Fr riday, June $t 1973 THE SUMMER DAILY Page Three ridoy, June 8, 1973 THE SUMMER DAILY Page Three Local Democrats picket A&P to, mser Mayor Robert Harris (left) 'and 'a htenaw County Sheriff Fred 1'ostill ( enter) join other prominent- IncaI Democrats yes terday in a picket line around the Stadium Blvd. A & P store. The demons tration wa: held ti, ur Je the market to boycott 'rapes not harvested by onion orkers.refy y the Ann Arbor tPoice, who werc re- :ponding to a complaint by lthr 'tore. Pommented Sheriff P stitl, "The A & I aid we were afteting thir busines dver.s'ly. Of courRe that's 'h 'swe' an Photo y ~tERRY McCARTHY e 'V' r- r% I I i A r- 0 i A r" & a -4r- 1 d sl a C LUUNI LR-LUMMLNLLMfrNT C TCM Spock voices outrage at 750and055...merica n medical care . . . are this week's winning lottery umbers. Big winner this week was James By KATHLEEN RICKE "ongoing and serious epidemics" plaguing regular graduation ceremonies. The {dison of Detroit who took home the Dr. Benjamin Spock addressed a crowd that nation for centuries. ficial commencement address will be 200,000 super prize in the 28th super of over 900 at the Medical school counter- Spock called for large reforms in the en by T. V. star Robert Young, rawing of the Michigan Lottery. A commencement last night, telling them American medical system. He said the known as Marcus Welby, Ml). pecial three digit Mumber-479-was also that it is a "shame, an outrage, that only American people should be guaranteed rawn to determine 120 qualifiers for the the wealthy can have medical care in this "free, high quality medical care in their ONE STUDENT summed up his feet oilirn dollar drawing June 21 in Ypsil'oti. country." own communities. It's one of the sickness- by saying, "It disturbs me that Ro In his 90 minute address, Spock spoke es of our society that people don't feel a Young seemingly represents to this c of the need for socialized and localized sense of community." try what medicine is." Spacewalk a success medical care in America, and of his re- The audience, composed primarily of Before Spock's speech, a representa cent trip to the Far East. medical students and their families, react- from the Medical Committee for Hu of- giv- also Aings bert ouo- ative Iman Two Skylab spacewalkers opened a jammed power wing yesterday in a bold and unprecedented space salvage job, giving their orbiting laboratory a much needed boost of electricity. Skylab com- mander Charles Conrad complained, "One little, lousy single bolt," as he worked to free the damaged wing. AFSCME gains members Employes of Washtenaw County have voted overwhelmingly to join Local 1583 of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employes (AFSC- ME.) In the balloting-held Wednesday- the county workers voted 186 to 30 to join the unit. Local 1583 also represents the University's non-academic employes. Happenings.. .are highlighted by the second night's performance of "The Importance of Being Earnest" at 8:00 p.m. in Mendelssohn Theater ..Friday night folkdancing wilt be held at Barbour Gymo at the regular time, 8:00-11:00 p.m. ..-.and at 8:30 at the Ark, Irish folksinger Owen McBride will sing about the beauties of the Emerald Isle. A2's weather Generally cloudy with rain today, clear- ing this afternoon and evening. A nice stationary front waited up in Canada till we received some good weather and then began to- advance on us. Highs today between 72-77 with lows tonite- 53-58. THE FAMED PEDIATRICIAN and peace advocate said that the field of medicine in China has expanded to in- clude "barefoot doctors and doctors' helpers" that have worked to end the ed favorably to the speech, often inter- rupting Spock with applause. His appearance came about after many graduating med. school students became incensed at the school's refusal to invite the controversial doctor to speak at the S. Viets refuse to recognize, any new cease-fire accords SAIGON hP-The South Vietnamese government announced yesterday it does not intend to sign any new cease-fire agreements drawn up in Paris by the United States and North Vietnam. A second round of talks on bringing an end to the present Vietnam cease-fire. violations has been under way in the French capital between Henry Kissinger and Hanoi's Le Duc Tho since Wednesday. AFTER THE announcement by the Sai- gon government, the U.S. presidential adviser called off a planned morning session with Tho but showed up for the scheduled afternoon meeting smiling and jovial. He said he canceled the morning session because "we just needed more time to prepare something." He did not say what it was. The South Vietnamese announcement raised the question in some quarters that the government of President Nguyen Van Thieu might be doubtful about accords that could result from the Kissinger-Tho meetings. The announcement came from the gov- ernment spokesman, Bui Bao Truc, who said: "We are not going to sign anything." ACCORDING TO the South Vietnamese, the cease-fire documents signed on Jan. 27 were valid enough and the new sessions in Paris were prompted only by what they called the truce violations by the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese. Meanwhile, in Washington the House Foreign Affairs Committee approved a 120-day deadline on the president's power to commit U.S. armed forces abroad with- out congressional approval. Unlike the Senate's war powers bill, the House bill covers the existing bombing in Cambodia. Rights attacked the counter-commence- ment exercise, labeling it as "additional publicity for the University." He added that "a once every four year media stunt is no substitute for political action", he claimed the medical school students had neglected to take in the past. NEXT ON THE evening's program was Kay Weiss of the Advocates for Medical Information (AMI). She spoke of her group's research and effortsptokcurb the experimental use of the drug DES on involuntary subjects. In her talk, Weiss also made references to the controversial medical text "Obste- trics and Gynecology," by Dr. J. R. Wilt- son. Spock and the rest of the audience exploded with applause as she labelled the attacked book for equating "a wo- man's role in life with a piece of shit." The AMI and other campus groups burn- ed the medical text and other books ear- lier in the spring as a protest to their usage as texts at the medical school. THE NEXT SPEAKER was Kathy Okun from the Free People's Clinic. tkun, with a humorous air, suggested that the medi- cal school had a very good idea when they invited Young to speak, since he is nut a doctor. She then suggested that they were really inviting the character Marcus Welby. Okun concluded that it was "too bad" the medical school had invited a man that didn't even exist to speak at their com- mencement.- Spock introduced his new "radical" out- look on politics as something "I wouldn't have believed ten years ago." See SPOCK, Page 8