The Michigan Daily-Sunday, February 5, 1978-Page 3 CITES MARSTON AFFAIR: Brock calls for Bell's removal y tJYU SEE NES KVPEN4 CALL W DAILY The great tray ride From the steal-from-the-hand-that-feeds-you department: Dor- mitory cafeteria workers have noticed a significant increase in the number of trays that never quite make it to the dishroom. Seems last week's super snow saw many trays slip-sided away off tabletops and unto the whitewashed slopes of the Arb. Said one South Quad em- ployee: "You know they (students) rip off anything-bowls, silver- ware-but the trays get stolen all at once." Alas, the situation has become chancey at Alice Lloyd where, down from a season start of 700, there are only 575 trays left, or about one for each resident. Asked if West Quad was running short of the molded plastic platters, Em- ployee Reiche Hildegarde replied: "I guess so. Why, you've found some?" No but we're looking. Risking life and limb Leave it up to dogs and little kids to always steal the show. Dr. James Sherman's Physiology 101 lecture was disrupted earlier this week when a scruffy-looking canine marched down the aisle and took his place on stage with the prof. Sherman, not to be upstaged, advised the intruder, that perhaps Med Sci II, within whose confines cadavers are contemplated and esophaguses examined, was a dangerous place to be roaming unattended. The dog trotted out shortly thereafter. * 0 Clowning around Clad in snazzy patch-work clown suits, three gentlemen from the University Activities Center (UAC) startled passers-by as they dan- ced around campus yesterday. The three, advertising UAC's up- coming Michigras, Ann Arbor's answer to New Orlean's Mardigras) will be making a repeat performance Monday in the fishbowl, handing out free popcorn to the ravished lunch hour crowd. "The ruffles around my neck keep me warm," chortled one of the clowns, "only my hands are cold.," Happenings . .. ... Not much by the way of events today, but for you early-rising politicos, today's first happening is a Zolton Ferency for Governor meeting at 621 Church, beginning at 11 ... capping off today's events is the opening of a week-long "Symposium on Human Rights in the USSR and Eastern Europe" beginning at 7:30 with a "welcome" ad- dress by Roman Szporluk of the History Department .. . at 8 the organized of the Moscow Chapter of Amnesty International, Dr. Valentin Turchin, will speak on "The Fate of Three Soviet Dissidents: Orlov, Cabalev, and Tverdokhlebov" . .. and at 9, Soviet Scientist Andrei Sakharov's son-in-law Efrem Yankelevich will address "Soviet Dissent and the West.", all at MLB Aud. 4 .. . On Monday, you can return to the "Symposium on Human Rights in the USSR and Eastern Europe" for a bag lunch at noon in Rackham's West Lcture Room. The bag lunch will feature Sakharov's step-daughter, Tatyana Yankelevich . .. Also at 12, AMSA films presents two films-"A Mat- ter of Inconvenience" and "The Blind: An Emerging Minority"-in the South'Lecture Hall at Med. Sci. 2 ... then at 4, back to the Sym- posium for a lecture on "International Broadcasting and Totalitarian Regimes" brought to you by Jan Nowak, formerly of Radio Free Europe at the Rackham Amphitheatre . .. or if you are a Yeats fan, attend a lecture on "The Meaning of a National Theater" also at 4 in the Union's Pendleton Room.. . by 7, if you haven't worn yourself out yet, try the movies presented by the Women's Studies Film Series en- titled "Hey what about Us" and "A Woman's Place" in Auditorium 3 of MLB . . . or if you are interested in Third World politics, the Ann Arbor Committee for Human Rights in Latin America is holding a membership meeting at 7 in Suite 1 of the League .. . and at 7:30 and 8:30 respectively, there are two more discussions on Soviet Human Rights-"The Struggle Against Censorship in Poland" and "Russian Dissident National Groups in the USSR"-both at the Rackham Am- phitheater. Good night. The price of success From the gee-life-is-rough department: What does First Lady Rosalyn Carter find most wearing and demanding about life in the White House? Guest speaker at the annual dinner of the Americus and ' Sumpter County Chamber of Commerce earlier this week, the country girl from Plains, Georgia said: "The hardest thing you have to do is stay dressed up all the time." Oh, the price of success. -* 4 On the outside . . . Our havenly sources inform us that the outlook for the next two days is hardly celestial. A high of 160, a low of 20 and one to two inches of snow will keep us earthbound. Monday's precipitation prophecy is the same and the high will be 14° and the low will hit a big fat 00. -s4 PULITZER PRIZE POET Richard Howard will read from his work Tuesday, Feb. 7-4 p.m.' in the Pendleton Rm. (Michigan Union) WASHINGTON (AP) - Republi-] can Party Chairman Bill Brock yesterday called for the removal ofI Attorney General Griffin Bell, saying he has turned the Justice Depart-: ment into a political clearinghouse. late 1976, was ousted by Bell last month after he refused to stay on as a lame-duck caretaker while a Demo- cratic replacement was being sought. A spokesman for the Justice De- ' -. - it is painfully ob- vious that Attorneyk General Bell has, indeed, politicized the Justice Department and its ap- pointments process-and for that breach of trust he should resign or be fired.' -GOP chairman Bill Brock IN HIS statement, Brock quoted Bell's news conference remarks in which the attorney general sought to justify the administration's action on the grounds that Marston "was recommended by Republican Sen. Richard Schweiker. He had not prac- ticed law in a long time, and only for a short time at that time . .. He must have been perceived as a person who was out of a senator's office and there were Democrats complaining about it." Brock, however, said