Vote to day, tomorrow in all-camus elections CONGRESS: WHICH WI SHY-WASHY? See Editorial Page Alit~gC Dait DRIZZLE High-4S Low-38 For details, see today,.. Vol. LXXXlII, No. 48 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, November 1, 1972 Ten Cents Twelve Pages today.. if you see news happen call 76-DAILY The go's bookcase What does a governor put on his bookshelf? If you're Gover- nor William Milliken it's books on history, the State of Michi- gan ,"The Sophisticated Poll Watchers Guide" by George Gal- lup, "0 Congress" by Congressman Donald Riegle (R-Mich.) and a biography on Huey Long. He also has three elephants scat- tered around his office on the second floor of the capitol build- ing. Milliken spread the elephant motif to a tie he wore during a press conference with college editors from around the state yesterday. Milliken urged passage of Proposition C to eliminate the property tax as the base for school funding, but said he op- posed Proposition D, which would lift the constitutional ban on a graduated income tax. Milliken also expressed support for Proposition B, the abortion reform referendum. Finally finished If you want to go to Chicago don't leave till Thursday. By then the last 18 mile stretch of I-94 will be finally finished and open to traffic. The completion will make the expressway a straight non-stop, toll-free road saving motorists at least 25 min- utes driving time, 10 miles, and $1.40 in road tolls. You can now visit the fun city of Mayor Daley fast and for free. Leary has a home (maybe) LSD freak Timothy Leary still has a country to call his own- for a while. The Swiss government was going to throw him out yesterday but has kindly allowed him to stay for two more months. During that time th Justice Ministry will rule on Leary's appeal for permission to stay in Switzerland. The Swiss really don't want him. The U.S. government however really does want him. Leary still has a ten year jail term to finish. Happenings .. . Rev. William Sloane Coffin, just back from Hanoi, will meet with students tomorrow at 12:15, Wesley Foundation, cor- ner State and Huron (bring lunch) 3:00 at the Children's Psychia- tric Hospital, and at 8:00 at the First Presbyterian Church at 1432 Washtenaw . . . Phil Ochs in a benefit for McGovern. 8:30 at the Power Center $2.00 . . . Want to go to law school? The director of admissions for the University law school will talk about admissions policy tomorrow night In Aud. B at 7:30 .. . Dr. Johan Eliot of the Dept. of Public Health and the population research center will speak on "Abortion: Why Proposal B" and birth control, Wednesday, 7:30, Betsy Barbour Lounge. Poli Sci notes Your Poli Sci profs will have to do a little more work from now on. All department members are expected to counsel un- dergraduates. The counselors will be grouped in their fields of specialty so students can choose a counselor who can give them help in specific areas. Other changes in the department include a new Honors Program. For more info call the Under- graduate Political Science Association at 763-2227. Election muck revisited + Yesterday we reported that someone called The Daily and cancelled an HRP ad for Steve Burghardt. Well, the politically motivated person had much more nerve than that. Our ad staff reports that a short .woman with glasses and short dark hair came in to The Daily with a forged receipt for $130. This woman asked that the HRP ad be cancelled and the money be refunded -to her. HRP is charging criminal fraud and has the cops inves- tigating. On the inside . . ..*,.lots of goodies . .. A profile of composer-in-resi- dence Ross Lee Finney onthe Arts Page . . . The Daily endorses no one for Congress on the Editorial Page . and on the Sports Page an in depth profile on Michigan's Gil Chapman by sports staffer Marc-Feldman. The weather picture Stay in bed. It's going to be cloudy with a good chance of drizzle or rain today. The high will only reach the mid 40's. During the night it will continue to rain and the tem- perature will drop to the low 40's. The winds will be out of the South-Southeast at about 10 mph. ,"," Thiei Right wins plurality in Canada- OTTAWA (Reuters) - Pro.- gressive Conservative Party leader Robert Stanfield last night called for the resigna- tion of Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau to pave the way for a Conservative government. Stanfield's party held a one-seat edge over Trudeau's Liberal Par- ty after Monday's federal general election for the 264-seat house of commons. Trudeau has so far given no in- dication of his plans. He plans to make a statement or hold a press conference following a Cabinet meeting today. Stanfield told newsmen he was prepared to form a government. He said "Trudeau and his gov- ernment have lost the confidence of the people and he should re- sign." Stanfield's party won 109 seats, the Liberals had 108, the New Democrats 30, the Social Credit Party 15 and Independents, includ- ing the Speaker of the House of Commons, two seats., Stanfield said the Conservative program would involve tax cuts to counter/ unemployment-one of the major issues of the election cam- paign - and to deal with rising prices, particularly as they affect old age pensioners. The Conservative leader said he had had no contact with Tru- deau, or David Lewis, whose So- cialist New Democratic Party now holds the balance of power in the House of Commons. Asked what he thought of Tru- deau and the Liberal leader's repu- tation of a colorful personality, a jocular Stanfield answered: "I've t said many times I think Canada needs an exciting leader of the opposition." By precedent in Canada, Tru- deau is not obligated to resign and may attempt to form a govern- ment with minority support. But this has been the closest election in Canadian history and it is likely that whoever forms the new government, new elections will be held within a year. The populous eastern Province of Ontario proved to be the ful- crum in Monday's election, with the Conservatives gaining heavily there at Liberal expense. The Liberals picked up margin- ally in the Conservative East coast provinces, while the Conservatives strengthened their hand in the ag- ricultural Western provinces. The Liberals maintained their tradition- al strong position in the French- Canadian Province of Quebec. Four cabinet ministers went down to defeat: Labor Minister resumes u calls striL :es on plan North; sell-out' e Deadline passes but agreement not signed By the AP and Reuters SAIGON-U.S. B-52 bombers unloaded one of their heav- iest attacks on North Vietnam yesterday as its deadline for a peace agreement with Washington passed without any posi- tive sign of a ceasefire. Meanwhile, an angry President Nguyen Van Thieu today denounced the draft peace agreement as a "sell out" and a "surrender of South Vietnamese people to the Communists." The B-52s flew 13 missions into North Vietnam despite an American hold down of bombing above the 20th parallel about 75 miles south of Hanoi. This equalled the greatest number of B-52 raids against North Vietnam reported last Aug. 13. The bombing raids were an attempt to halt a Hanoi ef- fort to beat a cease-fire with a big --- - -- supl puh itLas and Sout Vietnam, field reports said yester- day. Forty of the bombers unleashed 1,000 tons of bombs on coastal supply routes south of Vinh leading both to the demilitarized zone and the Laos border. Vinh is 170 miles GOP taps confirmed north oftheDMZ. The United States, however, maintained its halt in air and na- bu val attacks above the 20th Parallel, which is 75 miles south of Hanoi. President Nixon has ordered the WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Sup- partial bombing halt during cur- porters of President Nixon had the rent efforts to conclude a peace Democratic P a r t y headquarters settlement worked out earlier this bugged" to obtain political infor- month in Paris between U. S. and mation, according to a report Vieti o ie!su tdi a by congressional North Vietnamese negotiators. The agreement, when signed, would mean a cease-fire inViet- nam, and end to all air and naval, operations against North Vietnam, withdrawal of all American forces from Vietnam, and the release of more than 500 U. S. airmen held prisoner by Hanoi. staff investigators. The,. investigators., working for the House of Representatives Bank- ing Committee, alleged in a 90- page report that the monitoring of the Democratic headquarters was concocted by the political com- mittee to re-elect President Nixon. Committee Chairman Wright Pat- AP ' Photo THESE YOUNG Laotian soldiers reportedly deserted from insurgent Pathet Lao units, coming over to the Vientiane government in their home province. OKLA. SEN. SPEAKS: Harris attacks U.S. Thieu told a National Day memor- man tried to open televised hear- ial service yesterday that he would ings last month on the bugging "never accept a peace that offers controversy but failed to obtain the South Vietnam to the commu- needed quorum, although his com- nists." mittee is controlled by Democrats, The president's remarks at a before Congress adjourned. National Armed Forces Cemetery Seven men have pleaded not just outside Saigon followed a radio 1guilty to conspiracy charges in address in which he denounced the connection with the alleged wire- draft peace agreement between tapping of the headquarters on North Vietnam and the United June 17. States as a "sell out" and a sur- Nixon has said that nobody pres- render.' ently employed at the White House Thieu repeated that he was had any connection with the alleged ready to discuss peace and cease- incident. The Committee for the fire with North Vietnam and talk Re-election of the President had over South Vietnam's internal no immediate comment on the re- problems with the Viet Cong. port. "It is Hanoi who must make the The committee investigators said first move for peace. It is not in their report, "It appears that Washington or South Vietnam. I the