MAIL SERVICE See Editorial Page i4 toor Yi OA4& :43 46"AW t EXECRABLE High-36 Low-18 See Today for details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVI, No. 134 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, March 16, 1976 10 Cents Ten Pages 3 1 A C. If (U&EE *NvSAPPCLX LY Breaking up isn't hard to do The number of Washtenaw County couples filing for divorce has been on a steady upswing, accord- ing to the records from the county clerk's office. In 1974-75, the total number of filings jumped from 1906 to 2078. From January to February, the num- ber rose from 176 to 185, although the actual num- ber of divorces granted dropped from 164 to 122. "If people would look more carefully at marriage before crawling into it, these statistics would change," says Circuit Court Marriage Counselor Donald Haller. Since Michigan has a no-fault di- vorce law, he could not cite the major reasons for divorce. It ain't so Yesterday's University Record erroneously re- ported that the annual Henry Russel Lecture and Award will take place at the Rackham Amphithea- tre this afternoon at 4:00. It will actually be a week from today, Tuesday, March 23. The award is given every year to a young faculty member of exceptional achievement and promise. - Happenings... .. . are fair to middlin' today, starting at 12:00 with an Academic Women's Caucus meeting in Rm. 1337 of the Ed. School, where Virginia Nordby will speak on "Rights and Responsibilities of Aca- demic Women" . .. Future Worlds features Dick Gregory at 3:00 in Hill Aud., speaking on "World Food Issues" . . . Gayle Jones reads from her poetry and fiction at 4:10 in the Pendleton Rm. of the Union . .. UAW 2001 clericals who wish to picket with striking Eastern Michigan University employes can get rides leaving the local office at 711 N. University every day at 5:30 . . . The Coa- lition to stop Senate Bill One meets at 7:30 this evening at 332 S. State . .. And you can learn to meditate gratis by showing up at the Project Out- reach Building, 504 Thompson, at 8:30. Assassination note Federal agents are investigating a terrorist plot to assassinate President Ford and Ronald Reagan at this summer's Republican National Convention in Kansas City, the Chicago Tribune reported yes- terday. According to the story, The Justice Depart- ment learned of the plot from an informant who is "a part of the violent underground in northern California." Department sources said the plot in- volved a commando-style assassination team of persons from the San Francisco area who intend- ed to "throw the convention into complete chaos." 0 Head for music British Air Force Sergeant Jim Collins bangs out tunes in his spare time-not with a piano, but on his head with a nine-inch wrench. The maestro, whose repertoire ranges from "Rule Britannia," to "Deutschland Uber Alles," to "Onward Chris- tian Soldiers," says he discovered his musical gifts when he banged his head into another man's at a rugby match. He must have really had his bell rung, because the impact produced a clear musical note. "People who hear me think I need to have my head examined, but I don't even get a headaches after a musical session," Collins added. As long as he doesn't try the long version of In-A- Gadda-Da-Vida, we guess he'll probably be okay. 0 Getting (a toehol1( Police in New Orleans believe they have ended a bizarre series of break-ins with the weekend ar- rest of a burglar with a toe fetish. On Saturday, they arrested Arthur Ford, 21, charging him with nine counts of burglary stretching over a period of several months. Police said Ford wore a ski mask and entered the homes of his victims by cut- ting screens, but that he never took much money. They said his primary purpose was sucking his victim's toes. You can make up your own joke' On the inside... Editorial Page has Paul O'Donnell examining the civil discontent currently festering in Spain . . Arts page features David Whiting's review of last week's Patti Smith concert in Lansing . . . and Sports Page has the results of last night's hockey game with Michigan Tech. on the oUtside ... Showdown: Wallace vs. Carter in Ill. By MIKE NORTON Special To The Daily CHICAGO--Jimmy Carter and George Wallace are preparing for another head-to-head tussle for the Demo- cratic presidential nomination, this time in today's tricky and unpredictable Illinois primary. At what was billed as a "major foreign policy speech" here yesterday, Carter repeated his charge that Secre- tary of State Henry Kissinger has shown a "deep mis- trust of the American people" and then attacked the Ford and Nixon administrations for making foreign policy something in which Americans and their legis- lators have very little say. THE FORMER Georgia governor promised to return to a foreign policy in which the people would be con- sulted. "I have in mind something like the fireside chats that Franklin Roosevelt used to have," he added. Carter also stressed that "the time for balance-of- See CARTER, Page 10 Daily Photo by PAULINE LUBENS Wallace Daily Photo by KEN FINK Carter GEO demands tuition waiver By JODI DIMICK The Graduate Employes' Or- ganization (GEO) announced over spring vacation that it will demand a full tuition waiver for all Graduate Student Assistants (GSAs) for 1977-78 when nego- tiations with the University be- gin in August. "The University is giving in one hand