GILL FOR PRESIDENT See Editorial Page S r tI~a 43a t ZOWIE High--S8 Low-35 For details, see Today Vol. LXXXIII, No. 139 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, March 27, 1973 Ten Cents Ten Pages &c IYOUSEE NEWS HAPPNC -LL76Dm y No strange bedfellows Politics in Ann Arbor apparently aren't the kind that make strange bedfellows, despite encouraging rumors to the contrary. Associates of Second Ward HRP 'candidate Frank Schoichet spread stories yesterday to the effect that Schoichet had dallied overlong last night at the East Quad room of Carol .Tones, his Democratic opponent for councilperson. Alas, both Jones and Schoichet firmly quashed this tale. Jones admits to Schoichet "partying" for about an hour and a half in her company, but states he left at the sober hour of 12:45 a.m. "Listen," Jones said, "I'd be very upset if word of this got around." Snowman rumor quashed With the coming of spring, the great question that has plagued us through the winter has found resolution. Ann Arbor's Abominable Snowman has been revealed: he is not a snowman at all, but a grad student who was seen on three occasions run- ning about in the vicinity of Cram circle. Why the "fuzzy, huge" appearance described by our informant? The man, it seems, is quite tall and wears high sneakers and wooly sweatpants when he runs laps at night. Why at night? "Insomnia," he says. And may we all sleep better, at least until next winter . Dobbs declares There's another hat in the SGC presidential ring and it bears the name of Bill Dobbs, long time SGC honcho and man-about- town. Dobbs announced his candidacy as a write-in yesterday and is basing his campaign on the claim that: "All the other candi- dates are corrupt, manipulators or just plain stupid." Today's weathermen Today is proud to announce that starting today our readers will be serviced by ace West Quad weatherman Bill Marino and his assistant Dennis Dismachek. The pair, who have achieved considerable success in their closed circuit prognostications on the West Quad bulletin board, are meterology students in the en- gineering school. To mark their joining our staff we are chang- ing the name of our forecast from The Weather Picture to the more simple: A2's Weather. Faculty wants 9% raise The Committee on the Economic Status of the Faculty has asked for a 9.2 per cent pay hike this year for the Big U's 2,575 teaching faculty. They'll be lucky. The Governor has provided for raises less than a third of those asked for, and other financial considerations may bring salary rises down so low that, taking inflation into account, faculty members will be taking a de facto pay cut. 'Mona lists contributors Fifth Ward Democratic hopeful Mona Walz yesterday re- leased a list of her campaign contributors, and the figures in- dicate she's doing quite well. Total gifts are $1,298 of which half consists of handouts of less than 12 bucks. The biggest gift was one of $100.hNotable contributors includekState Rep. Perry Bul- lard ($10), former city councilman Leroy Cappaert ($1), and unsuccessful candidate for county prosecutor George Sallade ($15). Happenings . . ... if today is as nice as yesterday, make your own happen- ings in the great outdoors. A good place would be the Mathei Bottanical Gardens on Dixboro Rd., but you'll need a car or bike to get there. Otherwise try flying your kite in the Arb . . . on an indoor note, you could attend the LSA coffee hour in the Herb- arium, 2009 N. Univ. Bldg., at 3 p.m . . . or perhaps stop by Rive Gauche at 1024 Hill Street for the German language night at 9 p.m.. .. Jan Gehl, an architect from Denmark's Royal Academy of Copenhagen speaks this afternoon at 4 p.m. in the Arch. Aud. on Scandanavian Housing . . . finally, there is a free lecture and demonstration of the Topeng Dance Theatre of Bali in the Rackham lecture hall at 1 p.m. Enjoy yourself. Nostalgia note TOMS RIVER, N.J. - Yowser, yowser, yowser! The dance marathon immortalised forever in the movie "They Shoot Horses Don't They?", has come springing back to life. Fifteen couples danced last weekend away in a marathon that raised $87,000 for the Ocean County Heart Association. The winners of the 52-hour endurance test were a 42-year grandmother, Mrs. Betty Colyer, and hernext-door neighbor, Eddy Stockton. Mrs. Colyer's com- ment: "I'm just a little sleepy." iet leader freed SAIGON-After five years as South Vietnam's best known p- litical prisoner, Truong Dinh Dzu has returned home. Dzu, a peace candidate in the 1967 election, was sentenced to five years at hard labor in May of 1968 for "advocating negotiations with the Viet Cong." Dzu was eligible for release from Chi Hoa Prison in Saigon last May, but was held there until his wife sent letters to President Thieu and several legislators, stating