NAPOLEONIC NIXON See Editorial Page A&igau -44 & :43att FEARFUL High--70 Low-18 See Today for details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVI, No. 133 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, March 5, 1976 10 Cents Ten Pages ICU SEE NEWS AMENCALL .6r DAILY Vacation time With spring break upon us just about everything is coming to a one-week halt, including publica- tion of The Daily. We will be on your doorstep again Tuesday March 16. In the mean time, enjoy! 0 Happenings ... .. .the list here covers the entire spring break. Today there is a Luncheon at Guild House, 802 Monroe at noon, where Barbra Smith of the Asso- ciation of Native American Students will speak on "Ways of Living of Native American People" . . . Tomorrow the Native American Student As- sociation is sponsoring their 4th annual pow wow at Huron High School. There will be displays fea- turing craftwork as well as dance exhibitions from 2 to 4:30 and 7:30 to 10 . . . Sunday the pow wow continues with dance exhibitions from 2 to 5 . . . Monday is the last day to register to vote for the April 5th election, registration sites include City Hall, on Fifth and Huron Sts., and the Michigan Union . . . Monday March 15 there will be a clas- sical music recital in the Residential College Aud. at 8 p.m. featuring Tracy Filliger on piano and Eve Herman on trumpet. 0 "I will not run..." Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield an- nounced yesterday he will not seek reelection. The Montana lawmaker, who will be 73-years-old March 16, has served in the Senate since 1953. Before that he served 10 years in the house. It is not clear who will succeed Mansfield as Majority lead- er, but Robert Byrd (D-W.Va.) is the current fav- orite. In announcing his decision Mansfield said his 23 years as Senator "are not a long time," but, "it is enough time .. ." Revealing protest Nineteen members of Yale University's wo- men's varsity crew staged a strip-in Wednesday in their athletic director's office to protest the lack of shower facilities where they train. The women painted "Title IX" on their backs and chests with blue felt-tipped pens to call attention to their plight. The U. S. Department of Health, Educa- tion and Welfare requires that women's teams have facilities equal to men's. The men's varsity crew has lockers and showers located on the river where they train, but temporary facilities for the women have not been okayed by the New Haven zoning board. 0 Research ban The federal government has ordered a halt to all research and medical experiments on federal prisoners, according to Rep. Robert Kastenmeier (D-Wisconsin). No medical experiments will be in- itiated in the future and the one project currently in existence will be halted by the end of the year. The ban came after Congressional hearings last fall revealed that prisoners received various in- ducements, including better quarters, special treatment and financial rewards for participating in research programs. On the inside.. ... Editorial page features Paul O'Donnell writ- ing on author Jorge Luis Borges . . . Arts page has Jim Valk profiling the live entertainment at the Matrix Theater . . . Sports page includes all the information about who and where Michigan will play in the NCAA Basketball tournament. 0 On the outside .. A strong cold front will come through today, causing the temperature to fall during the after- noon. Tonight skies will be fair and temperatures will be very cold. The high temperatures will reach 65-70 before thunderstorms ahead of the cold front start cooling things off. Tonight's low will be 18-23. Saturday will be sunny and cold. Senate st By PAULINE LUBENS A voluminous 789-page bill which would codify federal law is current being considered by the Senate Judiciary Committee, and its opponents say it represents an unparalleled threat to American civil liberties. Dubbed as "the largest piece of legislation ever introduced in Congress" the Senate Bill 1, or S-1, has raised a cloud of con- troversy since its introduction in January 1975. WHILE SUPPORTERS of the measure claim it is simply an attempt to create a uniform code of federal law, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and other opponents have denounced the bill as a return to McCarthyism and an outright attack on civil liberties. The proposal redefines various crimes already on the books, such as robbery or burglary, but adds new dimensions to other crimes, such as riots or disclosure of classified information. It would reinstate the death penalty, and extend the legal limits on ruggles wit the use of wiretapping and other methods of obtaining incrimi- nating evidence. The measure is sponsored by a long list of Senators including John McClellan, Robert Griffin (R-Mich.) Roman Hruska (R-Neb.) and Birch Bayh, (D-Ind.) who has recently withdrawn his name from the bill under pressure from liberal constituents. BECAUSE the original work on the bill began during the last years of the Nixon Administration, opponents have charged that the bill represents many of the "hangups" of the former President and his closest advisors, including former Attorneys General John Mitchell, and Richard Kleindienst. Simon said that many of the provisions stemmed directly from Nixon's constant "paranoia" about anti-war demonstrators and his penchant for wiretapping. The wiretapping and disclosure of classified information pro- visions have drawn the heaviest fire. Under S-1, landlords and phone companies must cooperate with law enforcement officials in installing wiretap devices. In addition, S-1 requires that only one party in a conversation con- J' 1 s sen S-I bill nt to the interception of the communication. IN THE CASE of disclosure of classified information, the mea- sure hands downs sentences ranging from the death penalty to a seven-year-prison term. The death penalty would be invoked if a person "collected national defense information, knowing it would be communicated to a foreign power." This would apply only during time of war or national emergency. Opponents claim that this provision inhibits free speech and violates freedom of the press because reporters would be hesi- .tant to disclose documents such as the then-classified Pentagon Papers which the New York Times printed in the spring of 1971. Under S-1, Daniel Ellsberg, who revealed the documents to the Times could have been subject to the death penalty. THE OTHER major criticism of the measure