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April 08, 1975 - Image 2

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Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1975-04-08

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I

Poge Two

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Tuesday, April 8, 1975

SPIRITUAL COMMUNITY OF THE SUN
PRESENTS
DICK GREGORY
r Speakinq on the food crisis and survival of humanity *
FRI., MAY 16, 1975-7:00 P.M.
UNIV. OF MICH. BALLROOM
Donation $4 plus 1 can of food
profits qo to world community food bank-
ann arbor. mi
GET TICKET in ADVANCE of show!
Available at David's Bookstore-529 E. Liberty
and 'n the Michigan Union

Stephenson apparent winner

m;

Humanities lecture Series

SECOND LECTURE: Tues., April 8
4 P.M., EAST LECTURE HALL
(3rd Floor Rackham)
GUEST LECTURER: Prof. Marvin Felheim
lecturina on "THE POLITIC BIRD"
DR. FELHEIM is a Professor of Enqlish at the University of
Michigan and a recipient of the William Award for Teach-
ing in Humanities and the Distinguished Faculty Achieve-
ment Award. He. has been with the University for over
twenty years, and has been a lecturer at the University of
Athens (Greece) and the University of Pau (France). He
is the author of COMEDY: THEORY, PRACTICE, PLAYS
and THE LIVING ARISTOPHANES, and is preparing two
books, FILN AS GENRE and THE AMERICAN NOVELLA.
Professor Felheim participated in the lecture series in co-
ordination with the University T h e a t r e Production of
PER ICLES.
THIRD LECTURE: Tues., April 15
4 P.M., EAST CONFERENCE
(4th Floor Rackham)
GUEST LECTURER: Prof. Gerald F. Else
Iecturinq on "SOME BIRD NOTES FROM ATHENS"
The Humanities Lecture Series is offered in coordination
with the University of Michigan Theatre Program Guest
Artist production of THE BIRDS, which is a MUSICAL,
COMEDY, SPECTACLE ADAPTATION BY LAWRENCE
RAAB AND JONATHAN SIMON, featuring guest director,
JOSEPH NASSI F from the Pittsburgh Playhouse and the
Pittsburgh Ballet Theatre and quest designer, HENRY
HEYMANN, also from the Pittsburgh Playhouse.

(Continued from Page 2)
1,117 for Goodman and 1,104 for
Graf.
The major issue in the con-
test was Taylor's opposition to
the day care and rent control
City Charter amendments-both
of which Goodman supported.
Incumbent Councilwoman Ca-
rol Jones (D-Second Ward)
trounced her opponents, HRP
member Frank Shoichet and Re-
publican Robert McDonough. All
three ran liberal campaigns in
the student-dominated sector of
the city.
UNOFFICIALLY, Jones garn-
dd 1,260 ballots. Shoichet and
McDonough received 674 and
360 respectively.
T h e Republican - dominated
Third and-" Fourth Wards pro-
duced no surprises as incum-
bent Republican Robert Henry
and newcomer Gerald Bell re-
spectively won with extremely,
convincing totals.
Henry, who during the past
year served as mayor pro-tem-
pore, overwhelmed Democrat
Michael Broughton by a 2,552-
1,455 vote margin on the basis
of partial returns. HRP candi-
Worid Airways a-.
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S *.t. - .w. 0.,*

Incumbent councilmen Norris AFt2,481 votes, HRP candidate
ncumentcounilmn Noris A FORMER state president I Jackson ran third.
Thomas (D-First Ward), Rica- of the NAACP, Wheeler has Jakso-rn-ti.
ard Hadler (R-Fourth Ward), been a longtime advocate for
and John McCormick (R-Fifth black rights. He came to Ann
Ward) chose not to seek re- Arbor about 35 years ago and
election this year. Each had is now an associate professor B allo t
served at least two terms on of microbiology in the Univer-
council. sity Medical School.
Stephenson, a local patent Although active in the local! O osR
attorney, won the mayoralty two Model Cities program, Wheeler!
years o twithoutg8 sper recently had not played a ma-
cent of the vote against a jor role in Democratic Party
stronger HRP challenge but a politics - until his bid for the
weak, poorly planned Demo-! mayoralty. i
cratic campaign.RI FOR THE past three years. (Cotnued fromPage 1)
Dean of city Republicans,! Ernst has worked as a bus
Stephenson served as a councils driver and dispatcher for the istration attacked Kelley'sc
man from 1968 through April Ann Arbor Transit Authority ion as being poorly reseay
1972. and has served as a union stew- and inaccurate in many

Eric

date Everret Guy got a scant I
139 votes.I
IN THE Fifth Ward, Bell eas-
ily outdistanced conservative
Democrat Douglas White and
iHR member Laurrie Ross. The
incomplete totals read: Bell-
2,575; White-1,642; and Ross-I
310.

framework of his re-election
campaign.
Stephenson announced pub-;
licly last November that he
would not seek re-election. But:
apparently he changed his mind
to avoid a split within the Re-
publican party, according to'
knowledgable observers.

