EVICTION; NO SOLUTION See Editorial Page Yl r e Sir A ,Aq& :43at j OPTIMISTIC High-32 Low-20 See Today for details Vol. LXXXI11, No. 123 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, February 27, 1973 Ten Cents Eight Pages .\ 1\ PI-7-7- 1 FYOUSEE NEWS HAPPEN CALL76-DLtY Doug Harvey Busted The strange and terrible saga of Washtenaw County's former law 'n order Sheriff Doug Harvey took yet another bizzare twist over the weekend when the 41-year-old ex-cop wound up in the Cheboygan County drunk tank. According to Indian River policeman Charles Miller, Harvey and his car took an un- scheduled detour off the I-75 freeway and into a ditch Saturday. Officers on the scene say Harvey was intoxicated and became violent when they suggested he spend the night in a motel. At this point, according to Miller, Harvey was tossed uncere- moniously into the Cheboygan County Jail's drunk tank. He was released Sunday on $100 bond. Stay tuned to this space for further developments in this increasingly twisted drama. Feldkamp clams up You won't be hearing much from Director of Housing John Feldkamp about the case of the East Quad resident who faces eviction for reporting that his dope was ripped-off. Feldkamp announced yesterday that "Lease terminations are adminis- trative procedures requiring due process and are not normally conducted in public." He did say, however, that a decision on eviction has not yet been reached. Teens run amok Ever since the age of majority was lowered to 18, Washte- naw County youth have either been boozing more or just being less cautious. Newly compiled figures show that since the new age of majority bill took effect last January, alcohol-related busts in the county have more than doubled for those under 21. Arrests in this age group for driving under the influence, driv- ing while intoxicated, and drunk and disorderly have jumped from 7.4 per cent of the total to 16.8 per cent. Love them grades! According to a recent survey of the American Council on Education, more University freshmen favor grades than oppose them. This year 56 per cent responded that they opposed abolishing grades-up from 48 per cent who thought so last year. t In most respects, however, the -freshman class hasn't changed much. It's still among the smartest, most ambitious and most liberal in the country, according to the survey. Peculiar logic dept. Today was devastated to get a memo in the campus mail yesterday announcing that the Office of Student Services (OSS) useful "What's Happening" calendar will no longer be sent to The Daily. The calendar, the source for much of the information in the daily Happenings section of this column, has apparently proven too successful. Explains 0S: "Due -to a growing de- mand of recipients we have decided that a mailing list is not really where it's at." Sorry Last week through a blooper in editing The Daily reported that presidential advisor Marina Whitman spoke at a lecture sponsored by the economics department. In fact, her talk was sponsored by the graduate school of business administration. The Daily regrets the error. Happenings ... .. are topped off by another in the series of Future Worlds lectures. This week psychic researcher Joseph Rhine speaks on "Psychic Phenomena and Their Implications for the Future" at Hill Aud. at 3 p.m. . . . Natural Resources students can have "Donuts with the Dean," 2032 Nat. Resources Bldg. from 10:30 through 11:30 a.m. . . . if you're still hungry at noon you can catch a lunch at the International Center spon- sored by the Campus Ecumenical Center. Price is 50 cents. .in the evening you can choose between the UAC "1973 Crea- tive Arts Festival," free at the Nat. Sci. Aud. from 6 p.m. through 10 p.m. and the Tuesday Night Singles Club men's spring fashion show with dancing at the YW-YMCA from 9 p.m. until midnight (25 and older only) . . . the Gay Liberation Front meets on the third floor of the south wing of the Union at 8 p.m. Reporters bugged Time magazine says White House aides tapped the tele- phones of several reporters over a two-year period ending last June in an attempt to find the source of some high level news leaks. The Time account says the bugging was done under the orders for former Attorney General John Mitchell and involved "six or seven" unnamed reporters. Both Mitchell and his suc- cessor Richard Kleindienst deny the report. Missing cop What do you do when you've lost the town's only cop? The city council of Royse City, Texas, responded to this crisis by calling an emergency session to discuss the matter, only to learn that their wayward chief had at last been found after an 11 day absence. The chief, Luther Davis, offered no explanation for his disappearing act except to say, "Somebody must have got their wires crossed. I haven't been missing." Cat burglar A would-be thief got the surprise of her life in Flint Sunday when she snatched a package off a car parked