CIA-NSA RECRUITING See Editorial Page A& 4ift I t r4 A n :43 it SOPPING High 53*- Low 27° See Today for details Vol. LXXXVI, No. 119 Latest Deadline in the State bor, Michigan-Wednesday, February 18, 1976 10 Cents Eight Pages - - - - - - C. r Ir~wCE: AM CALL ADLY Professor who? The University recently, received a letter from Merseberg, East Germany, addressed to James Watson, director of the observatory. Officials tried in vain to figure out where to forward the letter. The reason for the difficulty was the fact Watson had been dead for 96 years. He worked as observatory director from 1863 to 1879 and died in Madison, Wis. in 1880. It just goes to show what happens when you don't keep your mailing list up to date. Happenings ... ... can keep you very busy today. At noon there is a showing of the movie "Diet for a Small Planet" Rm. 378 Dental School ... at 12:15 catch a cartoon as you eat 15-cent pea- nut and jelly sandwiches in the Student Coun- seling Office Rin. 1018 Angell Hall ... Pi Lamb- da Theta, Xi Chapter, is sponsoring Dr. Geraldine Scholl at 6:30 speaking on "Assuring Every Handi- capped Child Equal Opportunities in Education and Employment." Conference Rm. 3 of the Union ... The Union pool hall is giving free pocket billiard instructions from 3 to 5 and 6:30 to 8:30 ... The Residential College lecture series spon- soring Prof. Lemuel Johnson talking about "Pre- spectives on Utopia in the African context" in the Greene lounge of East Quad ... The English Dept. is holding a sherry party for prospective concentrators at 7:30 in Rm. 7629 Haven Hall.. and at 8:00 Robben Fleming, President of the University, will discuss the issue of CIA recruit- ing on campus in the Union Ballroom. 0 Dangerous to your heath More bad news for cigarette fiends. The Ameri- can Chemical Society has announced the discovery of vinyl chloride in cigarette smoke. This marks the first time vinyl chloride, known to cause cancer in test animals, has been found in an environment unrelated to its manufacture or use. However,. researchers point out the amount of vinyl chloride in cigarette smoke is probably too minor to be a significant contributor to the known carcinogenic properties of tobacco smoke. Hijack Two San Francisco patrolmen knew something was wrong the minute they spotted several young- sters pushing a vehicle down a Haight-Ashbury street in the dead of night. The vehicle was a helicopter. The youngsters scattered upon the ar- rival of the police. The one-seat copter is cur- rently awaiting a claim by its owner. Whatever. happened to ripping off hub-caps? Disaster Fire officials in Milan, Italy expecting a tragic event, raced to a church with three ambulances and two fire trucks, only to find instead of the bloody traffic pile-up they expected, a wedding. A crowd quickly gathered to watch the puzzled firemen and ambulance attendants look for an accident that was not there. Authorities estab- lished that a phone call reported a smash up outside the church with 10 persons killed or in- jured. Police said they traced the call to a 68- year-old aunt of the bride who was upset because she was not invited to the wedding. Taxing experience Gambling' figure Tracy "Pody" Poe had no argument with IRS, which said he owed $2,045 in wagering taxes. But he was quick to point out the government already had the money, which was in the hands of the FBI. The FBI had con- fiscated $1,400 in cash from Poe in a raid and had never returned the money. Poe suggested the 'tax man "walk across the halt" and get it from the FBI. IRS took a walk and Poe paid the $600 balance. Ont the inst.ie... ... On the editorial page is a PNS story on the instability of the Chilean junta ... Arts page has a review of Hedy West's appearance at the Ark by Joan Boris ... on sports page Rick Bonino writes about wrestling. A O tthe outside ... A storm moving northeast from the Gulf States will pass over us today. This will result in rain most of this morning with a good ' chance of a thunderstorm. The rain will end for a time in fbp latemnrninpa ntiafternoon then start amann Frye maintains calm amid tempest By ANN MARIE LIPINSKI His legs comfortably crossed and his arm dangling carelessly over the back of an office chair, Billy Frye doesn't look like a man who has spent nearly two years in the midst of high-level University crossfire. He has weathered the "deanship crisis" nicely. Above him, stretching across the top of an entire wall in his spacious office on the second floor of the LSA Building, hangs a hand-scrawled banner which reads: "Happiness is having Billy Frye for Dean." "THE SECRETARIES brought