Nixon committee wanted the will wait for Hanoi to move," kind of information that would en- Thieu said. able them to disrupt Democratic Elsewhere, Radio Hanoi assail- politics as well as information of ed the Nixon administration for an intimate nature which could be tnot signing the agreement yester- used to smear the character of day, as originally scheduled by those working and dealing with the - both sides. Democratic National Committee." It accused Washington of taking The investigators based their al- a "tricky attitude in not respect- legations on monitoring mainly ing what it had agreed upon, not from an interview with Alfred h only evading the signing of the Baldwin, an ex-FBI agent who has I agreement but also seeking to said he 'listened to conversations in change the agreement which had a hotel room across the road from t been reached." the committee headquarters. corporate structure l By GORDON ATCHESON "If we have a work ethic so- ciety, why do John Paul Getty, ITT and U.S. Steel pay no taxes,j while"the working people are forced to make up the difference," speech was sponsored by the local MIcGovern for President chapter. - Using General Motors to illus- trate the privilege of wealth, Har- Zis said, "GM is not a human-t sized institution. The president of ;M earns 90 times as much as the average assembly line worker. "It's wrong to say as the econ-( omy grows the people becomef richer. Clearly, only a few bene- fit," he said.t Martin O'Connell; Industry, Trade declared Sen. Fred Harris (D- and Commerce Minister Jean-Luc Okla.) yesterday. Pepin; Agriculture Minister Bud Harris lashed out at the Ameri- Olsen; and Minister of State Pa- can corporate structure during a trick Mahoney. speech in front of about 400 people See RIGHT, Page 12 at the Modern Language Bldg. The ECOLOGY ISSUE STRESSED Esch, Stem pien race: Down to the wire Closing tax loop holes, breaking up) monopolies, and instituting a steep graduated income tax will according to Harris, help to dis- tribute more fairly the wealth in 'he United States. During his talk, Harris claimed ixon has erred in dealing with Nguyen Van Thieu. Harris called for Nixon to change tactics. "We ought to sign what will ge us out of there, whether Thieu agrees or not. We've let him dic tate terms of settlement too long,' he said. Harris added that, "the peace talks show George McGovern is the peace candidate. I think the pressure of the campaign haw caused Nixon to change his stan 180 degrees." Harris backed this contention by citing the President's willingnesE to accept a coalition governmen in South Vietnam and to alloA North Vietnamese troops to re main in the south. Harris said, "I we can agree now, why couldn' we have agreed four years ago?" Along with the war, Harris called the Watergate affair the most vola le issue of the presidential elec lie charged, "Watergate reaches oto the highest realms of th White House. It was an attack or alnpmw -rni ndatP- ad By LORIN LABARDEE The congressional race in the Second District between Marvin Esch and Marvin Stempien has been called by many observers one of the closest in the country. The incumbent Esch is clearly in trouble - a Republican running in a predominantly Democratic district with a large student population. According to the Wall Street Journal, "Some of the most liberal GOP incumbents also seem threatened by the presumed pro-Democratic tilt among students." Democrats rate Esch as "es- pecially vulnerable." vonia the new district also includes much of Monroe County which is also heavily Democratic. Despite the odds against his winning Esch maintains, "I'll do well in all areas of the dis- trict." As a result of the uniform composition of the district, the candidates cannot afford to differ greatly on the issues. Each candidate is contin- ually trying to outdo the other on given issues, but the fact is there isn't much difference be- tween them. The candidates frequently argue as to which is the more concerned about the ecology. Both can- - - -- ., - - - - - A e el s d t t s S e n n By CINDY HILL Though women won the right to vote in national elections In 1919, they have found that in 1972 their votes may not count on two Michigan Union referenda in the three - day all - campus election now in its second day. The referenda items will de- cide whether women will be elig- ible for membership in the Union and also whether students should ass'ime control of the Union through the creation of a student policy board. There is confusion as to wheth- Women s vote right on Union questioned ly the computer which is pres- ently screening out women's votes on the referenda, was pro- grammed before the decision to extend U n i o n membership to them. Booth said that he did not know how women's votes were being recognized by the com- puter. Nowhere on the toallot does the voter specify his or her sex. Election Director Victor Gut- man disagreed with Booth, how- ever, saying that he had been - _m n ,_ her he nnrdto;n- .:.;: