SGC SHENANIGANS See Editorial Page AOF AOF 4 -&-- .A4tr4Tg a 'It itF FROSTY High--40 Low-20 See Today for details Eighty-Five Years of Editorial Freedom Vol LXXXV, No. 148 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, April 5, 1975 Ten Cents Eight Pages I. i Adoption aid A toll-free number has been established for U.S. citizens seeking information or offering help to refugees from South Vietnam, in particular, those who are willing to adopt homeless children air- lifted from Indochina. The Red Cross says that 60 staffers are running a round-the-clock disaster relief service, which can be reached at 800-424-1180. Those interested can also contact the Council on Adoptable Children, P. O. Box 40541 Palisades Station, Washington D.C. " 265748 and 517195... . . are the winning numbers in the "Loser's Lottery" drawing in Lansing yesterday. The num- bers apply to losing $1 Jackpot tickets dated Jan. 30, Feb. 6, 14, 20, 27, March 6, 13, 20, 27 and April 3. A losing ticket with either of those six- digit numbers in the Jackpot number space at the top of the gold ticket wins a special $1,000 losers' prize. 0 Happenings... .. are wide-ranging today, beginning with a conference on "Health and Safety on the Job," from 9 a.m. until 4 p.m. . . . at noon FASST pre- sents an "Alternative Energy Show and Display" at Schorling Aud., with a slide presentation by Richard MacMath and a contest for a solar cookery .. the more politically-oriented can participate in the Ann Arbor Farmworker Support Committee's picket at Campus Corners on State and Packard in protest of the sale of nonunion Gallo wines, that's from 12 noon to 4 p.m. . . . the evening starts off with a bang when UAC Future Worlds presents a "Cartoon Extravaganza" with William Sanders of the Milwaukee Journal and Charles Rodriguez .of the National Lampoon, at 7:30 p.m. in Rackham Aud. . . . at 8 p.m. the School of Music Opera airs "The Tales of Hoffman" by Offenbach in Lydia Mendelssohn Theater . . . also at 8 p.m. all students, beginners included, are invited to the 'U' Square Dance Club meeting at the Coliseum (on 5th and Hill) with admission charged . . . and crowning the night will be the Boston Symphony Orchestra's performance at 8:30 in Hill Aud., as part of the Choral Union Series of the 'U' Musical Society, tickets are available in Burton Tower. " Mini-muggers Six year olds in England are on the rampage, mugging other students and running extortion rackets to get pocket money. Headmaster George Kavanagh blasted the mini-criminals yesterday before the National Association of Schoolmasters. He said lax parental discipline was partly to blame for students joining in gangs to bully weaker chil- dren. The older colleagues are a bunch of Artful Dodgers who teach the younger students the tricks of the candy and pocket money stealing trade, Kavanagh said. At his school, there have been three recent cases of six and seven year olds mug- ging other kids. What ever happened to the flower children? 0 On the inside ... ... Edit Page features endorsements in the City Council race by the Ann Arbor Tenants Union who have rated the candidates in terms of their posi- tions on rent control . . . Sports Page includes an analysis on Michigan's chances in the NCAA gym- nastic championships . . . and Arts Page features a review of saxophonist Jean-Marie Londeix by James Fiebig. " On the outside... Would you believe there is no end in sight to our cold weather? A nearly stationary arctic fair weather system will continue to cause a northerly flow of air through tomorrow, thus skies will re- main generally clear through tonight. Highs will be 35-40, lows will be a frosty 20-25. There will be a near zero chance of snow through tonight. Sunday, in spite of the arctic fair weather system to our north, a storm moving towards us from the south- west will cause increasing cloudiness during the day with snow or rain possible at night with cold temperatures continuing. Disagreement hot iiourth T cird By ANN MARIE LIPINSKI The Fourth Ward is a political microcosm of Ann Arbor, yielding a colorful mixture of Democrats, Republicans and Human Rights Party (HRP) supporters-with the liberals holding a slight upper hand over the conservatives. Beginning south of Hill St. and covering the southwest corner of the city, the Fourth Ward includes the single family oriented Burns Park area, lower income and student neighborhoods and a healthy portion of the city's high income suburban fringe. THIS HETEROGENOUS composition, coupled with an equally diverse trio of coun- cil hopefuls, has turned the city's "swing ward" race into a volatile one which may determine the majority of City Council for the next 12 months. Bill Bronson, the Fourth Ward's Demo- cratic candidate, appears to have gripped the reins of control in this important race, although Ron Trowbridge, the ward's GOP candidate, is dealing Bronson a run for his money. Spicing the contest, though