I CHINA See editorial page Eighty-Nine Years of Editorial Freedom :43 at PUDDLES High-64 Low--40s See Today for details v..l I YVYIY "J 1Qd i ... i _ . Vol. LA AIAN, OI- 4 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, March 20, 1979 Ten Cents Twelve Oages S. Africa protest repercussions begin Assembly condemns Regent R " disruption By HOWARD WITT By an overwhelming majority the Senate Assembly voted yesterday to condemn the actions of the more than 200 students who disrupted last week's Regents meetings. The demonstrators, urging University divestiture from South African corporations, prevented the Regents from conducting their regular meetings last Thursday and Friday. The Assembly voted 32-2 to approve the censure resolution, introduced by Chairman Shaw Livermore during the "new business" portion of the Assem- bly meeting. THE RESOLUTION "condemns the actions of those who interrupted and forced the cessation of regular business" at the Regents meetings, and acknowledges that "the Assembly was disturbed by (a similar) planned in- terruption of a lecture here by former Israeli official Yigal Allon last Decem- ber. Livermore, the only faculty member present at last Friday's restricted Regents meeting, said he initiated and drafted the resolution, 'but that it was approved by the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs (SACUA) yesterday afternoon prior to the Assembly meeting. SACUA member Larry Jones voted in favor of the resolution. "I don't accept the fact that disrupting a meeting is the way to make voices heard. It is counter- productive," he said. NURSING Professor Patricia Scear- se, one of the two dissenting Assembly members, was concerned that the resolution had not been distributed to the Assembly. "Not having seen it, I See SENATE, Page 5 Group to challenge closed Regents meeting in court Daily Photo by DAN OBERDORFER 18th District Democratic State Senator Edward Pierce (left) and Ann Arbor Democratic Representative Perry Bullard (right) discussed University funding with the Senate Assembly yesterday. Assembly chairman Shaw Livermore (center), later introduced a resolution, which passed 32-2, condemning last week's disruption of the Board of Regents meeting. Students camp out for dorm lists By MITCH CANTOR and MARK PARRENT Washtenaw County Coalition Against Apartheid (WCCAA) members have taken . preliminary steps' toward challenging the court order which allowed the Univ.ersity Board of Regen- ts to meet behind closed doors last Friday. The initial meeting was disrup- ted by demonstrators advocting Universitydivestment from firms that do business in South Africa. Local attorney, Thomas O'Brien agreed to represent the group after meeting with several coalition mem- bers Sunday. THE TEMPORARY restraining or- der, which banned over 200 protesters from attending the Regents meeting that afternoon, was granted after testimony from only the University's side of the conflict. The order, issued in Washtenaw County Circuit Court by visiting Judge Harold Van Domelen, would probably allow the Regents to hold semi-private meetings in similar disruptive situations "unless there is a hearing or further order of the court," according to University General Coun- sel Roderick Daane. Interim University President Allan Smith recessed the public hearing in the Administration Building for a second and final time Friday after the disruption made communiction among the Regents impossible. Friday marked the second day of protests at the meeting by students and others opposed to University investments in firms: doing business in South Africa. The order, issued at 2:05 p.m., was read to the demonstrators as they oc- cupied the Regents room. They then peacefully left the building vowing to return to the next meeting in April. ALTHOUGH A hearing on the order has not yet been scheduled, "you can rest assured that we'll be going to court about it," said O'Brien. "It strikes at very fundamental rights," he added. "You don't go around suspending the Constitution on the basis of the allegations of one side." Possible consequences of the up- coming hearing are unclear. Some ob- servers speculate a decision in favor of the coalition could void the business transacted in the semi-private meeting, to which only selected members of the press and others invited by the Regents were allowed to attend. O'Brien said such a decision "is within the realm of possibility," while the University counsel Daane declined to comment on the matter. "I DON'T know what it would take to tell the board 'You have to go back and do it all over again,' " said Pat Murphy, administrative assistant to state Attor- ney General Frank Kelley. Murphy added that the restricted ac- cess meeting allowed under the court order may be the first of its kind since the 1977 enactment of the Michigan Open Meetings Act. Before the confrontation Friday en- See WCCAA, page 5 FSCME orkers vote ,o extend contract By RON GIFFORD Meeting last Sunday afternon in the Michigan Union Ballroom, members of the American Federation of State, Municipal, and County Employees (AFSCME) Local 1583 approved their bargaining team's request to extend for 15 days the terms of their present con\ tract, which expires today. The bargaining team, led by Bargaining Chairman Art Anderson and union President Dwight Newman, also outlined the union and University econpmic proposals, which the two sides exchanged late last week. SEVERAL MEMBERS of the bargaining team said the negotiations are going well up to this point, and called the membership's action Sunday a "vote of confidence" in. the bargaining team's efforts. Dave Mit- chell, representing AFSCME District Council 25 in the talks, said more has been accomplished in the 19 ,hours of negotiations held so far this year than in hundreds of hours spent talking at the last contract talks, held in February See AFSCME, Page 9 BY PATRICIA HAGEN Students with sleeping bags and pillows, armed with books and playing cards camped in the lobby of many University dormitories over the weekend in hopes of being near' the top of the waiting list to live in the dorm of their choice in the fall. The students - mostly dorm lottery losers and dorm residents wishing to transfer between residence halls - all have leases at one of the Univetsity's many housing units. But the students, some of whom began their vigil as early as Friday evening, were waiting in line for the prime spots on the list that didn't officially begin until yesterday morning at 8:00. ONCE AGAIN, more students wanted to live in the dorms than there were leases for those dorms. The University reserves so many dorm leases for in- coming freshpersons, and returning students who wish to compete for the remaining spaces must go through a dorm lottery. The students who lost in that lottery were mostly able to find vacancies in other University housing, like Oxford and Baits, but