CIA PAYMENTS See Editorial Page I rP Ar A6F t r4tgan ~~IatP 40 SPRIGHTLY High - 32* See Today for details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVII, No. 125 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, March 1, 1977 Ten Cents Ten Pages plus Su Ii ippiemen c n- ,f u SE S3 tAi CALL Z i Head count The last little noggin has been counted and the tally is in. You might be interested to know that you are one of 33,250 students enrolled at the Uni- versity of Michigan's Ann Arbor campus. That's 312 fewer tuition checks than last year. Enroll- ment figures for individual cdlleges and schools reveal that the College of Engineering registered the largest increase of students - from 4,115 in winter, 1976 to 4,429 this year. The biggest drop in enrollment came in' the School of Education where there were 3,175 last year and only 2,639 this year. As for Literature, Science and Arts, enrollment is 15,524, as compared to last year's 15,632. " The beat goes on Were you wondering why we can still publish the Daily even though our printers belong to the striking AFSCME union? Bet you thought you'd caught us contradicting ourselves - supporting the strike on our Editorial page, but using scab labor to put out a paper. Well never fear - the Daily is still the bastion of liberalism you always thought it was. We aren't using scabs, it's just that in the interest of keeping students in- formed, AFSCME has asked our printers to stay on the job. Hope that answers all your questions. Happenings... ...start off today with a reminder for those of you who are filling out Project Outreach intern applications that the deadline is March 4 ... at 11 a.m., the Student Support Committee for AFSCME will hold a rally on the Diag ... at the Ecumenical Campus Center at noon today, Brian Kuttner of the South African Liberation Commit- tee will speak on "Inside-South Africa: The Mean- ing of Apartheid" ... also at noon, these will be "Music at Midday" in the Pendleton Arts Center of the Union ... Anne Waldman will hold a poetry reading in the Pendleton Rm. at 4:10 ... and, lo and behold, you can go to the Pendleton Rm. at 7 tonight and listen to John Trudell, chairman of the American Indian Movement and Selo Black Crow, who'll speak on "Native American Sovereign- ty"...and after you're good and sick of the Pen- dleton Rm., you can mosey on over to Rackham Auditorium to hear a free .concert entitled "Con- - trasts," featuring the music of Bartok, Mozart and Brahms. Musicians will include William Doppman, pianist, Gordon Staples, violinist, David Shifrin, clarinetist. Boogie on down, fellas. The great cover-up You can't judge a book by its cover, the old adage goes, and no one knows it better than An- drew McNair of Hartford, Connecticut. It seems McNair went out the other day and picked up Alex Haley's "Roots." However, upon settling back to read it, McNair sensed that something was not quite right. About ten pages into the book, it dawned on McNair that he wasn't following the heroic struggle of Kunta Kinte but rather the graci- ous, Old South existence of Scarlet O'Hara, Rhett Butler, Mammy and the rest of the "Gone with the Wind" gang. Bamboozled representatives of Doubleday company, which publishes both books, theorize that the "Roots" bookcover found its way onto a copy of "Gone with the Wind" by way of a mix-up at the printing plant. Pass the grits. Keep the faith Of all the things car salesmen have been ac- cused of, under-confidence is-not a trait that readi- ly comes to mind. But according to Detroiter Joe Girad, that is the largest obstacle any huckster has to overcome. Joe siould know. He's the num- ber one car salesman in the world, by authority of the trustworthy Guinness Book of World Rec- ords. And after ten years in the numero uno spot, Toe is naAw revealing the secrets of his rec- ord-breaking sales technique. "The first person you have to sell in " your life is yourself," Joe preaches. "This was my problem in life - I used to leave the house a non-believer." Now Joe sports a gold "1" pin in his lapel. "I put it there because I'm 'the greatest person. There's no one in this world better than me. Remember one thing, when God put you on this world he made you one of a kind. And that makes you. the No. 1 person in the world. -'I ain't no better than you and you ain't no better than me. Tihere's nobody better than nobody." Okay, all you folks got that? Now get out there and sell! On the inside ... Take a gander at the Digest on Page 3 and read abort the first PBB-related lawsuit. On the Editorial Page, there are some MSA notes ... Arts Page features Jim Stimson's review of Leo Kottke's Sunday night oerformance ...and on Sports page, Dave Renbarger gives some tips on how to get your paws on some NCAA trylrnament tickets. AFSCIME team to make original contract demands By BOB ROSENBAUM When representatives of the American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employes (AFSCME, Local -183) sit down with the University at the bargaining table today, they will be offering essentially the same economic proposals they offered when they first sat down last November. Although Chief University negotiator William Neff would not