in a shopping center. Thinking it might contain some valuables, she clutched her boty and ran across the lot and into a store. A routine search by a security guard, however,' forced a disclosure of what she had ripped-off. The- bag contained a dead cat. On the inside .,. . . . Bert Stratton writes about the Herbie Hancock- Freddie Hubbard jazz concert on the Arts Page . . . on the Editorial Page John Conely says Ann Arbor has gone from activism to apathy . . . and Sports Page features SupremeCourt reaffirms abortion ruling, denies Detroit busing appeal Decision directed at laws in nine states By AP and UPI The Supreme Court refused yesterday to reconsider its Jan. 22 decision legalizing abortion, and in a second key move, rejected a request from four Detroit area school districts for consideration of their plea for exemption from District Judge Stephen Roth's school busing order. In reaffirming last month's controversial abortion rul- ing, the Court specifically directed lower judiciaries to apply the decision to anti-abortion laws in nine states. Swept aside were pleas to hear guardians assert "the rights of the unborn" and to consider more medical data. The action implies the court is not likely to provide an opening to cut back its 7-2 decision in cases from Texas and Georgia that until the fetus is, viable-generally in the 24th Daily Photo by RANDY EDMONDS A GROUP of Indians wait in the Regents Meeting Room to confront acting University President Allan Smith. Discouraged by the Uni- versity's apparent lack of action on their demands, one woman commented, "All we get is meetings. We don't get any answers-or any bones." DostratigIndians de manlRSd SposeCVssion"aof skeletal Ire-m ains to 28th week-the states may not interfere with the doc- tor's judgment and the wo- man's right of privacy. Since then, anti-abortion laws in Massachusetts, Ohio, New Mexico and about a dozen other states have been nullified by lower courts or state officials. In appealing for reconsideration,' Texas accused the high court of imposing its own "social and eco- nomic beliefs" to strike down the state law. Atty. Gen. John Hill and other officials said "the question here is not one of postponement of life but one of the taking of life." Georgia, accused the court of overlooking the state's "compelling interest in protecting the dignity of human life." Atty. Gen. Arthur Bolton and other officials said the justicesahad ruled without adequate medical information and should have heard a spokesman "for that legal entity and for its natural right to develop to birth.' Without comment, the court sim- my denied their petitions for re- hearing. As a result the state laws will become invalid after the Jan. 22 judgments are remanded to courts in Texas and Georgia. Orders in 12 other cases will af- feet nine state laws. In some in- stances, lower courts had upheld the laws. In others, judges had granted women the right to an abortion during the first three months. In refusing to hear the caseof four suburban Detroit school dis- tricts, the high Court left stand- ing a July appeals court decision encompassing the districts in U.S. District Judge Stephen Roth's con- troversial busing order. The four districts are Bloomfield Hills, West Bloomfield, Birming- ham, and Clarenceville, which is a part of Livonia. They were not parties to the original NAACP com- plaint but were included with 48 See ABORTION, Page 8 Ellsberg ,~ er acquitted on11 count LOS ANGELES (mi)-The judge in the Pentagon papers trial order- ed Daniel Ellsberg and Anthony Russo each acquitted of one count of the espionage charges in their 15-count indictment yesterday and scheduled the defense portion of the trial to begin today. U.S. District Court Judge Matt Byrne did not immediately rule on two other counts which he took under submission. He refused de- fense requests to acquit on 11 counts of the espionage-conspiracy- theft indictment. His rulings came in the wake of six hours of defense argu- ments last Friday in which acquit- tal on all counts was sought. "There still remain questions of constitutionality 'on some of these statutesas applied," said Byrne of the laws invoked in the govern- ment's case. But he added, "The question of constitutionality . . . is best con- sidered, analyzed and resolved after all evidence is presented." Ellsberg and Russo are on trial in connection with the release to news media of the Pentagon's top secret study of the Vietnam war. The judge's ruling on the es- pionage count against Ellsberg made official a "saction" imposed on the government . earlier for withholding documents from the de- fense. The government had already been forbidden from presenting evidence from the Pentagon papers volume involved in that count. The removal of one count of the See ELLSBERG, Page 8 By SUE STEPHENSON "We want those bones returned," shouted one Indian woman yesterday afternoon as she and 