SHOOTING INVESTIGATION See Editorial Page Y A& .4jj t 4t an aitii, PUFFY High-5S Low-30 See Today for details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVI, No. 127 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, February 27, 1976 10 Cents Ten Pages F ONLY WHITE WOMEN GAIN IF~ ICtU SEE NEwS HA1PO4CAi"I$JtY U' still lags on affirma tire action Splitting at the seams The big U keeps getting bigger and bigger as local housing for the masses becomestscarcer than ever. Winter term enrollment is up to 35,103 stu- dents, 951 more than last year. Undergraduates comprise 59 per cent of the burgeoning University population while the literary college (LSA) con- tinues to be the largest college with an enrollment of 15,632: Men outnumber women 20,823 to 14,280. Meanwhile, as is common knowledge, losers of the merciless dorm lotteries have been turned out into the streets to join anxious apartment and house- hunters, victims of Ann Arbor's infamous land- lords and their skyrocketing rent. Bicentennial dilein ra? The State Legislature, after weeks of heated de- bate, has finally agreed on a crucial issue-which species of our little feathered friends should have the honor of being dubbed the Michigan Bicen- tennial Bird. The decision ? Kirtland's Warbler, a tiny insect-eating bird that lives mainly in this state. However, there was stiff opposition from some legislators who wanted to stick with Michi- gan's traditional state bird, the American Robin. Luckily the two factions were able to compromise - Kirtland's Warbler will be the Bicentennial bird, but the red-breasted harbinger of Spring will re- tain its title of State Bird. Who knows, maybe robins will be eligible to receive free U. S. bonds for their invaluable contribution to patriotic Amer- ica. Happenings.. .. .abound around campus today . . . at noon Guild House at 802 Monroe is hosting Bob and Margaret Blood who will speak on "Personal Growth and Better Relationships" . . . at 3 the Undergrad Political Science Association will meet at'812 Monroe. . . East Wind is sponsoring a TGIF at 7:30 in the Angela Davis Lounge at Markley ... TheUndergrad Art Show opens with a recep- tion from 8 p.m. to 10 p.m. in the School of Art Gallery . . . and at 9 p.m. Shlomo Cohen will speak at Hebrew House, 800 Lincoln on Israeli politics. 0 Dope note President Ford says he disapproves strongly of marijuana and thinks family dialogue is the best way to put his point across. Ford's son Jack, you'll recall, was quoted last fall as saying he had smoked marijuana and that "pot-smoking might be compared to the use of beer and wine in mod- eration." "I strongly disagree with any child, mine or the child of any other family, if that in- dividual does smoke marijuana," the President said in an interview. His family? "We have firm- ly spoken to them and the problem, if it ever did exist, is solved." a SwingingSwedes A committee set up by the Swedish government proposed yesterday that sexual relations be per- mitted as early as age 14 and that prohibitions against incest be removed. It also proposed treat- ing homosexuals no differently than heterosexuals. The committee, made up by seven experts in medicine, sexual research and law concluded pro- hibitions of a moralizing character should be re- moved. It replaced the old concept of sexual sin with a more functional approach aimed exclusive- ly at protection of the individual. The reason the report gives for lowering the age of innocence is "the age of puberty is lower than before." t 'Alphabet soup The French government, is in the middle of a project to remove foreign words from the lan- guage. Such expressions as "hot dog" are being replaced by their non-English version, in this case "saucisse de francfort." However they appear to have gotten snagged on acronyms. Translators say French has twice as many acronyms as English. "Abbreviations are perhaps a greater danger to comprehension than foreign words," reports Paris Pofessor Jacques Gandouin. "For example, the acronym for General Association of Cooperative Pensions is AGRR, which sounds like someone is being strangled. s Flying high The Bicentennial state commemorative stamps just recently iss-ied by the post office are flying the Tennessee flag upside down. A Tennessee state employee said, "It's a common mistake for peo- ple to fly it upside down . . . but it's a little ridicu- lous for the federal government to make a mistake like that." The post office predicts the mistake will probably increase the value of the stamp as collectors grab them up. On the in~side(... Arts Page offers Cinema Weekend . . . John Schwartz of the Sports Page reports on women's basketball with Adrian . . and on the Edit Page By STU McCONNELL The University Affirmative Action Committee's second annual report, released earlier this week, revealed that while the percen- tage of white women staff members has increased substantially, the percentage of minority staff members of