In the Ypsilanti city elections
yesterday, Mayor George Good-
man, who directs the Univer-
sity's Opportunity Program, eas-
ily won re-election over nominal!
opposition.
Goodman, a Democrat, whip-
ped Republican Robert Dum-'
mitt bya 3-1 margin, garnering

S

opin-
rched
re-

Voters have little
trouble with new
balloting process
By TIM SCHICK
Although Ann Arbor voters have not used paper ballots since
1962, there seemed to be virtually no confusion yesterday over
the new voting system.
Of the several poll workers interviewed, none reported any
unusual problems or difficulty and some indicated that the paper
ballots had even speeded up the voting process.
Paper ballots were introduced to accommodate preferential
voting, which was approved in the November election as an
amendment to the city charter. Under this system, a voter
can designate a first, second, and third choice for mayor.
During the weeks preceding the election, many people had
expressed the fear that the new voting system would confuse and
deter potential voters.
The real test of the new system, however, comes during tab-
ulation of the votes. Under paper balloting procedure, improper-
ly marked ballots ane invalidated.
Councilwoman Kathy Kozachenko (HRP-Second Ward), poll-
watching in Markley Hall, commented that "most people seems
to understand preferential voting."
'U' budget slashed
by additional cut,,
(Continued from Page 2) tion must still receive legisla-
The faculty also heard a gen- tive approval. He indicated the
eral preliminary report on the figure more accurately repre-
University Affirmative Action sents a 3.5 to 4.2 per cent sal-
committee's investigation into ary increase, adding that the
the controversial Jewel Cobbb legislatore makes its calcula-
affair. tions on 70 per cent of the uni-
Committee chairman and Ed- versity's gross butget.
ucation Dean Wilbur Cohen said The President o u t 1i n e d a
the committee decided at their number of ways the University
first meeting on Feb. 4 to fo- could bring the 3.5 figure up to
cus on the literary college the 5.6 recommendation. Since
(LSA) deanship crisis that he only learned of the addition-
flared in January when the Re- al two per cent cut yesterday
gents unanimously named Cobb morning, however, his sugges-
a black woman educator, to the tions were based only on the
high administrative post. four per cent cut.

IN his tenure as mayor, he
has enjoyed a Republican coun-
eil majority working with him.
Stephenson's concerns gravi-
tated toward tight fiscal con-
trol favoring traditional munici-
pal services such as fire and
police protection and garbage
collection over social services.
That stance, in addition to a:
pledge for improved street
maintenance, constituted theG

ard
Today's election story was
written by co-editor Gordon
A tcheson. Election night cover-
age was coordinated by city edi-
for Stephen Selbst, with files
from reporters Ann Marie Li-'
finski, David Burhenn, Rob
Meachnm, David Whiling, andj
Dan Blugerman.

spects, although they acknowl-
edge it probably had an adverse
affect on voter reaction to the
measure.
This yea r's rent control
amendment was much like one
that tumbled to defeat last year
by a wide margin.
IRP INTRODUCED both pro-
posals-neither of which drew
broad-based Democratic support
or any Republican backing.
Aanin this r_ the rcitv' ad

THE PUBLIC IS INVITED TO ATTEND ALL LECTURES
FREE OF CHARGE

II

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,..-...--................... -
- EACN AND MAIL 70
Trauel Charter Inc.a
S 143 S,.otShS e.D , troIt, MI48226 7.6. 962I1 I
Send me detailedMWmatlon. MD1
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'all

. gar n1. year ,e u1y S11U
lard interests waged an expen-
THE CENTER FOR SOUTH AND SOUTHEAST ASIAN STUDIES sive media campaign against
AND THE the amendment.
DEPARTMENTS OF POLITICAL SCIENCE & ANTHROPOLOGY The amendment would have1
ARE PLEASED TO PRESENT established a five - member,
elected board to implement rent
*WIcontrols. They would have had
the power to authorize rent in-
creases and roll-backs.
Q Agehananda Bharati BTOPNNSo h
9e 0000 OfJrBUT OPPONENTS of the
PROFESSOR AND CHAIRMAN measure claimed it would dry
DEPARTMENT OF ANTHROPOLOGY, SYRACUSE U. up housing, hurt union labor,
SPEAKIG ONIj and reduce housing maintain-
T r SPEAKING ON kence-criticisms leveled against
IJ The Gurus and Their F lock (' last year's rent control amend-
A Critical Assessment of Indian Cults in Americ .ent as well.
THURSDAY APRIL 10, 1975- at 4:00 m. While condemning this par-
ticular proposal, the Democratic
RACKHAM LECTURE HALL ozIcouncil candidates have prom-
MAIN FLOOR ised to introduce a rent control
0<==>0<C==>0 -=-V<=-0o<-=> -o<--<-> <> mjordina e, if their party wins
maorityin the municipal elec-
Ition.

.._.. .. .

