WATERGATE JUSTICE See Editorial Page it e 'IA; ALASKAN High-1S LoW-0 See Today for details Eighty-Four Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXV, No. 108 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, February 8, 1975 Ten Cents Eight Pages HIGHEST SINCE 1941 c (~XVUSEEff. 6 HAPP (CALL ALY Voter registration For you students planning to take advantage of the only voter registration site on campus - the Michigan Union - perhaps a trip down to City Hall might be in order. With March 10 the dead- line for registration for the April elections, the Union and all other special registration sites in the city will only be open during spring break, March 4-10. Fortunately City Hall is open Monday-Friday to register hopeful voters throughout the year. Wait until dark "The world is full of perverts, molesters and rap- ists who are lurking and waiting to attack your children and wives," says Barbara Collins, a De- troit Democrat who led a successful fight in the state legislature yesterday to keep Michigan on standard time. The House vote was one tally shy of the number needed to pass a bill to put the state on Daylight Savings Time by Feb. 23. Those who favor standard time say that daylight time sends children .o school in the dark and causes an increase in crime. Nevertheless, the issue will again be raised this spring as current state law still requires the switch to daylight time on April 27. Heads he wins . . Governor Milliken laid his cards on the table today when he stated his opposition to a proposal to legalize gambling in the state. He criticized Rep. Casmer Ognowski's proposed measure to open up gambling casinos as a step "in the wrong direction" and said he fears Michigan would be- come "the Nevada of the Midwest." He disagreed with Ogonowski's claim that legalized gambling could be a shot in the arm for ;he state's sagging economy and as an alternative to rejuvenate the economy, Milliken has suggested raising the in- come tax raterfrom its current level of 3.9 per cent to 4.6 per cent. 'Heads he wins, tails we lose. " Happenings .. are primarily brought to you by East Wind for their Asian-American Awareness Week. For the early risers there will be a Children's Work- shop at 10 a.m. at the Ann Arbor Public Library featuring games, snacks, storytelling and a speak- er from the Chinatown community . . . an Asian American Literature Workshop will follow at 11 a.m. in the Angella Davis Lounge in Markley .. . refreshments and an Asian American . History Workshop will take place at 1 p.m. in the Mosher Jordan main lounge . . . a symposium on qom- munity organization and how it was accomplished in Chicago Chinatown will bring things back to the Ann Arbor Public Library at 2 p.m. . . . and East Wind events wind up for today with a social gettogether and -refreshments at S o u t h Quad in Smitty Lounge at 8 p.m. . . . and the Clinic Restaurant, 1133 E. Huron wil feature Gary Shack- leford, folksinger, guitarist from 9-12 p.m. with a 50c cover charge. The naked truth Kathy Tillman is running a booming business in Seattle, Washington, by taking advantage of sex- ist party-goers. Her rent--doll Escort service fea- tures six female streakers who can be hired to stroll through parties in the nude, often creating a stir with cocktails going astray. Male streakers are also available but have yet to receive any takers. Morale buster? Rear Admiral Harry Mahin has come out in defense of the bust enlargements and face lifts for wives of military men. The sailor claims these operations give a boost to the women's morale and are a valuable free service of military hos- pitals. He blasted the charge by Rep. Les Aspin (D-Wis.) that tax payers are footing the bills for the surgery and insists the surgeons only sched- uled the operations when their services weren't needed for medically required surgery. The navy is only keeping abreast of the times. On the inside... the Edit Page features a storybyJoe Grimm who argues that the University should is- sue picture student ID cards . . . Sports Page includes previews of this weekend's wrestling meet with Michigan State by John Chavez as well as a preview of today's basketball game with MSU by Kathy Hennaghan . . . Arts Page features Frank Bell's weekly bridge column. On the outside ... Even colder yet. As another cold front passes through this morning, skies will be generally cloudy with occasional light snow or snow flur- ries this morning and afternoon. Accumulations will be less than an inch. Making conditions even Unemment soars to 8,020/o Fleming a leading UCali. i~ i candiate By DAVID BURHENN A source close to the Univer- sity of California (U-C) regents yesterday confirmed reports that University President Rob- ben Fleming is a leading can- didate for the presidency of the nine campus