VOTER PRIVACY See Editorial Page . E LIE aug UNFORTUNATE See Today, Page 3 Vol. IXXXVIII, No. 24 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, October 5, 1977 Ten Cents Ten Pages Voters must reveal mayoral choices v§ Judge hits township woman with contempt By GREGG KRUPA irregularities in the last election would alter the out- Republicans and five Democrats, it is likely Belcher come if corrected, and he's gone to court to prove it. would be appointed Mayor. Monroe County Circuit Court Judge James Kelley Belcher named Wheeler, the Washtenaw County ruled yesterday that people who voted illegally in last Board of Canvassers and Jerome Weiss, City Clerk as HENRY INTRODUCED PRECEDENTS for the April's mayoral election can be forced on the witness co-defendants in the suit. ruling - one from 1929, the other from 1931. Those stand to reveal how they voted. Belcher's law suit, being conducted by former decisions declared that if witnesses admit they voted Twenty people who resided in township peninsulas Republican City Councilman Robert Henry, Jr., asks illegally, they are liable to disclose their electoral . which jut into city boundaries registered and voted in the judge to either declare Belcher the victor - over- choices. =V the election, won by Mayor Albert Wheeler by one turning the election results - or declare the election vote, void. If the election is declared void by Kelley, the But the first person asked refused to reveal how < City Charter provides that City Council will appoint she voted, even after being threatened by Judge COUNCILMAN LOUIS BELCHER, Wheeler's Re- an official to fill the vacancy. heeler publican challenger, says those and other voting Since the Council is presently comprised of six See VOTERS, Page 2 Belcher ACLU's Dorsen assais Court By DENNIS SABO The Supreme Court and the Carter Administration are failing to provide much needed civil lights legislation, Norman Dorsen told a luncheon group at the Michigan Union yesterday. "This is not a good time for people's rights," the national chairman of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) said. "People's rights are less secure than they were ten years ago." CALLING THE COURT "insen- sitive" Dorsen criticized Monday's ruling against James Gaylord, a high school teacher fired in 1972 af- ter admitting his homesexuality. Rather than give in to Court decisions which have undermined civil liberties recently, Dorsen said the ACLU is digging in for the fight. SALT agreement near completion Carter tells U.N. Dorsen "We believe they (gays) have equal rights legislatively and in the courts," he said. And, he said, the ACLU is not only interested in protecting gay rights, but also in protecting any other civil liberties which "the government is trying to take away., ACCORDING TO Dorsen, the UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) - President Carter told the United Na- tions yesterday that a new strategic arms limitation agreement between the U.S. and the Soviet Union is in sight, and added that the U.S. would be willing in some later treaty to cut its nu- clear arsenal in half. "Peace will not be assured until the weapons of war are finally put away,'" the President said. "IF WE ARE to have any assurance that our children are to live out their lives in a world that satisfies our hopes - or that they will have a chance to live at all - we must finally come to terms with this enormous force and turn it to beneficial ends." ACLU is working to pass legisla- tion to control secret intelligence, including regulation of the FBI. ACLU wants a ban on political surveillance, wire tapping and the use of government. informers for political purposes, all of which have been determined unlawful by the courts, Dorsen said. See ACLU'S, Page 7, 1 After Carter's speech, Oleg Troyan- ovsky, the Soviet ambassador to the United Nations, said, "On the whole, it was a well-balanced speech but there was nothing new in the U.S. position." Carter, however, had said only last week there was no immediate prospect for a new weapons treaty with the Russians despite "some further progress." The President also had said after a White House meeting last week with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko he wouldn't be "optimistic" about an early settlement. A lower-ranking Soviet representa- tive said the absence of any reference to human rights - Carter's major theme when he addressed the United Nations last spring - was a "victory" for the Russians. BRITISH AMBASSADOR Ivor Rich- ard said he felt Carter "gave a major push to controlling proliferation of nu- clear weapons and arms control." U.S. officials said some major differ- ences had been resolved in talks which Secretary of State Cyrus Vance held here with Gromyko. But they said there are other differences remaining to be resolved by negotiations in Geneva. After his speech, the President tur- ned his attention to the Middle East and received what he described as a "posi- tive" message from Egyptian Presi- dent Anwar Sadat. The U.S. Defense Minister said the Soviet Union has de- veloped a satellite-killing weapon that could attack some U.S. satellites