FORD'S JUSTICE See Editorial Page Bk Da itip SUMMERY High-85 Low--b2 See Today for details Vol. LXXXV, No. 5 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, September 10, 1974 Ten Cents Ten Pages IF YOU SEE MNE-UFLPP8~t BALL DAILY Ford stalls reaction to I on amnesty as pardon snowballs Ferency sues Human Rights Party gubernatorial candidate Zolton Ferency has come out swinging against his opponent, Governor William Milliken. Ferency yesterday filed a suit in InghamiCounty Circuit Court charging Milliken with "illegally and un- ethically" raising campaign contributions on state time with public facilities. Milliken has denied the charge. Voter problem Sixth District Democratic Congressional hopefuls John Reuther and Dr. Edward Pierce have entered the fight to end what they term "blatant" discrim- nation in voter registration. Both joined the Human Rights Party in criticizing a decision for- bidding voter registration for students while they register for classes in the Waterman Gymnasium, and blasting City Clerk Jerome Weiss' decision to prohibit door-to-door registration. They called on Ann Arbor's Republican Congressman, Marvin Esch, to protest the measures. Oo ps! the Daily mistakenly reported on Saturday's Sports Page that Bob Ufer broadcasts Michigan football for the WUOM radio station. Actually, he is a football broadcaster for WPAG. The Daily regrets the error. Happenings .. . . . . are largely political, beginning with a triple happening for Michigan voters. Human Rights Party gubernatorial candidate Zoltan Ferency will speak at West Quad's Michigan House lounge at 6:30 p.m., East Quad's South lounge at 8 p.m., and Markley's Angela Davis Lounge at 9:30 p.m. HRP candidates Diane Hall and Marty Wegbreit will also be on hand . . . the National Organization for Women wil sponsor a session on "Women and Credit" at 8 p.m. in the First Unitarian Church. State Senator Gil Bursley (R-Ann Arbor) and feminist attorney Allyn Ravitz will speak . . - a campus-wide informational meeting for AFSCME will begin at 7:30 in the Stratford Rm. of the Crystal House Motel . . . employes of the Uni- versity are invited to attend a clericals rally at 7 p.m. in the Michigan Union . . . Project Out- reach will hold a mass meeting at 7:30 p.m. in Hill Aud. You must attend to register for the 2-credit course . . the astronomical film festival will begin this month with "Cosmic Zoon," "Crab Nebula," and "Skylab," at 8 p.m. in MLB Aud. 3 . . and finally, at 7 p.m., University Housing Director John Feldkamp will appear on WCBN- FM program "Talkback." Students will be able to phone in questions. Nixon turns author Don't waste any tears on whether former Presi- dent Richard Nixon will be able to meet his back taxes. Nixon is planning to write his memoirs- and with the profits he makes, he'll be able to make ends meet. According to his literary agent, Irving Lazar, the planned book will make an easy $2 million. Lazar predicted a sale of 10 million copies in paperback, and at least 500,000 in hard- cover. Lazar says he has visited Nixon, and the former president wants "to make his voice heard loud and clear." More pardons While President Ford's pardon of Richard Nixon has subjected the new President to his first on. slaught of criticism, there's at least two members of Middle America who couldn't be more delighted. A Grand Forks, N.D., judge as liberated two men from the county jail in response to Ford's action. "This court is determined to present an act of clemency to any and all prisoners serving jail sentences for convictions in this court for the commission of any criminal offenses," declared the Judge Kirk Smith. He then freed John Smith, with 50 days remaining in his sentence for drunk driving, and John Kleinsasser, serving 15 days for a traffic charge. Elementary A new element has been discovered-but exactly who discovered it remain unclear. Russian scien- tists claim they discovered it last month. American scientists claim the Russians' claim of finding the element lacked firm evidence. The Russians dis- covered it, they announced Monday, when they successful identified the particles the 'new element gives off during its brief existence. Until they discover who discovered it, its name apparently, will be simply Element 106.' Element 106 has a half-life of nine-tenths of a second-then it turns into an isotope called Element 104 0 On the inside . . ... Arts Page features an interview with blues artist Luther Allison and also a wrap-up of the Ann Arbor Blues and Jazz Festival in exile. Sports Page will give you all the info on last night's Notre Dame-Georgia Tech football clash School Strike settled By DAVID BURHENN A few extra days of summer vacation for Ann Arbor school children ended yesterday when 1,000 striking teachers tenta- tively ratified a new one-year contract. Bargainers for the school