STRIKE TALK See Editorial Page Y t t Yt D~aitil BALMY High -68* Low-47° See Today for details Latest Deadline in the State t Vol. LXXXVII, No. 29 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, October 12, 1976 Ten Cents Eight Pages I'rtX SE NWS ArFPUCALL 6AlY A Council quickie The Ann Arbor City Council last night held what may have been their shortest session in modern history - a 60-second blitz of public hearings in which no one came forward to speak. Democratic Mayor Albert Wheeler decided not to attend, and the meeting was chaired by Mayor Pro Tem Louis Belcher (R-Fifth Ward). As Belcher declared the meeting adjourned, Third Ward .Republican Ron- ald Trowbridge quipped: "See how efficient these Republicans are?"u Self-inflicted wound , The Ann Arbor police have determined that South Quad resident John Oliver died by his own hand. Oliver was found dead in his locked room last. Friday. According to Detective Jerry Wright, "There is no reason for us to believe that the wound was not self-inflicted", thereby ruling out a murder investigation. The medical examiner's report said tht the body had been in the room for two to four days and found no evi- dence of drugs in his system. The police also said that Oliver was receiving "professional" help at the time of his death and that he bought a shot- gun (the weapon he used) early last week. Happenings .. . start at noon today on the Diag, where Democratic U. S. Senate candidate Don Riegle speaks . . . from noon to 1:30 the Center for Con tinuing Education of Women, 328 Thompson, holds a brown-bag luncheon for women who have re- cently returned to school called "Re-entry '76." Beverages will be provided. All interested men and women are welcome . . . Also at noon Bar- bara Fuller, director of the Interfaith Council for Peace, speaks on "Vietnam After the War," at the International Center, 603 E. Madison. You can buy lunch there for 75 cents . . . The Reading and Learning Skills Center is accepting applications until Oct. 25 for an experimental pr<^ram using bio-feedback-assisted relaxation train, for the re- duction of test anxiety, which you should all know something about. If you're a sophoiore or above, you can call 764-9481 for more information . Representatives from the School of Business Ad- ministration visit Bursley Hall's East, Lounge at 7:30 to discuss BBA and MBA requirements . . . Prof. Ali Mazrui lectures on "Nationalists and Statesmen from Nkrumah and DeGaulle to Ny- erere and Kissinger, at 7:30 in MLB Lecture Rm. 1 . . . Films on "The Force of Gravity and "Fluids in Weightlessness" highlight the latest installment of the Astronomical Film Festival, at 8 p.m. in MLB Aud. 3 Two peas in a pod- Former Texas Gov. John Connally is defending Earl Butz's racist remarks about blacks and cri- ticizing Jimmy Carter for "more offensive" com- ments in his interview with Playboy magazine. In the interview, Carter admitted having "committed adultery in my heart many times." Connally, in Kansas City Sunday, downplayed the furor over Butz's comment, which slurred blacks in sexual and scatological terms. "We all tell 'em (racial jokes)," said Connally. "Everybody tells jokes on the blacks, and so the mere telling of a joke on a nationality or a racist group doesn't disturb me." 0 Turkeys aver Texas Gentlemen, start your turkeys" was all Ruby Begonia and Paycheck needed to hear. With that they began a frenzied foot and air race Sunday to decide the winner of this year's Traveling Turkey Trophy of Tumultuous Triumph, in Cuero, Tex. When the feathers settled at the end of the 150- yard contest Ruby had the fastest time, but Pay- check won the six-foot trophy. Ruby was the Texas entry, and she failed to overcome a time loss she suffered against Paycheck during the first leg of their race last month at Worthington, Minn. After Sen. Lloyd Bentsen (D-Tex), kind of a turkey him- self, shouted "start your turkeys" the birds were airborne for most of the race before more than 3,000 persons lining the town's main street. Cuero, in fact, bills itself as the Turkey Capital of the worlds-a title also claimed by Worthington. Sun- day's results evened the overall annual turkey race series at two victories apiece for the rival towns. Perplexing polls A poll released late last week by the Carter campaign organization shows the Georgia Demo- crat leading President Ford in his homestate by eight percentage points. The poll conducted by Patrick Caddell's Cambridge (Mass.) Survey Re- search has Carter leading Ford by 47 per cent to 39 per cent, with former Minnesota Senator Eugene McCarthy carrying 6 per cent, and former Geor- gia Governor Lester Maddox tallying a single per- centage point. A poll conducted by Market Opinion Research for The Detroit News, published Sunday, however, has Ford ahead by eight per cent, 47 to 39. Pick your poison. On the inside -. . . . . Editorial Page offers Mark Greenwood, ex- nlorina the differences between President Ford Mao's others