A LI'TTLE MORE DECEPTION See Editorial Page C, 4c itg D43ai4 SLIM- High- 7 Low-39 See Today for details Eighty-Three Years of Editorial Freedom 'Vol. LXXXIV, No. 68 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, November 28, 1973 Ten Cents Eight Pages HOUSE VOTE NEXT WEEK S USEE N SE s uPPCALL'M Y Kerr at commencement Dr. Clark Kerr, chairman of the Carnegie Commis- sion on Higher Education, will be the main speaker at the University's December 16 winter commencement exercises. Kerr, who took the Carnegie post in 1967, has a penchant for standing in the eye of campus hurri- canes: in 1959, he told a businessmen's convention that the student of the 1960's would be "a quiet generation . . they won't throw any bombs." But five years later he had to eat his words when, as President of the Uni- versity of California, he stood against the first major student uprising at Berkeley. Later Kerr was fired by California Gov. Ronald Reagan, and has since made more waves with the Carnegie Commission's recom- mendation that public college tuition be greatly in- creased. Masseuses file suit Four fired masseuses from American Health Spas (formerly the American Massage Parlor) have filed suit with the Michigan Employe Relations Commission, charg- ing that manager Terry Schultz interfered with union organizing activities. While the four women say they will continue to occasionally picket the establishment, three other employes who had joined in anti-management pro- tests have returned to their jobs as masseuses at the parlor. Spokeswoman Louann Fish said the women re- turned to work only because they needed the money and did so with the consent of the striking ex-employes. " Ypsi in trouble The entire Ypsilanti city government may be declared illegal. That's what Ypsi City Attorney Ken Bronson told the stunned city fathers Monday night. Bronson says a new city charter adopted last year may be invalid be- cause the version of the charter approved by Ypsi voters in a referendum was not "complete or accurate. Recent city elections were held under the new charter which establishes ward representation and partisan politics. Hence, officials elected under it may be serving illegally. An opinion on the charter's legality will be sought from state Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley. 0 Optimism note University officials say they're encouraged by , a Thanksgiving weekend "experiment" in which heat and electricity to eight Central and North Campus Buildings were cut back. According to Donald Wendel, University director of plant operations, "enough electrical energy was saved to light and run motors in the Administration Building for a mont." The University's Task Force on Energy Conservation hopes to identify buildings in which heat and electricity can be reduced for an extended per- iod over the winter break. 0 Happenings .. . . . . include a lecture by Fred Haddock, professor of astronomy, on "The Possibility of Extraterrestrial Life in the Universe" at 8:30 p.m. in Anderson Rm. A of the Michigan Union . . . a Rackham Student Government Executive Board meeting at 9:15 p.m. in 3526 Rackham . . The Gilbert and Sullivan Society presents "The Grand Duke" in Mendelssohn Theater at 8:00 p.m. .. . movie goers have a choice of Citizen Kane in the Nat. Sci. Aud. at 7:00 and 9:30 p.m.; Pride and Prejudice in the Arch. Aud., at 7:00 and 9:05 p.m.; Cabaret at 7:00, 8:45, and 10:00 p.m. in MLB Aud. 3; and A Man and a Wolan at Angell Hall Aud. A at 7:00 and 9:00 p.m. Flighty hijackers A Dutch jumbo jet commandeered by three Palestin- ian terrorists Sunday continued to hop around the Medi- terranean yesterday. The terrorists say they won't re- lease the 14 passengers left on the Boeing 747 until seven Arab prisoners are released on the island of Cyprus. More than half a dozen Arab countries have already refused to let the jet land at their airports. In the mean- time the hijacked jet has been using an airfield in the tiny Persian Gulf sheikdom of Dubai as home base. " Quake shakes Azores An earthquake has left more than 4,000 persons home- less in the mid-Atlantic Azores Islands, officials re- ported. Only one death - a fisherman killed by a fall- ing rock - was attributed to the tremors, which shook the Azores for five hours Monday. A witness to the quake said it was "a miracle" that more people had not been killed. Help was being sent in by the Portu- guese government, the Red Cross and the U. S. air base at Lajes on Terceira Island. Surgery for Liz Actress Elizabeth Taylor was admitted to UCLA Medical Center yesterday and was scheduled to under- go surgery today. An aide to the 41-year-old screen star said that Taylor has been suffering severe stomach cramps, and that the scheduled surgery is believed to be for an internal hernia or related to adhesions from pre- vious operations. "Doctors don't think it's a tumor, and they don't suspect cancer," the spokesperson said. "She is very anxious to get it over with and find out what's wrong." On the inside . . . . . HRP member Betsy Bunn discusses the problem of rape on the Editorial Page . . . sportswriter John Kahler looks forward at the coming Michigan basket- ball season . . . and Kurt Hirju writes about folksinger extraordinaire David Bromberg on the Arts Page. Senate OKs Ford by big margin WASHINGTON (P-The Sen- ate overwhelmingly approved Rep. Gerald Ford yesterday as the nation's 40th vice presi- dent. House approval, expect- ed next week, would complete congressional confirmation as required by the 25th