GRAND JURY SHOULD BE FIRST See Editorial Page I C, .4.r Lilt i~au A6 .A, A, :43 t I QUESTIONABLE Tyigh-8 s Low-61 See Today for details Eighty Three Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXIV, No. 17 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, September 25, 1973 Ten Cents Ten Pages plus Supplement ir c*J3E NWSlAPPCAL6,DNL Associate deans named Two professors, Billy Frye of LSA and Maurice Sinnott of Engineering, have been named associate deans of their respective schools. Frye - a professor of zoology - joined the faculty in 1961 and is currently chairman of the Zoology Department. Sinnott - a* professor of chemical and metallurgical engineering - first joined the University staff as an instructor in 1944. He was an act- ing associate dean before the appointment came. Placement registration If you're a senior or a grad student and looking for a job after graduation the Career Planning and Place- ment Service wants to help you out. Today and tomor- row, every hour on the hour from 10 a.m. through 5 p.m., the placement folks are holding a registration meeting in the UGLI Multi-purpose Room. Those who show up can register with the placement office, and find out about- what services are available. " Happenings . The Women's Political Committee (the group working on city charter amendments) is meeting at Feminist House (225 E. Liberty) at 8 p.m. . . . 'the LSA Coffee Hour is in the Anthropology Dept. Lounge in the basement of Angell Hall this week, at 3 p.m... . the Psych Film Series is showing Interviews with My Lai Veterans and Obedience in Aud. B, Angell Hall . at 4 p.m. . .. . Hist. 103 and Asian Studies 101 present Satyair Ray's The World of Apu, same place, 7:30 p.m. . . . and the Women's Studies Films is showing Reichert's Growing Up Female in the UGLI Multi-pur- pose Rm. at 7:30 p.m. Probe halt sought Vice President Spiro Agnew is proceeding with his official routine in Washington while his attorneys pre- pare to try to stop an investigation of him. The lawyers say they will go to court, probably by tomorrow, to try to stop a probe of Agnew in connection with alleged poli- tical kickbacks in Maryland. Bolivian coup The Holivian government has arrested 89 labor lead- ers and accused them of taking part in a Marxist plot to overthrow the military regime of President Hugo Banzer in La Paz, Bolivia. War wears on Two Cambodian units moved through light opposi- tion yesterday to within 5% miles of a linkup in a sweep designed to secure Phnom Penh's vulnerable western approaches. The South Vietnamese command announced in Saigon that North Vietnamese have apparently over- run a. government outpost 23 miles north of Pleiku in the central highlands. Sextuplets gaining Four of the five surviving Stanek sextuplets of Den- ver, Colorado, have conquered their breathing problems. and the last born, Nathan, is making good progress, their doctor says. Monetary discord The International Monetary Fund showed the world how deeply its 126 members are divided on -rebuilding the shattered international monetary system. The fund's committee of 20 finance ministers meeting in Nairobi, Kenya, issued a report yesterday that only stated alter- natives for the toughest points at issue, indicating the hardest negotiations are yet to come. U.S.;vs. Canada The Toronto Star says American tanks lined up at the Canadian border in preparation to move into Quebec at the height of the separatist crisis in 1970. According to the former intelligence chief of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, CIA agents had infiltrated Montreal on a large scale 'and heavy equipmentwas massedtat the border to protect American interests along the St. Lawrence Seaway in case the Quebec government fell. U.S. and Canadian sources have denied the report. 0 Bobby's seeond thoughtsj Bobby Riggs has scrapped plans to leap from the London Bridge this week because the water is too shal- low, his publicity agent said yesterday. Larry Lawrie said Riggs decided against the jump after findinig out water under the bridge was only six feet deep. Riggs had promised to jump off a bridge if he lost his tennis match with Billie Jean King last week in Houston. He lost, 6-4, 6-3, 6-3. Riggs reportedly is looking for a bridge with more water under it. - - On the inside .. * burglary and surveillance in America is the subject of a Zach Schiller essay on the Editorial Page ... Dan Borus writes about (what else?) Michigan football on. the Sports Page . . . and the Arts Page features a story by Roy Chernus on the Faculty Cham- ber Music Series. WATERGATE HEARINGS RESUME Hunt Flein says Colson In on bugging quizzed on fee hike, residency By DAN BLUGERMAN University President R o b b e n Fleming defended the recent tui- tion increases and new residency regulations against charges raised by Student Government Council, (SGC) Vice President for Adminis- trative Affairs David Fowler last night on WUOM's Symposium '73. However, the anticipated head-on student-administration confronta- tion did not materialize on the one hour call-in radio show. FLEMING OPENED by reading a "simplified, yet accurate" ver- sion of the official budget figures for 1973-74. He invited the. audience to follow him in computing a projected defi- cit of $5.4 million if revenue sources are not increased from last year. When questioned on his figure, Fleming admitted that the deficit figure is only a rough "guesti- mate." FOWLER OPENED with a re- statement of the Student Activities Committee's (SAC) charges that the administration did not include the students in the decision-making process. Fleming responded by stating that he hadchecked the minutes of the Budget Allocation Committee and was positive that both student representatives were absent from both meetings where the tuition in- crease was discussed. Fowler claimed last night the SAC has 4,000 signatures of people who have pledged to withhold their first tuition payment. When Fowler was asked what the University would do to students if they with- held the fee, he could only refer to the mandatory late fee of $5. When Moderator Fred Heindly posed the same question to Flem- ing, Fleming s i m p 1 y replied, "That's an interesting question." A listener called in a question to Fleming challenging the 'U's' with- holding of the faculty salary list. The listener included a reference to state Attorney General Frank Kelly's ruling that these lists were public record at state supported in- Few can to seek stitutions. Fleming responded that the issue must be decided in the courts and that the University will only turn to the courts if sued. FLEMING SAID this fall will not be an accurate indicator of ,the correctness of the tuition hike. He See FLEMING, Page 10 didaes office in, SGC election By BILL HEENAN In recent years Student Govern- ment Council (SGC) has been plagued by low voter turn outs but this year it apparently cannot even find enough people to run for office. Yesterday noon marked the fil- ing deadline for candidates seek- ing seats representing residence halls, independent housing, and LSA in the up-coming election, yet only two persons have chosen to run for six available independent housing positions. MOREOVER JUST enough can- didates have filed for residence hallseats to hold a coptested race. Four people will vie for three seats. Prospects for contested races in the various other positions do not appear promising, since many peo- ple have filed for more than one position. The SGC election code requires that these persons actual- ly run for only one position. Final filing deadilne for the re- maining-- seats is Oct. 1, just a week before the actual election. THE POOR TURNOUT by candi- dates was not unexpected, accord- ing to SGC member David Horn- stein (Bullshit Party). "Many can- didates especially those represent- ing the independent housing will win by default," he added. Hornstein, however, predicted "real contests" in the LSA and undergraduate races. Former SGC Treasurer David Schaper blamed the poor response on delays in preparing for the all- campus election. The hold-up re- sulted from SGC's move to amend the controversial 10-10-10 plan ap- proved last spring, he said. THE PLAN ESTABLISHED the expanded SGC format providing 42 seats divided among three basic categories: residential, graduate/ undergrauate, and s c h o o 1. The drive to change the new con- stitution was killed by Central Stu- dent Judiciary last week. Nonetheless, Elections Director Ron Straus dlaimed he is "farther ahead now" in preparation than any past SGC elections director. "All we need now are poll workers and ballot counters," he said. Persons affiliated with such bi- zarre parties as Screw SGC, Dump (University basketball coach Johnny Orr), and the Mad Hatters Tea Party have already filed peti- tions of candidacy. SGC President Lee Gill's Student Rights Party and the Campus Coalition, former- ly CLAMP, are also fielding slates of candidates. UNLIKE LAST year SGC cannot afford to publish candidate plat- forms, prompting Vice President Sandy Green to comment "they're on their own now." SGC will, how- ever, provide each party with a $30 campaign subsidy. Ex-advisor, K4} reuserd 'to testify WASHING'TON (Reuter) - Convicted Watergate conspira- tor It. Howard Hunt told the Senate Watergate Committee at its reopened hearings yes- - terday that he had learned f o r m e r presidential aide Charles Colson knew in ad- vance of the plan to bug the ; -.Democratic party headquar- ters. In the most direct evidence so far implicating Colson, }{" wHunt told the committee in an opening statement that he. understood the former counsel t" the- President was among three top presidential aides who approved the establish- ment of a large-scale Intel- ligence and counter-intelli- - gence program which included k'={ >-{>4 the bugging of Watergate. Colson was to have been the - opening witness yesterday, but he : declined to testify on the grounds ..< that he might be indicted by the Y }" grand jury investigating the break- {r:, in of the office of Daniel Ellsberg's psychiatrist in September, 1971. Hunt, who has been given a holding sentence of 50 years im- Y:d prisonment for his part in the con- spiracy, said another convicted Watergate conspirator, G. Gordon Liddy, told him the program was proposed by former Attorney Genm eral John Mitchell, with Liddy as its chief. "It is my understanding that the program had been approved by AP Photo Jeb Magruder, a former White CONVICTED WATERGATE conspirator E.'