DOUGLAS OUT? See Editorial Page V'YI L , iA t 4bp 4)kl SERENE High-70 Low-S7 See Today for Details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVI, No. 56 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, November 7, 1975 Ten Cents Ten Pages r Rockefe ller Enchanting ears Now hear this: the Koss headphone company is conducting a big prize give-away contest, and if you'll just lend us an ear for a moment we'll ex- plain the off-beat entry system. It doesn't require that you wax eloquent in 25 words or less on why you deserve the $1,000 grand prize. What the con- test organizers ask is that you send in a reason- able facsimile of your ear. That's right, you heard it, they want to choose the most beautiful ear in town. Just draw a picture of your aural organ, or press an ink pad against your ear and print it on a card, and bring your entry in to Campus Broadcasting at 530 SAB. The ear prints will be sent off to Koss for the grand prize drawing to be held late this month, after local radio stations WCBN and WRCN conduct drawings for free sets of head phones. The deadline for entries is Novem- ber 15, so enter early. Robbery rash Responding to a rash of bank robberies in re- cent months, banks in the Ann Arbor-Ypsilanti area have begun this week a citizen action reward program in cooperation with local, state, and fed- eral police. There have been 17 robberies this year, five in October alone. The reward program will pay up to $1,000, depending on the value of the information, to anyone providing a tip which leads to the arrest of a suspect. The identity of all tip- sters willbe held in confidence, as will the amount of any rewards. Union saved Marquette voters crushed a ballot proposal that the Upper Peninsula secede from the rest of Michigan and become a 51st state. It was a sharp set-back for the go-it-alone advocates who have been campaigning for a separate state to be called Superior. But luckily for Michigan, Marquette vot- ers decided the idea was ludicrous and turned it down with over a 2-1 margin. Whew. Happenings ... . . are multi-faceted today. Leon Howell will be speaking at the Wesley Foundation, 602 E. Huron, at noon on Multinational Corporations in Southeast Asia . . . the Fred Harris Media Public- ity Committee will be meeting at 4 p.m. at 3361/2 S. State . . . Leon Howell will speak again, this time at the Ecumenical Campus Center, 921 Church, 'at 6:30 p.m., it is a potluck, so bring something to eat . . . Tvagi Ji, the cosmic trans- mitter, will be at the Friends' Meeting House, 1420 Hill St. at 7 p.m. . . . the Hellenic Student Society presents Dan Georgakas speaking on U. S. re- snonse to Chile, Greece and the Palestine in the 3rd floor of the League at 7 p.m. .. . there will be a Balkan dance workshon at Barbour Gym at 8 p.m. . . . The Ann Arbor Libertarian League is smonsoring a talk by James Warner on "What is Art." at 8 n.m. at 1015 F. University . . . and there will be an Oneg Shabat and discussion at 8:15 in the E. Quad Greene Lounge. 0 Kiss and make better While New York City administrators are gnash- ing their teeth over the city's financial problems, two loving residents have vowed to at least pay lip service to the problem. In less than..two hours of puckering up on Wednesday, New Yorkers bought $80 worth of kisses from a couple of sidewalk vendors. College student Jace Kaufman, 20, and actor Stan Watin, sold kisses for 25c, 50c and $1. The cheaest smooch was a "continental on the hand." a half dollar ho' ht a sisterly kiss on the cheek, and fof a dollar, love-starred nassersby nonld get a "Robert Redford on the lips." " Cracking up The Liberty Bell is not only cracked but might be America's most flawed treasure. "Scientifically speaking, it's a piece of junk," says Philadelnhia metallirgist Mike Modes, who spent an entire night last week making "radiograph" pictures (similar to x-rays) of the nation's symbol of freedom. It was the first time anyone has examined the me- tallic strircture of the big bell; and it showed that the famous crack is only one of dozens of defects. Modes, who works for Universal Technical Testing Laboratorv Inc.. wanted to see if the bell is too brittle to he carried next month from Tndenen- da-nce N-all to a new disnlav center across the street. "Tt iq safe to move," he concluded, "But it's a mess," On the inside .,. on Snorts Pnae. Al Hranskv writes about ex- Michijan coachina asst. Jim Dutchei who is now head hack-thall conch at Minnesota . . . Part 3 of Mb'hapl Reckman's "ries on the Tanmsters an- nears on the Editorii hDoge . .. and Arts