PUBLISH OR PERISH See Editorial Page I Sir 43AU A461 vr - , l4latly CLOUDY High- 8 Low-35 See Today for details Vol. LXXXIII, No. 140 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, March 28, 1973 Ten Cents Ten Pages Truce W(YOU SEE NEWSHAPENCALL-7&DAJLY Fleming on SGC University President Robben Fleming said yesterday that the Student Government Council should restructure itself to combat the "indifference most students feel toward the all-campus stu- dent government." Speaking with SGC member Margaret Miller, Fleming suggested an assembly formed by representatives from each student constituency, including dorms, and schools. Flem- ing's plan resembles the new constitution proposal on the ballot in this week's voting. Fleming also stated that he believed SGC would "shamefully lose its teeth", if voluntary funding is passed. Hash news While President 'Nixon has declined an invitation to attend this Sunday's Hash Bash, the festival is nonetheless picking up support from many prestigious organizations. Yesterday after- noon the East Quad Tripping Club, the Portage Lake Ducksters and the New York Branch of Stoned and Geeked Inc. added their names to the growing list of sponsors. These groups are apparent- ly well known in dope circles and news that they are attending is certain to attract tremendous crowds to the festival. More contributions The Human Rights Party yesterday released a list of cam- paign contributions. HRP to date has collected $2652 in private contributions, and has picked up approximately another $1400 be- tween bucket drives and a movie benefit. Topping the list with a donation of $367 is Gabe Kaimowitz, husband of the party's mayoral hopeful Be Kaimowitz. One surprising name on the list is Marjorie Lansing. Lansing ran for Regent last November on the Democratic slate. Happenings :,. ... today are multitudinous and span the gamut of interests. Joseph Brodsky, the famous Russian poet will autograph books at 1:00 p.m. at Borders' Bookstore . .. The Black Students Psycho- logical Associatiorf is a sponsoring a book drive for the inmates of Milan Prison. Anyone who wishes to contribute is urged to bring books to the group's table in the Fishbowl anytime today or tomorrow . . . there will be a seminar at 3:00 p.m in the au- ditorium of Public Health School on the topic of "Energy and Environmental Quality." Jesse Denton of the University of Penn- sylvania will be the primary speaker . . . the Center for South and Southeast Asian Studies and the Ecumenical Campus Center are sponsoring a concert tonite of North Indian Classical Music at 8:00 p.m. in Room 200 of Lane Hall . .. in a related Oriental happening the Asian Studies Department will show the film "The Year of The Pig" at 7:00 p.m. in Room 1025 Angel Hall . . . and in a final non-happening Secretary of Housing and Urban Devel- opment James Lynn will not be speaking here today as previous- ly announced. More dirt on garbage Garbage, one of the hottest issues in the current city cam- paign, was at the center of a particularly heated debate at City Council Monday night. At that meeting, the council approved on a first reading an ordinance that would require home owners to remove their garbage containers from the curbside within two days of pickup. Councilman John McCormick (R-Fifth Ward) de- fended the proposal on the grounds that, the garbage constitutes a health hazard. Jerry De Grieck (HRP-First Ward) blasted the proposal calling it "the ultimate victimless crime." Homeward bound Another Ann Arbor POW is on his way home. Air Force Cap- tain Jack Butcher, a University graduate who has been missing in action since March 1971 was among the seven pilots released yesterday by the Pathet Lao. Butcher will be flown to the Wright- Patterson Air Force Base in Dayton, Ohio. A correction We goofed. In a Daily article yesterday we claimed CLAMP presidential candidate David Faye was a supporter of voluntary funding. He is, in fact, opposed to voluntary funding. Also con- trary to .our story, CLAMP has indeed printed information of the issue of school governance. In a final sin of omission we neglected to mention that Mark Share and Nancy Hackmier are running on the STOP slate for president and vice-president, and Elliot Chikofsky, a Mad Hatter honcho, is running for an at-large seat. nth inside . . . . . . the Arts Page has on this night of the Oscar awards, a movie review of all things . . . the Editorial Page features candidate statements from the first and third wards . . . the Sports Page provides more info on the race for that final NHL playoff spot. A2'S weather No need for sunglasses this afternoon. Mid-latitude cyclone "Able" in conjunction with a cold front trailing from Canadian cyclone "Baker" will cause increasing cloudiness during afternoon bringing temps of 55-60. Precip- itation from these systems will effect us by early morning Thursday, with lows of 38-43. brings no peace to iet Nam By GEORGE ESPER AP News Analysis SAIGON-The guns still fire, the terrorist bombs explode, the widows and mothers mourn their battlefield dead. Sixty