BOSTON RACISTS See Editorial Page Y Aft 4f It 4Tg a n Ten Cents DRIPPY High-70 Low-35 See Today for details Vol. LXXXV, No. 33 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, October 12, 1974 Eight Pages NIXON ASKS EXEMPTION IUSEE &S HAPPnCALL..y Marching madness There's a double treat in store for football fans today, when both the Michigan Marching Band and the Michigan State Band perform at half-time. The MSU show will open with "Spartan Suds," an ar- rangement combining themes from various beer commercials, and close with a rendition of "Then Came You." The finale will feature the unusual sounds of a synthesizer. The Michigan half time show is being kept a secret but will allegedly be based on "bugs and insects." It is known, however, that the show will feature the 70-member trumpet section. Election procedure Student Government Council members have be- gun to outline voting procedure for the upcoming Council elections. It was announced at Thursday night's SGC meeting that all ID cards will be mark- ed at the polling place with indelible ink to prevent people from voting twice. Students are asked to abide by the honor system and vote in the proper constituencies. Ballots will be checked to make sure votes are cast for only one constituency. The election will be held Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday of next week. Housing committees The University Housing Council (UHC) is look- ing for, students to fill vacancies on various com- mittees. There are several openings on the hous- ing planning committee, the resources utilization committee, the single student rates study commit- tee, and the staff selection committee. There is also an opening for one woman on the Housing Re- view Board. For further information on these open- ings call either Greg Higby or Robert Gordon of UHC at 764-7668 no later than Monday afternoon. Happenings .. . ... The Wolverines battle the MSU Spartans to- day. Kickoff is at 1:30 . . . After the game get some free beer and cider at an open house for John Reuther, Democratic candidate for Congress .. . Tonight Black Ink presents the Mighty Essentials and the Funky Unity Board at Waterman Gym. Tickets are $3 at the door . . . The Markley Hall Minority Council is sponsoring a cabaret tonight at 10. Music will be by the Black Connection. Admis- sion is $1.50 per person or $2.50 per couple. Sirica seat t e at e jury Hart endorses Reut he r By MARY HARRIS Senator Phillip Hart (D-Mich.) endorsed congressional candi- date John Reuther last night, speaking at a beer bash at Democratic party headquarters. Arriving over an hour late, Hart addressed an enthusiastic crowd of around 75 inebriates. He told themahe saw Reuther as part of a new spirit in politics. "THE NATION desperately needs people who can move the levers of government a little faster than they have been moved, in the past," he said. He added that the nation would be less pessimistic if it could see, as he did, the optimism and enthusiasm with w h i c h y o u n g e r voters approached politics. Hart was introduced by Reu- ther himself, who led off with a spirited attack on his oppo- nent, Rep. Marvin Esch (R-Ann Arbor). In Reuther's words, "Marvin Esch has very little principle, very little character." He at- tacked Esch's refusal to debate him, and pointed out that 75 per cent of congressional votes cast by Esch in the last two years have followed Nixon Ad- ministration policy. REUTHER WENT on to cri- ticize Esch's abuse of the congressional franking privilcge which allows him to mail free literature to his constituents. "And yet," said Reuther, "Esch will criticize me when I seek contributions from labor unions." Reuther contended. he had no option but to seek labor money when the incumbent abused his privileged positicn. HART FOLLOWED his speech with a question and answer ses- sion. He fielded an irate ques- tion as to why he would not disclose his income tax returns, explaining that he filed a joint return with his wife, who has considerable income from trust funds which she did not wish to make public. He noted, however, that he had revealed every source of income he had had since 1962. In response to another ques- tion, Hart criticized President Ford's proposed five per cent income tax surcharge as in- equitable. He said the figure of $7,500 was too low a point to begin applying the surtax. Nine women three men pass screening WASHINGTON (R - A predominantly middle-aged jury of nine women and three men was chosen yesterday to decide whether five Nixon White House and campaign associates joined in a criminal conspiracy to cover-up the Watergate affair. Eight of the four jurors selected were black and four were white. They were painstakingly