SENATE PASSES FINANCING BILL Y L sir 43U Eighty-Four Years of Editorial Freedom Iait APRIL High-66 Low-O See Today for Details See Editorial Page a Vol. LXXX IV,No. 155 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, April 13, 1974 Ten Cents Eight Pages GOP chiefs . IroUS1EE ?&S APPc ALL ty Postill's problems Act III in the continuing drama of Sheriff Fred Postill's problems with the jail administration unfolded Thursday, this particular episode starring Postill's under- sheriff, James Spickard, and his aide, Laird Harris. Postill sent the two to the Board of Commissioners Ways and Means Committee to recommend that Spickard re- place former jail administrator Paul Wasson, who Pos- till fired last week. The proposal was defeated after an angry debate, and Spickard- and Harris walked out in a huff. Then the plot thickened: it seems the board had a recommendation of its own-namely acting jail admin- istrator Frank Donley. A quick phone call, however, revealed that Donley didn't want the job. Postill's name was also considered and rejected before the board fi- nally accepted the name Postill suggested in the first place-Spickard. Postill, whose representatives had long since' departed, apparently found out about his small victory later. Alms for Nixon There's always a helping hand around when you need one-even if you're the President. Students on their way to classes yesterday were confronted on the middle of the Diag by a young man calling "small change to help the President pay his taxes. . ." The man, however, refused to take any change that was offered him, direct- ing them to send it directly to Washington instead. Bab- bling something about "cooties," the unidentified man said he did not want to handle "dirty money." Surpris- ingly, the notoriously poverty-stricken student popula- tion did offer a few dimes and nickels, but response was reportedly not overwhelming. Hopwood winners The University's annual Hopwood Awards, one of the largest cash awards for creative writing in the country, were awarded yesterday and, if you don't mind our bragging, the Daily had its share of winners. Sunday Magazine editor Tony Schwartz was awarded $500 in the major essay category, arts critic David Blomquist was awarded $500 for his drama piece, and sometime magazine writer Richard Streicker won $400 in the minor essay category. HRP City Councilwoman Kathy Koza- chenko also earned $300 in the minor poetry category. The big winner for the day, however, was Philip Pirages, who won two major awards totalling a haul of $2,000. Two other students-David Fuk, Peter Serchuk-won $1,200 in the literary awards. 9 Laurels for Johnson Vice-President for Student Service Henry Johnson has added another feather to his cap-this time with the title "Social Worker of the Year" awarded by the Huron Valley Chapter of the National Association of Social Workers. Johnson is serving his second term as member of the Ann Arbor Board of Education and has done exten- sive work for the community, including his work as chairman for the University's 1973 United Fund cam- paign, and as a past delegate to the Michigan State Council of the National Association of Social Workers. Johnson was a psychiatric group social worker at Fort Wayne State School in Indiana, and a group worker at Children's Psychiatric Hospital Happenings .. . .. . are few but colorful today, highlighted by the "National Tax Protest Day" sponsored by the Ann Arbor Libertarian League. The Internal Revenue Service will be picketed between 11 a.m. and 3 p.m., speakers will be on the Diag at noon, and, says a spokesperson, streakers are welcome . . . the Michigan men and women's billiards competition will take place at 11 a.m. in the Michigan Union's Billiard Room . . . Irish author and authority on the Edwardian period, Anita Leslie, will speak at an English department seminar meeting ... Louis Malles's "Phantom India" will be shown (for free!) in Aud. B of Angell Hall. Organizers say "bring sandwiches" . . . and, if you're into partying, the Free People's Clinic will sponsor a benefit dance at 8:30 p.m. in East Quad's Halfway Inn. Phony concerts The Detroit rock scene finally outdid Ann Arbor in bizarre goings-on and strange shenannigans. Two phony concert dates involving Elton John and Ike and Tina Turner were advertised in the Sunday edition of the Detroit News. All tickets were to be mail ordered. The office of U.S. Attorney Ralph Guy has issued a sub- poena to the National Bank of Detroit to stop payment on the $11,000 worth of checks that ensued. Two men have already been apprehended for the nefarious deed. In other words, you'll be able to get your money back, but not Elton John or the Turners. Sorry folks. Marbles and women The women's movenent made another major advance this week, when the World Marbles Board of Control removed its ban on women marble players at the annual Good Friday competition in Tinslei, Green, England. It seems the ban was imposed in 1972 when a miniskirted woman bent down to play, revealing the word "knickers" printed on her panties. The Board did stipulate this year that women must be "suitably dressed" when it lifted the ban. That's one small