board and Ann Arbor Educa- tion Association (AAEA), which represents the teachers, reached agreement on the new pact at 5:15 yesterday morning after over 24 hours of continuous bar- gaining. TWO HOURS later, teachers almost unanimously ratifed an outline of the contract, and by 9:30 a.m., students were head- ing back into their classrooms for another year of school. The AAEA had proposed a two-year contract on Saturday, but union president Daniel Bur- roughs said that the "doubtful economic situation" prevented negotiators from r e a c h i n g agreement on 1975-76 terms. Both the school board and the teachers will vote soon to offi- cially ratify the new contract, the details of which have not yet been made public. THE DAILY learned that. the pact includes the following pro- visions: -a salary range from a $8,650 minimum for bachelor de- gree holders to an $18,850 'max- imum for teachers with a mas- ters degree. The board also agreed to pay a 5 per cent con- tribution toward teacher retire- ment; See TEACHERS, Page 7 Crowds boo President WASHINGTON (Reuter) - President Gerald Ford, suddenly embroiled in a row over his pardon of Richard Nixon, yesterday postponed indefinitely a decision on the controver- sial issue of how to deal with America's Vietnam war draft evaders and re- sisters. The decision was an- nounced by new acting press secretary Jack Hush- en, who told reporters the President wanted more time to consider the issue. H U S H E N ' S announce- ment came as the President found his month-long honey- moon with Congress turning sour and the wounds of Water- gate reopened because of his pardon Sunday of former Presi- dent Nixon. Ford's press secretary, Jer- ald terHorst, also quit in pro- test at the move. TerHorst says other Ford aides misled him. See story, Page 10. The pardon and its timing roused passions that had been subsiding since Nixon resigned on August 9. Italso raised ques- tions about the political impact and about otherrWatergate fig- ures serving prison sentences or waiting trial. FORD himself had his first personal experience of public feelings when he journeyed to Pittsburgh yesterday morning to speak to a conference of U.S. urban transport officials. For the first time since he became president, he was booed and confronted by demonstrat- ors chanting "no more cover- up" and "prosecute Nixon." Others carried placards saying, "Does Ford know the meaning of justice." Some of the crowd, however, cheered him warmly. Ford had been expected to announce today the terms un- der which the thousands of Viet- nam draft dodgers and resisters now in self-imposed exile aboard can return home without fear of prosecution or imprisonment. The President has already said he is in favor of leniency for such people but that they must "earn their way back." He is expected to specify in his an- nouncement - the White House has not set a time - what pub- lic service any returning exiles would be required to perform. The decision to grant Nixon a full, absolute and uncondition- See PARDON, Page 10 AP Photo A LARGE CROWD outside a Pittsburgh hotel protests Presi- dent Ford's decision to grant his predecessor an uncondi- tional pardon. Ford was at the hotel to address the sixth annual International Conference on TransportatiLon. RICHARD NIXON, who indi- PRESIDENT FORD, who yes- cated he will resign from terday delayed his scheduled practicing law in the wake of announcement- of a plan to his pardon from Ford. provide "leniency" for Viet- nam era draft resisters and deserters. Nixonl to quit barm, fear ofimpending state action denied SACRAMENTO, Calif. (#')-Former President Richard Nixon, faced with possible disciplinary action by the state bar of Cali- fornia, plans to resign his bar membership shortly, his attorney said last night. Los Angeles attorney Dean Butler denied that the resignation was designed to avoid possible disbarment. "IT IS A DECISION he made some time ago that he would not engage in the practice of law," Butler told a news con- ference at the state bar convention. Butler's announcement came moments after the bar's board of governors gave convention delegates permission to vote on a resolution critical of President Ford's pardon of Nixon. But the board refused to let the conference take up a section of the resolution which dealt indirectly with possible disciplinary action against the former president. THAT DELETED section read: "The conference trusts that the disciplinary processes of the state bar, which have already been invoked, will continue to be conducted without regard to the rank or station of the lawyers involved." Nixon has been under investigation by a committee of the bar for possible disciplinary action or disbarment for his role in the Watergate cover-up. Butler was asked repeatedly about the timing of the Nixon announcement. But he said it was not connected