A NEW ATTACK ON THE MEDIA See Editorial Page Y Sir 19a ~!I~itW APATHETIC High-35 Low-2 See today ... for details Vol. LXXXIII, No. 105 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, February 6, 1973 Ten Cents Eight Pages today0. if you see ines happen call 76-DAILY S Statistician's delight OVERWHELMINGLY DEFEATED LSA rejects grading reforms Statistical buffs should be pleased to know that the Univer- sity has released a 56-page booklet showing the breakdown by colleges of teaching salaries. Topping the charts is the school of medicine which boasts a median salary of $39,000 and a maxi- mum salary of $55000. Bringing up the rear are the school of music and the Flint and Dearborn campuses with median sala- ries of around $18,000. The figures are for the most part, fairly meaningless, however, as they contain no names and indicate no breakdowns along racial or sexual lines. Dean named Dr. Carolyne Davis of the Syracuse University School of Nursing has been named to the post of dean of the nursing school here at the University. Davis whose appointment must still be confirmed by the Regents, succeeds Acting-Dean Norma Marshall. Her appointment will become effective on July 1. Chess returns Local chess enthusiasts should be happy to learn that the University once again has a chess club. The club, which is open to any Ann Arbor resident, meets Tuesday nights from eight to midnight in South Quad, Dining Room No. 2. There is no mem- bership fee so players are requested to bring their own equip- ment. Happenings.. . ... today are a bit on the stuffy side. Pilot Program residents, just coming down from Sunday's bong festival can hear Mark Green speak tonite on the newly formed Learning Exchange. The time is 7:00, the place, classroom 6. The Young People's Socialist League, youth section of Social Democrats, USA, recent- ly voted the organization with the world's longest name, is meet- ing tonite at 3:30 in 3540 SAB. The meeting will feature a speech by Josh Muravich, the group's national chairman . . . the Frank Capra film festival will continue tonite with Platinum Blonde at the Arch. Aud. at 7:00 . . . and finally for drunks and debauch- erers, the Ski Club will hold a wine-tasting party at 7:30 in the Half-Way Inn at East Quad. Dope notes Another chapter to the now infamous French Connection drug case came to light yesterday which added more evidence to the growing realization that the government's drug-fighting agencies are riddled with corruption. Francis Waters, one of the FBI agents involved in breaking the case, was charged yesterday with selling heroin with a street value of more than $200,000. Waters' arrest comes only weeks after it was learned that the heroin seized in the original case had been stolen from the New York City Police Department. Female jocks A female swimming coach whose complaint has led to an un- fair labor practices suit against the Grand Haven School District said yesterday that she wants to give girls the chance to do more "than just sit and watch boys play." Ann Schroeder, swimming coach at Grand Haven High School said, "Fifty percent of the school's students are girls yet we have no tennis team, no bas- ketball, and no golf teams." She filed her complaint last July when school officials ignored her request for a pay raise. Shoe lib With the new invention of the "Dog's Lib," curbing of man's best friend may be a thing of the past. Hooked into household plumbing, the boxlike device, features a 27-inch belt of astroturf that rotates through a brushing, washing and drying cycle after the dog has done its duty. Maybe we will soon be able to walk through the Diag again without fear of ruining our shoes. On the inside .. . .the Arts Page features a review of Keith Jarrett's performance at the re-opening of Detroit's Strata Gallery . . . the Edit Page is highlighted by a Bob Barkin piece that takes a probing look behind the scenes at SGC . . . Sports Page readers can find out the results of last night's Big Ten basketball contest between Indiana and Ohio State. The weather picture Temperatures this afternoon should rise into the mid- thirties under partly cloudy skies. The outlook for the rest of the week according to the weather people is for clear skies but with temperatures dropping to more believable February lows of 10 to 15. Faculty denies motion to liberalize college By JUDY RUSKIN The literary college faculty yesterday overwhelmingly rejected a grading reform'plan that would have eliminated the recording of failing grades among the college's more than 15,000 students. The plan, which was offered by the 10-faculty, 10- student Policy Committee of LSA, also would have enabled freshmen and sophomiores to take classes on a pass/no entry basis, meaning that students failing a course would have no entry made of their grade on their transcript, and students passing would receive no letter grade. Also under the proposal, instructors of upperlevel courses would have been given the option of offering their classes either pass/no entry or graded. Students enrolled in courses designated by professors to be, Daily Photo by RANDY EDMONDS CITY SCHOOL BUSES stood idle yesterday as bus drivers refused to cross the picket lines of striking secretarial workers. graded, could then have their professor's decision overruled and elected the course pass/no entry. The proposal was defeated by a vote of 226 to 45 with two absten- tions. The proposal failed despite ef- forts by reform proponents to en- sure that their supporters attended