SUNDAY MAGAZINE See Editorial Page 'YI rL 4OF A6P As&- cm t AOF :43 a t. ty LES MISERABLES High - 38* Low - 25* See Today for details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVII, No. 134 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, March 20, 1977 Ten Cents Eight Pages plus Supplement if 'mSrr EE N WS APPE CALrDMA i Candidates Night Hear it all, straight from the horses' mouths - about 16 of 'em. Dark horses and favorites in the mayoral and City Council races will be on hand tonight at 7:30 to candidly answer - or slickly side- step - queries from the average citizen. Odds are that 16 of the 17 candidates from the Demo- cratic, Republican, Human Rights, and Libertarian Parties will show up for Candidates Night, sponsor- ed by Local Motion, to be held at Community High School, 401 N. Division. Don't miss it 0 Ratification vote Members of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employes (AFSCME, Local 1583) are scheduled to vote on ratification of a newly-reached contract agreement this afternoon. Workers should bring proof of AFSCME member- ship with them to Rackham Auditorium between 1 and 3 p.m., to register their approval or disap- proval of the settlement. AFSCME leaders will be reviewing the agreement in detail at the meeting. Happenings,.. Sunday sure ain't no day of rest. At 8:30 a.m. (yawn) the University Kayak Club hosts Toledo Area Canoe and Kayak Club for a pool-slalom con- test expected to continue until noon. Held at the North Campus Recreation Bldg. Pool, it is a gratis event . . . From 2 - 4, previous and interested campers of Camp Raanana will gather for a re- union at Hillel, 1429 Hill St. . . . At the same time, Janet Maclennan will speak on "Roman Portrai- ture: Ancient and Modern Revivals" as part of free gallery talks at Kelsey Museum . . . and if nei- ther of those events interests you, there's still the Astronomical Film Festival showing "Apollo 16 Unabridged, Part 3" in Aud. 3, MLB at the same time. . . . At 3, the Jongleurs, performers of med- ieval and renaissance music, present a concert commemorating Guillame de Machaut in the Mu- seum of Art on State St. . . . also at 3, the Sunday Gay Discussion will be on "Gayness in the Psychol- ogy of Carl Jung" at Canterbury House, corner of Catherine and Division . . . the grand opening of the relocated Women's Bookstore and Women's Crisis Center at 4115 N. Fourth St. will be held from 3-6. Also at the new location are the Common Woman Library and the Women's Art Gallery. Re- freshments will be served . . . WUOM (91.7 FM) and WVGR (104.1 FM) will broadcast the first of a three-part adaptation of Dostoevsky's novel, Crime and Punishment, at 4:45 . . . and tonight at 7:30, the Sunday Evening Grad. Fellowship will hear Dr. Herbert Hildebrandt. University Speech and Busines Ad. professor. speak on "Realism and Ethics in American Business" at the Wesley Foun- dation, 602 E. Huron at State St. . . . Hear mayoral and City Council candidates stands on the issues at 7:30 in Community High School, 401 N. Division 'Tomorrow, learn about ";Healing as an Anti- onthropic Process" from Steve Slaby of Prince- ton University, who will speak in the W. Confer- ence Rm, Rackham. at noon. . _t 3, Claudia Stal- lings will talk about "Molecular Decomposition in Information System Design" in Rm. 218. W. En- gineering .s..at 3:15. Jesse Choper discusses "The Nature, Essentiality and Fragility of Judicial Re- view" as part of the Thomas M. Cooley Lecture Series on judicial review in 100 Hutchins Hall, Law Quad . . . The conflict between growth and repro- duction in plant populations will be the essence of a talk by Brian Clarke of the University of Not- tingham, U.K. He speaks at 4 in Lecture Rm. 2, MLB . . . Also at 4 Moche Goshen-Gottstein of He- brew University. Jerusalem, discusses "The Rise of Hebrew Studies in Renaissance Europe" in 2003 A.H. . . . "Circulatory Control by Receptors in the Heart and Lungs" will be discussed by John Shepherd, director of research, May Foundation, in Rm. 7745 Med.,Sci. II at the same time ;,. A mini-course on "Human Sexuality begins with Herant Katchadourian, M.D. of Stanford Univer- sity lecturing on "The Genitalia: Structure, Func- tion, Pride and Prejudice." Running from 4 - 5:30, he sneaks in Aud. 4 MLB . . . If that doesn't turn you on. then hear Jane Sallade speaking on "Ethno- archaeology in a Cypriot Village: Evaluating As- sumptions of Spatial Patterning" in the E. Con- ference Rm., Rackham . . . or wait until 4:10 and Francis O'Connon will show you "New Deal Mur-. als" in Aud. A, AH... The Future Worlds lec- ture scheduled for 7 has been cancelled. but the Rec. Sports Dept. offers a jogging clinic in the Central Campus Rec. Bldg. at that time. On the inside ... A Turkish jet with 173 people aboard was hijacked by terrorists later surrendered them. selves