SENATOR HARTg See Editorial Page Y Aijjr~t~ Daiti STASIS High--7a Loci-47 See Today for details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVII, No. 21 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, October 2, 1976 Ten Cents Eight Pages ., -Z7 - , IrYOU SEE NEWS HAPPM CALL7DAJY Fletcher reinstated Madeline Fletcher, the black policewoman who stood trial for shooting her white male partner, is being reinstated by the Flint Police Department and will receive $7,000 in back pay. Fletcher ad- mitted shooting Patrolman Walt Kalberer last Dec. 27 during an argument over who was going to drive their patrol car. A Genesee County Circuit Court Jury found her innocent of assault charges. She said she shot Kalberer out of fear for her life, wounding him in the left thigh. Fletcher was shot in the abdomen. Flint Police Chief Max Durbin said yesterday that Fletcher is being fined 60 days as a disciplinary measure for the shoot- ing. Kalberer drew a five-day suspension. " Happenings ... are topped,. of course, by this afternoon's slaughter of Wake Forest. Kickoff time at Michi- gan Stadium is 1:30 ... The Go Club meets this afternoon at 2:00 in Rm. 2050 of the Frieze Build- ing ... Alumni and members of the University's Inter-Cooperative Council honor Luther Buchele, their executive secretary for the past 25 years, with a picnic supper at Island Park from 4 to 8 p.m. For further information, call Nancy Petter- son, at 662-4414. No ifs, ands, or Butz Agriculture Secretary Earl Butz got a heavy tongue-lashing yesterday from President Ford for using abusive and derogatory language about blacks. The reprimand was triggered by an ac- count in Rolling Stone magazine by John Dean (of Watergate fame) which quoted an unnamed Cabi- net member as using incredible language when asked why blacks did not vote for Republicans. Butz said: "I'll tell you why you. can't attract coloreds. Because coloreds only want three things. You know what they want? I'll tell .,., what col- oreds want, it's three things: first, a tight pussy; second, loose shoes; and third, a warm place to shit. That's all." Butz issued an apology for "the unfortunate choice of language." " Screw, bang, cherry The American Heritage Dictionary of the Eng- lish Language has been removed from Hanover Central High School in Cedar Lake, Id. because the school board said it contains four-letter vul- garisms and slang definitions for such words as "screw" "bang," "cherry," and "tail" "I don't believe in censorship, I'm not a Victorian, a Puri- tan or what have you," said Hanover Community School Board member Carolyn Kenning. "I don't believe in censoring things that are vital to an education, but I don't see where these words are vital to an education. A 93-signature petition ask- ing the Board to rescind the order was presented this week, but school superintendent Larry Crabb said he'll abide by the decision unless a three- member policy committee he serves on comes up with a different recommendation. Cedar Lake resi- dent Barbara Sack thinks the whole business is a sham. "I don't know what kind of a person looks in ' ,e dictionary to find dirty words," said Sack. "B, re it was just a dictionary, but now someone's rL de it into a dirty book. Swashbucklers An Arizona State University Professor of colonial history says that the swashbuckling pirates of the eighteenth century, remembered for terrorizing the Caribbean islands, were virtually all gay. Profes- sor B.R. Burg asserts that the popular image of buccaneers as boisterous ruffians carrying off struggling women from plundered ships is far from accurate. Burg says his research indicates that the pirates were far more likely to seize and carry off young boys. Burg explains that be- cause there were very few women in the West Indies, and because pirates were often at sea, they developed a self-contained homosexual com- munity. He concedes however, that his thesis is based on a "situational analysis." Vox Corpora State Attorney General Frank Kelley said yes- terday the Michigan law prohibiting corporate con- tributions to ballot proposal campaigns is unen- forceable. What effect this opinion will have on the upcoming election is, however, unclear. House Republican Leader Dennis Cawthorne (R-Manis- tee), who requested the opinion, said it will "give the green light" to corporations which might have been hesitant to spend money on ballot campaigns. Some state business firms have already gone ahead and contributed to a committee opposing the pro- posal to ban throwaway bottles. A On the insidel.. On the Editorial Page Pacific News Ser- F reshwoman, 17, murdered ini Arb; Police seek clues By JAY LEVIN A 17-year-old University freshwoman was