'U' prof says Riley case may hurt court image The Michigan Daily-Saturday, January 22, 1983-Page 3 U.S. open to Soviet ideas for arms reduction LANSING (UPI) - An attorney representing former Gov. William Milliken suggested in a brief filed yesterday that the reputation of the Michigan Supreme Court could be af- fected on how it handles the case of Justice Dorothy Riley. James White, a reknowned Univer- sity of Michigan law professor, made the pitch in a lengthy and impassioned friend of the court brief filed in defense of Riley's right to continue serving. BRIEFS ALSO HAVE been filed by Riley's attorney and Solicitor General Louis Caruso, who is seeking the justice's ouster from the court. Oral arguments in the case are set for Monday. Riley was appointed by Milliken late last year to replace the late Justice Blair Moody, who died shortly after winning election to a new, eight-year term. MILLIKEN CONTENDS Riley may serve until after the next general elec- tion in the fall of 1984. Gov. James Blanchard and Attorney General Frank Kelley argue her right to serve ran out when Moody's old term expired at the end of last year. The case has political implications because Moody, like Blanchard and Kelley, was a Democrat. Riley, like Milliken, is a Republican. White also discussed the con- stitutional and legal issues in the case, as did Caruso and Frederick Buesser, Riley's attorney. Caruso said Riley cannot continue serving because explicitly missing from the state Constitution is any "holdover" provision permitting justices to stay on until a successor is elected and qualified. Buesser and White contended the language on appointees is clear cut - they serve until the Jan. 1 following the next general election after they are ap- pointed. WASHINGTON (AP) - President Reagan's arms negotiator said yester- day that the United States would seriously consider any Moscow proposal to eliminate medium-range nuclear missiles,: "if the Soviet side gives." Paul Nitze said he is returning to talks in Geneva prepared to negotiate seriously on intermediate-range nuclear missiles. "BUT IN ORDER to negotiate seriously," Nitze added, "it requires give on the Soviet side. If the Soviets side gives, then I am sure we will give serious consideration to any serious proposal of theirs." But when asked directly if the United States was locked in on its "zero-zero" plan, Nitze replied, "I won't answer that question." Under the zero-zero plan, the United States would cancel deployment of 572 cruise and Pershing II missiles in Western Europe in return for the Soviet Union dismantling 590 intermediate- range missiles targeted at Western Europe. MOSCOW HAS offered to reduce its arsenal to 162 missiles - matching the number of French and British missiles - if the U.S. deployment is canceled. The American proposal calls for the Soviets to remove the 245 SS-2 missiles they have deployed in the European part of the Soviet Union in exchange for cancellation of the deployment of 572 new American Pershing 2 and cruise missiles. Meanwhile, the leaders of West Ger- many's Social Democratic Party urged the United States yesterday to offer the Soviet Union something more than its "zero option" plan for reduction of nuclear missiles in Europe. BUT THE LEADER of the conser- vative forces in the campaign for the March 6 national election, Chancellor Helmut Kohl, said the zero option is the best way to re-establish the balance of power in Europe. The new leader of the opposition Social Democratic party, Hans-Jochen Vogel, told a party conference the Americans must show some movement in the Geneva talks. He said the Americans should respond with coun- terproposals to the Soviets' recent offer to reduce their arsenal of SS-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe if the Nor- th Atlantic Treaty Organization cancels its plans to start deploying new U.S. rockets in West Germany and othe European countries this fall. The Soviet rejection of this was em- phasized to West Germany's officials and public last week by Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko during an of- ficial visit. As an alternative, Soviet Communist Party chief Yuri Andropov on Dec. 22 offered to reduce SS-20 deployment to the total of French and British missiles, reportedly 162. But the SS-20s each have triple nuclear warheads, while the British and French rockets have single warheads. NITZE, TRYING TO blunt Soviet ef- forts to woo European support for its arms proposals portrayed Moscow as being more interested in arms buildup than arms control. "I go now to Geneval hopeful that the Soviets will see the folly of seeking to divide and intimidate our alliance," he said. Norway studies 'yout 51 OSLO, Norway (AP) - His classmates called him "the leper," because measles had left his 12-year-old body scarred. His mother said children ten- tied to blame him when things went wrong. One day, distraught, the boy took a rope and hanged himself. HIS DEATH and those last year of four other Norwegian boys, ages 10-14 have turned Norway's attention to the question of young suicides and what causes them. Three of the five were in the Arctic Circle town of Tremsee, the other two in Oslo, the capital. National newspapers attributed the