drawn from a cross section of the Washington community in the ninth day of extraordinarily intensive screening and were admon- ished by the judge to try the case "without bias, preju- dice or sympathy." THE DEFENDANTS, John Mitchell, H. R. "Bob" Haldeman, Doily Photo by KEN FINK SENATOR GEORGE McGOVERN (D-S.D.) campaigns for congressional candidate John Reuther at a Democratic rally yesterday in Hill Aud. McGovern spoke on a number of current issues be- fore a crowd of 1,500 and met criticism of his role in the Wounded Knee incident from demon- strators. John Ehrlichman, Robert Mar- dian and Kenneth Parkinson, stood and faced the jury box as the jurors raised their hands in oath. With the swearing-in came also the release of documents filed under seal recently with the court. They included: 0 Motions by lawyers for for- mer President Richard Nixon asking that subpoenas demand- ing his in-person testimony be dismissed because Nixon's health will not permit travel for three to six months: * A bid by Ehrlichman for a separate trial when Nixon is able to testify, either in person or through a video-taped deposi- tion that would be shown to jurors; and 0 A motion by Haldeman, asking that the trial be sus- pended, to await the Nixon tes- timonv. The motion said Halde- man intended to subpoena the former President. THE EHRLICHMAN motion, filed Sert. 30, was denied by U. S. District Judge John Sirica the following day. Haldeman's motion, filed Wednesday, has not been ruled upon. Both men, the No. 1 and No. 2 aides in the Nixon White House, claim Nixon is "a material and indispensable witness in this case" and that he alone has personal knowledge of facts that will help the defendants. By the time the papers were unsealed, the new jurors were at their homes, accompanied by U. S. marshals, packing belong- ings for a three to four month trial. B E G I N N I N G last night, they were housed at a down- town Washington hotel, two miles from the courthouse. The government, which also had subpoenaed Nixon, argued that the trial should proceed and that questions about his tes- timony - including taking a deposition - can be resolved later. Citing the phlebitis that put Nixon into a hospital for 11 days recently, his lawyers said, "It is clear Mr. Nixon cannot com- ply with the subpoena in the immediate future without im- pairing this physical condition and creating a potentially very serious risk to his health." House kills Senate aid extension; veto seen WASHINGTON (R) - Con- gress abandoned its plan to re- cess yesterday night for cam- paigning because of President Ford's certain veto of its cut- off of U. S. military aid to Tur- key over Cyprus. House and Senate leaders agreed at a hastily called con- ference to come back next week to vote on overriding the veto and to take up other bills for at least three days. FORD'S VETO of the Turkish aid cutoff was assured after the House killed a Senate-passed resolution to delay the cutoff for 60 days to allow more time for negotiating a Turkish troop cut or withdrawal from Cyprus. Congress' leaders and the White House tried to work out a compromise 45-day delay rather than 60 but opponents of the Turkish aid rejected it. Democratic Leader Thomas O'Neill told the House that Ford's veto "is expected over the weekend" and announced the House would reconvene Tuesday rather than adjourn as planned until after the Nov. 7 elections. CONGRESS HAS no choice but to act on the veto. The cut- off is in a stop-gap continuing resolution several agencies need for legal spending authority - which expired Sept. 30 - until Congress approves their regu- lar appropriation bills. The delay had been rejected, 187 to 171, after Republican Leader John Rhodes told the House that without the delay Ford would "definitely veto" the Turkish aid cutoff. Congress voted earlier this week to cut off military aid to Turkey until Ford certifies "sub- See HOUSE, Page 2 Student protest Waves of young people shouting slogans for the release of imprisoned students and a liberalized constitution battled policewyesterday at Korea Uni- versity in Seoul. It was a second consecutive day of violence. About 1,500 students tried to break through police lines and move off campus but were driven back as police fired round after round of tear gas. No arrests or serious injuries were re- ported. The students attempted to march onto the capital's streets after proclaiming a manifesto that demanded the release of prisoners jailed for anti- government activity, freedom of the press and sus- pension of campus surveillance. '75 predictions A food shortage, a bone-chilling winter and a searing summer are in store forg1975, according to the Old Farmer's Almanack, which