the meeting. The unusually large crowd voted by secret ballot for the first time this academic year. It was hoped that this would prevent department heads from intimidating junior fac- ulty and thereby influencing their votes. The S-FPC proposal combined the suggestions of two other pro- posals, that of the Committee on the Underclass Experience (CUE) and that of the LSA Curriculum Committee. Both of the alternative proposals will be considered by the faculty at their next monthly meeting in March. George Mavrodes, a faculty member of S-FPC, commenting on the upcoming vote for the two al- ternative proposals said "I sup- pose they have a better chance of passage than today's proposal. I would suppose neither one has a good chance." Mavordes, voting "no" in yester- day's decision, voiced objection to the lack of student evaluation a pass/no entry system would en- gender in the literary college. He would, however, have supported the single section on no entry on fail- ures if that had come before the See REFORMS, Page 8 Deficit predicted for city By GORDON ATCHESON and TERRY MARTIN City Council received a report from the administrator's office last night indicating the city may be hit with a $400,000 budget deficit this fiscal year. The report shows the city will probably sustain the deficit be- cause anticipated revenues in sev- eral areas have been miscalculat- ed. Half the deficit is due to unpaid traffic fines. The city also originally expected to receive $150,000 from the Uni- versity for city fire department services provided in the campus area. "There was a mistaken presump- tion on the city's part that the 'U' would come to an agreement on fire service," explained University Secretary Richard Kennedy. Assistant City Administrator of Finance Kenneth Sheehan, who prepared the report submitted to council, predicted the remaining $50,000 deficit will result because revenue from city recreational fees has been much lower than expect- ed. Picket iines of city school bus drivers add strength to strike By LAURA BERMAN The week-old strike of Ann Arbor Public School District's 185 clerical workers gained mo- mentum yesterday when local school bus drivers honored picket lines and left their buses sitting in the parking lot. Over 100 members of the strik- ing clerical workers' union- Teamsters Local 214-picketed the school district's bus garage at Pioneer High. The bus drivers, members of Teamsters Local 247, refused to cross picket lines. In addition to the bus drivers' support, some 25 members of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employes (AFSCME) Local 1182 are also honoring picket lines. The AF- SCME members are maintenance workers who normally have to use the bus garage during their working day. About 4500 Ann Arbor students usually ride buses to school. Yes- terday they walked, rode bi- cycles, or formed car pools, but most came to school. "Our students tend to get here," said Forsythe Junior High Principal Fred Leonard. "Today has been no different than any other Monday. According to a spokesperson at Tappan Junior High, the clerical workers' strike has had "very, very little effect" on attendance or on any other aspect of the school's operation. And while that comment was reaffirmed by most primary school administrators, the high schools-who must cope with a larger student body and more paper work-are finding it diffi- cult to operate without secre- taries. "Of course things are not work- ing out," a spokesperson at Pioneer High snapped. "Paper- work is piling up and mainten- ance workers are not working." "There is a possibility that the schools may be shut down," said William Stewart, public informa- tion officer for the school district. "If the teamsters continue to pull out other locals, things could i become intolerable from a health standpoint." Teamsters Local 214 is asking for a 5.5 per cent pay increase; the school district has maintained that it cannot afford more than a 3.5 per cent increase. The prob- lem, Stewart says, is "finding an acceptable middle ground." Union members are particular- ly incensed because they were offered a 4.5 per cent increase in November-an offer that was withdrawn after it was discovered that $801,000 had to be trimmed from the budget. One picketing secretary la- mented that even if her salary were raised 5.5 per cent "it would only be a $200 yearly in- crease." During a press conference yester- day morning, School Superintendent Bruce McPherson called the union's demands "preposterous" and at- tacked the striking workers' methods: "This strike by public employes is illegal; the deployment of pick- ets to disrupt an organization's operation is illegal . . . refusing entry to a United States mail truck is illegal." "So much for the union's com- mitment to law and order," Mc- Pherson added. He also observed that in the past three years, salary settlements with Local 214 have totaled nearly 36 per cent-"higher than most industry and substaintially higher See CITY, Page 8 Unemployment rises to five-month record Police, firemen call for death sentence for certain murders' DETROI (UPI) - Veering off from the national trend, Mich- igan's jobless rate rose to its high- est level in five months in January, with seven per cent of the state's work force on the unemployment rolls. Figures released by the Mich- igan Employment Security Com- mission (MESC) yesterday show- ed that 254,000 workers were un- employed in January. The figure was the highest un- employment rate for Michigan since September 