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16

- - - -e m = m - -- -- -- - m
-COUPON- 2 for 1 Special -COUPON--
GOOD ONLY 4/8, 4/9 and 4/10
Buy 1Super Salad-GET 1 FREE
A large portion of fresh greens, tomatoes, cheese,
mushrooms, cauliflower, olives and sprouts with
our famous yogurt dressing.
NOT AVAILABLE FOR
CARRY OUT

_I

I

STEVE'S LUNCH
1313 SO. UNIVERSITY
Home Cooking Is Our Specialty

Longevity Cookery
314 E. Liberty
Ann Arbor, Mich.
GOURMET NATURAL FOOD RESTAURANT (313) 662.2019
m~~~~~~~~~ 83 oooooooooo

Breakfast All Day
3 eggs, Hash Browns,
Toast & Jelly-$1.05
Ham or Bacon or
Sausage with 3 eggs,
Hash Browns, Toast and
jelly-$1.50
3 eggs, Rib Eye Steak,
Hash Browns,
Toast & Jelly-$2.10

Specials This Week
Beef Stroganoff
Chinese Pepper Steak
Delicious Korean Bar-a Beef
(served after 4 Daily)
Eaq Rolls
Home-made Soups (Beef,
Barley Clam Chowder, etc.) .60
Chili, Vegetable Tempuro
(served after 9 p.m.)
Hamburqer Steak Dinner-
(1/2 lb.) .. . . $1.89
Spaqhetti in Wine Souce
Beef Curry Rice
Baked Flounder Dinner $2.25
/4Ib. Rst. Beef, Kaiser Roll $1.69
% lb. Ham on Kaiser Roll $1.39

The day care charter amend-
ment, also initiated by HRP,
would have forced the city to
allocate 1.7 per cent of the mu-
nicipal budget in support of
non-profit child care centers.
A HEATED controversy de-
veloped over exactly how much
money would actually be in-
volved. HRP originally contend-
ed that only $314,000 would be
dispursed under the measure.
Howto do a
Jewish Wedding
Part of the
Living Jewish Catalogue
TUES., APRIL 8
8:00 p.m. at HILLEL
1429 HILL

N E G O T I A T I ON S
betweenthe University and
Cobb, broke down when the
Zoology Department refused toj
grant the cell biologist tenure
in a hasty, tightly - guarded;
decision.-
Cohen said the committee was
"completely preoccupied withj
the so-called Cobb case," and
had so farmade one tentative
decision - not to interview the
individual Regents or the Re-
gents collectively. Cohen said
the group had cited no reasons
for their decision not to go back
to the Regents.
COHEN GAVE no details of
the group's meetings with Vice-
President for Academic Affairs
Frank Rhodes, Fleming, Zoolo-
gy chairman Carl Gans, LSA
deanshiprsearch committee
chairman Otto Graf, and Jew- I
el Cobb. He said, however, that
"the issues have far-reaching
implications for the faculty."
Discussing the economic
crunch yesterday, Fleming fo-
cused on a 5.6 per cent salary
adjustment presently being
considered by the state legis-
lature.
Last fall the Committee on the
Economic Status of the Facul-
ty requested an 18 per cent
salary increase whiih the ad-
ministration slashed to 12 per
cent in its report to the gover-
nor. Milliken further reduced
the figure to 5.6 per cent.
F L E M I N G explained that
t h e governor's recommenda-1

FLEMING said the limited
options are to increase tuition,
to further reduce programs al-
ready hit by the four per cent'
cut, or to use some "funds of
limited amounts" accumulated
from various other sources
which include private gifts.
Fleming called a tuition hike
"not a happy solution but one
of the possible ones."~
He also discussed other un-
avoidable University expenses,
particularly those incurred by
the University's seven unions.
The recent Graduate Employes
Union (GEO) contract requires
$250 thousand in addition to
monies already allocated for
graduate and research assist-
ants.
THE PRESIDENT stunned
the faculty when he revealed
that the University loses a
quarter of a million dollars an-
nually for losses in moveable
equipment.
Fleming named the GEO and
the clericals as the two unions
with the largest impact on the
University's budget.
Addressing the faculty, Cohen
described the faculty - admin-
istration affirmative action com-
mittee, appointed by Rhodes in
early January, as a heterogen-
ous group likely to come up
with different points of view
regarding the Cobb affair. Co-
hen said, "Whether we can
come to a unanimous consensus
remains to be seen."

FAST AND FRIENDLY SERVICE BY MR. AND MRS. LEE

lsAUn;v.

U

= ii_

SUN. 9-8
CLOSED MON.
TUES.-SAT. 8-8
769-2288
1313 SO UNIVERSITY
STEVE'S LUNCH

1

University Theatre Pro ,rams
IT5 A COMED40Y/ITS A MUSICA4L!
/7 -. . e~r _E

SOLID COPPER PENNY BRACELET
Honest Abe, these genuine old Lincoln
pennies date back to the days when
pennies were pennies and copper was
copper and the twain met at the U.S. mint.
Now intricately soldered in a bracelet
that's been buffed to a warm shine, these
Lincoln copper penny bracelets are great
gifts for warm friends. We can't attest to
those spurious rumors of mystical
healing powers possessed by copper
bands, but we can honestly say this one is
fun to wear. Bends to fit and glows with
everything.
$3

w. --- _______ ____ _ __-..___
f 1

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