75 other Indians participated in a dramatic plea for the University to return to them their ancestral skeletal remains. The Indians are requesting the bones dug up by University archeologists nearly 20 years ago, displayed at the Fort Wayne museum until two years ago, and now on the shelves of the University archeology museum. The afternoon's events consisted of a scheduled meeting with acting President Allan Smith and a procession to the mu- seum of anthropology where several chants were performed. The Indians had met with the Regents approximately a week and a half ago and yesterday was apparently an attempt to expedite the Regents' reply. Smith had hoped for "a staff discussion of the issues and problems to determine the nature and purpose of the Indians' claims" yesterday and was "sorry that it turned into a TV spectacle." (He was re- ferring to the several area TV :amera crews present at the meeting.) "I think we dramatically got one point across," said Frederick Boyd, community relations chairman of the Detroit North American Indian Association, and he added "I hope we won't have to use alternate plans." "Possession (of the Indian skeletal re- mains) is entirely lawful," Smith said. But Roslyn McCoy, a member of the Ann Arbor American Indians Unlimited, pointed out that "laws were not made according to Indian custom or belief. The crime is on you," she said, "you've taken the re- mains of the (Indian) body from the earth without regards to Indian tradition "You totally disregard and make a mock- ery of Indian tradition," McCoy accused. And one Indian woman in the back of the room added that this incident-the Univer- sity retaining the Indian skeletal remains--- was simply "another example of the white man's disrespect" for other races. See INDIANS, Page 8 CODE VIOLATION CLAIMED: SGC tr CSJ ag By BILL HEENAN In a surprise move yesterday, acting Student Government Coun- cil Treasurer Elliot Chikofsky filed suit in the Central Student Judiciary (CSJ) against SGC President Bill Jacobs and three others, charging they had broken the SGC Elections Code. Chikofsky's suit charged - Ja- cogs, SGC Vice President Lou Glazer, Elections Director Ken Newberry and former elections computer programmer John Koza with violating chapter 14.62 of the Elections Code. The section of the code in ques- tion provides that computer print- out results from the fall all-cam- pus elections must be readily available for public inspection. The code also provides that the computer program for counting SGC election results remain in the computer-in a computer file which is open to public access. Chikofsky claims that the four defendants have not made avail- able the computer printouts of the election results. It further al- leges that the sole copy of the comnliter program used to count ih votes is in Kn's nessinn. easurer files charges in aistJacobs, 3 others said Chikofsky "does know what he's talking about." He -contends that election results are already accessible, as they were printed in The Daily. Jacobs also said that technicali- ties of the computer program are currently being worked out so it can be used this spring. Koza is not currently a student, and it appears that CSJ would have now power over him even if it ruled in favor of the suit. He will not be involved in the SGC elections this spring. Koza said last night he had no copies of the election results. He said he ;"might have" one copy of the computer program, but that, "I'm sure my popy isn't the only copy.'' Koza denied involvement in the issue, saying, "I don't give a shit where my name appeared. I've got nothing to do with it. I'm not a student." In a later conversation with The Daily, Koza said, "If you print the charges named (in the suit), I'll sue your balls off." According to CSJ chairperson, Ron Henry, the student court probably will not hear the case at least until the middle of March. Battle continues over Huron area rSuper Sewer' proposal By LINDSAY CHANEY They call it the Super Sewer controversy. It all started when a few gov- ernmental units near Detroit- notably Wayne and Oakland counties-decided that the best way to get rid -of their sewage would be to build a huge pipe- line and ship their waste water straight to Lake Erie. ing Ann Arbor sanitation facili- ties. Furthermore, it would cost the Ann Arbor taxpayer more to join the regional system than to improve the local plant. The Michigan Water Resources Commission (WRC), the body which dispenses federal and state grants for sewage treatment fa- cilities, hired a team of civil engineering consultants to pre- were the most important. Plan 11 was for one large interceptor to collect sewage from parts of Wayne, Oakland and Washtenaw counties, and pipe it to a treat- ment plant on Lake Erie. This was the plan favored by the De- torit-area governments. Under plan 11, all sewage treatment facilities on the Huron River. including Ann Arbor's