comment on the union's proposals last night, several months ago he had called them "unreasonable." AFSCME BARGAINING TEAM members will demand that the University "take the cap off the cost of living" and offer "a $1.04 (per hour) wage increase over 23 months" ending Sep- tember 30, 1979. The union also demands that no holidays be taken away from Daily Photo by BRAD BENJAMIN Striking AFSCME workers try to prevent a University garbage truck from picking up trash at West Quad yesterday afternoon. Refuse collection has been disrupted since the strike began last Wednesday. FACULTY SENATE TO REVIEW PLAN: DPP delaye By BRIAN BLANCHARD and PATTY MONTEMURRI The Department of Popula- tion Planning (DPP) in the School of Public Health will get a one month reprieve, the Fac- ulty Senate was told yesterday. Associate Vice-President for Academic Affairs Carolyne Da- vis told 45 Senate members at a special meeting that the contro- versial plan to drop DPP would go to the Regents at their April meeting, rather than in March as originally scheduled. "WE DON'T NEED to rush the process," she said, adding that the extra month will allow further review of the recommen- dation to eliminate the depart- ment. Davis outlined the third draft of new University policies on elimination of programs. She said these guidelines could see service as often as twice a year because of the University's bud- get crisis. The new policy, tentatively approved by the Regents Feb- at transit studied By DENNIS SABO What's wrong with Dial-A- Ride? The University's Institute for Social Research (ISR) has em- barked on an $80,000 study to find ways to improve the ser- vice of the Dial-A-Ride and. other Ann Arbor Transit Au- thority (AATA) programs. A COMPUTERIZED random sample of approximately 1,500 city residents - including both students and permanent resi- dents - will be contacted by ISR to find out if they use the transit systems, and if not, to find out why. According to ISR Project Di- rector Sandra Newman, the fed- erally-funded study will try to See CITY'S, Page 7 ecision kduntl ruary 18, is being applied in the cases of two programs proposed for scrapping, DPP and the Speech and Hearing Sciences Program. ' SENATE members expressed concern with certain provisions in the program discontinuance guidelines, including provisions for tenure status and faculty participation in the review pro- cedures. Hoping to insure faculty par- ticipation in the final program closure policy, the Faculty Sen- ate members unanimously ap- proved a motion by Jesse Gor- don, psychology professor, ask- BULLETIN LONDON - Uganda's Presi- dent Idi Amin has declared that American residents are free to go anywhere they like, inside or outside Uganda, Ra- dio Kampala reported today. By AP and Reuter Ugandan President Idi Amin has postponed a meeting set for tomorrow with some 240 Ameri- cans, Radio Uganda said last night. THE BROADCAST from Kam- pala said another date for the meeting would be announced later but gave no further de- tails. After the broadcast, the U.S. State Department withdrew plans to have top American diplomat Talcott Seelye attend the Entebbe meeting, depart- ment sources said. Secretary of State Cyrus Vance called for an explanation from Ugandan Charge d'Af- faires Paul Cherubet, of Amin's decision. VANCE TOLD reporters he had no idea what lay behind the latest Ugandan radio announce- ment: "I just don't know," he said. Vance said he expected Cher- ubet to call at the State De- partment later last night but did not expect to see him per- sonally. to be April ing the Regents to postpone ap- proval of the document until the Senate Assembly endorses it. Even though Davis explained she didn't "expect a total fac- ulty . . .,to determine the posi- tion the group (faculty) would take" in reviewing programs for termination, Robert Weeks, a humanities professor, asserted that "people in this room are quite willing to sift through reams of data" to evaluate pro- grams. "The faculty wants to be meaningfully involved," he said. THE MOST recent draft, dat- ed Feb. 23, promises .that "ev- See FACULTY, Page 10 AFSCME workers, that no jobs that the University place a freeze no tradeswork be included in maintenance mechanic classifi- cations. The six proposals to be of- fered today are taken from dis- cussions held between picket captains and union members since the AFSCME walkout be- gan last Wednesday. "THAT'S WHAT people are talking about," Union Local President Joel Block said last night. He said he was "sure there will be more, demands" submitted to the union bargain- ing team by membership. On February 16, the' Univer- sity and AFSCME reached a tentative contract ;agreement which called for a 55-cent per hour wage raise over a two-year period, and no cost of living al- lowance. The proposed contract was overwhelmingly rejected by union members. Block confirmed that he will be present at negotiations to- day, "to show that I'm with the bargaining team and see the University's attitude at the ta- ble." Union members had request- ed that Block join the other bargainers when talks resumed, apparently because they were See AFSCME, Page 10 classifications be downgraded, on union parking