THE QUINLAN DILEMMA See Editorial Page \:YI ri!;zt ~aiti COLD High-35 Low--17 See Today for details Vol. LXXXVI, No. 61 Latest Deadline in the State Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, November 13, 1975 Ten Cents Ten Pages ou. as quits upreme ourt I IrTcJ.E W.S ftAP+r fT ALLZ DNLy Shutter at the thought The Michiganensian is sponsoring a photo con- test without themes, fees, or any other hard-to- digest rules. But the prizes are easy to digest. They include a ski parka from Bivouac, and $25 gift certificates from Purchase camera and Big George's. Entries are due by Dec. 10 and should be handed in at the Student Publications Bldg. at 420 Maynard. Sponsors say that any photo that's good enough for you is good enough for the Ensian contest. And in addition to the material wealth, enjoy the spiritual uplift of having the top three winner's photos published in the '76 Ensian and the Ann Arbor Scene magazine. " Happenings .. . today make an encyclopedia look short .. . At noon on the Diag is an Israel Solidarity Rally to protest racism at the U.N. . . . Or if you hap- pen to be hanging around the Women's Bookstore at 225 E. Liberty (above the Fisher Pharmacy) between 1:30 and 3:30, you can catch the editors of the New Women's Survival Catalogue . . . The Advisory Committee for Recreation Intramural and Club Sports (ACRICS) is meeting at 2 p.m. at Waterman No. 6 . . . Come one, come all to the Hopwood Tea and Coffee Hour from 3 to 5 p.m. at the Hopwood rm., 1006 Angell Hall. Featured this week, as every week, are coffee, tea, cookies, and plenty of company . . . At 3:10 Loren Ghiglione (rumored to be Loren Greene's Sicilian couzen), editor-publisher of the Southbridge Evening News, will speak on "The Plight of Theodore Cat, News- paper Editor," at Aud. 4, MLB . . . Ann Arbor Film Co-op announces the Frank Zappa Film Fes- tival at Aud. A, Angell Hall. There will be a host of films, the first is at 6:30, the last at 9:30 .. . The Committee on Undergraduate Studies will hold a general meeting at 1205 Angell Hall at 7 p.m. to discuss job opportunities for persons with Bach- elor's Degrees in Psychology . . . Men. the time has come to strut your stuff while the women- folk have their chance to ogle. Couzens Hall's male beauty contest will be at 7:30 and it only costs Sc to see it. Proceeds go to Maxey Boys Training School. If you are interested but haven't yet entered, you can do so until noon today, but don't forget your suit and swim trunks. Prizes are surprises . . . There will be a Child Care Meeting at the Madelon Pound House on the cor- ner of E. University and Hill at 7:30 . . . At An- gell Hall Aud. D also at 7:30 is "To Die in Ma- drid," a documentary on the Spanish civil war. Admission is free . . . Perry Bllard will speak at the Blue Carpet Lonnge of Alice Lloyd at 8 p.m. on the British and American methods of deal- ine with heroin addiction ... And today is the first day of Soh Show of 1975, "Celebration" written by the authors of "The Fantastics". The perform- ance will be at 8 p.m. at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre in the Leage . . . William Milford Correll will give a Christian Science lecture on "The Spiritual Viewpoint" at 1833 Washtenaw Avenue at 8 p.m. . . . The Undergraduate Political Sci- ence Association (UGPSA) will meet at 8 p.m. in 6602 Haven Hall. Dr. Jacobson, chairman of the department will explain budget cuts and wishes feedback from undergrads on departmental facul- ty openings . . . The Citizens Commission of Ann Arbor is meeting at the Women's Center at Alice Lloyd at 8 p.m. It is the first meeting of the group designed to re-open debate on the assassination of President Kennedy. Biblical comparisons "Maybe the President was a congressman too long," said Presidential hopeful Ronald Reagan in a interview with Time Magazine. "The presi- dent has all the machinery, but I'd be happy with the grass roots," said the former actor and California Governor. He also stated that he didn't think President Ford "Had been very successful. If I decide to run, maybe there's a little David and Goliath to this thing." The question is, who's David and who's Goliath? On the inside . . . ... Sports Page features an article on the Michi- gan Hockey Team by Tom Duranceau . . . Martin Porter