desire to transfer the new lease back to their old dorm. Other students who joined the long lines for the wait list had won the lot- teries in their present dorms, but wan- ted to switch to a new dormitory. Places in the dorms usually become available due to transfers and drop- outs. IN PREVIOUS years, the Housing Office controlled one, central line for waiting lists for all the dorms. This year, however, each dorm started its own separate waiting list. "We thought it might be easier for students," ex- plained Housing Advisor Marlene Man- tyk. With the new system, students don't have to camp out weekends in one long line outside of the Student Ac- tivities Center. Markley was the only residence hall that reported any problems with the new system. Despite an official statement that no lines would be recognized before 8:00 a.m. Monday, lines were started on Friday evening in the lounge next to the building directors office. The first students in the line organized a separate list and check-in system for men and women. By Sunday evening, 25 men and 10 women were See STUDENTS, Page 9 Township signs pact for new sewage plan By ELISA ISAACSON In the second major step in the city's plan to officially define its boundaries, city council last night approved a resolution validating a boundary and sewage treatment agreement with Scio Township. A similar treaty was signed earlier this year with Pittsfield Town- ship. Locking in the city's borders is one of MayorLouis Belcher's pet projects, which he said will be.completed when the remaining townships adjacent to the city have also signed peace treaties. A map accompanying the resolution indicates the land designated as Scio Township property will be serviced by Ann Arbor's soon-to-be-expanded sewage treatment plant. The ownership currently uses septic fields to dispose of its sewage. The agreement states the township will pay the city a monthly service charge, 103 per cent of the amount charged Ann Arbor. The city will only be responsible for the cost of the sewers facilitating it and the township, under the agreement. These sewers will be constructed by Utilities Department Guidelines. Scio Township would have to receive approval from the city for any new housing or commercial complexes that Tuesday " Saying Energy Secretary James Schlesinger is shackled by an "impossible" energy policy, Congressional Republicans yesterday proposed creation of an energy czar. See story, Page 2. " An unusually calm 16mm Film Festival wound up Sunday, night by screening the week's big prize winners. See Review, Page 7. * Purdue demolished Alabama. 87-68. in one NIT semi- might make use of the sewage facilities, under the agreement. The city reserves the right to restrict any additional areas from using the facilities, but promises to accept waste material from the designated township area, provided the daily flow does not exceed 2.05 million gallons. To prevent possible damage to the sewage facility, only "normal" residential, commer- cial, and industrial sewage will be ac- cepted. In most cases, the sewage charged .will be computed according to water meter readings. Referring to the use of the meters, Councilman David Fisher (R-Fourth Ward) made a comment of See A2, Page 9 f Ann Street historic district approved By ELISA ISAACSON City Council adopted an ordinance last night designating the 500-600 block of East Ann Street the "Ann Street Historic Block," and, in further action, passed a resolution in support of the proposed University Hospital Replacement Project. The East Ann Street designation is tIle culmination of a year and a half long study by the Division Street Historic District Study Committee and labels the 500-600 block of the street and // Bush criticizes Marxist expansion By MICHAEL ARKUSH and KEITH B. RICHBURG Special to the Daily DETROIT-Republican presidential candidate George Bush warned yesterday that American strength and prestige in the world have severely declines, particularly in Asia and Africa, which has led to the proliferation of Soviet-backed Marxist countries in those areas. Addressing a packed luncheon crowd at the Detroit Economics Club, Bush blamed the Carter Administration's "lack of resolution and strength" for the emergence of communist satelittes in Angola, Ethiopia, Iran, Yemen, and Afganaistan, and offered a "new era of leadership" that could reverse that tide. "FROM THE PLAINS of the Congo to the plateaus of Persia, we see the '. advance of Marxist doctrines. From the sands of the Sahara to the snows of >,y g the Himalayas, we see the Marxist-Soviet influence," Bush said. Bush is one of the most versatile past employees of Republican ad- ministrations. He was director of the Central Intelligence. Agency (CIA) and was U.S. Ambssador to the United Nations under Richard Nixon. Bush, once elected to Congress from Texas, expects to announce his formal candidacy "within a couple of months," but yesterday's speech and earlier news con- ference seemed to give an early peek into his campaign platform. Displayhing the traditional Republican rhetoric, Bush outlined a series of goals that he said the leaders of the American government must adopt to reverse the flow toward communism and rebuild the country's power in global affairs. The proposals dealt specifically with the economy and the declining free enterprise system whose resurgence he insisted is integral to a stronger America. He urged the government to move toward the following Daily Photo by DAN OBERDORFER; goals: y* TO ACHIEVE A balanced budget in order to stop the inflation which is Presidential hopeful George Bush says U.S. influence has eroded under the eroding America's economic system and is diverting capital from the Carter Administration. He addressed the Detroit Economics Club yesterday. See BUSH, Page 5 Dorm presidents pooi ideas By JOHN GOYER Dorm government leaders can now swap housing woes and work out the similar problems plaguing dorm residents since the creation of the Dorm Presidents Organization. The organization, formed last month in order to resolve some of the University's 17 residence halls. "We represent a quarter of the student body right here," Singer said. The Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) recognized the Dorm Presidents Organization at its February 27 meeting, and appointed MSA member Bill McNee to attend the organization's At the first meeting, several dorm presidents became excited and said they realized that they could do something about problems such as ob- taining outside funding and collecting unpaid dorm dues. AT THAT first meeting, many said they had problems organizing an effec- tension, alcohol use, student apathy, and money. AT SUNDAY'S meeting, presidents were told how to obtain MSA funding and put hold credits on a student's ac- count if he/she doesn't pay dorm dues. Dorm presidents also agreed that dor- ms ned a newsetter tn nulicize un-