days after a cease-fire, peace seems as elusive to Viet- nam as it was a decade ago, a generation ago. "After a generation of war, habits develop and it is hard to break them," says an American official. "You have to reach far in order to achieve something closer. "The main point is how the Communists and the Saigon gov- ernment are going to live and work together in some acceptable form. This is not easy to answer." Peace has been costly. According to figures provided by the Saigon government, there have been more than 20,000 South Vietnamese casualties since the cease-fire, an average of better than 300 a day. Nearly a tenth of these have been civilians. Actually casualties on both sides were higher during the first 60 days of the cease-fire than they were during roughly the same 60-day period a year ago, when a full-scale war was on, according to reports issued by the Saigon command. Since the cease-fire began Jan. 28, the Saigon command lists 3,086 government soldiers killed, 15,212 wounded and 817 missing. A check of the official records shows that during a similar com- parable period in 1972, the Saigon command reported 2,987 govern- ment soldiers killed and 7,320 wounded. It claimed 12,260 North Vietnamese and Viet Cong troops killed a year ago compared to 15,091 during the first 60 days of the cease-fire. The peacekeepers acknowledge they have failed in imple- menting a true cease-fire, although some U.S. officials insist that the limited presence of international and Joint Military Com- mission peacekeeping bodies at some regional sites has resulted in reducing the level of violence. It is difficult to gauge, because the four-party Joint Military Commission, made up of representatives of the United States, North Vietnam, South Vietnam and the Viet Cong, has failed to carry out one of the most important provisions of the peace agree- ment-that of establishing corridors and routes through territory of the opposing sides. The commission's poorest performance has been in the area of investigating alleged cease-fire violations. It has not completed a single investigation. Another 'major failure of the Joint Military Commission has been its inability to implement Article 4 or the cease-fire agree- ment which asks that "the commanders of the opposing armed forces meet to reach an agreement on temporary measures to avert conflict and to insure supply and medical care for these armed forces." Viet New bond hearin for Pun By REBECCA WARNER and wire service reports A new motion to reduce bonds set for Rainbow People's Party (RPP) members Pun Plamondon' and Craig Blazier will be argued at a hearing Thursday, RPP spokespersons announced yester- day. The announcement was made at an RPP news conference, part of a party effort to draw public at- tention to the case. Also featured at the conference was a statement by Michigan American Civil Lib- erties Union (ACLU) Director Ern- est Mazey, who called the $100,000 bond set for Plamondon and Bla- zier "unconstitutional bond imposi- tion in order to punish before the trial." Mazey said the northwest Michi- gan chapter of the ACLU plansto 'file a brief in court protesting the bond, and will go to appellate court with the case if necessary. Plamondon and Blazier are cur- rently being held in Beulah, Michi- gan on charges of armed robbery, conspiracy to extort, extortion and criminal usury in connection with an alleged attempt to collect $3,000 in a marijuana transaction. However, the two key prosecu- tion witnesses contradicted each other diametrically concerning the two men's actions in the incident at a preliminary examination. Uwe Wagner, the complainant in the case, testified that Plamondon' and Blazier threatened and robbed him in an attempt to collect money he owed from a marijuana deal. But another prosecution witness, Bruce Peterson, testified that the two men did'not force their way into Wagner's house, were not armed, made no physical threats, and did not demand interest on the debt. Peterson claims Wagner sug- gested that Plamondon and Blazier take some of his (Wagner's) be- longings temporarily as collateral until he (Wagner) repaid a fourth person to whom he owed money.' Peterson also says Wagner dealt "on a large scale" such drugs as' morphine, opium, methadone, speed and downs, as well ds marijuana. RPP attorney H u g h "Buck" Davis maintains Plamondon and Blazier are being held as political prisoners,rcalling the $100,000 bond "ransomous." Davis remarked yesterday, "We believe that we can go, supported by the ACLU, to Cadillac Michigan and say, 'Judge, either reduce the bond or say very candidly to the See PLAMONDON, Page 6 begins Co ng final troop -last p ullon PO*'s t" releas~ "Freedom. met with j 1ubiation SAIGON {1P - Two groups of jubilent Americans left Vietnam yesterday, b o t h heading for home. In Saigon, a group of American GIs be- gan the final withdrawal of U. S. troops from Vietnam, while in 1:anoi 32 more priso- ners of war, the last held by/ the Viet Cong, took off for stateside. The last U. S. troops are sched- uled to depart Saigon