WOMEN'S CONFERENCE See Editorial Page V' P L c itgul ai1 CREEPY High.--35° Low --25'0 See Today for details Vol. LXXXVIII, No. 65 Ann Arbor, Michian-Tuesday, November 22, 1977 Ten Cents }0 Pages MAYORAL SUIT HEARINGS RESUME 'Two By JULIE ROVNER An appeal was filed yesterday in the 'Michigan Supreme Court on behalf of two University women protesting a Monroe judge's ruling that they must reveal their votes in the disputed city mayoral election. Meanwhile, hearings on the mayoral -suit will resume tomorrow after a delay -of nearly two months. The portion of the suit concerning the two women and 18 --other voters who accidently voted ille- gally in last spring's election will not be city' dealt with, pending the Supreme Court's decision whether to hear the case. THE APPEAL is another step up the judicial ladder in a controversy which began last April when incumbent mayor Albert Wheeler defeated Repub- lican Councilman Louis Belcher by one vote. Belcher is suing Wheeler, charging that he is holding his post illegally because of a number of disputed votes. While some of the disputed votes are in the form of paper ballots and oters machine tallies which could not be recounted, by far the most attention had been given to the 20 illegal votes cast by township residents. DUE TO THE USE of faulty street guides by some city registrars, the 20 were accidently registered to vote in an election for which they were not eligi- ble. Because the number of illegal votes was far larger than the margin of vic- tory, Judge James Kelley (Monroe), al- lowed Belcher's attorney to ask the peo- ple to reveal their votes. The first three complied, but Univer- Sadat returns home to, hero 's welcome file In sity junior Susan VanHattum refused on the grounds that it was her consti- tutional right to keep her vote a secret. Kelley cited her for contempt, and she was handcuffed and held briefly before being released. Graduate student Diane Lazinsky also refpsed to talk, but was not cited. ATTORNEYS FOR VanHattum and Lazinsky immediately went to the Court of Appeals, which halted the proceedings while it considered the case. Two weeks ago, the court ruled that since the 20 had no right to vote in the first place, they also had no right to keep their votes secret. In yesterday's appeal, VanHattim's lawyer Jonathan Rose called that deci- sion "an erosion of secrecy of the ballot, long cherished as central to the concept of democracy."~ HE ALSO CALLED the court's deci- sion not to quash the subpeonas errone- ous because "it will either force a pub- lic disclosure of a'vote or jail sentences for Susan VanHattum and Diane Lazin- sky. Robert Henry, Belcher's attorney, said he thought Kelley would probably ask for closing arguments on the suit's first two counts, which include five dis- puted absentee ballots and four voting machines whose totals were incorrectly recorded. Robert Grace, Wheeler's lawyer, in- dicated that he, too, would be ready with closing arguments for the two counts. SHOULD KELLEY make a ruling solely on the basis of testimony on two of the three counts, the supreme court case would automatically become See TWO, Page 10 iew appeal CAIRO (AP)-President Anwar Sadat returned home to a hero's welcome yesterday after opening a new chapter in Middle East history by telling the Israeli people in their own capital, "No more war." Hundreds of thousands of Egyptians cheered their president at the airport and along the motorcade route into Cairo. ' A GOVERNMENT spokesperson said Sadat's historic visit to Israel had succeeed "100 percent" in preparing for new Geneva peace talks.' "We can say that hostilities of the past 30 years have been ended in 30 hours," the spokesperson said, according to the of- ficial Middle East news agency. It said the spokesperson was a member of Sadat's delegation on the trip to Jerusalem. The news agency quoted him as saying Israeli leaders : tried to persuade Sadat to settle their differences and sign a peace treaty but Sadat refused, telling them the aim of his visit was not to cdnclude a separate peace but to prepare carefully for reconvening the Geneva conference. "ISRAELI LEADERS showed understanding and real interest in peace," the spokesperson told the news agency. Sadat, addressing the Israelis before leaving for Cairo, said, "We've had enough-four wars in 30 years." The Egyptian president had gambled Arab unity, his political future and even his life on the success of his 44-hour visit. See related local stories, Page 7 Thousands of Egyptians were bused to the Cairo airport for Sadat's return. Many carried banners reading, "Welcome hero of peace," "Long live the leadership of Egypt," and "God bless your moves for peace." HASTILY-ERECTED arches lined the motorcade route with signs saying, "God is with you," and "The people rally behind Sadat." In Cairo, sirens wailed and car horns honked as crowds packed 10-deep behind barricades chanted, "Live, Live 0 See SADAT, Page 7 Silly cone Freshperson Marla Horovitz tried out three ice cream flavors at once yesterday, but the sloppy sunshine caused some sloppy coning. A SPECIAL SECTION; The University's dilemma over South Africa stock ....