both sexes still lags well behind the affirmative action goals set for 1974-75. Non-minority women increased their percentage of the total staff from 44.1 to 46.1, while their percentage of the instructional rose staff from 13.6 to 14.6. The University narrowly missed ful- filling its goal of 14.7 per cent. FOR MINORITIES of both sexes, however, it was a different story. While their percentage of the instructional staff rose from 6.2 to 6.6, this still fell short of the University's goal of 8.3 per cent. The number of minority members of the total staff, defined by the committee as "Blacks, Orientals, Spanished-surnamed, and American Indians," has actually decreased from 14.4 to 14 per cent. In the literary school (LSA) the pattern was the same - the instructional staff exceeded its quota of non-minority women while falling short of its projections for minority groups. Non- minority women comprised 12.2 per cent of the instructional staff (versus a projection of only 11.5 per cent) while minorities made up 6.5 per cent (projection: 7.8 per cent) The report cited four departments - History, Political Sci- ence, Psychology and Sociology - as having been "particularly unsuccessful at achieving the minority staff levels which they had projected." The Economics and Political Science departments also fell well short of their hiring goals for women. Although some of these failures may have been due to opti- mism on the part of departments when they set quotas, the com- mittee concluded in its report that an increased effort to hire mi- norities is necessary. In addition, "tenure track" positions (professor, associate pro- fessor, assistant professor, males. instructor) are held mostly by white "Non-minority women and minority men and women tend to be slotted in the lower ranks" noted Nellie Varner, former direc- tor of the Affirmative Action Program. Nine LSA departments are listed in the report as having set no minority hiring goals for 1974-75: Computer and Computer Sci- ence, Mathematics, Astronomy, Classical Studies, Economics, German, History of Art, Near East Studies, Slavic Language and Literature and Statistics. The last seven of these, however, either had no openings in 1974-75 or no minority applicants for open positions. EVA MIUELLER, Assistant for Affirmative Action to LSA Dean Billy Frye, cautioned that the projections and goals cited See 'U', Page 2 Nuclear missiles on seabed, says cri'ti'c' By GLEN ALLERHAND The Department of Defense (DoD) has experimentally de- ployed nuclear missiles on and above the ocean floor, accord- ing to Tony Hodges, executive director of a Hawaiian citizens' action group. Speaking yesterday at Rack- ham Auditorium, Hodges charged that since 1968, both the United States and the Soviet Union have worked separately to p l a c e "encapsulated mis- siles" on the ocean floor and to float them above the sea bed. LAST DECEMBER, Hodges issued a 45-page "warning docu- ment" in which he detailed his allegations, including a charge that "there is a high probabil- ity that both the U.S.A. and the USSR have willfully violated and are presently still violating the Sea-Beds A r m s Control Treaty and SALT." Copies of the report were de- livered to the ambassadors of 54 nations who signed the 1971 Sea-Beds Treaty, and to Sen. Frank Church (D-Idaho), chair- man of the Senate Select Com- mittee on Intelligence. A committee spokesman yes- terday told The Daily that Hodges "has been in touch with us." He added, "We're not go- ing to make any comment yet. It's a pretty sensitive matter." THE SPOKESMAN also said that the committee is "involved in writing up a report," osten- sibly the result of an investiga- tion into Hodges's allegations. In the w a r n i n g document. Hodges claims that the DoD has utilized three types of nuclear missiles for underwater place- ment: an encapsulated missile housed in a seabed silo, a mis- sile capsule tethered to and floating above the ocean floor, and a free-floating missile cap- sule. All three types supposedly employ a special capsule that floats to the ocean surface, and then releases the missile for its eventual destination. HODGES, HEAD of an envir- onmental advocacy group called Life of the Land, also alleges that the DoD has developed a tidal wave and earthquake-gen- erating system (TWEGS) "cap- able of causing massive destruc- tion in many of the world's ports and coastal cities." Hodges stated yesterday that it is "100 per cent fact" that free - floating missile capsules were deployed in the ocean in 1971. but were swept away by waterrcurrents, and have not been recovered. Hodges also says that he has received confirmation from Na- tional Security Council (NSC) arms control officer John Mar- cum that "RAND Corporation did studies for the weapons re- search." IN A TELEPHONE conversa- tion yesterday, Marcum stated, See CRITIC, Page 7 Nixon trip hurt him, says Ford By AP and Reuter WASHINGTON OP) - Presi- dent Ford said yesterday that