KATZIR PROTEST See Editorial Page Y Eigt iau Eighty-Four Years of Editorial Freedom i1 PONDEROUS High-32 Low--21 See Today for details Vol. LXXXV, No. 129 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, March 14, 1975 Ten Cents Ten, Pages Food for thought An LSA student in the Grad's Library's rare book room recently decided to take a break from his tedious research. Just as he had finished un- wrapping his carefully prepared snack, he was approached by a library employe. "I'm sorry," she said, "but there's no eating in the University library system, especially in the rare books room." The startled student remarked innocently, "Oh, I wasn't eating. I was just reading a peanut butter and jelly sandwich." 925 and 572... ..are this week's winning lottery numbers, and that ain't all. If you have both numbers, for- get about your dwindling grade point and pray that your luck will hold up for the $200,000 draw- ing. The $1 jackpot gold ticket numbers were: six digits 651170, five digits 08959, and three digits 464. The million dollar elimination number was: 090926, and the market basket bonus numbers were 796, 251, 434. 0 Happenings... . . . are scant but impressive today. Consumer advocate Ralph Nader will speak on "Corporate Power, Consumerism and Food," at 1 p.m. at Hill .. the 16mm film festival continues with shows at 7, 9, and 11 p.m. at the old Architecture Aud...-. the Natinal Farmer's Organization is sponsoring a Wisconsin cheese sale at the Saline farm council grounds at Ann Arbor and Saline Roads, and on campus at Hill Aud and South Ingals from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.. ..the play "Trial by Jury" of Gilbert and Sullivan will be presented by the Law School today, tomorrow, and Sunday, at 8 p.m. in the E. Quad Auditorium . . . and summer subletters Are reminded that today is the last day for placing an ad in the Daily's summer sublet supplement. Cloudy shies black eyes How many times have gloomy weather predic- tions made you want to belt Marilyn Turner right in the .. . jaw? Well, a Memphis, Tenn. man, ap- parently upset about the heavy rains there had his way when he slugged his local television weather- man just before air time Wednesday night. A re- ceptionist for WHBQ-TV told police the man came to the station and asked to talk to the weather- man Dave Brown about his forecast. She told the man Brown was about to go on the air, but he rushed past her and into the studio. The man then hit Brown and knocked him down before being ppushed from the studio by other station em- ployes Incidently, Brown's forecast was for con- tinued rain. 0 Poetic justice Supreme Court Justices may be above suspicion, but they ain't above the birds, and they have pe- titioned Congress for $45,000 for the porticoes of the Supreme Court Building to prevent bird drop- pings from coming to rest on their judicious heads and judicial robes. Unable to merely issue a cease- and-desist order against the foul fowl, the Supreme Court was forced to throw itself at the mercy of Congress. Until the petition is accepted, however, they'll just have to carry umbrellas to work. 0 The last hurrah In Manningtree, England the other day, a com- muter frustrated by trains that showed up late or never at all jumped on a main line track and, to the cheers of fellow commuters, flagged down an express train with his umbrella. He and the other commuters then boarded the train and rode com- fortably to London, where he was picked up on charges of obstructing railway operations. I'll second that During the recent Senate debate over whether to relax the filibuster rule, James Allen kept the Senate in a state of confusion and helplessness be- cause of his mastery of parliamentary procedure. At one point, amid the Alabama Democrat's flurry of motions, a vote was taken on .the following: A motion. to table a motion to reconsider a vote to table an appeal of a ruling that a point of order was not in order against a motion to table another point of order agaipst a motion to bring to a vote the motion to call up a resolution that would in- stitute the rules that change. Let's hear it for Par-, liamenary procedure. 0 On the inside ... . . . Edit page spotlights the defoliation of land and the harmfid effects of its thoughtless develop- ment . . . Arts page propounds to offer a host of exciting reading featuring Cinema Weekend and another article, in the series on the Ann Arbor 16mm film festival by Kim Potter and Chris Koch- manski . . . Sports page features a UCLA scouting report by Jeff Schiller. On the outside... Do you have snow shoes? A major-winter storm --.ml rvn- .. rn th ( If.t C tea n l{in no 7 Fighting increases I V ietnarr American airlift into Cambodia continues AP Photo A Southeast Vietnamese armored vehicle with troops aboard rolls by children fleeing Tri Tam which was overrun yesterday by the North Vietnamese. By The AP and Reuter SAIGON, South Vietnam -An armada of South Viet- namese helicopters f I e w through heavy antiaircraft fire yesterday, f e r r y i n g hundreds more government soldiers into the battle for Ban Me Thuot. North Vietnamese forces, meanwhile, t o o k another district capital and attack- ed still another district seat in the central highlands, field reports said. THE SAIGON command re- norted that a fourth major high- way, Rt. I., had been cut in two places, along the central and northern coasts. Five of the na- tion's vital roadways, three of them in the central highlands, are now severed. Associated Press correspon- dent Huynh Minh Trinhreported from the 2nd Corps headquar- ters in Pleiku that officers told him the South Vietnamese now had a full division of troons in and around Ban Me Thuot, 155 miles northeast of Saigon, after reinforcements were poured in Wednesday and yesterday. Estimates put the total South Vietnamese strength at about 6.000 to 7,000 men with the North Vietnamese at equal strength. TRINH reported that 50 South Vietnamese helicopters bring- ing in reinforcements yesterday met heavy antiaircraft fire, but that all the choppers returned safely to Pleiku. The reinforce- ments were dropped off at sev- eral points around Ban Me Thuot, 'officers told Trinh. Lt. Col. Le Trung Hien, chief spokesman for the Saigon com- mand, said South Vietnamese bombers inflicted heavy damage on North iVetnamese forces and claimed that 16 tanks had been knocked out in the four-day-old battle for control of the city. One South Vietnamese bomber was reported shot down. Hien acknowledged that the fighting had reduced parts of the city to rubble. Many sec- tions of the town were reported under North Vietnamese control. More than 20.000 refugees fled the city of 165,000, field reports said. A SPOKESPERSON for the U.S. Embassy said radio contact had been lost with nine Ameri- cans, three Canadians, an Aus- tralian and a Filipno in the city since Wednesday but this may be due to the batteries in their radio running low. "I think the die is cast and the House is not going to pass it (aid to Cambodia) anyway." -Sen. Thomas Morgan The district town lost was Buon Ho, 25 miles northeast of Ban Me Thuot. The Saigon com- mand said heavy North Vietna mese pressure forced the gar- rison to retreat to another posi- tion. There was no word on casualties. Buon Ho was the sixth of South Vietnamese's 244 district towns to fall in the past five days and the 17th lost since the signing of the cease-fire two years ago. THE OTHER district seat un- der attack was Thanh An, south of Pleiku and 225 miles north- east of Saigon. An Air Vietnam airliner was shot down by insurgent forces outside Plekiu late Wednesday, killing all 26 persons aboard, in- See VIETNAM, Page 2.. DECISIVE MARGIN: GEO OK's new By ANN MARIE LIPINSKI Nine months of negotiations and a four week strike officially concluded yesteraay as the Graduate Employes Organization (GEO) membership okayed the contract} settlement union and University ne ;otiatcrs reached Tuesday. The contract was put to a two day rati- fication vote of GEO members who over- whelmingly endorsed the settlement 622-12, union leaders announced yesterday. THE UNION membership agreed to be- gin the ratification process Tuesday night By GLEN ALLERHAND WINNE Last night's dormitory lottery teries, w went without a hitch, but those dorms s students turned away by the p.m., ar ranomselctonprocedure ex- campus l, pressed anger and frustration. Newberr Sandra Heal, ak-Newberry On Mo freshperson, remarked, "I lnst. O I'm very, very upset." H~ping wishing i to take action, she added, "I'm rent roon calling the Housing Office and my' state representative and state senator to ask whether it's legal-kicking people out who are willing to pay tuition." MARK HUFZIGER, a Burley c I resident who had hoped to re- turn to his dorm next year, said, "I'm upset. I've heard a lot of the apartments are filling up. City I may be thinking of moving to Rep. Per another University." Rp e Figures released by housing the ordin staffers explain the widespread dates for student discontent. Leroy Wil- replaced liams, Markley building direc- Bulla: tor said, "We allocated 441 stu- Frank Ke dent spaces, 275 male and 166 Kelley de female. We turned away 51 fe- Bullard s males and 171 males." Forty per cent of next year's THE available spaces in each dormi- Rights P tory are open for student reap- earthede plicants. All freshpeople ai e guaranteed resident hall open- primaryr ings. after