SUNDAY MAGAZINE See inside YI ittiau Da111&b REPETITIOUS High-25 Low-I5 See Today for details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVI, No. 99 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, January 25, 1976 10 Cents Eigi ht Pages ~Last laugh City Councilwoman Kathy Kozachenko (SHRP- Second Ward) had the last laugh when a joke played on her by city Democrats backfired. At last Monday's council meeting, ,Kozachenko introduced a resolution directing the city attor- ney's office to draw up a rent control ordinance modeled on the 1973 SHRP rent control ballot proposal. To her surprise, the Democrats sup- ported the resolution, although in the past only Councilwoman Carol Jones (D-Second Ward) has back such a measure. After the resolution passe: the Democrats smugly revealed their reason for supporting the measure: the ballot proposal Kozachenko referred to was voted on in 1974, not 1973. The Democrats later said that they were playing a prank of their SHRP col- league. However, Kozachenko discovered that while the proposal was voted on in April, 1974, it was officially filed in the city clerk's office Dec. 30, 1973. Acting City Attorney Bruce Laidlaw is com- plying with the order and council is scheduled to take a first reading on the proposed ordi- nance Feb. 2. " Happenings... There's plenty to do if you're interested in art or food. There will be a benefit dinner to help send people of the Youth Right Bicentennial in Chicago next month in the South Lounge of East Quad from 5 to 7 p.m.; a buck and a half buys a plate of spaghetti and the trimmings six EMU faculty members are showing a variety of their artistic works at the Ann Arbor City Hall; the exhibition is on display until Feb. 20 ... there's also a number of cultural events afoot on Mon- day ... from noon until T p.m. on Monday; the Ann Arbor Art Association is hosting a brown bag lunch at 117 W. Liberty; the public is in- vited to dine and chat with local artists ... Michael Mandziuk is presenting a lecture/demonstration on acrylic, hard-edge paintings at 8 p.m. at the Ann Arbor Art Association ... there will be an organizational meeting of the "Science for the People" club at 7:30 p.m. in 3056 Natural Science Bldg. .. the Ann Arbor Civic Theatre is having open auditions for its next studio production at 7:30 p.m. in the Civic Theatre Bldg., 201 Mul- holland ... Daphne Williams and Marion Johnson will be speaking on women in other cultures at 7:30 p.m. in Rm. 1309 in the School of Education and the Spartacus Youth League is holding a forum on Angola at 7:30 p.m. in the Kuenzel Room at the Union. 0 Fastest growing profession Ever since William Masters and Virginia John- son attracted nationwide attention to themselves and their clinic, countless con-artists have billed themselves as sexual therapists in the hopes of flattening the wallets of the naive. As a result, 30 bonafide sex specialists gathered in St. Louis Thursday and Friday to start formulating a code of ethics of the burgeoning, unregulated practice of sex therapy. The doctors, psychologists, social workers, theologians, sociologists and lawyers spent the two days discussing the ethical dilemmas fac- ing sex clinics. According to Masters, the esti- mated number of self-proclaimed sex therapists across the nation has jumped from less than a dozen six years ago to as many as 5,000 to- day. Of those, he said possibly only 100 could be considered legitimate 'therapists. "There are any number of pseudo sex clinics where the main idea is to bilk the public," he said. " Who knows? Walter Cronkite and John Chancellor, respond- ing intheir most indignant, acerbic manner, de- nied charges that they are on a list of journalists paid by the CIA. The accusations were made in an interview on the Metromedia station in Wash- ington by Sam Jaffe,- a television correspondent in the 1950's and 60's. He said that Cronkite, Chancellor and ABC president William Sheehan were on a list of CIA media contacts which con- tained between 30 and 200 names. Pink pop Someday soon, that bottle of red pop sitting in the back of your refrigerator may become a collectors item. Because of the Food and Drug Administration's recent ban on Red Dye No. 2, red pop may resemble pink lemonade and grape pop may fade away entirely, according to Bor- den, Inc. Researchers at the firm's headquarters said the dye had been used in such items as pie fillings, soft drinks, and ice cream. They have been attempting for several months to find a sub- stitute for the banned substance. A Borden spokes- person said that other dyes they have experi- mented with dan'ttproducethe same color in- tensity. The FDA banned the dye Monday be- cause it may contain a cancer causing agent. On the ins ... staff writer Lois Josimovich introduces us to Esther and Horst Mathia, operators of the local pet cemetery in the Sunday Magazine ... nnr C- -- Tnsnfxnfn r- - rwt r Ao o . nop Hearst SAN FRANCISCO (UP) - The time of reck- oning finally has come for Patricia Hearst. Just one week less than two years after she was kidnaped by the Symbionese Liberation Ar- my, she goes