MOYNIHAN DEPARTURE See Editorial Page Y lflfr igau AOF :43atlil ICE CUBES High-27 Low- -3 See Today for Details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVI, No. 107 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, February 4, 1976 10 Cents Eight Pages . If XV S E WS tAPPM CALL6 -DAILY Pop-tops stopped Those days of flying down the highway with the top of your convertible rolled down and the wind blowing through your hair will soon be gone for good. The Cadillac corporation has announced that its convertible, will go out of production within a couple of months - marking the end of the American. soft-top. Meanwhile, some Cadillac dealers are paying astronomical prices to gobble up the last trickle of the cars. Warren Shafer, a Cadillac sales manager in one Chicago suburb says he can sell "every one we can get. We're offering to pay other dealers $2,000 over cost for one." A Miami dealer called the softtops "a better investment than the stock market, jewelry and anything else I can think of." ! Rumble, rumble At least 10 communities in the downriver De- troit area were struck by an earthquake Monday afternoon that registered 3.25 on the Richter Scale. The quake, which lasted from a few seconds to two minutes, was felt in an area stretching more than 10 miles - from Trenton south to Rockford and some 20 miles from New Boston to across Lake Erie to Colchester, Ontario, according to the Na- tional Weather Service. Police in the areas were flooded with calls from residents who felt their homes shake, but no injuries or damage were re- ported. Happenings .. . .. are slim today.,The University's division of Biological Science will present a seminar by Jack Hailman on Phototaxis: a Reassessment at 4:00 in lecture room 1, MLB . . . Ars Musica will pre- sent a Baroque concert tonight at 8:00 in the Pendleton Arts Center of the Union . . . the Un- ion Gallery will be the site of a ceramics exhibi- tion; the show will last until Feb. 29. . . . the Center for Russian and East European Studies is having a brown bag lunch at 12:00 in Lane Hall; Henryka Yakushev will be the speaker . . . and there will be a mass meeting sponsored by PIR- GIM on nuclear safeguards in the multi-purpose room, third floor of the UGLI at 7:00 tonight .. . the Ann Arbor Tenants Union will hold a meet- ing on the fourth floor of the Union at 7:00 . . . and there will be a demonstration against the CIA, dorm rate increases at the Regents' meeting to- day. Lost in space Deserters from the Great Lost UFO Cult are straggling back after a summer and autumn of spiritual wandering, mostly to no avail. Last April, a group of 24 from Oregon and California left their families and possessions to follow a mysterious duo called The Two, who promised that those daring to give up everything would be transported aboard a UFO to another spiritual plane. The Two were later. identified as Marshall Applewhite, 44, and Bonnie Nettles, 48, both of Houston. They traveled. to various parts of the country, sometimes camp- ing in the desert. According to Joan Culpepper, one of the disillusioned disciples, most of the fol- lowers are now scattered across the West and Southwest, still believing they will "graduate" to a higher state of spiritual knowledge. Her defec- tion came when leaders of her group accused he of being too outspoken andahcreating dissension. "Some have gone back to their former lives and it's beautiful," she said. "Sometimes it's not." One of those who couldn't go home agai is under treatment by a psychologist, and two are in Ari- zona "getting themselves together," she said. Blown away Two years ago, Joseph Dhauyre, 77, signed pa- pers to leave his body to science after his death. Last Sunday, wearing a beat-up hat and a worn topcoat, he hobbled with a cane into the Toulouse, France Medical Center. "Excuse me for bother- ing you," he commented to the receptionist, draw- ing the official documents from his coat pocket. "Two years ago I gave my body to science. The time has come. I'm sick. You must kill me. My body will be immediately available," the old man asserted. "Even at your age, there's plenty of time to die," the receptionist responded. Two nearby medical students who overheard the con- versation said, "Our job is to save life, not to end it." "Oh," said Dhauyre, "I thought you could end it as well." Not to be outdone, the old man turned and walked a hundred feet toward the door, took a pistel from his pocket, put it to his head and blew his brains out. The Tolouse Medi- cal Center then took possession of his body. On the inside ... Arts Page will include a review