Tuesday, November 23, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Tuesday, November 23, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three P vial yesl let mor hou LSA (LS litic the P eled app Kay pus ,H Pre ed1 ger T seek PESC accuses smear By LISA FISHER I Program, which is housed in Campus Coalition who is seek- dential College, because of the Lloyd Hall, and to cut down ing office in LSASG. Brazee group's support for the two al- rogram for Educational So- on Residential College (RC) claims Gembala distributed the ternative learning programs. Change (PESC) members and BGS degree programs. leaflets at Lloyd. Laskey also denied the leaf- terday charged that a leaf- However, Dick Brazee, who is GEMBALA DENIED last night let's charge, that LSASG re- passed out early yesterday running for an LSA Student he was connected in that dis- ceives $13,000 a year from the rning in 'Alice Lloyd Hall - Government post on the PESC tribution. mandatory dollar-a year LSASG rs before the start of the ticket, claims the leaflet is in- Laskey denied Campus Coal- tax in order to pay its officers k S t u d e n t Government accurate. ition was responsible, saying $75 a month. ASG) election - is a x "po- BRAZEE, a' former Pilot Pro- "I am totally pissed off. If He said the money is funneled al ploy" geared to discredit gram peer counselor, said "I someone is trying to smear for payments of office expenses, student political group. lived there (Lloyd) last year PESC, that's awful. I don't like eleztions and Regents candidate ESC denies all charges lev- and support them (Pilot pro- the idea that someone is try- night. I in the sheet, which was gram) incredibly." ing to drag Bob Matthews type I Laskey adde'd that he would arently signed by David Brazee believes that Campus tactics into student govern- ask his members to resignf if t ye, former President of Cam- Coalition, one of the opposing ment." they were involved in the Coalition. parties, is responsible for the Matthews was believed respon- smear. OWEVER, Campus Coalition "smear" tactics. sible in a smear tactic against Brazee said that he was not sident Brian Laskey assert- He claims to have three Lloyd the Student Organizing Commit- as concerned with who was re- last night that Faye no lon- eyewitnesses who can identify tee (SOC) last April. sponsible, but "the main con-i attends the University. a man named "Joe" who alleg- LASKEY ADDED that it seems cern is that we're being dis- he leaflet charges PESC with edly meets the description of inconsistent that PESC would credited and losing votes right king to eliminate the Pilot Joseph Gembala, a member of try to disband -Pilot and Resi- and left." Panel attacks U.S. involvement in Iran (Continued from Pagex1) ship." He said the United'pamphletting as some of their coverage of guerrilla activities of Tehran in the next three States profits from Iranian ex- I tactics. in Iran and accused the media Parking plan hit by local residents city years to operate machinery im- ported from America. HE COMPARED this to America's entrance into the ports and the Shah works to 1 HE ADDED that there is a help America establish naval , black market in the Iranian dominance in the Indian Ocean army which has supplied the region, which lies on Iran's guerrillas with much of their southern border. growing arsenal. "nni rw, twugo Vietnam conflict and predicted Fedayee tearfully described a similar escalation of troops. resistance efforts in his native He added that American country and the acts of oppres- military representatives have sion committeed by the Shah'sa been responsible for training regime. Iranian police, running the g military there and breaking up "IN OUR country, when peo-' organized efforts against the ple are jailed they're flogged regime. so much that they're left with * -- .i e -: - -T-.. .. .. "When it grows, it will grow in the whole middle east. There's a lot of oil and it's go- ing to burn real bad." Both DePue and Fedayee at- tacked the American press for what they described as its scant of repressing information. DEPUE ADDED that it is important for information to be disseminated in the United States in humanitarian terms. "We've got to raise the abys- mal level of ignorance. We're supposed to be the most educat- ed country in the world but we don't know nothing about noth- ing," he said. (Continued from Page 1) DAN KAPLAN, who rents property in the South Univer- sity area, said he will be charg- ing his tenants from five to six dollars a month extra in rent to cover the assessment. Ac-1 cording to Kaplan, theassess- ment, if carried out, will drive low-income renters into the out- lying areas of the city. Kaplan produced lists of mer- chants, tenants, and property owners in the area who opposed the assessment. "They want to see improved parking," Kaplan said of the merchants, "but they don't think a special assessment is the way to go about financ- ing it." "That's the whole problem