on trial this week for armed robbery. THE JURY will be called upon to decide once and for all whether she became "Tania," the darling of the American revolutionary left, because she wanted to or because she feared for her life. The trial, expected to last about eight weeks, is scheduled to begin Tuesday after a day of hearing defense motions tomorrow. Arguments on the motions were delayed last week because the judge, U. S. District Judge Oliver Carter, underwent minor surgery. faces day Of Trial to begin on Tuesi ered on tape recordings that turned the tiny SLA into America's most notorious radical group. But throughout, her family, and since her arrest her defense attorneys, have insisted that she was a victim of her captors; not a soldier com- rade who willingly carried automatic weapons and talked of fighting for revolution. HEA4RST, the 21 year old granddaughter of famed publisher William Randolph Hearst, is charged with taking part in the $10,660 holdup of a San Francisco bank on April 15, 1974, 10 weeks after she was kidnaped, along with four mem- bers of the SIA who were killed the next month in a fire and shootout with Los Angeles police. Two bystanders were wounded as the bank rob- bers fled to two waiting getaway cars. The formal charges against bank robbery and use of a fir a felony. A bank robbery con' maximum sentence of 25 years a $10,000 fine, and she could be additional one to 10 years on the The long search for PatriciaF ably the most embarrassing in history. More than 8,500 agent of dollars looking for the 100 whose father, Randolph Hearst the San Francisco Examiner. The government's case agains based primarily on the evidence 1,200 photographs taken by bank the 10 minute holdup of a neigh Bank branch six blocks south reckon in Park. More than 90 secret subpoenas have been is- a y sued to government witnesses, although only about half are expected to testify, according to the chief prosecutor, U. S. Attorney James her are armed Browning. earm to commit In a summary prepared by prosecutors for viction carries a Judge Carter, the government's interpretation' of in prison and or the holdup photographs - which have been sentenced to an put together in movie form - was described: firearm charge. "HEARST first appears on a frame simul- Hearst was prob- taneously with Camilla Hall one of the SLA the FBI's long members. Miss Hearst is seen to take up a :s spent millions position in the middle of the bank lobby facing pound woman, in a southerly direction so as to cover customers is president of lying on the floor and on the officer's plat- form . st Miss Hearst is "At the moment of the shooting Hearst's mouth of witnesses and is open and her facial expression is subject to cameras during the interpretation of the viewer of the photo. She borhood Hibernia is also seen in the film as either directing or of Golden Gate See HEARST, Page 2 For months after her kidnaping, Patty ed police and the FBI, her family and a nated public with revolutionary rhetoric taunt- fasci- deliv- China explodes 18th mto nuci, By Reuter and UPI HONG KONG - China, declaring its intention to break the "nuclear mono- poly" of the "superpowers," announced yesterday it had conducted an 18th nuclear test explosion. The test was Friday, ac- cording to the official New China News Agency. ALTHOUGH the explosion was presumably set off at the' main nuclear testing site near Lop Nor in the remote Sinkiang re- gion of northwest China, the wants end ear monopoly announcement did not say whether it was in the atmo- sphere or underground or say how powerful it was. It was the first since China began setting off nuclear blasts in 1964 that such a blast was not first announced by monitor- ing agencies outside China. The most recent test, con- ducted last Oct. 27, was detected and announced first by L ian monitors. IN WASHINGTON, a spokes- person for the office of Public Affairs, Energy Research and Development Administration said the blast was detected by Traying: Fun and games in the Arb By RICK SOBLE Screams cut through the cold, crisp air. They are the screams of mock terror mixed with a lot of excitement - they sound just like the noises made by captives on a roller-coaster. To the people shouting their lungs out, traying in the Arb may be better than the scariest carnival ride -- after all it's free. All anyone had to do to get in on the action is filch a plastic tray from a dorm and wait for the snow. BUT THE SPORT ALSO requires some measure of guts be- cause once a tray is set in motion down the steep hills of the Arb, it cannot be controlled and may break apart beneath the rider. "You cannot stay on them. There's nothing to hang on to," says Dale McCurdy a. veteran visitor to the Arb. "Once you go flying you're done for." Although many people use unbreakable metal trays instead of plastic ones, McCurdy swears by the dormatory specials. 