0 RESTRICTING CONGRESS' POWER See Editorial Page Y Sir 43au :43 a t t MOIST High-45 Low-29 For details, see today.. Vol. LXXXII1, No. 102 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, February 2, 1973 Ten Cents Eight Pages topday.. if yin. see nuews huappenu tali 76-DAILYI UAC banned UAC-Daystar's recent Luther Allison concert will apparently be the organization's last one at that location. According to Secre- tary of the University Dick Kennedy the ban was imposed for repeated lease violations. These violations included "consumption and debris leftover from liquor and food, heavy smoking and subsequent burns on the carpet, seats pulled loose from their moorings and vomitting in the balcony seats. Engin school dropout The engineering school government has voted unanimously not to participate in SGC elections this spring, but rather to hold their own separate election. Council president Ro Nagey said SGC elections are unresasonably expensive and that the ballot is still not fraud-proof. "Therefore," he said, "for us to participate would be a farce because SGC elections are a farce." Foiled again Three gunmen who robbed the Ann Arbor bank on Packard St. yesterday were apprehended moments later-thanks to the quick thinking of Ann Arbor's dog catcher. Stephen Hill, Ann Arbor dog warden, witnessed the robbery at 11:40 yesterday morning and followed the crooks in his car-radioing police as to their whereabouts. Police captured all three only a few blocks from the scene of the crime. Negotiations begin Negotiating teams representing the board of education and the Ann Arbor public school system will sit down with striking secretaries of the Teamsters local 214 at 10 a.m. this morning to discuss their demands. The meeting came at the request of the Michigan Employment Relations Commission. Meanwhile it is possible that school bus drivers of the same local union may also walk out. Happenitngs .. . are mighty slender especially for a Friday but if you're in Peking the People's Republic will hold a rally to celebrate the signing of the Vietnam peace agreement . . .on the home front, today is the first day of a national symposium at Rackham Auditorium entitled: "Community Health and the Emerging Black Physician-Bringing it on home." . . . The Association for Clinical Research Studies Inc. presents Judith Bardwick, PhD. who will speak on the psychology of women. The place is Ypsi State Hospital-registration for seminar is at 9 a.m. Cost five dollars . . . Tonite Barbour Gym will be the scene of International Folk Dancing from 8-11 p.m. Dope notes Apparently San Francisco police do not believe in halfway measures. Last night the cops raided a home and arrested ten people on drug charges. As they left the house with the suspects in custody, they ran into six federal narcs who had also been planning to bust the dopers. "They were surprised we were there," said a San Francisco policeman. "I guess it really blew them out of the water. But that's the breaks of the game." Some game .. . and in New York, the police have finally begun monitor- ing their narcotics seizures, after the theft of 400 pounds of heroin and cocaine from police confiscated stores. Instant replay SANTO DOMINGO-Thousands of Dominicans watched over nation-wide TV as a 33 year Yoga professor was voluntarily nailed to a cross Wednesday night. French born Patrice Tamao described his crucifization as "48-hour sacrifice for world peace and under- standing among men and to show the power of the spirit over matter!" Tamao's wife Maritza helped to drive six-inch stainless steel nails through her husbands hands and feet into a T-shaped wooden cross. No blood flowed from the wounds as the nails pierced his flesh. Makes it worthwhile NEW YORK-Mild honors continue to shower down on return- ing POW's. Paseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn has announced returning prisoners of wa'r will be given golden lifetime passes to all professional baseball games. The action will go into effect with the start of this season. A number of hard-core baseball fans are reported to be considering re-enlisting in the hopes of becoming part of this elite corps. On the inside ... Mitchell Ross reviews the University Players' pro- duction of The Magistrate on the Arts Page . . . the Editorial Page features the transcript of a meeting of the University's higher-ups-the way Daily Feature Editor Bob Barkin heard it . . . and the Sports Pages are filled with-you guessed it-sports. The weather picture If the Weather Bureau's predictions of lower tempera- tures hold true, the wet may turn to its more pleasant white form of snow this weekend. For today, however, rain is almost a sure bet, with "springlike" temperatures shooting up to the high forties. For the winter freaks the thermome- ter will drop into the twenties tonight, and there may be occasional snow flurries. FIGHTING EBBS Viet peace-keeping force .. R Names of several U.S. begins task POW's By The Associated Press Soldiers of four nations today v the world's most difficult poli overseeing the Vietnamese cease tween enemies who have thus far to stop fighting. The team of 24 soldiers from Hungary, Indonesia and Poland v Saigon for the first time to inspe ties in Hue and Da Nang in northe Vietnam and Pleiku in the cent lands. The soldiers are the advance ele the International