there "hard- ly seems to be evidence Marston 'had politicized his office'." "To the contrary, Marston's record was that of a vigorous and highly capable prosecutor who obtained convictions of corrupt public officials of both major political parties - and he was on the trail of more. "ONE TARGET of Marston's in- vestigation, Rep. Joshua Eilberg, (D-Pa.), requested and received intervention by the President, him- self, in removing Marston from his job," Brock said. Carter has said hewas unaware that Eilberg was under investigation at the time of his telephone conversa- tion with the congressman. Brock said Bell had pledged in his confirmation hearings last year that the Justice Department "would have nothing to do with politics" under his guidance. "DAVID MARSTON did not politi- cize the United States attorney's office in Philadelphia, but it is painfully obvious that Attorney Gen- eral Bell has, indeed, politicized the Justice Department and its appoint- ments process =~ and for that breach of trust he should resign or be fired," the Republican chairman said. Ann Arbor Premiere A John Waters Double Feature Two films by the most diabolical mind in movies, John Waters. DESPERATE LIVING "Such serious ethical,.political and legal issues surround Attorney Gen- eral Bell's recent conduct at the Justice Department that - by his own rationale for firing David Mar- ston as United States attorney in Philadelphia - the attorney general himself should resign immediately or be summarily discharged by the President," Brock said. IN A STATEMENT released by GOP headquarters here, Brock cited Bell's statement at a news confer- ence Friday that Marston was fired because he "had politicized his office." Brock charged that Bell had politicized his office - the nation's top law enforcement agency. Marston, a Republican appointed by then-President Gerald Ford in partment said yesterday that Bell was unavailable for comment on Brock's statement. DURING A NEWS conference it Portland, Ore., on Friday, however, Bell said he had considered resigning during the Marston affair because he felt he had let President Carter down by not knowing who was being inves- tigated by Marston when the decision was being made to remove him. "I think I've been damaged," Bell said. He said he plans to release a full report on the case soon. The Marston affair has become a major political issue because Mar- ston had successfully prosecuted several public officials during his brief tenure in Philadelphia and was investigating others, including some influential Democratic congressmen. TE 1H1IHANDS 1 and 2 bedroom apartments includes security lock system, drapes, dishwasher, lighted tennis courts, and pool Buses to and from campus daily 1693 Broadway, Apt. 302 769-3672 Reaume and Doddes Management Co. PLUS the second incredible John Waters Extravaganza DIVINE starring in PINK FLAMINGOS MLB Room 1 Saturday, Sunday Showtimes: Desperate Living 7:008& 10:30 Pink Flaimingos 8:45 Double Feature Admission: $2.50 Single $1.50 Roted X, You must be 18 METROPOLIS FILM SOCIETY /I Daily Official Bulletin Sunday, February 5,1978 DAILY CALENDAR Music School: Faculty Voice recital, John Mc- Collum, tenor, Rackham Aud., 4 p.m. * * * Monday, February 6, 1978 DAILY CALENDAR Ctr. Near Eastern/N. African Studies: AntonySul- livan, "Thomas Robert Bugeaud, France & Algeria, 1804-1834: The Mediterranean Nexus," Commons Rm., Lane Hall, noon. Macromolecular Research Ctr.: Thermodynamic & Kinetic Factors in Membrane Selectivity, 3005 Chem., 4 p..m. Applied Mechanics/Eng. Sciences: James Wein- man, "Measurements of Eddies in he Planetary Boundary Layer by Means of Lidar," 29 W. Eng., 4 p.m. W. B. Yeats Lecture: "The Meaning of a National Theatre," Pendleton Rm., Union, 4 p.m. Physics/Astronomy: C. DeHaven, "Neutron Pro- ton Elastic Scattering at Fermilab Energies," 20313 Randall Lab., 4p.m. Music School: Faculty Piano recital, Louis Nagel, Rackham Aud., 8 p.m. THE MICHIGAN DAILY ' Volume LXXXVIII, No. 105 Sunday. February 5, 1978 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage is paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morning during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 September through April (2 semesters); $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Satur- da morning. Subscription rates: $6.50 in AnnArbor; $7.50 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Frederick Wiseman's FREE Showings HIGH SCHOOL (At 7:00) Wiseman's second work shows no streching of minds. It reveals the dreari- ness of teachers and administrators who are more interested in discipline than knowledge. 1968. HOSPITAL (At 9:15) A horrifically beautiful study of lifein a metropolitan center of succor and mercy made in 1970. * * Fredrick Wiseman will speak on Sunday, Feb. 12 * * Mon: Wiseman's JUVENILE COURT (FREE at 8) CINEMA GUILD Old Arch. Aud. CINEMA 1 Aud. A Angeli Hall Sunday, February 5, 1978 FANTASTIC PLANET Director-RENE LALOUX (1973) Once upon a time there was a planet, Ygam. On that planet evolved two races of man, the Ohms (human-like pets) and the Draags (their masters), who entered into a threatening revolt. A skillfully animated science fiction epic in the tradition of Star Wars. Cannes Film Festival Winner. 7, 8:15, and 9:30 p.m. $1.50 TUESDAY: Jean-Luc Godard's TOUT VA BIEN I Tired of your own cookina? Bell's has great pizza & grinders! S. State & Packard 995-0232 Open from 11 o.m. FREE DELIVERIES from 4:30 p.m. _. --r r - % ,. -. _ .. r, , . ;, ' r , _ ._ . RESCHEDU LED The 1978 Mich igenin (U-M's yearbook) is looking for students interested in working on the business staff. Positions are open in marketing, sales, and general business. No experience necessary, we will train you. Mass Meeting for all those interested on e F CL L&L n I I