The Michigan Daily-Thursday, November 17, 1977-Page 7 Josten's College Jewelry Representative Will Re Here For ERS' APPEAL MAYDELAY HEARINGS: layoral trial to By GREGG KRUPA Monroe County Circuit Court Judge James Kelley, the presiding judge in Ann Arbor's continuing mayoral dis- pute, has set November 23 as the date for the resumption of court proceedings in that case. But the suit will probably not resume that early since attorneys for two University women who voted improperly in last April's mayoral elec- tion are planning an appeal to the Michigan Supreme Court. Attorneys for Diane Lazinsky and Susan VanHattum are seeking to over- turn an appeals court decision ordering the two women to reveal their votes be- cause they had been improperly reg- istered. - JUDGE KELLEY'S move yesterday was a response to a letter from Coun- cilman Louis Belcher's attorney, Rob- ert Henry. Belcher was Mayor Albert Wheeler's Republican challenger in April. Henry asked the judge to s'It a trial date so the opposing attorneys would move quickly in making their appeal. It was because of Henry's line of questioning that the trial - now in its .seventh month - was interrupted in October. Henry cited two precedents for requiring 20 voters who had been registered improperly to reveal their votes. Three voters complied with the court order, but the two women re-' fused. VanHattum was cited for con- tempt and handcuffed. The next day Kelley decided to delay the , trial to allow an appeal to the Michigan Court of Appeals. EDWARD GOLDMAN, an American resume. Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) lawyer whois representing Lazinsky, said he is still working on the appeal. "The appli- cation for leave to appeal has already been written. If I get the brief written and typed tonight, I'll file it Thursday or Friday," he said yesterday. The state supreme court must grant the motion for leavestoappeal before actually hearing the case. Once a mo- tion is filed, it usually takes the court three or four months just to decide whether or not to hear the case. However, one attorney said, the court may hear the motions on an emergency Nov. 23 basis "because of the time pressures which are inherent in this type of case." Mayor Albert Wheeler has already served seven months of his elected term. If the state supreme court does not speed up the normal appeals process, Wheeler will have served fully one-half of the two-year term by the time the appeal is heard. In addition, attorneys representing the two women have said they may ap- peal the case to the United States Supreme Court if the state Supreme Court does not hand down a favorable decision. GEO maps strategy THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN DEPARTMENT OF PHILOSOPHY PRESENTS PROFESSOR JULIUS SENSAT The University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee "Marx and Habermas on Historical Progress" DATE: Friday, 18 November, 1977 TIME: 8:00 P.M. place; AMPHITHEATRE RACKHAM SCHOOL OF GRADUATE STUDIES " White gdld " encrustings " full name engraved " sunburst stones (Continued fromnPage 1) The committee proposed bargain- ing for specific limits on class size for each type of class. The limits would be based on a warning figure that can be exceeded with the TA's permis- sion, and an absolute maximum not to be exceeded under any circum- stances. DISCUSSION and recitation see- ions would have a warning figure of 19 students and a maximum of 24. The warning number for labs would xbe 20, with a maximum of 24. Some classes, primarily in 'the math de- partment, would be allowed a warn- ing figure of 25 and a maximum of 30. Also, the number of teaching ap- Regrets Vhuckles fill Dean's speech (Continued from Page 1) without breaking'his rhythm. Dean admitted his guilt in the Watergate affair, saying: "Those were the worst years of my life. I can't exactly point to when I crossed that line (marking right from wrong) but I know I crossed it. I wanted to prove myself. "BUT I WASN'T in a position to go into the Oval Office and say, 'Listen Dick, this doesn't go any more - you're President now'," he said. Dean said when he went to the prosecutors to tell all he knew of Watergate, he didn't think he would topple the Nixon administration. "1 thought-if I came forward that others would follow. That happened to be one of the most naive judgments I have ever made. When I went to the prosecutors, there wasn't exactly a line following me." DEAN ALSO said he was "absolutely certain that there is something terribly Wrong with our justice system" when a young person can be sentenced to prison for ten years for possession of marijuana "when I only got four mon- ths for what I've done. Dean said the Watergate-related in- telligence campaign began in a memo from Richard Nixon to H. R. Haldeman in May 1971. "Task forces were studying every detail of the campaign," Dean recalled. 'The night Nixon finished reading them all, he noticed a conspicuous report missing, one on campaign intelligence. He told Haldeman, 'I want a far better intelligence program than we had in '6&.' Once that memo was sent, things started happening." DEAN SAID the man picked to lead the espionage effort, G. Gordon Liddy, did not turn out to be the man the Nixon administration originally believed him to be. "Liddy had plans that were in- credible. He planned chase games in- tercepting ground-to-air com- munication against Canada. He had plans to form prostitution squads en- ticing Democrats from their convention in Miami to posh boats off the coast. They were to be hookers from Baltimore-he claimed they were the best," Dean said. Dean was in Ann Arbor as part of speaking tour of college campuses. He whisked into Ann Arbor by cab a few minutes before the engagement began and left in another taxi immediately af- terwards, having received about $1600 for his short talk. pointments would relate proportion- ately to undergraduate enrollment. The union also discussed an af- firmative action/non-discrimination proposal that would call for a study to determine if minorities and women are being hired less often than other applicants. If a deficiency is found, the proposal demands a "good faith effort" to correct it. DATE: Thursday and Friday - Nov. 17-18 TIME: 11:00 to 4:00 PLACE: Michigan Union Main Lobby tell ouro fS weenououeciee tochange your maor. ., i 1 7:4 4 -n/1// / r 4O w l IVAIWI i Vv fJ /.tl1111v - Z"evvq I b-4/ 4404 . - - A4& 1124 r II A7wt ,,xr AAAI d/11 a4 1 / _ v -I 1 t/v - 44 /* */* . 41&4v Vt 4V N~I e1R At Anheuser-Busch, we believe in brewing Busch beer just one way. The natural way. P1W PH a --& 0% a I#1i AI A 1'94"%1 IT "r LA C' 1 L