The Michigan Daily Vol. LXXXV, No. 55-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, August 2, 1975 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Ho ffa search continues By the United Press International DETROIT - Officials of the Teamsters International union said yesterday they feared "the worst"-death-in the disap- pearance of James Hoffa more than 48 hours ago, but Hoffa's son said he believed the former Teamster union boss had been kidnaped and is alive. Local 299, which Hoffa founded in 1930 and led for decades, offered a $25,000 re- ward for information on the whereabouts or fate of the fiery 62-year-old Hoffa. HOFFA'S SON, James, told reporters at the family home 30 miles north of Detroit he believed Hoffa was alive and that union politics may have led to his abduction. The huge union has been split by a bitter feud between Hoffa and the current Teamsters International president, Frank Fitzsimmons. But Hoffa's son said he does not think Fitzsim- mons was behind his father's disappearance. He also denied that he met secretly with under- world figures-as reported earlier-in an attentlA to solve the mystery of Hoffa's disappearance. POLICE maintained almost total silence on Hoffa's disappearance, but Hoffa's son said po- lice have "some clues." He did not elaborate except to say a search for Hoffa is concentrated in Oakland County where Hoffa lives and where his car was found Thursday. Police focused much of their attention on Hoffa's last reported engagement-a luncheon date with reputed Mafia enforcer Anthony "Tony Giacalone, a longtime friend. Michigan's governor William Milliken said state police told him that Hoffa planned to meet Giacalone, who is currently under indictment for income tax evasion, at a fashionable sub- urban restaurant. ROBERT HOLMES, an International Teamsters vice president, issued a statement saying the union's leaders, Fitzsimmons included, were deeply concerned about Hoffa's fate. "Everybody, from Frank Fitzsimmons down, fears the worst," a high ranking union official said. "Jimmy just wouldn't go away this long without calling home." State and local authorities agreed. HOFFA VANISHED in the Detroit suburb of Bloomfield Township after telling his family he was going to meet "someone." He did not say who he was going to see, but his family said Hoffa telephoned later to say the other person had failed to show up and that he was coming home. Daily Photo by STEVE KAGAN THE LAST FEW WOULD-BE-ARTISTS add the finishing touches to their masterpieces at the Local Motion spon- sored chalk-in on the Diag yesterday. Local Motion organized the project as a fund raising extravaganza. The artists drew the Local Motion logo, and attempted a few pieces of work on their own-and if it didn't rain last night . .. Ford signs wor code HELSINKI, (A) - Leaders of 35 na- more than any Soviet leader, made rights and ease the daily lives of tions, including the United States and the conference possible through his their citizens and promote a freer the Soviet Union, signed a contro- proclaimed policy of East-West de- flow of information between East and versial charter yesterday aimed at tente, _ and when he signed the docu- West. guiding their conduct in Europe and ment it climaxed a Soviet effort be- TlE DOCUMENT, filled with high- treatment of their own citizens. gun in 1954. sounding promises but riddled with President Ford, who signed third The nonbinding document, worked condin qaises , isdlegally after the two nations of divided Ger- out during 30 months of negotiations unenforceablen and qualifiers, implementationlly many, cautioned world leaders ear- in Helsinki and Geneva, accepts the deendscalsntil on lier in the day, "We had better say postwar map of Europe--including depends almost entirely on the good what we mean and mean what we Soviet dominance in the Eastern see- will of the participating nations. say, or we will have the anger of for - and says national frontiers But as Ford told the statesmen our citizens to answer." shall be "inviolable" unless changed earlier in the day, "peace is not a SOVIET leader Leonid Brezhnev by peaceful means. piece of paper" to be locked away appeared near tears as he chatted This was in exchange for Western- in a drawer. animatedly with Ford after the sol- backed clauses pledging the partici- "Laudable declarations of princi- emn signing ceremony. Brezhnev, pating nations to further the civil ples are not enough," Ford said, World pedalers take a rest in City By PAULINE LUBENS A troupe of nine bicyclists completed another leg of their world pedaling expedition when they wheeled into Ann Arbor early yesterday afternoon. When Bob Ellis, French teacher at Bush school in Seat- tle Washington, told student Helen Anderson two years ago, about his scheme to journey around the world on a bicycle she "didn't really think it would come off." "I WANTED to go from the very beginning" said the 17 year old Bush graduate. "It sounded so crazy, I don't think I knew what I was getting into, but the more we worked on it, the more it became a reality.' For Helen and her fellow pedal pushers, the trip has more than lived up to their ex- pectations Since they left Seattle, June 14, they have travelled an av- erage of 60 miles a day, straining over mountains and hills under intense heat or cooling rains and through flat- I nds of the western states. THE two-wheeled caravan has been greeted with hospital-, ity throughout its expedition. "We would ask directions from someone and end up eat- ing dinner with them," says Debbi Hofer. Their two most memorable incidents were' the time they dined on steaks and branded cattle at a ranch in Montana, See CYCLISTS, Page 9 Nader lauds co-op system By JEFF RISTINE Urging consumers to work toward greater control over the products sold to them, Ralph Nader last night said a growth of co-op systems in the United States would lead to reform in both the economic and political arenas. "The most just form of private property is the property owned by the people who use it," Nader told some 1,000 persons at Hill Auditorium. The consumer activist blasted the na- tion's large corporations for being out of touch with the people they serve, outlined discouraging economic trends and said the legal system shuts out millions of Ameri- cans from obtaining justice. See NADER, Page 5 Daily Photo by Ralph Nader