has been predicting American weather with a claim of 80 per cent accuracy for 182 years. The 183rd annual edition of the almanac - not to be confused with The Farmers' Almanac, a mere 158 years old - says, "Mother Nature is still in charge and we only try to forecast what is already ordained." Last year's almanac predicted the drought in sev- eral areas of the country and the mild winter of 1974. The almanac's weather tables, which begin with November, predict a generally warm Thanks- giving and a cold Christmas, even in Florida, for 1974. The Old Farmer's Almanack's prediction by "Abe Weatherwise" use a secret formula devel- oped by its first editor and take into account sun spots, moon phases, jet streams and ocean cur- rents. On the inside .. . . . . The Sports Page features a preview of to- day's football game plus an advance look at the other Big "Ten games . . . Beth Nissen discusses possible substitutes for aerosol products on the Editorial Page . . . and David Blomquist reviews That's Entertainment on the Art Page. 0 Mc Goveri Reu ther By PAUL HASKINS REUTHE Senator G e o r g e McGovern assemblage passed through Ann Arbor yes- hurried en terday, pausing just long enough sized thes to boost John Reuther's congres- ther's Rep sional campaign, comment on a Marvin Esc sampling of national issues and "Reuther absorb the criticism of a small policies 24r but vocal group of demon- McGovern strators. just vote McGovern was the keynote right." speaker at a Democratic rally Reuthert held for Reuther before a Hill his remat Aud. crowd of over 1,500. Esch's his campaign boosts ;R warmed up the before McGovern's trance. Both empha- shortcoming of Reu- publican opponent, ch. will support fair months of his term," said. "And he won't right - he'll lead devoted the bulk of rks to establishing tory of support for the Nixon Administration. "Mar- vin Esch is a Republican who identified with Richard Nixon two years ago," R e u t h e r charged, "and who doesn't have the integrity to put the word 'Republican' on his billboards.' McGOVERN arrived 15 min- utes into the scheduled one- hour rally. His comments gen- erally met with light, scattered applause and occasional disap- proving shouts from members of the Revolutionary Student B r i g a d e (RSB) and Na ive American S t u d e n t Union (NASU) in the audience. The South Dakota Democrat encountered strong resistance, however, when he stumbled over his position on the Rocke- feller confirmation. A s k e d where he stood on the matter, U' resists GEO agency shop demand, cites iow membership By JEFF DAY"W University negotiators told the Graduate Em- have n ployes Organization (GEO) yesterday that unless said. the union could muster greater constituent sup- The port, the University would reject a demand for Approx an agency shop. teachin The demand, one of 15 non-economic items assista presented by the union in current contract nego- CHIE tiations, would require all graduate employes to tered t pay some form of union dues regardless of union all 2,20 membership-or face dismissal. wouldi IN REBUFFING the union demand, University bear p negotiator William Neff told the group, "Unless 4"Th labor can exhibit significant showing of support vantag through the size of its membership, this presents getting very serious problems for the University in workin granting this demand. Coun tyste Vith anywhere near the membership you McGovern said, "I'm not ow you can't have an agency shop," Neff (how I'll vote) right now." reply was greeted by a s GEO has about 600 dues-paying members. chorus of boos, hisses, ximately 2,200 graduate employes, including comments including "Rem ng fellows, research assistants and staff ber Attica," and "Yes or nts, are represented by the union. George." EF GEO negotiator Michele Hoyman coun- T h e apparently campai he University charge, claiming that since weary McGovern'stresponst 00 of the University's graduate employes hisses?"-amplified the cro benefit from the contract, they should all dispeasure. He went to art of the cost. "I'm not prepared to vote re are people out there getting the ad- (Rockefeller) at this point. es of unionization," she said. "They're make a decision in the nati better contracts, better wages, better interest." g conditions and they can use our griev- PHIL CARROLL, H u m See AGENCY, Page 2 See McGOVERN, Page2 polce relations sure His hrill and em- ro, ign - :hos wd's say, for I'll onal a n 2 strained a fter bizarre crime By DAVID BURHENN A residue of bitterness and mistrust be- WASHTENAW COUNTY Sheriff Fred Pos- till said he is writing a letter to state po- they want to catch the suspects them- selves. Most of what I know about the rte::; _ _ ;i ::::::::::.::. :rx:: :>