CONGRESSIONAL ACTION NEEDED Y itqa Daiti MUSHY High--4 s Low-25 See Today for details See editorial page Eighty-Three Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXIV, No. 117 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, February 19, 1974 Ten Cents Eight Pages ! i / % IF MU SEElNEwSHuAPPECAL1 Ay Senate Assembly meets The Senate Assembly voted 40-5 yesterday to approve a motion to "strongly support retaining the age of 70 as the mandatory faculty retirement age." The Assem- bly's vote was in response to Vice-President for Aca- demic Affairs Allan Smith's announcement last week that the administration was considering lowering the age of mandatory retirement to 65. Smith said that the change is an attempt to speed up turnover in the faculty ranks. Prof. leaves Prof. John Styan, head of the English Dept. and University's resident expert on Shakespeare, has ac- cepted Prof. Andrew Mellon's prestigious position in the University of Pittsburgh's English Dept. Styan will be leaving the University at the end of the academic year. His replacement has not yet been named. " Miners support The Sparticist League and Revolutionary Communist Youth (RCY) are mobilizing support for the British miners among American working class and socialist militants and students,. The RCY will be holding a meeting on campus today at noon in Room 4202 of the Michigan Union to build support for a demonstration tomorrow noon at the British Consulate, Fort and Wash- ington Blvd. in Detroit. (See today's letter on the Editorial Page.) " Man burned An Ann Arbor man is listed in critical condition after wedging himself or being wedged into a trash can filled with carbonic acid, police officers report. Police are not certain whether the incident was an attempted suicide or murder. The man could not be extracted from the can by ambulance operators and had to be taken to St. Joseph's Hospital in the can. The acid discolored his skin black from the waist down and red from the waist up, Police Chief Walter Krasny reports. Krasny is not certain why the man was in the can. He said detectives were trying to determine whether the man was "high or had flipped his lid." Happenins.. ... include something for everyone today, especially if you're of a political bent . . . for the artistically in- clined, paintings by Joan Matthews will be on exhibit in the Union Gallery beginning at 10 a.m. . . . the ACRICS committee meeting will take place at 3:15 p.m. in Crisler Arena . . . Asst. Prof H. Versyer from the Northwood Institute will speak on the energy crisis at 7:30 p.m. in the Henderson Room of the League spon- sored by the Ann Arbor Libertarian League . . . also at 7:30 p.m. Feminists in Struggle Together (FIST) will meet in East Quad's Strauss Lounge . . . the Awaji Puppet Theater of Japan will perform at 8:30 p.m. in Rackham Auditorium . . . a student mass meeting for undergradaute support for the TF strike will be held in Room 35 Angell Hall at 9 p.m. . . . and if partying is more in your line, Primo's will have a benefit concert for the Ann Arbor Sun tonight. " Dope note Alfonso Martinez, the 21-year-old Detroit police cadet and hero who may be rejected in his bid to become a police officer because he admitted he once smoked marijuana, may have a job afer all. Genesee County Sheriff John O'Brien called Martinez Sunday and told him he may have a job at the county department. "It would be a great advantage to have another Spanish speaker in our department," said O'Brien. "We've got a Mexican-American population in Genesee County of some 10,000 people." Martinez was recommended for a bravery citation after rescuing a man from a burning building Saturday. His admission that he had smoked marijuana a few times as a teenager came during a police depart- ment interview, Aard creature TFs ap By GORDON ATCHESON Daily News Analysis Although a strike vote among the University's teaching fellows is already underway, a majority of graduate employes, faculty, and administrators ap- pear highly undecided about the success and effects of a strike. The Graduate Employes Organization (GEO) lead- ership claims the prospects for a strike are greater than ever, but in a number of departments most teaching fellows remain perched on the fence - wait- ing to see how many of their colleagues will join the picket lines.1 WHETHER the strike mandate will be approved ; remains a mystery even to GEO leaders. While TFs in several departments - Romance Languages, Po- l litical Science, and History - are solidly committed eachin ear, hesitant about strike Units differ on support for walkout to the strike, other units do not strongly back the GEO demands or methods. Some departments - particularly in the natural sciences - are generally opposed or ambivalent to the strike issue. Nonetheless, these teaching fellows tend to be uninformed or vaguely informed about the GEO efforts. "I'm just too busy to be concerned," a physics teaching fellow said yesterday. "The strike just isn't a topic of conversation." The strike-support leaflets which adorn most buildings across the central cam- pus are noticeably absent in the halls of the West Engineering and Physics and Astronomy buildings. fellow The math department - touted as a