UNSAFE DORMS See Editorial Page V'I r Sir 1~ Wig IDYLLIC .High: 70 See Today for details Vol. LXXXVIII, No. 17 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, September 27, 1977 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Council r rr ile go "The ashtrays were put out in the name of safety," said Murray. "The clerk noticed that people were going to smoke anyway, and they were just d~~nn hi aic -+^C--- . 0 By JULIE ROVNER Two large printed cardboard signs are hanging in full view - big as. anything -in the Ann Arbor City Coun- cil chambers. Their message is un-' mistakeable: DO NOT SMOKE. Sometimes, though, it seems as if somebody forgot to tell the City Coun- cil. AT 9:15 LAST NIGHT, for instance, the Council was engaged in a long and emotional public hearing concerning a site plan for a cluster home complex. It wasn't long before Mayor Albert Wheel- er took out a nonfilter Camel' and began puffing on it. Within seconds, the sound of scratch- ing matches was heard on both sides of the room. City Administrator Sylvester Murray and Councilman Lou Senunas (R-3rd Ward) had also become law- breakers. Well, maybe not lawbreakers. More, like resolution-breakers. Two years ago, then Councilwoman, Liz Keogh introduced a 'Clean Air' resolution banning smoking during regular council sessions in the cham- bers. "I SMOKE like a chimney," she said, "but it is an annoyance and a discom- fort to those who don't like it. That's why we have a workroom." The resolution passed nearly unami- ously because, as Keogh said, "It looks neat and cool to vote for something called Clean Air. It's like going to chur- ch on Sunday." With the departure from Council of Keogh and Colleen McGee reported to have cried, fainted, and even *omited at Council to get .smokers to curb their habit, the resolution has been, increas- ingly ignored. A WOMAN in the audience at last night's meeting, who declined to be identified, said "I used to abide by it (the resolution) until most of the signs came down and the Councilpeople start- ed smoking again. Even the city clerk accepts the fact the Council members are going to smoke; at every meeting a number of ashtrays are made available for the Council members. esup Actually, seven of the eleven votes on Council belong to smokers, which means - theoretically - they could repeal the resolution.Y in smoke in the closest election in the city's history). INSTEAD, LATTA has vowed to ign in my lungs. Ands besides - that chamber isn't the bestVentilated room in the world." I uoppuing ei1r asheson the foor, so he bring a water gun with, him to the next STATE LAW already prohibits smok started putting them out. "WE JUST HAVEN'T had the Council meeting. "I'd just like to see ing in grocery stores, and a new statute courage to rescind it yet," said Coun- them charge me with assault if I use that went into effect this year provides A F(IRM BIT of Council etiquette, cilman Robert Bertoia (R-3rd Ward). it," he said - only half jokingly. for eating places to divide into smoking however, dictates that no one smoke "I was going to sue," said Council- "We should either abide by it or and non-smoking sections. It is also until the mayor lights up. man Ken Latta, (D-ist Ward) one of the repeal it," said Councilman Lou Bel- possible that Michigan will follow the "It looks neat and cool to Sunday." vote for something called Clean -former Councilwoman Air. It's like going to church on Liz Keogh 5:::5::::::::::5:::::::9:::::5:5:5:::::s::::::s::::::::::::5::::5::::::::::5:::::::5:$:: ::::::::::::::::.:::::::. .:::.:.::::::::::::::.. .:::~:::3:~~:ii~~~::. .... .:::::5-....::: :g I "We just all watch for the mayor to light up; we let him break the law fir- st," said Council member Gerald Bell (R-5th Ward). "We all just follow the leader, and our leader happens to like to smoke," Murray said. non-smokers, "But I decided not to, since the mayor already has one suit pending against him." (Wheeler is being sued by Councilman Belcher fol- lowing Wheeler's one-vote win in last spring's mayoral election. Belcher is charging that he lost due to voter fraud cher (R-5th Ward). "How can we ex- pect citizens to abide by the law if we break it?" "I wish they would abide by the rules," said Councilman- Earl Greene (D-2nd Ward), "because I don't smoke and I have an aversion to anything fore- lead of a number of other states and pass legislation to ban smoling in all public places. ."I think that I'll just have to go to Lansing and lobby against that," said Wheeler. And he lit up another cigar- ette, just to show how serious he was. ---;--- _ ,,.. . S. African ekishes kill rtwo more KING WILLIAM'S TOWN, South Africa (AP)-Police killed two blacks in separate clashes yesterday, raising the death toll to four since the weekend funeral of black leader Steve Biko. Biko died two weeks ago while in police detention. His funeral Sunday was attended by some 20,000 mourners. Violence erupted yesterday in this small town near the eastern Cape coast where Biko was born and was buried. POLICE SAID 17year-old Wiseman Tyakuma, a student, was killed when police opened fire after rioting youths set fire to the office of the local Bantu African administration board, overtur- ned a police vehicle and shattered fac- tory windows.. Earlier, police reported a black ur- ban guerrilla armed with a machine gun was killed and two white security policemen wounded in a gun battle in Soweto, the black township outside Johannesburg,*450umiles north of here. Police officials said a quantity of ar- mswere seized after the gunfight. SUNDAY NIGHT black rioters, ram- paging through a township near East London, 30 miles from here, stoned to death two black policemen. In an unrelated development, Moki Cekisani, a political detainee and divisional head of Biko's Black People's Convention (BPO), was taken to a hospital Monday in the coastal city of Port Elizabeth, 125 miles to the south- west. The eastern Cape police chief, Col. P.J. Goosen, said Cekisani "is an epileptic suffererand,kaccording to doctors, he is receiving normal medical treatment for epilepsy." Carter energyabill sla)shed by Senate threat to veto any bill that deregu- was engineered by Senate WASHINGTON (AP)- The Senate lates natural gas prices. cans and oil-state Democrat Republi- ts. dealt major new blows to President Carter's energy program yesterday, prompting a counterattack from the President against the oil industry and an appeal to senators to stop dis- mantling his plan. Accusing big oil of trying to "jeopardize^ our energy future," Carter urged . the Senate to reject "narrow special interest attacks on all segments" of his national energy program. The President spoke in th, White House press room after the Senate Finance Committee, rejecting the heart of his energy plan, defeated his proposal to force conservation by taxing U.S. crude oil. BUT EVEN AS Carter was speak- ing the full Senate rejected in a new test vote his plan to keep federal controls on natural gas prices. The 53-39 vote, following action to halt a filibuster of an industry- Supported - deregulation measure, was the second time a majority of the Senate has gone on record against Carter's gas-pricing plan.: And it came despite the President's THE VOTE KILLED an effort by Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.), and other administration allies to revive the Carter plan. The move Last week, the Senate voted by a six-vote margin to continue debating the industry proposal to lift price controls from natural gas as an alter- See SENATE, Page 9. AFS CME local. toB consult with union leadership Officials of the American Federa- tion of State, County and Municipal Employes (AFSCME, Local 1583), will meet with national AFSCME officials in Washington, D.C., today to. discuss the University's sub- contracting of housekeeping person- nel. Local 1583 President Dwight New- man, Bargaining Chairman Art An- derson and Secretary-Treasurer Tim Seguin will seek the national office's advice on how to deal with the labor issue which is currently embroiling the University Hospital. LAST FRIDAY, Anderson said the union was "at war with the Univer- See 'U', Page 9 Brunt and fbear it Scott Reit (with look of determination in the rear), Warren Thornwaite (squnited eyes, open mouth in center), Pete Kretzchmar (digging his body into the right side of the photo) and others found out "they just don't make ropes like they used to." In the first annual Field Day between Alice Lloyd and Mosher-Jordan residents the rope snapped, both teams piled up, and a draw was called. Better ropes next year, guys! : Vance defends Panama treaty before Senate WASHINGTON(AP )-+Secretary of State Cyrus Vance said yesterday that Senate refusal to ratify the new Panama Canal treaty would increase the likelihood that Panama would one day seize control of the waterway. Seeking to counter conservative critics who say that Panama might be ecnouraged to repudiate ; the new agreement, Vance said if the Senate aspproves the treaty, "We will be much better off than we were in the past." VANCI~ AND the two treaty negotiators, Sol Linowitz and Ellsworth Bunker, received a generally friendly reception from the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, which opened three weeks of hearings on the canal treaty. Committee members focused most heavily on a treaty provision which Vance said gives the United States unlimited right to intervene militarily if the neutrality of the waterway is threatened, even after Panama is given control in the year 2000. "This is really the gut issue that bothers me and my colleagues," said Sen. Claiborne Bell (D-R.I.). LINOWITZ SAID the Panamanian negotiators understood when the treaty was signed that the United States can decide on its own when to protect its in- terests in the canal. In no -way, he said, "does the treaty, li itour ability to act." On the issue of allowing U.S. war- ships to pass through the canal, Linowitz said after -the Panamanians have taken over in 2000, American vessels are guaranteed priority treat- ment. "U.S. SHIPS GO to head of the line even if other ships are waiting to get in- to the canal," he said. Federal funds split RITA CLANCY, far right, explores the University of Califor- after ch'arging the university with discrimination 'against nia- Davis campus with friends on her long-awaited first day non-minority applicants. of classes. Clancy won admission to the UC-D medical school Classes begin foronetim of 'reverse discrimination' governors' AUSTIN, Tex. (AP)-The lines were drawn closely yesterday by the gover- nors of New York, Illinois and Oklahoma over the distribution of federal dollars between Snowbelt and 0 meetngl he has examined several studies of state-by-state distribution of federal spending, and added, "For the state of Illinois, the bottom line is disastrous." Gov. David Boren of Oklahoma DAVIS, Calif. (AP) - A "very nervous" Rita Clancy at- tended her first class at the University of California medical press and very afraid of what student reaction would be," he said. "I think the first two weeks are going to be extremely