and the unharmed hostages. Details on page 3 in the.News Digest. . .. The past week is review- ed by co-editors-in-chief Jim Tobin and Ann Marie Lipinski on the ,Edit Page . . . Paul Shapiro in the Magazine writes the second story of a series on sports as big business, this week focusing on collegiate athletics . . . and speaking of collegiate athletics, Sports Page's Scott Lewis Tom Cameron and Kathy Henneghan all file stories from Lexing- ton, Ky. on Michigan's defeat at the hands of UNC-Charlofte. " *VI A AN Workers likely to end strike today By BOB ROSENBAUM Striking campus service workers, by all indi- cations, will accept the terms of a newly-reach- ed tentative contract settlement with the Uni- versity at their ratification meeting this afer- noon. If rank-and-file members of he American Fed- eration of State, County and Municipal Em- ployes (AFSCME, Local 1583) ratify the agree- ment, they will return to their jobs, admittedly a lot less affluent than they had planned. THE 2,300 FOOD service, hospital, maintenance and grounds workers will have only realized five cents an hour more than the wages they rejected last month befope embarking on a 26-day strike, "We're not really very happy about it," AFS- UNCC CME, Council 11 President Walt Oliver admitted moments after the two sides reached agreement in the early hours of Saturday morning. But Oliver added, the union had no choice but to accept the University's terms. He said later that he had no doubts that the University's final offer was "absolutely the best" AFSCME could get. "WE'RE QUITE SURE they're going to ratify it," said Don McClure, a representative for Local 1583's international parent union yesterday. The agreement calls for a 60 cent per hour wage hike over 24 months, with a 30 cent increase effective March 20 and an identical increase as of March 20, 1978. The contract is set to expire on the same date in 1979. shocks Also provided for each employe is a $125 pay- ment, retroactive to January 1, 1977, covering the period union members went without a contract. THE THIRD ESSENTIAL addition to the settle- ment is a crucial "no reprisal" clause, which lim- its the number of returning strikers who can be disciplined or discharged by the University. The_ clause gives the administration the right to discipline certain people, particularly those found guilty of criminal offenses associated with the walkout. At the same time, AFSCME has the right to challenge any disciplinary actions through arbitration. The University agreed to pay the union's $86,000 Blue Cross insurance bill for March, normally taken care of through deductions from worker Blue, paychecks and University contributions: ADMINISTRATOS WILL also make several changes in work shifts during the Christmas/New Year's holiday period. All other items in the contract remained as they were When AFSCME workers overwhelming- ly rejected an initial tentative agreement on Feb. 22. At that time, the wage increase proposed was for 55 cents per hour over two years. Unlike the first ratification vote, however, where the union bargaining team and other lead- ers split over whether the contract should have been accepted, this afternoon's vote is more care- fully organized. See AFSCME, Page 5 75-6181 Council to decide carport funding. By ANNE GERTISER The controversial special as- sessments plan for the funding of a $1.7 million carport and parking lot repair will come to a vote at City Council tomorrow. But even if passed, Mayor Al- bert Wheeler says hewill veto the, three agenda items neces- sary to. its implementation. The plan calls for property owners in a defined. special as- sessment district to assume 60 per cent of the cost while car- port users would pay the rest in increased parking rates. See related story, Page 3 COUNCILMAN Jamie Ken- worthy (D-Fourth Ward), al- though an original proponent of the plan, says it is no longer relevant: "Downtown merchants had agreed to pay 60 per cent of the cost, but only because they would get additional parking to accommodate shoppers. We agreed to give them something if they gave us something in re- turn. We've just withdrawn our See COUNCIL, Page 2 Upsetloss prevents Blue from capturing first NCAA cage title By SCOTT LEWIS Special to The Daily LEXINGTON-All the indicators pointed to a typi- cal Michigan comeback yesterday, but the University of North Carolina-Charlotte. (UNCC) wasn't just any typical opponent. After blazing back from a 13-point halftime deficit and taking a 49-48 lead, the first-ranked Wolverines seemed to have enough -momentum to' carry them to an NCAA semifinal berth in Atlanta. INSTEAD, WITH STILL twelve minutes and eleven seconds left, the mf an Mean Green once again started to roar, and pullen away to a 75-68 victory enabling them to meet Marquette in the NCAA semifinals next Saturday. As for Michigan, its