HIDING BEHIND GOOD INTENTIONS See Editorial Page a Ir 4 Ir itFA6 :43 iiy WARMER High-60 Low-42 See Today for details Eighty-Three Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXIV, No. 38 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday,;October 19, 1973 Ten Cents Ten Pages x IT WYcMJCSEE NEWSHAPPECALL 06DAILY Regents hear report The Board of Regents yesterday heard an extensive review of the report on the University's Affirmative Ac- tion Program prepared by Affirmative Action Director Nellie Varner. Varner explained that "many schools are under-utilizing both women and minorities," except in the 95 per cent female clerical category, where men are under-utilized, she said. Utilization analysis is made by comparing University employment figures to percent- ages of women and minorities in the total qualified labor pool. Following Varner's report, members of the Com- mission for Women commented on the statistics and showed a slide presentation entitled "Turnabout," fea- turing men in stereotyped female roles. Several of the Regents squirmed visibly during the three hour meeting, and afterward Regent Robert Brown (R-Kalamazoo) was heard to remark, "Its just amazing to me how many of you girls are happy to be on the employment rolls." Following the meeting, President Robben Fleming pre- dicted the outcome of 20 of tomorrow's football games, including Wisconsin at Michigan. See the Sports pages for Fleming's picks. New city clerk chosen City Asst. Purchasing Director Jerome Weiss has been tabbed as new city clerk. The announcement of Weiss appointment came yesterday, although City Council must officially confirm the nomination next week. The 46-year-old Weiss has held his present post since May, 1970, and will take over the clerk's duties on Oct. 29. As clerk he will serve as the city's chief election officer, in addition to overseeing a11 city records and documents. The clerk position has been vacant since last April when Harold Saunders left the job. TFs meet The Organization of Teaching Fellows met late last night and decided 'to meet again in three weeks to consider a strike against the University if its demands are not met. Those demands include an immediate 10 per cent cost of living raise, reinstatement of in-state tuition rates for this year, and for next year, the drop- ping of all tuition payment plus wages. f UFO mass meeting A mass meeting has been called by Unidentified Flying Object enthusiasts for tonight at 8 on the Diag. Speakers will address the "need to form a UFO organi- zation", according to a leaflet. The leaflet enumerates a 13-point program which includes assembling facts on UFO sightings, encouraging the phenomenological study of UFO's, extending equal protection of the laws of the Constitution to UFO crew members, having the group act as a hospitality committee to welcome UFO crew members to the city, and seeking City Council funding for the distribution of a free UFO decoder ring to all city residents. Lottery numbers The winning numbers in this week's regular drawing of . the state lottery were 954 and 526. The winning numbers in the second chance contest were 790 and 513. Happenings .. . are topped by a full Homecoming schedule with a Thirties Look-alike Contest on the Diag 'at noon, Operation Egg Drop at West Engineering at noon, and an All-Campus Marathon Dance at Markley, 3 p.m... . the second annual Ozone Homecoming Parade will also get underway at 3 p.m. . .. Folksinger Bob Gibson will play a three-night engagement at the Ark beginning to- night at 8:30. . . . and Ballet West, USA is at the Power center at 8 p.m. Nobel to Harvard prof Harvard economist Wassily Leontief won the Nobel Prize for Economic Science yesterday for inventing a technique used in the economic planning of numerous countries. "I suppose I am pleased," said the 60 year- old Russian-born economist, "not only for myself but for my collaborators. It took a long time to develop ny theories, it's very complex." The Nobel prize for literature, meanwhile, went to Australian Patrick White for his novels on pioneer life. White, 60, was cited "for an epic and psychological narrative art which has in- troduced a new continent into literature." x0 Cartoonist Kelly dies Walt Kelly, whose cartoon creation Pogo became a political force in the fifties, died in Los Angeles yester- day at the age of 60. Kelly used his cartoon to attack the anti-Communist investigations of Sen. Joseph Mc- Carthy and in 1952 Pogo, a possum, was nominated for the presidency under the campaign slogan, "I go Pogo." The cartoonist portrayed McCarthy as a stubble- jawed wildcat who got himself elected to committees with aid of a shotgun. On the inside . *. Pharmacy student Larry Glever discusses the abuse of legal drugs on the Editorial Page . . . on the Arts Page, Cinema Weekend is featured . . . and on the Sports Page, Brian Deming tackles the Wisconsin Confusion By CINDY HILL "It's insane," said former Student Government Council Vice- President Sandy Green; describing the exorbitant cost and bureau- cratic confusion of last week's all-campus election. Oi Moser examination, Green's comment appears to be an under- statement. COMPLETE WITH alleged corruption, confusion, the involvement of controversial formet' SGC Treasurer David Schaper, and Keystone Cop-style antics among the election workers and security guards, the election also had the dubious honor of having the lowest voter turnout in University history. And at a total of 900 ballot (once the 400 "bad' ballot were dis- carded) and a total cost over $5,000, the election cost averaged over $5 a ballot. 0 '3 e gns ove "Bad ballots" are those which, because they have no ID numbers or are otherwise erroneously filled out, cannot be tabulated at all. According to Election Director Ron Strauss, however, there is no chance of fraud in this year's election. "I know there wasn't fraud," said Strauss, "there were too many checks. Besides, so few people voted that they would have been caught." Strauss did admit, however, that multiple voting occurred in the undergraduate seat elections for SGC. Because that particular section of the ballot was tabulated by computer, said Strauss, students were able to vote for as many of the district seats as they liked, and the computer tallied all votes. BUT PERHAPS the most surprising election-related revelation was UGC election the role played by David Schaper-who was fired by SGC President Lee Gill earlier this year. Schaper, although never convicted of any wrongdoing, has fre- quently been accused of everything from ballot-stuffing last spring's election to printing libelous material. Strauss, who claimed he "knew nothing about Schaper's back- ground," hired Schaper as an adviser. Schaper demanded-and received promise-of a $300 payment - for the election. Strauss said Green, who resigned this week, authorized payment. "I wouldn't have said Strauss. had to rely on Schaper had someone else helped," See CONFUSION, Page 7 abs raid U.S. alhold in Beirut; KosygMin Sadat secret talks TON night stive Terrorists still hold over forty hostages By AP and Reuter Five masked gunmen shot .their way into the Bank of America office in Beirut yesterday threatening to kill an esti- mated 40 to 50 hostages and blow up a seven-story building if their demands were not met. They demanded release of Palestinian guerrillas in Leba- nese jails, $10-million to aid the Arab war effort and an air- liner to take them to Yemen or Algeria, THE RAID CAME on a day of continued heavy fighting in the Sinai as well as a secret visit to Cairo by Russian Prime Minister Alexei Kosygin. The gunmen, saying they were members of the "Lebanese Social ist Revolutionary Movement," weree t o i a s grenades. They set a 6 p.m. - noon EDT - deadline for theiro with negotiations continuing. Po- lice brought relatives to plead with - the gunmen to give themselves up, but they refused. Originally the group held about 60 hostages in the bullet-scarred ByDAVID STOLL building, which also houses offices Memorial services were held of the Anerican Chemical Bank yesterday afternoon for the Rev. and the Deutsche Bank. Ed Edwards, draft counselor and long-time director of Guild House, THEY ALLOWED a few of them who died last week at the age of to leave and later Lebanese police 63. engineered a daring rooftop escape Director of the inter-denomina- for 17 other bank employes. tional counseling agency at 802 Later the guerrillas agreed to Monroe for seventeen years, Ed- release another member of the wards provided the first meeting bank staff. All the American em- place for the Ann Arbor chapter ployes were believed to have es- of the Students for a Democratic caped. Society (SDS) in the early sixties Algerias Ambassador, Mhamed and, as students on campus turned Yazid, who negotiated with the against the war, counseled thous- group through the afternoon, left ands of them about the draft. the scene at about 6:00 p.m. lo- "I've never lost a CO case," he cal time (12:30 p.m. EDT). He is reported to have told a friend refused to comment but said he once. would be back later. The memorial service, held at the First Congregational Church at the IN THEIR ORIGINAL communi- corner of State and William, was que, the guerrillas did not ex- well-attended and carried off with plicitly threaten to kill their hos- hymn and organ in the best of tages but said they had "instruc- churchly tradition. tions to act in the face of any stand Edwards was eulogized by a suc- by the authorities. We will not be cession of his friends and col- held responsible for the fate of the leagues, who not only recalled his hostages." achievements and qualities as a Heavily - armed troops with gas human being, but read poems