Page Four THE MICHIGAN DAILY _Saturday, August 7, 1976 Page Four THE MICHIGAN DAILY satur4ay, August 7, 1976 Crowd watches as youths beat boy LONDON (UPI) - Ensrico Sidoli had a nervous tic and his classmates taunt- ed him with the nickname "Noddy," after a children's book character whose head nodded back and forth. The teen-ager lived in a fantasy world, pretending to be a disc jockey, and he talked incessantly. All this set him apart and made him the butt of pokes at school. Three weeks ago Enrico went to a public swimming pool where three youths attacked him, beat him severely and held him under water until he stopped struggling. Not one of the 1,000 persons at the pool, including lifeguards, paid any at- tention to his cries for help. And now not one of them will come forward to talk to Scotland Yard about his slaying. "There is a complete wall of silence around this case," one Scotland Yard source said. , Fifteen-year-old Enrico, who died 11 days after the attack, was buried Wednesday. An older sister came from Australia for the funeral. Other rela- tives came from Italy. Scotland Yard detectives sent a wreath.r Another wreath at Enrico's funeral- a teddy bear of white chrysanthemums was from the students at school. But none of those classmates, some of whom witnessed Enrico's death, would talk about what they lad seen. "Some of our people talked to one 15-year-old girl and decided her parents should be present," said Scotland Yard 'Detective 5Chief Inspector Harry Cle- ment. "When they went to her house the par- ents pretended they were not home, then; said the girl was not there, then said she was sick and could not speak." "We know there are people who saw this killing of a helpless boy, and who could identify the killers," Clement said. "We appeal to them to come forward." Police sources voiced suspicion that Enrico's attackers were about his own age, knew him well and had not in- tended to kill. They said this still was guesswork.,~ "People cannot be so sick as to ignore the grief that has been shown here," Clement said at the boy's funeral. "There is nothing to be proud about in concealing the identities of ruffians who kill a helpless lad. It makes me sick to think that despicable yobs hood- lums are being shielded from the law." "My son was killed in front of 1,000 people," said Antonio Sidoli, Si. "If they don't want to come forward, what can I do?" Unemployment up in July Regents OK new 'U' budget sContinued from Page 3) For whatever reason, 47.,4 per cent of all working-age women are now looking for or holding jobs, up from 46.1 per cent a year ago. The participation rate for adult men, meanwhile, has fallen in the same period, from 81.1 per cent to 80.5 per cent. THE UNEMPLOYMENT rate for adult women in July was 7.6 per cent compared to 7.1 per cent in June. Adult male un- employment at 6.1 per cent, was virtually unchanged from 6 per cent in June. Unemployment among heads of households climbed to 5.4 per cent from 5.1 per cent. Teen-agers and blacks, the groups hardest hit by unemploy- ment, gained in July, as teen- age unemployment fell from 18.4 per cent to 18.1 per cent and black joblessness fell from 13.3 per cent to 12.9 per cent. The severity of unemployment moderated somewhat, with the average duration falling from 16.9 weeks in June to 15.8 weeks in July. (Continued from Page 3) Dearborn campus, and $8,264,950 for the Flint campus. The Regents also approved a separate $95 million operating budget for University Hospital,, an increase of more than $9 million over last year's amount. The budget calls for a 9.4 per cent increase in daily service charges, effective September 1, to produce part of the additional revenue. The rate hikes, coupled with increased use of hospital facilities, are expected to gen- erate enough money to cover increased expenses that have resulted from inflation, mal- practice costs and higher utility costs. Town mourns Litton THE NEW budget will provide (continued from Page 3) ton, took -25 per cent of the vote, for improvements in patient Litton, a millionaire cattle services, including purchase of breeder, had campaigned up to The executive committee of new equipment, changes in the last minute, concluding a the Democratic State Commit- emergency medical service and flying tour of the state the day tee will meet today in Jefferson e m he died. City to set a date for the full stepped-up security. The second-term congressman committee to select a nominee .But daily rates for wards will from the widespread '6th Dis- to face Atty. Gen. John Danforth rise from $105 to $117 per day, trict scored a surprising victory in November. The committee is -while charges for private ac- in the primary by capturing 45 not bound to select any candi- com-modations will go from $117 per cent of the vote in a field of date who ran in the primary, to $129. The daily service charge ten candidates. His nearest ri- but Hearnes said Thursday that for the hospital's intensive units val, former Gov. Warren Hear- a majority of the committee will be, increased from $300 to nes, had 27 per cent of the vote, members favor him. The young- $320. The Hospital Executive and Rep. James Symington, son er Symington said he would not Board noted that the new fees of retiring Sen. Stuart Svming- seek the nomination. ' will still be comparable with those of other teaching hospitals complex in an effort to save 1 in the country. ' century-old facility. Thursday's Regents meeting The Board -had initially saw a group of enthusiasts pre- proved demolition of Waterm. sent a 30-ainute slide presenta- Barbour last March, butt tion depicting the beauty of the final verdict will not be deliv Waterman-Barbour gymnasium ed until its September meeti House may choose city as research. center site (Continued from Page 1) Sage maintains that Cin halted and that previous plans nati has a lack of "professio to build the permanent facility types" which Ann Arbor d in Cincinnati be continued. not. The study to find an alter.- The previous study groupv nate site was then abandoned. searching for a city with However, Rep. David Obey (D- established research commui Wis.) and Sen. William Prox- and access to public hea mire -(D-Wis.) successfully m e d i c a l and engine fought this week for the dele- ing schools. tion of $1.5 million in the pro- The- top ten cities listed posed NIOSH budget for fiscal the previous study inclu 1977 which 4would have begun Ann Arbor, Pittsburgh, Cin work on a permanent Cincinnati nati, Houston, Atlanta, Detr complex, thus reviving thb pos- Chicago, Minneapolis, New sibility of a continued study - leans and Madison, Wisc. THE HQUSE will vote Mon- day on whether to estore the Interesting facts .$1.5 million to the appropria- tions'bill or to send it back to aboue E,50gt oas learneo a House-Senate conference. for iron. They used a bellows m review, of goat skin to force air Any decision to relocate the their iron-making furnace. facility would most likely be__ subject to presidential review. E W. Davis at the Uni Rep. Marvin Esch (R-Ann sity of Minnesota successf Arbor) has been actively at- treated Taconite rock to tempting to revive the site moye the iron. study with letters to HEW Sec- retary David Matthews and ap- Some 21 per cent of the p r o p r i a t i o n s sub- torcyclists in California, committee chairman Rep. Dan- cording to National Autom iel Flood. Club statistics, are women, on a national scale 5 per ACCORDING TO Bill Sage, are women. Esch's administrative assist- ant, "We're not necessarily Easy and good dessert: S pushing for the site in Ann Ar- wich a scoop of ice cream bor, but we're trying to find nilla or chocolate flavor) the best place for the facility, tween two halves of ca of which Ann Arbor is surely pears and top with choc one possibility." sauce. the ap- an' the -er ing cin- nal Joes was an nity lth, ieer- in ded cin- roit, Or i by ught iade into iver- fully re- mo- ac- obile but cent and- (va- be- nned slate ROBERT REDFORD in 1969 DOWNHILL RACER With the summer Olympic fever just subsiding, we bring you Michael Richie's (director of SMILE and BAD NEWS BEARS) arresting exploration of winning and losing on a world scale. Redford plays a hot-shot skier from way-out west who tries to be a star, stud, and gold medalist in one easy jump. With Gene Hackman and Commila Sporu. Short: GOLD RUSH MICKEY. SUN.: Serge Eisenstein's ALEXANDER NEXSKY (FREE-AT 8) CIN EMA GUILD TONIGHT AT OLD ARCH. A UD. HASKELL WEXLER'S 1967 MEDIUM COOL The first feature filmdirected by Haskell Wexler, award-winning cinema- tographer of ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO'S NEST. Documentary foot- age of the riots outside the 1968 Democratic Convention provides the cli- max of the story of a television news photographer who is gradually drawn into the reality which he records on film. With Robert Foster, Verna Bloom, Peter Bonery, Marianna Hill, and Harold Blankenship.. C IE A II TONIGHT AT ANGELL HALL AUD. A 7:30 & 9:30 Admission $1.50 'I the f narbor fim oYp ra" w TONIGHT an Encore of Woody Allen in MLB 3 LOVE AND DEATH (1975) 7 &10:30 w oo Allen's satire on Russian novels, Napoeonic wars, and moi1lsistfrom -i -euis tBrgmansuopleteih snr- lner* sa ou eyntgAiien, dineKet nstar. TAKE THE MONEY AND RUN 1969) 8:45 only In hs Airecting debut.-Allen lays virgil, product/result of an ,ifowunrte childhood: b ken glasses, neighborhood bully, bilet-tug parents, acute sals playing. and a neurotictendency to iin a girl by stealing money. His downfai comes when he oisspel sg'n on his hoidup note. Stars Alien, and Janet Mar $ DEliU. $1.25, DOUBLE FEATURE $2.00 -