WHY CHOOSE? See Editorial Page I Sic an 1E ai1 TENACIOUS Hligh-26° Low-120° See Today for details Vol. LXXXVIII, No. 110 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, February 11, 1978 Ten Cents 8 Pages Trash trucks can't dump dumpsters / By STEVE GOLD With the sun shining and the ice beginning to melt, most Ann Arborites have all but forgotten the big blizzard. For some local apartment dwellers, things may not return to normal until spring. That's the soonest Acting Director of Public Works Richard Sayers says he can be sure that he'll have everybody's garbage picked up. "Residential collec- tions are current," he said, "and com- mercials (such as apartment buildings) are more or less current I. but there are still some places where the snow and ice physically prevents. us from getting to the dumpsters." RESIDENTS in one apartment on Vaughn St. say the Public Works depar- tment has "not been exceptionally cooperative" in helping them get their trash collected. Mike Sinclair, manager of one building, said he has called every Thursday for the past three weeks and has gotten a different story each time. This week, Sinclair said Public Works told him a car was blocking his driveway. He said, however, this can- not be because he was watching the driveway all day. "They couldn't give us the license number or the color of the car they say was blocking the way." Rosemary Pierce, a. clerk at the Public Works office, says the number of reports of situations like Sinclair 's an- .\ r "the size of a novel." BUT, SHE SAID, "Ninety-five per cent of tpe cases are the problem of the owners. They'll tell us they have a path cleared, but when we get out there we find as much as two feet of ice." Sayers explained when the dum- psters are surrounded by ice and snow they can't get the trash trucks in the proper position to pick them up. In those situations, Sayers' workers have been directed to "take material out by hand." "But," he said, "that is a -dif- ficult time-consuming process." Sayers had no specific advice for those whose trash is still snowbound, except to be sure that Public Works is aware of their situation. "But from the calls we've been getting, I think most people have already taken care of that," he said. Pierce said she thinks another week of good weather should help the depar- tment catch up. Sayers was a little more cautious, however. "It's awfully hard to say - we have no way of 0 knowing how many are in this situation. A lot just depends on the weather." Daily Photo by JOHN KNOX PA TTERSON BIDS FOR SENA TE SEA T: Milliken seeks re-election Daily Photo by JOHN KNOX Callfor action Speaking to an audience at Rackham Auditorium last night, Representa- tive Abner Mikva (-IlL) closed the week-long symposium on human rights by challenging -theUnited States to become the guardian of human rights around the world. See story, page 2. Suit alleges police negligence in shooting By KEITH RICHBURG For Michigan state politics, yesterday was a morning of the expected, the un- precedented and the inevitable. In what State Senator Patrick Mc- Collough- called "Republican dominoes," Governor William Milliken ended months of waiting by announcing to no one's surprise he would indeed seek a third consecutive term as Michigan's governor. In the shocker of the day, the Gover- nor also announped Eastern Michigan University President James Brickley as his running mate, ressurecting his victorious 1970 political ticket. AND THEN CAME the inevitable. Oakland County Prosecutor L. Brooks Patterson confirmed his candidacy for the United States Senate seat being vacated by retiring Senator Robert, Gif- fin. Milliken.had scarcely made his an- nouncement when Patterson came out railing against irresponsive gover- nment and a lack of fresh blood in Michigan politics. "Basically, I see no one on the horizon in either party who understands the frustrations of the people here in Michigan," said Patterson in a telephone interview. "As a populist, I think I can tap the pulse of the people." PATTERSON acknowledged his can- dicacy may meet with little favor from the state GOP. Milliken and Patterson have often fueded publicly over the volatile prosecutor's staunch position on crime. "They may well look upon me as a maverick," Patterson said. "If I had my druthers, I'd rather they look upon me as a maverick." Patterson said his largest task is to broaden his support from southeastern Michigan. He plans on stumping the state to spread both his name and his politics of public responsiveness. He likens some of the present officeholders to "the little boy who goes to the store for his mother, and when he gets there he forgets why he was sent." ABOVE ALL, Patterson promised not to compromise his hardline position on crime that gave him something of a following in the tri-county area. "I'm not going to tailor my beliefs," he said. "I'm going to continue my stand on crime and hope that the people of Michigan agree with me. If not, it will cost me votes." But if Patterson wasted no time in launching his candidacy off the Milliken decision, the Democratic op- ponents of the Governor also used yesterday's announcement as a springboard to boost their own cam- paigns. Although the consensus was that Milliken's re-election decision came as no surprise, the Democrats who hope to oust the incumbent saw the Governor's endorsement of Brickley as a running mate as indicative of the campaign's .main issue. "IN MY OPINION, this (Milliken- Brickley ticket) is an indication of the staleness of the Republican party," said gubernatorial hopeful, State Senator Patrick McCollough. "I'm glad he ended his publicity-seeking ruse. In my opinion, Bill Milliken is the easiest man to beat." State Senator William Fitzgerald was not so reserved with his attack on the Milliken-Brickley ticket. "It's the ticket See MILLIKEN, Page 8 M~illikena By MARGARET