of the Tom Paxton concert by Stenhen Selbst . . . Editorial Page will feature an article on public power . . . and Snorts Page will have complete coverage of last night's hockey game. On the oui 57 C.. . If you don't mind cold tenneratires, we'll have Kaycall By JAROLD SOLE Psychologist Rollo May yesterday warned that society must re-examine its values if it plans to address tomorrow's problems constructively. "Only a creative re-evaluation of personal and societal values will thwart the inevitable decline of modern society," May told an attentive crowd of about 800 at Hill Aud. MAY SPOKE as part of the Future Worlds series. His speech coincided with the Univer- sity's Values Week 1976, a program to facilitate inquiry into value-related issues. "We are currently in a state of transition be- tween dying conventional mores and the new values which are not yet born," said May, point- ing to Watergate as an example of a bankrupt value system. May added that the old order of rationality and competition is either dying or dead. "Society now reflects this destruction of values," he explained. for cultural assessment MAY POINTED to our current disintegration of values by criticizing the media. "In the 40's, the press would never photograph FDR from the waist down," said May. "But now we find Kennedy's love affairs splashed all over the front page. It's a curious change." He said that the disintegration of values is also reflected in ever-present "radical pessimism", as exemplified by today's blue collar workers. He quoted an article in the National Observer in which blue collar workers said that the basic problem of society- today is a "loss of com- munity." HE STATED, however, that "If history is per- ceived in a cyclical way, Jhe rapid pessimism of today can be understood as something which could change as situations change." When asked why society should again get in- volved in political change, May said one has to do whatever possible to change things as an act of "personal integrity." May said that many college expressing interest in offsetting values, but he cautioned against presidents are the decline of any attempt on the University's part to "program values". "THIS WOULD produce an empty form of be- havior," he explained. "We can't be content with copformity." He added that when obedience is the central criteria in programming values, individual re- sponsibility, autonomy and confidence in one's abilities are destroyed. May suggested that one cure for the decline in values might lie in introspection. "NEARLY all of the Chicago Seven have gone through psychotherapy in order to discover them- selves; to clear up their personal conflicts so as to proceed to make constructive social change," he said. May See MAY, Page 2 Ford states prefer~s to decide on abortion WAS HIN G TON (A - President Ford said yes- terday he would oppose a constitutional amendment prohibiting abortion, but prefers one that would give states the right to decide such issues. "I do not believe in abor- tion on demand," Ford said in a television interview with CBS correspondent Walter Cronkite. But he added that there must be some flexibility in the law to permit abortion in cases involving the mother's ill- ness or rape. HE SAID that while he did not agree with the Sunreme Court's 1973 decision legalizing abortion, he had taken an oath of office to uphold the law as interoreted by the court and would do so. The high court has ruled that a state cannot bar a woman from obtaining an abortion from a licensed physician during the first three months of pregnancy. The decision permits the regula- tion of abortion in the second three months of pregnancy to preserve and protect the mother's health. States are per- mitted to forbid abortions in the final three months. Ford said, "I do not believe in abortion on demand. I do not agree with the court de- cision." HE SAID he agreed there were instances, such as illness of the mother and rape, "when abortion should be permitted." But, he said he felt the "prefer- able answer" was through an amendment that would permit the states to make their own decisions on their own abortion law laws. Ronald Reagan, Ford's rival far the GOP presidential nomi- nation, has endorsed =a consti- tutional amendment x approach that would, in effect, prevent most abortions but allow them in extreme cases such as when a mother's life is in danger. Among Democratic candidates, only George Wallace has voiced See FORD, Page 2 Did, Kissinger cause Moyiiihan to resign By AP and Reuter UNITED NATIONS, New York - As the search for his successor began yesterday, many