examines the Lousy Housing Scene in Ann Arbor for Editorial Page . . . and Jim Valk is chewing the fat about "Jaws" on Arts Page. Law profs react to justice's resignation By STEPHEN HERSH Justice William Douglas' resigna- tion from the Supreme Court may well mark the end of a liberal era, several University 1 a w professors agreed last night. Should Ford appoint a conservative to replace Douglas, the bench would swing to the right, they said. DOUGLAS drew praise as a "great dissenter" and was described as the "brightest" justice. "It's too bad this happened while Ford is president,' said Prof. Yale Kamisar, a nationally recognized au- thority on constitutional law. "I'm not confident that the right person will be appointed as a replacement. "I'm sure he was hanging on for just that reason,"Kamisar said. "I would hope the president would ap- point someone of distinction, without regard to the person's politics." DOUGLAS' position as a liberal on the court was a crucial part of the body's political make-up, Kamisar ex- plained. "On the one hand there were the four conservative Nixon apointees, and on the other there were the three. See LAW, Page 8 Departure may shift Court's liberal balance By AP an4 Reuter Supreme Court Justice William Douglas retired from the Court yesterday because of ill health, ending a career in which he served a record 36 years on the high court and earned a reputation as a great liberal crusader. Douglas' retirement opens to President Ford an ap- pointment that could tip the balance of power on the court. AMONG THOSE considered to be prospects for the court appointment are four prominent Michigan figures: Mary Coleman, a justice of the Michigan Supreme Court; Sen. Robert Griffin, deputy Republican leader; and fed- eral judge Cornelia Kennedy and former Rep. Martha Griffiths, both of Detroit. Douglas, 77, said he would leave the bench immedi- ately because "I have been unable to shoulder my full share of the burden." He suffered a stroke last Dec. 31. He had been absent from the bench several times and spent long periods in hospital since suffering a stroke last New Yeark's Eve. On the occasions he did make an appearance in the court, wheeled into place on an office chair pushed by two court attendants, he more than once nodded off during the proceedings and it was obvious, the pace was telling on him. HE HAD SERVED on the court longer than any man before. He had made his mark as a dissenter, a civil lib- ertarian and a figure of controversy in his private life. Twice there had been moves in the House to impeach him as a justice-the most recent led by then-Rep. Gerald Ford. Ford's charges included Douglas' association with a foundation that was supported by a businessmen who at one time had been in trouble with the government. Ford also attacked D o u g l a s on the grounds of morality. HE DREW attention to excerpts from a book by Douglas, "Points of Revolution," published in the maga- zine Evergreen Review, which at the time regularly in- cluded pictures of nude men and women as well as pun- gently-phrased articles punctuated by swear words and obscenities. The impeachment effort collapsed, however, when House Judiciary Committee refused to forward a bill See DOUGLAS, Page 8 Walla ce announces bid for presidency A? Photo, Supreme Court Justice William Douglas, who retired because of ill health yesterday, is shown attending funeral services for forme,, Chief Justice Earl Warren two weeks ago. CONDEMNS ANTI-ZIONISM: Kissinger hits U.N. move By AP and UPI PITTSBURGH-Secretary of State Henry Kis- singer indicated yesterday retaliatory action could be taken against countries which helped pass a United Nations resolution condemning Zionism. But he stressed in a news conference that no decision had been made yet on such a step. RESPONDING to a series of questions, Kissin- ger deplored the anti-Israeli resolution adopted by the General Assembly on Monday as "ex- tremely unhelpful and highly irresponsible." "The countries which voted for the resolution have contributed to an international environment that will be less helpful in settling the differences in the Middle East," Kissinger said. "Therefore, we will have to consider the vote on an individual basis before deciding what specific action we will take toward various