THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, January 30, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, January 30, 1974 ote registration called illegal (Continued from Page 1) - However he added that he "did not know" what all the deputy registrars were doing. "I won't get involved in partisan back biting on this issue," Shoichet said. CITY CLERK Jerome Weiss said he was unaware of the specific allegations but that door-to-door registration is "definitely illegal." He promised to launch an investi- gation of the charges today. HRP has carried out its illegal registriation in the two most pro- HRP areas in the Second Ward- East Quad and Alice Lloyd resi- dence halls, accdrding to Jones. This year's Second Ward race is expected to be a photo-finish be- tween the Democratic and HRP candidates. "The race is one in which any single vote could be the margin of victory," an observer commented. THE PARTY has also given voters "a partisan rap" while reg- istering them and has been com- piling a mailing list of the new voters," Jones said. .Shoichet de- nied both allegations. "We sent out instructions that our registrars were not to make politically oriented statements," Shoichet said. He added that HRP's mailing has not greatly changed since last December. HRP's official statement also charged that oJnes has "decided to help" the Republican party and local landlord interests which op- pose student registration by lodg- ing her allegations. The Steering Committee argued that "voting is a right, not a privi- lege" and the door-to-door registra- tion is not illegal but merely non- compliance with a "political direc- tive" from Mayor James Stephen- son, a Republican. Both Jones and Shoichet fear these charges will give the Repub- lican-controlled council grounds for killing the present fixed site regis- tration and forcing all potential voters to register at City Hall. WEISS INDICATED the present registration system - providing several sites in each ward - will be cancelled if Jones' charges can be substantiated. Jones blasted HRP for "violating the public trust" through tamper- ing with the voter registration pro- cess. "This type of action stems from the same mentality the Re- publican demonstrates - using voter enrollment to improve their own political position," she said. Nonetheless, Jones claimed she had been aware of HRP's alleged door-to-door registration campaign but did not publicize the effort because it would provide the GOP with an excuse to limit severely any further voter enrollment. SHOICHET in turn condemned the Democrats for not assuming a Nader speaks at Hill (Continued from Page 1) stated emphatically. "The question is whether we can live with it" Nader sees the public as victim in the nuclear energy issue. "TECHNOLOGY being promoted by the taxpayer's resources with no accountability by the govern- ment and the people not informed of the credible risks - that can only be described as known crimi- nality," he-accused. Nader sees other safer fuel sources available, including solar and wind energy. "Ask why a company won't de- velop these alternative sources," he said. "They don't have a title to it, that's why." Nader predicts the issue of ener- gy will be the subject of a massive grassroots struggle. "I urge you to take a deep interest in this," he told his audience. Nader then suggested the estab- lishment of a Federal Energy Company. "This would explore and pro- duce its own gas on federal lands," he said, "lands that belong to the people. It wbuld provide supply to anyone victimized by the monopo- lies." TO NADER, the consumer has both the power and the duty to change things effectively. "Throw the full force of the outraged con- sumers on the Congress," he said. "How many full-time citizens are there? You have to develop these roles. The public has to dedi- cate certain hours of their week to their civic culture. They will spend hundreds of hours earning money for a new car, but not three hours learning how to buy one. They will spend hundreds of hours earn- ing money for food, but they go into that supermarket and get conned aisle after aisle." Center for Russia and East European Studies takes great pleasure in announcing an exhibition of under- groun d material from the SAMIZ- DATA collection. Exhibition d a t e s now through Feb. 17. 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