1972 when 9.1 per cent of the state's workers were and a "downturn" in construction work. "January is the worst month of the year," a MESC spokesperson said. The January figure for the state is up from December unemploy- ment when the rate was 6.6 per cent, with 244,000 out of work. However, the January rate was lower than the January 1972 un- employment level of 7.9 per cent, or 283,000 jobless workers. In the Detorit metropolitan area of Wayne, Oakland and Macomb counties, unemployment totaled By DAN BIDDLE Special to The Daily DETROIT - Eleven Michian police and firemen's organizations announced their collective support yesterday for a move to rein.are7 the death penalty in cases ;nvolv-! ing murder of police, firemen, and public officials. In a prepared statement to re- porters, the informal coalition of' local and statewide groups en-f dorsed a legislative proposal that would amend the Michigan con- stitution to allow capital punish- ment in "certain murders '-in- cluding sniping, kidnapping, and bombing cases as well as the kill- ing of government figures and "persons engaged in defending the lives and property of law-abiding citizens." The proposal, sponsored by State Representative Joyce Simons (D- Allen Park), comes in the wake of numerous alleged attempts on the lives of police in Detroit aind other cities, as well as the holdup-wound- ing of Sen. John Stennis (D-Miss.). In a controversial ruling last Daily staff changes editors The staff of The Daily has chos- , Y }en Christopher Parks and Eugene Robinson tobe Co-editors in Chief for 1973-74. In the first all-staff editor's elec- tion in the history of The Daily last week, a slate of Senior Edi- tors was chosen to direct the news, editorial and photo operations of The Daily. Sports and Business staffs choose their directors sepa- rately. Daily editors are chosen each year to serve from February of their junior year through February of their senior year. Robinson and Parks will share the position of editor and jointly oversee the news and editorial Mees'of The Dly. wRobinson is August, the Supreme Court de-! clared the death penalty uncon- stitutional, terming it a form of "cruel and unusual punishment." Coalition spokesman Carl Parsell said the assembled groups will urge citizens' groups to "contact their state legislators and also urge their respective city councils to adopt resolutions supporting cpi- tal punishment for the cold-blooded murders of their representatives." Parsell, who heads the Police Officers Association of Michigan (POAM), attemptedto dissociate the coalition from what he called "other more emotional grouips" within the state. While not referring specifically to any such groups, Parsell stres..- ed in a later interview that "no 1 a w enforcement organizations" were involved in the anonymous circulation of a "Death to Cop Killers" bumper sticker. ''We want to go about this caln- ly," he said. "We simply feel ' hat the death penalty is a just punish- ment for the killing of police and! other public servants, and we ask that the state legislature place this matter before the public." Asked why the murder of police- men merited special punishment, P a r s e II responded, "We're all equal under God's eye, but police- men are put there to defend public safety - and that's why they're getting shot." Using somewhat stronger lan- guage, Detroit Fire Fighters Aso- ciation President Earl Berry cp ]led jobless. b107,000, or 6.2 per cent of the labor MESC attributed the increased force last month. unemployment rate to "tradi- It was an increase from Decem- tional" post-holiday reductions in ber when the unemployment rate the trade and service industries was six per cent PACKED HOUSE Fuller delights crowd at Hill By PAUL RUSKIN In a sometimes technical, but always provaca- tive speech Sunday evening, Buckminister Fuller presented his highly unorthodox philosophy of life to a crowd of over 4000 people in Hill Auditorium. Here as part of the Future World's lecture series, the 77-year-old Fuller is a famous architect, phi- losopher and modern day Renaissance man, as well as the holder of 22 U. S. patents. In his speech, Fuller combined subjects as di- verse as physics, philosophy, architecture and ecology in vividly demonstrating his theory of uni- versal thinking. Basically, Fuller's theory holds that in any com- plicated system, such as the human body or the solar system, the behavior of the whole system is not predicted by the behavior of its parts. That is, a system cannot be understood by ana- lyzing its individual components but rather by Fuller attributes much, of his success to the fact that he "got out of the groove of being a special- ist" and developed an integrated world view. He feels that one of the most difficult tasks modern man faces is'to reverse the seemingly inexorable trend towards specialization. In line with his universal thinking, Fuller is very concerned about the ecological effects of human activities. "Environment must be, all there is that isn't me; the universe must be, all that is, and isn't me," according to a little jingle Fuller com- posed to express his feeling that "the universe is ecologically connected." Fuller believes that the greatest stumbling blocks in the path of anyone who wants to develop an in- tegrated world view are the many many inaccur- ate or false ideas which people learn when they are very young. For instance, Fuller pointed out that the terms "up" and "down" are inconsistent ..'"i i:' ':: is ii$iii: i.,.. ..t.. .. ±.........