self-admittedly not running to win, is Judy Gibson, the HRP's low-profile entry. "Voting is a right, not a privilege." She believes it is important to tap the eligible voting population in the city "by setting up uolimited registration sites." Bronson, like Gibson, also supports the voter registration proposal, citing many of the same reasons. However, Trowbridge, Bronson's most serious competitor, calls the proposal a "nonissue" explaining, "It's as easy as going to K-Marts. Any student can register to vote." THE PROPOSED Day Care charter amendment draws different reactions from all three candidates. Gibson, disgarding G01P and Democratic accusations that the IIRP authored proposal is loosely written and conducive to fraud, lauds day care centers as superior alternatives to the See HOPEFULS, Page 2 ALL THREE candidates offer the Fourth Ward constituency a different menu vis-a-vis the proposed charter amendments, with Gibson giving her nod to all three, Trow- bridge emphatically opposing them all, and Bronson offering a mixed bag of positions. On the proposed voter registration charter amendment, Gibson recites the HRP slogan, Bronson Trowbridge 'WAR GOVT.' FORMED So uth State " " Cltzens a*d Viet arlift By BILL TURQUE A Troy-based group of con- cerned parents and the Detroit office of Senator Robert Grif- fin (R-Mich.) combined efforts yesterday to battle government- al red tape ahd aid an Atlanta, Ga. citizens group in obtaining a chartered airlift of some 350 children at South Vietnam's An Loc orphanage. Richard Darragh, an em- ploye of Eastern Airlines in At- lanta, and a founder of An Loc Inc., an organization attempt- ing to bring Vietnamese or- phans to Georgia for adoption, said last night that pressure from Griffin's office was in- strumental in persuading Pan American Airways to provide a 747 jetcto transport the children from Saigon to Atlanta. "T H E S E N A T O R' S office made the necessary phone calls to show Pan American the Senator's interest in the flight," PICTUR said Darragh-fow.f The Michigan group which en- flown f listed the aid of Senator Grif- fin's office is the Agency for MINC International Adoption (AIA). Although the organization has not vet obtained the necessary state licensing, it is interested M bringing Asian children to Michigan for adoption. AIA has been helping to raise some of the $200,000 dollars needed to By GL finance theflight. In a let While Darragh did not have yam Milli specific figures to cite, he torney Ge termed AIA's financial contri- commend bution to the airlift effort "very withholde significant." posed day ment that A SPOKESMAN for Griffin's ballot in office in Detroit said that Dar- election. ragh's and AIA's difficulty with Kelley's arranging the charter flight will have arose from a misunderstanding proposal's with the State Department over ballot. A government policy regarding posed by charter flights to Saigon. care, does He said that Darragh had ernor's a been told by the State Depart- on. ment to direct all arrangements KELLE) See TROY, Page 2 objections Vietnam ca i1met quits Sabotage suspected in aigon air crash SAIGON QTR -Faced with heightened uncertainty and crisis, South Vietnam's premier and cabinet resigned yes- terday and President Nguyen Van Thieu ordered forma- tion of a "war government, one that will not ask to sur- render to the Communists." Thieu himself resisted continuing demands that he step down to open the way for a political grouping that might deal with the insurgent side in an effort to reach a negotiated settlement of the war. The Communist-led forces have repeatedly declared they will not negotiate with a government headed by Thieu. IN OTHER developments, the first official U.S. airlift of Viet- narnese war orphans ended in flaming disaster yesterday when the AP Photo :ED HERE in the arms of his new mother is one of the 27 South Vietnamese orphans rom the embattled country to Denve r's Stapleton International Airport early yesterday.' ).R OBJECTIONS: huge Air Force jetliner carry- ing 243 infants crashed in a rice paddy. Washington military officials suspected sabotage. At least half of the 305 infants and adults aboard the C5A Galaxy, the world's largest air- plane, were either killed or ser- iously injured. IT WAS the first of the flights ordered by President Ford to bring 2,000 Vietnamese orphans to new homes in the United States. Fordmand his wife had planned to be at Travis Air Force Base, Calif., when the Galaxy transport arrived Mon- day. He said the airlift would continue despite the tragedy. The political developments came on the second day of rela- tive quiet on the military scene. But it was a tense lull that only increased fears of what the next move might be by the powerful Communist-led forces that have taken swift control of three- fourths of the country in a month-long offensive. R e p o r t s from Washington quoted U.S. intelligence sources there as saying