has been that it reenacts the Smith Act, which the Supreme Court ruled uncon- stitutional in the 1950's. Like the Smith Act, S-1 would make it See SENATE, Page 7 Top- secret CIA papers missing WASHING TON (Y) -- More than 200 "Top-se- cret" and "Secret" docu- ments which the CIA turned over to the house intelligence committee are missing, according to a let- ter written by an aide to CIA director George Bush. The documents cover such sensitive subjects as the CIA budget, strategic arms limitation, the 1974 coup in Portugal, the agen- cy's use of business firms for cover and detailing of CIA personnel to other gov- ernment agencies, CIA aide Mitchell Rogovin said in a Feb. 27 letter to committee chairman Otis Pike (D- N.Y.). OF A TOTAL 232 documents missing, 189 were classified Top Secret, according to the letter. Some of them were list- ed as "Top Secret-Codeword," which an agency spokesman said further restricts the num- ber of peonle with access to the material. Pike discounted the possibil- ity of theft, saying the docu- ments probably had been turn- ed over to the National Ar- chives, destroyed, or returned to another by mistake. In a letter sent Monday to Bush, Pike asked for more specific information about the documents, such as when and to whom they were given. He also promised that "I will cer- tainly do what I can to help you find them." THE HOUSE committee went out of business last month aft- er the full House voted not to publicly release the panel's fin- al report on its investigation of U. S. intelligence agencies. The House Ethics Committee has undertaken an investigation into the leak of that report to CBS correspondent Daniel Schorr. Pike was first alerted to the See CIA, Page 2 Most lottery losers to remain in dorms By CATHERINE REUTTER Most University dorm residents, including those who originally lost out in last month's housing lottery, have been offered rooms for next year. Available spaces opened up when people who participated in the lottery did not sign dorm leases. ACCORDING TO Couzens Building Director Leonard Spillane, people entered the drawing and later withdrew for a variety of reasons. Some, he believes, were merely "playing it safe" by keeping their housing opportunities open for the fall. Markley Building Director Leroy Williams attributes the reluctance of lottery participants to sign leases to another factor- that the current room contracts are binding until September 27, whereas last year, leases could be broken before June or sold dur- ing the summer. "Anyone who participated in the drawing at Bursley had an opportunity to sign a lease," said Building Director Loretta Anderson last night. See MOST, Page 2 AP Photo TivitC Wally Orawczyk, 17, contorts his face in the "U gliest Man on Campus" contest at Chicago's In- stitute of Technology. The event is part of their homecoming festivities. DEBT ,AD SERVICE ALLEGED: gement prolems may sb By MICHAEL BLUMFIELD The Loma Linda, a local Mexican restaurant -turned - dis- cotheque, may be forced to close down due to a month-long liquor shortage, deteriorating service, inadequate h e a 1 t h standards, and a tremendous debt, accord- ing to several of the establish- ment's former employes. Eight employes who decline to be identified, have left Loma Linda in the past two months have filed complaints about the bar with the Liquor Control Commission, the health depart- ment, and state and local labor ut Loma Linda bureaus. TWO OF those formerly em- ployed were fired for reasons not discussed by the manage- ment, while the others quit be- cause they had not been paid in f )ur weeks. The restaurant's troubles be- gan when its debts prevented further liquor purchases for nearly a month. "People would ask for Chivas Regal and I'd say 'We have no Scotch,' and th ey'd ask for just bar Scotch. I had to explain that we had no Scotch at all," a former cock- tail waitress comments. Several former employes state Committee 13 explores moral aspects of DNA By MARGARET YAO The unique mandate of the University's Committee B, ex- ploration of the moral and ethical issues surrounding recombi- nant DNA research, may make it the only academic gathering of its kind in the country. Unlike the national scientific committee which drew up the ational Institutes of Health (NIH) safety guidelines for the esearch, Committee "B" is comprised of laypeople. As such, it annot be charged with self-aggrandizement or other selfish mo- tives as Jonathan King, MIT biology professor, accused the NIH roup at Wednesday's DNA forums. See related story, Page 7 that they had seen cheap bar liquor emptied into expensive brand bottles, and cheaper beers disguised as more expensive brands. "THEY connected a Stroh's keg to both the Stroh's tap and a Calgary tap-the most expen- sive beer sold here," stated one ex-waitress. During Loma Linda's liquor crisis, which occurred about two months ago, management credit with liquor wholesalers dropped so low that workers were run- ning to local party stores for supplies, according to ex-work- ers. Former employes report that backed-up sewers plagued the sanitary conditions of the bar, and that when a health inspec- tor appeared one day, the lights went out while he was writing his evaluation. Detroit Edison did not turn the lights on again until three days later. WHENsLOMA Linda's dining room was shut down in Janu- ary, many employes were not informed until it was actually closed, the ex-workers stated. According to a former wait- ress, the changes in the estab- lishment produced a clientele of "kids, 18 to 19-year-olds who sit and drink maybe one beer all night. As a result, tips have dwindled to reportedly next to nothing." Ths maagement flatl enies Daily Photo by STEVE KAGAN The "Shoeshine" parlor, to the right of the barbershop on the 100 block of E. Ann St., is a popular game hall where hopeful gamblers go to spend their money playing craps. The area is known as a center for heroin trafickking and fencing of stolen goods. The Block': a chronic problem Tfor cit offtictals By MICHAEL YELLIN and DAVID WHITING Second of a three part series After 40 years of infamous existence, "The Block" on E. Ann St., known as the local cen- ter for black marketing, has become a rusty "They operate big and they operate in the basements. I don't think there's any question about that. I don't know how you solve the problem. I've been here 37 years and it hasn't improved." 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