POST-ELECTION COMMENT See Editorial Page S4ir rigau iOAIaiI4 RECALESCENT Hgh-58 Laow-32 Fair, no snow Vol. LXXXI, No. 152 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, April 7, 1971 Ten Cents" Eight Pages REVIEW OF CASE:. Calley prosecutor hits Nixon sta { r' 1 t r -Daily-Jim Judkis Indian culture Prof. Sibanarayan Ray of the University of Melbourne, Australia speaks on Indian intelligentsia and culture last night at the Interantional Center as part of a Discussion Group on India program. LAOS TRAIL: tement WASHINGTON UP) - Capt. Aubrey Daniel III, prosecutor in the trial of Lt. William Calley Jr., has written Presi- dent Nixon that his interven- tion in the case-"in the midst of public clamor"-has dam- aged the system of military justice. Daniel said in a letter to the President, with copies to six sen- ators, that he was shocked and dismayed at Nixon's action. He said it opened the system of mili- tary justice to charges "that it is subject to political influence ..." He said Nixon has enhanced the image of Calley "as a national hero .. Daniel said it would have been more appropriate for Nixon to speak in behalf of the jurors, and to "remind the nation of the pur- pose of our legal system and re- spect it should command ... "For this nation to condone the acts of Lt. Calley is to make us no better than our enemies and make any pleas by this nation for tle humane treatment of our own prisoners meaningless," D a n i e wrote. Calley was convicted of the pre- meditated murder of 22 South Vietnamese civilians in the My Lai incident -- which, Daniel noted, Nixon once said "appears was cer- tainly a massacre." "In view of your previous state- ments concerning this matter, I have been particularly shocked and dismayed at your decision to intervene in these proceedings in the midst of the public clamor." "Certainly no one wanted to believe what ,occurred at My Lai, including the officers who sat in judgment of Lt. Calley. To believe however that any large percent- age of the population could believe the evidence which was presented and approve of the conduct of Lt. Calley would be as shocking to my conscience as the conduct itself, since I believe that we are still a civilized nation. "If such be the case, then the war in Vietnam has brutalized us more than I care to believe. And it must cease." Meanwhile, the Los Angeles Times reported yesterday that at least half of the six Army officers who convicted Calley and sen- tenced him to life imprisonment are having second thoughts about the severity of their decision. At Fort Meade, Md., Col. Oran K. Henderson's defense counsel claimed yesterday that Henderson was inadequately warned that he was suspected in an alleged cov- erup when he testified during original investigations . into the My Lai incident. CI Cty coup officer $ By JANET FREY City Council acted last night on the status of controversial C i t y Grievance Officer Edward Van- denberg. rCouncil approved an additional budget appropriation of $3,300 for Vandenberg, with the understand- ing that the money would be used to complete work on complaints already received by the grievance officer. In addition, council postponed for one week its decision on the Bird Hills rezoning petition, fol- lowing the report of a citizen C r. c i; a s ;S s t e x c iv .x la -Daily-Jim Judkis S. Viets raid base on Communist route, By The Associated Press South Vietnamese commandos riding U.S. helicopters made a lightning raid against a North Vietnamese base on the Ho Chi Minh trail in Laos yesterday as President Nixon prepared for his announcement tonight of a new round of U.S. troop withdrawals from Vietnam. The raid into Laos, by Hac Bao (Black Panther) troops was the second hit-and-run raid in a week. Saigon headquarters announced that the 200-man com- pany of Vietnamese troops found the bodies of 15 North - Vietnamese soldiers apparent- *., ~ 7 ly killed by U.S. air strikes. A South Vietnamese communi- que said a number of assault rifles, anti-aircraft guns, tons of rice and h s Wother foodstuffs were destroyed by the commandos. Elsewhere, North NVietnamese i By JONATHAN MILLER troops kept up pressure against' In an unprecedented on-the-air U.S. and South Vietnamese troops protest of the firing of a fellow in the northern and central sec- dpoe Wtors of South Vietnam. Delayed disc-jockey, WNRS/WNRZ disc- jockey. Mike O'Brien told listeners reports told of heavy fighting in yesterday afternoon, "I've always I eastern Cambodia. wondered how I'd end my broad- .In Vietiane, the Laotian admin- istrative capital, the Defense Min- casting career but if someone be yh lieves in something .then they have' istry reported that North Vietna- tosand upnoit soner thy lae" mese and Pathet Lao forces have to stand up for it sooner or late. overrun seven government posi- O'Brien made his sharply worded tions in northern Laos. statement, and announced he was President Nixon secluded him- "boycotting" the station on his self with staff members yesterday, regularly scheduled broadcast soon in the final stages of putting to- after hearing of the firing of Larry gether tonight's troop withdrawal Monroe. He left the air imme- announcement. diately afterwards. Although there is wide specula- Monroe, the disc-jockey