JANE FONDA: 'THE REVOLUTIONARY' See Editorial Page Yl r e A&A httAa A& 471attly BLAND High-50 Low-35 Cloudy with a chance of occasional rain. Vol. LXXXI, No. 75 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Thursday, December 3, 1970 Ten Cents Eight Pages GULF OF MEXICO WELLS: Oil companies fined for safety violations' NEW ORLEANS UP) - Three major oil companies were fined more than half a mil- lion dollars in federal court yesterday after pleading "no: contest" to charges that they failed to have safety valves on: some offshore oil wells in the Gulf of Mexico. SGC p ledg9es- support to AFSCM-,E By ROSE SUE BERSTEIN Student Government Council last night voted to, support Local 1583 of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employes (AFSCME) in their contract negotiations with the University. AFSCME represents the University's 2700 service and maintenance employes. A strike is considered likely if no agreement is reached by Dec. 31, when the present contract expires. SGC called for the establishment of an SGC "Students to Support AFSCME" committee, charged with "organizing and educating students" on the issues involved in the AFSCME negotiations," investigating "other methods for aiding the A FIRE CONTINUES to burn o drilling platform in the Gulf of major oil companies charged wit others were convicted and fined, be tried at a later date. Florida, bli for oil slici JACKSONVILLE, Fla. UP-A square miles was located yester miles off north Florida. A spo U.S. Navy deliberately dumped The heavy black fuel oil po sandy beaches from near the the spokesman said. "This is not a spill; this is ges, director of the State Natu l Tallahassee. Lt. John Seay of the Florida -... ... .... ...The three companies - Humble' Oil Co., Union Oil Co., and Con- tinental Oil Co.-each received the maximum fine of $2,000 for each count in the indictments. A fourth company, Shell Oil Co., which is currently fighting a blaz- ing offshore oil well fire, pleaded innocent and U.S. District Judge Fred J. Cassiery said he would set a trial date later. The action came at an arraign- Sme it on mdictments brough by the federal government in Novem- ber. Humble was fined $300,000 on 150 separate offenses involving 33 offshore wells; Union $24,000 on 12 counts involving eight wells; and Continental, $242,000 on 121 -Associated Press counts involving 24 wells. ut of control at a Shell Oil Co. Shell is charged with 170 sep-' Mexico. Shell was one of four arate offenses involving 40 wells. h safety violations. While three No pollution was involved in any Shell pleaded innocent and will of the offenses. Firms were indict- ed after a grand jury investigation which stemmed from the massive Chevron Oil Co. offshore fire and oil spill last February. Chevron ~ mi-~ av y aid $1 million in fines after pleading no contest to 500 counts in that investigation. ct The government has said all the Ou coas companies are now complying with the law and emphasized that the offenses listed in the indictments massive oil slick covering 760 were for past actions. rday in the Atlantic Ocean 23 Asst. U.S. Atty. Julian Murray kesman for the state said the said, "I like to think of the fines it. as a deterrent and also that they )sed a threat along 50 miles of protect the people." "The efforts of the oil compan- Georgia line to St. Augustine, ies to cooperate with the govern- ment are commendable and so are a dump," said Randolph Hod- their efforts to clean their own' ural Resources Department at house," he said. Since the Chevron spill, which wentnuncontrolled for a month, a Marine Patrol described it as the federal Interior Department seen-much bigger than one has doubled the Gulf Coast Oil in- located Tuesday in the Flori- spection force and a further ex- day Keys near the underwater pansion is planned. The man who ordered the expansion, Walter J. Pennekamp State Park. Hickel, was fired from his post as "The way it's moving unless the U.S. Interior Secretary last week wind changes it looks like it will by President Nixon. hit the beaches," Seay reported. Hickel had also suspended fur- ther leasing of offshore oil sites The Navy at Jacksonville said until Dec. 15. There has been spec- it had dumped "a quantity of ulation that the Shell fire mightl sludge from two barges into the result in an extended suspension ocean" Monday night but Capt. of the leases. Don Dietz of Mayport Naval Sta-_ tion said this material is usually' about 90 per cent water. It was reported unofficially 11R s more than half a million gallons of waste oil was dumped from two. Navy barges. The official Navy statement said Cva e X mouth of the St. Johns River "has used this procedure for the past By MARK DILLEN two years. as required by the Oil Several students awoke yester- -Associated Press Pla'mondon arraigned Pun Plamondon, right, minister of defense of the White Panther .Party, leaves federal court in Kalamazoo yesterday after being arraigned on two charges of possessing false draft cards for iden- tification. Plamondun, already charged with par ticipation in the bombing of an Ann Arbor draft board, was arrested July 23 in the Upper Peninsula's Mackinaw County when officers stopped a car from which a beer car was flung onto the roadside. FINDS MARKLEY INADEQU ATE: Day careu- group plans the biggest oil spill he's ever move, 1t By SHARI COHEN The day care center which has operated on a temporary basis in Markley Hall since last summer will move to the Lutheran Stu- dents' Center in January. The move was announced in a letter from the day care center steering committee at last night's, Markley Council meeting. According to members of the steering committee, the center is moving because facilities at Mark- ley are inadequate and the Uni- versity has not acted to renovate them. The center is presently lo- cated in a Markley cafeteria which lacks room dividers, sinks and adjacent lavatories. "The