Thursday, January 22, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Thursday, January 22, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page -Three ' -. Hearst trial delay p ossible SAN FRANCISCO (P) - The starting date for Patricia Hearst's bank robbery trial was in doubt yesterday with thet announcement -that the trial judge is undergoing surprise surgery after a routine check- up. Lawyers for the jailed heiress were left outside a locked courtroom when a pretrial hear- ing scheduled for yesterday morning was postponed. Anoth- er hearing with a substitute judge was set for later in the day, but it was unclear whether pending defense motions would, be dealt with. "I'm beginning to have my doubts," said chief defense at- torney F. Lee Bailey when ask- ed if he believed Hearst's trial would start on schedule next Monday. She is charged with the April 1974 holdup of a Hi- bernja Bank branch here. THE TRIAL schedule -Was placed in question when it was disclosed that U. S. District Court Judge Oliver Carter was to have undergone minor sur- gery for an undisclosed vascu- lar ailment in his neck. He had entered a hospital on Monday for a routine physical examina- tion. Carter's secretary maintain- ed the 64-year-old judge intend- ed to be on hand for the trial Monday morning. But his ab- sence yesterday morning left unresolved for the moment de- fense motions challenging the qualifications of a government psychiatrist and seeking to have lie detector evidence admitted as evidence. The pretrial hearing was set despite a second meeting Tues- day between Hearst and Dr. Harry Kozol, the Boston psy- chiatrist she claimed badgered her to tears during an inter- view two weeks ago. He inter- viewed her for four hours at the San Mateo County Jail, where she has been held since her capture here on Sept. 18. DEFENSE attorney Albert Johnson said the interview took place "without incident" but added the defense still in- tended to challenge Kozol's qualifications. Also at issue was the admis- sibility of polygraph tests of Hearst. The tests were believ- ed to support the defense con- tention that she was indeed in fear of her life when she took part in the bank robbery with members of the Symbionese Li- beration Army, the terrorists who kidnaped her nearly two years ago. Admission of such tests as evidence in the federal court's Northern District of California is, unprecedented. But Bailey has fought successfully for ad- .nission of such tests in otherj trials. HEARST gave sworn testi- mony last week that Kozol har- rassed her to the point of hys- teria during their first inter- view. Kozol, himself under oath, denied the allegations. "We still think the courtj should disqualify him as an ex- pert," Johnson said. He had promised earlier to presents "newly discovered evidence" yesterday that would challenge1 Kozol's qualifications to ex- amine Hearst. . The attorney said that Hearst's decision to meet with the doctor for a second time was in response to the trial judge's order that she co- operate. "We had three options," John- son said. "One was to refuse to have him examine her at all. One was to appeal to the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals. One was to allow the doctor to go in under very stringent safe- guards and guarantees." He said the government of- fered the guarantees late Mon- day night, and the defense de- cided on the third option. Kozol is one of several psy- chiatrists who have interviewed Hearst for possible expert tes- timony about her mental state. Inflation drops to PS t below1974.high WASHINGTON (P) - Inflation+ wide variety of consumer se cost American consumers seven ices were responsible for m cents on the dollar in 1975 and of the December increase. President Ford saidayesterday FOOD PRICES rose thr it will cost them another 5.9 tenths compared with as esthis year.But 1974 and tenths per cent jump the p 1973 when inflation clipped 21 vious month. Non-food com cents off the dollar's purchas- udities rose three-tenths, eq ing powering increases in each oft Final year-end