who was tion that he will announce an ac- fired yesterday morning, said he celerated pullout, the White House was told of his dismissal "effective kept strictly silent on both what immediately" in a telephone call he will say and on unofficial esti- from staticn manager Lou Skelly. mates on the figures he would See WNRZ, Page 8 come up with. ie Radical slate i* winning vote inBerkely BERKELEY, Calif. (N-A moderate white attorney and three radicals led the race for four Berkeley City Council seats in early returns this morning. A ballot initiative to split Berkeley police into separate departments for black, white and student areas trailed by nearly 2-1 with 28 per cent of the precincts counted. . In the race for mayor, a black city councilman who en- dorsed the radical slate for council led a moderate black 5,914 to 5,400. A conservative white with 16 years service on the City Council trailed with 1,228 votes. Most, of the early returns were believed to be from pre- dominantly white districts and absentee ballots. Highest voter turnouts-85 per - Burgess speaks at U' Celebrated author Anthony Burgess addresses an overflow crowd in the UGLI's multipurpose room yesterday. The prolific British writer, currently teaching at Princeton University, has authored sev- eral best selling novels, and is a renowned authority on the life and times of William Shakespeare. MEAGER SUPPORT: RIP plans for uture after election letdown By CHRIS PARKS although he was "disappointed attributed the low totals to the Despite a disappointing v o t e with the number of people who difficulty in getting votes in. a, total in Monday's city elections, wrote-in for RIP," considering the write-in campaign and what he members of the Radical Independ- difficulties the party had faced he terms an "effective scare campaign ent Party (RIP) express confi- felt it "still has a future in Ann by the Democrats." dence in the party's future in Ann Arbor." Nissen claims the party's "ac- Arbor politics. Party member Steve Burghardt tual support" is much greater The party garnered 161 votes for says the results "weren't that than the figures show. RIP City Council candidate Jerry bad," citing the party's recent He asserts that statements by, De Grieck in the Second Ward and origins bnd the traditional prob- Democrats claiming they were 53 votes for mayoral candidate lems in building a political organ- running a close race against con- Doug Cornell. ization. servative Republicans convinced; De Grieck said last night that Party spokesman Steve Nissen many radicals to vote Democraticl -_ __-_ __----_ --__-in order to stop the Republicans.' "1The party plans to participate in the June school board election, 1 ii rants rievance but no decision has been made yet whether to nominate candi- dates or merely to endorse inde- pendent candidates. Another party concern is the committee, formed recently by group which claimed that it had However, Mayor Harris asked City Council, which will study the raised $90,000 in pledges to help that action on the rezoning ordi- possibility of a city c h a rt e r the city buy the land for a park. nance be postponed for one week, amendment allowing local third As of last month, Vandenberg until representatives from the cit- parties on the ballot. had already overspent the $12,000 izens group could meet with the The party plans to work tnroug. allotted to him in the current owners of the land, developers, its representative on the commit- budget, because of the unexpected- and a representative from the city tee, Eric Chester, for both recog- bugtl aree eauenubr fofte oplitsuexete-administration. nition of the party on the ballot ly large number of complaints he Harris explained that if the de- and a council election system in received against city employes and veloper intended to build under which representation would be departments. the present zoning requirement of based on the percentage of the At that time, council agreed to single-family dwellings instead of votetreceived by each party in the pay him for additional time he the condominium units, or if the elections had already spent on complaints, owners refused to sell the land to Nissen says that this would pro- but asked for more information the city at a reasonable price, the vid asystem in which voters before appropriating more money h itya esnbepie h could vote for RIP candidates fn t.hp ro-, io ing moe mni ey I . 9l 000 nledged would be useless. . See RIP's, Page 8 ±U b I I . . r- -- - --- -- cent to 93 per cent--were reported at polling places in the " affluent hills area around the Umvershy of California campus. Turnouts of 75 per cent to 85 per cent were reported from precincts in middle class integrated ares and the campus area. Predominately black west. and south Berkeley precincts were slowest bringing in. returns. A new computerized tabulation system, requiring two trancrip- tions of ballots slowed returns but election officials said there were no breakdowns. The radical slate's platform in- cludes a police partition plan' which would create thr~ee separate police departments in black, white and student areas. The police chief has said that if it passes, virtually all Berkeley policemen would re- sign. The radicals have gained na- tional