CITY COUNCIL GERRYMANDER See Editorial Page Y Lw A ~~Iati4 BLEAK High-28 Low-21 See today . .. for details Vol. LXXXIII, No. 68 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, November 29, 1972 Ten Cents Eight Pages itoday.. I if you see news happen call 76-DAILY :C:.. . :: . . .. :: .. :>. .. .i'' .:. ::' .. :.... : ..:::. . . .. . .. .. . :. x .:z :::t. . . ... 3C;. c3i~2 . Gra ding re form may be delayed Teenage fantasies The minds of impressionable young teenagers may soon be protected from the dangers of X-rated movies shown at drive-in theaters. State Rep.: Alex Pilch (R-Dearborn) introduced a bill Monday which would ban movies depicting "explicit sex acts, or those which are obscene, lewd, filthy or indecent" from the screens of drive-ins which can be seen from the street. The bill is reportedly an attempt to keep young people under the age of 18 from parking outside the drive-ins and watching the movies. To China with love Economics Prof. Alexander Eckstein, a leading authority on the Chinese economy, will lead a 15-member delegation to the People's Republic of China next month. He'll be traveling as immediate past chairperson of the National Committee on United States-China Relations - the people who brought you the Chinese table tennis team last year. Marching on The Hoover and Division Street neighborhood won't be the same anymore. Ground at that corner was broken yesterday for the new William Revelli Band Building, which will become the home of the Michigan Marching Band. The band, which in recent years has practiced outside in that area, will have a large re- hearsal hall, four offices, a music library and storage rooms for uniforms and instruments in the 10,000-square-foot structure. Revelli was University band conductor for over 35 years. Happenings.. are numerous and sorta different. The Ann Arbor Black Theatre will present "An Evening of Black Theatre," at the city Community Center, 625 N. Main St., 7:30 p.m. .. . if your bag is bargaining (collectively, that is) pop into the First Annual Conference on Collective Negotiations in Education, starring Education School Dean Wilbur Cohen, President Robben Flem- ing and others, second floor, Michigan League, from 1 p.m. on . . . the Coordinating Committee for the Representation of Wo- men in Health Planning will meet at 8 p.m. in St. Andrew's Church to finalize a proposal of the Family Planning Medical Service, a clinic opening in January . . . Learn how to tune up your car with the help of engineering students at 7 p.m., Room 170, Physics-Astronomy Bldg. The first 40 persons to sign up will be able to tune their cars Saturday at the Automotive En- gineering Lab . . . Speeches include French geologist Hugues Faure on "Pluvial Lakes in the Sahara" 3:30 p.m., Room 1509 C.C. Little Bldg. and a panel on "Gender Identity and its Mea- surement," Children's Psychiatric Hospital Aud., 10:15 a.m. Fruity flock DETROIT - A frtlit-filching flock of giant parakeets has invaded Detroit's east side, reportedly gobbling the fruit off neighborhood apple and pear trees. Keith Kreag, general cura- tor for the Detroit Zoo, identified the culprits as "monk" para- keets, a foot-long, South American member of the parrot family. He also pointed out that these parakeets bite people as well as their favorite foods. Officials theorize that smugglers brought the birds into the country without having them vaccinated and quarantined, and that the birds escaped. Audubon Society officials were reported hot on the tails of the voracious varmints yester- day afternoon. Sorry, wrong number SAN RAFAEL, Calif. - A jealous husband was arraigned here yesterday on charges of ripping telephone receivers out of public phone booths. When asked why he had spent so much time tearing the things apart, Walter Harper, 32, said he van- dalized the booths because his wife ran off with a Pacific Tele- phone Co. employe. We should have guessed. Magee trial SAN FRANCISCO - San Quentin lifer Ruchell Magee, the "other defendant" in the Angela Davis murder case, got his trial off to a great start yesterday by slugging his lawyer and shouting "stupid, dumb judge." Magee knocked his court-ap- pointed attorney, Robert Carrow, off his chair while screaming at the same time, "Arrest this son pf a bitch." He was removed from court to a holding cell after both incidents. Magee and Davis were charged two years ago in connection with the Aug. 7, 1970, gun battle at the Marin County courthouse in which a judge and three other men were killed. Dope notes HERE AND THERE - In Washington, Consumers Union, the non-profit product testing organization, has recommended the legalization of marijuana. CU also recommended that all those imprisoned for selling or processing marijuana be released. These conclusions were based on interviews, field trips, and other studies on drugs . . . In Bangkok, police have arrested a Thai couple and seized 8.3 pounds of heroin. The trap was laid by an Ameri- can agent, posing as a member of an international narcotics ring. He had agreed to purchase the heroin for approximately $62,700 . . . In San Francisco, trained detective "wonder" dogs have sniffed out 350 pounds of hashish from cartons of brass bells. Arrested was a Superior Supreme Court judge's 30-year-old son, who was released on his own recognizance after being ar- raigned before U.S. Magistrate Owen E. Woodruff. A further hearing will be held Dec. 8. Roses are red . . . Who says men of science are cold-hearted, emotionless ma- chines? Not the three independent dealers who paid $12,500 for a collection of Albert Einstein's notes at a New York auction yesterday. Scratched on 452 assorted pieces of scrap paper, in- cluding the back of an envelope, were theories and calculations and this little poem: "I shan't be absent, little snookie, though I am not a sugar cookie; what life has brought you up to now may sweeten the farewell somehow." By DAVID UNNEWEHR Daily News Analysis The issue of grading reform, which has been hotly debated in the literary college, seems doomed to languish in a faculty committee for at least an- other year. Unless a student-approved reform proposal is passed by the faculty at their January meeting, grading re- form wil become the property of the- new Graduation Requirements Com- mission, which is not expected to sub- mit its final report for at least six months. Under the proposal, all 100 and 200 Chances for faculty approval of the proposal at this time appear slim ... Com- puter Sciences Prof. Bernard Galler, a member of the LSA Executive Committee, says, he doubts the "conservative majority" of faculty members will pass the stu- dent-approved reform proposal. level courses in the literary college would be graded on a pass/no record basis with accompanying written evaluations of student performance. With all other courses, instructors would have several options to teach either on a graded or non-graded basis. Students would have several choices on how the grade would ap- pear in their transcript. The proposal, formulated by the Joint Student-Faculty Policy Com- mittee, was approved by students during the recent campus election. Two other proposals, submitted by the Curriculum Committee and the Committee for Undergraduate Ex- perience, were rejected. Chances for faculty approval of the proposal at this time appear slim. "In view of the fundamental changes proposed, says Associate LSA Dean Charles Witke, "we need to substantially air the proposal from every angle. Before we change the grading system we must realize pos- sible implications on every aspect of the college - including admission and composition." Computer Sciences Prof. Bernard Galler, a member of the college's Executive Committee, says he doubts the "conservative majority" of LSA faculty members will pass the stu- dent-approved reform proposal. Grades, he says, are still consid- ered by many as a "positive mo- tivating force." They also provide the most quantitative evaluation of student progress in science or math courses, he maintains. See FACULTY, Page 8 io . , , . . , . .:, . . . . . .. . .. ... .._ . : . .. . ... ._ : ._ . .. . .., . .. _ _, .. _ .. .. . a . . ,. . . , _. . , .. : .. . .. . _ .. .. ,. . .. : .. . . . . : .. . . ... . . . .. . . _ . .. . . _ .: :. . .. , . w, ,. . ..,, : .> . : . . ., . : : . . . : _ .. . . z .. . ,. ...s Richardson, Weinberger named to defense, HEW positions by Nixon < By AP and Reuters CAMP DAVID, Md. - Presi- dent Nixon yesterday named Health Secretary Elliot Rich- ardson .as his new defense secretary at the start of a m a s s i v e administration shake-up for his second term. The President announced his choice at his mountain retreat here and said through his spokesperson that Richardson would help bring a sense of excitement and renewed purpose to the government dur- ing the next four years. Nixon also disclosed two other major nominations for posts in his new cabinet which will take office Jan. 20, the day he begins his second term. He named Caspar Weinberger, director of the Office of Manage- ment and Budget (0MB) which keeps a tight rein on the budget for him, to succeed Richardson as secretary of Health, Education and Welfare, (HEW) and named Roy Ash, president of the Litton Industries conglomerate, an ef- ficiency expert, to take charge of 0MB. The nominations are subject to Senate approval. There had been advance specu- lation that Richardson might be picked to succeed Secretary of De- fense Melvin Laird, who disclosed weeks ago that he planned to re- sign at the end of Nixon's first term. However, there had been equally persistent rumors that Richardson might become secretary of state, to head the department in which he served as undersecretary during the early part of the Nixon tenure. Richardson, 52,thas beentHEW chief since 1970. Laird, a, former Republican congressman from Wisconsin, plans to return to private life. He ruled out any other government post. "I told the President I could not go home and even discuss such an idea with my wife," lie told a press conference yesterday. White House Press Secretary Elliot Richardsort U.S. bombs hit Vllage; 21 killed By AP and Reuters American warplanes accidently bombed a South Vietnamese Vil- lage near Da Nang yesterday, kill- ing 21 civilians and wounding 29, a U. S. spokesperson reported. Six flights of Navy and Air Force jets hit the village, named by sources in Da Nang as Vinh Tho, on Highway One which runs the length of Vietnam from Saigon to Hanoi along the coastal plain. The American spokesperson said the planes were flying in support of South Vietnamese troops oper- ating near Hoi An, a provincial capital 15 miles south of Da Nang, the country's northernmost port. Field reports said up to 10 500- pound bombs hit the village. The cause of the bombing, the AP Photo How now brown cow Big Mlac, a 1,600-pound steer, takes a leisurely stroll through the lobby of a Washington hotel yesterday. Some 170 western cattle growers are lobbying with Congress for higher beef prices. Mac reportedly said of his tour, "It's a nice place to visit, but who'd want to live here.' SURRENDERS TO POLICE: By AP and UPI PONTIAC - A 16-year-old boy yesterday surrendered to police who charged him with felonious assault in the shooting of five students at Pontiac Central High School. The youth, sought for more than 24 hours by police, turned himself in to police headquar- ters at 11:30 a.m., Detective Capt. Ray Meggit said. He was jailed on $10,000 bond after his juvenile court appearance yes- terday. The youth's name was not released. Witnesses had identified the boy from pictures in the high school'yearbook as the one who went on a shooting spree and wounded five students, one ser- iously, in a school courtyard Monday morning. Police said there was no ap- parent motive in the shootings. but reports indicated the youtl opened fire Monday after a fei- low student turned his back on a fight. Some 50 students witnessed the shooting in the Pontiac Central High School courtyard. Timothy Williams, 15, was shot in the lower back and four other students received minor gunshot wo'nds. Williams had a kidney remov- ed in a 21 hour operation at geid i n Pontiac shooting firecrackers. Suddenly all the kids were clearing out. This black guy was pointing a gun." Police said exact details of the shootings were sketchy. The in- cident occurred near the Voca- tional Educational Building where some 50 to 150 youngsters were walking. Classes were canceled after Monday's shooting, and absentee- ism was high when classes re- sumed yesterday. "About 30 per cent stayed home," said Principal Don Mc- Millan, "but we expected that. Most of them probably stayed home at their parents' orders. We weren't worried and very few of the kids were." Although about 50 students were on hand during the shoot- ings, which occurred during a change of classes, no one got in- volved and the wounded were left to fend for themselves until they left the shooting site. 'The students here have de- veloped a high degree of sophis- tication," said McMillan. But a black teacher, who, like most teachers and students, ask- ed not to be identified, said. "These kids are watched by their teachers, by hall monitors and by police. These kids don't trust anybody except their 'friends and they're not going to bother getting involved with any- body." A young white student teacher, however, said the students had learned "from the idiocy of their parents of both colors. They've learned that fighting and riot- ing isn't going to accomplish anything." A white student, who said he witnessed the shooting, added, "All I wanted to do was get out of there. If some fool opens up as long as I'm not hit, it's not my problem." HOUSING ISSUE Ronald Ziegler said Nixon would worst such incident reported in announce further cabinet changes several months, is under investi- today as part of his goal of revita- ation. lizing the administration in his g second term. Meanwhile, South Vietnamese Richardson has a reputation for envoy Nguyen Phu Duc arrived in managerial skills as well as be- Washington yesterday for a meet- ing an eloquent spokesman for ing today with President Nixon for Nixon administration policies. cntayi trs for These two qualities would seem consultation on terms for ending to make him eminently qualified the Vietnam war. for his new job of presiding over Duc, who is South Vietnamese the Pentagon at a time when the President Nguyen Van Thieu's administration is strongly resist- ing efforts by Congress to cut the foreign policy advisor, refused to defense budget. speak to reporters or say what the See NIXON, Page 8 purpose of his visit was. Soc1 By TERI TERREL Does Student Government C have the power to recall Coup members of committees whent with SGC mandates? Should on-campus housing c allocated from an appointed, trolled Housing Policy Boar University Housing Council ( members were elected by on may recallU ,L There are five students and four faculty ouncil (SGC) members on OSSPB. ncil-appointed The recall is not automatic under the they disagree SGC constitution. However, Jacobs said yesterday, "If the ontrol be re- student OSSPB members refuse to alter student-con- their stand, SGC can either change their d (HPB) to own minds about the issue and withdraw the UHC) whose mandate or they can thank the present ly three per members of OSSPB for their services anl )SSPB mE student-elected UHC for dormitories. Off- campus housing matters would be consoli- dated under a new Off-Campus Housing Policy Board. However, UHC has rejected SGC's plan. UHC at a meeting on Monday unanimously supported a compromise plan instead of approving SGC's plan for UHC's total con- trol over all housing. /r,, CL - - ,I t..,. ...A 1. 4 3m bers On the inside On the Editorial Page, you will find a stimulating dis- cussion by David Burhenn on the redistricting of Ann Arb'or by City Council . . . Sports writer Mark Ronan looks at the Big Ten football season in review on page 6 . . . the Arts Parra reveals ailr reviewer Herman B crnhnk annlaudjina I .U