com- masks stood by and armored posed by him a few days before cars were parked in sidestreets. Of- his death. ficers at the scene refused to say Edwards "met a kind of despair" how the negotiations inside were observed his close friend Peter Di- going. Lorenzi, not only at the "numer- Meanwhile, a spokesman for the ous marriages he performed that See ARABS, Page 7 See SERVICE, Page 7 Doily Photo by JOHN UP PLACARDS CALLING for Solidarity for Israel and Freedom for Soviet Jews are displayed by some of the 150 people who marched last1 from Hillel to the People's Plaza in a candlelight procession. At the plaza, marchers engaged in Israeli folk dancing to celebrate the fe Jewish holiday of Simchat Torah. sGC resolution to recall Gill postponed for the charges against By JACK KROST The newly elected 42 member Student Government Council last night considered for the. second time' a resolution calling for the re- call of SGC President Lee Gill, but tabled the motion on the grounds that more evidence needed to be heard. Led by a new majority composed of Campus Coalition and Screw SGC party members, the council postponed discussion on standard procedural questions to focus im- mediately on Gill. Members of both parties have charged Gill with numerous acts of corruption. As of yet, however, no concrete evidence has been brought forward to substantiate the charges. The recall resolution was intro- duced for a first reading last week by CC candidate Robert Matthews. Last night's decision to postpone action was based on the claim that former council members Sandy Green and David Hornstein still another needed to testify about Gill's alleg- ed corruption. Neither was avail- able for comment last night. The two names were brpught up by David Faye, head of the Cam- pus Coalition Party, which elected the largest bloc of candidates in the recent elections. FAYE, WHO last week admitted knowledge of only "circumstantial evidence concerning. Gill, said last night that both Green and Horn- stein spoke, to him privately and week. indicated their belief that Gill was guilty. He also said he would try to get Laurie Artz to speak about the theft of her desk which occurred last year. Gill's opponents have charged Gill with the theft, claim- ing the desk currently sits in his apartment. The special SGC investigative committee looking into the charges will probably not be ready to make its presentation to council at the next meeting, according to com- mittee member Carl Sandburg. IN DISCUSSING the recall pro- posal Student Rights Party mem- ber Marcia Fishman said, "I view the resolution, in rather great amazement, in view of the fact that there is no concrete evidence on any of the charges. She also re- asserted her earlier comparison of the recall effort to a "lynching party." Gill himself did not speak about the charges until Screw SGC Party member Matt Hoffman challenged him personally. "Please tell me as an individual if you are guilty," Hoffman quer- ied. Congressman Esch holds town meeting UAC homecom ing journeys back to thie nostalgia of the thirties By MATT GERSON Encouraged by the success of last year's fifties revival, organ- izers of UAC's homecoming have plunged even further back into America's past to find a theme for the '73 extravaganza. This time it will be the thirtie - with all the NewDeal, depression, gangster, "brother can you pore supervisor, participants will be asked to dress up like famous pei- sons of the era. A pair of free tickets to the homecoming concerts will be awarded to that stately FDR, evil Al Capone or innocent Judy Gar- land who can best impress t h e judges. dance set to begin at 3:00 p.m. +o- day at the Markley Hall snack bar. Though Jane Fonda is not ex- pected to attend, the dance prom- ises to be quite an event. For a two dollar entry fee, couples can dance to the tunes of the thirties for as long as their legs wili hold. THOSE WITH WEAK knees and By ANN RAUMA Congressman Marvin Esch (R- Ann Arbor) met with some 120 of his constituents last night in an open town meeting held 'at city hall. Though the topics of discussion ranged all the way from social security to U.S. foreign policy in Chile, the evening's most heated discussion focused around a "youth differential clause" contained in a new minimum wage bill. THE CLAUSE would establish a policy whereby young people would be excluded from the new, higher and hire more cheap labor. Esch, on the other hand, con- tended the proposal would encour- age more employers to train and hire youth. "I WOULD RATHER see a per- son put to worl six months and earning $1.60 an hour than see him on the street as a result+ of a higher minimum wage," he said. As to the possibility of- discrimi- nation Esch suggested further gov- ernmental regulation. "It's absurd to contend we can't regulate em- ployers regarding minimum wage," Esch commented, "if we