RULING ON PV See Editorial Page :Y guit 43U~g t a4i RIGHT ON High-,55 Low-3S See Today for details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVI, No. 60 I a Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, November 11, 1975 Ten Cents Ten Pages 'I Lost on the lake The Coast Guard launched a search late last night for a 729-foot Great Lakes ship carrying 30- 35 persons that was reported missing on windswept Lake Superior. A Coast Guard spokesperson said the Edmund Fitzgerald was last seen at 7:10 p.m. by a trailing vessel. Attempts to raise the ship by radio have failed, and the trailing vessel lost radar contact, the spokesperson said. Three Coast Guard ships were steaming toward the ship's last reported position west of Sault Ste. Marie. Winds were re- ported in excess of 60 miles an hour and waves reached 18 feet. The brighter side? According to black feminist lawyer Florynce Kennedy, the defeat of the state constitutional amendments banning sex discrimination in New York and New Jersey isn't all bad. "Now women won't sit back and rest," said Kennedy at a speech at the University's Dearborn campus. "We've learned a lot about the political process, but we still have a lot to learn." Kennedy predicted event- ual success for the ERA, but also sharply criticized the media for their treatment of the amendment. "The media practically ignored the existence of the referenda until that morning when they called the defeats in New York and New Jersey major set- backs." - Was to have been Nobody knew it, but Carol King was supposed to play in Hill Aud. tonight and last night-the last two performances out of six, Sue Young of the University Activities Center (UAC) ex- plained yesterday. UAC and Carol King had signed contracts, but the show wasn't announced because UAC doesn't announce them until things are set. And at the last minute Carol King backed out. Happenings.. .. ... are still anti-intelligence oriented today. At noon there will be a rally on the Diag to pro- test the CIA. Scheduled workshops are also planned The Peace Corps and VISTA will be recruiting on campus in the Career Planning and Placement office from 9-5 ... There will be a poetry read- ing in the Pendleton Room in the Union. Herbert Scott from Western Michigan University will read at 4:10 p.m. ... Charlie Bright will speak on "Them and Us: Social Distance in Criminal Images," as part of the R.C. Lecture Series at 7 p.m. in Green Lounge in East Quad ... A new NAACP chapter will hold a meeting at 7 p.m. tonight at Trotter Huse ... Visiting Professor Harvey Gould, a Physicist from Clarke University, will speak on Science in Israel at 9 p.m. in East Quad's Green Lounge as part of the R.C. Lecture Series. s Dueling celebrities Sen. Hubert Humphrey (D-Minn.) and Bob Dy- lan competed at the University of Vermont cam- pus this weekend. Humphrey appeared at one end of the campus, drawing 350 party faithfuls for a $25 dollar-a-head speech. Dylan, and his sidekick Joan Baez drew 5,500 in the school's gym at $8.50 a head. A bit of computation and Dylan wins- at $46,750, while Humphrey trails with a meas- ly $8,750. Modern medicine Druggist Harry Neff sells leeches, and has been selling them since 1923. "We sell what the public wants," says Neff. The 'public' consists mainly of elderly people of southern European nationali- ties, explained Neff. They use the leeches to cure a variety of ailments, including draining excess blood from inflamed and rhuematic joints. One customer applied them to a black eye to reduce the swelling. "The leech is put on the area of pain, preferably on soft tissue. When the leech has had its full, it crawls away and the thing for you to do is dispose of it. Unfortunately, Neff has no blood-sucking parasites now, because the only two leech supplying firms in the coun- try went out of business. But he's foundanother one in London, and is expecting a shipment any day now. Ah, the wonders of modern medicine. Ounce of prevention.. . Secretary of State Henry Kissinger has devised strategy for avoiding the fate of Defense Secre- tary James Schlesinger, who was purged by Presi- dent Ford the Sunday before last. Asked at a news conference yesterday whether he expected to last out President Ford's term, Kissinger re- plied, "Well, I don't answer my telephones on Sunday."y f On the inside .. . David Blomquist previews the upcoming Uni- versity Theatre Showcase, Machiavelli's Mandra- gola on the Arts Page ... Cathy Reutter writes Court rules to keep