countries." AT THE SAME time, he appeared to be trying to blunt any drive to restrict U.S. participation in the United Nations or to punish individual" countries. "It is important in the present world situation to keep our eye on the fundamental issues that must be solved," Kissinger said. "We have to see the United Nations in some perspective," Kissinger said. "We went through a period in which the U.N. was described as the best hope of mankind. That was exaggerated .. . ."WE MUST not now swing to the other extreme of not realizing some of the benefits that the U.N., with all of its failings, still has for the United States." Daniel Moynihan, U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, struck the same- theme in a television interview yesterday, saying, "We don't want to get so mad about this thing that we forget where our interests are." Kissinger said a U.S. proposal for amnesty for political prisoners in all countries is unrelated to the U.N. campaign against Israel. "We do not put forward fundamental pro- grams in a fit of pique to punish other countries," he said. THE WHITE HOUSE said Tuesday President Ford condemned the U.N. action but was not considering United States withdrawal from the world body. The Senate later passed a resolution urging consideration of the withdrawal. Meanwhile in New York, most of the 32 nations that abstained from voting on the General Assem- bly resolution reacted sharply yesterday to charges that they ducked a moral issue. "WHAT MORAL issue?" snapped a diplomat from a Southeast Asian country, who asked not to be identified. He added, "If there were ever a moral issue that concerned us, it was the war in Indochina. Where was the United Nations then?" See UN, Page 8 Kissinger: "We went through a period in w h i e h the U.N. was described as the best hope of mankind. That was exagger- ated. .. MONTGOMERY, Ala. (P - Gov. George Wallace, with the brash, vigorous, scolding voice of earlier campaigns, issued a call yesterday for middle Amer- ica to launch a "political revolu- tion" to carry him to the White House in 1976. Lively and at times nearly shouting to the cheers of sup- porters, Wallace vowed that neither his paralysis nor his foes in the Democratic party will stop his fourth bid for the presidency. "MY HEALTH is excellent and I will be able to campaign actively, and I don't care what they say," the governor de- Woodcock to meet disputing clericals By ELAINE FLETCHER United Auto Workers (UAW) President Leonard Woodcock has agreed to meet tomorrow with representatives from the Uni- versity's clerical union in an attempt to resolve differences within the newly formed UAW local, clerical Jean Jones said yesterday. The meeting with Woodcock and several unamed UAW region- al officers will include members of the local's former bargaining team and an opposition caucus called Clericals for a Democratic Union (CDU). WOODCOCK'S attention was drawn to the dispute, it is specu- lated, by a dues strike of CDU supporters and a CDU drive to have the local withdraw from the UAW in the next election. The former bargaining team and CDU are embroiled io a bitter dispute over a set of bylaws up for membership approval tomorrow. CDU is attempting to strike down provisions within the pro- posed laws which they saw would give local officials fat salaries and too much nower over the membershin. clared in formally announcing his candidacy for the Democrat presidential nomination. Wallace said the Democratic party leadership has succumbed to the "ultra-liberal exotic left." But he disavowed any talk of bolting the party to run as an independent, as he did in 1968, and, urged "a political revolu- tion at the ballot box in the primaries of 1976." PRESIDENT Ford is the only announced Republican candidate but former California governor Ronald Reagen, a conservative- Republican, is expected to an- nounce his candidacy soon. See WALLACE, Page 8 Senate says 'no to sex ed proposal By GEORGE LOBSENZ The Michigan State Senate yesterday voted down a con- troversial proposal that would have provided instruction on contraception and venereal dis- ease in public high schools. The compromise bill, an amended version of a measure originally introduced by Sen. Gilbert Bursley (R-Ann Arbor) last summer, was defeated 22- lip ,,xx