people here believe Daniel Patrick Moynihan decided to resign as U.N. ambassador because he felt he lacked firm backing from Secretary of State Henry Kissinger. Moynihan, 48, perhaps the most controversial U.S. Ambassador ever sent to the United Nations, resigned Monday night. AMONG NAMES being mentioned yesterday as possible sue- cessors were those of two women-Rita Hauser, a prominent lawyer, and Shirley Temple Black, the former child star who is now Ambassador to Ghana. Moynihan said he will resume teaching at Harvard, but will keep an eye on the New York Senate seat of Conservative- Republican James Buckley. QUALIFIED SOURCES said President Ford's and Kissinger's expressions of support for Moynihan had been unconvincing. The ambassador threatened to resign last November and again last week, after he criticized the State Department. See MOYNIHAN, Page 8 Daily Photo by SCOTT ECCKER Snow Bowl Several snow-covered law students play a cold game of football outside of the Education Build- ing. Yesterday's match was dubbed the, "Pneumonia Bowl" by the participants. Regents to vote today on dorm rate inerease By KEN PARSIGIAN The University Board of Re- gents will meet today to vote on an 8.9 per cent dorm rate in- crease proposed by Housing Di- rector John Feldkamp. In what may turn out to be the busiest meeting of the year, the Regents will also decide how to fund PIRGIM next fall. The meeting may be punctuated with demonstrations by the Ann Arbor Tenant's Union and a group protesting the 'National Security Agency (NSA). THE PROPOSED dorm rate hike would raise the price of a double room from $1402 to $1512 and rates for single rooms from $1565 to $1753. Feldkamp said that the hike was necessary to maintain the presentlevel of services. He added that dorm rates haven't kept pace with inflation. "Residence hall rates have not kept pace with general changes in the outside economy, as a double room in a traditional res- idence hall rented at $900 for two terms in 1964-65 now rents for $1400, a $500 increase," Profs see decline of Miranda decision By JAY LEVIN Two University law professors foresee the continued decline of the "Miranda Warning," the landmark 1966 Supreme Court decision thrust into prominence again last Saturday with the murder of its namesake in a skid row Phoenix bar. The "Miranda Warning," originating from Ernesto Miranda's successful appeal of a 1963 conviction for rape and murder, forces police to advise arrested suspects of their constitutional rights. These include the right to remain silent and the right to free legal counsel. TlE COURTS, however, have narrowed the scope of the r'!liig in recenttyears. In 1971, thedSupreme Court permittedbthe use of statements obtained from defendants who had not been Feldkamp explained. "That's a 55.6 per cent increase in 11 years, but the Consumer Price Index has risen 75.6 per cent in the same period." DORM RATES weren't in- creased last year, despite Feld, kamp's plea for a three per cent hike, because the Regents felt they hadn't had enough time to make a decision. Rates were hiked in 1973 and again in 1974. Feldkamp would make no prediction on today's vote say- ing, "I really don't know what the Regents will decide, but I'm hopeful that they'll approve the hike. We need that money." The Regents must also decide how to fund PIRGIM next term. Under the present funding sys- tem students are automatically chargedthe $1.50 fee. To obtain a refund a student must then fill out and return a form. that will be sent with each student's tuition bill. THE REGENTS were sched- iled to approve this same plan, for next term at their January meeting when University Pres- ident Robben Fleming informed the Board that University Gen- eral Counsel Roderick Daane thought the present PIRGIM finding system might be illegal because it isn't "completely voluntary." om ewhere# inths tow today fake.* By JENNIFER MILLER Somewhere in this town today is a 76-year-old soldier of for- tune who has known the pleas-. ures of 5,000 women, played the guitar at Woodstock, and at- tended the 1912 Centennial (the 1912 Centennial?).r He's Shakey Jake Woods, a near-institution in Ann Arbor. Jake's regular haunts are the Fishbowl, Dooley's, or the front of Discount Records on State r St where he can be found whistlingrat the women and hawking copies of The Sun. Jake has apparently found his own image marketable, as wit- nessed by the Shakey Jake T- shirts he also peddles. Jake thinks Ann Arbor is the ,Y . most hip town there is," but says the young people here "jus' don't know "how to act. They can't conduct themselves in pub- r