attention over their plat- form, which also includes new city' services for the poor, including rent control on apartments, child care centers and a city income tax instead of the property tax. Mayor Richard J. Daley of Chicago was elected to his fifth straight term, building an over- whelming margin against a chal- lenger who had accused him of be- ing out of touch with the people. Daley ran up a better than 2-1 plurality over Richard E. Fried- man, 41, the Democrat-turned- Republican who challenged t h e mayor's 16-year reign as one of "bricks and mortar." The final unofficial vote t o t a 1 showed Daley with 735,787 votes, for 69.82 per cent of the ballots cast, to Friedman's 318,059. In Kansas, voters approved granting the franchise in all elec- tions to persons over 18. Housing unit studies hiring I SAgovt. I proposals By GERI SPRUNG Students and faculty members discussed proposals that would in- volve students in governing t h e literary college at an open hear- ing yesterday. The proposals, drafted by a stu- dent-faculty committee, wou1d create either a student-faculty le- gislativetcouncil or a student- faculty policy committee. The two plans will be considered at t h e April 12 meeting of the literary college faculty. Last week a nearing on the is- sues of the proposals was held to allow discussion before the pro- posals are brought before the fa- culty. 'Because of the sparse attend- ance at that hearing, however,' yesterday's hearing was planned. One proposal provides for a legislative council composed of 40 faculty members and 40'stu- dents. The council would assume the legislative functions present- ly exercised by the LSA faculty, but any actions would be subject to faculty review. A second proposal would set up a student-faculty policy commit- tee with the power to introduce legislation to the faculty for ap- proval. Faculty members attending yes- terday's meeting, which was also poorly attended, tended to favor the second proposal over the plan for a parity council. "It seems unfeasible," one fl- culty member said, "to go immed- iately from no student input to tremendous student input and to expect the faculty to enormously curtail its power. "I will be very surprised," he added, "if the majority of the faculty is going to. permit sui- cide." However,, students favoring the first proposal argued that students will only be able to participate ef- fectively in any governing b o d y if they have some "real" power. Faculty members brought up ar- guments that the students do not have as much at stake in the University as faculty members, since students only spend f o u'r years here. They contended t h a t although student input is import- ant, other considerations suggest that parity is not necessary. Students responded that they do in fact have as much interest as faculty in the University. By MARCIA ZOSLAW The Office of Student Services Housing Policy Board yesterday authorized a, subcommittee to study the feasibility of permitting both students and administrators to have veto power in decisions concerning the hiring, promotion, and firing of University Housing staff members. Presently such decisions are made jointly by both students and administrators depending on the level involved, but neither group has veto power. John Feldkamp, director of Uni- versity Housing, argued that the present policy is better since it avoids abuse of the veto by both students and administration. He See BOARD, Page 8 or Le rs fLi wu er The administration had request- ed an additional appropriation of $5,000 to enable Vandenberg to act on new complaints as well, but Roy Weber, Republican from the Fourth Ward, proposed a one-third reduction. 'This allows funding for only those projects Vandenberg h a s already begun. Some councilmen have objectedj to Vandenberg's work on the grounds that not enough concrete results have been demonstrated and that Vandenberg is doing work that should be the respon- sibility of the various department heads. Council was also presented with a report from the Bird Hills ParkI Fund Group, which claimed to have the required $90,000 in pledges Council said it needed in its fight to prevent the building lvv V, V Vv I V - - Nv v+vvv COMPLAINTS VOICED Studen ts criticize U' Towers By HANNAH MORRISON The arrival of high-rise, high-density apartment buildings on campus in recent years has been greeted with skepticism by many students who question the quality of such housing. As the first high-rise to be built, Univer- sity Towers has sometimes been the subject of criticism. Recently, for example, the management of the 240-unit structure at the corner of S. University and S. Forest has received complaints by residents about safety and health conditions. blame for various problems won't soothe anyone," he says. "However," Vaitkus adds, "the manage- ment attempts to respond to complaints on an individual basis, as best as possible. We are not trying to hide any faults with smoke- screens or delaying tactics." Some tenants, however, feel that the man- agement is unresponsive to their needs., One student says, "The manager stalls around and refuses to see me. It just doesn't seem the right attitude." "He has a tendency to talk around prob- lems," comments another. Aw- N ;;: