THE ISSUE OF RESIGNATION See Editorial Page Y AOP AdL M-ww :43 rii49 CRISPY High-65 Low-39 See Today for details Eighty-Three Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXIV, No. 26 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, October 5, 1973 Ten Cents Ten Pages r--, 920 and 234 . . . are this week's winning lottery numbers. Ken- neth Fox, a 53-year-old Detroit truck driver was the big winner, pulling down a cool $200,000 in the super draw- ing. Tuition rap This afternoon at three President Fleming will appear in the Rackham Lecture Hall to explain the recent 24 per cent tuition hike. On hand to ask questions will be representatives of The Daily, SGC, the Student Action Committee, and the teaching fellows. Everybody on campus is invited (urged to attend, even) and questions will be taken from the floor. Double agent? Although few students realize it, President Fleming leads a double life! In aldition to being president of the University, he is a regent (or in this case, a trustee) of a small college in Wisconsin. In fact, the school - Beloit College in Beloit, Wis.,-announced yesterday that he has been re-elected to another three-year term there. This presents a serious problem. What happens if the day comes when the Mighty Blue Wave of Michi- gan faces the Paltry Blue Drip of Beloit? President Flem- ing, where do your loyalties lie? Happenings .. . are topped by a Women's Fair - "What Women Are Doing" - which will be held on the third floor of the League. Some 27 local organizations will take part . .. the International Center's "Foreign Student Continu- ing Orientation Program" is showing the film But What if the Dream Comes True? at the International Center, 603 E. Madison, 7:30 p. m. . . . Cinema Guild is show- ing Antonioni's Laventura at Arch. Aud. 7 at 7 and 9:30 . . . and Cinema II is showing Hawks' Only Angels Have Wings in Angell, Aud., A at 7 and' 9:30. Ervin vs. Nixon An attorney for President Nixon argued in federal court yesterday that the Senate Watergate Committee had no authority to sue the President for Watergate- related tape recordings. Charles Alan Wright said also that the court lacks jurisdiction in the case. Samuel Dash, chief counsel for the committee, said it is a unique situation, "the first case in which the President himself may be involved in criminal activity." ACLU vs. Nixon The American Civil Liberties Union urged Congress to begin impeachment proceedings against President Nixon, based on six grounds "affecting civil liberties." It was the first time in the 53-year history of the o- ganization that its board of directors has voted a resolu- tion seeking a president's impeachment. 0 Pullout halted The Pentagon is reported to be suspending U. S. Air Force withdrawals from Thailand until it sees what Con- gress does about ordering an over-all reduction in U. S. troops overseas. In this way, officials hope they can credit already planned withdrawals from the Far East against any quotas set by Congress. Agnew lives Vice President Spiro Agnew attended a 90-minute Cabi- net session at the White House. Deputy White House Press Secretary Gerald Warren said there was no dis- cussion of the matter concerning allegations of political kickbacks against Agnew. Junta offs leftist The military junta announcedthe execution by firing squad of Jose Gregorio Liendo, a leftist extremist leader of Chile's rural south. It was the 21st execution reported by the junta since the armed forces leaders overthrew the government of Marxist President Salvador Allende on Sept. 11. Shultz in Germany U. S. Treasury Secretary George Shultz arrived in Bonn, West Germany yesterday to try to get the govern- ment to pay a bigger share of the costs of keeping American GIs in Germany. Bonn reportedly is willing to pay only half the $3.3 billion the United States is be- lieved to have requested. What's your 'hurry? A man accused of robbery in Kingston, N.Y., appar- ently couldn't even wait to hear the -jury's verdict. Police said George Greenidge escaped from the county courthouse while the jury was deliberating his case yes- terday; he had been accused of second-degree robbery in connection with a grocery-store holdup. The jury foundahim guilty, but the police couldn't seem to find him at all. On the inside . . . Marnie Heyn writes a drug-crazed account of true experiences with rabid squirrels on the Editorial Page . . . the Ann Arbor Civic Theatre production of Shaw's Arms and the Man is reviewed by Alvin Katz Community By ANN RAUMA start a dow] Last month, with the opening of the school Following year, Ann Arbor's Community High School cele- and the grot brated an uneasy first anniversary. which Com City School Superintendent Harry Howard an- duced to 21 notinced that the school would have to surrender The comp seven of its 24 teachers, due to a decline in en- statement, I rollment. Failing to make cuts, Howard said, man for Co would constitute preferential treatment for Com- "the integri munity High by giving it a better student-teacher