figures from three previous months. Servi the Labor Department showed increased six-tenths following the rise in consumer prices 4.1 per cent jump in Nove slowed in December, increasing ber. five-tenths of one per cent. The indexes for the three n For all of 1975, prices rose jor components of the consu seven per cent , down from the er price index - food, comn 12.2 per cent jump in 1974 and dities other than food, and se the smallest yearly increase ices - all rose less in 1975 th since 1972 when prices rose 3.4 1974. per cent. Over the year ,the food in WHITE HOUSE Press Secre- rose 6.5 per cent, compa tary Ron Nessen said the fig- with 12.2 per cent in 19 [ures show that inflation is mod- Prices of services rose 8.11 erating. cent compared with 11.3 1 "It is still higher than the cent a year earlier. Nonfi President would like but it is commodities showed 6.21 better than in the last two cent increase during 1975, 1 years," he told reporters. Nes- than half the 13.2 per cent sen added that the administra- ure recorded in 1974. tion believes "the outlook is - quite good" for the economic recovery in 1976. In presenting Congress With Teew budget, President Ford -rpdicted a further drop in the inflation rate this year - to 5.9 per cent. THlE MICHIGAN DIAILY Volume LXXXV No. 96 Thursday, January 22, 1976 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 164-0562. Second class postage pei1d at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. vtiblished d a i i y Tuesday through Sunday mrning during the Univer- rv-t '.vitat 420 Maynard Street, Ann rv- . rbor, Michigan 4109. Subscription ost .cs. sl$ Sept. tLru April (2 semes- r ai $13 by mal outside Ann Ar- Nor ee- unumer session published Tues- e.day through Saturday niorning. six- Subscriptu rates: $6.50 in Ann pre- Arbor; $7.50 by wail outside Ann mo- Arur u a l- - - _ _ __ . ._ __.. __ the John Lucas, a senior from ces Durham, N.C., led Duke's bas- g a ketball scorers with a 19.5 point m- average last season and is back for his final season with the B111 i)N7l ma- um- mo- erv- han idex red 974. per per food per ess. fig- mue Dnevus. We have our reputation to protect. UM Stylists at the UNION, Chet, Harold, and Dave Daily Photo by PAULINE LUBENS Bill banning f n sale roin state to reach Hou 1 By PAUL EISENSTEIN Special to The Daily LANSING - The House Pub- lic Health Committee will re- sume hearings next week, on a bill introduced by Rep. Perry Bullard (D-Ann Arbor) which would halt the sale within Mich- reivsed bill which would just ban the sale of fluorocarbon pro- i pelled aerosols anywhere with- in the state, rather than a ban: of manufacture and sale," saidI Bullard. The target date is now January, 1977. (C P (I f f~f !INFLATION had averaged two to three per cent a year during most of the post-World dustry's reticence to accept the War II period before prices ban. "I think this is an example gained momentum in the late of the problem of our profit 1960s. based corporate structure," he The seasonally adjusted five- says. "We're in danger of poi- tenths of a per cent increase in soning ourselves and our ecolo- consumer prices last month gy. "compared with the seven-tenths The second most popular aero- increase in November and was sol propellant, vinyl chloride, the smallest monthly rise since has been banned nationally as September, when prices also of the first of this year. Tests rose five-tenths of one per cent. showed it caused a rare liver The government said higher cancer in rats. orices for some foods and a - - - British, French Con begin supersonic iguttan Luc alao fl srayspr- THE STRONGEST opposition igan of all aerosol sprays pro- to Bullard's bill is coming from pelled by freon. 