Belcher: 'Denis will be respected' By KEITH RICHBURG and JUDY RAKOWSKY Louis Belcher's three-year quest for the mayor's seat ended last night when the 38- year-old Fifth Ward Republicah was sworn in along with the five freshperson Council members. Councilman Gerald Bell (R-Fifth Ward) was elected Mayor Pro Tem of Council in the first of many party-line votes to come. After the swearing-in Belcher attempted to dispel fears of Republican, heavy- handedness on the new 7-4 Republican majority Council. The mayor also lauded acting City Attorney Bruce Laidlaw and recommended his approval as permanent City Attorney at next week's meeting. BELCHER PROMISED tighter controls on Council's often free-wheeling debate and an end to personal attacks during meetings. He reassured the minority party that hewould tolerate dissent. "I am going to ask Council next week to confirm Acting City Attorney Bruce Laidlaw as City Attorney of Ann Arbor," Belcher said. "Another rumor that has been going around is that the Republicans, now that they have the majority, are going to make changes at the administrative level. That is not true, and City Council does not have the power to fire department heads under the City Charter." TO THE DEMOCRATS, who sat on one corner of the chamber, Belcher said, "In a free democratic society we shall not stifle debates on issues." However, the mayor cautioned, "I will be a lot tighter on Coun- cil rules and I will limit debate to two times per member." He further threatened, "I will not tolerate from the chair personal attacks on individual Council people." The Democrats were silent in their elec- toral exile. The only time a Democrat spoke during the meeting was when new Councilwoman, Susan Greenberg (D-First Ward) nominated fellow Democrat Leslie Morris (D-Second Ward) for Mayor Pro- Tem, as a response to the Republican nomination of Bell. "I feel it would be important to have a member of the opposite party in that position," she said. "I also feel that it is important to have a woman in that position." After the meeting Greenberg said, "I'm afraid we're going to lose the dialogue that has been characteristic of Council in the past." MAYOR BELCHER promised to quickly secure the 700 committee appointments facing Council "Those committees are the heart and soul of city government, and I would like those filled as soon as possible," he said. Belcher's first recommendation was University Political Science Professor Joel Sammoff to head the powerful Ann Arbor Transportation Authority (AATA). In a touching moment, a subdued Belcher took advantage of the Cable-TV televising of the meeting to say "Hi, Dad" to his ailing father, who was stricken with a heart attack last week. BELCHER ANNOUNCED his public of- fice hours, keeping a campaign promise to maintain close contact with citizens. The hours are Monday, Wednesday and Fridays from 4:30 to 6 p.m. "If it isn't enough, I'll try to make more available," he said. Doily Photo by BRAD BENJAMIM Louis Belcher raised his right hand last night as he was officially sworn as Ann Arbor's new mayor' GLOB4IICOOLER, RAIN COXFV IO N ic-tN nt s HighP-upper 50s Lo-9IISee Editorial Page See Today for details Vol. LXXXVII, No. 152 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, April 11, 1978 Ten Cents 12 Pages Six Bursley Board members evicted in pot buying incident By RICHARD BERKE Leases of six Bursley student leaders who approved pur- chase of three-quarters of a pound of marijuana for use at an all-dormitory party have been terminated by Acting Univer- sity Housing Director Robert Hughes. The students, members of the Bursley Board of Govern- nors, voted to spend $400 for the March 31 party on the fourth floor of the Bursley Van Hoosen wing, $200 of which was allocated for marijuana. HUGHES SAID HIS decision last Friday to terminate the leases was based on a recommendation by Bursley Building Director Tod Hanson. The University lease the students are under contains a clause stating that the purchase of marijuana is grounds for lease termination, according to Hughes. Hughes said he believes arrangements have been made to allow the students to remain at Bursley through the final examination period. But Hanson, who is responsible for that decision, declined to comment on what action he has taken. He said each individual was considered separately. The six Board members will not be permitted to return to University housing next year. Although unhappy with the Housing Office's action. Board members said they haven't decided whether to appeal their lease terminations. "I GUESS IT'S the only thing they could have done to us," said freshperson Sally Eibert, a Board member and candidate for the Literary College Student Government. "I can't say I was right in what I did," said freshperson Rolf Pielemeir, a Board member. "I just wish the enfor- cement could have gone a little farther. Irving Freeman was one of those supposed to have originated the idea (for the par- ty) but no action has been taken against him." Freeman, Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) vice- president for personnel and MSA presidential candidate, admitted last week to being in on plans for the dope purchase since they were first drawn. FREEMAN, A BURSLEY resident, said he contacted a Campus Legal Aid attorney for help in fighting the lease ter- minations, but declined to elaborate on the situation, Sophomore Board Member Doug Steinberg, who is also president of te University Housing Council, an MSA student general counsel, and current MSA candidate, declined to comment oi the action, as did sophomore