we're faping," Council member Louis Belcher (R-Fifth Ward) interjected. "Nobody wants to lose the parking, but nobody wants to be the one to pay for it, either." OTHER OPPONENTS of the, assessment approach claim thatI benefits of the carports go pri- marily to out-of-towners and suburbanites who use the facili- ties when they attend University functions or do their shopping downtown. Larry Cooperman of the Ten- ant's Union claimed the Speciall Assessment District would in- clude "most of the lower in-1 come tenants in Ann Arbor," and called the scheme "an ex- ample of taxing the poor toi subsidize the rich." Defenders of the concept were few and far between, and their support was openly lukewarm. Guy Larcom, a former city ad- ministrator now with Ann Ar- bor Tomorrew, credited park- ing expansion with "making the downtown area in every way," and told the dissenters they had to choose between "a 40 to So per cent increase in parking HOUSE OF IMPORTS * PERSIAN RUGS . SHEEPSKIN COATS, HATS, VESTS 9 Tapestry Pipes 0 Jewelry 320 E. LIBERTY ANN ARBOR, MICH. 769-8555 V ROSE BOWL TOURS rates or a Special Assessment District." ARTHUR KENNEDY of Ker- rytown, another supporter of the scheme, chided non-drivers for their opposition. "The rea- son downtown is such an attrac- tive place for people who don't drive is because there are peo- ple who do drive; without them, downtown would be a drag. We can't have an active, vibrant downtown unless we provide adequate parking." But critics of the plan re- mained unconvinced. They charged that in many city park- ing areas there is no parking shortage, that a special assdss- rhent might succeed only in driving out the marginally suc- cessful business owner, and that public facilities like the Univer- sity and the federal government are being given a "free ride" because of their tax exempt status. Council heard the arguments, but made no decision on the plan last night. IS THE ADMIN ISTRATION TRYING TO BUST, G. E. O.? The contract is ready for ratification, but the "U" refuses to sign. GEO has already filed an unfair labor practice against the administration. We must use other pres- sures to obtain a contract. COME TO THE MEMBERSHIP MEETING WEDNESDAY DEC. ht-8:00 p.m. Rackham Amphitheater Azad described Iran as an economic and military tool of the United States, saying, "The Shah with all his so-called pow- er is a pawn of the U. S. multi- national corporations and has maintained loyalty to his mas-1 ters." HE ADDED that Iran, since the 1952 poup has served as a military base for -"U. S. imper- ialism" and has been used as a springboard for American ac- tivities in the region. DePue, called the Iranian Shah a "second generation gangster" and characterized the U. S. role in Iran as part of a "hand-in-glove relation- I no meat on their legs or feet but they walk because they don't want to show the enemy they're weak. With their bones on the floor, they walk upright," he said. He added hat the "oppres- sion has intensified in scale and barbarism both" since Febru- ary 8, 1971, when guerrillas at- tacked an Iranian army outpost. He refers to that date as a turning point and calls it the "start of the arms struggles." According to Fedayee the guerrillas h a v e employed strikes, demonstrations and Ferency rejoins Dtemocratic Dartv 7 DAYS 6 DAYS 5 DAYS 4 DAYS Dec. 26, 1976-Jan. 2, 1977 S.n Francisco/Monterey/Los Angeles With deluxe 2 days' motorcoach excursion San Francisco to Los Angeles-Sheraton Fisherman's Wharf/Del Monte Hyatt House/L.A. Marriot Hotel. Dec. 30, 1976-Jan. 5, 1977 Los Angeles/Los Vegas 3 days Los Angeles Marriot Hotel: Las Vegas Land Mark Hotel. Dec. 28, 1976-Jan. 2, 1977 Los Angeles Marriot Hotel. Dec. 30, 1976-Jan. 4, 1977 Los Angeles Marriot Hotel .. (schedule D United Airlines Flight) $530 $429 $439 $429 (Continued from Page 1) FERENCY LEFT the Demo- crats in 1970Land became a founder of the Human Rights Party (HRP), running unsuc- cessfully for governor and the Michigan Supreme Court on the HRP ticket. On Sunday, he of- ficially severed ties with the HRP. He believes that the political environment is bad for minor parties. But minor movements within the big parties have been "imminently successful," he said. "It is my hope I will be able to shake up and perhaps be able to destroy the marriage to the status quo that party leaders describe as unity and i" - v I Expert says laws blunt elections 1 J the party's policy committee would be more likely to mae the ideological changes Ferenc espouses than the ,convention caucus he is proposing. "I don't even think he knows# that," Winograd said. FERENCY SAID he has run for office mainly to get his ideas across and would not rule out a candidacy in the future. But he declined to pinpoint the office he would aim for in 1978. "I'll look at the scene as it unfolds and see if a candidacy makes sense," he said. 10OCARDS? .. Yes, orders for as few as 10 Kodak Christmas Cards Are OK at SUN PHOTO 3180 PACKARD 