MILITARY RESEARCH MANDATE See Editorial Page Y 41i'tr tgan ~~IAti DEMORALIZING High-45 Low-35 Cloudy and windy Vol. LXXXI, No. 151 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, April 6, 1971 Ten Cents Eight Pages student to be prosecuted under interim ru les Charges set in incident at Ad. Bldg. By TAMMY JACOBS Invoking the controversial Regents' interim disciplinary rules for the first time since Stheir formulation in April, 1970, University a t t o r n e y Craig Christensen has form- alized a complaint against John Eustis, '73, for actions stemming from a Feb. 19 de- monstration outside the Ad- ministration Bldg. Eustis is also being tried in civil court on charges of assaulting an officer during the February de- monstration, which began when a crowd of students were prevented from entering the Regents meeting in" the Administration Bldg. One of the key provisions of the interim rules provides for adjudication by a hearing officer appointed by the' University Pre- sident. Accordingly, President R o b b e n Fleming has appointed Theodore Souris, a Detroit attorney and a former Michigan Supreme Court Justice, to hear the case against Eustis. The hearing is scheduled for April 14, at 9:30 a.m., at North Campus Commons. How- ever, the complaint might be con- tested, according to Eustis' lawyer, 'Denny Hayes. The charge was originally brought by University fire mar- shall Russell Downing last month. In accordance with procedure as set in the rules, the charges went *first to Alfred Sussman, acting John Eustis Dean of the literary college, in which Eustns is a student, and then to Christensen. Christensen, in accordance with the rules, had one month to de- cide if the charge would have va- lidity asa complaint. "We just check to see whether if the facts 1 alleged are true, they would vio- late any of the rules," Christen- sen said yesterday. Christensen found three of the rules applicable. Those rules forbid "use of force or violence against any member or guest of the Uni- versity community; interference *by force, threat or dureess, with the freedom of movement of any member or guest of. the Univer- sity; and disruption of interrup- tion of a duly authorized Univer- sity activity, andrecruiting inter- views." Downing had charged that Eus- 4tis violated the rules by "strik- ing the Complainant (Downing) in the right shoulder with his fist and by seizing the Complainant's hat and striking the Complain- ant in the face with said hat," the complaint stated. See 'U', Page 2 * * * * * * * * * * * * a r r Dems Faber wins in Second Ward race By W. E. SCHROCK Democratic victories in three of the five City Council ward r a c e s guaranteed that re- elected Democratic M a y o r Robert Harris would have a sufficient number of Demo- crats on Council to uphold his power of veto. The Republican Party, however, captured the Fourth and Fifth Wards, thus breaking the two year majority of the Democrats on Council. In the Second Ward, the so- called student ward, incumbent Democrat Robert Faber easily de- feated Republican challenger Don- ald Robinson, while Radical In- dependent Party (RIP) write-in candidate Jerry De Grieck caught a small percentage of the total vote. Democrat Norris Thomas, pre- dicted to be a sure victor over Republican Edward Rutka in the First Ward, beat him by a healthy 3,433 to 1,798 votes. The Democrats needed to cap- ture either the Second or the Third Wards to retain enough seats on council to uphold Har- ris' power of veto. They won both of these, however, with Faber downing Robinson by 1,690 to 1,350 votes in the Second, and Nelson Meade defeating Repub- lican Peter Wright by 3,754 to 3,179. Republicans R i c h a r d Hadler and John McCormick defeated Yeste Democratic hopefuls Gilbert Lee vided t and Donald Warren in the Fourth surprise and Fifth Wards respectively. from b Hadler defeated Lee 3,094 to 2,415, and th while McCormick defeated War- seat Ma ren 3,155 to 2,424. Inste In the Second Ward RIP can- backlas didate De . Grieck received 161 tremei votes, approximately what an- for the alysts expected. pectedl See FABER, Page 8 crats. of drug S WASHINGTON (P) - In a ma- Norm jor "bugging" decision, 'the Su- has a r preme Court yesterday gave gov- son wit ernment agents permission to will not send informers into the homes of the po narcotics suspects with hidden ra- templat dio transmitters and to use the Thei recorded conversations for prose- making cution. Justice Moreover, said Justice Byron R. plaintiv White in the 6-3 ruling, the agent William does not need a search warrant "Muste since there has been no invasion every v of "constitutionally justifiable ex- transmi pectations of privacy." I ter repe re-elected b large seats, margin; win 3 council peep veto Harris wins in 60 per cent voter turnout By LINDSAY CHANEY Democrat Robert Harris won his second term as mayor last night as he overwhelmingly defeated Republican candi- date Jack Garris by a 4,500 vote margin. The mayoral victory was the largest Democratic win in the history of Ann Arbor with Harris outpolling his opponent in the first three wards and running close in the other two. The total vote was 15,789 for Harris