Quinlan alive MORRISTOWN, New Jersey (Reuter)-A Superior Court Judge yesterday ruled that 21-year-old Karen Quinlan does not have a right to die and shall be kept alive indefinitely by artificial means. Judge Robert Muir, in a history-making decision, denied a suit brought by the stricken young woman's parents asking for the removal of a mechanical respirator that has sustained their adopted daughter's life through almost seven months in a deep and irreversible coma. "KAREN QUINLAN is by legal and medical definition alive," Muir said in his 44-page decision. "This court will not authorize that life to be taken fromher." Muir agreed with the five parties which contested the Quinlan's suit that to remove the machine that supports her breathing "would be homicide." He said the court's duty was to protect those in her condition and that to grant her parents' suit "would be to permit Karen Quinlan to die." interests," the Judge wrote. The Judge's decision was distributed to the press after he had consulted in his chambers with the Quinlans and the other parties to the suit. Muir said he sympathized with the parents but said his decision was based on judicial conscience. If he ruled according to his own conscience, he said, "the compassion, empathy, sym- pathy I feel for Mr. and Ms. Quinlan would play a very significant part in the decision." But this was not the case. HE ALSO SAID that it should be a medical decision whether or not Karen should be removed from the respirator. He noted that the young woman's attending physician testified during the five- day trial of the case last month that he would refuse to remove the respirator even if ordered to do so by the court. "The nature, extent and duration of care by societal standards is the responsibility of the physician. The morality and conscience of our society places this responsibility in the hands of the physician," Muir said. See COURT, Page 2 Muir "THIS IS NOT protection. It is not something in her best Quinlan Kissinger hits USSR on SALT City GOP to a ppeal-recen.t' PV decision I e 1 I I 1 1 I c I I I I c The Ann Arbor Republican party decided last weekend to appeal a recent Circuit Court decision upholding the constitutional- ity of preferential voting (PV) in an all out attempt to strike the system from the city charter. The appeal, which will be filed in the next few days, will be coupled with a petition drive to place the issue on next April's ballot. About 4,000 signatures are needed to place it before the voters, and the city GOP claim they Dave already collected 4,800. THE UNIQUE and confusing method of electing the city's mayor was passed into law one year ago to prevent a candidate receiving less than 50 per cent of the votes cast from becoming mayor. Under the system, voters got three choices for major - but because no candidate received a clear majority, the candidate finishing last was eliminated and her second choice votes redis- oterstributed among the other two candidates. It was this redistri- bution of votes that enabled Democrat Albert Wheeler to squeeze past the incumbent Re- publican James Stephenson by 121 votes. But it was not until after the m illiage Stephenson's defeat - five months after PV was enacted - that the GOP decided to take the By JEFF RISTINE issue to court. City voters yesterday approv- Thek asserted that the method ed a crucial two mill property was unconstitutional because it tax increase and relieved an violated the 'one-person, one- anxious school board from the vote' decision by the Supreme need to slice nearly $5 million Court, gave different weight to from its budgets during the voters for different candidates next three years. and allowed certain votes to be With all but absentee ballots counted more than once. tabulated, school officials said But in his ruling of last Wed- last night the measure was ap- nesday, visiting Circuit Court proved 8,357 votes to 6,298. The Judge James Fleming refuted vote was the first millage in- each of the charges leveled by crease proposal approved in the Republicans. more than six years, with the "The form of majority prefer- most recent defeat only five ential voting employed in the months ago. City of Ann Arbor's election of BOARD Trustee Clarence its Mayor," Fleming noted, Dukes attributed yesterday's "does not violate the one-man, results to an awareness on the one-vote mandate nor does it de- part of the public that the prive anyone of equal protection school board and its president under the Michigan and United See CITY, Page 10 States Constitutions." reject American WASHINGTON (Reuter) -The Soviet Union has re- jected U.S. proposals on a new nuclear weapons agree- ment, and t hi e Stratic A r m s Limitation J'l k s (SALT)-thb touchstone of U.S.