within budg ratio than the other schools in the district. tained." COMMUNITY HIGH'S teachers, students and BUT ALT parents responded to Howard by organizing meet- been averte ings to rally support for the school, charging that it remain. the proposed cutback would drastically limit the Communit individualized educational opportunities. This, 1972, as the they said, would further dcrease enrollment and Superintend nward spiral. a series of meetings between Howard )up, a compromise was reached under imunity High's faculty would be re- full-time and two half-time teachers. romise satisfied both sides. In a joint Howard and Dr. Allen Menlo, spokes- ommunity High parents, agreed that ty of the program (at Community), getary constraints, has been main- THOUGH the immediate crises had d, myriad problems which led up to y High began its life in January, brainchild of liberal-minded former ent Bruce McPherson. troubled The idea was to create a flexible school with a broad curriculum, which would make it more nearly an organic part of the surrounding com- munity, rather than an isolated institution. CENTRAL to this idea was the use of so-called "community resource persons" - workers and professionals and other members of the local community who meet with students to broaden their knowledge of various skills, trades and life- styles. Enrollment at Community last year was 464 students-56 below the school's projected capacity of 520. This year, enrollment slipped drastically down to 339. THE MAJOR reduction was in the 9th grade- enrollment dropped from 140 last year to only 40. Baltimore but alive Enrollment in 11th and 12th grades, however, actually increased. Those involved with the school cite a bad pub- lic image as a major factor behind the decline. They blame "the media" and counselors at other schools for this image. IN A LETTER to the Ann Arbor News a 'few weeks ago, Community High Freshman Gene Sperling defended his school against criticisms that its curriculum is chaotic and the validity of its credits open to question. "Community is not a 'freak' or 'freedom' school," he said. "It does have a structure, but more flexibility than other high schools. It offers conventional courses but also other options. The credits at CHS (Community High) are valid for See COMMUNITY, Page 2 official a Agnkew indicted grand ji BALTIMORE (i) - A spe- praised cial grand jury investigating who ha allegations of political corrup- unbelie tion against Vice President Hvese."n Spiro Agnew yesterday re- THEN turned an indictment against concern his successor as chief execu- of a pr lican fu tive of Baltimore County. he decl It accused Dale Anderson, are me a Democrat, of evading $67,- results.' 833 in federal income tax for social ci 1969 through 1972. had pro ANDERSON, 56, the first Mary- Agnew land official to be indicted in the get hi present probe, was charged in a previous indictment with extortion, bribery and conspiracy in a .kick- back scheme involving architects and consulting engineers doing business with tLA county. Similar allegations against Ag- new, which the vice president has denounced as "damned lies," now P are being heard by the jury in J strict secrecy and under heavy se- curity. U. S. marshals continue to block courthouse corridorsto shield witnesses and jurors from I L newsmen. Joel Kline, a Montgomery Coun- ty, Md., land developer who re- WA portedly has raised funds for Ag- terday i new, was the first witness before Florida the panel yesterday, spending marily nearly an hour in the jury room. "It SHIELDED by his lawyer, Kline MartinI declined to tell newsmen the sub- first da stance of his testimony or whe- works. ther it even concerned the vice "I KN president. He acknowledged, how- ever, that he had appeared volun- were ill tarily, without immunity, and was Republic cooperating was we Kline was once considered for and I co appointment as Maryland's bank- Kelly ing commissioner by Gov. Marvin ald Seg Mandel, who succeeded Agnew. torney w The developer has been reported from a as telling federal investigators he had ple collected more than $100,000 for misdem Agnew and other politicians and his olit laundered the money to disguise Fpoit its sources. But sources close to theFlrdI case said the report was erroneous. Anoth Another witness was Ormsby Benz, 25 "Dutch" Moore, who was execu- to testif tive secretary to Agnew from 1962- 66 when Agnew was county execu- KELL tive. a camp MOORE huddled with the prose- cluded b cutors in the office of U.S. Atty. leases,r George Beall in the morning be- and stin fore going before the jury in the Onc afternoon. He, too,tdeclined to say Democr why he was called. Members of consulting engineer- staying ing firms also were subpoenaed, Kell among them a man identified as until the Eugene Hsi. He refused to give his' acti newsmen his name as he left the to influe court house following his jury ap- "WE pearance. cord an In Chicago last night, Agnew, each ott avoiding direct references to his' elly own personal crisis resulting from Kel a corruption probe in Maryland, 1i President Nixon as "a man s faced some of the most able pressures that have nfronted one in the White VICE president's remarks ing Nixon came at the end epared speech to a Repub- nd-raising dinner in which ared that Nixon's programs asured "in one way only- He said the Democrats' hange programs of the 1960s ied to be failures, said that Nixon wants to s administration moving probe / again toward its goals, "but to do so he must overcome the inertia caused by the current morbid fas- cination with America's warts, commonly known as the Watergate syndrome. "To do this, he needs your help and the help of every American who is concerned that the major issues of today - the economy, the energy problem, health, for- eign policy and others - are not to be left dangling while Pat Bu- chanan gives a TV lecture on 'dirty tricks,' however instructive and fascinating it may be." Beethoven and friend The classic, pensive stare of Ludwig Van Beethoven appears to be reflected in the eyes of Rob West, '73, as both gentlemen watch State St. passersby on a gray afternoon. Two "Beethoven fans," Tim Mayhew and Jerry Shulman, transferred the 20-foot wall painting by means of a grid. it estelso [an to sabotage skie campaign SHINGTON (1P) - A confessed political saboteur testified yes- he tried to damage and divide Democratic candidates in the 1972 presidential primary with a dirty tricks campaign directed pri- at Sen. Ed'mund Muskie. began with pranks, but it began to get more and more intense," Douglas Kelly, 24, told the Senate Watergate committee in its y of hearings not broadcast live on commercial television net- NEW some of these things legal," the Miami Young can said of his activities. "I aving my own spider web ouldn't get out of it." was an accomplice of Don- retti, 32, the California at- who said he took his orders White House aide and who aded guilty to three federal tanor charges arising from '.~' ical sabotage efforts in the primary. ' er Segretti helper, Robert , of Tampa was scheduled y later today. Y described for senators aign of disruption that in- Sen. Muskie bogus letters, fake news re- misleading posters and advertisements, counterfeit invitations k bombs. e, he said, he paid a girl $20 to run naked in front of the main ats' hotel, yelling, "Muskie, I love you." The Maine senator was at the hotel. y said he did not begin to feel guilt or shame for his activities ey were over. And he maintained throughout his testimony that vities were intended to confuse and antagonize candidates, not nce votes. E EXPECTED the candidates to become upset and to cause dis- id malcontent," he said. "We wanted to get them backbiting at her and to feel that they were being sabotaged by each other." y said that he had been recruited by Segretti, who asked him to See MORE, Page 7 ALL-CAMPUS ELECTION: Student power of SG( Ed. note: This is the third in a series on the upcoming all-campus elec tion. By JACK KROST "Student power." Ask a Student R i g h t s Party (SRP) candidate for Student Gov- ernment Council what the central issue is for SGC this fall, and you'll find yourself bombarded with that phrase. THE THREE - DAY all - campus party student government election be- gins Tuesday. The second-year party's platform says that "students are the first to be used, had, and moreover manipulated," by the University, and that "a renaissance of student power and a fight for students' rights" is desperately needed. Specifically, the eight SRP can- didates seek changes in areas of driv academic reform, student services, tenants' rights, and programs for women and ethnic minorities, as part of their student power phi- losophy. PARTY MEMBERS, moreover, feel that: -The needs of students are ha- bitually glossed over by the ad- ministration, in favor of other con- stituencies; -Students should be given more input i n t o the decision-making process; -SGC has a potential as a cat- alyst for change, and should be put to better use this year than it was last year; and, -With the help of an informed and involved student body, SGC can help improve communication between the students and the Uni- versity, and also the larger city community. WHAT IT ALL boils down to is that the party members take them- selves and council seriously. Many City politicos clash at dormitory debate House, Senate conferees OK Presidential war powers curb By DAN BLUGERMAN Alice Lloyd Hall became the center of Ann Arbor political arena for two hours last night. Republican Mayor James Steph- enson squared off against two of And a little excitement was pro- vided by an unexpected visit from none other than State Rep. Perry Bullard (D-Ann Arbor), a man with some strong public views on the marijuana issue. As~ the sessionn was molfviL Yto- WASHINGTON (P) - Senate and House conferees agreed yesterday and Senate a concurrent resolu- tion, not subject to presidential 1pt n JAVITS, ZABLOCKI and Chair- man William Fulbright (D-Ark.) of the~ gpt Foreign Relations Com-