found shot to death in the Ar- boretum yesterday morn- ing. Local law enforcement officials last night were probing the murder, but had arrested no suspects nor discovered any motive for the slaying. The body of Jeanine Boukai was discovered shortly after 8 a m. yester- day by a passing jogger, just yards outside the Ann Arbor city limits. BOUKAI, AN Ann Arbor resident who lived in Stevens Co - operative, was just three weeks shy of her 18th birthday. Washtenaw County Sheriff's Detective Michael Walters con- firmed yesterday that the wo- man, who was found clothed, had been shot four times. "We're right in the middle of fact-finding," said Walters, adding that the detectives as- signed to the case are sorting out "bits and pieces" of infor- mation. A SHERIFF'S department spokesperson said that from Boukai's appearance, there was no indication to believe she was sexually assaulted. According to Walters, the sheriff's denartment is being assisted in its investigation by three officers from the Ann Ar- bor Police Dept. A complete autopsy was per- formed yesterday, but the re- stilts will not be released until this morning, according to Dr. Robert Hendrix. BOUKAI WAS described by acquaintances at Stevens Co-op as a pleasant, safety - conscious woman who was not known to have frequented the Arboretum, the grassy expanse of parkland abutting campus where as- saults are not uncommon. "She was very safety-minded. She was normally home and asleep by ten," said one Stev- ens resident who wished to re- main anonymous. Another Stevens resident, Ann Rebentish, who lived in the same house at Boukai last s u m m e r, s a i d dinner- time Thursday was the last time Boukai was seen. THE MURDER has left a pall over the blue-frame dwelling, where residents are at a loss to explai, why Boikai had gone to the Arb. "Some speculated that she would not have gone there alone. "Nobody knows anything," said one resident. "Everv- bodv's surnrised to say the least. It's glum." Earlier this week, Boukai re- portedly filed an application See POLICE, Page 2 Ford- Carter gap narrows BULLETIN WASHINGTON (AP)-Watergate Special Prosecutor Ch Ruff will publicly clear President Ford early next week close his investigation of alleged campaign finance impro ties without any prosecutions, sources familiar with the p said late last night. A source said Ruff found no basis criminal charges against Ford or anyone else. By The Associated Press and Reuter News Service WASHINGTON - President Ford's election drive was g a boost yesterday with a new poll showing he has closed fi er on rival Jimmy Carter, but politically lethal questions his congressional campaign funds refused to disappear. Deputy Attorney General Harold Tyler disclosed he tou off an investigation by the Watergate Special Prosecutor alleged campaign fund irregularities in Ford's Michigan gressional district during the 1972 presidential campaign BUT TYLER TOLD REUTERS Ford's name did not fi either in the allegations, made to the Federal Bureau of vestigation by an informant, or in a request to the W gate Prosecutor last July 12 to conduct an investigation. Earlier yesterday, the Washington Post reported that torney General Edward Levi and other top Justice De ment officials initiated the campaign finances probe. THE NEW DEVELOPMENTS in what has become a c paign issue emerged a few hours after Ford had declared personal integrity in handling congressional campaign funds in accepting golf trips with big business lobbyists years ag A Gallup poll published yesterday showed the President closed the gap to eight percentage points on his Democi rival for the November 2 election. The poll, taken after last week's first television debate tween Ford and Carter, said Ford was now trailing by 50 cent to 42, compared to a 54 to 36 per cent disadvantag month ago. The remainder were undecided. Carter celebrated his 52nd birthday in Maine, Connect: Tennessee and Pennsylvania, worrying about political ap among blue-collar workers and predicting he'll be elected of whelmingly despite "fumbles and mistakes and honest erro Carter pledged that as president he would veto a Se bill (S-1) revamping the nation's criminal code if it is to the White House with provisions intruding on personal vacy while protecting unwarranted government secrecy. THE BILL BOGGED DOWN in the Judiciary Committeec ing this session of Congress after civil libertarians critic See POLL, Page 8 Elurricaner Liza kills 500 in MEXICALI, Mexico (Reuter) -The death toll lost night near- ed 500 in the Northwest Mexi can City of La Paz, partially destroyed by Hurricane Liza's 120-mile-per-hour winds and massive flooding. Red Cross officials contacted by telephone said rescue