that his term was up and that Thieu's own regime has negotiated with the Viet Cong. Dzu remains in seclusion and is reported to be "sick and weary." Walking note WASHINGTON-Too many government officials are allowed official cars, in the opinion of Sen. William Proxmire, D-Wis. Yesterday, he took up the matter with James C. Fletcher, space agency chief who uses a chauffeur-driven 1973 four-door govern- ment Chrysler to take him to and from work, among other things. Fletcher said he does paper work every minute of the 90 minutes he spends daily on the road. " . . . What's your salary," Prox- mire asked. "$42,500," Fletcher said. "That's a very good salary, the same as mine," said Proxmire who runs and walks to and from the office everyday. "How can I justify this to the average family in Wisconsin? Should I ask the average family to pay his taxes for this?" Proxmire asked. "The taxpayer is always get- ting his money's worth," Fletcher replied. On the inside .. . . . . get your advance look at the Oscars on the Arts Page . . . news from abroad on Page 2 . . and The Daily's Candidates vie in A plethora of candidates seek control of student government campus election Student Power' the key issue in LSA government, housing election By DAN BIDDLE and CINDY HILL This week's Student Government Council elec- tion may be remembered for having the most candidates and the least voters in recent SGC history. A total of 32 candidates are running for presi- dent, executive vice-president, and five open member-at-large seats on council. All 32 appear to be hoping that the election nets a somewhat higher turnout than the seven per cent of the student body that voted for SGC last fall. On the ticket are some familiar campus party acronyms-the Coalition of Moderates and Lib- erals Party (CLAMP), the right-wing Responsible Alternative Party (RAP), and SGC member David Hornstein's Bullshit Party. There is also a quartet of rookies-the Stop Taxation-Open Programs ticket (STOP), the Mad Hatters' Tea Party, the Student Rights Party (SRP), and Engin Council President Ro Nagey's Time and Space Party. Without exception, the candidates have center- ed their campaigns on what has been variously described as a need to "remove the Council's elitist leadership," to "end SGC's inefficiency and inactivity," to "restore credibility and honesty," and to "clear up the stench of corruption that hangs over the SGC offices." CLAMP presidential candidate David Faye and his vice presidential candidate, Bart Moorstein, say they will seek to "choose between wrong and right rather left and right," and support optional funding. See 32, Page 10 By REBECCA WARNER Student power in literary college governance is the key issue in the LSA Student Government election which starts today. Proposed changes in the LSA power structure lead the platforms of all four contending parties. However, in general, the literary college elec- tions seem plagued by the close similarity of the parties' stands on substantive issues. Much of the controversy in the LSA election disappeared last week when a proposal for volun- tary funding of the government was invalidated -although too late to be stricken from the ballot. LSA government officers are asking students not to vote on the question, however, fearing that literary college administrators may cut their funds if voluntary funding finds voter support. Candidates of the Program for Educational and Social Change (PESC), the Mad Hatters Tea Party (MHTP) and the Bullshit Party all stress the importance of the proposed introduction of student representation in LSA policy - making functions. Those functions are now controlled exclusively by the college faculty in a monthly "town-meet- ing" assembly. "Without the governance change, no other pro- grams mean anything," PESC candidate Lisa Dickinson says. Approaches to the governance i s s u e vary among the other three parties. PESC candidates favor the strategy of trying to "convince impor- tant people" on the faculty to approve a repre- sentative assembly h a v i n g both student and See GOVERNANCE, Page 10 Remaining POWs to head for home i i i I E I } i i I i I i i I 3i i ( 1 By AP and Reuter troops and the release of all Ameri- ment worked out by the Joint SAIGON-The final release of all can prisoners throughout Indochina Military Commission (JMC) in Sai- American prisoners captured in by Thursday. gon after he assessed cables from Vietnam and Laos began in Hanoi The imminent end of the Ameri- Southeast Asia and conferred by last night. can military involvement in Viet- telephone with officials of the de- Freedom for the 148 captives fol- nam was announced by the Florida fense department and the National lows a last-minute break-through White House in Key Biscayne after