MAIL-ORDER DIPLOMAS See Editorial Page Y ofitt igmi :43 a A&V ty t CUCUMBERISH High--54 Low-27 See Today for details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVI, No. 155 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, April 9, 1976 10 Cents Ten Pages I '2 j1. IFYSEENEWSHAPPENCALL7)DNy Clap service The Washtenaw County Board of Commission- ers Wednesday night authorized the signing of a contract between the county and the University Health Service for a joint VD program. The pro- gram provides for VD diagnosis, treatment. and counseling for any county resident desiring the ser- vice during specified hours at the Health Service office. The county will pay an annual rate of $24,- 000 to the University in return for use of its facil- ities and services. Last year, over 4,000 people were diagnosed in University and Ypsilanti clinics alone, with 15 per cent eventually receiving treatment. The estimated fee for the service is $8. False alarm Classes were interrupted yesterday at the MLB when a sheetmetal worker bumped a heat detector setting off a fire alarm. About half the 10:00 a.m. classes got out 10 minutes early as a result. One unidentified University employe commented, "Well at least we know the things work." It takes a thief A Michigan resident visiting Ohio found out Wednesday someone liked his red-white-and-blue Michigan license plates. Paul Perez told police someone stole the plates from his car while it was parked at a local motel. But thesthief didn't leave Perez empty handed. Perez found an old Ohio license plate attached to his auto. Happenings. . . . . today begin with a seminar on library values from 9 to 12 this morning in the multi- purpose room in the UGLI . . . at 3 this afternoon, Don Riegel will not speak as scheluled in the Kuenzel Room at the Union . . . Guild House will have a luncheon at noon at 802 Monroe . . . a panel discussion is scheduled for 3:00 on "Equal Rights for Women" in the Pendelton Room at the Union . . . Canterbury House will be the scene of a lec- ture on "Psychic Healing and Western Medicine" at 8 tonight . .. Edward Blyden and Phillip Palmer - Sierra Leone ambassadors to the United Na- tions and United States respectively - will give a lecture at 7 tonight in Lecture Room 2, MLB . - the University Flyers will taxi a plane from th local airport down State St., for more info call 994-8464 . . . there is a benefit dance for Leonard Crow Dog, an American Indian Movement spiritual leader, in E. Quad's main cafeteria tonight begin- ning at 8:30 . . . a panel discussion will be held on decentralized economics at the Rackham Am- phitheatre . . . "Consumption of the Dependency Theory in the U.S." will be the topic of discussion at noon in 1017 Angell . . . Tyagi Ji will hold a free session at 7:00 at 1420 Hill . . . and Gene Sharp, a leading theoretician on non-violence, will speak on "The Politics of Non-Violent Action" in Room 126 at E. Quad at 2 this afternoon and again at 7:30 tonight . . . also at 7:30 Addie Wyatt, one of Time magazine's women of the year will speak in the Pendleton rm. of the Union. s Family squabble A lawyer representing television writers, actors and directors told a federal judge in Los Angeles yesterday that the networks adopted the con- troversial "family viewing time" under unprece- dented and illegal pressure from the Federal Com- munications Commission (FCC). Ronald Olson, chief counsel for the television workers, said the FCC's intrusion into network programming con- stituted government censorship and a violation of the First Amendment. The FCC requires that two hours each night be set aside for television pro- gramming for children. Snaky surprise Elizabeth Golob doubts it will ever replace toast, ham and eggs as a traditional American breakfast, but it was certainly a wake-up surprise. Toasted snake, that is. Golob put four slices of bread in her new toaster, but the bread on one side became stuck. "So I put my hand inside with- out looking," she said. "I felt something strange. And would you believe, there was a snake in my toaster." It was no small reptile at 18 inches, eith- er, and it liked its well heated home. Police could not poke or shake it loose and eventually had to disassemble the toaster. A pet shop owner identi- fied the serpent as a mole snake, indigenous to the southeastern United States. How it got to Southern California, into Golob's toaster, and was overlooked the first few times she used it, re- mained a mystery. On the inside .