Saturday, August 2, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Poae Thre Helsinki agreement: Nothing but high sounding promises? By WILLIAM RYAN An Associated Press News Analysis The glittering supersummit at Helsinki has adopted a high sounding declaration, but there is likely to be a vast chasm between East and West when it comes to interpreting the meaning of the words, or to matching deeds to promises.. Leonid Brezhnev, the So v i e t evangelist of European security, has placed the West on notice that the U.S.S.R. will interpret the document as it pleases. EUROPEAN SECURITY as the Kremlin inter- prets the concept has been a Soviet goal for 20 i ! Deputy testifies in Little murder tril RALEIGH, N.C. (UPI)-A deputy sheriff testi- fied yesterday in the Joan Little murder trial that he does not know what happened to seven pieces of evidence found in the cell where the body of jailer Clarence Alligood was discovered. Willis Peachey nervously admitted under cross examination he has no idea where a mattress, a blanket, a sheet, a pair of glasses, a pack of cigarettes and two bloody wads of tissue paper are now. "YOU DID NOT preserve these items," chief defense attorney Jerry Paul asked. "I did not," said Peachey. Black activist Angela Davis watched from the back row as Paul interrogated Peachey, the Beaufort Conty Sheriff's Department's chief in- vestigator of the killing. LITTLE, a 21-year-old black construction work- er, is accused of murdering the 62-year-old white jailer with an icepick last Aug. 27. She claims he tried to rape her, but the prosecution main- tains she lured him into her cell and then killed him to escape. Two doctors testified earlier this week that evidence of recent sexual activity was found on Alligood's body. Peachey, visibily disturbed by Paul's cross- examination, glared at the attorney occasionally, and at times his voice almost broke as he an- swered questions on the witness stand. "THE BEAUFORT County Sheriff's Depart- ment has no organization, no methodology for in- vestigating a crime?" Pasl asked. "On that morning, there was none," Peachey said. "There was just mass confusion," Paul said. "Is that right?" "NO SIR," said Peachey. "I would not say mass confusion. I would say some confusion." Peachey also acknowledged lie grasped the ice- pick by the handle when it was handed to him by policeman Danny Respass, who removed it from Alligood's hand. "It's so obvious, I think, that the prosecution is trying to build this case on flimpsy evidence," she said. "It's so clear there's no facts." "We feel this is one of the most important events unfolding in this nation today," said Davis. "If Joan Little is set free, it will be an enormous victory." years, and Moscow's plans have never envisioned opening up the Soviet orbit to Western influences or relaxing the iron control of Communist parties. In his Helsinki speech, Brezhnev indicated no change in that attitude. He reserved to Moscow the right to define what is meant, for example, by the promise "to encourage cooperation in the field of information," or the promise to respect each nation's right "freely to choose and develop its political, economic and cultural system." Western leaders at Helsinki had to be acutely aware of some sinister background developments, events in progress right now that could pose tests of Soviet sincerity. PRESIDENT FORD dropped a warning that "peace is not a piece of paper" and that the principles enunciated in the declaration were "not cliches or empty phrases." Prime Minister Harold Wilson of Britain noted tartly that "we have not come here to build Potemkin villages," a sry reference to the old Russian custom of shielding the Tsar from reality by building pretty false fronts. However, the Soviet Communist party is still ruled rigidly by the dogma of Lenin, who held that treaties were "made to be broken." THE HELSINKI declaration isn't even a treaty and isn't binding, but the West had been hopeful of persuading Brezhnev to agree to freer ex- change of people and information in return for his hungry quest for some sort of "document." Brezhnev, though, noted that "information media can serve the purpose of peace and con- fidence or . . . spread throughout the world dis.