Security Council. here in the four-day deadlock over the Communists suddenly dropped A four-day impasse over release their release and U.S. troop with- conditions holding up the prisoner of nine Americans captured in Laos drawal from South Vietnam. release. and held by the Communist Pathet The United States and the Com- Presidential press secretary Ron- Lao delayed the homecoming of munists yesterday agreed on a com- ald Ziegler said President Nixon the American prisoners held in plete withdrawal of American had given his approval to the agree- Vietnam as well as that of the ------ --5,000 remaining U.S. troops. - The prisoner dispute had cen- li/U ~ IItered on the nine Americans cap- o r s s n tred in Laos. Their names were on a list handed to the United a States by North Vietnam on Feb. 1.: in Watergate affair While North Vietnam and the Viet Cong earlier had proposed last Saturday and Sunday for release of By AP and Reuter the POWs held in Vietnam, the North Vietnamese failed to state WASHINGTON-Senate invesligators yesterday opened new lines the time and place the prisoners of investigation into the bugging of the Democratic Party headquarters captured in Laos would be released. -involving people in influential positions-after one of the accused The United States refused to in the case began "naming names." withdraw any more troops, under' inet-orders from Nixon, until North Samuel Dash, counsel to the special Senate committee invest Vietnam gave assurnices that the gating the bugging affair, refused to identify the people named by POWs held by the Pathet Lao also James McCord, awaiting sentencing for the bugging. would be released on a specific' But informed sources said McCord had named people in influ- date and at a specific place. ential positions during two meetings he has had so far with Dash. The impasse was resolved when the North Vietnamese announced McCord, a former member of the Central Intelligence Agency early today that the nine will be and security chief of President Nixon's re-election campaign com- released in Hanoi tomorrow. mittee, is one of seven men convicted of spying on the Democratic The 32 Americans held by the Party headquarters in the Watergate office building here last June. Viet Cong'seProvisional Revolu- tionary Government (PRG) would When he appeared for sentencing last Friday it was agreed he be flown out from Hanoi's Gia Lam would meet the judge, John Sirica, privately and tell more about the Airport yesterday evening, he said.' affair. He said political pressure had been put on the accused to plead They will be followed from Gia guilty and keep silent. Lam today by nine prisoners held Since then McCord has had two meetings with Dash and given the10aeriashd e what the counsel described as a full and honest account of the T- b conspiracy. McCord is expected to have further meetings with Dash, tNorht Vndtomorrowmillob freed and to meet Sirica privately, before appearing in court again on In Vietnam, meanwhile, Commun- Friday. ist forces went on the attack yes-j Democrats hope McCord's agreement to talk, breaking months terday only five miles west of of silence, will reveal a widespread campaign of political sabotage Phnom Penh's city boundary, the against the Democrats during last year's presidential election. military command reported. Fighting in the area was thej The Los Angeles Times said it learned McCord told Dash White heaviest since Dec. 1971 when the House counsel John Dean and former presidential assistant Jeb hill changed hands several times Magruder had prior knowledge of the bugging. as North Vietnamese forces ap- A White House spokesman said the report that Dean had prior proached the western defenses of knowledge was "flatly incorrect." Magruder was quoted by the the capital and shelled the airport. Sweet so Several musicians took advantage cool breezes to play a few tun Passersby on the Diag appreciat their otherwise humdrum classday FEDERAL PROGR City appre to study 13 By GORDON ATCHESON City Council last night approved a $350,000 grant application pro- viding funds for the establishment of a 11 officer city police unit deal- ing exclusively with breaking and' enterings. The federal government will give a majority of the funds through the state Office of Criminal Jus-, tice Program. Mayor Robert Har--I ris indicated a grant authorization at the state level is automatic fol- lowing council's approval. l Violaitions t surround By DAN BIDDLE In what has become a familiar f pattern for all-campus elections, a host of election code violations, ballot entanglements and charges of illegality have preceded the Student Government Council vot- ing, which starts today. Elections Director Ken New- bury has come under fire for en- dorsing the presidential candidacy of Lee