Thursday, July 10, 1975 r' THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three ApoIlo-Soyuz flight: Space detente By JEFF RISTINE * First of two parts The quiet void of space is perhaps the most appropriate spot for detente. Color photographs returned from orbit show no boundaries between nations and astro- nauts often use their vantage point to emind us that we are all passengers on the same giant spaceship. Economic and political differences seem petty and ir- relevant when considered on a cosmic scale. And so, in an impressive step toward Soviet-American manned space coopera- ion, three astronauts and two cosmo- nauts will next week spend nearly 5O hours together, circling 140 miles above earth in an experimental joint mission: the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project (ASTP). THREE YEARS of research, new tech- nological designing and rehearsals will culminate July 17 when the United" States' Apollo spacecraft docks with its tSSR counterpart, the Soyi . That day, astronauts Thatmas Stafford, Donald= 7 Slaytotn and Vance Brand will transfer: through the cylindricalI docking nmoduile" airlock joinitng the tswo ships and receivef, "reetin televised to the >rid below fromn cosroanats Aleksei Leonov and y Valeri Kubasov. The joint mission begins at 8:20 a.m. (EDT) July 15 when a rocket carrying Leonov and Kubasov will be launched -NASA Photo from the Baikonur, Kazakhstan cosmo- THIS ARTIST'S conception shows the Apollo spacecraft, at left, approaching the Soviet Soyuz vehicle 140 miles above earth. Attached to the front of Apollo is the new Docking Module which will allow three astronauts and two droine in central Asia. Seven and a half cosmonauts to transfer to each other's spacecraft for two days of joint experiments, ceremonies and television See APOLLO, Page 6 transmissions. CONSTITUTIONALITY QUESTIONED Ferency Ferency attackspli refr ilas 'dangerous' By PAULINE LUBENS . Speaking before a sparsely-attended Human Rights Party (HRP) dinner last night, party leader Zolton Ferency blasted as "dangerous" a political reform bill awaiting action in the State. House of Representatives. The 71-page bill, sponsored by Common Cause, a national public interest lobbying group, establishes tighter limits on campaign expenditures. The measure also redefines a "major party" as one which receives 25 per cent of the vote in a previous election, and restricts interaction between local and statewide party committees. Ferency, a founder of HRP, feels that the bill will make it more difficult for a small party to gain a statewide stronghold. "IT IS HIGHLY destructive of political organizations," said Ferency, "and I am fearful this bill will set us back, I don't know how many years." See FERENCY, Page 9 Mental By BILL TURQUE New legislation tightening guidelines for the release of mental patients and widening criteria for involuntary com- mittment of the mentally ill is nearing final approval in Lan- sing. The two measpres, already passed by the House, were ap- proved by the State Senate Tuesday in identical 31-0 votes, despite warnings that the bills may be unconstitutional. THE BILLS were returned to the House yesterday for what was described as "minor" amending, and indications are that the measures :will be avail- able for Governor Milliken's signature sometime within the next couple of weeks. One bill creates a new ver- dict of "guilty but mentally ill", where a defendant would receive psychiatric treatment in a state mental hospital, but would then be eligible for im- prisonment in a penal institu- tion for the crime committed. The bill is designed as an alternative to the "not guilty by reason of insanity" (NGRI) plea, which the bill's sponsors claim has been exploited by at- torneys as a way of circum- venting lengthy prison terms for their clients. THE SECOND measure ex- pands the state's definition of mental illness to include those people whose behavior "can be reasonably expected to result in physical harm to him or her- self or others." This proposal was modified by Senate liberals, who objected to the earlier House version of the bill, requiring committment for those mentally ill but in- capable of realizing their need for treatment, health bills ok'd Both bills are a response to hearing, the state could not es- last fall's controversial Mc- tablish a defendant's legal in- Quillan decision, in which the sanity, that person had to be State Supreme Court upheld a released. Wayne County Circuit Court The majority of those releas- ruling that people could not be ed under the provisions of Mc- held in state mental institutions Quillan have returned to so- unless they were found to be ciety without incident. Others, both mentally ill and danger- such as John McGee, who al- ous due to that illness either legedly ' murdered his wife to themselves or others. shortly after his release from THE RULING forced the the State Forensic Center in state to reevaluate all NGRI Ypsilanti, have spurred a pub- patients according to the new lic demand for more stringent criteria. If, after a probate See MENTAL, Page S Group plans reviv o downtown trolley By ELAINE FLETCHER A trolley "trip into the past" may be in store for local shop- pers moving between the city's disjointed and depressed down- town commerce centers next summer if a group of private citizens have their way. With the antique car already purchased, the citizen group, calling itself the Ann Arbor Street and Railway Museum, is attempting to convince City Ball that the proposed trolley line, which would run down Liberty from State to First Street, is not impractical. THE WORKING relic, accord- ing to the group, would aid in the city's revitalization efforts by providing a unique attraction as well as needed transporta- tion links between the area's beleaguered downtown sectors. Built in St. Louis in 1899, the trolley holds 40 passengers, and would operate all day, all year round for 25 cents on weekdays and only a dime on weekends. "AND THERE'D be night runs for theatre-goers," adds Mary Lou Slater, president of the group - "It's very pretty lit up at night." Though the first phase of their effort is concentrated on estab- lishing the half-mile Liberty trolley, Slater envisions an ex- tension of the line, "so that eventually people could ride from the edge of the old west- side neighborhood to South U and Washtenaw." While formal approval of the project has not been obtained from the City Council, installa- tion of the trolley line is one of Council's approved goals for its bicentennial commission, says Slater. AND WITH the support of the city Chamber of Commerce, State Street and Downtown Mer- chants Associations as well as- Ann Arbor Tomorrow, Slater is forging ahead with plans for a street feasibility study of the See TROLLEY, Page 10