EQUAL TIME See Editorial Page YI r A6'gall :43 a t I HAZY High 73 Low--SO See Today for details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVI, No. 30 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, October 8, 1975 Ten Cents Eight Pages IFCMVSEE 06 APPE CALL .Nyy Sorry, kids After booting an estimated 1,000 Scouts out of the Stadium Saturday, the University's face was red. And Monday, the head honcho, Robben Fleming himself, made an official apology to the little eager-beavers. Fleming usually avoids talking sports, but in a statement he said, "On behalf of the University of Michigan I want to apologize to the Cub and Boy Scouts who attended the Missouri game last Saturday as our guests, and then found themselves evicted from their seats. The error which resulted in this unfortunate incident was entirely the University's." As part of the apology, the Scouts will be given an opportunity to attend the Northwestern game, October 18, and sit in seats, no less. A Scoop poops out As one of the endless stops on his presidential campaign, Washington's Democratic Senator, Scoop Jackson, was scheduled to make a speech to cap the Bicentennial Day at Pinckney High School. But Scoop bowed out because he had to stay in Wash- ington for a House-Senate conference about an energy bill. Instead of going himself, Jackson gave a brief talk over a phone hook-up, saying how sorry he was he couldn't attend. As compensation he also asked a friend; Elmo Zumwalt, to appear for him. Zumwalt is former chief of naval operations, and is himself considering a run for the Senate in Virginia. Job notes The Union Ballroom was the scene of the Sec- ond Annual Graduate School and Career Confer- ence for Minority Students yesterday. "The pur- pose is to offer students jobs, both summer and regular," said Caren Yancey, Coordinator of the minority section of Career Planning and Place- ment. According to employers at the conference, graduates with degrees in engineering, business, health sciences, and social work are in high de- mand. Teachers and journalists' have glutted the market, however. "It's good to acquaint minority students with the opportunities available to them," said one recruiter. Amen. Happenings .. . include a lecture on a "Systemic Approach to Incarceration" by Charles Bright in lecture room 2 of the MLB at 7:30 . . . At 8:00 the Democrats of the Second Ward meet to talk politics at 535 Wal- nut . . . and the Professional Theater Program presentation of "Death of a Salesman" is also on at 8:00 at the Power Center. The choice is yours. On the trail The election is still thirteen months away, but that matters little to the hard-core pols. The race is on. In news of unannounced contenders for the top jobs in Washington, former California Gover- nor Ronald Reagan told an airport news confer- ence in Martinsburg, Penn. that he would accept the vice-president's job if the GOP honchos con- vinced him they wanted him to take the post. "I have never liked that second job, but if the party convinced me that it's necessary then it's like a call to duty," the self-sacrificing ex-movie star said. And despite avowals to the contrary, guess who else is beginning to make noise again? That dusty relic of days gone by, Hubert Humphrey, has now conceded he'd accept a draft from the Democrats if they nominate him at their conven- tion next July in New York. At the AFL-CIO con- ference in San Francisco, over 2,000 enthusiastic union leaders chanted, "Hubert, Hubert," while Mr. Modesty himself shyly demurred from re- porters' questions about his future ambitions. Bopping away Looks like 1950's rock and roll star Fabian Forte is no teen angel. Fabian, who was discovered while still in high school, and who rode to fame with such recordings as Turn Me Loose, was arrested yesterday in Los Angeles on charges that he al- legedly beat his estranged wife and her mother. Police said that Fabian, 32, his wife Katie, 34, and her mother Moreau Regan, 69, got into an argument after dinner Sunday, at which point the former teen idol allegedly hit his wife in the face, chest, neck, and ribs, and supposedly tossed a punch at his mother-in-law's mouth for good mea- sure. Forte then took off, but was apprehended about a mile from his house by police, responding to a call from his wife. On the inside . . Jonathan Parsius writes about crime at the University on the Editorial Page . . . Arts Page features the debut of the new record column, Side One, with. Stephen Hersh's review of the new Her- bie Hancock platter . . . and Sports has Dave Wi- Couste By JEFF RISTINE Misuse of the Earth's oceans will genocide" unless nations stop dest lution, marine explorer Captain Ja teau warned a local audience last "Life is only possible when c abounds," Cousteau said, urging tf ocean authority be established whi both the ocean system and the pla SPEAKING to a banquet audience of some 350 persons as part of a fi posium on satellite