that in," he explains, cracking a reserved smile. But behind the cool administrative veneer sits a man who, by his own description, is "humbly grateful" for being awarded one of the most prestigious positions in academia-the University's LSA deanship. Awareness of the strong faculty support for his appointment to the deanship-a support which search committee members have called "amazing"-has only intensified his humility, he says. FOLLOWING a 20-month stint as acting dean, which coincided with a controversy-riddled search for a permanent administrator to occupy the top spot in LSA, Frye last week secured the position. Many knowledgable sources predicted he would land the job from the start. However, Frye reacts defensively to charges that he was destined for the deanship, and that the deanship search procedures were mere formalities. "I simply see no basis for that kind of charge at all. It's just a circumstantial charge because I happened to be in the picture both times," he says, alluding to the two successive deanship searches. THE FIRST search, conducted through the fall of last year, resulted in what is now remembered as the "Cobb affair," in which Connecticut College Dean Jewell Cobb, a black woman, was denied the deanship by the Administration after the University Board of Regents had unanimously approved her for the post. Frye, Cobb's closest contender for the deanship last year, was reported then to be the administration's choice. See FRYE, Page 8 Daily Photo by STEVE KAGAN Frye Ford revamps U.S. intelligence GEO voting on affiliation By JODI DIMICK Members of Graduate Em- ployes Organization (GEO) are voting this week on whether or not to affiliate with the Mich- igan Federation of Teachers/ American Federation of Teach- ers. Vote counting will begin at 5:00 tomorrow, according to union spokespersons, who hope the tally will be complete in time for the steward's meeting that same evening. ART SCHWARTZ, GEO treas- urer, said, "The executive com- mittee is in favor of affiliation 9-1. It will add long-range sta- bility to our union." Schwartz said, "Most of the members in favor of affiliation are people that have put a lot of time into the union. They h a v e exhausted themselves working as volunteers and it's ruined their academic career. They don't want. to see this hap- pen to others. This is a sure way to keep the union going." Paula Mindes, chairperson- of the affiliation committee, said, "Affiliation would give us great- er strength to fight cutbacks. If we were connected with the na- tional organization it will give us more strength against the University." MINDES explained that affil- iation would "relieve people in the union of their work-load. The AFT will give us advice in bargaining and help in writing better contracts. When we have a question they can give us ad- vice readily. Now we are spend- ing a lot of time doing research and finding resources. We want less, mechanics and more think- ing.'' "We are working for some un- usual goals such as affirmative action and non - discrimination. If we join a larger group and get them to support our ideas then we will have' a better c h a n c e of obtaining these goals," said Mindes. See GEO, Page 8 * Citizens committee o oversee operations By AP and Reuter WASHINGTON - President Ford announced a re- organization of the beleaguered U.S. intelligence com- munity yesterday which he said strikes a middle ground between the need for first-class intelligence capability and protection of the rights of U.S. citizens. Management of foreign under a new committee to George Bush, the President news conference. HE NAMED a new, three-m zens to oversee intelligence ar intelligence will be placed be headed by CIA Director told a nationally broadcast ember committee of private citi- nd revamped the secret Forty Committee which makes covert The Forty Committee is being renamed the Operations Ad- visory Group, an aide said later. The President's plan did not include many of the recom- mendations made by the House Intelligence Committee, which proposed that presidents report covert- operations to a House committee within 48 hours and that covert para-military opera- tions be outlawed. The House panel did recom- mend that the CIA director be placed in over-all charge of for- eign intelligence management, as Ford is doing. THE recommendation w a s also contained in a special com- mission report issued last sum- mer. T h a t commission was headed by 81-year-old former Ambassador R o b e r t Murphy, whom Ford named yesterday to head the new panel to supervise intelligence agencies. The Senate's Church