Parties split: HRP. rejects By CHARLES STEIN Stating that there is room in the party for differences of opinion, the Human Rights Party Sunday made its first official com- ments on the decision of the Rainbow People's Party to withdraw support for HRP's fall campaign. The statement was not intended as an appeal for reconciliation according to party spokesmen, but rather was an attempt to clarify the differences between the two groups and set straight some of the criticism levelled at HRP by the Ann Arbor Sun, the RPP paper. In the Sun's September 1 issue, RPP spokesmen explained their decision to split with HRP for the fall campaign, ending an alliance which began some nine months ago. The split, for now, only applies to this fall's campaign, as RPP officials affirmed their support for the HRP platform and the party's current office-holders. The immediate reasons for the break center around the results of HRP's August 24 con- vention, but spokesmen for both groups con- cede that more fundamental questionsabout the nature of the party and its constituency were really at the heart of the split. According to the Sun, the August nominat- ing convention was dominated by a "narrow- minded, ego-oriented, ultra-leftist faction of the Human Rights Party, which would ignore the interests of the people in order to satisfy their own dry intellectual lusts." RPP representatives were particularly in- censed by the decision of the convention, not to nominate a candidate for the office of sheriff, blaming what they call the "liberal opportunism" of the party for that action. They also accused certain party regulars of employing "parliamentary tricks and sin- ister maneuvers" in an attempt to silence RPP viewpoints. In their Sunday release, HRP spokesmen, explained that the decision not to run a candidate for sheriff was made only after the two people who had been considered for the post were forced to withdraw for per- sonal, not political reasons. The charges of parliamentary chicanery were also denied. Rainbow The main thrust of the HRP statement, however,dealt with the conflicting ideas held by the two groups about the party's direction and constituency. RPP members feel that the party's atten- tion should be focused on street people and "freeks," a position HRP finds untenable. HRP, according to the statement, feels that the party should appeal to social and economic groups rather than simply age groups, with particular emphasis on the laboring and oppressed classes. They further disagree with RPP's emphasis on issues like rock and roll and marijuana, which they see as rather trivial in the overall political context. In effect, the two groups represent two rather different lifestyles, each viewing the other with a certain amount of suspicion and mistrust. HRP has tried to establish itself as a serious political party with a well-defined ideology and a system of tight party" disci- pline. The Rainbow People on the other hand reject such restrictions and are more inter- People's charges ested in matters relating to the youth culture. HRP campaign manager Steve Nissen in- dicated, however, that the loss of RPP support would have a minimal impact on the campaign. "The party can still win in November without the support of RPP," commented Nissen. "They supplied only about one per cent of the workers for the city council cam- paign last spring, and they were really only involved in Genie Plamondon's race in the third ward." Nissen admitted that RPP did aid in the publicity aspect of the campaign and lent the party $750 out of a total budget of $5,000. He added that money would not be as hard to raise in this campaign, since the party had established itself as a credible political force. However, according to the Sun, HRP can not possibly put together a broad enough coalition to win in November, without sup- :> port from the elements of the community Steve Nissen RPP represents. John Sinclair 'M AT)DOG' McGOVERN See Page 8 _ _ _ __ 111k A& .:43 tly USUAL High-75 Law-52 More rain and cooler Vol. LXXXIII, No. 5 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, September '2, 1972 Ten Cents Ten Pages ACTION STALLED: Dems in W accuse Stans terjrnte case Study c Women ites' underpaid ' staff; levels A clustered at* low _ ___. __.._-- __.-.v__.®..._ I E E f:. Y: WASHINGTON {P7 - Demo- crats yesterday asserted that- former Commerce Secretary Maurice Stans supplied $114,- 000 in Republican campaign funds to finance the activities of the men who broke into Democratic National Commit-} tee headquarters last June. The allegation came in an amended complaint in the Demo- crats' invasion-of-privacy suit filed yesterday. The complaint was re- jected on a technicality by the presiding judge but was expected to be ref iled correctly today. The new complaint added Stans, finance chairman for the Commit- tee for the Re-election of the President, and Hugh W. Sloan Jr.- former committee treasurer-to the list of defendants and upped the request for damages from $1 mil- lion to $3 million. - Sians has denied any knowledge of diversion of campaign funds toI the break-in attempt. The allegations were contained } in an amended complaint filed inx the Democrats' civil damage suit' stemming from break-in last June . 