former President Nixon's China trip "probably was harmful" to Ford's election campaign in New Hampshire. The President cautioned that returns in the Tuesday presidential primary have not yet been fully analyzed, but when they are, he said, "I pre- sume there will be evidence that it probably hurt." FORD during a MADE his comments taped interview with station WTVJ in Miami. Asked twice about the im- pact of Nixon's trip, Ford said, "I think the weight of the evi- dence we have so far - we don't have all the evidence in -that it probably was harmful, but I wouldn't want to make that comment at this time." Ford won the Republican presidential primary in New Hampshire narrowly, taking 5l per cent of the vote over chal- lenger Ronald Reagan. DURING THE interview, Ford placed heavy emphasis on Nixon's role as a private citizen in Peking. "President Nixon went to China as a private citizen on the invitation of the Chinese government," Ford said. "Mr. Nixon did not go to China rep- resenting this country. "He did not speak for this administration in foreign poli- cy." SEVERAL of Ford's aides have expressed dismay over Nixon's decision to visit China at this time, believing that it recalls the Watergate scandal and Ford's controversial par- don of his predecessor during the election campaign., Ford said he does not be- lieve that spending more time campaigning in New Hampshire would have helped his vote total. Doily Photo by PAULINE LUBENS Joni Mitchell sings her own moody brand of folk last night at Hill Auditorium. AEROSPACE RESEARCH Fuel study controversy grows By LOIS JOSIMOVICH Research into fuel cloud detonation, conducted by the University Dept. of Aerospace Engineering under contract with the United States Air Force, is rapidly becoming a source of controversy in the University community. Some believe the studies vio- late a provision of the Univer- sity's regental research poli- cies which disallow any con- tract the "specific purpose of which is to destroy human life or incapacitate human beings." IN THIS case, the Air Force may have been applying the study's results to further de- velop its Fuel Air Explosive (FAE) bomb - already used in the last days of War. the Vietnam According to an article in a May 1975 issue' of Newsweek magazine, the South Vietna- mese Army killed "scores of C o m m u n i s t troops" with a "murderous new American bomb, the CBU-55, that releases a blanket of ethylene oxide gas over an area the size of half a dozen football fields and then explodes with a lung - searing thump." The University's research - which mainly uses a combina- tion of methyl acetylene, tropa- diene and propane rather than ethylene oxide - is based on a study of just such "unconfin- ed" explosions as those which were developed into the bomb. YET, DESPITE a growing feeling that the studies should be re-examined in the light of an admission by the Air Force that its primary interest is in weaponry aspects of cloud de- tonation, scientists involved ex- hibit an unabated belief in the ethical firmness of their re- search. Professor James Nicholls, one of the research directors, said, "it would be wrong for us to de- sign a new weapon," but that "anything technical can be used for so many things, and some of them could be weaponry." Nicholls and his fellow re- searcher, Professor Martin Si- chel, emphasized that their work is "all open," conducted on a theoretical and experimen- tal basis to determine such things as decay of supersonic blast waves and the influence of changing energy levels used to ignite clouds of "heteroge- nous" - mixed solid, liquid and gas - droplets. "THE ANALYTIC part of the problem is really beautiful," said Nicholls, adding, "usually you can't do it because it's too complicated." In the laboratory, the two scientists and their graduate student assistants work with a machine called a "sectored shock-tube" from which they fire clouds of various gases at different pressures and levels of energy. The gas is then ignit- See UPROAR, Page 7 Nixon Ford asks deadline for pipeline project By AP and Reuter WASHINGTON - With energy issues partly resolved by a two-month-old law, President Ford yesterday urged Congress to get on with the unfinished business of achieving national energy indenendence. In a special message to Congress, Ford proposed two new measures: -Legislation setting deadlines for federal processing of pipe- line orojiects to bring natural gas from northern Alaska to the "lower 48 states" and allowing the President to select a pipeline route subject to congressional approval. I Newsman on leave studies ethics here By DAVID WHITING After 29 decided to depressing University1 years as a wire service reporter, Wes Pippert take a break from his grueling and sometimes job in the nation's capital, and come to the to grapple with the moral aspects of journalism. X I"The media can-and need to-handle moral issues," said Pippert in a calm and relaxed manner during a interview