SEXUAL SEGREGATION See Editorial Page i t 4MW C~ A4V 44*4hr :43 a t I AUTUMNAL High-TSS Low-3S See Today for details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVI, No. 37 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, October 16, 1975 Ten Cents Eight Pages i F X -SE IFWS K AL tNYY Naked came the swimmer Margaret Bell Pool may have the best x-rated swim show in town. During co-ed swim, the men have been squeezing into very tight rented bathing suits. The result? A lot of rips in the wrong places on those unsexy, black nylon suits and a lot of repair work for pool matron Gwen Carter. She has posted the following letter at the pool: "Gen- tlemen, Our bathing suits are not bikinis, so please don't expect them to fit as such. Some men are using suits that are too small and are ripping them. Swallow your vanity, and take pity on me as I have to repair them. Thanks." What's going on between laps at the pool?. " Rosa Parks Blvd.? You'd think Detroit would jump at the chance to rename 12th Street after resident Rosa Parks, proclaimed as the Mother of the Civil Rights Move- ment. City Council received a petition last May requesting the street be renamed Rosa Y. Parks Boulevard, and so far it's still plain old 12th Street. The hangup is a city rule which says only the dead can be honored by a street name. Rosa Parks was arrested and jailed in 1955 in Montgom- ery, Ala., after she refused to give up her seat in the white-only section of a city bus. The incident touched off a boycott that resulted in national at- tention for the civil rights movement and its lead- er, Dr. Martin Luther King. This week, the Plan- ning Commission submitted an entire new set of rules for naming streets. Their proposal would allow the use of names of the living. " Happenings ... ... tody are perfect for those who wish to ex- pand their minds. At 3:30 p.m. a, lecture on elec- tronic funds'transfers will be held in Hale Aud. sponsored by the Marketing Club at the business school . . . at 4:10 Pulitzer prize winning Poet James Wright in the Pendleton room of the Un- ion . . . at 7:30 Morris Halle will sneak on the "Preliminaries to a Theory of Meter" in Lecture Rm. 2 of the MLB. Enjoy. 0 Burton and Taylor Elizabeth Tavlor and Richard Burton have done it again - gotten married, that is. The world's Viost famous couple nicked a remote village in the pf Botswana for their second marriage cere- :ifonv, performed by a district commissioner. The Burtons. divorced last year after 10 years of mar- riage, were reconciled in Augst and have been sendin a sennd honeymoon in Botswana's Chobe Game Park Th n'inle wore what they called traditional Walh dress: R-rton. 49, wore a red shirt, white troisers, and red socks: and Taylor. 43, was in a green dress with lace frills and guinea fowl feathers. Rich kid's monopoly Want to play filthy rich oil baron? If you've got a spare $195 or $790, you can play the latest takeoff on Monopoly. It's called Petropolis, created by a French baron for the rich, fashionable, famous, or powerful. Instead of bidding for Monopoly real es- tate the new game's players juggle miniature gold- plated oil rigs around resort pools and debate which petroleum rights to buy with their paper jillions. If you think $790 is too steep, how about a $20,000 set, with 18k gold rigs and derricks, soon to be unveiled? The currency of Petropolis is the petrodollar, bearing the motto "In 6il We Trust." Saudi Arabia and Iran are the Boardwalk and Park place of this high-priced game. Save the acropolis Pollution over the past 40 years has caused greater damage to the ancient monuments on the Acropolis hi than they suffered in the previous four centuries. Experts from the United Nations Educational, Social, and Cultural Organization pro- posed an immediate start on protection of the 2500 year old marble temles and statuary. They said the famed monuments overlooking the city of Athens should be covered with plastic or nylon for the winter. A UN report on the crisis said that if protective measures were not taken before winter "the monuments might be irretrievably damaged." $2 bill comes back Remember the $2 bill? The cash with the portrait of Thomas Jefferson will probably be back in your wallet in time for the Bicentennial. Rep. Benjamin Rosenthal (D-N.Y.), said yesterday the Treasury Dept. plans to issue 400 million $2 bills annually. It would also cut in half the current production of 1.8 billions $1 hills. Because of Tublic disinterest the $2 bill was discontinued in 1966. Bring back the $2 bill, and -with current inflation the old $1 bill's gonna look like small change. On the inside... ... on the Edit Page Marc Basson takes a