REGISTER TO VOTE See Editorial Page :Y 41it 6 DaliP FLOWING High-55 Low-32 See Today for details Vol. LXXXV, No. 24 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, October 2, 1974 Ten Cents Ten Pages v /i' 'U' Cellar to fight state a * f F 1CSEE tEvS HAPP~rt 0C L N lY Register to vote Students, this is your city. You eat here. You sleep here. You're taxed here. You live here. So, register and vote here. Today through Monday is "Voter Registration Week." If you want to be able to vote in the Nov. election, you must register by Oct. 7. Registration sites include: the Union, today through Friday, 1-4 p.m.; Ann Arbor Public Li- brary, located at the corner of William and Fifth Ave., today through Friday, 9 a.m.-9 p.m.; and, City Hall, located at the corner of Huron and Fifth Ave., today through Saturday, 8 a.m.-S p.m. 0 Aid Hondurans The Student Government Council (SGC) office is serving as a collection place for clothes - pre- ferably summer weight - shoes, blankets and other dry goods, to be sent to aid the Honduras victims of hurricane Fifi. The SGC office is lo- cated on the third floor of the Michigan Union, Rm. 3909, and is open Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. "It seems like a worthwhile thing," says Calvin Luker, director of student organizations. By PAUL HASKINS The University Cellar and its attorney are presently scrambling to win an appeal of a state ruling which could cost the student bookstore as much as $50,000 in back taxes. If Cellar attorney Raymond Clevenger loses his case, the ruling could also jeopardize the tax shelter offered by the University to its four other big "auxiliary corporations" - the University Club, the Board in Control of Intercollegiate Ath- letics, the Union, and the Lawyers Club. AT THE HEART of the issue is a debate on definitions: while the Cellar and the other four corporations all claim they are well within Uni- versity control, the State Tax Commission has ruled that the Cellar and the U Club are inde- pendent, taxable corporations. In a September 1973 decision, the tax board ordered the bookstore to pay state personal prop- erty taxes back through 1971. Last August, the board specifically assessed the Cellar for $33,000 in 1971-72 personal property taxes. The Cellar, the commissioners stated, "is not the property of the University of Michigan; the University of Michigan is not in control of the corporation, owner of the property." THREE ASPECTS of the Cellar's financial status raise serious questions about the store's independence from the University: A In 1969, the University provided the store with $100,000 from the University Parking Fund -money earmarked for use as starting capital. The money came in the form of a gift. * One main source of ready cash for the Cel- lar is a $5 fee assessment for all new students. The money is a loan, refundable when a student graduates. According to University Counsel Roderick Daane, the assessment is directly un- der the Regents' control: "If they wanted to," says Daane, "they could terminate it." " The Cellar's charter stipulates that the Re- gents can disband the entire store if they deem it "mismanaged." Should that occur, the Univer- sity would assume control of the Cellar's assets. CLEVENGER is challenging the taxation order in the state appeals court with a double-barreled argument. First, he contends, the Cellar's finan- cial status and charter tightly connect it to the University, and place the store under the con- trol of the Regents. The second half of the Cellar's case is the x ruling charge that the state tax board bungled its hand- ling of the issue and failed to follow due process of law. In its report, the commission said its tax as- sessment was based on a 1971-72 Cellar asset figure of $600,000. As Cellar representatives point out, that figure is based only on "ballpark" esti- mates - but the commissioners blamed the failure to get better information on the Cellar. THE BOOKSTORE failed to submit detailed figures, the commission stated, and a subpoena for George Isaac, president of the Cellar's board of directors, was never answered. Clevenger denies Cellar neeligence. He ex- plains he refused to hand over financial details See CELLAR, Page 7 Sirica opens Watergate trial MHC joils Oss In an effort to make student counseling services more centralized and efficient, the Office of Stu- dent Services (OSS) is taking the Mental Health Clinic (MHC) out of Health Services, and putting it into the Student Counseling Services of OSS. The administrative change was made official yester- day, but Donna Nagely, director of the new coun- seling office, says that until both services are moved, they will continue to act separately as they have always done. CCEW scholarships Applications are now being accepted for 20 schol- arships to be presented this spring by the Center for Continuing Education of Women (CCEW), 330 Thompson St. Women whose education has at some time been interrupted for at least 12 consecutive months and who are continuing a degree program are eligible for the awards of $500 to $2,000. Appli- cants may be undergraduate or graduate stu- dents, full or part-time. A Happenings.