bastion of GEO support - seems typical of most divisions. Perhaps a quarter to a third of the teaching fellows actively support the strike move. A somewhat smaller per- centage strongly opposes GEO. The remainder claim to be sympathetic but "don't want to get stranded backing a strike that fails." THE ADMINISTRATIQN yesterday remained firm in its position that GEO must receive formal recog- nition from the state Employment Relations Commis- sion (MERC) before the University will consider the teaching fellows' package of demands. The recognition question has directly precipitated s egin the strike threat, and the additional demands - tui- tion waiver for all TFs, maternity leave, written con- tracts, affirmative action procedures, and other de- mands concerning job security, working conditions and dismissal - have become secondary The TFs' demands now cover only broad areas since the exact details and contract wording theo- retically would be hammered out during negotiations with the University. The University contends no negotiations with GEO over these demands can take place until MERC re- cognizes the group, and an official certification elec- tion is held among teaching fellows, research assist- ants and staff assistants. GEO LEADERS argue that the University could block the recognition process in the courts and that See TFs, Page 2 vote on strike; ado pt 'no fee hike' stand 450 GObackers attend mass, meeting By GORDON ATCHESON The Graduate Employes Organization (GEO) began its 24-hour strike vote with a mass meeting last night, as a work stoppage by most of the University's 1600 teaching fellows ap- pears more likely than ever. Some 450 teaching fellows filled the Union Ballroom and sounded a strong pro-strike call, while expressing an equally strong distrust for the University administration. If the strike vote is successful, the walkout will begin Thursday morning with picket lines around the entrances to the main buildings on central campus. THE BODY ADDED a "no-tui- tion -hike" stand to its previous1 list of demands presented to the University. The measure, which in par stt "we fin"*d any increase in tuition unacceptable . . . we" support all University workers-who P P ro seek a fair and living wage, and all students who oppose tuition hikes," was considered crucial in o_ gaining undergraduate support for the strike. The meeting also tabled action on a University offer to conduct a ord in ce Commission (MERC) election to recognize GEO as an official bar- By CHERYL PILATE gaining agent for teaching fellows. Ypsilanti v ot e r s yesterday ap- Recognition has b e c o m e the proved by a slim 29-vote margin crux of the confrontation between the area's first anti-obscenity law the administration and GEO, since which will prohibit "any material the University has refused to ne- or performance whose predominant gotiate with the teaching fellows appeal is to prurient interests." until a MERC election is held. Since 1 a s t summer's Supreme The meeting viewed the election Court decision granting local com- -which could take a month or munities the right to determine more-as an administration ploy to their own obscenity standards, a dissipate the momentum GEO has heated controversy has raged over built. "It would be very dangerous the pornography issue. Last Sep- to go through MERC," GEO chair- tember, the Ypsilanti City Council woman Sandra Silberstein said last tabled the proposal after a lengthy, night. "We should strike and de- heated debate. mand the University immediately The proposal, which drew most come to the bargaining table." of its support from Republicans and THROUGHOUT the meeting Sil- religiously - affiliated groups, was berstein and others charged Presi- nearly defeated until absentee bal- dent Robben Fleming and the ad- lots, which were 3-1 in favor of ministration with completely "fail- the proposal, were tallied-putting ing to bargain in good faith" with the final vote at 994 to 965. the teaching fellows. The ordinance which will "pro- To-extended applause, one teach- hibit the dissemination of porno- ing fellow declared that if GEO graphic material" will completely attempted to gain MERC recogni- shut down all adult movie theaters tion, "Fleming will see us in hell and book stores in Ypsilanti. See TFs, Page 8 See YPSILANTI, Page 8 Daily Photo by DAVID MARGOLICK GRADUATE EMPLOYES ORGANIZATION leader Sandra Silberstein (right) implores over 450 teaching fellows at a mass meeting last night, as one TF (left) watches and listens attentively. The group began a strike vote against the University. GRAND RAPIDS SPECIAL ELECTION: Dem By AP and UPI GRAND RAPIDS - Democratic underdog Richard VanderVeen ended 62 years of Republican rule in the conservative 5th Congres- sional district last night and dealt President Nixon's political fortunes a serious blow. With all but two of 273 pre- cincts reporting, VanderVeen had an unofficial 52,691 votes while fa- vored Republican candidate Rob- ert VanderLaan had 45,101. wins Ford's old seat State GOP, chairman William McLaughlin said the result meant the voters were unhappy. "EVERYTHING went our way except one thing - Watergate," McLaughlin said. "That killed us." VanderVeen, who hit the Water- gate issue