by commer- cial and military planes tomorrow leaving only guards for the U. S. Embassy and members of the Joint Military Commission which will continue to administer the ceasefire until March 31. American servicemen who had been waiting for 12 days because of a last minute dispute over pri- soner exchanges began boarding their aircraft within minutes of the release of 32 U. S. prisoners in Hanoi yesterday afternoon. The 32 prisoners were the last known held by the Viet Cong and left 116 U. S. POWs in Hanoi, 107 of them prisoners of the North Vietnamese and nine Americans and one Canadian prisoner of the Pathet Lao. They will be freed today and tomorrow simultaneous- ly with the last U. S. withdrawal. The 32 begans calls to home to their families almost immediately after their arrival. They feasted on chicken and steak and some were reported still eating at a snack bar shortly before midnight. All were declared in reasonably good shape by doctors who gave them preliminary once-overs at Clark Hospital. A U. S. military spokesman said that 936 U. S. servicemen left last night for bases in the states, Guam and Thailand. The airlift will resume at dawn today when another 1,800 U. S. ser- vicemen depart and be completed on Thursday when 2,500 American soldiers will leave. The final wave of American with- drawals began at a time when the level of scattered fighting be- tween the Communists and South See U.S., Page 7 Daily Photo by KEN FINK Piecy Piper Heather Carrigan smiles wistfully as 4 year-old Brad Davis makes music with the big people on the Diag yesterday. Talent scouts report Brad's music shrill, but with definite potential. VOTING SLOWED: Difficult ballot confuses students By CINDY HILL Although local politicos may argue and fight throughout the election, there is at least one point that they'll, all concede during this year's all-campus election now in progress: the ballot is "just too damn compli- cated," according to Elections Director Ken Newbury. Newbury claims he had trou- ble voting, as did LSA candidate Dennis Mazurek. The sticker system which has confused voters since the last election involves several grids on the ballot, a receiptthat imprints the student ID card and, in this election, two voting stickers in- stead of one. One poll worker characterized voters as "really ticked off" about the ballot. "If word gets around,'' he said, "there won't be anybody voting on Thursday." Other first-dayhelection prob- lems occurred when many poll workers never arrived at the poll- ing places. Polling places at Mosher-Jor- dan, Stockwell, Alice Lloyd, East Quad and Markley were never opened for that reason. Newbury said new poll workers will be hired, although it is a vio- bus stop and at the bridge near the Hill'area. Polling places will also be open from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Medical Science Bldg., from 2 to 5 p.m. outside the Law School and in dinnerline polling places in dorms. According to Newbury, turn- out was heavy. He estimated 1,500 people came to vote yester- day on the first day of voting. A poll worker, however, said. turnout was "fair to poor," blam- ing it on "the precedent sat by previous SGC elections." Newbury estimated an addi- tional 2,500 people will vote to- day, barring bad weather. In other election action, the Credentials and Rules Commit- tee (C&R) was stripped of vir- tually all its power during a Cen- tral Student Judiciary (CSJ) hearing Monday night. CSJ ruled in favor of the plain- tiffs, Election Director Ken New- bury and SGC member David Smith, and found that the ap- pointment of C&R members ac- cording to 14.062 contradicted the SGC constitution. The constitution states a de- fendant can only be judged by his peers (i.e. an LSA student can only be heard by an LSA C&R). However, 14.062 of the Election, See ELECTIONS, Page 6 Women s clinic gets no funds in revenue sharing agreement ~i nd at a V- ,n. EL) Branodo refuses Oscar, i9 I , V treatment of LOS ANGELES (Reuter)-Marlon Brando last night won and refused the Academy Award for Best Actor of 1972. Brando, who was not present at the ceremony, had announced beforehand he would not accept any awards for his role in "The God- father." The film also took the Oscar for Best Film of 1972. Brando's refusal was conveyed by an Apache woman who said Brando could not accept the award because of "the treat- ment of American Indians today by the film industry and on television movie reruns and recent happenings at Wounded Knee." < The c'nnlrew~nm.a s onPnni. unnc'first 'met 1by, hnnc _' hut blasts Indians By DAVID BURHENN and SUE SOMMER After a compromise agreement between the Democratic and Human Rights parties, chances appear dim for a publicly funded women's clinic in the city. However, a privately-supported fa- cility may be in operation in a few months. cost abortions and dispense medical aid an counseling to women. Members of these organizations claimed th other health groups interested in sponsoring clinic, notably the Family Planning Medical Ser ice (FPMS) would not be controlled by wome _: _ _ k .