- - . . . include several Indochina Peace Campaign (IPC) activities today. Beginning at 9 a.m. and continuing until 4 p.m., IPC will display a tiger cage on the diag and operate a literature table in the Fishbowl . . . Then John Whitmore, professor of Vietnamese history, will speak at 2 p.m. in Rm. 25, Angell Hall . . . And at 3 p.m. in Aud. 3 of MLB, the slide show "A Question of Torture" will be shown . . . But if you happen to miss this show- ing, it will be shown again at 8:30 p.m. in Alice Lloyd's Klein lounge . . . At 4 p.m. in Rm. 3000 of the School of Public Health (in the old biildina, a slideshow entitled "Health and the War" will be shown and a discussion will follow . . . The Ad- visory Committee for Recreational, Intramural and Club Sports will meet at 3:15 mn.m in Crisler Arena . . . At 4 n.m. Prof-ssor James Wispman of the classical studies and historv dennrtments and Kelsey Museum of Archaeology will lecture on "Five Years Excavations at Stobi. Macedonia, 1970-74" in And. A, Angell Hll . . . Also at 4 n.m. everyone is invited to an pfternnon tea at Presi- dent Flemine's house on S. University . . . At 7 p.m. von can meet the Democratic candidate for the State Senate, Peter Eckstein in the West Lounge of South Quad . . . Or perhaps you feel like having your say aboit the city's celebration of the up-coming national bicentennial. If so, there's a meeting sponsored by the Ann Arbor People's Bicentennial Commission at 7:30 p.m. in Pm. 126, East Ouad . . . And, fin-llv, the Proiect Community Child Care and De-elonment program THREE SPECIAL PROSECUTORS for the Watergate cover-up tri al arrive at U.S. District Court in Washington yesterday. From left, the attorneys are Richard Ben-Veniste, James Neal and Jill V olner. The trial got off to a slow start with Judge John Sirica be- ginning the jury selection process and predicting the proceedings could last past the Christmas holidays. WASHINGTON ( - The Watergate cover-up case went to trial yesterday with the judge predicting it will be months before the jury renders its verdict upon men who once sat in the high councils of govern- ment with Richard Nixon. "Every effort will be made to conclude the trial before the holiday season, but this cannot be guaran- teed," U.S. District Judge John Sirica said on the first day of the time-consuming process of electing a jury. BY DAY'S END the first pool of 155 prospective jurors had been whittled to 65 and each one will be questioned in more detail and privacy tomorrow. In the meantime, a second panel of 175 will go through the initial weeding-out process today. Before Sirica as defendants in a criminal conspiracy case were three men once counted as among the most powerful in government, John M i t c h e 11, Richard Nixon's law-and-order attorney general; H.R. "Bob" Haldeman, Nixon's chief of staff and John Ehrlichman, through whom all domestic programs cleared. Along with co-defendants Rob- ert Mardian and Kenneth Par- kinson, who were employed by the Nixon re-election commit- tee in 1972, they were accused of trying to hide. responsibility for the Watergate break-in through "deceit, craft, trickery and dishonest means." AS THE defendants whiled away their time writing letters, doodling or talking with friends, Sirica heard and excused 90 jury prospects who asked to be let out of service. They pleaded mostly the care of children or home or problems of health. With only a handful of exceptions, the judge accept- ed the excuses. The remaining 65 then under- went mass questioning for an hour and a half, asked if they or any member of their family ever had any dealing with near- See COVER-UP, Page 10 'NEWSREEL' LOSES AUDITORIUM: Ehrlichman Distribautors for student By DAVID BLOMQUIST Two national movie distribu- tors stated yesterday that they may sue the University in an effort to collect substantial debts from the now-defunct stu- dent film group Friends of Newsreel. In a related move, the Stu- dent Organizations Board of Student Government Council unanimously voted yesterday to void reservations Newsreel had held on campus auditoriums through the rest of this term and open up the space to other film groups. "WE DON'T want to sue the University, but if it comes to it, we will," asserted Kirk Karhi, Midwest sales supervisor for New Line Cinema Corp. "We have been considering legal action, and chances are at the moment we will sue," said Bob Burrs, assistant de- partment head of Warner Bros.' may si f 0 flm d(? non-theatrical sales division. Lawyers for Warners and New Line met in New York yesterday to discuss the possi- bility of filing joint legal ac- tion against Newsreel, the Uni- versity, and Community Media Projects, Inc., Karhi reported. COMMUNITY MEDIA Pro- ject (CMP) is a non-profit me- dia collective affiliated with the Newsreel organization. Glen Allvord, treasurer of Newsreel, serves as vice-president of CMP. Karhi indicated that he also expects two other major dis- tributors,tRBCtand United Ar- tists, to join in any court pro- ceedings initiated by New Line. Nevertheless, University Gen- eral Counsel Roderick Daane brushed off the threatened legal action. "Any damn fool can file a lawsuit, but it's quite clear that the University has no obligation," Daane commented. KARHI CLAIMED, however, that the University and the Stu- dent Organizations Board had "fallen down on their job" of looking after the financial af- fairs of student