2 BIks. E. of Platt ONE DAY SERVICE MAKE RESERVATIOI S NOW--Limited Seats THESE TOURS INCLUDE: " Rouind trip transportation from Detroit on American Airlines or United Airlines chartered jets " Accommodations for stated number of nights superior hotel, including double occ. * All transfers dnd baggage hand(;ng 0 Admission to Disneyland and 11 attractions 0 Su- perior reserved grandstand seat for Rose Bowl Parade " Reserved seat for Rose Bowl Game " Fully escorted. Deposits fully refundable if the U of M football team doesn't go to Rose Bowl. (Heaven Forbid!) Other Individual Rose Bowl Tours Available. HOLIDAY BREAK FLIGHTS BOSTON $97 LOS ANGELES $218 NEWARK $85 NEW YORK $85 PHILADELPHIA $94 (Continued from Page 1) ling. HE ADDED that by discour- aging third parties from enter- ing the election year fray, the new campaign laws impinge on yet another source of political conflict and fanfare. "There is a risk that cam- paign reform tends to be sup- portive of the present system," he admitted. "But the alterna- tive is no eform." Still, Kimberling emphasized that there is some' room for third parties to operate under the election laws. "GEORGE WALLACE for in- stahce, would have qualified as a major party candidate in 1968," he said. Kimberling said there is no way to determine who was hurt more by the elections laws dur- ing the 1976 presidential cam- paign - President Ford or Jim- my Carter. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXVII, No. 65 Tuesday, November 23, 1976 Is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Published d a i1 y Tuesday through Sunday morning during the Univer- sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 Sept. thru April (2 semes- ters); $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tues- day through Saturday morning. Subscription rates:- $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.50 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Had the election been conduct- ed under the lax rules which governed the 1972 race, Ford might have gained an economic advantage over Carter as the beneficiary of sizeable corpor- ate campaign pledges, he claimed. ALTHOUGH cautioning that the relationship between the Republican party and corporate business has been mythologized, Kimberling noted that "in this case, Ford had the support of the fuel-related businesses." On the other hand, the fed- eral election laws may have aided Ford by preventing his nemesis in the primaries, Ron- ald Reagan, from splitting away from the party and drawing Re- publican votes along with him. Kimberling added that con- tributions "may have wormed their way into some election committee funds, regardless of the stringent federal laws. "We still haven't knocked out the Gulf Oil contribution syn- drome," he said. U-M STYLISTS S[ will be open harmony," Ferency said. "I don't.expect to be alone in what I intend to do.." STATE DEMOCRATIC Chair- man Morley Winograd said Fer- enby would be welcome. But Winograd said the party has changed considera$Ay in organi- zation in the past decade, and he doubted Ferency under- stands that. For instance, Winograd said Great Places TRAVEL CONSULTANTS 216 S. FOURTH AVE 4th, CALL 769-1776 Ave. near LIBERTY U U regular hours Friday & Saturday at the UNION 11 'V. ' Featureo of they week ~~ A by Wayne W. Dyer HAPPENINGS 763-1107 THE WAY WE WERE Presented by Mediatrics for Ann Arbor bound Thanks- giving romantics. Showing Friday, Nov. 26 at 7:00 & 9:15 p.m. in Nat. Sci. Auditorium. Admission $1.25. ECLIPSE JAZZ RAHSSAN ROLAND KIRK, one of the miracles of the tenor saxophone (as he good-naturedly describes him- self) will appear in concert Sunday, December 5, 1976 at the Michigan Union Ballroom on the University of Michigan Campus in Ann Arbor. Two Shows: 7:30 & 10:00 p.m. Tickets now on sale at the Michigan Union Box Office, Schoolkids Records, Ann Arbor Discount Records. For further information contact Eclipse Jazz, (313) 763-1107. HOW TO SUCCEED IN BUSINESS WITHOUT REALLY TRYING Ann Arbor's most creative contribution to theater this year. An all time first in the history of American Musi- cal Theater. The new version of "How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying." Performances: Thurs., Dec. 9; Fri., Dec. 10; Sat., Dec. 11 in Lydia Mendels- Sohn Theater. Tickets now on sale. Brought to you by the people of SOPH SHOW '76. UAC TRAVEL UAC XMAS CHARTERS to New York: $90; Newark: $90; Boston: $100; Philadelphia: $95; Los Angeles: $225; San Francisco: $225. DEADLINE for sign-ups: until Nov. 24. MUSKET needs Directors, Designers and Staff for its Spring Musi- cal. Here's your chance to direct or design a major Pewer Center production! Apply at UAC, 2nd floor, Michigan Union. UAC T-SHIRTS 40~ 611 CHURCH ST - ANN ARBOR INTRODUCES THE WEEKLY SPECIAL Starting: Mon., Nov. 22 thru Sat., Nov. 27 O CLOTt of GOLD 411 Chvrch 5+. .m A practicing psychologist offers advice based on the axiom: "You are the sum product of I