U-C system. However, the source indicated that the regents would more likely choose "someone from within the University system who is ten years younger than Fleming." THE SOURCE said that Flem- ing was "the leading outside candidate" in a field of three or four men, but that Univer- sity of Utah President David Gardener and U-C Provost Da- vid Saxon appeared to be stronger contenders. Gardener has been connected with the California schools in the past, and is several years See FLEMING, Page 5 Jackson predicts 10% y year's end Daily Photo by PAULINE LUBENS Siebel so-os Singer, songwriter, guitarist and wit Paul Siebel warms his audience last night while freezing winds blow around the Ark. Siebel will also be entertaining tonight and Sunday evening at 8:30. CDRS FUND PLAN: HRP, Dems may join By DAVID WHITING A unique coalition appears in the offing between the Hu- man Rights Party (HRP) and city Democrats to submit a joint proposal to the Office of Housing and Urban Develop- ment (HUD) for the use of a $2.5 million federal grant. The grant is in the form of Community Development Reve- nue Sharing (CDRS) funds aim- ed at aiding low and moderate income residents, according to HUD. A CONTROVERSIAL task force's recommended alloca- tions for CDRS are expected to pass the Republican - domi- nated City Council Monday night in a tn-partisanDsplit, causing the HRP and Demo- crats to submit an alternative minority - backed proposal to HUD. The task force, called the SDRS Citizen's Committee, was appointed last fall by Re- publican Mayor James Steph- enson to advise Council as to how the $2.5 million grant to the city should be spent. A for- mer Republican councilman, William Colburn, was appoint- ed chairman of the committee. The committee's recommen- dations have come under fire from HRP, Democrats, local service organizations, and mem- bers of the task force itself, for not being in the spirit of SDRS. COUNCIL Democrats an- nounced intentions of submitting their own CDRS recommenda- tions at a press conference yes- terday and indicated hopes that other council members would support them. Last night IRP extended a formal invitation to council Democrats for a meeting to discuss a bi-partisan CDRS pro- posal. Democrats and HRP set Sun- day afternoon as the tentative date for the meeting. HOWEVER, the meeting is likely to be a heated debate since the Democrats and HRP hope to agree on a single pro- posal yet both parties have drawn up separate CDRS plans, each claiming their own as su- perior. Carol Jones (D-Second Ward) chided HRP last night saying, "Our proposal is more sophis- ticated and sensible than HRP's." In response, David Goodman, forces HRP City Council hopeful, coun- tered, "That's hogwash," and blasted the Democrats' plan saying, "The Democrats really butchered funding for low and moderate income housing . . they totally ignore the city's housing needs which are a ma- jor part of the CDRS legisla- tion." IRP allotted some $1 million See HRP, Page 5 W A S II I N G T 0 N, (Reuter) - Unemployment soared to a postwar record of 8.2 per cent in the U.S. in January, the Labor De- partment reported yester- day. Nearly one million Amer- icans were added to the jobless total during the month bringing the num- ber unemployed to about 7,500,000. In December the unemployment rate was 7.2 per cent with the number of people out of work to- talling slightly over 6,500,- 000. SENATOR Henry Jackson (D-Wash.) who only Thursday announced his candidacy for the Democratic Presidential nomination in 1976, said the 8.2 unemlovment rate meant that the United States "could be headed for 10 per cent before long." Senator Edward Kennedy (D- Mass.) described the increase in unemployment as "anpal- line" and said it was "shock- ing" new evidence of the total bankruptcy of the Ford Admin- istration's economic policy." The Labor Department re- ported the jobless rate was the hiehest in 34 years - since 1941 - when unemployment averaged 9.9 per cent for the year. There are no monthly fi- ures for unemployment prior to 1948. JANUARY'S unemployment rate was the highest postwar level, outpacing the previous record of 7.9 per cent reached in October, 1949, by three- tenths of one percent.. The one percentage point jump in unemployment last month was the biggest one nonth advance since a one per- centage point gain between No- vember and December of 1973. It is expected to raise sharp otcries from the Democratic- ally controlled Congress which is working urgently on a tax re- bate package totalling' about $20 billion for both individuals and corporations. T H E T A X relief pack- age which is emerging from the influential tax - writing House Ways and Means Committee is about $4 billion more than that proposed by President Ford. The shock rise was attributed by the Labor