thor- owlh look at the Unner Peninsula minin contro- versv . . . David Blomaist critioues "Porgy and Bess" on the Arts Page . . . and on the Snorts Page Rich Lerner renorts on the return of ex- Michigan star Campv Russell at last night's exhi- Ex-medica I By TED EVANOFF A former medical student is slapping C a l[S eX the University with a $5 million lawsuit, alleging his 1973 expulsion from the Medical School was arbitrary, irrational, doctors finding Stone emot: and unconstitutional to pursue a medical careerv cause of the expulsion. T Twenty-eight-year-old Charles S t o n e and his lawyer, Barry Moon of Flint, say Moon says he will argue they will press the litigation, which was trial begins, sometime this originally filed in Detroit Federal Court the required examination of last month. The decision to bring legal lated his constitutional righi action was made just before the Medical The lawyer also says he School's Executive Committee refused Stone's third readmission appeal. case will become a landma forcing professional schools UNIVERSITY officials are reluctant to their grading procedures a talk about Stone. Academic difficulty, open themselves to wider pub they maintain, was the basis for his ex- pulsion: However, Moon says that Stone cases and states, "I'll stake was academically sound, and that a on my ability to prove the psychiatric examination by University versity) violated the Constitu student s ulsion irrational ionally unfit was the real e when the winter, that f Stone vio- its. is sure the ark decision to change and perhaps blic scrutiny. ther similar my license y (the Uni- ution." FOR CHARLES Stone and his parents, also of Flint, the past three years have been a strange and embittering struggle. Convinced that their son was wrongly denied a medical degree in the last weeks of his education by an impractical and insincere bureaucracy, the elder Stones have financed a legal battle against the Medical School with their income and savings. Stone, now earning a masters degree in microbiology at Michigan State Uni- versity, says the Medical School's atti- tude toward him is bewildering. Stone explains, "I was sabotaged. They tell me I did something wrong but won't let me defend myself, defend what ues'U I did. I wouldn't acknowledge that I was sick and that they were helping me so they called me paranoid. They say I'm so paranoid I don'teven know they're trying to help me." CORRESPONDENCE regarding Stone written by the Medical School faculty between 1968 and 1973 indicates Stone successfully completed his first three years but apparently suffered a nervous breakdown that impaired his perform- ance on the general medicine rotation at Ann Arbor's St. Joseph Mercy Hospital in -late 1971. The letters report that Stone's poor performance led to exams by University psychiatrists, at the Medical School Promotion Board's suggestion. Those exams revealed Stone apparently couldn't See FORMER, Page 8 Stone MENNIMM } w { L o- La*' f } £ w ~ ., i i ,,X,,R,:., - . . ... ... ... . .. : x . . :::; .: i: .,. :x-i*i;:: ! .;*...,...,.."........%,.- ..::::.:::::: ,:::::::. ,: ,,, :"::. it .: ii t ."LL.y. l< :. : i.: %:? / ii T {::+ ji:, p;. ... v 5 ". T.. R Y ''"'"h M f ..;. :.ter ::". ,":.".;n .. ? 'v:L;... y:. } : ::. ,, } :,.".: {:. ",:. as ;y: :a < :. : s": : 1 - a} ' ::{a: fi1. 4 X ^; {.: }. ; ,. }., . 4. "S i }. . .:. z .:: {. is . }y{}.W" :a "..i is' ::". 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" a " " I " Prosecutors never inic By AP and UPI etched on tape, "which showed The Watergate Special him to be a participant in the Prosecution Force (WSPF) cover-up," the report said. said yesterday that it elect- ed not to seek an indict- THE UNSIGNED report - for .ssale for $2.65-summarizes the ment against former Presi- work of Special Prosecutors dent Nixon for fear of trig- Archibald Cox, Leon Jaworski, gering a constitutional Henry Ruth and their staffs crisis that would have im- since the office was set up some peded impeachment. 28 months ago. The office com- piled a record of five dozen con- Once Nixon resig ed, ac- victions, including those of many cording to the firs public high government officials. report of the prosecutors, Ruth leaves today to join the reoro he rosennctrs' Urban Institute and will be suc- work, his criminal indict- ceeded by Charles Ruff, a staff ment virtually was assured attorney who will handle the - then President Ford f e w remaining investigations pardoned Nixon for all and appeals on a part-time bas- crimes committed during is. Thus far, the report said, Watergate investigations have his presidency. cost more than $5.5 million. THE NEARLY 300-page re- port, issued on the eve of the departure of the third man to hold the special prosecutor's job, broke little new ground in the **.