University is not willing 'o n ew1t to take out any funds and dedi- cate them to day care and that's why we're moving," said steering committee member Judy Sharpl- ess. After negotiations with repre- sentatives of the day care group, the University offered the use of the Markley cafeteria for day care with the understanding that more suitable facilities would be sought. The center has a contract with Markley on a semester basis. A room in the Civil Defense Center on North Campus was con- sidered for a more permanent lo- cation, but a University official told day care representatives the; University thought that necessary renovations would be too costly. Use of salt on, road ie criticized By STEPHEN CORNMAN A University professor last night questioned the use of rock salt as a de-icer on Ann Arbor streets, claiming the salt is ecologically harmful. Prof. Rane L. Curl of the De- partment of Chemical Engineer- ing spoke at a public hearing con- cerning the effects of rock salt and alternatives to its use. Th meeting at City Hall was at- tended by about 50 people. Spec- ially appointed committee mem- bers, who will submit their recom- mendations to City Council Dec. 21, heard statements from towns- people, University professors and highway safety experts. Curl said the salt used on city strets contains a compound to pre- vent caking which releases hydro- cyanic acid. Under certain circum- See USE, Page 8 oca lion The day care group will have use of the Lutheran Center rent- free. Sue Erlich, another steering committee meimber, described the facilities there as better than those at Markley. The University provided the furniture and toys for .the center, which were moved from Univer- sity School to Markley last sum- mer. The day care committee has written education school Dean Wilbur Cohen, chairman of the University advisory committee on day care, asking that the Univer- sity move the supplies to its new location before Dec. 31. This would enable the center to operate after winter vacation. The center offers day care for children of University students, faculty members and other em- ployes. A nominal fee is charged. About 70 families use the cen- ter's facilities each month, with about 25 children attending reg- ularly. Staff members include two certified teachers, one paid aide, parents, volunteers, and students in Project Community (formerly Outreach) and work-study pro- grams in a number of fields. Representatives of the day care center will meet with state offi- cials next week with the goal of obtaining a state license. The center would like more funds to increase teachers' sal- aries and possibly expand their services. "Child care should be a right and not a privilege," claim- ed one committee member. cause of the Union" and ex-v amining in closer detail the Union demands. In moving to support the de- mands and the potential strike, SGC endorsed "the efforts of APSCME to win substantial wage increases, cost of living adjust- ments, increased insurance bene- fits, and better grievance proced- ures in their negotiations with the University." SGC further recognized "the need for students and workers to join together in an effort to make the University more responsive to their needs and those of the com- munity." SGC president Marty Scott pointed out that "the biggest func- tion SGC must perform is educa- tional. Unnecessary counter-p r o- ductive hostilities may erupt if the students don't understand the issues involved." Scott likened student support for the possible AFSCME strike to workers' support for last spring's Black Action (BAM) strike for in- creasd minority admissions. "Just as it was important dur- ing the BAM strike that workers understood what the students were doing, it is important now t h at students realize their mutual in- terests with the workers," he ex- plained. "Unless the students are pro- perly informed about the strike," Scott continued, "they may see the union as an evil force which wants to stop them from going to school." SGC's informational program, Scott said, will encourage stu- dents not to fill in for striking workers. It will also urge students to pressure University officials to give rbates for any services missed as a result of the strike. Council will meet in committee today to draft more precise plans for organizing, according to ex- ecutive vice-president J e r r y De- Grieck. In a related develoument yes- terday, student food service work- ers at Alice Lloyd Hall initiated an ad hoc committee to insure active student support for the workers in the event of a strike. In other action, SGC attacked th current non-academic disci- plinary procedures. Council moved to condemn "any and all proposals for a University judiciary which include a proced- ural panel with less than major- ity student representation in cases where a student is a defendant." SGC claimed such proposals violate the Bill of Rights of SGC and the Central Student Judiciary (CSP) constitution. The documents cited guarantee the right of students "in all non- academic cases, to be originally judged only by a judiciary drawn from and responsible to a demo- See SGC, Page 8 Garris to seek 'GOP candidacy The full text of Garris' state- ment appears on today's Edi- torial Page. By CARLA RAPOPORT Local attorney Jack Garris, a prominent conservative in city politics, announced yesterday he will seek the Republican Party nomination for mayor of Ann Ar- bor. Garris helped found the Con- cerned Citizens of Ann Arbor which formed during the summer of 1969 with the initial demand of prohibition of summer rock con- certs. The second person to file for the mayorship, Garrisjoins Lew- is C. Ernst in the race for the Republican nomination. Party pri- maries will take place in mid- February, with the mayoral elec- tion slated for April. A spokesman for the Republican party said last night that neither Garris.or Ernst carries the ppty's backing. He