1 ra e corporainadthsae If Bullard's bill passes, Mich- r ations and the state igan would be the second state Chamber of Commerce. That to regulate the sale of fluoro- organization's representativest caron (freon) aerosols. Oregon claim passage of the bill would was the first state to pass such cost 193 state jobs. a bill last year, phasing out DuPont, the world's largest fluorocarbon aerosols by March, freon manufacturer, has mount- 1977. ed a major campaign to delay After a similar bill failed two any state or federal legislativea years ago, "We've- submitted a action. _____------------------ Recent findings have shown that freon damages the earth's e{S ozone layer, which. filters dead-: c. rd lv ultraviolet radiation coming rdefrom the sun. A reduction of the ozone layer of one or two, per cent by 1985 has been pre- S dicted. A one per cent reduc- tion could cause up to 20,000 new skin cancer cases each "Never have so many coughed year, say experts. up so much for so few." An anti-Concorde group was report- DR..RALPH CICERONE, Uni- ed staking out the flight path versity research scie tist, says,I west of Heathrow with noise- "I see freon as a more formid- monitoring devices. able threat to the ozone than Jonathan Cavenna, a 30-year- ithe A-bomb tests of the '60's." Jonathan Cavenna, and 30yer- Cicerone has testified that a old office worker and father of three to five per cent ozone! idtwo who earns $6,000 a year, reduction could be reached by' said it would take him three ;1990 even if a ban began im- ,years to pay back the $1,000' he hadtto borrow t make the mediately. This reduction, says heiha tborrhowBrtohmCketrdCicerone, "is serious enough to flight on the British Concorde. 1set off significant climactic' .: . jtil. }jj ff' r: '' / TAKE A BREAK . in the . PARIS (AP) - Britain andi France began commercial ser-1 vice by their Concorde super- sonic airliner today with simul- taneous takeoffs from Paris for Rio de Janeiro and from Lon- don for the Persian Gulf. The British Airways flight reached Bahrain in three hours, 3 minutes - more than three hours faster than the speediest subsonic jet. Air France's Con- torde was 7 minutes ahead of schedule stopping at Dakar, Senegal, to refuel enroute to Rio de Janeiro. The only mishap reported was that the speed indicator in the passenger compartment of the British jet stuck at about 450 miles an hour and refused to budge when the plane broke the. sound barrier, not even' after the Duchess of Argyll walked up and gave it a slap.z "'" ?, ' ? " Y :1'kq ?qfrr,. .i %rff {': .. .:.is r;?.,r,::,? THE OLDEST PASSENGER aboard the French jetliner, 82- year-old Aureli Ouille, said she been waiting for the trip for years and was taking it "simply for the pleasure of it." "I hope that I will be able to fly the Concorde to New York when the Americans let it land there," said Mrs. Ouille, who comes from Toulouse, in South- ern France, where the French plane was built. Both planes had full loads of 100 passengers, but the French did much better financially. Ninety-three of their passengers were paying customers; only 28 aboard the British flight were not traveling free. BA HAMAS. Dates of Trip: MARCH 6-13 Destination: FREEPORT BAHAMAS Stay in the CASTAWAYS HOTEL only + 10%°r + $3.00 Includes Air NON-STOP on Northwest Orient, Hotel, Transfers, Baggage Handling, & Meals in Flight. LIMITED SPACES STILL AVAILABLE $25.00 deposit reauired to hold reservation CAMPUS INTERNATIONAL Contact: Rosanne at 761-4965 original works of graphic art-etchings, lithographs, by leading 20th century artists: Pablo Picasso Johnny Friedlaender Marc Chagall Salvador Dali, Alexander Calder Joan Miro Georges Rouault Victor Vasarely and others. ALL NEW ART! 1ST SHOW OF SEASONI THIS SUNDAY, Jan. 25th at 3:00 p.m. MARRIOTT INN-BALLROOM US 23 at Plymouth Rd. EXHIBITION: 1:00-3:00. Mod, prices-Free admission Presented by Meridion'Gallery Bank Chq. Cards acpt. "I can't really afford it," he changes." said. "But I talked it over with BULLAR my wife and she agreed I must BULLo go. mc n FORDTEN CZ. A FRIEND'S LUFE I S VISCOUNT LEATHERS, the House tor votes to p Bmillard RT) CLAIMS the sup- 34 members of the~ 3his bill. It needst56 pass. strongly criticizes in- 'AT LONDON'S Heathrow Air- ports, critics opposed to the Concorde's noise and more than $2.5 billion development cost picketed with signs saying: :vg ,n;sms ,v,.;.;r r;:r""a{::'rrr:?:iv: :r;;y;{x r:;r,{- T 14) V yl\1 LL[1111L:1 , 41 'first to apply for the passenger list more than 11 years ago, t' :: I i DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN "°"kr:k?;.