While you were away... The Michioan Daily-Wdnesday, January 7, 1981-Page 9 Registration: Part 2 'Cabbie slain A 39-year-old convict, charged in the Dec. 22 stabbing of his girlfriend in Pin- *ckney, is a suspect in the stabbing mur- der of a 19-year-old Ann Arbor woman cab driver, a Livingston County Sheriff's department detective said yesterday. Timothy Hughes is "certainly a suspect" in the death of Eleanor Bailey, a 1979 graduate of Community High School, Detective Michael Smith said. Bailey's stabbed body was found early Dec. 23 on Silver Hill Road, about five miles south of Pinckney. Hughes has been arraigned on a charge of assault with intent to commit murder stemming from the Dec. 22 knife assault on his girlfriend, Marilyn Creekmore, 32, in front of her Pinckney home. Bailey, a driver for the Yellow Cab -Co., picked up Hughes at 1124 E. Ann St., a halfway house for convicts from Jackson State Prison. He was living at the rehabilitation center while serving a sentence for a 1972 murder convic- tion. Polive found Bailey's empty cab near the house and a search led to the discovery of her body at approximately 2:30 a.m. Dec. 23, in Putnam Township, jgst north of the Washtenaw County line. Hughes remains in McPherson Hospital recovering from a gunshot wound received when a Pinckney police officer tried to break up what appeared to be an argument between Hughes and his girlfriend, Smith said. Detective Smith said the Ann Arbor police have made no connections bet- ween Bailey's murder and the stabbing deaths of three young Ann Arbor women during the past 10 months. New law prof U.S. Solicitor General Wade McCree, Jr. Will join the University Law School faculty in the fall of 1981. McCree, who * was appointed by President Carter in 1977 to represent the United States in Supreme Court cases, will leave his post Jan. 20, with the inauguration of President-elect Ronald Reagan. Despite recent budget cuts, and the fact that there is no opening on the Law School staff, Law School Dean Terran- ce Sandalow described McCree as "so distinguished that you don't worry if he. fills a particular slot on the faculty." Sandalow said McCree, 60, had a variety of academic and personal op- portunities from other institutions, but he declined to comment on specific of- fers. McCree's teaching schedule has not been determined yet, but Sandalow said the former judge has expressed interest in a first year course entitled "Lawyers and Clients," which deals with professional ethics. Regardless of his particular teaching schedule, Sandalow said, "We will build on his unique background as Solicitor General and a Judge." McCree has strong personal and professional ties in the Detroit area, where he served as a lawyer and a judge for 29 years. A practicing lawyer until 1952, McCree was a commissioner on the state Workmen's Compensation Board for two years before serving as a Wayne County circuit court judge until 1961. A District Court judge in the state's eastern district from 1961-66, McCree sat on the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals bench from 1966-77. Theater company established The Michigan Ensemble Theatre, a resident Equity theater company, recently was created at the University under the guidance of Walter Eysselin- ck, chairman of the Department of Theatre and Drama and director of the Professional Theatre Program. Eysselink called MET "a regional theater as well as a University en- deavor." Bruce Ives, publicist for MET, said the company will "bring professionals into the University environment so they can practice their art. University students can see how a professional company actually operates." MET's first production will be per- formances of Henrik Ibsen's A Doll House March 25-29 in the Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre. Members of the company include professional members of the acting and directing faculty, other professional ar- tists, and a few select advanced theater students. Also working on the first production will be internationally-ac- claimed scenic designer W. Orem Parker and stage combat choreographer Erik Fredricksen. ISR scholar Campbell dies Angus Campbell, a founder and program director of the University's Institute for Social Research died of heart failure Dec. 15 in his Ann Arbor home. The reknowned author was scheduled to retire at the end of the academic year from the institute where he served as director from 1970-75. Considered a founding father in the field of political surveys, Campbell, 70, was the author of many books and ar- ticles about American attitudes. He wrote The American Voter, a book which underlies the work of well known pollsters George Gallup and Louis Harris. Leslie Kish, a founding member of ISR and friend of Campbell for 39 years, said the researcher was a prominent statistician and also a "free-thinking humanist with a very good eye for the visual arts-painting, ballet and theater." Campbell was described by Kish as a strong family man who, along with his wife, Jean, was a very knowledgable football and basketball fan.I Campbell is survived by his wife, two daughters and one son. Nurses still negotiating University Hospital nurses and ad- ministrators will meet with a state mediator again today in an effort to reach a contract agreement, now three months overdue. The more than 1,000 registered nur- ses represented by the Professional Nurses' Council have been working un- der an extension of last year's contract since September 30 when the previous contract expired. Fleetwood Diner burns Overheated grease caused a fire at the Fleetwood Diner, 300 S. Ashley St., Dec. 11. Approximately $5,000 in damages to the cafe have since been repaired and the popular eaterie reopened after nine days, according to owner Kaye Dumsick. Because of its age, the small yellow building, built in 1947, did not conform to fire regulations, Dumsick said. (Continued from Page 1) and allowed the Selective Service to on- ce again require registrants to fill in the number. The November ruling said the request for social security information was a violation of the 1974 Privacy Act. But because many thousand registrants completed the form bet- ween the two rulings without entering their social security numbers, prosecution of those who neglected to enter their numbers this week is unlikely. David Landau, an attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union, m'ain- tains that the social security number requirement is a violation of the Privacy Act. However, he warns that registrants "have a legal obligation" to include their social security numbers until the Appeals Court makes a final ruling. MEMBERS OF the Washtenaw Committee Against Registration and the Draft (CARD) asked men entering Ann Arbor post offices to register to reconsider the possibility of registering as conscientious objectors (CO). CARD volunteer Darcy Gingerich said, "We aren't telling people not to register, we're just giving them their options." Although Selective Service officials said registering as a conscientious ob- jector does not affect a man's draft status, CARD and American Friends ServiceCCommittee draft counselors say registering as a CO helps to build a case for one's status as a CO in the event of an actual draft. Paul Keller, a Music School freshman who was considering registering as a CO, said he showed up at the East Liberty Street post office yesterday because he felt it was his "duty as a citizen." But, he added, "I refuse to go to war. No country is so valuable that I'd giye up my life for it." Controversial editor retires after 28-year newspaper career ROCKY MOUNT, Va. (UPI) - Ker- mit "Red" Salyer has been cursed, threatened, sued, offered bribes and sent to jail during his 28 years as editor and published of The Franklin News- Post. But Salyer's caustic front-page editorials also have won him his share of admirers, such as the editorial writer at a rival newspaper who dubbed him the "conscience of Franklin County."; "Why do people either love me or hate me?" Salyer asked with a chuckle as a reporter started to ask him the question. "BECAUSE I believe there are no shades of gray to an issue. Either it's black or white, a lie or the truth. If everybody agreed with me, I'd tack a mirror on the wall and look in it every day to see what's wrong with me." Salyer, 66, and spry, has decided to trade typewriter for fishing pole. Tem- porarily, at least. He said Monday he's selling the News-Post to a corporation whose directors are the top executives of The Martinsville Bulletin in Martinsville, Va. "IT WAS AN offer I couldn't refuse,"' Salyer said. "I'm going fishing." Salyer'sa departure caps a career spent mostly in lively competition with the weekly Franklin County Times established by former employees who are now bitter rivals at a time when one-newspaper towns abound. Salyer says his philosophy of "telling it like it is, regardless of who it hurts" has cost him friends, advertising dollars, and legal expense. BY HIS COUNT he has been sued six .times for libel (never :successfully)., sentenced to jail by a judge who took of- fense -at a front-page editorial describing him as gutless (he won the appeal), and threatened by moon- shiners. "When I came in '52 moonshine was a taboo subject," said Salyer. "Right away we put it front and center. People threatened to burn me up or blow me off the face of the map." After a suspicious-looking showbox was found at the newspaper five years ago, Salyer warned in an editorial the responsible "moron" would spent the next six months picking buckshot out of his behind" if caught in the act. THEN THERE was the time he took a local politician to task for his campaign statements, calling him a liar in a front- page editorial. And the time he headlined a story about a Ku Klux Klan meeting, "Kowardly Killers Konvene." Salyer concedes the editorials are "what gets us in trouble" but adds they also have been the strength of the newspaper, which is published three times a week by a staff of 15 that in- cludes his wife and two sons. He plans to do a lot of fishing in the Floride Keys, although he hasn't com- pletely washed his hands of the news business. "I hope to buy a small daily in Florida-if I can find one," Salyer said. p ------ mm m - mm mm - - - m I ARMY °I SURPLUS, We stock a full line of clothing, boots, camping equipment, hunting clothing & winter coats. 201 E. Washington at Fourth Open M-Sat 9-6 994-3572 15% OFF ALL Merchandise with this coupon (except sale items) -. , NExpires January 10, 1981 * - m -mm mm m m -m - m -mm m mit * American scientists helping with Soviet space robot project TOROTO (PI)American sc en: tists . are helping Russian researchers find the most productive landing spots for a pair of advanced Soviet robots to land on the planet Venus next year and obtain soil samples for on-site analysis. 9:The cooperation is expected to pay off for scientists around the world seeking answers to some of the questions raised by previous Soviet landing missions and the American Pioneer-Venus radar satellite. Harold Masursky of the U.S. Geological Survey said at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science Mon- day, the Pioneer satellite has produced a topographic map of most of the cloud- shrouded planet. It will complete its studies March 19. MASURSKY AND other project scientists recently met with their Soviet counterparts to discuss landing areas the radar maps suggest would produce the most useful scientific information. He said the two Soviet spacecraft will be launched next December and are to land on Venus in mid-March next year. Each will carry a device to either reach out and take a sample of the planet's soil or drill material from the surface. In addition, each craft will carry an x-ray composition detector. "That's the most complicated mission they've tried to fly so far, and we hope it will work," Masursky said. "We'd like very much to know what the chemistry is at several different poin- ts on the Venus surface." PRESIDENT CARTER is expected to ask Congress for funds to start a new Venus radar satellite project that will vastly improve mapping of the planet's surface. Masursky said the Soviets plan to follow up next year's landing mission with even more advanced probes in 1985. He said the different approaches taken by the two nations in exploring Venus are complementary. Although Venus is considered a twin of Earth. scientist have determined the two planets have followed different evolutionary paths. Venus is blanketed ,by a thick, hot atmosphere of CO2 and[ the radar maps indicate the planet has not undergone the crustal shifting processes that occur on Earth. IN ANOTHER report, Tobias Owen of the State University of New York at Stony Brook said Saturn's intriguing moon Tital may srv' as a deep freeze for the chemical remnants of early stages of life development. Voyager 1, which passed Saturn last November and is now en route to a 1986 rendevous .with Uranus, found Titan has a surface temperature of minus 283 degrees Fahrenheit. He said the extreme cold has halted 'organic chemistry processes of the type that presumably ledto life on Earth. But Owen said Titan must have been warmer billions of years ago. Owen said the National Aeronautics and Space Administration is con- sidering development of a robot spacecraft to land on Titan in the 1990's, drill into the surface ice and look for any chemical precursors to life. |i SAmity