17 at the Democratic party head- quarters in the Watergate Office Building. The complaint alleged that Gor- don Liddy and Howard Hunt, for-' mer White House aides, and James McCord, former security chief for Driver Ray Caselli hits the wat the Committee for the Re-election land, Calif. Caselli escaped inju of the President, "from time to sible internal injuries when his time . . . as commanding person- nel of the political espionage squad visited the listening post to check FIRST READING: up on the squad's progress." SMinorities also reported grouped in bottom posts By PAUL RUSKIN A University-funded study released yesterday reports that 13 per cent of the professional and administrative (P&- A) staff are paid less than what the study calls "minimum salary." The study, performed by the Robert H. Hayes and Assoc. Inc. management consulting firm, reports that female P&A employesreceive lower salaries within given salary levels and are clustered in lower levels than male staff. i' Minority staff are also clustered in lower levels than white employes, but general- ly receive equal salaries with- in classifications, the report says. It recommends .that the Univer- sity spend $322,000 to restructure its salary classification system and bring salaries up to proposed mini- mums. Before the Hayes report can be implemented, it must be approved by the Regents and then reviewed by several groups, including the Commission on Minorities, Com- mission for Women, Academic Af- fairs Advisory Council, and oper- ating managers.I Personnel M a n a g e r Edward Hayes says he expects the report to be approved with only minor changes. In order to restructure the salary classification system, the Hayes re- port recommends that the current 4,500 P&A job classifications be condensed into 544 proposed posi- tions. The report places each of these new positions into one of 21 proposed salary grades. It also suggests merging all P&A staff into one system of job classification rather than the cur- rent system separating the aca- demic and non-academic staff. AP Photo Flags flyingy Flagbearers enter the Olympic Stadium at Munich last night be- fore 80,000 spectators, in ceremonies that marked the closing of the 20th Olympic Games. u o I U.S jets smash key N. Viet nk to South SAIGON P--U.S. jets smashed the strategically important Paul Doumer Bridge within the city limits of Hanoi in one of the mpst intense raids of the war on the North Vietnamese capital, the Air Force claimed yesterday. In the ground war officers reported the threat to Hue had been ended with the smashing of a North Vietnamese division that had menaced the old imperial capital in the northern front. It was the first significant victory claim on the northern front contrasting with the government's failure to recapture Quang Tri north of Hue. The bridge (said to carry all traffic from the Chinese frontier to the demilitarized zone) suffered its heaviest damage of the war in raids Sunday said an Air F orce spokesman. - Three spans were destroyed and three damaged by F4 Phantom jets using 2,000-pound laser-beamed By CHRIS PARKS bombs the Air Force announced. A Daily News Analysis Navy A7 jet was shot down by a Thousands of young people floc SAM missile 14 miles southwest of Spann Memorial Field for the Hanoi on another mission. 'Ihe Blues and Jazz Festival last wee pilot is listed as missing. Most came to enjoy two days Since the start of me enemy of- rights of some of the finest blue fensive last March 30, 90 U.S. air- jams available. craft have been reported lost over A few, however, had a rath North Vietnam. There have been 98 airmen listed as missing with reason. They came to sell hard dr 37 of them. known to have been ly methaqualone (quaalude), PCP captured. sedatives (called downers)-to t Troops of South Vietnam's 1st . Infantry Division also hold vital They entered the park in spit high ground west of the two out- spicuously placed sign at the posts-where the North Vietnamese reading: "No Dealing-Anyone had placed 122MM artillery guns ing dope will get the bum's rush. Race boats crash ter as his boat crashes during a high speed race Sunday near Oak- iry, but another driver, Vern Amaral, suffered a broken arm and pos- craft collided with Caselli's. rouncil passes McGovern, Kennedy, In Detroit today Democratic Presidential candi- George McGovern and Senator Ed- ward Kennedy (D-Mass.) will be featured speakers at the McGovern rally today. The rally, sponsored by the Michigan Labor Committee for Mc- Govern, is scheduled to be held 4:30 p.m. at Kennedy Square, De- troit. Staffworkers in McGovern's De- troit campaign headquarters were unable to comment last night, on the size of the crowd expected or on the text of the Senators' speeches. Spokespersons in McGovern's office said yesterday they antici- pate sending 10 busloads of people to the demonstration. Kennedy has accompanied -Mc- Govern on a whistlestop campaign tour throughout the Midwest this week. Rides for the rally can be ob- tained by calling the local Mc- Govern headquarters at 761-9804. The Washington Post reported Monday the account-came from a man who identified himself as the principal monitor of the telephone taps in operation from late May until June 17. The Post did not identify the individual. City pot, law amendment I - I Federal investigators and Re- publican campaign officials de- clined comment on the story. Stans issued a statement last night saying: "Mr. O'Brien's al- legations against me are a scur- rilous pack of lies and he knows it. They amount to nothing more than a contemptible maneuver to use the court for his own political pur- poses .. . I By DAVE BURHENN An amendment to Ann Arbor's marijuana ordinance that would make payment of the $5 fine for use and possession of marijuana like the payment of a parking ticket was passed on first reading six to five early this morning by a volatile City Council. The amendment, which will not become part of the city's mari- According to the report, women juana law unless it is passed on offenders of the law. However, lo- comprise 70 per cent of the people second reading next week, provides cal judges have threatened to put who are below the proposed mini- that those who plead guilty of vio- violators on probation. Sentencing See REPORT, Page 10 lating the city ordinance may pay in the first case is scheduled for PUSHERS BLAMED rs plague BluesA eked to Otis Ann Arbor kend. and three es and jazz er different rugs-large- P, and other hose in at- e of a con- main gate caught sell- " And they The result was the worst downer overdose problem yet seen at a local concert. Downers in general and quaalude in par- ticular have been an increasing problem over the last year in the city's street community. With downs there's really nothing we can do. If it's bad enough we have to take them to the hospital." According to some medical authorities the quaalude is addictive and withdrawal can be fatal. and otherc The com fact festiva they turned vend beer t Until last confined to ations. Acc summer'ss ly free ofd At the b night-the geance. During a the crowd, scription. sumed duri their fine to the district court Friday. clerk's office as "full and complete The granting of probation means satisfaction of liability," thus mak- that the offender must regularly ing an appearance before a judge report to a probation officer. It unnecessary. has been speculated that failure to The current ordinance, passed comply with probation laws might this summer, carries a $5 fine on mean a jail sentence of up to one -----year. -However, City Attorney Jerold Lax last night said that judgesI could only impose the original sen- A tence of $5. Univ The proposed amendment specif- pere iclyprohibits the levying of Rese F e s tiv a "robation or any other punitive or cine rehabilitative measure" but would afte downers with alcohol. permit a deferred sentence to be Th bination can result in a coma-a levied.tere al promoters had in mind when normal prerogative of the accused, than d down a lucrative opportunity to would defer sentence for a certain rent to their customers. period of time. If at the end of viru t weekend, use of the drug seemed this time, the accused has not been Dr individual and small group situ- arrested for any other crimes, sity ording to Drug Help workers, the charges may be dropped. sitw series of free concerts were most- When the issue came up for dis- cussion, Councilman J e r r y De A Grieck (HRP-First Ward) said, "In stra lues festival-especially Saturday Ann Arbor we have tried to de- ing problem surfaced with a ven- criminalize as best as we legally inn could, the use, possession and sale tory long, warm day pushers worked of this weed." A dealing downers of every de- Councilman John McCormick (R- duce TsFourth Ward) said to De Grieck the These were subsequently con- that "Your statement, Jerry, is fens ina theday-o--ften with heer or i.1 c, . By JIM O'BRIEN new vaccine developed at the versity may soon win the ennial fight against influenza. ,earchers hope that the vac- will be distributed nationally r it passes safety checks. he vaccine can be adminis- d as a nose spray rather n as an injection in the cur- ly used vaccine. The spray, ybrid strain ofd aliving flu s, has been developed by H. Massab of the Univer- 's School of Public Health, vas announced yesterday. ccording to M a s s ab, the in combines the outer cover- of "wild" flu virus with the er RNA core from a labora- y-bred variety. harmful protein growth pro- ed by the outer covering of virus triggers the body's de- se mechanisms exactly like a .+ - .ih- + n r niai Live virus used in newest flu vaccine terializes, because the core of the virus, responsible for repro- duction of the organism, prod- duces offspring incapable of causing the virulent "disease. The antibodies produced by the body as a defense against the flu "attack" remain active and prevent further infection for at least a year. Manufacture of the vaccine is faster and more economical than previous flu vaccines composed of dead virus. A live virus vaccine also pro- vides greater protection to the nose and throat, the area where flu virus enters the body. The laboratory - bred v i r u s strain is grown in eggs from se- lected disease-resistant chickens. A harmless (attenuated) virus strain, created by gradual ex- posure to a temperature of about 77 degrees is "recombined genet- ically with a virulent natural I