the North Viet- namese command was sending more than 1,000 fresh troops a day into the south in an ap- parent buildup for a final blow. In announcing he had accept- ed the resignations of Premier Tran Thien Khiem and the cab- inet, Thieu told a television audience he was naming Ngu- yen Ba Can to form a new gv- ernment. Can, speaker of the lower house of the National As- sembly, is not a widely known political leader. Jobless rate hits new high of 8.7% WASHINGTON (P)-The na- tion's unemployment rate jump- ed to 8.7 per cent in March as the number of Americans with- out' jobs increased to eight mil- lion, the government reported yesterday. The Labor Department said job losses last month totaled nearly 200,000 and this, com- bined with a rise of 300,000 in the size of the U.S. labor force, pushed the increase in unem- ployment to 500,000 over the previous month. THE LOSS in jobs dropped total employment in the nation to 83.3 million, and marked the sixth consecutive month of job losses. They have totaled 2.6 million since last September. Analysts with the Bureau of Labor Statistics said the March figures show no indication of any abatement in the nation's rising unemployment rate, which now is at the highest level since 1941, when jobless- ness averaged 9.9 per cent in a labor force of 55.9 million. See JOBLESS, Page 2 :elley faults 4 LEN ALLERHAND tter to Governor Wil- ken April 1, State At- neral Frank Kelley re- ed that "the governor approval" of the pro- COURT RULES: Crestwood LANSING, (UPI) - The State Supreme Court ruled yesterday, that the Crestwood school board acted legally when it fired 184 striking teachers, but the decision does not mean the teachers will immediately or automatically lose their jobs. In a 4-3 ruling, the high court overturned lower court rulings that said the Crestwood board violated state law by firing the teach- ers last year during a long, bitter strike in the Detroit suburb. THE COURT ruled that provisions of the firig legal teachers until a finding is reached on the unfair labor practice charges. IF THE CHARGES are substantiated, MERC may order permanent reinstatement of the teachers despite their illegal strike, the court said. Edward Homeier, attorney for the school board, said last night that "the present staff is the one that will continue - at least for the time being." The Crestwood board fired the teachers last Dec. 30 after they ignored an order frnm the ho hard 1to return to work-The strik- drafted b' Party (Hp * the T nosal mig] ing day ca the amour noes disbi ices:;" * there which rev( requireme funds proj ing fiscal1 city has a *treferr of state la apnror-riat vid'ials an shall inset its low-in met." In '2V~a rn ort- care charter amend t will appear on the Monday's city-wide decision, however, no effect upon the appearing on the ny amendment pro- petition, as was day not require the gov- pproval to be voted Y raised three main to the proposal, v the Human Rights passage of the pro- Ft call for appropriat- re funds that "exceed [t of available reve- irsable for day serv- is confusion as to enues the 1.7 per cent nt would be applied: ected for the uncom- year or those that the ctually received; and ring to a subsection aw, Kellev said, "In ing monies to indi- nd groups, the City re that the needs of come residents are the current charter nt annronriaitiosafqire Thus, ,.if the ballot proposal passes, Ann Arbor might have more money earmarked for day care than could be raised. In re- gards to this possibility, Kelley remarked, "However improba- ble its occurrance, that result is unlawful." IN KELLEY'S second objec- tion state law would appear to be violated because day care monies must be appropriated according to projected revenues rather than actual receipts. Asked about the significance of Kelley's report, City Attor- Holt asks n ew look for child facilities By SUSAN ADES "We've created a world which is totally unsafe foryoung peo- ple . . . that is why we need day care," stressed John Halt, the noted education author, at a luncheon yesterday sponsord by the Day Care Coalition. Sneaking to an audience :om- Buckley ..spars a Hill Aud. By ANN MARIE LIPINSKI Following a contest the victor charac- terized as "just a little infield practice," William Buckley left the ring with nary a scratch. Fielding punches from two local politicos was an easy task for the East Coast kid. Buckley, renowned king of conserva- tive rhetoric, clashed with State Rep. Perry Bullard (D-Ann Arbor) and Zol ay care ney Edwin Pear replied, "The law requires that all proposals be submitted to the Governor for approval." "This opinion does not effec- tively validate.or invalidate the proposal," he added. DESCRIBING w h a t might happen if the day care mea- sure were to pass, Pear com- mented, "Any interested party could bring it to court for a rul- ing. The city can ask for a de- cision even without anyone bringing suit against us." See KELLEY, Page 2