in outer space. The U.S. does not have a similar capability. See Story, page 7. The President refused to divulge the message from Sadat, which was de- livered to Carter by Egyptian Foreign Minister Ismail Fahmy. However, Egypt is known to be concerned about an expanded Soviet role in the quest for a Middle East settlement and the ab- sence so far of explicit U.S. support for a Palestinian state. ANOTHER SETBACK FOR CAR TER: enate WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate narrowly voted yesterday to lift price controls from newly discovered nat- ural gas, rejecting President Car- ter's proposal for continued regula- tion. Breaking a 2 -week deadlock, the Senate approved the deregulation proposal by a 50-46 vote, then went on to pass the overall natural gas bill by voice vote. A HOUSE - SENATE conference committee now must decide the final form the bill will take. The House passed a similar measure containing the President's proposal for contin- ued price controls. President Carter previously had said he would veto a deregulation bill like the one passed by the Senate. The measure approved by the Senate after a frequently bitter debate would allow controls to con- tinue for two years at a sharply increased price which producers could charge. AFTER THAT, controls would be totally lifted and producers would be permitted to charge whatever the market would bear. deregulates Natural gas, which has seen a The Senate's fourfold increase in prices since 1973, setback to Presi is now unregulated if used in the program. But it states where it is produced but three previous controlled under a lid of $1.46 per deregulation fo thousand cubic feet when shipped in hand, interstate pipelines. Carter wanted to end this dual THE VOTE C market by extending controls to the filibuster again intrastate markets while lifting the lapsed. Leader price lid to $1.75 per thousand cubic accused the Whi feet for newly discovered gas. ing them. DEREGULATION would increase Although ad gas prices, with the cost of imme- made a last eff diately deregulated gas rising at a the President's faster rate than that remaining phase out pri under federal price controls. The nine-year period Senate bill contains a clause which was rejected by would require gas pipelines to give Despite heavy homeowners the first chance to buy House and Sena the cheaper gas still under govern- ers were unable ment price controls. of Republicans The vote came after supporters of crats who wantf deregulation had unveiled - a com- promise that would reduce a pro- THE SENAT posed price ceiling of $2.48 per gas decontrol m thousand cubic feet to $2.25. But failed by four Sens. Lloyd Bentsen (D-Tex.), and By its vote, James Pearson (R-Kan.), remained replaced the ad] firm in urging that controls be lifted ed plan with th after two years. sure, which i w natural gas 'action was a major dent Carter's energy t was expected after trial votes showed rces had the upper CAME a day after a st deregulation col- s of the filibuster te House of abandon- dministration allies ort to salvage part of plan by offering to ce controls over a d, this "compromise" the Senate. lobbying, the White ate Democratic lead- to shake the coalition and oil-state Demo- price controls lifted. E passed a similar neasure in 1975 but it votes in the House. the Senate formally ministration-support- ie deregulation mea- ould remove price limits from newly discovered on- shore gas after two years and from offshore gas after five. Under the deregulation measure, there would be a lid on gas prices of about $2.48 for the next two years until controls are removed. Both those who wanted to continue price controls and those who wanted them lifted had sought an end to the filibuster, which tied up Senate business for 14 days. Carter told Fahmy "if we c;- just keep the Arabs and Israelis moviri in the right direction, we can see pec come." A key White House adviser told re- porters the administration "anticipates a very difficult Geneva , conference" which might even recess in discord. LSA officials consider possible changes in By SHELLEY WOLSON According to LSA officials, the class of 1982 may face a new set of LSA distribution and English compo- sition requirements when they start school next fall. A new LSA curriculum sub-com- mittee will begin a series of study meetings next week to review the. present distribution requirements and discuss possible areas of change. frosh requirements Changes in distribution and Eng- affect students entering next fall," lish requirements could mean either Knott said. looser or tighter academic stand- The English composition require- ards. None of the LSA officials would ment will be reviewed by the LSA speculate on what the changes might English Composition Board, chaired be. by English professor Dan Fader. "THE COMMITTEE will try to see THEY WILL MEET to "develop a" what sorts of problems there are with proposal for the English Composition present requirements and make requirement and their long-range recommendations if changes are function will be to implement that warranted," said associate LSA proposal," Frye said. 777..~ " '