and taking back in the other. This seems absurd to us," said GEO spokesman Dan Tsang. UNION treasurer Art Sch- wartz explained that GSAs are paid wages which then must be immediately returned to the University in the form of tui- tion. "It's like a revolving door," said Schwartz. "All we're inter- ested in is the after-tuition money," he added, referring to the union's complaint that tui- tion unfairly depletes the take- horte pay of GSAs. William Neff, assistant direc- tor of personnel for the Univer- sity, refused to comment on the GEO demands until they are officially placed on the bargain- ing table. ACCORDING to S c h w a r t z, GSAs "have fallen way behind cost-of-living standards." "It's not that we want to live in high style," said Schwartz, "but we don't want to live on food stamps." The 1976-77 demands include an 11 per cent raise in the min- imum salary. The current salary See GEO, Page 10 0 rises 2.5 pct. By GLEN ALLERHAND Arrest warrants for Washtenaw County in 1975 were up about 2.5 per cent over 1974, according to an annual crime report issued yesterday by County Prosecutor Wil- liam Delhey's office. The nost significant increase was in narcotics, in which 266 arrest warrants--a 57 per cent jump from the previous year--were issued by the prosecutor's office. THE OTHER major increase arrests climbed from 58 in 1974 to 89 last year, more than a 50 per cent rise. Though Delhey acknowledges that the arrest increases "have no direct relationship with the commission of crime," he does state the two are "indirectly related." "Our report seems to parallel the crime trend in the surround- ing area," the prosecutor stated yesterday. DELHEY attributes the in- crease in drug arrests to the Washtenaw Area N a r c o t i c s Team (WANT), a specialized unit designed for full-time in- vestigation of illegal drug ac- tivity in the county. According to the prosecutor's report, the street value of the drugs seized by the WANT team was over $291,000. Regarding sexual offenses, the report states "there does not appear to be an increase in the number of sexually-perpetrated offenses, however, the under- signed (Delhey) is of the opinion that local organization's involve- ment and the anti-rape section has caused willingness among the victims to come forward not ' only to report the offenses but to appear in court on the same. See COUNTY, Page 2 was in sexual offenses, in which to " e By ELAINE FLETCHER Special To The Daily CHICAGO - The Democratic presidential candidates who first visited Chicago with hopes of winning Mayor Richard Dal- ey's blessing will leave town af- ter the Illinois primary tonight without so much as a nod in their direction. In the non - binding prefer- ential primary, Jimmy Carter's expected victory over Alabama Gov. George Wallace, Sargent Shriver and Fred Harris will be bittersweet when accompa- nied by far less than half of the state's delegates. IN CHICAGO, "Boss" Daley is expecfled to throw plenty of wrenches in the candidates' strategy by carrying at least half of the Illinois delegation, See DEMS, Page 7 Doily Photo by PAULINE LUBENS Sorry, wrong number Whether or not this young lady is upset with the Bell Telephone Company we were unable to tell, as she doesn't talk yet. That was what was so surprising about her obvious determination to make a few phone calls. rd, eu 1~11. President confident f whoppi g victory By KEN PARSIGIAN and JAY LEVIN special To The Tiaily CHICAGO -- President Ford's Illinois campaign manager, former Governor Richard Ogilvie, yesterday predicted a Ford victory in today's primary but warned of "massive over-confi- dence" in the Republican ranks. "Ford's supporters should not let their exoectations run ahead of their actual voting," Ogilvie said yesterday at Ford headquar- ters here. THE FORMER governor, who said that there would have to be a large voter turnout for Ford to win big, urged Republicans to "get out and vote." Ogilvie was also concerned that mny Republican voters might cross o0er to east a protest vote in the state's Democratic g'iber- natorial primary, also being held today. "Many people don't realize that if they vote Democratic in the governor's race thev most also vote Democratic in the Presi- denti-l nrim -ry," Ogilvie explained. "LET THE Democrats have their own scran in the race for Tin in Juni Hometowners back their boy Ronnie By KEN PARSIGIAN and JAY LEVIN special To The Daily TAMPICO, Ill.-The town has one main street, two bars, a supermarket, a couple of grain elevators, and a handful of other drab-looking establishments. The occasional Sunday stroller finds the place deserted and one wonders where the 850 residents of this western-Illinois hamlet are hiding. Not exactly the kind of place you'd expect a glamorous movie star turned presidential hopeful to have spent his formative years. But Ronald Reagan was born here 65 years ago, right on Main Street in a turn-of-the-century apartment building which now houses his honorary national headquarters, a polling place, and the town's diminutive police force. NEAL ROBINSON, editor of the area's weekly newspaper, "The Echo," was the first to think of turning Reagan's birth- place into his symbolic headquarters. "At first I didn't know if Reagan would come out here to speak or how he would feel about making this his honorary national headquarters." said Robinson. oIS slu, ''e