r FUNDING THE NEW 1M 1FAd ILITIES See Editorial Page Y Ak 'ianF flalli, T f rih-62 Low--41 see 'l'oday for details Vol. LXXXIIIi No,. 158 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, April 18, 1973 Ten Cents Twelve Pages IfYYW SEE NE W3 APPENCAL76DVJtY Harris ponders past, future of city By CHRISTOPHER. .last of two par PARKS ts Into the sunset One of the University's least known but most powerful in- dividuals will retire at the end of June. The person is Clyde Vroman, director of admissions here since 1949, and at 69 one of the most senior department heads at the U. Vroman, who has admitted 100,000 students to the University according to an of- ficial spokesperson, will be going to sunny California - where anyone with any sense retires after so long in Michigan. Partisan junket With three of his fellow Republicans off vacationing in Flor- ida, Mayor James Stephenson found himself o the short end of a vote Monday night. The vote came on a motion asking that Lloyd Fairbanks (R-Fifth Ward), be appointed chairman of the Zoning Board of Appeals. The Democratic-HRP victory was strictly a moral one, however, as Stephenson quickly exercised his executive prerogative and appointed Fairbanks interim chair- man. By next week, Stephenson's tanned colleagues should be back to make that appointment an official one. PHistory lies In more serious business, the council approved an ordinance which sets aside nine houses in the Division St. area as historic monuments. The ordinance prevents any of the owners from making structural changes in the buildings without prior approv- al from the Historical District Commission. Tenth life Perhaps taking a cue from Ms. O'Leary's cow, who accord- ing to legend is said to have started the famous Chicago fire, a local cat has been identified as the culprit behind Monday's fire at 317 Jefferson. Fire officials reported yesterday that the blaze was started when a cat knocked over a lamp. The cat was killed in the fire but fortunately all Homosapiens involved survived. Happenings . . . East Quad will be the scene of an indoor-outdoor dance theatre concert this evening at 7:00 p.m. in the Greene Lounge .the Phenomenology Group is presenting Rick Amaro who will'speak on "Phenomenology and Buddhism" at 7:30 p.m. in Anderson D, first floor of the Union .. . looking ahead to the weekend, the last big sock hop of the season is scheduled for Friday night at 8:30 p.m. in the Union Ballroom. The hop will, as usual; star "Jimmy and the Javelins" and Chasity and The Belts." Admission is free. Also coming up is a motorcycle clinic at Edsel Ford High School in Dearborn. The clinic will be open for those who wish to learn to ride. The sessions will be from 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. on both Saturday and Sunday. Dope hot line MUSKEGON - As a member of the American Bar Associa- tion's narcotics committee, Judge John Schoener thought it was his duty to find out what "the people" thought about the evil weed. Schoner installed three "dope hot lines" in his home and invited people to call in and talk about their experiences with marijuana. The Judge reported that nearly everyone who has called thus far has been in favor of legalization. "I have the impression people seriously believe marjuana is good for them and contend alcohol is more dangerous," he commented. Pistol Pete WASHINGTON - Despite the tact that he hails from the great metropolis of New York, Secretary of Labor Peter Brennan has added a touch of the "Wild West" to the Nixon administra- tion. Brennan, it seems, packs a pistol tucked in his waist when he walks through "tough neighborhoods" in New York and Washington. He has also hired several special private guards to patrol the halls outside his office. King of Hearts? LONDON - For a people generally characterized as humor- less the British find some mighty strange things to laugh about, Peter Richardson found that out yesterday when he tried to rob the prestigious Barclay's Bank. After passing a threatening note to the bank teller, Richardson puled out his gun to show the teller he meant business. The teller then began laughing un- controllably and passed the note to his fellow employees. They in turn began laughing as well and within a matter of seconds the entire bank was in hysterics. Not knowing what to make of the whole affair the robber fled. Robert Harris looks and talks the part of the tough, shrewd politician he was as the undisputed czar of City Hall for the last four years.. He stares at you with cold, unemotional eyes as he puffs on his ever-present cigar in a jaunty, almost obscenely self- confident manner. And you sense some of the Harris elan-the almost unbearable cool which has so enraged his opponents. Words like "pragmatism", and "realities" slip frequently into his speech. People who opposed him are dismissed 'as "romantics" who simply didn't understand "all the facts" or "the inside story." In his four years as mayor, Robert Harris developed a repu- tation as an extremely shrewd (some say unscrupulous) pol- tician and an expert arm twister and wheeler-dealer, After the disasterous 1970 election, the Democratic major- ity was reduced to 6-5. One of the six was conservative First Ward Councilman H. C. Curry whose support could not be counted on. For Harris, wheeling and dealing became a way of life,. "The only way we got through that year was with Second Ward moderate Republican councilman (Robert) Weaver. When we could peel him off, we got some stuff done. But