board member Eric Wilson, an engineering student. Board members Tim See POT, Page 2 At the ballpark Daily hoto by PETER SERUNG Boys, young and old, perched themselves along this fence Saturday to watch Michigan's double-header with Bowling Green. Lebanon repatriates refugees as Israeli troops begin withdrawal BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - The Lebanese government announced a mass repatriation of refugees to south Lebanon will begin today timed to coin- cide with the first stage of a partial pullback by Israeli invaders. The plan to send Lebanese refugees back in a "test of Israel's real inten- tions on how serious the withdrawal will be," official Lebanese radio said yesterday. It said Lebanon was holding to its demand for a "quick, total with- drawal" of Israeli troops. ISRAELI RADIO reported that Nor- wegian troops of the U.N. peacekeeping force would take over from the Israeli army Tuesday at eight posts in the oc- cupied area. The broadcast added that Palestinian guerrillas north. of the in- vaded zone were allowing few Lebanese Christians to return to the area. Right-wing Christian militias generally have allied themselves with the Israelis against the Palestinians and Lebanese Moslem leftists. Tuesday r r FORMER FBI Director L. Patrick Gray was indic- tfad vatavrlau Tip i About 220,000 Palestinians and Lebanese fled their homes after Israeli troops occupied 500 square miles of south Lebanon in their drive against Palestinian guerrilla positions that began March 15. An estimated 14,000 Lebanese and 40,000 Palestinian civilians have returned on their own, despite a lack of electricity and water. REFUGEES REMAINING in Beirut and the coastal town of Sidon are to be given a month's supply of food to en- courage their return to the south. The Lebanese government regards their presence in those overcrowded cities as a potential source of serious unrest. The Lebanese broadcast said the first convoy of returning refugees would leave Sidon, 25 miles south of this capital, this morning in 20 buses and trucks each accompanied by an Inter- national Red Cross representative and a Lebanese civil defense corpsman. The convoy will carry 14 families back to the port city of Tyre and five to near the village of Bourg el Chemali, both policed by French troops of the U.N. peacekeeping force. A LEBANESE GOVERNMENT spokesman reported that another con- voy would set out from Brirut, possibly See LEBANON, Page 2 Trowbridge bids for State .Senate position By KEITH RICHBURG nography ordinance, it was Trowbridge Councilman Ronald Trowbridge (R- who interrupted the seriousness of the Fourth Ward) has decided to run for moment by observing that, he did not State Senate. He promises to be the like the bill his own party had in- same Ron Trowbridge who has been en- troduced. tertaining Ann Arbor City Council chambers every Monday night for three "I READ THOSE magazines," he years. confessed, "And, yes, in a moment of When Council was hammering out the weakness I have been known to look at final version of a strict new por- See TROWBRIDGE, Page 12 S elections get high tunu Trowbridge Studio preserves 'U' musIC By DOUG HELLER The process of capturing music - a fleeting sound wafted through the air - can recording that sound on a thin strip of tape to produce it again, is a mystery4 to most people. " But the process is no mystery to University student Bill Papineau, who F through the work-study program, is learning the art of sound recording. ALTHOUGH PAPINEAU cannotr earn credit or a degree for studying his craft, he spends a great deal of his time working as an audio-visual assistant fory,. Electronic and Recording Services. (ERS), a division of the University's School of Music. "We're comparable to a professional sound studio," Papineau said. "No school in the country is better." ERS records recitals of students fulfilling degree requirements in the Music School. The department also cuts records for all University musical " groups, including the University Sym- phony Orchestras, choir, jazz band and I the Amaizin' Bles.,.r .:. - By SHELLEY WOLSON and MARK PARRENT Voter turnout for the first day of the Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) election yesterday was "outstanding" according to Election director G. J. DiGiuseppe. He estimated the turnout was between 1800 and 2000 students. the election continues today and tomorrow. Meanwhile, controversy still dominates the Literature, Science and the Arts Student Government (LSA- SG). After several suits, appeals and long meetings, the names of five People's Action Coalition (PAC) can- didates remain off the ballot. DI GIUSEPPE attributed the first day's turnout, which was higher than the total turnout in several recent MSA elections, to the large number of issues; on the ballot drawing student attention. Among the reasons cited by Spirna$ operated the polling site at the Medical Science Building alone. "I've never heard it done before," said Central Student Judiciary Chief Justice Thomas Potter of a candidate serving as a poll worker, "but. I don't know of any specific rule against it. I know that at the last minute some of the poll workers didn't show," Rotter ad- ded. "Spirnak's just a good friend and he was just doing me a favor," said DiGiuseppe. IN STARK CONTRAST to many previous elections, at many of the polling sites across campus, lines developed as students waited to cast their ballots. But LSA-SG presidential and vice- presidential candidates Bob Stechuk and Kathy Friedman from PAC and four other LSA-SG hopefuls-Brucel Kozarskv. Mary Hallesv Michael En-