Gill and the Students' Rights Party (SRP) three weeks after his appointment as elections chief. In a Credentials and Rules Com- mittee (C&R) hearing last week, Newbury was cleared of charges from Council members Bill Dobbs and Laurie Artz that he had vio- lated the elections code by endors- The code describes the elections director as an ex officio member ber of C & R, and states that no member of that body "may have atpublic position on any candi- C&R ruled that as a non-voting member of the committee, New- oul music bury's politics were irrelevant. of the warm temperatures and Dobbs and others, including for- es on their congas and flutes. mer assistant Elections Director ieson hei cogasandflues. Paul Howard, insist that New- ed the music as diversion from bury's endorsement of Gill "still y- constitutes an absolute violation of the spirit of fair election." A liI:The chapter covering "Election .AM: Standards" in the All-Campus Compiled Code states that "elec- tions personnel shall make no C ! a( rartL statements of support of any can- didate." Newbury insists that he has "dEne nothing crooked," andscon- chapter has no application to SGC election conduct. In addition the two will serve as "Now I'm not saying that I'm not a public relations unit by dissemi- biased," said the elections direc- nating information to city residents tor last night. "Sure, I support Lee concerning how to prevent break- Gill, and I still think he's the most ing and enterings. competent candidate running." The remaining officers will form Newbury changed the wording of two Action Prevention Units. Eachchne the wornay u ding ofa ls unit employs one staff sergeantthe voluntary funding proposal last one detective andethree patrolmen. week, rplacing the word "volun- The units' purpose is to investigate The election code bars anyone actual b r e a k i n g and entering other than C&R from changing crimes after "extensive analysis referendum wordings, and states of burglary data." that any such change must be Currently the city has the third made 17 days before the election. highest rate of breaking and en- Newbury says the change was terings for cities in Michigan with: "my only mistake, but it was just populations exceeding 50,000 per- a minor change that I made." sons. Only Detroit and Pontiac The voluntary funding issue has have higher rates. been obfuscated by another pro- Harris said he was pleased with , posal for a reduced $.75 funding the new program especially since which contradicts it. it costs the city virtually nothing. Should they both pass, the win- The city's grant share is about ning proposal will be determined See CITY, Page 10 See CHARGES; Page 7 See McCORD, Page 7 EX Mal die The measure was approved 6-3 as only the HRP council members! R and Norris Thomas (D-First Ward) voted no. " The 11 officers will be divided h aei into two separate units. The first: unit is comprised of one patrolman and a clerk typist. Their duties will include charting robbery pat-, terns across the city. Fredrick Matthaei, University Regent from 1960-67, died at Uni- versity Hospital early yesterday morning. He was 80. Matthaei, a graduate of the class of 1914, was an active University alumnus and donated land for the Botanical Gardens on Dixboro Road and for the Radick Farm Golf Course. President Robben Fleming said yesterday that Ma tt h ae i was "among that select group of Mich- igan's sons whose life remained' intertwined with the growth and development of the University." Matthaei was born in Detroit on' Sept. 17, 1892. He is survived by his wife Frances, his two sons Fredrick and Konrad. and eight Marshal shot in S.D. WOUNDED KNEE, S.D. /P)-A U.S. marshal was shot and seriously wounded at a roadblock outside Wounded Knee last night, a Justice Depart- ment spokesman said. The marshal, whose identification was withheld pending notification of relatives, was flown by helicopter to Fitzsimmons General Hospital in Denver. . Mark Sheehan of the Justice Department said the wounded marshal was shot in the chest about 12 inches below the shoulder. Sheehan said the bullet then exited on the left side of the man's back, near the spine. Sheehan said details of the incident, which oc- Sheehan said AIM leaders contacted Justice 'Department representatives earlier yesterday and suggested - a meeting today to discuss the stale- mate in negotiations. The Justice Department spokesman called the overture "an encouraging development" and added that federal authorities were willing to explore any possibility for a peaceful solution to the month-old confrontation. Meanwhile, Oglala Sioux tribal leaders refused to permit a car loaded with food past their block- ade yesterday afternoon after announcing they intended to starve out AIM forces at Wounded Knee. . -