and 11,158 for Garris. With 60 per cent of the electorate voting, the Democrats also won three of the five council races-much better than was expected. "I think it's just great that we won," said Harris as he proclaimed victory. "The Republican party wanted a test of conservatism versus liberalism and they found out what the answer was." - -Daily-Jim wallace Harris celebrates at Democratic headquarters Large Dem vote, by GOP determine By JIM BEATTIE For more than any single fac-' Executive Editor tor, it appears that the heavy; Daily News Analysis turnout of Democratic voters in rday's c i t y election pro- the first, second and third wards the city with a host of provided the Democrats with their es, as the promised threats margin of victory. oth the Republican right In a similar fashion, the mod- e radical left failed to un- erate Republican's abandonment ayor Robert Harris. of their rightist mayoral candi- ad, an apparent liberal date, Jack Garris, added a large h against both of the ex- part of the margin by which Har-t positions assured victory ris was re-elected. mayor and for an unex- Jack Garris, the Republican y high number of Demo- candidate, last night blamed his poor showing on a massive turn- rallows out of students. But it that this analysis was shallow. First of all, the abandon Garris by the Republican1 the form of crossovers to was fairly uniform througl city. Secondly, the high Den turnout, while significant dent-populated areas of t ond Ward, was perhaps m nificant in the First ant Wards, areas whose residE primarily non-student. !uggin ,ossovers 0 victor appears In the First Ward, for exam- rather ple, voters in traditionally Demo- cratic black sections of the city ment of turned out in very high numbers, party in and voted almost strictly Demo- Harris cratic. Thus, Garris' claims of dis- hout the contentment in the black com- munity for the Harris administra- mocratic tion failed to surface. in stu- In the more Republican sections he Sec- of the First Ward, however, more dost ir- than one Republican in 10 crossed in Third over to the Democratic ticket. tets are In the student (and Demo- cratic) areas of the Second Wards few voters crossed over from the Republicans to the Democrats. g However, about 160 of 175 cross- overs switched from voting Dem- ocratic for mayor but for Radical Independent P a r t y candidate SJerry De Grieck. inJVery few of those who wrote mnthe RIP candidate for City Council voted for the radical an al- party's mayoral candidate. eighbor- In the Republican areas of the ward, however, about 200 voters he test once again split their tickets be- ewerage tween votes for Harris and ballots te and for the Republican City Council d for a candidate, Donald Robinson. out the In the Third Ward, the heavy and fed- turnout proved most significant, rkawan- as voters in this marginally Re- for the publican area of the city not only returned a Democrat to City e court Council, but also gave Mayor Har- aturaliz- ris a plurality of 1,200, 1,000 votes abroad greater than they had in the last if they mayoral election. Garris conceded defeat at 10:30 last night. In a telephone call to Harris, he offered his congratula- tions but said he would still criti- cize the mayor's policies. Later, Garris called the Demo- cratic victory a "tragedy for Ann Arbor." "This summer the city will be sorry it turned down the Repub- lican program," he said. Garris attributed his defeat mostly to voter complacency. "The townspeople were so sure that Harris would lose, they sat on their hands," he said. "They're going to cry when they wake up in the morning," he added. Garris also said, "there were too many student votes," a factor which he said contributed to h i s loss. In the predominantly student Second Ward, Harris received 2,- 124 votes to Garris' 1,074. Harris also racked up a large majority in the heavily black First Ward where he received 3,783 votes to his opponent's 1,399. In the Fourth and Fifth Wards, where the Republicans won t h e council seats Harris lost by a small margin. In the Fourth Ward - considered a Republican strong- hold - Harris lost by 29 votes, 2,884 to 2,855. In the Fifth Ward, the mayor lost by 121 votes - 2,522 to 2,401. Before yesterday's election, most observers rated the mayoral race a toss-up. An unknown factor was See HARRIS, Page & China adds to Laos forces WASHINGTON (A) - The Peo- ple's Republic of China has sent another 4,000 to 6,000 troops into northern Laos in recent months, Pentagon sources reported yester- day. The sources estimate Peking's military strength there has risen to between 18,000 and 20,000 men, about double last year's number. U.S. officials said it appeared the reinforcement were intended I mainly to build up protection for Chinese engineer troops working on a major road project leading from South China's Yunan Pro- vince toward the Mekong River and for defense of the road itself. SGC Unit hits Daily edit poiIcy By MARK DILLEN Student Government Council has become involved in a dispute with The Daily on whether the content of the campus newspaper can be regulated by SGC. The dispute is focused on a rule passed by Council in February as part of the "election code" used in last week's campus-wide elec- tions. The rule states that "when a pub- lication endorses candidates and states reasons for its endorsements, and there is no comparable media, then the endorsement and reasons should be publicized soon enough before the election that the candi- dates not endorsed can reasonably answer the charges in the time re- maining." In addition, the rule states that "the publication should offer "at least equal and fair time or space" for the responses. According to Robert Kraftowitz, editor of The Daily, the news- paper's Senior Editors are in agree- ment with the "thrust of the rule" and will try to handle future en- dorsements in the manner sug- gested.