step for a woman ... On the inside Jonathan Klein writes of educational reform and the need for revolution on the Edit Page . . . Tom Kippert reviews the J. Geils Band on the Arts Page . .and the Sports Page writers tell us they have "all the relevent and interesting inforamtion in the world of sports." rap k a Nixor Second copy seen as an improvement WASHINGTON (R) - Senate Re- publican leaders warned the White House that its initial draft of a letter replying to a House Ju- diciary Committee deadline for tapes and other materials would be taken "as a brush-off and a stall for time." Sen. Norris Cotton of New Hampshire told a reporter yester- day that this was the unanimous reaction of the GOP leaders at a meeting Tuesday with presidential assistant Dean Burch. Cotton, chairman of the Senate Republican Conference, said one of those present remarked that if the letter were sent, "It would be asking for impeachment." A SECOND letter was drafted and, after it had been read to the Senate GOP leaders, was sent by presidential counsel James St. Clair to the House committee. It failed to satisfy the committee which voted Thursday, 33 to 3, to issue a subpoena ordering Presi- dent Nixon to turn over 42 tapes and other materials for its im- peachment inquiry. Cotton said he regarded the sec- ond letter as a great improvement over the first one, saying he didn't interpret it as being defiant. OTHERS at the meeting with Burch included Republican Leader Hugh Scott; his deputy, Sen. Rob- ert Griffin of Michigan; Sen. John Tower of Texas, chairman of the Senate GOP Policy Committee; Sen. Bill Brock of Tennessee, chairman of the Senate Republi- can Campaign Committee, and Sen. Wallace Bennett of Utah, sec- retary of the Republican Confer- ence. Cotton said they felt the first let- ter drafted "didn't indicate clearly enough that it was the President's intention to furnish the committee with all relevant materials." He said the letter was brief, thanked the House committee for being more specific about the ma- terials requested, promised an ef- fort to comply insofar as possible but no time for doing so. "WE FELT that wouldn't suf- fice," Cotton said. "We felt it would be taken as a brush-off by the House committee and would lead to trouble." Cotton said that President Nixon couldn't have seen the letter be- cause he was enroute home from Paris after attending funeral serv- ices for French President Pompi- dou. The second letter, before being sent to the House committee, was read to the Senate GOPnleaders individually over the phone. Cotton said he didn't know the reaction of the others, but he felt it indicated a willingness to comply with the committee's request as promptly as possible. HE SAID he wished the letter had set out the reason for the de- lay in complying, adding the Sen- ate leaders had been told this was because of the time it takes to listen to the tapes to determine if they are relevant. Cotton said most of them are &ight-hour tapes and "contain all kinds of subjects, some of them completely unrelated to anything" involved in the House committee's eb- impeachment inquiry. ade Cotton added there was said to but be difficulty in understanding them ely in some cases because of their ael poor quality. tape reply 0 AP Photo PRESIDENTIAL Press Secretary Ron Ziegler leaves the White House after a routine press briefing. Vice President Gerald Ford has indicated that he would drop Ziegler from the payroll if and when he becomes President. o willseek newlC press secretary i Nixo leaes office Daily Photo by KAREN KASMAUSKI POET AND MODERN-DAY holy 'man Allen Ginsberg meditates during a press conference yester- day after his presentation at Hill Auditorium. "When you've got a pot belly like mine, you've got to unzip your pants to meditate," he said. Beat' poet Ginsberg still playing the circuit By LAURA BERMAN "Neal Cassady is dead, Jack Kerouac finally drank himself to death. But here I am, 48 years old, and a survivor." And at 48, poet Allen Gins- berg is still on the road. His traveling companion on the concert circuit these days is Bhagavan Das who sings in Sanskrit before Ginsberg reads his poems. Both appeared at Hill Auditorium last night as part of the "Fes- tival of Lifes' weekend activities. GINSBERG has been touring campuses for almost 20 years. He first achieved recognition in the 1950's as a leading spokesman for the Beat Generation, and as the author of several books of poetry. In the sixties, what had been 'beat' be- came 'hip', and Ginsberg became something of a veteran sage. Most recently Ginsberg and Bhagavan Das have been touring the campus circuit with their "show". "I'm doing this so I will have enough money to build a shack next to (Beat Poet) Gary Snyder's in California," Ginsberg said. "It is going to be a simple hermit's hut with mud walls and two rooms in a 'meditation com- munity.' Gary and I bought land there a few years ago," the balding modern holy man explain- ed. "Snyder already has built an American-Indian Japanese country farmhouse model." See 'BEAT', Page 3 WASHINGTON (IP) - Vice Presi- dent Gerald Ford's office confirms he indicated Ronald Ziegler would not be retained as White