title aspirations came to an abrupt halt. "We are disappointed we lost, and we have no excuses," said an obviously dejected Orr after the game. ,"I wish North Carolina-Charlotte the best of luck. That's a fine team and they definitely have a chance to win it all." UNCC DISPLAYED what few of Michigan's opponents have shown this season - the ability to outscore the Wolverines in See CORNBREAD, Page 8 lackPanther,"-hits U.S. prison system Daily Photo by CHRISTINA SCHNEIDER MICHIGAN'S RICKEY GREEN displays his gravity-defying act for the last time this season to UNCC's Melvin Watkins., Neither Green nor any other Wolverines were jumping for joy yes- terday as they bowed out of the NCAA Tournament, losing to the dark horse 49ers 75-68. STUDENT TURNOUT KEY TO RACE: Three vie By EILEEN DALEY and BARBARA ZAHS Student voter turnout is ex- pected to be the key to victory in the April 4 Second Ward City Council race as three candidates vie for the seat being vacated by Democrat Carol Jones. Libertarian James Green- shields, Democrat Leslie Morris and Republican Allen. Reiner wi.l square off in that race. ,HEAVY student voter turnout in the election is expected to aid the Democrat and Libertar- ian candidates, while hurting Renublican hopeful Reiner. The Second Ward's 11 pre- cincts include all of North Cam- in Ward pus and the portion of Central Campus east of State St. and north of Hill. This includes all of ,the University's dormitories except South Quad, West Quad, Betsy Barbour and Helen New- berry.x Since 1971, Democratic and Socialist Human Rights Party (SHRP) members have con- trolled the two seats in the heav- ily student-populated ward. WHILE the candidates recog- nize the significance of the stu- dent vote, they refuse to confine their campaign efforts to that [ 2 particular segment of the ward's electorate. "I can't sacrifice one group for the sake of another," Reiner said. He added that he is expecting a small turnout of 1800-2000 vot- ers but would like to see 'a hell of a lot more" people at the' polls Libertarian candidate Green- shields said, although he would focus his campaign efforts on student voters, "I'm not going to prostitute myself at the ex- pense of others. I'm not going See STUDENT, Page 5 Huggins By GREGG KRUPA "This country- functions through fear and intimidation," Black Panther member Erica Huggins told a receptive crowd of 60 people at Mendelssohn Theater last night. "It functions by having people believe that what Jimmy Car- ter says is right; it functions by forcing us to believe that peo- ple who want to be free are to be equated with the devil," she said. HUGGINS, a member of the Alameda (Calif.) Board of Edu- cation and organizer of the Oak- land Community Learning Cen- ter, spoke as part of the third and final night of the Ann Arbor Teach-In on Prisons, sponsored by the Inmate Project. She slammed the American prison system and talked about the current activities of the Black Panther party. "I can never forget my own experience in prison," Huggins, who spent two years in a Con- necticut prison, said. "There is no way to leave that sort of thing behind. The women there showed me a side of life that is an indictment of the American system." HUGGINS SAID that most of the peonle she came into con- tact with were people unable to cone with American society. She told of vrostitutes and heroin ad- dicts who returned to prison three and four times a week, of a woman who went' insane be- cause she could no longer cope with simporting eight children on her welfare check, and of prison giards who brutally treated the inmates. She accused Alameda County Belcher expected to ou tspend dpponen ts By PHILLIP BOKOVOY If the April 4 mayoral election were to be de- cided solely by the candidates' expected cam- paign contributions, Republican Fifth Ward Coun- cilman Louis Belcher would trounce Mayor Al- bert Wheeler from Dexter to Ypsilanti, But though it is often true that more money means more votes, Wheeler hopes to overcome the difference between the $12,000 he expects to take in and Belcher's anticipated $24,000 in much the same way he did in 1975. In that election, in- cumbent Mayor James Stephenson outspent Wheeler $27 000 to $11,000. WHEELER, who concedes that Belcher's "big HRP candidate Diana Slaughter had collected $41.87, and is not soliciting contributions. She has spent no money so far' in the race. SINCE MARCH 10, Wheeler has seen his early lead in contributions dwindle away. Wheeler's treasurer, Michael Broughton, said the mayor has collected a lot of money since then but has spent a great deal as well. Broughton says the current total is .about $6,500. Belcher says his campaign coffers now hold about $8,000 and he expects to collect $7,000 more by March 28. The biggest 'chunk of Belcher's money will go for newspaper ads - about $8,200. Other big