deaths of the 12-year-old and at least one of the other Tromsee boys to "long- lasting harassment at and outside school." The 12-year-old's mother, who asked hot to be identified, told the Oslo newspaper Dagbladet that her son was harassed both in and out of school especially after he and a friend ac- cidentally set fire to an old empty house. "AFTER THAT he was blamed for every wrong thing that happened in our area. Other children always put the blame on him," she said. "Shortly before his death, he was acccused of having stolen some flower bulbs. I think that was too much for him." School Superintendent Alf Karlsen, quoting psychological experts, denied that any of the Tremsee deaths was caused solely by harassment. "But we realize the problem of harassment exists here, just as it exists at many schools in our country, and we have set up a committee which by Mar- ch will make proposals to combat it," Karlsen said. NORWEGIANS call harassment among children "mobbing," a word borrowed from English. "Mobbing" is 0 eides the common denominator for teasing and other forms of minor harassment as well as deliberate and systematic, even violent, persecution. Karlsen said the new committee in- cludes representatives of schools and organizations dealing with children's welfare. "The proposals will be directed toward pupils, teachers and parents alike," he said. "We must cooperate or all levels to solve the mobbing problem." PROFESSOR Dan Olweus of Bergen University, who studies school harassment and wrote a book "School Rowdies and Their Victims," estimates that between 25,000 and 30,000 children are harassed seriously in Norway every year, mostly at school. "The victims are usually the psychologically and physically weakest, the most emotionally unsure and anxious," Olweus said. "They fail to report the harassment because they are afraid of being treated even wor- se." Olweus' current project, in Sweden, is a study of whether harassment of children causes lasting harm. Nine hundred volunteers, victims of harassment and former admitted school bullies have been observed over several years and remain subjects of the research project. "THERE IS seldom only one reason for suicides among kinds, but harassment can often be a contributing factor," Olweus said. In Norway, there was an average of one suicide a year among every 100,000 children under 14 in the 1960s, 2 per 100,000 in 1971-75 and one per 100,000 in 1976-80. Since 1980, however, "It worries us that the rate in this age group has in- creased to 3 per 100,000," said Dr. Per Nyhus, head of teh National Center for - Children and Youth Psychiatry. Daily Photo by DAVID FRANKEL Prof. F. DeWolfe Miller examines an influenza culture in his University laboratory. Miller is looking for student subjects to help him perfect a new remedy for winter's worst - the flu. Researchers use flu outbreak to test drugw -HAPPENINGS Highlight Eclipse Jazz presents Ronald Shannon Jackson's Decoding Society tonight at the University Club. The Decoding Society "performs at the leading edge of today's innovative jazz, while hearkening back and incorporating the rich diversity of jazz history," says Weekend magazine of the group, which will perform at 8 p.m. and 10:30 p.m. Films Gargoyle-Lenny, 7:30 & 9:30 p.m., Hutchins Hall. Mediatrics - Victor, Victoria, 7 & 9:15 p.m., MLB 3. Hill St. - Brian's Song, 8 & 10 p.m., 1429 Hill St. Cinema Guild - The World According to Garp, 7 & 9:30 p.m., Lorch. AAFC - Women in Love, 7 p.m.; East of Eden, 9:15 p.m., Nat. Sci. Cinema II-Blade Runner, 7 & 9:15 p.m., Angell Aud. A. Performances Professional Theatre Program - "The Diary of a Madman," 8 p.m., New Trueblood, Frieze. Canterbury Loft - "Equus," 8 p.m., Residential College Theatre. UM Friends of Common Ground - Classical Jazz: A Symphonic Concert, Performance Network, 8p.m., 408W. Washington. Music at Michigan - Clarinet Recital, Robert Larm, 8p.m., Recital Hall. Ann Arbor Chamber Orchestra Society - Greek pianist Panayis Lyras, Beethoven's Piano Concerto No. 2 in B-flat, also Rossini and Haydn, 8:30 p.m., Michigan theatre. Miscellaneous Ann Arbor Go-Club - Meeting, 2-7 p.m., 1433 Mason Hall. Tae Kwon Do Club - Practice, 9-11 a.m., CCRB Martial Arts Rm. Recreational Sports - Focus on Fitness Weekend, noon -8 p.m., CCRB. Women Engineers - Crystal Mountain Ski Trip, details rm. 144 W. Eng. (Continued from Page 1) THE NEW DRUG, rimantadine, already is used widely in the Soviet Union, Miller said. It has been studied on both animals and humans in the United States. He said rimantadine is similar to and may even prove more successful than another flu remedy, amantadine, which is currently on the market. Rimantadine "has very few side ef- fects . .. fewer than the drug on the market today," Miller said. In the study, volunteers will be given New York bus crash kills 2, i " n 2injures From AP and UPI KINGSTON, N.Y. - A Greyhound bus bound for Montreal with 27 passengers crashed into a tractor trailer on the New York State Thruway yesterday, killing at least two people and injuring 22, authorities said. The front of the bus up to four rows back was jammed inside the back of the truck, according to reports from the scene. PASSENGERS in the first few rows of the bus were reported to be the most seriously injured and some were trap- ped inside for more than two hours. Emergency crews cut into the bus with "jaws of life" equipment to rescue them. At least 20 ambulances were called from as far away as Albany, six miles to the north and "all available EMTs (emergency medical technicians)" were asked to the scene two miles south of this Hudson Valley city. The accident occurred at 12:20 p.m., according to Art D'Isabel, a spokesman for the Thruway Authority. The bus had departed from the Port Authority in New York City, 90 miles to the south. KINGSTON Hospital administrator Anthony Triuldi said 10 to 12 "critically injured" people had been admitted to the hospital and more were expected.. .Another dozen passengers were admit- ted to Benedictine Hospital in Kingston. Steven McCardle, an emergency medical technician, was one of the fir- st to arrive at the scene. "Everybody's personal effects were all over the place," he said. "There werewa couple of them (passengers) that were obviously dead when we got here. We were handing them out the windows. At least 10 or 12 were trap- ped... and they were all critical." OFFICIALS withheld the identities of a bottle of either rimantadine or a placebo resembling the drug. During the five days volunteers participate in the tests they will be required to record theirtemperatures and report their progress, Miller said. THREE WEEKS later, volunteers will take a blood test to check for the presence of specific antibodies, he said. Students who wish to participate in the experiment must go to Health Ser- vices for a diagnosis at the beginning of their illnesses, Miller said. Reports from area convalescent homes, schools, and clinics alerted the researchers to the possible outbreak of influenza, said Dr. Caesar Briefer, director of Health Services. The first cases of influenza Type A were diagnosed in the middle of last week. To date, only 10 to 15 cases have been con- firmed, he said. Briefer said he isn't sure whether the outbreak is an epidemic, but the researchers wanted "to catch it early on" if it is. ''resource persons," as they are called in the course descriptions, have donated their time because of their firm convictions about the need for social change, which is the program's rallying point. Internal medicine Prof. David Bassett agreed. As the "resource per- son" for a course on conscientious ob- jection to taxation for war, Bassett said it was his duty as a physician to try to prevent war. "As someone concerned with alleviating human suffering, I cannot allow war to happen. There is simply no choice in the matter," he said. THIS IS NOT Canterbury Program's first try at running a free university. A similar program was begun in 1977. Ellis said the time is ripe to try again. "I see a resurgence of conscience," he said. "These things run in cycles. This is a pilot program to see if the free university concept appeals to (Michigan) students today." To publicize the program, Canter- bury Programs has requested $200 from the Michigan Student Assembly, though the program is not formally af- filiated with the University, according to Weber. Weber, who is also the editor of the MSA newsletter, said Canterbury made the request because the group feels that the Free University will have wide appeal among students. If all goes well, Ellis said he expects "several hundred" students to par- ticipate in the various courses. Canterbury Programs, which is run by the Episcopal ministry on campus, has a long tradition of social activism on campus, Ellis said. In the late '60s and early '70s it sponsored a cof- feehouse which served as a gathering place for people wanting to discuss political issues. HOUSING DIVISION RESIDENT STAFF APPLICATION FORMS FOR 1983-84 ACADEMIC YEAR Available Starting January 24, 1983 for Reapplying Staff Available Starting February 4, 1983 for New Applicants In Housing Office, 1500 S. A. B. POSITIONS INCLUDE: Resident Director, Assistant Resident Director, Resident Advisor, Head Librarian, Resident Fellow, Minority Peer Advisors and Graduate Student Teaching Assistant Advisory positions require the completion of a minimum of 48 undergraduate credit hours toward program by the end of the Spring Term 1983 for the Resident Fellows in Residential College, Resident Advisor and Minority Peer Advisor positions: Graduate status for Graduate Student Teaching Assistant in Pilot Program, Head Librarian, and Resident Director positions. However, qualified undergraduate applicants may be considered for the Resident Director positions. QUALIFICATIONS: (1) Must be a registered U of M student on the Ann Arbor Campus during the period of employment. (2) Must have completed a minimum of four terms or equivalent and 48 undergraduate credit hours toward program by the end of the Spring Term 1983. (3) Undergraduate applicants must have at least a 2.50 cumulative grade point average in the school or college in which they are enrolled by the end of the Spring Term 1983. Graduate applicants must be in good academic standing in the school or college in which they are enrolled by the end of the Spring Term 1983. (4) Proof of these eligibility 'Free university recalls spirit of the 1960s (Continued from Page 1)