Page fea- t>>e irnn eWP.Pknd explains withdrawal from race WASHINGTON ({-Vice President Nelson Rockefeller said yesterday he withdrew from President Ford's 1976 ticket to spare Ford from Republican "party squabbles" that were compli- cating his campaign against the im- pending challenge from Ronald Rea- gan. Rockefeller told a nationally broadcast news conference that Ford is "my candidate" for 1976 but indi- cated he disagrees with the assess- ment by the President's campaign managers that his presence on the ticket would damage Ford. THREE times in the half-hour session, Rockefeller refused to rule out the prospect he would seek the presidency if Ford's campaign falters in the early 1976 primar- ies. He called that possibility "specula- tion I have not made." When a reporter noted that he had been trying to attain the presidency since he won the first of four terms as New York governor in 1958, Rockefeller smiled and declared "I have to say I'm closer right now that I ever have been." And he added that "I wouldn't have ac- cepted the vice presidency if I hadn't been willing to take the presidency should, God forbid, something happen to the President. "SO I'M not going to kid you that I came down here with no thought of the presi- dency," he said. Rockefeller said that policy disagree- ments with Ford "were not the basic ele- ments" in the decision to withdraw which he disclosed in a letter to Ford Monday. But he indicated some disapproval with the President's increasingly conservative course by declaring the best way for the GOP to be effective is "in the center" of the political spectrum. The 67-year-old Rockefeller said that when he accepted the vice presidency, "I didn't come down here to get caught up in party squabbles, which only make it more difficult for the President in a very diffi- cult time. "I CAME here to help him and not com- plicate his life," Rockefeller added. The problem, he said, "first began to come up in sharp focus" when Howard "Bo" Calla- way, the President's campaign manager, told reporters that he was having difficulty winning conservative backing for Ford be- cause of Rockefeller and that many Repub- licans thought the President should have a younger running mate. Although he said conservatives constitute only "a minority of a minority," Rockefel- ler acknowledged their opposition was "ex- actly the reason" for his decision to with- draw. "The only wav I could take the issue out was me - was to write the letter," he said, making clear Ford made no ef- fort to persuade him to stay. See ROCKY, Page 2 AP Photo ocke feller Protest march enters Spanisb buffer zone Daily Photo by PAULINE LUBENS Fiddle riffs Local violinist Dick Solberg coaxes endearing strains out of his fiddle, on the sidewalk in front of the Maynard Street parking structure. That's proof that not all of Ann Arbor's out-of-door musical interludes take place on the Diag. By AP and Reuter KILOMETER EIGHT, Inside Spanish Sahara - Tens of thou- sands of Moroccans under a forest of red flags, chanting glory to Allah, launched a peace- ful human wave assault on the Spanish Sahara yesterday. They treked more than five miles into the disputed, mineral- rich territory through blinding sand storms under a baking desert sun. MEANWHILE, the United Na- tions Security Council called unanimously on Morocco im- mediately to withdraw all the participants in the march. The council also deplored "the holding of the march." The resolution, worked out in i n t e n s e private consultations, was approved by consensus. IT CALLED on Morocco and all the otheruparties involved to cooperate fully with U.N. Sec- retary-General Kurt Waldheim in the fulfillment of his man- date to try to resolve the crisis. Speaking after the text was a d o p t e d, Waldheim said he would continue his efforts. The situation was very serious and grave, he said. Spain informed the Security Council last night that Morocco had served notice that the ci- ) vilian march into Spanish Ha- hara would continue tomorrow unless Madrid agreed to nego- tiate a transfer of sovereignty to Morocco. er ey QUOTING f r o m information -p, which he said had been re- ceived by the Spanish embassy inRabat, the Spanish delegate, °s- Antonio Elias, said Morocco had ?a- stated that the halting of the ot, march at the Spanish defense or- line was impossible. Throughout the march Spanish helicopters and old propeller- he driven fighters buzzed low over nt, the sea of unarmed volunteers- ef- including hundreds of Moroccan A peasant women and three young at Americans carrying a huge