JOHNSON Viola Edwards is naming the City of Ann Arbor and the Police Department, among others, as defendants in a $1 million suit resulting from the fatal shooting of her son, Larry, in February, 1976. The suit, filed in U.S. District Court Thursday, also names Police, Chief Walter Krasny, police officers Tom Pressley and George Anderson and a radio dispatcher as defendants. THE SUIT charges negligence in the death of Edwards' son. Larry Edwards was shot by police as he was fleeing the scene of an attempted robbery of the/ Pump and Pantry store on Broadway Ave. Edwards' attorney Tom Blaske said there were several reasons for waiting two years to file suit. "We had hoped to have worked out a settlement with the city based on the change of firearms policy and payments to Mrs. Edwar- ds," he said. "We were forced to file," he said, "not through any negotiations with the City, but because the statute of limitations was running out." t BLASKE SAID not only is Edwards' seeking $1 million in damages, but also a declaration that the firearm policy is unconstitutional. The Ann Arbor Police firearms policy See SUIT, Page 2 UMW council rejects tentative coal settlement Senate Panama Canal debate will move into secret session By AP and UPI A United Mine Workers (UMW) bargaining council yesterday infor- mally rejected a tentative settlement to the nationwide coal strike as nearly 200 angry miners demon- strated against the pact at union headquarters. "Vote it down," they shouted as bargaining council members ar- rived. Some carried petitions seek- ing the ouster of union President Arnold Miller. Others denounced new health care plans in the proposed agreement. THE AGREEMENT'S most con- troversial provisions include penal- ties for chronically absent miners and those who participate in wildcat strikes. It would also raise the average $7.8 wage by $2.35 over three years and restore health and pension benefits. Union President Miller refused to attend the council meeting and charged the demonstrators with "intimidation and threats of vio- lence." But police reported no vio- lence in the loud demonstration. "We think the contract stinks," said one young miner from Ken- tucky. SENTIMENT on the 39-member bargaining council was reported to be strongly against the tentative agreement between negotiators for the UMW and the soft-coal industry. The council must okay such an agree- ment before it can be submitted to rank-and-file members. The council delayed its scheduled midmorning meeting until early afternoon to give M iller a chance to attend, but indicated it would meet without him if necessary. "This intimidation cannot be tol- erated," said Miller in a statement. "Our members have a right to vote on the agreement, free from intimi- dation and threats of violence ... the anarchy of a small, irresponsible group." Detroit Edison Co. yesterday ap- pealed to its customers to cut back on energy consumption in the face of dwindling coal supplies due to the prolonged UMW strike. Company officials warned they may be forced to take "more severe conservation measures . if the strike lasts much longer. WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Sen- ate yesterday decided unanimously to move its Panama Canal treaty debate into secret session Feb. 21 to discuss allegations Gen. Omar Torri- jos may have been involved in smuggling drugs into the United States. Shifting the debate toward mys- terious, sensitive issues at the de- mand of Republican treaty critics, the Senate also was expected to. review then the issue of U.S. elec- tronic eavesdropping on Panaman- ian officials during treaty negotia- tions. BIPARTISAN Senate leaders at first seemed reluctant to cloud the treaty debate with formal discussion of the so-called "Panama Connec- tion" drug charges. have that session early." UNCONFIRMED newspaper re- ports have suggested U.S. drug en- forcement and intelligence officials have information that Torrijos, some of his relatives and other Panaman- ian officials have participated in lucrative rackets that funnel illegal narcotics into the United States by way of Central America. Sen. Birch Bayh (D-Ind.), chair- man of the Senate Intelligence Committee that investigated both the drug charges and the electronic eavesdropping, said of the narcotics allegations: "You read the stuff in the newspapers - some of it is true and some of it is false." drugs . . . this is a good treaty for the American people," said Sen. Jacob Javits, (R-N.Y.), "I just plead we keep our eye on the ball." Going into the debate, Senate Democratic Leader Robert Byrd said the drug smuggling allegations were a "peripheral" matter. The only issue," he said., "is . . . whether the treaties should be ratified." MSA president to, Saturday r lobb fori By MARK PARRENT Michigan s t u d e n t Assembly (MSA) President Jon Lauer is leav- ing for Washington tomorrow to, lobby on students' behalf for a federal tuition tax credit. Lauer said he was making the trip to letthe lawmakers "know what the students are thinking." HE IS scheduled tb testify before the House Ways and Means commit- tee next Thursday and also plans to meet with several Congresspersons and Senators. tax credits four years. THE PACKWOOD-Moynihan Tui- tion Tax Credit Act of 1977 is similar but would allow tuition expenses to be credited to a maximum of $500. Some critics of these plans say they would cost too much and many of the benefits would go to higher-income students. President Carter, who is opposed to the tax credits, introduced his own plan Wednesday. Carter called for increased aid to be .channeled through existing federal financial aid " Mike McGee sizes up the match-up between himself and Earvin Johnson before today's Michigan-Michigan State battle. See story, Page 7. But, Bayh told the Senate, "these I I jjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjWR .R,, I