilts. He prefers the stilts to the more ly used ladder because they give him more freedom ment. Auto sales record worst since 1962 By AP and UPI DETROIT -- The nation's auto makers yester- day officially closed the books on their worst model-year since 1962, reporting a four per cent drop in September car sales from modest year- earlier levels. which traditionally ends in September, were the lowest since 1964, when sales were 8.1 million. September's performance was the U.S. indus- try's poorest performance for the month in five years. Company analysts attributed the decline to an unusually late introduction of new models this cent from the record total of 1.8 million, set in 1973. The imports, capitalizing on the U.S. industry's late entry into the minicar market, have taken a record 20 per cent of American car sales so far this calendar year. cent plunge from last September, due in part to a shortage of its popular Rabbit model. Of the 23 leading import nameplates, nine re- ported sales jumps in September over a year ago with Fiat, Honda, Subaru, Colt, Triumph, Peugeot and Alfa-Romeo joining Datsun and