Amend- ment, ratified in 1967. The vote was 92-3 in favor of the Michigan Republican.fAll of the opponents were Democrats. During brief debate, Sen. Howard Cannon (D-Nev.) said he was un- r enthusiastic about Ford's conser- vative views but that nothing was turned up by his Rules Committee to require rejection. Sen. Harrison Williams Jr. (D- N.J.), another Rules Committee member, said he was "truly im- pressed" by testimony in behalf of Ford by his colleagues in the House. As vice president, he said, Ford "will be in a fresh position to grow and change or modify some of the views he has advocated in the -{s But Sen. Gavlord Nelson (D- Wis.) opposed the nomination, say- : >:ing "I don't believe he can provide the type of inspirational leadership we need if he should become presi- dent." He cited Ford's votes against civil rights measures and for Vietnam war policy. Sen. Philip A. Hart (D-Mich.) said, however, that Ford would make "a steady, decent and be- lieveable President," a d d i n g "There is nothing the country needs more." AP Photo VICE PRESIDENT-DESIGNATE Gerald Ford has the look of a winner as he prepares to speak at a benefit dinner in Hauppauge, N.Y., Monday night. Yesterday Ford's VP nomination won over- whelming approval in the Senate, and final confirmation by the House is expected next week. CSJ uaimul rules to disminss. case against1Gill By STEPHEN SELBST After a three-hour hearing, the Central Student, upheld the Student Government Council presidency of unanimously against a suit seeking Gill's removal. Judiciary Lee Gill, (CSJ) ruling A rift in the union Embittered UAW members picket outside the Veterans Memorial Building in Detroit yesterday while the autoworkers' union leadership met inside. The workers are opposing the three-year contract agreement with General Motors and urging that it be turned down by UAW's GM Council. DENIAL OF RIGHTS CH ARGED: Students sue ' over residency requirements Besides Nelson, others voting against Ford were Sens. Thomas Eagleton (D-Mo.) and William Hathaway (D-Maine). The Senate vote came less than seven weeks after Spiro T. Agnew resigned the nation's second high- est office and pleaded no contest to a single count of income tax evasion. In another action yesterday, the Senate, apparently reacting to campaign abuses brought to light in the Watergate investigation, voted to provide financing for con- gressional and presidential elec- tions. The new legislation, if enacted, would provide government funds for candidates for all federal elec- tive office. It would presumably put a halt to contributions by large corporations and other illegal prac- tices. The measure, however, is given little chance of passage in the House. The court rejected the contention of the plaintiffs, primarily mem- bers of the Campus Coalition party, that Gill violated a section of the SGC consitution stating that all SGC officers must be students at the University. THE PLAINTIFFS argued that Gill was not enrolled during either the spring-summer or fall terms, and thus violated the clause stating that officers must be students "during the current or previous full term." But CSJ sidestepped the issue of whether spring-summer con- stitutes a full term and maintained that Gill had indeed been enrolled for both half-terms. One of the CSJ judges, Charles Krugman, summed up the court's opinion: "I think the fact that a leader is not a student is unfortunate, but he (Gill) has satisfied the requirements (in the constitution)." Chief justice Jay Brody said he was sorry the court avoided the constitutional issue of defining "full terms" of enrollment, comment- ing, "I would have liked to set a precedent, but the court decided that any change should come through legislative amendment." DAVID SCHAPER, the controversial ex-SGC treasurer who repre- sented the plaintiffs against Gill, refused to comment on the CSJ verdict. Schaper only snapped that his interest in the case was "no- See CSJ, Page 8 By CINDY HILL Two students have filed a class action suit in federal court against President Robben Fleming and several other University officials, charging that the University's in- state residency requirements are ambiguous and unconstitutional. The students - Terry Winter and Leslie Shalen, claim the present requirements for in-state tuition vi- olated property rights - in this case, the right to pay in-state tui- tion - and due process under law, a right guaranteed by the Four- teenth Amendment. THE SUIT seeks a reevaluation of all out-state students who ap- plied for in-state residency, and demands compensation for those reevaluated as in-state students retroactive to September. The suit, in addition, calls for punitive fines as well as compensatory redress from the University. Specifically, Winter and Shalen object to the University's proce- dure in accepting or rejecting ap.