Page 8-Wednesday, August 13, 1980-The Michigan Daily 6 6 orj the sa gui col ab pu He the ca de tha to Hello Guinness The Guinness Book of World Records can chock up another contribution for County Park to stack up 43 picnic tables pyramid-style, to beat the old record next year's edition. Pranksters took advantage of Muskegon's Twin Lake of 36. Their feat was acknowledged in an apologetic letter to park officials. MOVE IN SUPPOR T OF SIMILAR BRITISH SOCIETY U.S. group to print suicide guide LOS ANGELES (A?) - A new months before the book was finished guide. hasn't been applied," said Humphry, ganization dedicated to the right of and said plans for its distribution are There was no immediate comment on who was questioned by British police in terminally ill to "self-deliverance" incomplete. the proposed book from the California connection with' his 42-year-old wife's id yesterday it intends to publish a In London on Monday, Exit said it attorney general's office. death by drug overdose but was never ide to suicide. The announcement would not publish its booklet because Scott suggested the law may be out- prosecuted. mes' a day after a British group attorneys had advised group officials moded. andoned plans for a similar they could be prosecuted under a law. "THERE IS NO shortage of infor- HUMPHRY, SCOTT and Hemlock making it a crime to aid or abet a mation in this culture on how to commit president Gerald Larue, a religion blication. suicide, suicide," he said. "You can't watch TV professor at the University of Southern Members, of the Santa Monica-based AN 1873 SECTION of the California for three hours without seeing several California, stressed repeatedly that the mlock society told a news conference Penal Code contains a similar examples." group does not advocate suicide as a eir book will consist of euthanasia provision, but Dr. Richard Scott - an He said the means of death in the solution for emotional problems or even se histories, including methods of attorney, licensed physician and mem- Hemlock book would be "less ap- as the best way to deal with a painful ath, and will be less overtly clinical ber of Hemlock's advisory board - said palling ... than already depicted on terminal illness. an the controversial 30-page, "Guide "we would certainly contest any soap operas." "We're not advising people to die," dthdelvr ne bok l tb annBu prosecution" challenging the Hemlock "The law is there in America, but it Humphry said. " group Exit. BUT HEMLOCK director Derek Humphry, a Britishauthor who detailed his cancer-stricken wife's suicide in a 1978 book entitled "Jean's Way," said the Hemlock volume, being written by him and his new wife, Ann Wickett, "does help people to under- stand waysg9f self-deliverance." Humphry said it might be several a f FLEDERMAUS The University of Michigan School of Music Opera Theater POWER CENTER August 14-16 at 8:00 p.m. August 17 at 3:00 p.m. Tickets at PTP-Michigan League Noon-5:00 p.m., M-F Visa/Master Charge by phone- 764-0450 Democrats ratify 1980 platform (Continued from PageS)[ Reagan's current position on major issues with more conservative stands he took as governor of California. "The same Republicans who are talking about the crisis of unem- ployment have nominated a man who once said - 'Unemployment insurance is a prepaid vacation plan for freeloaders.' That nominee is no friend of labor." WITH HIS VICTORY at the Democratic National, Convention assured, President Carter spent most of yesterday fishing and working on the speech he will deliver Thursday night accepting his party's presedential nomination. While aides said he was working on the speech, two photographers spotted the president fishing in a stream several miles from Camp David, the presidential retreat. He spent about an hour fly fishing, standing ankle-deep in the mountain stream. But work on the speech was apparen- tly the theme of his five-day visit to the retreat in the Catoctin Mountains of Maryland. He consulted Monday with Hendrik Hertzberg, his chief speech- writer, who was summoned to Camp David on Sunday evening. z THE PRESIDENT is flying to New York City early Wednesday morning by way of Newark IntrotiQnal Airport.A Marine helicopter will carry him ac- Jimmy Carter." cross the Hudson River to the conven- Mayor Coleman Young of Detroit, a tion city, for his 50-hour visit. tireless Carter partisan, said he expec- While there was discord at the con- ted Kennedy's support for the Carter vention, a good many of the losers were ticket, telling an interviewer: "There's signing on with the ticket. Mark Hogan, no place to go except Ronald Reagan." the Colorado state chairman and a "Togetherness 1980" buttons Kennedy man, said he was ready to put sprouted on the lapels of Kennedy sup- on a Carter button. "I truly do not want porters from California, and party bitter,. hateful divisions now," he said. leaders urged unity behind Carter as "And with 'Ronald Reagan' as a sort of the convention took up the platform at rallying cry, we will be able to re-elect its second session Tuesday. Still no eontraet for TEU 0 0 (Continuedfrom Page2) our belief that AATA management cooperated in putting out this letter in hopes of dividing Union members." Ettinger said that comparing han- dwriting makes TEU leaders think the' letter was written by one of the three "scabs" that AATA hired during the strike. She said the letter's dark spots made it appear to have been duplicated on the copier of AATA's Downtown In- formation Center, and added that "Many TEU members have new home addresses (to which the letters were sent) that they did not write dawn on their original applications. The only people with access to these addresses are AATA management personnel." "We waited a long time to make:this public," Ettinger explained, "But since Simonetta is now trying to fire some of our members for swearing on the picket line, we think we should let the public know what dirty business is being done by AATA people." Simonetta denied that AATA management had anything to do with the letter. "I certainly don't have anything to substantiate what she said," he said when contacted at home last night. "If; as I believe, only Union people were involved in putting out that letter, I don't think TEU should drag AATA into their own problems." He added that he would cooperate fully should TEU decide to further in- vesxigate thenatter.;, ,z{