'METAL TRAYS get ruined just as badly as plastic," he notes. "They become all dented.". According to McCurdy, another problem with trays is that they get bogged down in snow. They only slide well on hard ice, much to the dismay of individuals suddenly separated from them. At some dorms students can obtain trays at the front desk in See TRAYING, Page 6 the U.S. atomic energy d!cction system. The spokesperson said the test was carried out in the atmosphere and was in the low- yield range-less than 20 kilo- tons. "The conducting of nece:sary and limited nuclear tests by China is entirely for the purp >se of defense and for breaking the nuclear monopoly by the super- powers and for ultimately .bol- ishing nuclear weapons," the announcement said. There was some diplomatic speculation that Chinas. iatost test might have been timed to c incide with Secretary of State Henry Kissinger's visit to the Soviet Union for talks on stra- tegic arms limitation. If it was, it er'm a bit late. CHINA IS vigorously oop ,,-_d to the Soviet-American arms limitation talks. Chinese leaders have warned reneatedly that the United States is falling into a Sniet tran. TN ISSUING these warnings with considerable regularity,- the Chinese have made it clear that they have no intention of ah'ding by any miclear test ban agree- ment that does not provide fcr destruction of all nuclear weap- ons. The announcement on the lat- est test said China would try to "achieve the lofty g)al of complete prohibition and thor- ough destruction of nuclear q anon s." It also reiterated Pekii:g's oromise that "at no time and in no circumstances will China be the first to use niclear weanons." CHINA TESTED a series of atomic and hydrogen bombs be- tween 1964 and 1969, its first underground nuclear tet was conducted at Lop Nor in Sep- tember. 1969. China's ICBMs are iL the 8,000- mile (12,800-kilometac) range, according to Jane's. AP Photo Slashin' Swede Ingemar Stenmark carves his way through the slalom poles in Kitzbuehel, Austria on the way to winning the World Cup Slalom yesterday. The Swede beat Italians Oustav Thoeni and Piero Gros for his third slalom triumph this season. CARTER NOT WORRIED: Wallace takes early lead in MIss. delegate caucus Hitting the bottle has plenty of class at Martha Cook f. By JODY DIMICK The wine flowed like water from a faucet last night as some 60 Martha Cook residents andr their guests were treated to a wine tasting party by a Detroit- area wine merchant. Walter Rosenberg, who fan- cies himself a "wine consul-< tant," is anti-liquor and ex-f plained that the only intent off the party was to "come away with a good, warm feeling." "LIQUOR," he continued, "is solely a depressant, but wine, on the other hand, is the great- est natural tranquilizer without anv side effects." j "Wine is the only way to go," he asserted to the receptive au dien ce. Suach is his dislike of the hard- From Wire Service Reports JACKSON, Miss. - Alabama Gov. George Wallace fared well yesterday in the first test of Southern strength among Demo- crats seeking the presidential nomination as he easily outdis- tanced the field in the Missis- sippi delegate caucuses. By late last night about 31 per cent of the approximately 3,000 county convention dele- gates had been chosen by the precinct caucuses. Wallace gar- nered almost 41 per cent of the delegates. FORMER Georgia Gov. Jim- my Carter received 17 per cent of participants. Another 24 per cent of the delegates were re- ported uncommitted. Trailing the leaders was Sar- gent Shriver, who ran well in black areas, with 13 per cent. Former Oklahoma Senator Fred Harris and Texas Senator Lloyd Bensten had only negligible backing. None of the other Democratic contenders were vying for votes in the Mississippi delegation to the party's national convention this summer. T H E PRECINCT caucuses represent the first step in a observers said it was crucial that he beat Carter, who has been running an anti-Wallace campaign from the outset. SHORTLY AFTER the pre- liminary returns came in, Wal- lace claimed victory for himself and his supporters. Carter, however, said that he did not see his distant second place finish as a setback. "I think he had a larger con- stituency to draw from and bet- ter name recognition and I've got toaattributehis showing to the fact that he reached his people," Carter said of the Wal- lace showing. "I DO NOT expect or need to finish first in every state," Car- ter added. He said that if he can finish first or second in most of the states in which he is running, "the inevitable re- sult will be more delegates for us than anyone else." Carter handily won a similar delegate caucus vote in Iowa earlier this month. Meanwhile, in Boston former Watergate Prosecutor Archibald See WALLACE, Page 6 U.S. Signsiltary epai accord with Spain MADRID, Spain (A') - The United States and Spain signed a five-year treaty yesterday extending American use of four military bases on Spanish soil in return for $1.22 billion in aid and the withdrawal of 10 U.S. missile-firing submarines from a Spanish port. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger signed his name 36 times to copies of the treaty and its annexes in a nationally televised ceremony with Foreign Minister Jose Maria de Areilza. U.S. OFFICIALS, while insisting the agreement is not a com-