The Michigan Daily-Friday, May 9, 1980-Page 3 Local SCeneae OF COURSE, TH EY MAYBE WATCIHNG YOU, TOO Watching the detectives By NICK KATSARELAS A light rain fell on the city of Dearborn that early Saturday evening. Joe Booth, a private detective, walked to the back of the beer warehouse and quietly unlocked the door. The vault in the warehouse had been blown open several times by safecrackers-"yeggs" as Booth calls them-and the owners of the warehouse had hired Booth to capture the burglars. Booth was completing his third week hiding in the warehouse, waiting for the return of the safecrackers. "There were no lights in there," Booth remembers. "But your eyes get used to it." After waiting a few more hours, Booth heard some noise, and as he watched and listened carefully, he knew his safecrackers had returned. WITH GREAT PRECISION and speed, the safecrackers went about' their business. Booth waited for and heard the deafening explosion, which the safecrackers set off with nitroglycerin. After the safecrackers collected the money, Booth heard one burglar say to the other: "Do you think there's anybody here?" "If there is," his cohort replied, "we're gonna blow away his head." Quietly, Booth crept closer to the men, drew his gun, and shouted, "Alright! Get your hands up!" THE TWO MEN ran, and as they ap- proached the steel door leading out of the warehouse, they turned and shot at Booth, who was protected behind the twisted steel remains of the safe. Booth then leaped from behind the safe, aimed, and shot, hitting one of the safecrackers. "He went down," Booth explained, "and he screamed and screamed. The other guy had run off." But the injured man, bleeding badly, managed to pull himself up, slammed the door behind him, and disappeared into the darkness. FOUR DAYS LATER, the safecracker was found dead beside railroad tracks near the warehouse. "It was kill or be killed," Booth said matter-of-factly. Thus ended one of the more in- teresting adventures of Joe Booth, a 60- year-old private investigator from New Hudson, Michigan, who has been in the detective business for 24 years. Booth is one of 300 private eyes in the state who offer their services to suspicious spouses, serve subpoenas, and find wit- nesses in civil and criminal matters. These private detectives are surely an inimitable breed, for they must be far more patient than most and willing to involve themselves in matters many wouldn't dsre pursue. ACCORDING TO Emily Conrad, of- fice manager for Investigative Associates, Inc. of Ann Arbor, the firm gets "a lot of custody cases," in which a parent hires a private eye to determine whether the other parent-usually the mother-is fit to care for the child. Conrad said that the investigator might watch the individuals as they go to and from work and follow them into bars and restaurants. The investigation terminates either when the spouse runs out of money or when the investigator finds something out. Clare LeFerier, of LeFerier Security and Detective Agency in Yp- silanti, said because of no-fault divorce laws, fewer individuals hire detectives to gather information which might prove helpful in divorce proceedings. BUT RICK MALIS, a detective for Security Services, Inc. in Farmington, said that often "girls call up and ask me to check on their boyfriends." "People are just more or less suspicious of everyone these days," he added. Other non-criminal matters which a detective may be employed to in- vestigate include checking on a person. who is collecting workmen's compen- sation, and background and credit checks. CONRAD SAID HER agency is often employed by attorneys whose clients have been accused of rape and who claim they are innocent. "What we try to do," explained Conrad, "is prove the woman asked for I Q it-that she enticed (the assailant) or is promiscuous." Most of the private detectives agree that surveillance is a fairly dull part of their job, because it usually entails many hours-and often days-of sitting in a car watching, or following the path of, a person. But then there are those few investigations which have all the excitement of a ""Rockford Files" episode or a detective thriller. And 60- See PRIVATE, Page 11 l .-" v^ Thousands expected a By BONNIE JURAN according to Morrow. As many as 100,000 people are ERA has been ratified by 35 states; expected to march through the streets three more states must approve it of Chicago tomorrow and participate in before it becomes a constitutional a rally to gain support for the Equal amendment. Rights Amendment, according to THE MAJORITY of the marchers National Organization for Women will be dressed in white, to members. commemorate the suffragettes who The marchers will be trying to worked "for 100 years" to give women convince Illinois legislators to vote in the right to vote, NOW volunteer Amy favor of ERA in the upcoming state Finck said. congressional action on the proposed Participants in the march will be amendment to the U.S. Constitution. grouped by home state; Michigan will ACCORDING TO Margot Morrow, most likely be the third state in the assistant director of the University procession, NOW vice-president Sue Honors Program and ERA chairwoman Smith said. for the Michigan NOW chapter, ERA The Equal Rights Amendment states supporters expect victory in the Illinois "Equality of rights under the law shall house and senate when each chamber not be denied or abridged by the United votes on the amendment this month and States or by any other state on account next, of sex." Three-fifths of the legislators in both DETAILING THE history of the ERA chambers must vote in favor of ERA in movem ent, Morrow said a order for it to pass. The Illinois "statement of legal equality" was first legislature has already considered formulated by suffragette Alice Paul passage of the proposed amendment almost 60 years ago. It ws not until the several times, coming within a few years following World War II, however, votes of passing it on ach occasion, that Congress began to hold hearings on t Chicago ERA rally the proposed amendment, which was ERA would destroy the American passed by Congress in 1972. By 1975, 34 family, Morrow said. states had ratified ERA, and Indiana brought that number to 35 in 1976. These groups began a "campaign of Following the rapid ratification of distortions," according to Morrow, who ERA by such a large number of states, said the organizations tried to convince groups such as the John Birch Society people ERA would lead to co-ed and Stop-ERA (organized by noted bathrooms, mandatory same-sex ERA opponent Phyllis Schlafly) argued underwear, and broken homes. Pro-ERA men's group to attend Chicago march By BONNIE JURAN offshoot of a larger, more loosely- If Nic Tamborriello has his way,a structured group cslled the Men's significant number of those marching Alliancefor Liberation and Equality in tomorrow's ERA rally in Chicago (MALE). Although the organization will be men, Tamborriello, a member ,focuses on men's issues, Tamborriello of Men Allied Nationally (MAN) for said, it is also "totally supportive of the S A Nwomen's movement." ERA. hones to see at least 100 members MANY MEN ARE subjected to of his organization, and a great many stereotyping in much the same way more from outside his group, women have been, Tamborriello said. participating in tomorrow's rally. The "provider trip" foisted upon men Organized in 1977, MAN for ERA is an See MEN'S, Page 17