Commission of and Supervision, which will e number 1,160 men. The team has been waiting i since the cease-fire accords wer in Paris last Saturday. However, ural problems had prevented thei: into the countryside where fight tinues to rage in violation of th ments. Even though the commissioni swinging into action, it still faces In Laos released able problems in trying to maintain a will begin truce between bitter enemies who have ce job- been at war for a quarter of a century. e-fire be- Canada has expressed grave doubts on r refused the present set-up, but says it will give it a try for two months. Canada' The U.S. also concedes that it is relying ct facili- to a large extent on the good faith of the ern South parties involved to make the cease-fire ral high- accords work. Under the accords finally signed, the ments of policing force will be broken down into a Control 108-member headquarters group based in ventually Saigon, and other teams of between eight and 20 men. n Saigon There will also be regional teams in e signed 26 places throughout Vietnam. , proced- The teams must make sure that no r moving military forces enter South Vietnam from ting con- the outside. They must see that military e agree- equipment is brought in only on a one-for- one basis to replace worn out arms. is finally One reinforced border team has to guard formid- the entire 35-mile length of the Demilitar- ized Zone between North and South Viet- nam. The International Commission will also supervise the return of prisoners and ac- counting of the missing in action, with the right to visit prison camps. More information about American pris- oners was released yesterday as North Vietnam gave the United States the names of seven American servicemen, a civilian pilot and two missionaries who were listed as captured in Laos. The new lists left in grave doubt the fate of 308 servicemen and four civilians pre- viously listed by U.S. officials as either prisoners or missing in Laos. Some veterans of the air war over Laos have said privately they thought as many as 65 to 70 U.S. fliers might have been captured there in nearly nine years of American bombing raids against the Ho Chi Minh trail network. Pentagon spokesman Jerry Friedheim refused to speculate on whether the North Vietnamese and their Pathet Lao allies might be deliberately holding back more names because U.S. warplanes have con- tinued to bomb the trail and other targets U.S. SERVICEMEN wave as they board an airplane for home yesterday at Saigon's Tan Son Nhut air base. in Laos after the last Saturday. Senators as, no penaItieE for pot use WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Two senators asked Con- gress yesterday to allow Americans to possess as much as three ounces of marijuana at any time without encountering any criminal penalties. Senators Jacob Javits (R.-N.Y.) and Harcld Hughes (D.- Iowa) introduced legislation which, if it passed, would re- move all federal criminal penalties against private use of marijuana or even possession of up to three ounces on the street. The bill apparently presumes that anyone possessing' --- - -- - . more than three ounces of SGC oustis By TERRY MARTIN and BILL HEENAN In what one Council member termed an "inquisition-type hear- ing," Stident Government Council last night voted to remove Ron Palmerlee from his position onI the University Council. SGC Pre s i d e n t Bill Jacobs (GROUP) led the Council forces who passed the removal motion by a 7-2 vote. There were two absten- tions. According to Jacobs, the removal motion stemmed from an incident involving office space allocation for a non-profit group called Col-i lege Entrance Assistance Commit- tee, of which Palmerlee is a member. Jacobs told Council that Palmer- lee had "doctored" a list of Coun- cil-approved office allotments in order to give his organization two offices instead of one. Palmerlee allegedly presented the doctored list to former SGC treasurer David Schaper, who: then issued Palmerlee key author- izations. However, after compar- ing Palmerlee's list with the orig-I inal list, Schaper .said he became, See SGC, Page 8 marijuana intends to sell some or all of it, and would thus be subject to prosecu- tion.I Presently, there are stiff criminal penalties for possession that range up to life imprisonment in some states. The bill if passed would not le- galize marijuana, but rather would decriminalizebits use. The drug would still be a controlled sub- stance-so the time when packs of Acapulco Gold are found at every corner drug store would still be well in the future. Last year, a presidential com- _ 676- - 442 are this week's winning lottery numbers mission on marijuana recommend- ed that criminal penalties for sim- ple possession in privates homes be ended. But the commission never pro- posed ending penalties for posses- sion in the street. The Javits-Hughes bill would re- tain criminal penalties for pos- session of marijuana with intent to sell. Most observers, however, gaveE the bill little if any chance of pass- ing successfully through Congress. Even if it passed the Senate, the more conservative House of Rep- resentatives would almost surely defeat the bill.j It must also be assumed that even if the bill managed to make it through Congress, President Nixon, who has repeatedly said he would not allow decriminalization of