Mo- roccan flag-but took no aggres- as sive action. Moroccan helicop- ne ters and light planes circled the in Spanish aircraft but there were no encounters. In scenes reminiscent of a biblical epic, the marchers - preceded by 10 men with bayo- nets to probe for mines-walked for three hours to a point just four kilometers (2.5 miles) from what the Spanish call a "dissua- sion line" bearing alleged mine- fields, barbed wire and heavy armored units. A senior Moroc- can police officer with the march said: "We will stay here overnight, and tomorrow morn- ing we will see." THE OVERNIGHT stay gave King Hassan II of Morocco time to pursue diplomatic efforts to ensure the march reaches the Spanish Sahara capital of El Aaiun. Hassan had originally said he would lead the march, 'The Moroccan gov- ernment foresaw and did not exclude t h e possibility of confron- tations between the marchers and Spanish forces.' -Spanish U.N. delegate Antonio Elias but Thursday he remained at his command post in Agadir, Morocco. T h e Moroccan government foresaw and did not exclude the possibility of confrontations be- tween the marchers and Spanish forces, involving a large number of casualties, if Spain did not accept immediately the proposal to negotiate, Elias said at the U.N. If these confrontations occur- red, it would be very difficult for the Moroccan armed forces not to intervene. In that case there would be a "situation of belligerency between Spain and Morocco." PICKETING CONTINUES Progress seen in hospital talksi By TOM ALLEN Intern and resident physicians at Univer- sity Hospital appeared to be making some progress last night toward a resolution of their contract dispute with the University. But according to Dr. Eric Hodeen, presi- dent of the House Officers Association (HO- A), which represents the doctors, the two parties "have not reached a settlement yet." TODAY MARKED the second day of picketing and administrative slowdown by HOA members. Much of the bargaining time was spent discussing patient care improvements, an issue which the doctors contend is the most crucial in the dispute. HOA argues that the quality of patient care at the Hospital has suffered because doctors are often forced to perform technical duties in order to compensate for a shortage of technical per- sonnel. Though Hodeen declined to comment on the specifics of the negotiations, he did say that "some movement" had been made by both sides toward an agreement. DURING THE day, HOA's protest action continued but the number of picketing doc- tors dwindled and their neglect of cer- tain administrative duties was termed largely ineffectual by Hospital administra- tors. However, one resident in psychiatry claimed that the small picket lines were hardly accurate indicators of support for the protest among doctors. In fact, some doctors contend that the picket lines were visible evidence of the HOA's "overwork" grievance. "Some of the interns work 100 hours p week," explained one HOA member. "Th don't have enough time to eat and slee much less walk on a picket line." SOME DOCTORS working inside the H pital continued to avoid charging their p tients for medical services. This did ni however, interfere with the delivery of n mal health care services. According to one administrator in t Hospital's out-patient billing departmer the paperwork slowdown had had little t feet on the department's operations. University spokesman said yesterday th "the clinics are operating pretty much they usually do," and he added that son clericals "were taking up the slack" the patient billing department. Students wait in line for CRISP... again By PAULINE LUBENS The University's CRISP system was responsible for deja vu yesterday as long lines of impatient, disgruntled students packed the central corridor of Angell Hall waiting to receive their regis- tration appointment cards. "All that time for just two pieces of paper," grumbled sopho- more. JefPhlnG nt t he end o i iv-m ir wmma raitTdn't t. Pierce announces candidacy for U.S. Congressional seat By GORDON ATCHESON Dr. Edward Pierce, an Ann Arbor Democrat, will this evening become the first major candi- date to announce plans to run for the Second U.S. Congressional District seat. Pierce. who narrowly lost the Democratic Con- A LONGTIME liberal, Pierce gave up a lucra- tive local practice in 1968 to found the Summit St. Medical Center, which provides inexpensive treat- ment for low-income persons. In 1974, Pierce, ran for Congress but lost in a five-person primary to John Reuther by about 130 vntes Reuther nenhew of the last United