CALIFANO'S COP-OT See editorial page V' P Ltxtt iE~ai1v DOWNPOUR High-upper '30s Low-lower 20s See Today for details Vol. LXXXIX No. 76 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, December 8, 1978 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Carter to brief allies as SALT treaty nears WASHINGTON (AP) - President Carter aid yesterday he will brief leaders of France, 3ritain, and West Germany on details of a iearly complete strategic arms agreement at a idwinter summit in the Caribbean. He said the United States and Russia are eparated in the SALT talks by only minor dif- erences, which he can see a way to resolve >rovided the Soviets are willing to continue vhat he called "steady progress" in the talks. It was announced yesterday that Carte and he three European leaders will meet Jan. 5-6 n extraordinary privacy on Guadeloupe, which s French territory. DISCUSSIONS ARE to range over a wide variety of subjects, including SALT talks, but no public announcements or daily news briefings are planned. Carter told reporters at a breakfast meeting at the White House that he plans to discuss U.S. SALT proposals "in final form" as well as the remaining points of dispute, "if any." "I doubt if we will have a final agreement to go over with the other European leaders in Guadeloupe, but we will have the SALT proposals that we have in almost final - our proposals, probably, in final form, when we get to Guadeloupe, and an accurate description to the other leaders of the remaining differences, if any, at that time," Carter said. I have been pleased recently with the progress being made oan SALT. Th e remaining (if- ferences are minor, compared to what they were a year ago, and in m y m indh, I can see a way to resolve them.' -President Carter "I HAVE BEEN pleased recently with the progress being made on SALT. The remaining differences are minor, compared to what they were a year ago, and in my own mind, I can see a way to resolve them," he said, adding, "If the Soviets are adequately forthcoming, I would guess that any further delay would be minimal." He said there has never been a time in SALT talks where the two parties retrogressed. "There has been steady progress," he said. The President said the four leaders had agreed to the January meeting last July, when they had a similar get-together during an economic summit that also included Japan, Canada and Italy. Carter said French President Valery Giscard d'Estaing issued the invitation to meet on Guadeloupe. Also attending will be West German Chan- cellor Helmut Schmidt and British Prime Minister James Callaghan. Each of the four leaders will be accompanied during the meetings by only one assistant. Car- ter is taking his national security adviser, Zbigniew Brzezinski. "We wanted to meet in an unstructured way," he said, recalling that the private sessions held in Germany last summer were very helpful. $25 drinking fine passed by state House By MICHAEL ARKUSH The Michigan House of Represen- tatives voted overwhelmingly last night to decriminalize the possession of alcohol for 18- to 20-year-olds who violate the state's new drinking age law. But the lawmakers' action left un- clear whether the localities can still adopt more lenient - or stricter - penalties. The bill now goes to the state Senate. The bill, sponsored by state Rep. Perry Bullard (D-Ann Arbor), would subject -first time offenders to a maximum $20 fine, while those convic- ted for the second time could receive a fine of up to $50 and a possible sentence to an alcoholic treatment center. BUT UNLIKE ITS original version the bill does not mention whether local authorities must obey the state's restrictions or can establish their own ordinances. Bullard said he would con- fer with state Attorney General Frank Kelley's assistants to determine who should have jurisdiction. But Bullard said the issue may eventually have to be decided by the state Supreme Court. "We're continuing to research the matter and we'll try to get whatever will give the best power to local gover- nment," said Bullard. The Ann Arbor representative added that since the state currently makes no reference to the power of local authorities, it would be up to city of- ficials to decide how to enfore the recently-passed ballot proposal, which raised the drinking age to 21. "SINCE THE city police department must get direction from the local government, any law not prohibiting local officials from making their own enforcement guidelines could be inter-. preted by the city any way they want," said Bullard. On Monday night, Ann Arbor City Council passed at first reading an or- dinance which would establish a $5 penalty for those violating the new law. City Attorney Bruce Laidlaw said yesterday that council would probably pass the lenient $5 fine on second reading unless the state legislature in- tervenes and orders it to adopt the new guidelines. "UNLESS SOMETHING precludes the field of possibilities, the council will keep the $5 fine just like they voted for 'Since the city partment must police de- get direc- tion from the local gov- ernment, any law pro- hibiting local officials fron making their own enforcemen t guidelines could be interpreted by Robert Giffel of Kalamazoo wonders about a Michigan license plate starting with the letters PBB. Polybrominated Biphenyl (PBB), a toxic chemical, was accidently added to Michigan cattle feed several years ago, resulting in agri- ' steer cultural and political disaster. "The state should recall those plates," Giffel says. the city want.' any way they NLRB OKS PLAN FOR AFFILIA TION: -State Rep. Perry Bullard Cellar workers to vote on union By JULIE ENGEBRECHT and SHELLEY WOLSON University Cellar employees will have the chance to vote on union af- filiation with Industrial