- However, Kraftowitz adds, the Senior Editors believe that SGC does not have the authority to es- tablish a regulation concerning election endorsements. Under the Regents bylaws, the Senior Editors of The Daily are given complete authority over the editorial content of the newspaper. The dispute between The Daily Senior Editors and SGC emerged on March 28, the day The Daily published its recommendations for the campus-wide elections. At a meeting of Council's Cre- dential and Rules Board, later that day, SGC Elections Director Bob Nelson filed a complaint against The Daily charging it with violat- ing the rule concerning endorse- ments. Noting that the next issue of The Daily was on Tuesday, See SGC, Page 2 uspec is con versat(iou ally, White said, no one ight to expect that a per- h whom he is conversing reveal the conversation to dice, especially "one con- ing illegal activities." ruling, two years in t h e and avidly sought by the Department, evoked a e dissent from Justice O. Douglas. He asked: everyone live in fear that word ,he speaks m a y be tted or recorded and la- ated to the entire world?" Justice John Harlan and Thur-' good Marshall entered separate dissents saying the Constitution dictates t h e need for a search warrant. Meanwhile, the court indicated strongly that it will provide no comfort for local officials who try to zone out blacks from white residential areas. The forceful hint came in the court's unanimous rejection of an attempt by the mayor and city council of Lackawanna, N.Y. to block construction of a housing LIFE UNDER BOMBING subdivision for blacks in most exclusively white n hood. The city claimed in t case that already taxed s facilities were inadequa that the land was neede park. Silently throwing appeal, the justices let sta eralcourt rulings that Lac na officials must prepare project. At the same time, th split sharply and ruled na ed American citizens living can lose their citizenship don't take up residence United States for five year The decision, given by fr JusticeHarryA. Blackmu rectly concerned Aldo Mar lei, 31, an electronics e who was born in Italy and ited his U.S. citizenship fr mother. Bellei, who works for N England, has visited the States five times and re for the draft but has not c with a 1952 federal lawt live here for fiveyears a point between the ages of 28. Blackmun said these n i7Pad citiens. nlike native Thousands By FRED BRANFMAN Dispatch News Service VIETIANE, Laos - Sustained U.S. bombing of Laos has made refugees out of an estimated 65,000 tribespeople here, many of them abandoning their homes for the second and third time. The flow underscores a population move- ment in Laos involving an estimated 750,- 000 people since 1967. Over 1000 inter- views with refugees from communist zones flee homes~ in Laos Refugee reports are supported by such eyewitness accounts as those of Le Monde correspondant, Jacques Decornoy, who visited the Pathet Lao stronghold of Sam Neua province in the spring of 1968; by U.S. Senate studies issued by the Ken- nedy Subcommittee on Refugees; a paper prepared by a U.N. expert here; thous- ands of documents detailing deaths and material losses on file in Lao government offices; photos of bombed-out towns stor- however, regular bombing of villages be- gan, largely by American jets, and most were evacuated. Raids increased consider- ably after November, 1968, when jets were diverted into Laos after the bombing halt over North Vietnam. Refugees uniformly report that t h e y 'cannot count" how often the planes came in 1969, that they might bomb as often as 5 or 6 times on a given day. As a 60 year n,1 msn mitt.+ "+ a n1nianpc namva ikra +ha in the rs. reshman inn, di- rio Bel- engineer d inher- rom his ATO in United gistered omplied that he at some 14 and natural- e bnvnl Students charge 'political bias as Flick's Bar refuses service By GERI SPRUNG Five University students are filing a complaint today against three policemen, charging the police with failure to enforce the civil rights law when a local bar refused to serve the students Friday night. The complaint arose after a waitress at Flick's Bar, 114 W. The complainants said a wait- ress told Chester he must pro- duce his draft card along with other identification. When Chester could not pro- duce it, the complainants report, the waitress commented, "Oh, I decided three years ago I wouldn't serve you anymore" and left. "TrhP musae.it" Nicn an im-m. -omnuma