applications, the scientist also praised space program and its uses in ocean research, and b he called "the stupid cost-benefit Cousteau, perhaps best known for sea World" television documentarie most nations have yet to understan luting the oceans is leading to sel WARNS OF 'SELF-GENOCIDE' haueslams pollution The Mediterranean Sea, which the explorer crease in water cleanliness. cause "self- said receives "all the residue of more than 400 Effective monitoring of the oceans will also ructive pol- million people," has already suffered great require continued use of earth-orbiting satel- cques Cous- losses of marine life because of pollution, ac- lites for "remote sensing," Cousteau said. Such night. cording to Cousteau. research has already proven "very fruitful," in lean water "If nothing is done in the near future," he the study of pollution and fish life, he added. hat a world added, "the ultimate result for the Mediter- Satellites, Cousteau explained, can easily col- ch will save ranean is total death." lect information from thousands of instrumented net. buoys in the oceans. "This is the only way for THE Mediterranean's plight, Cousteau warned, us to monitor the pulse of the ocean," he said. at Weber's "must be considered as an early warning of the But further satellite programs for these pur- ye-day sym- inexorable manmade threat to mankind." poses are threatened by trends requiring in- 65-year-old Possible rescue, the French oceanographer creased documentation of the results of re- n technology said, lies with the Law of the Sea Conferences search, as compared to the price tags, before lasted what which "must establish" a world ocean author- the programs are approved. ratio fad." ity to set guidelines for use of the planet's water his "Under- system. "Nothing today can be done without a so- s, said that He added, however, that policies of national called cost-benefit ratio," the scientist said, add- d that "pol- sovereignty and non-interference with other ing that these studies often reach "the absurd." f-genocide." countries will suffer at the expense of any in- See COUSTEAU, Page 2 Co ust eau ai uaavvau .. ..., .... ...,., , . ., .._ .,. .,.. ...., . r .. _. ,, 'techs refuse to U 10 *Z unionize By JAMES NICOLL University technicians voted not to unionize in an election which ended yesterday. Repre- sentation by the American Fed- eration of State, County and Muncipal Employees (AFSCME) was rejected by a margin of 415 to 323. The bargaining unit would have included nearly 1,000 full- time and part-time employes at the Ann Arbor, Flint and Dear- born campuses. Although tech- nicians are employed under 110 separate job classifications, the majority of them are licensed practical nurses. FOR OVER a year, the AFSCME Technicians Organiz- ing Committee has been trying to obtain union representaon. Their effort culminated in the election, supervised by t h e Michigan Employment Relations Commission. "Apparently, the m a j o r it y didn't think they needed us," said Glenn Marshall, AFSCME staff renresentative, and cam- paign director for the econ. He indicated, however, that a "substantial number" had de- sired a Union and that if support grew, AFSCME would be back. William Neff, assistant person- nel director for the University, said, "We are pleased both with the size of the voting turnout and by the confidence expressed by the majority in the Univer- sity as an employer." He said that since some employes had wanted a union, "there must be some problems in the working relationship." NEFF FURTHER stated that "we plan to extend our efforts in order to work out problems which may have prompted some emloyes to seek unionization." Marshall blamed the defeat primarily upon the long delay in getting the representation elec- tion. He noted that over the period of a year "people be- came apathetic." Preceding the election, Mar- shall had expressed his concern that apathy on the part of the technicians would be a major factor in the election. However, he voiced optimism folbwing the election, despite the results which he said came as a sur- prise. WHERE THE technicians wll go from here is still unclear according to both employes and union representatives. Some suggest that the vote is not so much the result of satis- faction with the University as dissatisfaction with AFSCME. Their concerns over wages and job security remain, and there is still considerable snti- ment to organize if these con- cerns are not answered. Congress Ford tax hits cut, spending plan WASHINGTON R) - Congress cannot pledge to meet President Ford's request for a $28 billion tax cut tied to an equal reduction on spending until it sees the Admin- istration's new budget, the House's chief tax writer said yesterday. House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Al Ull- man (D-Ore.), said Ford's plan is "an impossible one." Ford proposed enactment of $28 billion in permanent tax cuts for 1976 if Congress agrees to cut spending by an identical amount, setting a $395 billion spending ceiling for the fiscal year starting Oct. 1, 1976. He ain't heavy*..