we were working with five Democrats and one Republican," he recalls. In the winter of 1971, Harris led this shaky coalition into a battle to pass a city ordinance which would in effect lower the penalty for marijuana possession in the city from a felony to a misdemeanor, Through two- months of debates, hearings and revisions, Weaver's vote was courted. Yet no one really knew until the night the ordinance was passed which way Weaver would finally go. Harris remembers even more bizarre dealing - the pur- chase of the Fisher-Cadillac building on Washington St. as a home for Ozone House and the People's Ballroom. "The craziest deal I ever put through was the Washington Street building we bought from Fisher-Cadillac", he relates with relish. "That was a real wild deal. We had to get eight votes to make the purchase (under city charter regulations). We got the Republican votes because it was eventually going to be a parking structure and we got the Dems because in the interim it would be a home for Ozone House." But the tough, almost arrogant pragmatism which served See HARRIS, Page 12 Nixon makes an about fae on Watergate, vows Canada for peace violatto ns By AP and Reuter ' It has become obvious that the Americans and other combatants have yiolated the peace agreement on Vietnam, Canadian Foreign Secretary Mitchell Sharp said yester- day. Sharp said the Paris peace set- tlement called for foreign coun- tries to stop all military activi- ties in Laos and Cambodia, but the United States had breached the agreement by bombing. Sharp was replying to a ques- tion in the Canadian House of Commons. The bombing is a "major mat- ter" involved in Canada's impend- ing decision whether to continue as a member of the International Commission of Control and Super- vision (ICOS) in Vietnam, Sharp said. Canada has announced it would reveal its decision whether to withdraw from the ICCS by May 31. Meanwile, the U. S. launched B-52bombers in continued heavy attacks in, Cambodia designed to loosen the Communist strangle- hold on the capital of Phnom Penh as Cambodian Prime Minis- ter Hang Thrun Hak announced his resignation from 'the govern- nent of President Lon Nol. On the ground, bitter fighting continued on the main battlefront south of the Cambodian capital. In Phnom Penh itself, the capi- tal's supply crisis eased with the distribution of food and fuel sup- plies from river and truck convoys which had broken through a com- munist blockade. The eight-engine B-52s flew single missions at 20-minute inter- vals from early yesterday morn- ing, mostly against Communist forces ranged 10 to 20 miles along the Bassac River southeast of Phnom Penh. On the southern front, continued heavy fighting was reported around the provincial capitals of Takeo and Tram Kmnar. In Phennm Penh President Lon Nol gave no reason for the, sub- mission of his premier's resigna- tion. Last October, Non No] per- suaded outgoing Premier Son Ngoc Thanh to postpone his resignation for nearly a week to stave off a See CANADIANS, Page 9 cooperation Settlement proposed f or Dems cvl sUis WASHINGTON A--President Nixon announced yesterday he is ready to grant his full. cooperation with all investiga- tions of' the Watergate affair and promised to immediately suspend members of the executive staff who may in, the future be indicted by a federal grand jury investigating the He explained the action was a result of a personal in- vestigation which has produced "major developments." He declined to elaborate on what these "developments" were. In a separate move last night, the Committee for the Re-election of the President offered to settle a series of civil suits brought by the Democratic National Committee (DNC) . as a result of the Watergate bugging. Nixon declared last Aug. 29 that an earlier private in- quiry convinced him no member of the White House staff at that time was involved. But he said in a brief appearance . before newsmen yesterday that he now wants to emphasize Daily Photos by ROLFE TESSEM DIELTA TAU DELTA frat members Mark Seegel and Jim Nissley pose by the sign they con- structed to warn motorists of a hidden speed trap on Geddes (abo-ve). Meanwhile a grim Ann Arbor cop mans the offending speed trap (below). Kids vie with cos in tadar. spleed t-rap flap By JERRY NANNINGA t all started as a joke , When Mark Seegel was caught speeding last week by radar-equipped police he decided that others should escape his fate. So he and his friends at the Delta Tau Delta fraternity erected a sign warning, Danger: Radar speed trap." The joke developed into a full fledged feud jvesterday, however, when the Ann Arbor police decided to move against Delta Tau Delt's sign. Cops moved up' the road from their hide-out on Geddes near Concod to the fraternity at 1228 Gieddes yesterday afternoon. See POLICE, Page 7 that no member of the White House or the. executive branch should claim immunity from prosecution. Pledging full cooperation with present investigations of the Water- gate conspiracy by a federal grand jury and a select Senate commit- tee, Nixon announced that all members of the White House staff will appear voluntarily before the Senate committee, testify under oath and provide full answers to all proper questions. The President originally had in- dicated White House staffers would not be available to the Senate committee. He had claimed such a procedure would violate the con- stitutional separation of powers be- tween the executive and legislative branches. Nixon said that as a result of