-Howard Hunt peers over House aide, and John Dean, former his glasses as he answers questions posed by the Senate Watergate counsel to the president," Hunt, Committee, which resumed hearings yesterday in Washington. See HUNT, Page 2 Chiles military authorit burnms Mrxist literat ure Pacilfic splashdown awaits Skylab crew in disabled Apollo HOUSTON (UP) - Clean up, pack up and power down chores occupied the Skylab 2 astronauts yesterday as the record-breaking spacemen prepared for their splashdown to- day and the end of their 59%/2-day voyage. "Watch us today-we'll get this thing all put to bed," said Skylab 2 commander Alan Bean as the as- tronauts worked to close down the space station. "We're coming home tomorrow." BEAN AND HIS crewmates,' Jack Lousma and Owen Garriott, spent yesterday tidying up the or- biting laboratory and preparing it for the Skylab 3 crew, which is scheduled to spend 56 days aboard the space station starting Nov. 11. The Skylab 2 splashdown target is 230 miles southwest of San Diego, Calif., in the Pacific Ocean. Officials said the target may be moved to the northwest a number of miles if Hurricane Irah, which is 500 miles south of the splashdown point, becomes a haz- ard. Bean spotted the storm off the coast 'of western Mexico yesterday and told Mission Control it was "a beautiful hurricane." BEAN, GARRIOTT and Lousma will board their Apollo command ship this morning. They will con- duct a "hot fire" test of some steering rockets and undock the command module from Skylab at 3:50 p.m. EDT. After moving away from the or- biting laboratory, the astronauts will fire the powerful service pro- pulsion rocket on the Apollo craft. This will slow their speed, cause them to fall from .orbit and streak into the atmosphere toward the ocean. Splashdown will come at 6:20 p.m. EDT. RE-ENTRY WILL BE tricky and complex for the astronauts. The astronauts must fly the tronauts. SHORTLY AFTER splashdown today, the New Orleans will ma- neuver alongside t h e bobbing spacecraft and lift it on board with a crane. The astronauts will re- main inside the Apollo craft until it is on the deck of the carrier. Dr. Royce Hawkins, chief of the astronaut doctors, said he expects Bean, Garriott and Lousma "will be very unsteady" as the result of their long stay in the weightless- ness of space. By AP and-Reuter SANTIAGO - Chilean military authorities have launched a book burning campaign against Marxist literature, raiding private homes and ordering merchants to get rid of leftist materials. Col. Pedro Ewing, secretary-gen- eral of the government for the mil- itary junta that seized power Sept. 11, said in an interview published yesterday that book stores "must eliminate Marxist texts if they -don't want to be sanctioned." MEANWHILE, THE United States officially recognized Chile's new military junta yesterday, a State Department spokesperson s a i d. Some 20 nations have recognized the junta. - On Sunday; security forces raid- ed numerous apartments at gun- point in central Santiago and threw Marxist books; pamphlets and posters to the streets, wher'e they were burned in bonfires. IN SOME AREAS frightened people started their own fires in the street to burn offensive litera- ture before the troops arrived. ....... ........................................................................... :............................. ........................... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ............. *.*. . . .. *. *.' . *.* .* .* .*.*. *. *. *. *. . . . - eg .............. BANDING TOGETHER Marhing with Stanfrd ". By BETH NSEN Clad in a floppy white hat, cardinal-red jacket and goggles, I set out to get the inside story on ::the . colorful Stanford Marching Band at last Saturday's Michigan- Stanford football game. I tuned my vintage 1973 Chablis wine bottle under the direction of their gypsy-clad drum major. All I had to do, I was assured, was follow the saxophone player in front of me. WITH A GOOD supply of blind faith, I marched out in step (yes, they do all try to start on the same foot) and under the pressure of 80,000 pairs of eyes, ran to the correct positions guided by the shouts of cooperative band mem- bers. Their sudden offer to let me march with them during half time had been no joke; it was just typi- cal of their "have a good time" philosophy toward marching band. "We like to do unrehearsed The government also banned Marxist newspapers that supported the government of President Sal- vador Allende, who died in the bloody Sept. 11 coup. . But the press secretary for -the junta, Federico Willoughby, indi- cated that the new government does not have a. full-fledged policy to eliminate Marxist, books. "The - junta respects ideas. It doesn't be- lieve burning books will stop ideas," Willoughby told reporters. ON SUNDAY'S book burnings, he said: "Soldiers, police and stu-- dents do not always react in a manner coinciding wit hgovern- ment policy. It was something of the moment." The Swiss government announced in Bern that its embassy in San- tiago will be open to grant asylum to anyone seeking refuge from po- litical persecution. The junta has arrested thousands of suspected extremists sincemthe coup. An official. announcement over the weekend said 244 persons have been killed in the coup and in street battles between resisters and security forces. But unofficial estimates put the death toll much higher. AUTHORITIES reported that six extremists w e r e killed Saturday night while trying to escape their military captors near the port city of San Antonio. Meanwhile, Chile's Nobel Prize- winning poet Pablo Neruda will be buried in Santiago. He was denied a state funeral because of the mil- itary coup which overthrew one of his closest firends, Marxist Presi- dent Salvador Allende. Pablo Neruda, considered Latin America's greatest poet in his life- time, died Sunday night from heart , collapse at the end of a long can- cer illness. NERUDA, 69, spent his last days sinking into death as the vision of a Mar;xit nrit e hadichain-