Department to in- creased lay-offs during the month with the increases spread throughout most industries. Blue collar workers were among the hardest hit, it said, with their jobless rate rising to 11 per cent from 9.3 per cent in December. THE DEPARTMENT also reported that in January about 3,800,000 people were on reduced work schedules or were holding part-time jobs because See UNEMPLOYMENT, Page 5 Kennedy JaIcktson Ex-Vietnamese prisoner hits two-year peace with honor' Burns " Will ase credit WASHINGTON AP) - Chair- man Arthur Burns of the Fed- eral Reserve Board said yester- day that while the board will ease credit to encourage recov- ery from the recession "we have no intention of permitting an explosion in money and cre- dit. " Burns, testifying before the congressional Joint Economic Committee, disagreed with senators who want the Feder- al Reserve to'expand the mone- tary supply and ease credit significantly. "YOU SHOULD realize the Federal Reserve no longer has good options open to it," Burns said. He said the board can follow its present generally moderate course or "join the inflation- ists." Increasing the money to a large extent would "send long- term interest rates soaring, un- leash a new wave of inflation and wreck all prospects of re- covery in this country," Burns said. "SUCH A reckless course of action might hold short-term interests rates down for a time, but it would, before long, plunge See BURNS, Page 5 By STEVE ROSS "More people are being killed in Southeast Asia every day than anywhere else in the world," Jean-Pierre Devris told members of the Campus Ecu- menical Council last night. Devris, a French teacher who was imprisoned and tortured by the Thieu government, claimed that the Vietnamese people's ability to fight back against for- eign influence "has given the people of the third world coun- tries a lot to think about." DEVRIS BELIEVES the third world nations should form a sol- idarity movement to protect themselves against American oppression. Devris had harsh word: for the two years of "peace with honor" imposed by the Paris Peace Agreement. According to Devris 100,000deaths have en- suied during that period, and U.S. taxpayers have shelled out $8 billion in aid. Devris assailed South Vietna- mese President Nguyen Van Thieu's request for an additional half billion dollars in aid which would be sent in the form of munitions. "More Vietnamese will be killed and more of my friends jailed," he charged. DEVRIS depicted the present situation in Vietnam as tense due to an increase in the level of fighting. He cited aircraft carriers from the U.S. 7th Fleet sailing to the Vietnamese coast last month and U.S. "civilian" pilots flying over Cambodia as evidence of the U.S. govern- ment's potential move to risk reinvolvement in S o u t h e a s t As ia. Devris called on concerned -Americans to stop the war in Vietnam and Cambodia. He be- lieves the newly elected Con- gress members, who are more liberal and antiwar, will rebuff President Ford's request for additional aid. Davris urged Americans to exert pressure on their repre- sentatives to oppose involve- ment. COMMENTING on the torture he witnessed and underwent Devris concluded on a grim note, "These tortures are going on right now, will occur tomor- row, and will continue in the future." Center focuses on informal learning By TOM PRESTON A local alternative educational center which focuses on infor- mality and high interaction between adults and children is nearing accreditation as an elementary school. Annie Murphy, coordinator of the Children's Community Cen- ter (CCC), describes its unique form of day care and pre-school education, "We try to give them (children) as much freedom as possible, provided that they show responsibility." THE CHILDREN meet at 10 every morning in the small house on N. Seventh Street to decide on the day's schedule and the rules by which the center runs. "The kids make most of the rules, except for dishwashing and clean-up, or anything else that's really essential. We don't want to push them into any special lifestyle; we just try to get them to be relatively self-sufficient," explained Murphy. The parents of children are integral to CCC's operation. Since FIRST WARD DEMS ItonTaylor sk nomination i~g FBy TIM SCHICK- The First W a r d Democratic primary, slated for February 17, heated up yester- day as Robert Elton's and Elizabeth Tay- lor's campaigns switched into high gear. The candidates are focusing on widely different issues in their campaigns. While Elton sees planning and urban development as the major issues, Taylor is instead cam- paigning on the need for cooperation be-": tween governmental agencies while stress- ing her past experience as a County Com- Imissiofner. l . . . . . . . . . . Primary '75 -.-1.L.. emuseo mNNE=am