* Editorial Page presents a story by Tom Stevens on Minister Mils diploma companies that operate through the mail. . . Arts Page has a review of PTP's performance of 'Tennessee Wil- liam's "Camino Real" by Jeff Selbst . . . and Sports Page has the results of the all-important pro football draft. Hos ital lets Quinlan ruling stand By AP and Reuter DENVILLE, N.J. - The last major barrier preventing Karen Quinlan being, removed from her life-giving respirator was cleared today. The Denville hospital nursing her said it would not appeal a New Jersey State Supreme Court ruling last week that the respirator could be removed if doctors decided there was no possibility of her coming out of a year-long coma. However, secrecy shrouded those who hold court-approved powers to discon- nect Quinlan's life-supporting respirator and there was no indication yesterday when steps might be taken to end the comatose woman's life. "Now the decision is out of the public and legal arena and has been returned to the sacred realm of the privacy of the family, the physicians and the hos- pital," said Paul Armstrong, Quinlan family lawyer. "That matter is now private," Arm- strong said, when asked if the media would be informed when the woman's parents begin fulfilling the requirements of the court order so the respirator can be turned off. "THEY WOULD deeply appreciate pri- vacy at this point," said the Rev. Thomas Trapasso, a parish priest at Our Lady of the Lake Church in Mount Arlington, where the Quinlans worship and where Julia Quinlan, Karen's mother, works as a secretary. "It is really a family matter and they would like to deal with it outside the public eye. They terribly need to be alone and private," Father Trapasso said. According to the court ruling, before the respirator can be turned off com- petent medical authorities must advise Joseph Quinlan that his daughter cannot return to a thinking and aware condition. A hospital ethics committee must then consider that advice reasonable, the court said in the March 31 ruling. THE QUINLANS, Armstrong and spokespersons for Ms. Quinlan's doctors and St. Clare's Hospital, where the woman has been in a coma since last April, all declined to say if any or all preparations had already been made to meet the court requirements. Ralph Porzio, lawyer for doctors Rob- ert Morse and Arshad Javed, Karen's physicians, said yesterday the doctors would not appeal. He also said the doc- tors would not comment. New Jersey Atty. Gen. William Hyland, Morris County Prosecutor Donald Col- lester, St. Clar's Hospital and Thomas Curtin, who was Ms. Quinlan's court- appointed legal guardian until the high See QUINLAN, Page 2 Quinlan Carter apologizes for ethnic remark Crowd protests Medicaid cutbacks By LOIS JOSIMOVICH More than 75 elderly citizens and representatives of low-in- come groups gathered yesterday morning in a parking lot behind the county's Department of So- cial Services building down- town,to protest recent cuts in Medicaid payments. Shivering in the icy breeze, demonstrators a n d several spokespersons for community medical services gave short speeches castigating the 11 per cent cut, which took effect in January following an executive order by Governor Milliken. The entire crowd then packed into the Social Services building, waving signs and chanting, "No cuts! No cuts!" THE GOVERNOR'S order cancelled all Medicaid pay- ments for dental, vision and hearing services when a recipi- ent is over 21. It also eliminat- ed occupational, physical, and speech therapy as well as non- prescription drugs, from the list of state-funded health care. "We're here for a pretty im- portant thing, even if we freeze," said Katie Nixon, a welfare rights organizer. Nixon, who introduced the rest of the speakers, urged the audience to write Milliken and the state representatives letters criticizing the Medicaid reduc- tions. T H E DEMONSTRATORS, who ranged from little children to elderly men and women with hearing aids and canes held signs that read "Try eating with no dentures, Mr. Gover- nor," and "Need a crutch? Out of luck." The first speaker, Dr. Jerry Walden of the Packard St. clinic for low-income people, said he was "very concerned about what's happening." "Many of our (patients with) chronic diseases are going to need physical therapy," he add- ed, "if you don't have those services those limbs are going to deteriorate rapidly." See GROUP, Page 2 Harris iscontiues active campaigning From Wire Service Reports PHILADELPHIA-Jimmy Carter, under fresh attack by President Ford who said Carter is too vague on the issues, publicly apologized yesterday for using the phrase "ethnic purity" in opposing federal efforts to artificially change the character of neighborhoods. In Washington, meanwhile, former Sen. Fred Harris of Oklahoma announced he would withdraw from national campaigning for the Democratic presidential nomination. "I AM STILL a candidate for president. But our national effort >{ {' . in the primaries ends today," Harris told a news conference. Carter, in apologizing for his ethnic purity remark, said: "It was a very serious mistake on - my part." He spoke at a news conference as he and his two chief opponents, Rep. Morris Food Udall of Arizona and Sen. Henry Jackson of Washington, cam- paigned separately in Pennsyl- vania for the state's April 27 primary. Specifically, the words Carter called "unfortunate" and "care- lessly used" were "ethnic purity and the in tr us i on of alien groups." NSKY THE ISSUE surfaced Tuesday d the in South Bend, Ind., when the former Georgia governor com- mented, "I'm not trying to say WASHINGTON -P)-The Sen- I want to maintain, with any ate passed a bill yesterday mak- kind of government interference, ing s w e e p in g, fundamental the ethnic purity of neighbor- changes in the controversial food hoods . . . What I say is the stamp program. government ought not take as The administration has op- [r a major purpose the intrusion posed the measure. The Senate's of alien groups into a neighbor- 5 to 22 vote sent it on to the hood, simply to establish that House. intrusion." air, the Udall, also speaking to report- About 19 million persons, or had two ers in Philadelphia, said Car- slightly less than 10 per cent of l with. ter's apology shows "some of the American public, receive his attitudes" in a possibly ra- food stamps in a given month ndidate cial matter. under the program, which costs ed chal- "A mistake is revealing," the government about $6 million David Udall said. "There is no place a year. d down in this land for thinly veiled n then hints of the politics of racial THE SENATE bill's major 're go- division." features would combine to limit ysically HARRIS, IN announcing his the program to households that e law." withdrawal from the fight for have net incomes below the of- the Denocratic nomination, be- ficial poverty lines. For a four- aten to came the sixth Democrat to person non-farm family, the rating, abandon active campaigning or poverty level is $458 a month. on him withdraw from the race com- Limiting the program to fami- ge 2 pletely. See FOOD, Page 2 Daily Photo by ALAN BILII A LARGE TURNOUT of senior citizens and low-income representatives demonstrated behin Department of Social Services yesterday to protest recent Medicaid cuts. I EVIDENCE BUILDS: RAP named in smea By PHIL FOLEY and MIKE NORTON Evidence against the Respon- sible Alternative Party (RAP) mounted yesterday as former Student Government Council member Don Daniels reported seeing RAP candidate Bob Mat- thews and a companion roaming the halls of Alice Lloyd around 3:00 AM Tuesday. Meanwhile last night Student Organizing Committee (SOC) members said that at this point they have been too busy run- ning their campaign to worry about the attacks. SOC member David Goodman said that his party would pursue that matter fully after the election. He added, "We not only want to see justice done, but we want to clearly demonstrate that no one can get away with this in fu- ture elections." DANIELS said he had been finishing up some late commit- tee work and was leaving for home when he saw Matthews and the other man carrying a stack of the green leaflets which have been identified as the faked SOC handouts. "I know Bob Matthews from SGC," said Daniels, "and I'm certain it was him." Daniels said that Matthews "looked kind of sheepish" when he caught sight of Daniels. DESPITE the smear cam- paign the MSA election has had the highest voter turnout of any student government elec- tion in the past four years. A total of 3069 persons voted but six ballots were invalidated due to voter error. Elections Direc- tor Elliot Shikofsky said that he was "extremely pleased" with the turnout. Aside from having their van break down on Tuesday which put them behind schedule for the day and the RAP aff elections directors only I minor problems to dea Tuesday night MSA ca Irving Freeman request lengers credentials for Schaper and was turne by Chikofsky. Freemar said to Chikofsky, "We ing to get you. Not ph because that's against th HE WENT on to thre ruin Chikofsky's credit have hold credits put See ELECTION, Pag 1 3 a r C 4 i } L a rr ' .:.................: ::::::....:.::......:".......:.........:..................:.::::....n :::':^ .: ..... ".:."n,..'r .,, r. r..., ,. .::":::::. ::.'.Vr:::.l:::'« :rJ::":"::ti'}::":l:'.":::'t::"t«:"; :tit:" Yr. Pump 'n' Pantry employe refutes charge" of racial slur Steamr tunnel roamer tells of underground adventures By DAVID LEDNICER=> Wary of being caught by se- }\ cur ty men, he roams the steam tunnels underneath central cam- pus. Known by his nickname, "Turkey," he is one of the last of the great explorers left. His haunt is the network of tunnels that carry steam from the Heat- ing Plant to the buildings the steam heats on central campus. Turkey notes, "It used to be easy to gain access to the tun- nels, but after some pranksters shut off Robben Fleming's wat- er and heat security has been tighter." Turkey, who has dis- dain for these vandals, said, M .. ~ "My mission is one of explora- ;:;:...:: : ; : g4.x tion, not vandalism." AN UNLOCKED door or an : J A<<,. By MIKE NORTON Samuel Poston, the Pump 'n' Pantry employe involved in the alleged Feb. 8 robbery attempt in which 18-year-old Larry Edwards was killed, yesterday denied charges that he had used rac- ially insulting language toward Edwards and his comp-anion Ricky Bullock. "It's crazy," said Poston. "It's just absol'itelv not true. There were no racial remarks on either side. I didn't say anything like that to them torneys reasoned, he had called the police and reported a non-existent robbery. Theodore Spearman, one of the group's law- yers, said that PUJ would seek criminal charges against Poston for making a spurious phone call. PUJ BASES its contention on the accounts of three witnesses it claims to have, as well as an accouint of Poston's statements to a reporter for the Michigan Free Press. "T don't think anybody's going to get the MR *I.--i