HASH BASH See Editorial Page LY it A DaiA6i 1KOOL High=-43° Low--24° See Today for details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVI, No. 148 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, April 1, 1976 10 Cents Eight Pages IFYMUSEE NEWHSAkPPE CALL TrDALtY One more time Former Democratic State Rep. Marvin Stempien, who unsuccessfully challenged Republican Marvin Esch for his Congressional seat in 1972, is going to give it another try. Stempien will formally announce his candidacy Saturday morning for the Demo- cratic Congressional nomination. He joins Monroe County Commissioner Delbert Hoffman and Dr. Ed Pierce as active contenders for the nomination. Pierce narrowly lost to John Reuther in the 1972 Congressional primary. Sweet scent The fame, or perhaps noteriety, of the Ann Arbor Hash Bash, seems to have spread a little farther this year-into the Michigan House of Represen- tatives. Yesterday, legislative sponsors of a pot reform bill hurried it into a vote fearing that, "potentially adverse publicity," emanating from today's Hash Bash might spoil the legislative soup, according to Rep. Perry Bullard (D-Ann Arbor), one of the bill's co-sponsors. The strategy has less than an optimal effect however. With the vote running 63-37 against the measure, only the possi- bility of re-consideration keeps the bill afloat. Happenings ... . . .are topped, of course, by the Hash Bash, which will start at about 12:00 on the diag . If you're in the mood after that, Rosabeth Moss Kanter is speaking on "Women and Organizations: How Organization Structure Shapes Work Beha- vior and Work Prospects," at 4:00 in the Rackham Amphitheatre ... There are selected readings from the poetry and writing of the late Rev. J. Edgar Edwards being given at Guild House, 802 Monroe, at 7:30 . . . Weather Report with Dave Liebman kick out the jams at Hill Aud. at 8:00, for ticket info call 763-1107 . . . Michael Andes leads an experi- mental workshop on "Gestalt therapy: Attaining wholeness," at Canterbury House, at 8:00 . . . Prof. Kenneth Maxwell of the Institute for Ad- vanced Study lectures in the Rackham Assembly Hall at 8:00 on "Revolution and Counter-Revolution in Portugal, 1974-76." . .. There's a benefit concert at the Ark, 1421 Hill for the Food Action Coalition, with the doors opening at 8:30. Folk singers Michael Smith, Dick Siegel and Fred Small are featured, and there is a $1.50 donation. Scooped again The Washington reporters who were outscooped on the Watergate story are now having trouble catching the premier of All The President's Men, the movie based on the book by Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, whose investigative reporting sent Nixon back to California. Many of the reporters who paid $25 were unable to obtain seats to the benefit showing in Washington's Kennedy Center. The ballyhooed flick features heartthrobs Robert Redford and Dustin Hoffman as the reporters who changed the course of recent history. Premiers in New York and Los Angeles are also sold out, as they've found another way to bring Watergate into our lives. Moon rock madness The Apollo moon rocks are being stored in a facility so inadequate that scientists are afraid they may be destroyed. Dr. Larry Haskins, chief of the Johnson Space Center's lunar and earth sciences, warns that "the building they are in now is not fire proof. The roof leaks and we've tried for years to fix it and we can't do it." Haskins aid a tornado, hurricane or fire could easily wipe out the sealed collection of precious materials from six lunar sites, or that their value could be ruined by exposure to atmosphere. 'NASA has asked Congress for $2.8 million to build a more secure facility, but the House refused to appropriate the funds. Meantime, about 121 pounds of the lunar stuff has been transferred to a subterranean San Antonio vault, although the rest could easily be "wiped out by natural hazard or human accident," according to Haskins. "The walls around the place where they're kept are so thin I could kick them down," he laments. " Heavy heist Five Canadian bandits used a 50mm antiaircraft gun to snatch a cool $1.6 million in cash from an armored truck in Montreal yesterday in what police are calling, "the biggest single armed robbery in the history of Quebec and probably all of Canada." The robbers persuaded the truck driver from Brink's Canada Ltd. to open the cash door by pointing the weapon at him. Brink's and the Commercial Union Insurance company are of- fering rewards up to $125,000 for information lead- ing to the arrest'of pursuasive purloiners. On the inside... Editorial Page features the AATU's Robert Miller assessing the progress of the tenant's move- ment . . . And Arts Page has Kurt Harju's review IF eamsters go on strife N. ocourt will not block QuinlIan case By AP and Reuter TRENTON, N.J. - Karen Quinlan's parents won the right in New Jersey Supreme Court yesterday to allow their comatose daughter to die, climaxing a legal battle they began almost a year ag-o. The court, in a 7-0 ruling, appointed Joseph Quinlan legal guardian of his 22-year-old daughter and said he could let her die if he can find competent medical authorities who agree with him that there is no reasonable possibility of her recovery. THE NEW JERSEY attorney general said there would be no immediate decision on whether the state would appeal the decision. Joseph and Julia Quinlan said Reagan, on TV, criticizes issinger LOS ANGELES () - Ronald Reagan, his quest for the Re- publican presidential nomina- tion dormant for a week, took to the air waves last night and said the nation is "wandering without aim" in its foreign poli- cy and dangerously inferior in military strength. Reagan said he does not want to live "in a world where the Soviet Union is No. 1" and quoted Henry Kissinger as say- ing his job as secretary of state is to negotiate for an ac- ceptable second-place position. KISSINGER'S TOP AIDE said the quotation Reagan at- tributed to the secretary was false and "totally irresponsi- ble." See REAGAN, Page 2 they would not ask to have their daughter's respirator discon- nected until the state has time to decide on a possible appeal. Joseph Quinlan told a later news conference at Landing, New Jersey, that he foresaw no problem in finding doctors to agree with him that the respira- tor should be disconnected. He plans immediately to confer with doctors at the hospital where Karen lies comatose. "THIS IS the decision we have been praying for," Julia Quinlan said. Asked about her daughter's prospects for recovery, Julia Quinlan said: "There is no hope and there hasn't been any. If we had any hope we would never have started this." The court said if the Quinlans choose to let their daughter die, "this decision should be ac- cepted by a society the over- whelming majority of whose members would, we think, in similar circumstances exercise such a choice in the same way for themselves or for tiose closest to them." The doctors now treating Karen Quinlan had cought against her parents' suit :o turn off the support systems v~hich have kept the young woman breathing since shortly after she fell into the coma on April 15, 1975. She has never regained consciousness. Dailv Photo by PAULINE LUBENS PALESTINIAN ARABS and their supporters m rch against Israeli actions in the Mideast during a noon rally on the Diag yesterday. Fordmay intervene to end walout ARLINGTON HEIGHTS, Ill. (T - Teamters set up scattered picket lines in several s t a t e s early this morninz as negotiations on a nationwide contract con- tinued past the midnight deadline. Representatives of t h e Teamsters Union and the trucking industry met with President Ford's top labor troubleshooters in this Chi- cago suburb. The strike deadline had been set for midnight CST-1 a.m. EST -but it passed with no new word from the negotiators. Meanwhile, some Teamsters along the East Coast and in Detroit started picketing. THE TEAMSTERS Union represents 400,000 drivers who handle 60 per cent of the nation's manufactured goods. A nationwide strike would be the first since the u n i o n started negotiating master contracts in 1964. Teamsters Local 299, the big- gest in the Detroit area, said pickets were out around the city. A spokesperson said 500 Detroit firms are under con- tract and a majority were un- officially on strike, while 16 firms had signed interim agree- ments and were being permit- ted by Teamsters to operate. THERE WERE similar re- ports from Teamsters Local 375 in Buffalo, N.Y., where pic- kets were out at more than 100 trucking firms. Teamsters officials in North Carolina and South Carolina also called for truck drivers to go on strike. W. C. Barbee, president of the Teamsters Joint Council No. 9, said the strike was declared after union officials received a telegram from negotiators in Arlington Heights saying talks See UNION, Page 2 DIAG RALLY: Local Arabs stage protest against Israeli 'Oppression' By MICHAEL YELLIN Chanting, "Jewish people yes, Zionism no," some 100 Palestinians and Arab sympathizers gathered on the Diag yesterday to protest the recent attacks on Palestinians in Israeli oc- cupied Arab Jerusalem. Sponsored by the Organization of Arab Stu- dents and the Arab community in Ann Arbor, the protest was one of the most vocal and enthusiastic in recent history. The demon- stration came just one day after the fatal shooting of six Arab-Israeli men and boys by Israeli security forces, during the worst rioting in Israel's 28 year history. HOISTING SIGNS saying, "Israeli 'benign' occupation is malignant expansion," and "Self determination is the sole solution," the crowd swelled to about 200 as they made their way down Liberty to City Hall. According to one demonstrator, the protest made a show of support "for our brothers who are being beaten, jailed and murdered by Israelis armed with American guns and American money." A handout circulated by the Arab student organization, claimed that "throughout the Israeli occupation, Israel has persistently at- tempted to alter the legal status and the political, economic, cultural, demographic and physical character of Jerusalem, the West Bank and the Gaza." MOHAMED MASRI, representative for the Arab community and student organization, asserted these Israeli actions "are not new- the oppression of human rights by the Jewish state has just now been revealed by the media." The marchers arrived at City Hall and began taking up a chant in Arabic. After their request to speak to Mayor Wheeler was unanswered, they vowed to show up at the April 4 City Council meeting. i ENDS FUEL- Air By LOIS JOSIMOVICH The U. S. Air Force will dis- continue funding the controver- sial fuel cloud explosion re- search carried on in the Univer- sity's Aerospace Engineering Dept. after May 20, according to an official Air Force docu- ment released yesterday. "There are no plans for the continuation of the University of Michigan work due to chang- es in program priority," states the document, sent from the Air Force Development and Test Center at Eglin Air Force Base in Florida. UNCONFINED fuel cloud de- tonations similar to those being studied here were applied dur- ing the Vietnam War in the form of a "CBU-55" weapon, according to the document signed by Maj. Lester Smith- and the professors in charge of the research were aware of "the Air Force use of the re- search results and the applica- tion of the same to weapons de- velopment programs," the let- ter states. RESEARCH: orce cuts funding Force) has to be up to date on the best things available." HE SAID he had known about the contract's curtailment for "the last couple of weeks" and that the Air Force notice to his department concerning the cut- off "did not go into any detail." Nicholls further indicated he was disappointed with the Air Force action, saying, "I would much rather go ahead - we had two Ph.D.'s going on it," (for graduate students doing the research). Elham Elahi, a student mem- ber of the Classified Research Review Committee assigned to study research requests, includ- ing the fuel cloud study, claim- ed he was not told of the con- tract's non-renewal. "THEY usually don't tell any- body," he said, referring to Uni- versity departments in general. Elahi and the two University professors on the committee were charged with deciding whether or not the research violated regental guidelines doing it here they'll be doing it er University officials, as well somewhere else." as with the remaining members He had already met with Uni- of his committee. versity President Robben Flem- The other committee mem- ing once to discuss the research, bers were unavailable for com- and planned meetings with oth- ment last night. KEN FEIT, who calls himself an "itinerant fool," performs one of his various acts heralding April Fool's Day. ~'Fool-,' dr"aws, laughs w~f~th religious sow By MITCH DUNITZ Nary a sound can be heard. Ken Feit the "fool" seats himself next to a lone candle in the darkened room, and the audience ... . ~ s..,,et ., . " .. .. . . ,