with either Ford's pardon or possible action by the bar. HE SAID NIXON still holds membership in the New York State bar, but plans to resign from that organization also. An investigation by the bar has also been under way there. "I think his decision was not to practice law-period," Butler said. He said he had not been told what the former president's future professional plans were. LSADa raps 'U. for low minority hiring By BARBARA CORNELL Acting Literary C o 1I1 e g e (LSA) Dean William "Billy" Frye yesterday scored the Uni- versity's affirmative action hir- ing program for failing to pull minority employment from its "distressingly low" levels. Citing the LSA faculty fig- Jzz fest flops, debt hits By STEPHEN HERSH The p a s t weekend's "Ann Arbor Blues and Jazz Festival in Exile" ran a deficit of at least $60,000, with final totals still u n k n o w n, according to Rainbow Multi-Media (RMM), its sponsor-an outcome which casts serious doubts on the fu- ture of the event. See related story, Page S Asked about next year, RMM Vice President John Sl'clair said yesterday, "We'll try to re-group s o m e h o w. We still think the festival is a good thing, and a thing that needs to be done." SINCLAIR CALLED the finan- cial problems "just beyond be- ures of nine per cent female, three per cent black, and three per cent for other non-white mi- norities, Frye called the hiring program largely ineffective. THE DEAN'S statement, made in his first "State of the College" speech before the LSA faculty meeting, were followed by a report from Admissions Director Clifford Sjorgen on the related issue of minority enroll- ment. Sjorgen laid the failure to bring in minority employment to economic factors and cited the skyrocketing cost of at- tending the University as the reason for the increase in appli- cations from middle and upper- class students and the decline from all other categories. Sjorgen suggested several al- ternatives for raising the di- minished numbbr of in-state ap- plications, including allowing transfers before the junior year and admitting more students who apply after the February 1 deadline for equal considera- tion. PROFESSOR CARL COHEN later attacked Sjogren for sug- gesting the admissions office lower, "the threshhold of aca- demic standards" as a means of coping with the falling appli- cation rate. Several faculty members in attendance cheered when Cohen asserted the meas- sure would "deal a severe blow" to the University's integ- ritv. Frve also addressed the problem of the gradual trend in course interest strongly favor- ing the pre-professional disci- plines. "We must cope with student demands as well as possible," he said. adding that the most LSA faculty members to take "an intensive and positive atti- tude" toward evaluating the re- port of the Commission on Graduation Requirements. THE COMMISSION, which began its investigation in 1972, presented its report to the LSA faculty last February, but cur- rently some two-thirds of the report has yet to be considered and finalized. Commission chairman Ray- mond Grew pleaded for close consideration of the report ESCH, MILLIKEN CRITICAL Locals By BETH NISSEN While national leaders were sharply divided on President Ford's decision to pardon Rich- ard Nixon, most state and local opinion ran strongly against the controversial act. Both Democrats and Repub- licans viewed the move as a short circuiting of the judicial process which could well keep the full story of Watergate from ever emerging. CONGRESSMAN Marvin Esch (R-Ann Arbor), who had long resisted taking a pro-impeach- ment stance before Nixon's August 9 resignation, had sharp words for Ford's action. "This was properly a matter for the courts, and the judicial lure P process should have been al- violate lowed to take its course," Esch as long said in a formal statement. "I retire, still believe we should be a na- r p. blast Ford move UNIVERSITY law professor Robert Burt said the pardon ran contrary to justice. "Nixon betrayed us all in his conduct in office and I think we all had a right to expect that some price be extracted from him - not necessarily that he go to jail, but that the immorality of his actions be clearly identified as such in the regular processes of justice. Ford's action has made that impossible." University President Robben Fleming called Ford's announce- ment "an obviously highly con- troversial move" but would not express solid opposition. "I think he was sincere in doing it, but a great many people are going to disagree with him," said Fleming of the University's most noted gradu- ate. Student reaction to the pardon ranad from extreme anger to Milliken Esch Presidents that they can the law with impunity g as they are prepared to on a handsome pension, , rrinC r di;nvred.a" the facts."' SANDER LEVIN, Democratic candidate for governor, blasted Fnrd's mmve