said. the RepuYicans will soon present a favored slate of candidates. Garris charged yesterday that the present city administration headed by Democrat Robert Har- ris, has "weakened" the founda- tion of life in Ann Arbor, making it "difficult, uncomfortable, and unsafe for law-abiding citizens to live here." He criticized several conditions which he claims exist in Ann Ar- bor, including: -scattered low-cost h o u isi n g which has "spread a blight In all neighborhoods, destroying 10 n g and hard-earned residential har- mony;" -the exposure of Ann Arbor youth to "pornography and smut" without the city government act- ing against it; and -the fear of violence and at- tack which families now feel, as well as the streets and parks "which are no longer safe or avail- able for use by Ann Arbor citizens. Garris said he would urge judges to set "bail bonds and sentences commensurate to the nature of crimes" in order to deter the oc- currance of further crime. He also asked an end to in- creased income tax for Ann Arbor citizens unless "we bring real tax relief to the property owner." iat go boom at night planation of officials Pollution Act of 1924. It is done about twice a quartet over 50 miles from land." This is similar to the traditional method of ships blowing their bilge at sea, the Navy said. State Marine Patrol officials said the slick parallels the coast between Nassau Sound, 15 miles north of Jacksonville, and Palm Valley, 40 miles to the south. day morning wondering if sounds that had disturbed their rest were dreams. Others who had spent the night awake, however, weren't so sure their senses had fooled them. They say it was an extraterres- trial visit by another form.of life.f And, because factual evidence of what really caused the "booms" in the early morning is nebulous, they stoicially refuse to yield to traditional explanations. SVietnamese -w omen prisoners accuse police of brutal treatment SAIGON (4P) -Two women in :.,:::::. ..:::::::: :::r::. :{ri};::r . ::.:. ., .. mates o f a South Vietnamese..".:::...:... prison charged yesterday that rot police beat and tear-gassed . ...:.......:. :":: >:......:.:.":-..::.}:,.: more than 100 women prisoners s t last week and threw lye or acid r': on the group. Both women are in a hospital in Saigon. They said they were among 416 female political prisoners at the Tan iep prison neat Bien m Hoa, 15 miles north of Saign. Some of the women had been R transferred recently f rom the.. ..f ' Yb C n Son Isa d prison and..:::: .r:. :,... .........:.. others from a4 prison at Thu:;< " :..: Due.. ::: According to the two women, Official sources, while neither confirimng or denying the occur- rence of the "booms," cannot point to any definite cause of the noises. They speculate such blasts could be caused only by a plane's "sonic boom," the noise caused when a' jet exceeds the speed of sound. The so-called "booms" report- edly occurred between the hours of 12 and 3 a.m. and were heard in various parts of the city. Some. reported the effect was "like some- one dropping a dresser on the floor above me." Others said strange vibrations accompanied the booms, rattling windows and furniture. Nearby police and aircraft in- stallations said some residents called to report the events. "We have a notation in our log at midnight last night that people called in to report a sonic boom," a spokesman at the Federal Aero- nautics Association at Metropoli- tan Airport said yesterday. "It was obviously a sonic boom caused by military aircraft." However, the spokesman said he had seldom heard of sonic booms occurring near Ann Arbor. At Selfridge Air Force Base in Mount Clemens, the only nearby installation having aircraft cap- able of exceeding the sound bar- rier, spokesmen said no flight from their base caused the re- ported "boom." Both the Ann Arbor Police and "There's no record of anything like that on our shift logs," he said. "One is probably right in assuming such a noise was a mil- itary aircraft." Despite these assurances, many were still trepidatious. "I'm very certain those were men from Mars or Venus," said one student. "Be- sides, I was up then and saw these strange flashes of light as each 'boom' reverberated in my mind." Others were less certain the un- explained noises were the product of intelligent life from other worlds. "Sure, I heard a blast," com- mented one. "But then again, I hear lots of strange sounds." Mrs. Robben on Dec. center. Wilbur Cohen and Mrs. Fleming are giving a tea 9 to benefit the day care PETITIONING FOR AFSCME Student group to support union By SARA FITZGERALD With the approach of a possible strike by the University's= 2,700 non-academic employes, an ad hoc committee has been created to provide active student support for the workers. The University is currently negotiating a contract with Local 1583 of the Ameri- can Federation of State. County and Municipal Employes (AFSCME) which represents the University's service and maintenance workers. committee, made up mostly of student workers and a few members of SDS col- lectives, will man tables at meal' lines in the dorms, collecting signatures for a pe- tition they have drawn up. The petition expresses dissatisfaction with "the oppres- sive nature of the University's relationship with the workers." The petition goes on to declare support for the workers "at this stage of their endeavors" and in the future. Student petitioning is "generally in- students are now." He indicats the group can then decide what steps to take to in- crease the awareness of students.I "We want to put pressure on the Uni- versity because we don't think the union's demands will be met," Clinton asserts. "The University doesn't think the un- ion will get the' support of students." he says. He believes student support will help the union if it decides to strike. In addition to petitioning, the group is' circulating leaflets which describe some of