House press secretary if Ford became President, and that he has reser- vations about Secretary of Defense James Schlesinger. But Press aide Paul Miltich said Ford was not talking in terms of directly firing either Ziegler or Schlesinger when he answered questions on possible appointees if he became President for an ar- ticle in the current New Republic magazine. MILTICH SAID he is less upset with, the article than witiT Col- umnist WilliameSafire's criticism that it is unseemly for Ford "to be confiding his plans for the assump- tion of power while the body of the setting president is still warm." Safire's column, Miltich said, "makes it sound like Ford is wait- ing in the wings frothing at the mouth wanting to be President. This is just not an accurate char- acterization." The press secretary pointed out that the New Republic article by John Osborne starts by saying. Ford emphasizes both publicly and privately that he expects Presi- dent Nixon to complete his term. FORD DID tell Osborne, Miltich confirmed, that he felt Defense Secretary Schlesinger did not know how to deal well with Congress. Osborne's article says Ford blames Schlesinger partly for House rejection last week of in- creased U. S. military aid for South Vietnam and says whether Scheslinger would be in Ford's Cabinet is "the big question mark." Ford indicated Ziegler would not be his press secretary simply because Ford would routinely name his own press secretary, Mil- tich said. SAFIRE'S COLUMN in Thurs- day's New York Times quoted Ford as denying the statement in the New Republicstory that Ford gets so restive with President Nix- on's small talk that Ford has tak- en to breaking off conversations with Nixon. Miltich said Ford meant to say that when he talky to the Presi- dent he doesn't want to "overstay his welcome." Osborne's article repeats Ford's testimony at his House confirma- tion hearing that as President he would urge Dr. Henry Kissinger to remain secretary of state. It also says retired Gen. Alex- ander Haig would be asked to re- main secretary of state. ..It says Ford would want to keep Rogers Morton as interior secre- tary, Peter Brennan as labor sec- retary and James -Lynn as secre- tary of health, education and wel- fare. Aside from Haig, it says Ford would want L. William Seidman, a Grand Rapids lawyer and friend, or Philip Buchen, Ford's old law partner, to be among his top aides. HOUSES DESTROYED: Israelis attack Lebanon in retaliation for raids KIRYAT SHMONAH, Israel (')- Israeli forces carried out a retali- atory raid across the Lebanese bor- der early this morning after the Israeli village of Kiryat Shmonah. buried victims of an Arab terrorist raid that took 18 lives. The Tel Aviv command said Is- raeli troops entered several vil- lages in southern Lebanon during the three-hour raid and blew up houses belonging to Arab guerrilla sympathizers. At the burial ceremonies here yesterday, angry and embittered residents of Kiryat Shmonah had demanded vengeance against Arab terrorists and the states harboring them. "REVENGE!" Revenge!" chant- ed an estimated 10,00 mourners. HRP to petition for preferential balloting In announcing the raid into L anon, the Israeli command ma no mention of Arab casualties b said all the raiders returned safe to Israel. A- spokesman said IsrE used no armor or aircraft. "Israeli forces destroyed seve houses after evacuating their habitants, and avoided hurting t civilian population," the comma said. The action took place a few hot after the Israeli cabinet met special secret session to discs what action Israel should take the attack by three guerrillas Kiryat Shmonah. ISRAEL REPORTED no resi ance from regular Lebanese tro and said the regulars had "eva ated the area." The command identified the ra ed towns as Taiba, Muhebab, Bli and Eitarun, a cluster of Arab lages 10 miles west of Kiryatc monah along the northern stret of the Israel-Lebanon boarder. Also hit were the hamlets Yarin and Dahira, 16 miles nos of the westprn end of the front ral in- the nd urs in Uss for on ist- ops icu- id- ida vil- Sh- tch of rth ier ACTING DEAN SOUGHT January set as probable date for new LSA dean appointment By JACK KROST The Ann Arbor Human Rights Party (HRP) has announced it will start a petition drive this spring to implement a preferential balloting system for the city may- oral race, to replace the present direct voting system. Preferential balloting would al- ing system on the November ballot as a proposed City Charter amend- ment. In a statement released yester- day. HRP contended that such a voting system would "minimize the effects of so-called 'vote-split- ting' whereby conservative can- didates can be'elected because the left of center 'vote is divided be- By CHIP SINCLAIR It is unlikely that a new literary college (LSA) dean will be appointed before January of next year, according to members of the deanship selection com- mittee. The committee was designated to find a replace- ment for departing Dean Frank Rhodes. Rhodes will resign as head of LSA July 1 to become vice president for academic affairs. UNTIL THE NEW dean is selected, the selection committee has suggested President Robben Fleming XXX",