work- ers had now recovered nearly 500 bodies in the city, where about one-third of the buildings were flattened. Doily Photo by PAULINE LUBENS Steve Goodmna n and friend Singer/composer Ste %e Goodman strums and warbles for the crowd at Power Center. Good- man and fiddler Vassar Clements performed for a capacity crowd last night - and John Prine stopped by for some good times, too. HOW UNION, U' DIFFER: GEO's contract issues By SUSAN ADES and KEN PARSIGIAN As the doors slammed on mediation last Thursday neither Graduate Employe Organization (GEO) nor University bargain- ers could predict the future with any certainty. But there was nothing vague about where the two sides stood - they were miles apart. Between now and the Oct. 5th contract deadline the negoti- ating teams will not be meet- ing. Yet surface calm masks a growing tension in both camps as the possibility of a strike looms. UNION LEADERS are scram- bling to gather support from their scattered forces and gear them up for Tuesday night's critical membership meeting, when a definite course of ac- tion will be decided. Meanwhile, the University is polishing its contingency plans should the membership decide, at that meeting, to walk out. The table at the right shows where GEO and the University stood on several key issues at the end of mediation. And this is where the two sides will have to start from - if and when the bargaining resumes. GED SALARY-Seeks a 6.5 per cent salary in- crease for the 1976-77 school year and an additional 6.5 per cent for the 1977-78 school year. With the added stipulation that should the rate of inflation for the year preceding Sept. 1977 exceed 6.5 per cent, the percentage increase in salary would match that rate. TUITION-Seeks a 50 per cent cut in tuition for all GSA's working quarter time or more, for the 1976-77 school year, and for tuition to be waived for all GSA's working quarter time or more for the 1977-78 school year. FRACTION-Wants all fractional employment estimates to be based on a full time equivalent of 40 hours per week for 15 weeks. CLASS SIZE-Demands that for winter term 1977, the ratio of full time (GSA) salary alloted to the number of enrolled undergradu- ate students be no less than 3.148 per cent. If undergraduate enrollment increases X per cent there will be an increase of at least one half X per cent in full time GSA salary allotments. Regarding lab, recitation and discussion sec- tion enrollment limits, a high warning figure and an absolute maximum figure will be set. Labs--high warning-20, absolute maximum-24; See GEO, Page 2 "University SALARY-Offers a 5 per cent increase for the 1976-77 school year. Is not willing to dis- cuss increases beyond the first year. Maintains that GSA's, as enrolled students, should pay full tuition. However, the Univer- sity is willing to freeze tuition - which was raised 9.7 per cent this year - at last year's level while increasing GSA salary only 3.2 per cent. FRACTION-Wants to calculate fractional employment estimates based on an average GSA workload of 22 to 25 hours per week which could set full time employment as high at 55 hours per week. CLASS SIZE-Contends this is an educa- tional issue and therefore does not belong in a labor contract. RECRUITMENT--Does not believe hiring guidelines belong in a labor contract. The University refuses to discuss the issue. NONDISCRIMINATION-Has agreed not to discriminate against GSA's as outlined by GEO. Because the University is opposed to including hiring practices in a labor contract, it refuses to be bound to these non-discrimi- nation rules when reviewing GSA applicants. LESBIAN AND GAY COMMISSION-Is not opposed to the concept but is unwilling to fund it. See 'U', Page 2 - I State House race: multitude of issues By JENNIFER MILLER State Rep. Perry Bullard (D-Ann Arbor) faces three visible challengers (and one phantom) in his fall battle to keep his 53rd District seat in the state House. And perhaps the only ex- citement in the entire race is provided by the bewildering num- ber of issues involved. Bullard, Republican John Dietrich, Libertarian Gerald Wolke, and American Independent Ronald Graham have argued such problems as environmental and consumer protection, crime, taxes, unemployment, gambling, prostitution, marijuana, and sex. (HUMAN RIGHTS PARTY candidate Carol Burke-Fonte has apparently left for California without informing the County Clerk she is no longer running.) With the possible exception of Dietrich, the young and popu- lar Bullard appears to face no serious competition for the No- vember contest. As the only candidate with political experience, Rtllnird has ecellnt vting rrcord assessments from the Na-. - T: --- ----- - -- - -- -