fees and that dorm By BOB ROSENBAUM Waldo owes the University nearly $260 for his February room and board fees. He wrote up a check for the amount, by- passed the Student Accounts of- fice, and took the money to the Ann Arbor Tenants Union. Wal- do has joined the dormitory rent strike. It's simple: The Accounts of- fice 'won't see his cash until the cafeteria food is fresh again, the bathrooms are sanitary again and the sidewalks are cleared again. And that won't be very likely to occur until campus ser- vice personnel go back to work. "IT'S ALL LEGAL," rent Block Students opt to withhold strike organizer and Alice Lloyd resident Bob Miller assures stu- dents. "It is our right as resi- dents to withhold rent if our landlord (the University) is neg- ligent in providing services." Sofar, about 97 students have taken advantage of their "rights," signing up for the rent strike and handing their money - about $23,600 worth - over to the Tenants Union (TU) for safekeeping. TU has offered to take stu- dent rent paymerts and hold them in escrow while the strike by 'campus service workers is on. After the University and AFSCME settle their differenc- es, TU will release the funds and University bills will be paid. The students and the TU as- sume that as long as the Uni- versity is informed that a stu- dent is participating in the rent strike, no penalty will be levied. Under normal. circumstances, any bills paid after the due date are given a five dollar sur- charge until the following month's bill comes due. WHILE ANN ARBOR'S TU is accu stomed to organizing rent Strikes,the idea Isa new one for University dorm residents. By withholding their rent, /stu- dents who support AFSCME hope to out financial pressure on the University to meet the demands of the striking service workers and have services re- stored as quickly as possible. Since the AFSCME walkout See SOME, Page 2 postpones meeting The Ugandan announcement monitored in Washington ap- parently took the State Dep art- ment by surprise. EARLIER IN THE day, the Kampala radio said Amin told a small group of Americans at Entebbe they were "brothers and sisters" to Ugandans and he intended to honor them and all other Americans in the coun- try at the mass meeting tomor- row. The Narobi newspaper Daily Nation, however, reported that armed plainclothesmen have been following the Americans day and night.1 In Washington, President Carter sent a message to Amin thanking him for his assur- ances that the lives of U. S. citizens in Uganda were not in danger. A White House spokes- man said the message was sent through the West German Em- bassy, which represents the United States in Uganda. IN ITS earlier broadcasts, ra- dio Kampala quoted Amin as saying President Carter "was still new and young in office" and not quite familiar with Af- rican affairs. It said .Amin had told a Saudi Arabian diplomat that Carter should have studied the situation carefully and found out "the true facts" be- fore making any public com- ments. At the same time, Amin was said to have told,the Saudi charge that the Americans in Uganda were secure and well and that Amin "has no problem at all" with them. A government source in Kam- pala, Uganda's capital, said more than 800 dancers and 1,000 chieftains and officials were to have been at Entebbe tomorrow to entertain and honor the Americans. See AMIN, Page 2 -........... ........rV: ............ .V ....,, " .:: .: ..".....,' W !. '. .. ,sV ..Vffl . ... . .. z:::. ..: . 'IX X-1 Xll ................:" i':"::':"::":::........,::r.1\A::'"..ti.JJ::':':r. inR4":1:r '...',VC" ":':"1"J.Vr:'.Vrr.Y.Yrr:r""i:'}:"::'::'t.:: ':":':'J.:S"r."r.".V. "rl1ti . : : J. : : . ': :ti{ :: Love says we must choose a new future By JULIE ROVNER "I believe that a set of images of the future has been painted in our minds; and that certain things are happening right now, such as the energy crisis, that are causing those images to break down, and leaving us with just a vacuum," Sam Love told a crowd of over 150 at the Rackham Amphitheatre last night. Writer and environmental activist Love's slide presentation and lecture, entitled "Remember Tomorrow," was part of the Fu- ture Worlds lecture series. Van kills pedestrian crossing Waslitenaw LOVE'S WIDE-RANGING talk touched on topics, from solar houses to flying cities to World War II advertising campaigns. Love said Americans. have a view of the future that doesn't coincide with reality anymore. He noted how energy-intensive many former views of the future have been. "It's an image many of the national publications have projected. It may be that this future that we've projected for ourselves will have to be totally re-evaluated (because of the energy crisis)," he said. Love stressed the role that advertising by major corporations during World War II played in building American's views of the future. Since the major industries were so busy producing arms, they could only offer consumers promisest of things to come, rath- e than nnds for immedite u se he sa id A . entra ltheme th1 By LAURIE YOUNG A 28-year-old pedestrian Was fatally struck Sunday morning 2:40 a.m. and Traskas was an- nounced dead on arrival at St. Joseph Hospital. He suffered a x;jx