Workers of World (IWW) January 23. The election date and voter qualifications were set yesterday, at a meeting between Cellar management representatives, IWW organizers, and National Labor Relations i Board (NLRB) representatives. ALL EMPLOYEES will be eligible to vote except those who are classified as managerial personnel and seasonal employees - those who work during book rush. Yesterday, Cellar management disputed six Cellar em- ployees' qualifications to vote, asser- ting that the six were in managerial positions, and therefore ineligible to vote. The six will be allowed to vote, but these disputed votes coulti become significant if there is a close vote in that January election. Some 50 out of 75 Cellar employees had filed authorization cards with the NLRB Nov. 20. Only 30 per cent - about 25' signatures - were necessary to qualify for an election. During yesterday's meeting, Cellar management and union organizers traded disputes of eligible voting em- ployees in order to pare down the list of employees with questionable voting,, status. AFTER THREE hours, agreement was finally reached on all but six of 15 initial disputes, and Cellar management consented to a date for the union vote. IWW organizer Eric Glatz said the management action of refusing to recognize the union without a vote - as well as the denial of employee raises while hiring a lawyer at $40 per hour - was a "bad act of faith on the part of the board of directors," and one which was also unfair to the present union mem- bership. Meanwhile, Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) Vice-President Kate Rubin announced she plans to introduce a resolution to the Assembly Tuesday, urging the University Cellar board of directors to recognize the union. "IN MY MIND, the process the board has decided to go through with is just a stalling actioh," said Rubin. "It is clear there were enough people in the union to mandate their (management's) cer- tification." Rubin said MSA is liable for all University, Cellar losses. She also said if the Board of Directors for University Cellar "had wanted to be cooperative, they could have been. There may have been some anti-union feeling behind their actions, but of course I can't prove anything. "This just gives the University another opportunity to fight unions," Rubin added. SIX OUT OF ten members of the Cellar Board of Directors are MSA- appointed, but they haven't been atten- ding board meetings regularly, accor- ding to Rubin. "The student members have not been attending the Board of Directors' meetings. if they don't vote the way MSA wants, that's reason for dismissal," Rubin warned. She stressed that Cellar unionization is not a students vs. workers issue and said the employees' unionizing attem- pts pointed to some need for restruc- turing. "Workers have the right to organize and we want the store to be a good one for students," stated Rubin. Cellar Assistant Manager John Sap- pington said Cellar unionization will be helpful, and not harmful to students. "The union will have no effect on ser- vices and won't reduce what's available to the students. It will be a matter of determining structure of the store and the best way to handle it," said SaR pington. it on Monday. It's exactly the same situation as the marijuana issue," Laidlaw said. Mayor Louis Belcher was unavailable for comment yesterday, but City Councilwoman Leslie Morris (D-Second Ward) said she would have See HOUSE, Page 2 'U' grad hits CIA' mind control method S a moff supporters vow to bo cott Pol. Sci. classes By RICHARD BERKE Marxist political economist, was denied By VICKI HENDERSON Sirhan Sirhan could have been a programmed assassin acting in a hyp- notic trance when he murdered Robert Kennedy in Los Angeles in 1968, accor- ding to Marty Lee, an investigator of mind control techniques. Lee, a 1975 Michigan graduate, spoke last night in Schorling Auditorium on mind control drugs used by the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). He is working with the .Assassination Infor- mation Bureau based in Washington, a non-profit' organization investigating the use of these techniques in relation to political assassinations. IN AN INTERVIEW prior to his speech, Lee said, "Government has See LEE, Page 2 The Health Service Hand- nk dicusses the nrnhlem of Twenty-six students have signed an pen letter declaring their intention to boycott political science classes in pro- test of the department's refusal to grant tenure to Assistant Prof. Joel Samoff. The letter, signed by members of the Samoff Student Support Committee and several Michigan Student Assembly MSA) representatives, said the tenure denial results from the department's "distortion of the broad education fun- ctions" of the University. The Samoff n-mnnthizers called for more student. tenure in part because of his Marxist political views. IN RESPONSE to the announced boycott, Political Science Department Chairman Sam Barnes said, "that cer- tainly would be their privilege." Signers of the letter said that through boycotting political science classes, they will in effect be withdrawing their financial support of the department. This, they said, gives added leverageto the verbal and written protests they have made in opposition to the depar- Lee Moslem Arab nations back Shah NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) - Conservative Arab kingdoms with strong Moslem traditions are lending moral support to Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi in his struggle with religious nnf nnj if e fn Iran. ONE OF THE PURPOSES of Hussein's recent mission to Tehran, the sources disclosed, was to obtain the shah's go- ahead for the medintion effort Hssein the sources noted. shin splints and how you can -- - - _ - 1- - - - --.r - 12 A -