* Pat Boran, a Minneapolis four-year-old, grits his teeth to avoid saying anything nasty; great burdens he must take on to please his five-year-old brother Mike. REP A NNOUNCES CANDIDACY: Raa ADDRESSING Treasury Sec- retary William Simon, a wit- ness before the committee, Ull- man asked: "Are "you sitting there with a straight face and saying that Congress can be ex- pected to put a ceiling on a bud- get it hasn't seen, without know- ing what priorities would be set -to blindly strike out with no information on the budget . . . and put a tax cut in place by January?" Simon argued Congress could pledge itself to a $395 billion spending ceiling and leave the details to be worked out in talks with the Ford Administration. Simon emphasized that Ford will veto any tax reduction plan -including a simple extension of the tax cuts enacted in 1975- AP Photo unless it is accompanied by a spending ceiling. about the FORD, meanwhile, in a sneech yesterday in Knoxville, Tenn.. declared that despite pro- tests from Democratic congres- sinal leaders, his proposed tax and spending cuts can be achieved "if they put their noses to the grindstone and show a little imagination and strength." Unless his proposed budget lid of $395 billion for next fiscal year is enacted, said Ford, the government will face a two-year deficit of about $140 billion. The President pumned for his nrogram during an appearance before seven governors belong- ing to the Apnalachia Regional Commission. Earlier, he did the same at a White House-spon- sored conference here on domes- tic affairs. THE pronosed $28 billion cut, for 1976, which Ford called "the biggest single tax cut in our his- tory," includes the 1975 tax cuts totaling $22.9 billion which the President wants to extend. Ford's plan does not contain any provision for rebates, but individual taxpayers would get about $2.6 billion more in tax re- ductions in 1976 than in 1975. See CONGRESS, Page 2 Ullman By GORDON ATCHESON special To The Daily SOUTHFIELD --- U. S. Congressman Donald Riegle (D-Mich.) yesterday announced he will run for the Senate next year and indicated his campaign will focus on solutions to economic ills such as unemployment and high prices. Riegle, a fifth-term Representative from Flint, accused the Ford and Nixon Administrations of "gross economic mismanage- ment" which, he said, has convinced Americans that the federal government no longer cares about them. UNTIL 1973, Riegle was a Republican. He became a Demo- crat after consistently breaking with mainstream GOP members on many issues including the war in Vietnam. The 38-year-old Congressman is the first major Democrat to officially announce plans to run for fellow party member Philip Hart's Senate seat. Hart will retire when his third term expires next year. If elected, Riegle promised he would push legislation stabiliz- ing prices and creating jobs - particularly in the recession-rav aged automobile industry. See RIEGLE, Page 8 Urologist announces vasectomy reversal SAN FRANCISCO (RP) -- A urologist reports a new surgical technique has initially proven effective in reversing vasectomy -an operation once considered almost synonymous with hfelcng sterility. / Dr. Sherman Silber reported yesterday that the first 24 pa- tients who underwent the opera- tion now register a normal sperm count and 16 of their wives have become pregnant. Silber, assistant nrofessor of urology at the University of Cal- ifornia Medical Center and chief of urology at the Veteran's Ad- ministration Hospital here, said the new surgical technique util- izes a 40-power microascope, ny- lon thread so slender it is in- visible to the naked eye, and knives, forceps and other surgi- cal tools honed so finely their points are barely visible. THE microsurgery techniques are used to rejoin the male sperm ducts which are severed in vasectomy-a relatively sim- ple, inexpensive and effective birth control operation which about a million American men undergo each year. Silber says his results appear Riegle Drug busts By JIM TOBIN and ANN MARIE LIPINSKIt spark poli two people were arrested over several days. Theodore Vernier of the DEA and Krasny in a joint press release called Ann Arbor and the student housing facilities "a virtual supermarket" for hard drugs and marijuana, and blamed "a permissive attitude" for heiCal furor The recent series of Ann Arbor-based drug raids has drawn fierce poltitical battle lines among city leaders and provoked speculation over motivations for the raids. CityJ-, P n,rn tc hnrP r hnn *1, tht a rpotinn n d1irpr- In the press release Vernier placed a $4 million price tag on the amount of confiscated drugs. However, an official from the Statistics and Data Services division of the DEA in Washington, when asked to place an estimate on the value of the drugs, said