hard during the cam- paign immediately called for Nix- on's resignation. "People want a change," he said. "The vote is an expression of outrage." The picturedwbeast, looking as if he (it?) was assembled from spare parts of several different animals, is not the latest star of a science fic- tion thriller. R a t h e r, this four-=pound S o u t h African aardvark, only a few days old, is the latest star of the San Diego Zoo. Here, he contemplates visitors at the zoo's nursery. Mitchell, Stais trial beginsin NewYork NEW YORK (P) - Two original members of President Nixon's Cabi- net, John Mitchell and Maurice Stans, go on trial here today accused of selling their influence for a secret $200,000 contribution to Nixon's re- election campaign. Neither man was still in the Cabinet when the alleged crime occurred in 1972. Mitchell had quit as attorney general to take over operation of the Committee to Re-elect the President. Former Commerce Secre- tary Stans was the committee's chief fund raiser. Delayed three times since last September, partly while both sides wrangled over availability of White House tape recordings, jury selec- tion may start today unless there are last-minute pretrial motions for U. S. District Court Judge Lee Gagliardi. MITCHELL and Stans are the first Cabinet men indicted on crimi- nal charges since the Teapot Dome scandals of the 1920s. While this case is not related directly to the Watergate scandal, the two former administratorstand an alleged coconspirator, JohnDean, were major witnesses in the Senate Watergate inquiry. Dean, not a defendant here, has pleaded guilty to conspiring to obstruct the Watergate investigation. A missing defendant is Robert Vesco, the financier who made the secret cash contribution at a time when the Securities and Exchange Commission was launching a major civil action against his business empire. Verc, n h ived in the nahamas and onta Rica since the indictment No Democrat since World War II had polled more than 40 per cent of the vote in this western constituency that Vice President Gerald Ford held for 25 years. VANDER VEEN, 51, was defeat- ed by Ford in 1958. The last Democratic victory came in 1910 and two years later Republicans regained control of the district. The special election was called after Ford resigned in December to succeed the disgraced Agnew. VANDER LAAN, 43, who had contested and won 15 different po- litical campaigns and served in the state senate since 1963, entered the race a heavy favorite. But he conceded in the cam- paign's final days that the com- bined effect of Watergate, infla- tion, unemployment and the en- ergy crisis had cut deeply into his sunport. Republicans warned that if Van- derLaan failed to poll at least 55 per cent of the vote that it coi'd signal deep political trouble for the GOP in elections later this year. The 5th Congressional race was the firstpost-Watergate election in the state. VANDER LAAN generally avoid- ed Watergate during his campaign and rarely invoked Nixon's name despite taunts by VanderVeen. VanderVeen, a native of Muske- gon, 40 miles west of Grand Rapids on Lake Michigan, came from a lower middle class family of no particular prominence. He eventu- ally moved into a partnership in one of the state's most prominent law firms. His net worth was esti- mated at $250,000. His wife. Marion, and oldest son, ....,....* . . . . r. . . . .*.'.*. * ... .........,......r............*rr ....... **...... . " ,**...*.*.. .... ..a .. . . . Y "J .}Yn{:.. ... . . . Hon-k drive ma kes noiseByET ISN By BETH NISSEN Despite dismal, rainy weather, members of the Committee to Impeach the President carried signs < proclaiming "Honk for Impeachment and stood on the city's street corners yesterday between 4:30 and 5:30 p.m. Audible response to the signs was good, with a va- riety of long and short honks from rusted Volkswag- .4 ens, shiny Catalinas and muddy Pintos. AT LEAST HALF the people who drive by are honking," estimated Larry Albert as he held his sign toward the oncoming rush-hour traffic. "I even got a cop to honk." "All different ages and all different types of people are honking," said worker Charlie Handley. Not all was sweetness and ,light, however. Mem- bers of the Committee reported a few raised middle fingers. Other motorists slowed or stopped to com- ment. One lady rolled down her window and said "Why don't you have a trial before you impeach him. That's what we do in America." :; and his wife were classmates at Muskegon High. They married just before he entered Harvard in 1946. VanderVeen's trim dark suits, swept back hair receding in front and soft speaking voice seem to symbolize his Harvard background and profession. But his nervous frozen smile during the campaign showed he is not a poised, public figure. VanderVeen has a definite policy of never really speaking ill of a political foe. He insisted through- out his 1958 campaign that "Gerald Ford is a fine fellow personally and a hard worker." On the inside . . SAlbert Osburne writes about local playwright Chris Christian on the Arts Page . . . Jim Ecker blasts the Big Ten basketball television schedule . . . and Edit Page examines Soviet dissident Vitali Rubin in an article by Jeanne Vilnay. A o -anarflAse