commit- tee has not vet issued its CIA recommendations. Ford noted the barrage of congressional hearings that have See FORD, Page 2 intelligence recommendations. European naftions ,to recognize M[PLA By The Associated Pre~ss M a j o r European countries prepared yesterday to follow the lead of France and swiftly rec- ognize the Soviet-backed Popu- lar Movement -MPLA -as the legitimate government of An- gola following its battlefield vic- tories. The European Common Mar- ket's expected' action is likely to trigger similar moves around the world, but the United States, which supported rival factions in the civil war, .was expected' See EUROPE,' Page 8 AP.Photo Peinty altics Ken Gidney, professional ant catcher from Los Angeles, has grossed $1.4 million in the past 20 years selling his product. Gidney gets a penny an ant which are used in ant farms. Hearst recountsstory of her sex ualassault - SAN FRANCISCO () - Pa- tricia H.earst, crying and speaking with difficulty, told jurors yesterday that she was raped by two of her terrorist captors while imprisoned in a tiny cell-like closet. On her second day of testi- mony at her federal bank rob- bery trial, Hearst identified her attackers as William Wolfe and Donald "Cinque" DeFreeze, leader of the Symbionese Liber- ation Army. HEARST, giving'brief. details in questioning by her attorney, F. Lee Bailey, said both of the men at separate times entered the closet where she was held captive and forced her "to have sexual intercourse." Earlier in her trial, in testi- mony with the jury absent, Hearst said Wolfe was one of the 'SLA members who sexual- lv assaulted her, but at that time .she did not identify De- Freeze as another. In other testimony yesterday, Hearst. told of measuring her Ex-television correspondent hits media election coverage dark days of captivity by sounds - the tinkling bell of an ice cream truck, the click- ing of guns and the threatening voice of her captors. AT ONE point is her narra- tive on the witness stand, Hearst told of being. given an ultimatum to fight with her SLA captors or be killed. Hearst said the first sexual attack occurred after one of the SLA women prepared her by telling her that she "was going to sleep with William Wolfe." She said Angela Atwood gave the explanation, "She said ev- eryone else wared me to know more of what it was like being in the cell with them and ev- eryone else had to take care of the needs of other people and that sexual freedomewas part of the function of the cell and even though I was in the closet, I should know about it." THAT NIGHT, she said, Wolfe came into the closet. "I don't know what if anything he said . he came into the closet and closed the door .'> Then Miss Hearst's voice broke and she cried softly. "Did he make you lie down on the floor?" asked Bailey. Firearms use arpols aiucy By RICK SOBLE In the wake of last week's fatal shooting of a black youth allegedly robbing a party store, the City Administrator Sylvester Murray last night presented to City Council a proposed policy statement on the use of firearms by local police officers. Murray explained that the new policy statement is intended primarily as a clarification of the existing statement, which can easily be misinterpreted. "HOWEVER, this new policy would not 'have necessarily pre- vented what happened last week," he emphasized. The only real additions to the existing firearms policy concern intent and administration, Murray said. Murray's provision for intent states that "utmost care, reason and guidance should be exercised in using firearms; and that police officers shall be held accountable for their use of fire- arms . THE NEW administrative section simply provides that if an officer is responsible for a shooting death, he or she will be as- signed to internal duty pending a full report of the incident. The two officers involved in the shooting, George Anderson and Tom Pressley were transferred to duty within City Hall as stinilntpd by police union contracts, according to Police Chief W-'Iter Krnsny. Even if Council anoroves the rroposed policy, it will have to be submitted to the police unions for approval, according to Mayor By DANA BAUMANN Outspoken journalist S a n d o r Vanocur yesterday called for a drastic revision in the media's presidential election campaign coverage. Vanocur,, a former correspondent and anchorman for NBC News, argued that the press relies too much on information from the pollsters in shaping a presidential hope- fil's image, when instead reporters should analyze the candidate's character and past performances to establish eligibility for the .. _