}y:: {":;rr~*,}"". .rilYr :r"::"t:4:}','"'r irr?"::" '"rii: ,"r:???Yr.}?r}?r } i:-:r:r{ i:"}h:"Y>Y i sism l t z x Y t t I referred jokingly to the 13-plus' Brushing a loaf of yeast years it took Britain and France bread with slightly beaten egg1 to put Concorde into service. white before it goes in the oven helps produce a crisp crust. Be- "I wondered if I would de- cause you need only a small part first or the aircraft would amount of egg white, you can' depart first the 67-year-old pour the rest of it into a small viscount said. .jar and put it in the freezer for Bob Ingham, 50, an electrical use another time. company manager from Wilt- -- -~ shire, wore a flowing silver j dress edged with mauve and a' J flame shaped hat with silver'j fringes. His face was covered GJO rder with silver makeup. Thursday, January 22 pm; 802 Monroe. Day Caendar ! Int'l Night: Czechoslavakian & WUOM: "Dealing with Bureau- Yugoslavian menu, League Safeter- :racies," incl. talk with James ; ia, 5-7:15 pm. Borin, pres. of Intenat'i Assoc. of! University Club: Hockey Cmorgas- Professional Bureaucrats, 10:10 am. i bord - Dan Rarrel, Glen Williams, Ctr. Japanese Studies: Emiko Oh- Club Terrace, 6 pm. nuki-Tierney, Beloit College, "The PTP: Goldsmith's She Stoops to Ainu-Japanese Relationship," Com- Conquer, John Houseman's Acting mons Rm., Lane Hall, noon. Co., 8 pm. Public Health Films: Purposes of Music School: Wind Ensemble & Pamily Planning; Sex Role Develop- I Symphony Band, Hill Aud., 8 pm. ment; Vasectomy SPH II, 12:10 pm. 1 IPPS CEdward Gramlic, The Book- Behavorial Science: Richard D., ings Inst., Cornell U., "An Econo- Alexander, t'Evolution and Sosial mist's View of New York City's Behavior," Lec. Rm. 1, MLB, 3:30- Fiscal Crisis," 102 Econ. Bldg., 8 5 pm. pm Nuclear Seminar: B. H. Wilden- Chemistry: R. Kopelman, "Why thal, MSU, "Survey of one- and Are Leaves Green: Excitons in Mo- two-nucleon transfer reactions stu- lecular Aggregates," 1300 Chem, 8 died at the MSU cyclotron," P&Apm, Dolloq. Rm., 4 pm. Guild House: John Raines, Tem- pie U., "Marxism and Radical Re- ligion," 4-6 pm; poetry reading with Steve Schwartz and Jim Paul, 7:30POETRY r with STEVE and J IA The Feathered Serpent Reading from IMPORTS & CRAFTS THURSDAY, JA FROM THE AMERICAS at GUILD 309 E. Liberty Ann Arbor, Michigon 48103 802 Telephone(313)995-42222 -.'-I.. BECAUSE YOU'VE ACHIEVED 'SEl [tQ C... , , - U. ' ' The synchronized takeoff scheduled for 12:40 p.m. 6:40 a.m. EST was arranged so that{ neither Air France nor British' Airways would be first into com- Imercial operation with the con- troversial faster-than-sound jet- liner the two countries devel- oped jointly. -Th Subscription Today 764-0558 READING SCHWARTZ A PAUL Ihe experiences that have "carved" your real achievements are the personal ones. Wear a class ring and remember. Order on Ring Day and save 5%. Thursday & Friday,Jan. 22 & 23 ULIUCH' S 549 E. UNIVERSITY AVE. n Their Works N. 22-7:30 HOUSE- III I P.M. ON ROE THURSDAY-January 22 12-1 p.m.--SCHOR LING A UD., School of Education N "HIGHER EDUCATION and the AMERICAN DREAM: The Equal Opportunity Myth" A phone call. A simple, ten-cent phone call for a cab could save your friend's life. If your friend has been drinking too much, he shouldn't be driving. The automobile crash is the number one cause of death of people your age. And the ironic thing is that the drunk drivers responsible for killing young people are most often other young people. Take a minute. Spend a dime. Call a cab. That's all. If you can't do that, drive him yourself. Or let him sleep on your couch. We're not asking you to be a doctor or a cop.Just a friend. DRUNK DRIVER, DEPT. Y BOX 2345 ROCKVILLE, MARYIAND 20852 I want to save a friend's life. Tell me what else I can do. I Mvname is INTRODUCING, Wine Connection * I 4-5 p.m.-GUILD HOUSE, 802 Monroe "MARXISM and RADICAL RELIGION-Toward a Revolutionary Humanism" U ii I i II