r NIXON: STUMPING THE THUMB See inside Y Sir iauF :43 ti14p GALOSHEY High-r7 Low--5O See Today for Details Eighty-Four Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXIV, No. 154 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, April 12, 1974 Ten Cents Eight Pages tI OUSEE EWS4APPENCALLWDLY 049 and 318.. . . . . are this week's winning Michigan State Lottery numbers. Yesterday's drawing also yielded second chance numbers 992 and 383, with bonus numbers 901, 849 and 512. Cavanaugh OK Former Detroit Mayor Jerome Cavanaugh was re- ported in good condition yesterday after he underwent two hours of surgery including removal of his right kid- ney at St. Joseph's Mercy Hospital.. According to a hos- pital spokeswoman, preliminary evidence showed that the kidney contained a malignant tumor but that the cancerous growth had not spread. Cavanaugh will stay at St. Joe's for seven to 10 more days, and his prog- nosis is considered excellent, the spokeswoman said. Cavanaugh stunned state political observers by with- drawing from this year's Democratic gubernatorial race late last month. Clinic benefit set The Free People's Clinic has scheduled a benefit dance for tomorrow at 8:30 p.m. in East -Quad's Halfway Inn. Three bands will perform, including the Milton Bonaye dance band and jazz combo, Blind Alley Cocaine, atfd Deadalus. Donation is one dollar. A clinic spokesman explained that the dance comes in response to severe cutback in city social service allocations. "The city doesn't care about human services," the spokesman said. "The Clinic can keep going for awhile, but things will get tight down the road. We hope that people in the community we serve can scrape up the dollar this Sat- urday to serve ours. And dancing is great for your health!" Free mailings? State Rep. Perry Bullard (D-Ann Arbor) has proposed an amendment to the pending campaign finance bill to allow candidates for state offices to qualify for free elec- tion mailings during their campaigns. "This is the first step towards freeing candidates from the control of rich contributors and political influence peddlers," Bullard claims. To qualify for the mailing privileges, candidates would need nominating signatures of five per cent of the voters in their districts. Leaders sought The local branch of the American Youth Hostels (AYH) has a problem - they have scheduled a raft of spring and summer hiking trips to near and distant locations, but they can't find people qualified and willing to lead the trips. AYH would welcome people with knowledge of backpacking, mountain climbing, photography, ani- mal, mushroom or bird lore as trip leaders, and AYH offers training to people who lack these skills but would like to learn them. All positions are volunteer, with ex- penses paid for long-distance trips. If you'd like to join up, call Linda Coughenour at 665-0701. Happenings .. . S today feature the appearance of former beat poet Allen Ginsberg and holy man Bhagavan Das at Hill Aud., 8 p.m. in a benefit for a Gay Community Center, admis- sion $2 . . . the College Young Democrats are throwing a TGIF at Dominick's restaurant, 812 Monroe St., from 4-5:30 p.m. Guest speakers will be State Senate candi- date Gerald Faye and University Regent candidate John Koza ... Juan Petras will lecture on Chile in E. Quad's Rm. 126 at 12:30 p. in.... and at the Ark, Aly Bain and the Boys of the Lough will perform music from the British Isles on fiddle, concertina, flute, banjo and drum at 8:30 p.m. License liberation Secretary of State Richard Austin said yesterday his department would allow women to use their maiden names as their middle names on drivers licenses if the state legislature funds the switchover. Austin said it would cost $80,000 in each of the next three years if an estimated 30,000 women seek the change. A mail sur- vey of women drivers indicated that nearly one of every three would prefer to use their maiden names, Austin said. Presently, married women are not allowed to use their maiden names as either middle or last names on drivers licenses. S Death for smuggling A Chinese woman was sentenced to death in her ab- sence yesterday for her part in smuggling $70,000 worth of contraband cigarettes and cognac into South Vietnam. A military court sentenced the woman, Huynh Tu Hoa, who is in her twenties, three other Chinese and a South Vietnamese army sergeant to death for sabotaging the national economy. Police are seeking all five, said to be ringleaders of a gang which organized a convoy of trucks which took the contraband through a series of checkpoints in the Mekong Delta before the militia finally halted it. On the inside,.. . . . The Arts Page presents Cinema Weekend . . . Marnie Heyn offers a handbook on student services on the Editorial Page . . . and Clarke Cogsdill reports wrestling coach Rick Bay's resignation on the Sports n o Hospital Chi( By STEPHEN SELBST. Edward Connors, director of University Hospital, resigned Wednesday after an audit of his travel expenses revealed a misuse of expense account funds over the past five years totaling approximately $8,000. The final figure has not yet been deter- mined as the audit is still continuing and may take four to six weeks to complete. The initial audit showed that Connors had been billing both the University and out- side organizations to cover expenses in- curred in his official capacity. INVESTIGATION OFConnors' travel expenses began February 14, when the regularly scheduled review of hospital voucher receipts turned up a bill which had apparently already been paid; and was about to be paid again. Following this dis- covery a full scale probe of Connors' re- cords was begun. A. B. Hicks, director of University Au- dits, refused to comment further on the case, saying, "I'd just as soon not get into what our auditing procedures are." The University is currently investigating the possibility of pressing charges against Connors, and President Fleming released a statement yesterday saying, "I have asked our counsel to check what legal obligations, if any, we have to prosecute." University attorney Roderick Daane told The Daily, "I intend to present a report to the President before the Regents meet next week." Discussing the possibility of pressing charges, Daane said, "I know of no precedent at this, or any, other univer- sity, for pressing charges in such cases." CONNORS HAS admitted in a written statement that his actions were, "a serious mistake in judgement on my part." He also quit' announced he would make full restitution of the money to the University once the audit determines the final total. Fleming defended Connors yesterday, noting, "Few of us go through life without making a mistake. Mr. Connors has made .a serious mistake which he has had the strength to acknowledge. He has great skills from which our hospital has bene- fitted substantially. The world of health care needs his talents, and I am confident he will find a new start for what will yet be recorded as a distinguished career.'y Connors was also defended by Medical Center Director John Gronvall who said, "This is a very difficult and very sad time. At the same time the University has had to deal with a wrongdoing. I agree with Mr. Fleming that Mr. Connors will be recognized positively for his many achieve- ments in the health care field." In the wake of Connors' resignation the in scandal Regents are expected to name an acting director of the hospital at their meeting next week. Plans for finding a permanent replacement have not yet been formu- lated. Connors himself was not available for further comment yesterday and a spokes- person at his home said he was "away and could not be reached." CONNORS, 45, was first named, to the post in June 1969, and took over the duties of hospital director in September of that year, succeeding Albert Kerlikowske who retired after serving 24 years in that post. Connors had previously been Superin- tendent of University Hospitals at the University of Wisconsin since 1960. He had also worked for Health, Education, and Welfare (HEW) in 1968-69, serving as a consultant for the Health Services and Men- tal Health Administration. Connors House subpoenas aterg ate,. Comlete p romphance WASHINGTON (FI)-The H poenaed tapes and documents and the White House respond panel "comprehensive and con President's Watergate role. But Presidential Press Sec to say that the materials w+ demanded by the House comm Ziegler would only say that wit committee materials "consistent wi and that they would bear out the President's past explanations of his Watergate role and "receive the support of the House." The committee subpoena ap- proved by a 33 to 3 vote called for a response by 10 a.m. on April 25, four days after Congress returns by DAVID MARGOLICK from an Easter recess. The subpoena was hand-delivered to the White House and accepted own the block, by James St. Clair, the President's chief Watergate lawyer, late yes- terday afternoon. IT WAS ABOUT two hours later that Ziegler told reporters the White House had plans to deliver unspecified materials to the com- mide r sometime between April 22 and 25. The committee voted to subpoena ' the material despite an offer from St Clairto deliver part of it vol- untarily within a few days. But committee members, including many of the Republican minority, were angered by St. Clair's refusal to give an immediate response about all of the material the panel had requested in a letter sent last - Feb.,25. ;t;... ..',' .... A committee source said there" was no special significance to the April 25 deadline other than an effort to give the White House the maximum reasonable amount of time to respond. ALL OF THE disenting votes were cast by Republicans, includ- ing Rep. Edward Hutchinson of Michigan, the ranking minority member of the committee. Hutchinson said he doubted a subpoena directed at the President Boyle See HOUSE, Page 2 Ipes Vhite House notassured ouse Judiciary Committee sub- from President Nixon yesterday ed with a promise to give the clusive" materials regarding the cretary Ronald Ziegler declined would comply fully with those ittee. hin two weeks Nixon would give the ith his constitutional responsibilities" Senate I Daily Photo Energy crisis? Getting "carried away" is a car sitting in front of Kappa Kappa Gamma courtesy of some friends from a frat d ATTORNEY TO APPEAL: ..Boyle convicted of mu MEDIA, Pa. UP) - Former United Mine Workers (UMW) President W. A. "Tony" Boyle was convicted last night of three counts of first-degree murder in the 1969 slaying of union rival Jo- seph "Jock" Yablonski and his wife and daughter. "This is the end of the road," said special prosecutor Richard Sprague, who had doggedly pur- sued the trail of the Yablonski slayers for more than four years. Boyle's attorney said he would file a motion for a new trial. The jury of nine men and three women took just 4% hours to reach a verdict. The convictions carry a mandatory life sentence. No date for sentencing was announced. "GUILTY, FIRST DEGREE," jury foreman Clyde Parris re- sponded three times to the indict- ment read by Judge Francis Ca- tania of Delaware County Com- mon Pleas Court. The 72-year-old Boyle exhibited no emotion as the verdict was Women invade rooting ranks read, but his face appeared drawn as he waved to his wife while be- ing escorted from the courtroom and voiced a "goodbye." Boyle's wife, Ethel, fidgeted in her seat and strained for a look at her husband. Next to her, Boyle's daughter, Antoinette, rub- bed her eyes and appeared to be holding back tears. Kenneth Yablonski, son of the slain man, stood with tears on his cheeks and remarked to Sprague, "You don't know how happy I am. There are no words that I can express." "JOCK" YABLONSKI, his wife and a daughter were shot to death by three hired gunmen as they slept in theirdbeds in the fami- ly's sprawling red brick home in Clarksville, Pa. Their bullet-rid- dled bodies were discovered Jan. 5, 1970. Boyle's was the fifth murder conviction obtained by Sprague in the case. Three others have pleaded guilty and a fourth, Wil- liam. Turnblazer, pleaded guilty to a federal charge of conspiring to kill Yablonski. Turnblazer was the principal witness in the Boyle trial. The trail of the conspirators had led from southwestern Pennsyl- vania, to Washington, D. C., to Cleveland, Ohio, and to the coal fields of Kentucky and Tennessee. WITH THE CONVICTION of Boyle, Sprague said the case was finished. "Boyle was the origina- tor., We got back to the beginning and that's where we'll stop," he said. Boyle, who had ruled the 200,- 000-member union with an iron fist for 10 years and was a pro- tege of the late John Lewis, was accused of masterminding the Dec. passes new campaign reform bill, WASHINGTON (A) -The Senate yesterday passed a far-reaching, campaign reform bill with the avowed aim of eliminating big- money influence in politics It provides for the use of tax funds in financing general and pri- mary campaigns for federal Eof- fices. Also for the first time it puts a ceiling on campaign contribu- tions and limits the total expendi- tures of presidential and congres- sional candidates. ANOTHER KEY section estab- lishes a bipartisan Federal Elec- tions 'Commission empowered to bring civil and criminal prosecu- tions, independently of the Justice Department, for violations of cam- paign financing. Passage of the pil, 53 to 32,' after a debate that began March 26, climaxed a battle in which the Senate's anti-filibuster rule was invoked by a one-vote margin. The controversy centered around the provisions for public financing See SENATE, Page 2 New school funding bill would shift burden to income taxes By DEBBIE CANJA It happened again last night amid familiar ripples of discon- tent. Another male stronghold, the Michigan football cheerleaders, went the way of the Michigan marching band with the addition of ten women to next year's squad. "We know what's coming," said cheerleader Mason Kauffman, '74. "They have their tryouts in Crisler and we use the wrestling room in the I.M.," he added. "I hope they get run over by Chuck Heater, (Michigan full- back)" was Randy Neal's, '74, contribution. By MARY LONG More than two thirds of Michigan's state senators are backing a bill that would shift much of the burden of state school funding from property taxes to per- sonal and corporate income tax. Assistant Majority Leader Gilbert Bursley (R-Ann Arbor) is introducing the bill, which would reduce property taxes by one third for most homeowners, according to its sponsors. The resulting slack in edu- cation funds would be more than covered by a simul- taneous one per cent hike in Michigan's personal, corporate and financial institution income tax rate. _ -_ . tricts in areas of greater- or lesser community wealth. BURSLEY AIDE Gene Caesar says the new fund- ing bill is "not! a departure from the State School Aid Act at all. The concept and principles are en- tirely the same." Only those " school districts that roll back their property taxes proportionately will be given the new funding level of $60 as an option, according to Caesar. The senators have given school districts the guar- antee that if school property taxes are reduced by the suggested one third, the districts will suffer no lose in school funds. "WE DON'T have the legal authority in the legis- I NOT EVERYONE shared their { gloom, however. "We need some-