the drug, would exercise his veto power. It would be almost impossible to muster the two-thirds Congressional support needed to1 override an executive veto. Javits told the Senate the com- mission had found that 24 million Am rns h adused marijuaina at Vietnam cease-fire began Housing unit faces def icit By GORDON ATCHESON The city's Housing Commis- sion currently has an expect- ed $115,000 budget- deficit for this fiscal year. And unless federal aid is received, the program may go bankrupt. The only explanation for the commission's grim financial state has come in a series of charges and countercharges between the commission and the ex-director Donald Johnson. "Johnson was unwilling or un- able to exercise any administra- tive control. He simply refused to recognize problems," claimed, Housing' Commission Vice Presi- dent Steve Burghardt. Johnson contends he has been made a scapegoat by the commis- sion. "The Housing Commission is just blaming all their problems on me," Johnson said. The Housing Commission over- sees approximately 320 public housing units within the city. Both low income families and senior citizens live in the units. The com- mission itself consists of five members appointed by city coun- cil. They are responsible for hiring and dismissing administrative staff, including the director. Johnson abruptly resigned as director last- December as the Housing commission's financial status became known. "I resigned under pressure from Barlow (Eliz- abeth Barlow, Housing Commis- sion president). She forced me out," said Johnson. "The financial management was not very caref, the whole job was obviously being done - subsequently Johnson resigned," explained Barlow. The largest financial error made by the commission was in esti- mating the funds lost becauseof the controversial Brooke Amend- ment. The federal law, enacted last year, stipulates that public housing tenants receiving welfare cannot pay more than 25 per cent of their income for rent. The measure lowers the rent collected for public housing. There- fore local agencies, such as the housing commission, were ex- pected to reflect the lost funds in the budgets submitted to the De- partment of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). HUD would then reimburse the agencies. The Housing Commission under- estimated the effect of the Brooke Amendment by over $88,000. "The error clearly resulted from slop- py staff work," Barlow charged. See HOUSING, Page 8 Doily Photo by ROLFE TESSEM UNIVERSITY HISTORY PROFESSOR John Whitmore, who was in Hanoi when the cease-fire was declared, shows newsmen the Hanoi newspaper announcing the peace during his press conference yesterday. The headline refers to a "great victory for our people." Professor, back from Hanoi, explores other side of conflict By CINDY HILL and JOHN CAMDEN Speaking of a people "quietly confident" in war and "optimistic" in peace, John Whitmore, assistant professor of history, described his im- pressions of North Vietnam during a press con- ference in the Administration Bldg. yesterday. Whitmore, who was in Vietnam during a period immediately before and after the announcement of ceasefire, was the first official guest of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam since the De- cember bombings and was the first American academic specialist to visit Hanoi. Whitmore, an expert on Vietnam, claims that the Vietnamese felt that the war was "not aimed at any strategic or military goals." "The North Vietnamese felt Nixon's goal was to terrorize the people, and drive them into panic and chaos," said Whitmore. "There was no panic, discipline was main- tained and they fought back." "They destroyed the myth of the B-52, there was nothing to be afraid of anymore." Whitmore said that, despite the heavy bomb- ings, the North Vietnamese felt that they had brought America back to the peace table." The ceasefire, he said, was "more or less what they expected sooner or later, and probably later . . . Their attitude was one of 'We will go on as long as necessary."', Whitmore noted the historical importance the Vietnamese gave to the December 18-29 bomb- ings or as they termed it, "The Battle of the Twelve Days." Although Whitmore did not feel qualified to comment on the overall extent of the destruction, See PROF, Page 8 I Legislature By DAVID STOLL Special To The Daily LANSING-Legislation to shield the con- fidentiality of reporters' sources from government interference may not sail through the state legislature as smoothly as supporters have predicted. Four bills granting newsmen blanket immunity from contempt proceedings be- Vaughn thinks the bills will pass. He points to the fact that twenty other repre- sentatives "immediately" agreed to co- sponsor the legislation "without any lob- bying" on his part. State Rep. Perry Bullard (D-Ann Arbor) is one of the bills' co-sponsors. Like Vaughn, he thinks the bills have a "very good" chance of passing the House. }:biJJ}J:GI:iS::": ?: iJ??ii??Y-i:":: 1 ::+ "n:Jy+. k i -:" .C:.: -.i: ::.}:. .... ::.:JJi._}vi::?:.: J:.?:-J_::JT::: i::.i:t.::. .......... .. .. ... :v:i:::::.:::i::.:'.: i::p: ii:".:::-i:!:.i::i.i:: ': v::ti' }i'=:::::..: '::::i i::i i: rii+ itii::ii:. _..ti... dut."y: ti cry:.:: :::.;' :. ": :.. . 1+4Y) 099C4 ..... . ...,....t - __::.:' ::: ........ ... .. ....":.: "d :.-.:itii::i: :i::....: i