-Soviet detente-are in stagnation, Secretary of State Henry Kissinger said yesterday. Kissinger told the nfws conference that the United States insists that the So- viet Union come up with a reasoned response to the AP Photo latest U.S. ideas for com- pleting the agreement out- ir in Sun- lined by President Ford'and rts. There Soviet Communist P a r t y Leader Leonid Brezhnev at Vladivostok a year ago. OTHERWISE, he w a r n e d, there would be no new U.S. pro- posals, no new SALT agreement and no summit meeting between Ford and Brezhnev. Kremlin that the United States il members was as firm as ever in its de- adequately termination to resist any Soviet t operating attempt at expansionism. accept the In his first news conference under the since Ford dismissed his rival, h by the Defense Secretary James Sch- lesinger, regarded as a, hard- liner toward the Soviet Union, ally slated Kissinger said: sents a re- 0 from the "IF THE Soviet Union threat- pproved by ens the national interests of the to $833 a United States or the national to cover interests of its allies, the United ncy's Youth States will resist. n g to the "The United States will not ge 10 See KISSINGER, Page 2 Take that! Spectators are scattered every which way - including into the air - as a racing ca day's Argentina Grand Prix runs off the road. The driver was unhurt, according to repot was no immediate information an any injuries suffered by spectators. $44,130: Council allocates funi By ANN MARIE LIPINSKI and RICK SOBLE The first slice of Ann Arbor's $2.4 million in federal revenue sharing money was finally allo- cated by City Council last night following nearly two years of bitter controversy. Council targeted $44,130 of the total Community Development Revenue Sharing (CDRS) purse to six city human service agen- cies presently in dire financial condition. DEMOCRATIC Mayor Albert Wheeler also announced that he will offer council a "complete or nearly mendation remaining Monday. complete" recom- for allocation of the CDRS funds next But some of the recipient agencies have already express- ed dissatisfaction w i t h the amounts approved by councl. H o w e v e r Wheeler's proposal next week could recommend that these agencies receive more money. Peace Neighborhood Center, a city a g e n c y earmarked for $6,679 in last night's allocation, claimed in a Nov. 6 letter to the Mayor and counc t h a t it "cannot serve, or even mee expenses if forced to emergency funding conditions set fort Mayor." THE MONEY fin for the agency repre duction of over $3,00 $10,000 originally ap council. It amounts month; just enough the salary of the ager Director, a c c o r d i See CITY, Pai UN condemns Zionism over American, Israeli objections U' grads author By AP and Reuter UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. - The U.N. General Assembly overrode bitter opposition from the United States and Israel last night to approve an Arab-inspired resolution that labels Zionism "a form of racism and racial discrimination." The vote was 72-35 with 32 abstentions. U.S. AMBASSADOR Daniel Moynihan, who cast America's "No" vote, told the 143-nation as- sembly, "A great evil has been loosed upon the world. The abomination of anti-Semitism has been given the appearance of international sanction." Tearing up a copy of the document before the vote was taken Israeli Ambassador Chaim Herzog States, Israel, the nine members of the European Common Market, Australia and Canada. SUPPORTERS of the resolution equating Zion- ism with racism said it was anti-Zionist but not anti-Semitic. They argued that Zionism - the movement for a Jewish national homeland in Palestine - is exclusive and thus racist. Moynihan, in one of the angriest speeches ever made by the U.S. envoy to the world body, said the assembly "granted symbolic amnesty, and more, to the murderers of the six million Euro- pean Jews" during World War. He added that the United States "does not ack- By GORDON ATCHESON Stick a spiral notebook under David Weir's arm and a Bic pen in his pocket and he could be the guy sitting three rows back in just about any college lecture hall. But he graduated from the University seven years ago - having spent his time since then hacking around from here to Af-