they were presented with a contract the GEO negotiators described as "not perfect . . . but a very good beginning." Acting GEO President A l e d a Krause proudly disclosed the vote totals exclaim- ing, "I expected the ratification, but it's a fantastic majority that voted yes. I feel that shows very solidly that the member- ship is strongly behind the union. "The vote totals are a very positive way of ending the strike," she concluded. CHIEF UNIVERSITY negotiator Charles Allmand stated, "I am very pleased that they (the union) considered the rad-,ca- tion. I think we have a very good contract between the University and the GEO." The GEO also voted 605-29 to set the service fee for non-union Graduate Student Assistants (GSAs) equal to union member- ship dues. This decision came out of the agency shop clause included in the GEO contract that provides for all GSAs to either join the union or pay a service fee. Former union negotiator Jack Wileden stated at a GEO stewards meeting last night that if service fees are not paid by See GEO, Page 2 blast RS in yesterday's lot- hich occurred in 11 imultaneously at 7:30 assured of "spots in housing," according to y resident directar Jess nday, lottery winiers to return to their cur- ns can sign leases for lottery the 1975-76 school year. The following day, students desiring to move to another room on their present hall will engage in a separate lottery to determine those spaces. WEDNESDAY, dorm dwvlers hoping to switch to some other See HOUSING, Page 7 oic let candidacy allenged by Dems By STEPHEN HERSH Councilwoman Carol Jones (D-Second Ward) and State ry Bullard (D-Ann Arbor) have both termed "illegal" ance passed Monday by City Council which allows candi- council or Mayor to withdraw from elections and be by new candidates selected by their parties. rd has submitted a request to State Attorney General elley for an opinion as to the ordinance's legality. Should ecide that the ordinance is illegal, his decision could, aid, "be the basis for a court injunction." ORDINANCE was drafted and submitted by the Human arty (HRP) after party member Frank Shoichet un- evidence that Democratic cross-over votes cost him the race against Richard Ankli for the Second Ward council See SHOICHET, Page 7 Daily Photo by KAREN KASMAUSKI .Highpowered blues John Mayall, British blues musician does one of the things he's most famous for as he offers his best on the harmonica. Mayall is known in addition for his talent as a guitarist and singer and for his work with other well-known musicians including Eric Clapton, Mick Taylor and Peter Green. He performed at Crisler Arena last night along with Earth, Wind and Fire. Prof. proposes food shortage remedies By SUSAN ADES "The U.S. has the know-how and the resources to deal with the present world food crisis," declared Jean Mayer, pro- fessor of nutrition at Harvard and delegate to last year's Rome Food Conference, at a lecture in Hill Auditorium last night spon- sored by the Food Action Coalition. "We really haven't given enough to the world," he added. MAYER BLAMED the food crisis mostly on two recent occurences: the poor world crop yield in 1972 and the deepening of the oil crisis "at a rate the world could not absorb." In addition, he cited over-population as a significant factor causing food scarcity. Thi h aa cii inipri b tenh t+e Vati- tankers as "ecological bombs." The soft-spoken bespectacled Mayer sug- gested a two-part program to increase agricultural yield. First, fertilizer produc- tion should be stepped up all over the world, and irrigation systems should be improved. Then, when these steps result in yield increases, more and b e t t e r herbicides should be produced and put to use, and more silos should be constructed to increase storage space. MAYER ENCOURAGED the formation of large cooperative farms, saying "it has worked in other countries," and that it prevents "the rich from becoming richer." Also, he said that underdeveloped coun- tries should be pressured into investing mnre monev in agrricultIral technoloav han we should have pledged it then and there," because that would have put pressure on the other countries to make greater con- tributions. As for food problems in this country, Mayer remarked, "The situation for the poor is statistically very much better than it was five years ago. "But," he continued, "people with low, stable incomes are reluctant to take ad- vantage of social programs. This class of people is deteriorating now. "THE PROBLEM," he added, "is one of social work and out-reach, rather than lack of programs per se." But overabundance as well as shortage of food causes health problems. "Every other health nroblem is secondary" to " .-'xL~