THE MICHIGAN UA1LY Sunday, March 24, 1914 LOOKING BACK Spend an Afternoon at Your Friendly Neighborhood Pool Hall THE MICHIGAN UNION THE WEEK IN REVIEW BILLIARD ROOM VOTE IN RACKHAM STUDENT GOVERNMENT ELECTIONS TO BE ELECTED: President, Vice President, 15 Representatives ELIGIBLE TO VOTE: Every student enrolled in Rackham DATES: March 25-29 and April 1-5, 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. LOCATION OF POLLS: SGC takes Gill Three months after his resig- nation, the controversy surround- ing Lee Gill's handling of SGC money rages on. This week, the student govern- Iment's president, attorney, and treasurer - herself a Gill ap- pointee - filed civil charges against the flashy former prez, alleging misuse of nearly $8,000 in student funds. It was a familiar story. Almost since the beginning of his trun- cated term of office, the enig- matic Gill-an ex-convict and the University's first black student president - had been hit by his opponents for allegedly playing fast and loose with student funds. Last fall, anonymous leaflets appeared on campus charging that over the summer Gill had removed cash from an SGC oc- count in Ann Arbor and placed it in a Detroit bank under his own name. Gill claimed that he had in- to court Mon., Mar. 25-Rackham Building Tues., Mar. 26-Grad Library Wed., Mar. 27-Fishbowl Thurs., Mar. 28-Engin. Arch Fri., Mar. 29-Education School Mon., Apr. 1-Rackham Building Tues., Apr. 2-Grad Library Wed., Apr. 3-Fishbowl Thurs., Apri. 4--Kresge Library Lobby Fri., Apr. 5-Rackham Building FOREST TERRACE 1001 SOUTH FOREST Fall Rentals Modern Two-Bedroom Apts. tended to establish an SGC ac- count in Detroit but found he lacked the proper papers and had to put the money in his own name "temporarily." Extensive investigations by both The Daily, and SGC failed to turn up evidence to disprove Gill's story. Gill and his supporters, mean- while, dismissed the charges as part of a "racist campaign" to discredit him. SGC meetings grew increasingly heavy, becom- ing a virtual open forum for ra- cial hostilities which had been brewing for sometime. In the be- ginning of January, Gill finally resigned. Last week's court action pro- mises to set the stage for the final act of the Gill tragedy. What role Gill himself will play remains unclear-he hasn't been heard from in several days. But it's a safe bet that the dy- WIN A FREE GAME TODAY 1 P.M.-12 MID. UNION BOWLING namic and controversial former president will be there. As SGC Attorney, Tom Bentley put it, to play no role at all would simply The Regents and salaries The pressure is once again on the Regents to release a prof.- by-prof. accounting of faculty salaries. Wednesday afternoon, Eastern Michigan University declared its intention to make such a dis- closure. In response, University Regent Gerald Dunn (D-Lansing) promised to re-introduce the mat- ter at the April Regents meeting. Saginaw Valley, Delta Colleges and Michigan State have al- ready made salaries public. And last August, State Attorney Gen- eral Frank Kelley stated in a formal opinion that salaries of employes at tax-supported insti- tutions are public information. And yet, it is considered unlike- hy that the Regents, who have re- jected similar proposals in the past, are ready to change their minds. The reason: Strong and con- tinuing pressure f r o m older, more conservative, and - in many cases - more highly paid elements of the faculty to keep their salaries a secret. campaign notes Many observers,some of them HRP workers, believe that the campaign of their party's Second Ward candidate -Kathy Kozachenko - has been seriously damaged by her controversial self-introductory leaflet which has been dis- tributed in the ward for the past few weeks. The leaflet opens with a poem and rambles on into a discursive, philosophical essay on modern capitalist so- ciety viewed from a radical homosexual perspective. It is embarrassingly lacking in, substantive discussion of nuts and bolts city issues. HRP spokespersons vigorously defend the leaflet as Hon- est and necessary. However, new Kozachenko literature- tight, direct, and issue-oriented-has recently been re- leased. The tight-rope on which Democrats have been walking on this year's rent control proposal claimed its first victim last week. Colleen McGee - the party's candidate in the First Ward - came under fire from both Republicans and HRPers who charge her with taking contradictory stands on the issue. Specifically, they contend that she has expressed support for the proposition before student audiences while claiming to be against it in an interview with the conservative Ann Arbor News. McGee says she supports rent control "in principle" while maintaining some reservations about this specific proposal - the same position taken by Second Ward Demo- crat Mary Richman. She says the charges against her are a result of mis-quotes and misunderstandings. * * * The Ann Arbor Sun - the voice of the city's counter- cultural "rainbow community" - has made a final and complete break with HRP, refusing to endorse Any of the radical third party's candidates. As expected, the Sun backed Democrat Jamie Kenworthy in his bid to unseat Republican William Colburn-arch- bogeyman of the rainbowites. They endorsed Democrat Colleen McGee in the First Ward, but found no one they liked anywhere else. The slap at HRP came as the culmination of the Sun's growing disenchantment with the party over its habit of splitting the left-of-center vote in close races. For information, call 763-0109, weekday afternoons JAMIE KENWORTHY f f 0 0 fully furnished & carpeted etch apt. equipped with its own burglar alarm system private parking-free garbage disposals 24 hr. emergency maintenance service live in resident manager Cable TV-free 8 or 12 month lease available THE JOB OF i I GOVERNMENT IS TO PROVIDE SERVICES See Randy or Andy Young Apt. 211, 769-6374 3 FOR THOSE. WHO NEED THEM. REPUBLICANS plan to cut off funds for social services like child care, health care, and drug programs, while they waste vast sums on capital improvements like golf courses and the airport. KENWORTHY will fight to keep our revenue sharing money going to social services and will oppose "improvements" for which there is no public need. VOTE MONDAY APRIL 1 DEMOCRAT FOURTH WARD d. Political Ad. Live in a Language House Next Year! The Maison Francaise (French House), Max Kade Deutsches Haus (Ger- man House) and the Russky Dom (Russian House) invite students who meet their minimum language requirements to apply for residency for 1974-75. In support of the University's policy on Affirmative Action, we actively encourage minority students with the necessary linguistic pre- requisites to apply so that the language houses may enjoy and reflect the diversity of races and cultures represented at the University. For informa- tion concerning application priorities, please check immediately with the resident directors of the houses: Russian-764-2153 or 764-6302 French-764-2147 or 763-1344 German-764-2152 or 764-5551 IL . EASTERN MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY MAJOR EVENTS COMMITTEE is pleased to announce the only Detroit" area performance of with special guest stars TOWER of POWER in BOWEN FEELDHOUSE April 5, 8:00 p.m. TICKETS ON SALE TOMORROW $6.00 (reserved), $5.00 and $4.00 m A ....:1..x.1,. 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