*.=......>: massive political scandal that "" '"'-~ .-'":.; rocked the nation and drove..........~~ Nixon from office in disgrace 14 months ago. But it proclaimed publicly for the first time the belief of the WSPF that Nixon was involved in a criminal conspiracy suffi- cient to warrant prosecution. It was Nixon's own words, tell was I Ied Among the mysteries left un- solved are who caused the in- famous 18% minute gap on a crucial Watergate tape, and whether the Nixon White House deliberately tampered w i t h transcripts provided for the im- peachment inquiry. The report said criminal responsibility was impossible to prove. CALLING Watergate the "in- sidious climax" to years of growing governmental abuse of power, t h e report urged a strengthening of laws to guard against future crises-including a constitutional amendment to clarify when a president may be prosecuted. In an interview, Ruth said there was "never a firm deci- See PROSECUTION, Page 2 Kissinger ignores subpoena WASHINGTON (AP) - Secretary of State Henry Kissinger failed yesterday to respond to a House Intelligence Committee sub- poena for a memorandum by a State De- partment official who has acknowledged that it gives details about mismanagement of the 1974 Cyprus crisis. A. Searle Field, chief counsel for he com- mittee, said a 10 a.m. EDT deadline for Kissinger to respond passed yesterday with- out receipt of the memorandum or any word on whether the secretary intended to comply with the subpoena later. THE MEMORANDUM was written by Thomas Boyatt, tlhe department's Cyprus affairs director during the crisis. Boyatt has acknowledged in testimony to the com- mittee that it provides details about what he considered mismanagement of the crisis. During the crisis, Turkey invaded the island of Cyprus with a force of more than 40,000 and occupied about 40 per cent of the island. At the time, Turkish Cypriots com- prised only about 20 per cent of the island's population. The occupation continues today. The memorandum goes to the heart of a committee dispute with Kissinger over his order prohibiting State Department opera- tions officers from testifying on what rec- ommendations they make for U.S. policy- contrary to policy decisions or otherwise. BOYATT told the committee he was pro- hibited under Kissinger's order from testi- fying on what his recommendations had been during the crisis. Kissinger and State Department officials have said the order is needed to protect the confidentiality in which operations officers can make recommendations without fear of public exposure if they're proven wrong. One of Kissinger's top administrative aides, Lawrence Eagleburger, who disclosed the order, said it also is aimed at prevent- ing a public debate between State Depart- ment officials like the one over the so-called "loss of China" in 1949. WHEN BOYATT testified, he said he did not know whether he could turn his mem- orandum over to the committee. The com- mittee was later told he could not. It then voted 9 to 2 to subpoena the docu- ment. Chairman Otis Pike (D-N.Y.) was in his Long Island district for Congress' Columbus Day recess and could not be reached for comment on the passed deadilne. HE TOLD the committee last week he had received no indication what Kissinger or the State Department intended to do about the subpoena. If Kissinger chose to defy the subpoena, Pietlteenm i t P ma. m . s nnil Little Feds deny murde r suspect re ort; VA probe continues By ROB MEACHUMA Veterans Administration Hospital administrators and_ federal officials yesterday refused comment on pub- w lished reports that their probe into a macabre series of respiratory arrests and ten deaths has narrowed to. one suspect. "It's an ongoing investigation, that's about all I can say," commented Jay Bailey, an FBI agent in the Detroit office. "In fact," the agent continued, "I had m~n n t f h'hno-i l tn _ x n ,il ._ _'_ ncn - _ .... _...:. . Joan Little stresses need for black unity By PAULINE LUBENS "When Joan Little walked out of the courtroom a free woman, that was supposed to be impossible; but as you look at me stand- ing here, you know nothing is impossible if enough of us come together," Joan Little told a spirited audience last night at Eastern Michigan University's (EMU) Pease Auditorium. Smiling broadly with her right arm raised high, Little greeted the audience of over 500 black EMU students which already given a standing ovation to the 20-year-old black woman as she emerged from a wall of amplifiers and microphones. "WE AS BLACK people have to unify and stop living on