- plications for residency status. Pre- sently, students whose applications are rejected receive no explana- tion for their failure to qualify. Hence, the suit charges, it is vir- tually impossible for students to ap- peal residency decisions. The suit names as defendants Vice President for Academic Af- fairs Allan Smith, his assistant Er- nest Zimmerman, and Assistant. Registrar Larry Katz, as well as Fleming. FLEMING a n d Zimmerman could not be reached for comment on the student's suit. Smith and Katz said they haven't been no- tified and refused to comment. University Attorney Roderick Daane said he had not yet seen the suit and felt it would be "fool- hardy" to give an early response. But Daane added that the residen- cy rules - which he drafted - are equitable, fair and "constitution- ally defensible." David Goldstein, attorney for the two students, was optimistic about his chances yesterday, claiming, "I wouldn't have taken this case if I didn't feel it would go through. I think we've got a winner." "How the hell can a student ap- peal a residency rejection if he doesn't know why he's been re- jected?" Goldstein added. "We think (the students) have a right to know," Goldstein said he filed suit in a federal court to get as "fair and impartial a hearing as possible," and because the case involved a constitutional question. Goldstein admitted that the first University action will be to ask dismissal on the grounds that a federal court does not have juris- diction. They claim that no matter where the suits been filed. I've been in this before, I know the games the University plays." - The University has 20 days to respond to the suit. Rose Bowl flap goes on in state, national capitals Council Republicans seek to void contract with Tribal Funding By GORDON ATCHESON The Republican City Council members will apparently attempt to void a federal revenue sharing contract with Tribal Funding, Inc. for alleged noncompliance with the agreement, amid charges the decision is politically motivated. The Daily has learned that a motion to cancel the $17,000 contract will appear on next Monday's council agenda and should receive full The cry of outraged Wolverine fans resounded yesterday from the halls of the State Legislature ,in Lansing to the Federal Building in Detroit to Capitol Hill in Wash- ington. Lawmakers in both the state house and state senate lambasted the decision of the Big Ten ath- letic directors to send Ohio State, not Michigan, to the Rose Bowl. Some even went so far as to threat- en to torpedo plans for a law school at Michigan State University because MSU's athletic director re- portedly voted against Michigan. YPSILANTI ATTORNEY Ronald Egnor joined the battle by announc- ing plans to file suit against the Big Ten seeking to have the deci- sion overturned. In Washington, Ann Arbor's Congressman Marvin Esch took to the floor of the House to denounce the decision as a "major injus- tice." The Big Ten Conference's ath- letic directors voted by telephone Sunday to send Ohio State to the Rose Bowl in Pasadena as the con- ference's "most representative" team. The vote, which was offic- ially secret, reportedly went 6-4. Michigan and Ohio State wound up the season last Saturday play- ing to a 10-10 tie. Loyal Wolver- ines contend that Michigan should have been sent because the teams tied and Ohio went last year. Michigan State. Senate Republican floor leader John Toepp of Cadillac and State Representative Hal Ziegler (R- Jackson) co-authored an open let- ter to Big Ten Commissioner Wayne Duke stating that "the Wol- verines of Michigan should repre- sent the Big Ten at the Rose Bowl Jan. 1," and asking why the ath- letic directors' vote was kept sec- ret. In East Lansing, MSU officials would only say that Smith voted "for the team with the best chance to win." Smith has acknowledged that he did not see the Michigan- Ohio State game nor did he read much about it before he voted, bas- ing his decision on his feeling that Ohio State was the toughest team Michigan State played. THE STATE attorney general's office said Smith cannot legally be forced to divulge which team he voted for. In Ypsilanti Egnor said his suit against the Big Ten will center on a complaint that the athletic direc- tors, as public officials, have an obligation to make their decisions in public. Egnor's suit, filed in Federal Dis- trict Court, will seek to have Sun- day's decision overturnedhand an- other vote taken. See PROTEST, Page 8 support from the GOP majority, sparking TRIBAL FUNDING, a group closely associated with the Rain- bow People's Party (RPP), was appropriated the funds last March to establish a new commnunity ball- room, open a food cooperative, and stage an indoor concert series. The Republicans, then a minor- itv on council, strongly opposed the allocation along with about 25 other grants to various local social serv- ice agencies. The Republicans claim the or- ganition failed to fulfill the con- tract because only one of 24 con- certs h-s been held to date. Tribal Funlding has until next spring to meet the reqlliremnent, bit is "not achieving that goal," accnording to a legal battle over the action. TALK GIVEN AT 'U' Dope dealers foot 175 I '77 b~oys surgery mut DAVIE, Fla. UP - A $2,000 donation from the "Broward County Marijuana Dealer's Association" will make it pos- sible for a six year-old Florida boy to have a needed heart operation. "This puts us over the top for the hospital bill," Jean- nette Allie, chairman of the "Jody Dietrich Heart Surgery Fund," said yesterday. A SLIM woman in her early 20s walked into the Ster- I; - T ,ti - -lr A nn or -,.h- a"ranL .far w t NY Times reporter calls Agnew tragfic' By EILEEN LOEHER A New York Times reporter who was involved in the newspaper's investigation of former vice presi- dent Spiro Agnew called Agnew a "tragic figure" last night, and said that much of the information un- earthed about Agnew remained "puzzling." "Agnew became more and more of a tragic figure," said Salpukas. "No one has gone back to figure out why he became a petty crook." Salpukas hinted that part of the reason for Agnew's wrong-doings- his apparent acceptance of bribes from Maryland contractors, among others - was his rapid rise from