- cord between countries and peoples." He added: "We would like to hope that the result of the conference will serve as a correct guideline for cooperation in these areas." EVIDENTLY, Moscow intends to bar what it regards as "poison of discord" and to define just what are "correct guidelines." Thus, the Western idea of exchange is unlikely to get far. Brezhnev also said all people should be able to choose their own systems, but again he wields his own yardstick. In his view, any nation ruled by communism is happy waith its condition, even though it has required Soviet arms to keep it that way. Even at Helsinki, Brezhnev gave voice to the obligatory line that has accompanied the Kremlin view of peaceful coexistence from the beginning. So he told the 34 other chiefs he was happy that whatever compromise was made came about "without obliterating differences in ideology and social system." All along, Moscow has warned against truce in the ideological war. MOST OF ALL, Brezhnev seemed happy that the conference, in his view, was a "summing sip of the political outcome" of World War II. Other Communist chiefs at the summit seemed euphoric about this. A goal had been accom- plished. There would be a document, however in conclusive and lacking in treaty force, that would say specifically that European borders are now inviolable. That, said the East German Com- munist chief, "is the decisive point." To the Communists, it means no serious chal- lenge to their rule is in sight in a foreseeable future in the orbit. To Moscow it means retention of all the territory seized in and after World War II: the three Baltic republics and parts of Germany, Romania, Czechoslovakia and Finland. A MANACLED JAMES VINSON, arrested on Thursday for killing a doctor and wounding two other employes at the Ypsilanti Ford Parts plant, leaves the Fourteenth District court yesterday after his arraignment. Ford plant gun man charged with murder By TIM SCHICK YPSILANTI-An auto worker was arraigned yesterday son charges of murder and assault in connection with Thursdays fatal shooting of a Ford plant physician and the wounding of two others. James Vinson, 27, was charged with first degree murder in the killing of Dr. Robert Walting and two counts of assault with intent to commit murder in the shooting of Alton Emerine and Roland Seed. DISTRICT Court Judge Kenneth Bronson denied bail and remanded Vinson to the Washtenaw County Jail pending the out- come of a preliminary examination set for next week. Vinson remained silent during the arraignment as police guarded all exits in the court room. No plea will be entered until after the preliminary examination scheduled for August 7. Following the arraignment county prosecutor Lynwood Noah released details of yesterdays shooting. See YPSI, Page 9 Esch lkely to make bid for Senate seat By ROB MEACHUM U.S. Representative Marvin Esch (R-Ann Arbor) says he is confident that he will be a candidate in 1976 for the United States Senate, but he refuses to make the official announcement "prior to the first of the year." Esch, a 47-year-old moderate Republican, conceeds that he is "definitely considering it," but is holding off on the announcement because of federal regulations granting equal broadcast time to opponents of an- nounced candidates. IF HE DECIDES to make the bid, and all indications suggest that he will, he will run for the seat presently held by Philip Hart, a Democrat, who will retire at the end of his term. Esch will have served five terms in the House. In last November's election, Esch crushed his Democratic opponent John Reuther by some 10,000 votes. It was after this elec- tion that Esch won considerable stature among state GOP members, giving his possible candidacy a tremendous shot in the arm. "I have formed an initiating committee," he said, "and am beginning to raise funds." The initiating committee, he says, is in charge of raising funds and seeking out contacts and support throughout the state, but is not the campaign committee he will form later this year. PRESENTLY, Esch's only official Repub- lican opposition is Deane Baker, a Univer- sity Regent with little recognition outside of Ann Arbor. He is generally considered, at best, a long shot for the GOP bid. Early last month, Baker said that he spent nearly $12,000 since January "examining the pos- sibility" of a candidacy. Other possible Republican opposition to Esch appears to be Representative Philip Ruppe of Houghton in the Upper Peninsula, and Governor William Milliken; however Esch has said that the latter will probably not seek the nomination. Likely Democratic opposition in the gen- eral election appears to be state Attorney General Frank Kelley, Secretary of State Richard Austin and U.S. Representatives Donald Riegle and William Ford. BUT ESCH says that he isn't concerned about his opposition because if he was "they'd be, in a sense, running the cam- paign." That campaign will be geared towards a "government more open to the people. They're very concerned about the degree federal government intrudes on their in- dividual lives," he said. See ESCH, Page 10