ne- gotiations between leaders of the Senate group and White House aides, "I believe now an agree- ment which is satisfactory to both sides has been reached." The Senate panel, headed by, Sen. Sam Ervin (D-N.C.), voted Mon- day to accept no less than public, sworn testimony from any Presi- dential aides called as witnesses, with virtually no relevant questions PRESIDENT NIXON says he will immediately suspend any meme- ber of the executive branch who may be indicted by the grand jury investigating the Watergate :ase. ruled out. Ott the iside . ...'The Arts page has Gloria Smith's account of an interview with Dr. hool and The Medicine Show (They haven' as yet mde the cover of the Michigan Daily) . . Everett Ehrlich writes about Nixon and the minimum wage S .rack sportswrter Mar' Feldman has the details of a baseball twin-bll agnst Notre Dame. A2's iwewh er You can get high on the cloudiness today, said student WA/en'idy as she looked at the sky. This was the best student reaction to the questioi of today's weather, Actually it vili be warmer today and there will be some cloudiness of the cirrus type. Highs today ranging from 60-65 with lows tOnite of 40-45. CHEMICA L USED: Funding, teClmical woes beset, implementation of Teltran plan By CINDY HILL Two years since it was banned on campus, the University is again using the controversial chemical Avitrol to discourage pigeons from roosting on cam- pus b'iildings, the ');aily learned yesterday. Administrators are strangely elusive about the Avitrol pro- gram,and who ordered it on cam pus. The chemical, which is coated on corn and put on the roofs of campus buildings, is known to be fatal to six per cent of the birds who digest it, according to a local exterminator. A spokesman for the U.S. Ie partment of the Interior esti- mates the figure as high as ten per cent of the total bird popu- lation. Avitrol affects the nervous sys- tem of the bird, literally making rli.n ft -ifh ol t tr irt. . - '1Sons vxed with that program at all.'' Joseph Watson, manager of building services, admitted that the University was using a chemi- cal ~ that would "discourage pigeons from staying here" and keep them from "spreading hep- atitus," but said he knew nothing further about it, not even the name of the product used. 'It's nothing that kills them or anything," Watson said. "I hope you don't make a big thing about this. lTe directed questions to the Un ivecrsity's ht e a l t h institute, which reportedly clear's chemi- cals before they are to 'be used on campus. An environmental health in- stitte spokesman said he "didn't even know we had this program." Donald Wendel, director of the Plant Department, was vacation- ing in Colorado and not avail- able for comment; Rose Exterminators, however, said they do the job "every month, every week, every day." "I believe we did a job last week," said John Racy, a company spokesman. "We'll do whatever they order. As long as it's legal, it can be performed," said Racy. He could not identify "they," aside from being the University. "Avitrol is not a deadly poison," said Racy. "We're not out there to See 'U', Page 9 pigeons The President said that the committee had agreed it may hear some witnesses in executive session before they appear at televised public hearings, and that witnesses from the executive branch will be allowed to invoke executive privilege if they feel such a move is called for in the case of individual questions. Nixon said th'at he launched an intensive new investigation of his own into the Watergate matter after serious charges, some of them made public, caine to light on March 21. On Sunday afternoon, he reported, he met in the Executive Office Building next to the WhiteHouse with Atty. Gen. Richard Kleindienst and Henry Petersen, head of the Justice Department's criminal sec- tion, and discussed the new findings at length. "There have been major developments in the case," Nixon said, but declared it would be improper to detail them at this time. "Real progress has been made in finding the truth," he said. The- original White House inquiry into Watergate was directed by President Counsel John Dean. It was as a result of that investigation that Nixon publicly stated no present members of his staff had been involved. The fact that Nixon directed that a second investigation be con- ducted seemed to suggest he no lounger was satisfied with Dean's original findings. The President did not explain precisely the significance of the March date he had mentioned, but it was about that timethat con- victed Watergate conspirator James McCord disclosed that he would be willing to tell what he knew about, the matter, See NIXON, Page 7 By JACK K(1OST Due to a number of "ifs'' involving both fund- ing and technical problems, it appears the city's bus system of the future will remain just that, at least for te present. The new sy stem, d bb Tertan, w as ap- nroved mor'whelininp ei Lw mmI, oters in the re- ing ahead "at a fantastic rate'' in solving the new system's problems. Among the "ifs" surrounding Teltran's future !ne Umber of technical problems. Ire ) gmfor Teltran 's radio-equipped mini- buses have yet to be finalized and therefore pro- duction has been held up.t i 1sai J d By CHARLES COLEMAN As a part of the University's student advocacy program, the Office of Student evicesa nd Prorno m is develoning a pro- advocate will be concerned with are blind- ness, mobility disabilities, deafness, cardiac diseases, and epilepsy. A maior concern for the advocate, ac-