groups. Meanwhile, a Newsreel state- ment published in this week's is- sue of the Michigan Free Press in effect demanded that the T T CJ .bts University cover the organiza- tion's outstanding debts. "We assume that the corpor- ation (the University) is going to pick up the tab, and pay those commercial distributors," the statement said. "Let the corporations fight it out; they can well afford it, however it turns out." N E V E R T H E L E S S, Newsreel asserted that it was "ready to assume our organiz- ational financial obligations" if a list of six prerequisites, in- See 'U', Page 7 GEO to sue in wage dspute By JEFF DAY The Graduate EmployesdOr- ganization (GEO) has moved to file suit against the University over its refusal to grant a promised eight per cent pay hike. GEO, which represents teach- ing fellows and research assist- ants, claims that the University made the promise during the union's efforts to organize in order to discourage unioniza- tion, and that failure to keep the promise violates state law. BUT THE University claims that the promise, which was made by former Vice President for Academic Affairs Allan Smith last February, was made before the union was recog- nized, and therefore is no longer See GEO, Page 2 o i os 1 'Values' speaker warns of greed Interns at 'U, is meeting Union. at 8 p.m. in the Kunzel Rm. of the Dead or alive? Edith Smith, of Philomath, Ore., says she feels remarkably well for having been dead nine months, Smith, operator of a tavern here, recently received a notice from the Oregon Board of Revenue stat- ing she had died Jan. 7, 1974. The state wanted to know if she hqd git working, inasmuch as she was dead, or if her estate would continue opera- tion of the tavern. Smith had a few questions of her own. She wrote the Department of Revenue a letter asking, "Was my death accidential and can I collect double indemnity? I'm past 60, my husband is past 62 and my mother is 87," she con- tinued. "My death came as a nasty shock to peo- ple our age. Should we seek monetary compen- sation for our ment~a anguish from you or your informant?" On the inside . -. . . . The Edit Page hoses a commentarv by Clif- ford Brown on racism, liberalism in the IJniver- sity . . . Jeff Schiller writes about the IHeisman trophy race on the Snorts Page . . . And on the fifth page we have a combination of Food and Arts. By STEPHEN SELBST "A society that puts profit maximization before all other concerns is doomed," Nobel laureate George Wald warned a Hill Aud. audience yesterday in the opening speech of the University Values' Year lecture series. "We have eno'ieh information to cope with all the things that are threatening our lives and the lives of our children. We could begin to cope with them ri-ht now, but we can't while we're maximizing profits," Wald claimed. AS AN alternative Wald sug- gested that universities no long- er pursue research only, but begin to participate actively in the world's nroblems. Wald contended that the re- action of universities to prob- lems was "almost a reflex, 'let's do research. The end of the world is coming? Let's do Pro- ject Apocalypse and get $2 mil- lion from the National Science Foundation. We'll put out a re- port just before the end.' " e Ine begin By DAVID BURHENN Interns and resident physi-- cians at University Hospital began. a work slowdown today in an attempt to reach a new contract agreement. The action will not affect basic patient care, according to Dr. Robert Soderstrom, presi- work slowdown dent of the House Officers As- sociation (HOA). SODERSTROM said that the nearly 500 doctors represented by the HOA will refuse to per- form "a lot of the clerical pro- cedures that we've been re- quired to do, such as signing Medicare and Medicaid forms, GROUP OFFERS WORK TRAINING Job program to aid inmates and other billing requirements needing physicians' signatures." Soderstrom also said that the HOA would set up picket lines during "peak traffic hours 'in front of the hospital's main en- trance. The issues separating the HOA and the University center on salaries, fringe benefit pack- ages, and working conditions. NEGOTIATORS for the two parties will meet this evening, for the first time in weeks, to discuss terms of a new con- tract with a state mediator. The doctors had been work- ing on day-to-day extensions of the old pact, which expired Sept. 1. The HOA officially end- ed that extension Monday to begin their slowdown today. Soderstrom said that the na- ture of the proposals off3red by the University tonight would W7ald commented, "All I can say is if that's what you come up with the world is waiting for you- the world of power." Wald also told of a friend of By STEPHEN HERSH An Ann Arbor-based program intended to help inmates of the Adrian Training School for ju- veniles make the transition to life on the outside will enter a 10-day trial period this month. foster parents. They will be trained intensively for a day in child care techniques, and will then spend the rest of the week working five hours a day at Project Community child care centers. They will be paid min- mine whether they are ready to be released to their homes. The h e a r i n g outcomes will weigh heavily on individual per- formance evaluations to be pre- pared by the director of the program, Larry Tarkowski.