widow, 3 arrested for, 7 PEKING (Reut Chairman Mao Ts( widow, Chiang Chi three other top leaders have been and accused of ph coup d'etat, sourc allegied- er) - her of the Party Standing Coin- e-Tung's mittee and was often talked of ing, and asa likely future premier. If the arrests are confirmed Chinese it means the Chinese leader- arrested ship has been purged of all its otting a leftists radicals. ces said For two days rumors have swept Peking that the radicals have been purged. Party in succession to Mao, who died on September 9. Two senior officials here con- firmed Hua's appointment but mysteriously there has been no formal announcement. In an at- mosphere of gathering crisis, slogans appeared Sunday call- ing on the populace to support the army. Diplomats believe that Hua, a middle-of-the-road politician, could be sure of considerable military backing in any power See CHINESE, Page 8 yesterday. An official spokesman said comment." fI" I C h n e s e he had "no SINCE SATURDAY wallpost- ers have appeared proclaiming Premier Hua Kuo-Feng as Chairman of the Communist AP Photo Pumpkin pichin' October pumpkins may not be heavy to those of us in the m'isclebo'md set, but these two kids seem to be having quite a bit of trouble. These plump specimens are ready to be made into Halloween Jack-'o-Lanterns. FORD URGED TO RETORT SOURCES told Reuters that Chinese officials have been pri- vately briefed on the arrest of Chiang Ching andthree other members of the so-called "Shanghai Mafia" -- Wang Hung-Wen, Chang Chun-Chiao and Yao Wen-Yuan. All four are leftist radical members of the Politburo who first came to political promi- nence in Shanghai, China's Tust non"lo3ts city. Wang Hnng-Wen, about 40, is a vice chairman of the Com- munist Party and until last year was considered the prime can- didate to succeed Mao. Yao is tke country's chief propagan- dist, a former journalist who helned spark off .the Cultural n-,olition- MOST nowerf,7l of the four is Chiang Chun-Chiao, a vice pre- rier a-d the Army's political commissar. He is also a mem- S killed' labor's Veto threatens, Ford pact DETROIT P} - Chances for a quick end to the 28-day-old Ford Motor Co. strike were clouded yesterday as a tentative contract settlement faced rejection by rebellious United Auto Workers' skilled tradesmen. Union leaders have given the 25,40 tradesmen veto rights on the new three-year accord even if a majority of the 145,000 UAW production workers at the No. 2 auto maker ratify the agreement. "THERE'S NO question it'll be a close vote," one union of- ficial conceded after early returns showed tradesmen turning down to proposed pact by a narrow margin. "We remain hopeful it will be approved, but the outcome is uncertain," the official GOP r By The Associated Press President Ford met at length yesterday with a group of Re- publican political figures who urged him to retaliate against what they called distortions of truth and derogatory attacks on Ford by Jimmy Carter. Earlier, the President directly accused his Democratic foe of "pure demagoguery." Gov. Dan Evans of Washing- ton said Carter was conducting a "mean, nasty little cam- paign" with too many distor- tions and misleading claims to count. Sen. Jacob Javits (R- N.Y.), said he had told Ford it was his duty to warn the American people if he saw some- thing in Carter's position or character that might be "harm- ful to our country" if Carter was elected. rebukes Carter without any proof to support it, in terms even of his Personal honesty." Carter, meanwhile, said ru- mors allegedly spread by Re- publicans that he had had an extramarital affair are "seamy ... distasteful" and "there is no truth to the allegations." A spokesperson for Ford's campaign committee acknowl- edged that it had iceived a memo containing such rumors from a volunteer in Georgia but had discarded it, and the committee had no involvement in the spreading of any such, story. THE RUMOR was reported by columnist Jack Anderson on the ABC-TV program, "Good Morn- ing America," where he claim- ed that "Ford's campaign aides have been searching Jimmy Carter's past for a sex scan- dal," and that GOP aidesshad supplied him with the names of five women. Anderson said he had checked the information and found no truth to it, but received calls from several other reporters who had heard about his in- vestigation. "The only people who kaew I had the allegation about Cart pr's romances were the Ford aides who planted them with me." Carter said he had learned of the rumors during the week- end and that several newspa- pers, as well as Anderson, had been given the information by "Republicans," but did not pub- lish it. NEITHER CARTER nor his aides named any Republicans as being responsible. Press secre- tary Jody Powell said report- ers' had indicated to him that the rumor came from "highly- placed Republican officials," but gave him no names. Anderson said last night that he had gotten the rumor from four sources on the staff of the President Ford Committee, three of whom worked for the chief press spokesman, William Greener. Greener said he had ques- tioned those on his staff who have contact with the press, and all denied distributing the ru- mor. "Speaking for the top peo- ple of the committee, I abso- See GOP, Page 2 added. With results in from eight of was 2,500 for rejection and 2,060 person said. ' rejects call HE using about SAID CARTER had been "a rather derogatory tone the President's character, for ritration By KEN PARSIGIAN The University Administration yesterday formally rejected the Graduate Employe Organization's (GEO) offer of binding arbi- tration as a means ,of settling their contract dispute. If the University had accepted the plan, an independent arbi- trator acceptable to both sides would have been hired. He or she would then have heard arguments from GEO and the University, before handing down an irreversible compromise decision. "WE FEEL that it would be unwise to bring a third party into this matter," said Chief University Bargainer John Forsyth. "We have no way of knowing what an arbitrator might decide to do," he added. "The arbitrator may say that 'in order to avoid a strike, I'm going to split it down the middle' . , . we just couldn't do it that way." GEO Preident Doug Moran was disturbed by the decision, and did not forsee a bright future. "They appear to be unwilling to seriously bargain with us, and they are unwilling to call in an unbiased third party to decide See OFFER, Page 8 99 skilled trades units, the tally for ratification, a AUW spokes- The vote included tradesmen at the largest local in the coun- try, Local 600 at the Rouge complex in suburban Dearborn. The skilled workers there re- jected the accord, 2,269-1,703. The local represents more than a quarter of the UAW trades- men at 102 Ford plants across the country. BALLOTING at UAW Ford locals in 22 states will not be completed until this evening. Union officials said voting by production workers was run- ning about 2 to 1 in favor of ratification. The final tally would be announced late to- night orkearly tomorrow, a un- ion snokesperson said. Highlights of the new agree- ment include seven additional paid days off by 1979, a 3 per cent annual wage hike plus an- other 20 cents in the first year, and improved fringe benefits. Under the new package, the hrwrlv wage for the average as- semblv line worker would rise from the current $6.57 to $7.36 by 19'9 while the average tool- maker's hourly wage would go See SKILLED, Page 2 'U' grounds crew makes clean. sweep By DAVID HYDE Gazing across the pristine, picture postcard lawns of cen- tral campus, few casual stroll- ers can comprehend the magni- tude of the task facing the University Groundskeeping crew each and every day. Take, for example, the month of August alone, According to Kenneth Wanty, manager of the Grounds Maintenance Depart- ment, it took ten men working full time throughout August to collect some 4,000 cubic yards of garbage that if made into a wall "would be a bulk ten feet high, nine feet wide and fifth-four feet long - each day - and this is compacted." AND AS BIG as it is, refuse collection is only one of the 400 Lenient graduation policy not loite ex 1110 By LANI JORDAN Literary school Assistant Dean Marion Jackson said yesterday that students have generally not taken advantage of recently loosened graduation require- ments. "You might say that this lib- eralization comes at a time when students are looking for to 500 jobs performed by the Grounds Department each year. The department also maintains the grounds irrigation system, trims trees, removes snow, mows lawns, prunes shrubs and plants flowers. The department tends not only to Central Cam- pts but also North campus, the University Hospital, the TV Cen- ter, the I.M. fields and several other areas. Despite this multitude of re- sponsibilities, litter collection re- mains the department's number one chore. Every morning, lit- ter is picked up at 7:30 and all receptacles are emptied, a gargantuan job in itself. Apparently, refuse about cam- pus was more of a problem two or three years ago before the introduction of. cement trash containers. Before, the contain- ers were smaller and few and far between. However, accord- ing to Robert Hanselmann; gen- eral foreman of the -department, there has been a "real good re- sponse" from students in us- ing the larger containers. ANOTHER PROBLEM the de- partment has successfully elim- inated involved the removal of signs posted on trash cans. To alleviate the costly neces- sity of ripping down the signs, the department decided to in- stall kiosks as general posting areas. Space inside campus b-illings where notices could b- posted was also enlarged. Tree maintenance is another maior concern of the depart- ment. In this area, controlling D)tch elm disease is the most challenging nroblem facing the rr rr"r r rrr s rrrr"r rrrrrr+rrrrr n r ir "'r --- __ , r. J ">1,.:-'' }.: .,i