-- a 5 . V , I C. : Y , . . . '' . i L ' 'ae . c'\ ,a .. .G The pro and con of pulling out By RENE BECKER, BRIAN BLANCHARD,. and JULIE ROVNER As tensions rise ever higher in the black ghettoes of South Africa, a storm is brewing an ocean away over American corporations whose busi- ness activities in that country lend strength to its apartheid govern- ment. I Institutions such as the University have come under fire for investing in corporations with South African hold- ings. Africans living in the U.S. as well as many Americans argue that investors in South Africa are partly responsible for buoying the white minority regime, and that withdraw- al of the funds would hasten the coming of a new South African politi- cal order. The New York Times has reported that as much as 80 per cent of the country's private sector is wholly or partly foreign-owned, or dependent on foreign financing. It is that broad support, some critics of the white regime say, that can be used as a lkver for change. THE PRESSURE for withdrawal of investments has been particularly strong on American college cam- puses, where foreign students have prompted debate over the invest- ments question. Though revenue from investments comprises less than three per cent of the Univer- sity's total revenue, administrators have reacted with extreme caution, avoiding the rhetoric of the debate as well as substantive action. United Nations ambassador An- drew Young has said, "It is import- ant for us to use this coming dec- ade to promote peaceful changes- (in South Africa). We must use our ... economic power to accomplish this." But administrators such as Univer- sity President Robben Fleming are not so sure that unilateral economic action oromises constructive change. "I DON'T THINK anyone approves of apartheid," Fleming said, "but you get the very emotional reactions, to' two main issues. One is the question of whether the withdrawal of investments will possibly do more harm to the blacks than to the whites, because of the loss of jobs. "The other is the problem that if you do precipitate a revolutioi, whether you might end up with a totalitarian regime where no one would have any human rights at all." But Fleming, like many others who have been challenged on the issue, says he has made "no firm conclu- sions" as yet. Of the top ten multi-national ei- ployers in South Africa, the Univer- sity has holdings in siv - Ouin- Investments, The Daily, and the Board for The Daily staff was caught off guard when it realized last month that its own financial governing body, the Board for Student Publica- tions, is indirectly investing funds - mostly Daily profits - in corpora- tions which do business in South Africa. Indignation was the first reac- tion. The Daily has repeatedly con- demned such investments by the University, and the discovery that University investments included the Board's own prompted many staffers to feel hypocrisy had been forced on them. Student Publications Neil Shine, managing editor of the Detroit Free Press, questioned the thoughtfulness of withdrawing the funds. "If I was sure we could take some- thing out of the hands of the white racists by withdrawing money, then I would support (the motion)," he said. "But I'm not sure." He said the withdrawal might force blacks out of work without hurting the minority regime. OTHERS NOTED that the Board has no editorial jurisdiction over The Daily, and thus no political function, The Board rejected the proposal by a vote of seven to two. AT A DAILY staff meeting Novem- ber 13, firm objections were raised to the Board's vote. Despite the under- standing that the staff is not respon- sible for Board investments, it was felt by many staffers that The Daily's editorial position had nevertheless been compromised. The thought of Daily profits being invested in South Africa, when the paper had con- demned such investments, seemed totally incongruous and improper to many. RnmP felt that n evmhnlie ,nP2dn3