MSA's BAD JOKE See Editorial Page Y L W I!JZUI~ D3ait33 High-18° Loyw re-9 s See 'today for details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVI, No. 67 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, November 30, 1976 Ten Cents Twelve Pages plus Su ipplement f YOU SE SKNNCL %D& Rape Two weeks ago today was the date of the last assault by the male suspect police believe to be re- sponsible for a rash of fifteen assaults on women in one month.According to Ann Arbor Police. Chief Walter Krasny, there are no new leads in the investigation. But continue to take safety precau- tion. And remember, the nite owl bus service is now available. The service is free of charge and buses run every half hour from the Undergraduate library between 7 p.m. and 1 a.m. Buses run from main campus to Oxford Housing and the "Hill" area. 0, MSA elections Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) elections be- gin today, with 11 seats and two ballot proposals up for grabs (See page 5). Voting runs through Thursday, and you need only present a valid stu- dent ID to exercise your sacred franchise. Polling locations and hours are as follows: The Michigan Union, the Fishbowl, the Engineering arch and the bus stop on N. University will all have polling places from 9:30 to 5:30 today. You can vot in the UGLI anythime between 9:30 this morning and 10:00 this evening. The Lawyers Club (in the Law Quad) and the Business- School will have ballot boxes set up between 11 and 3, as will the Gradu- ate Library from 7-10. S. Quad, E. Quad,.Stockwell, and Mosher Jordan resident can vote in their dorms between 4:30 and 6:30 this evening. Do it again Mike Kelley figures he has a good thing going, so why should he give it up? For several days earlier this fall Kelley, armed with a huge sand- wich sign and a plastic bucket, stationed himself on the Diag to collect $50 a Catholic priest needed to purchase a water buffalo for needy farmers in Burma. He ended up taking in $480, enough to bankroll a stampede. So, Kelley is going to the well once again, this time for the treatment of lepers. He said $200 will cover the costs of a three-year treatment program for oe leper. "It's an expression of my love to Christ," said Kelley, "whose ventures are sponsored by the Newman Club of St. Mary's ChaM, "and an expression of love for people who receive it." It's no mean feat spending hours in the desperately cold weather we've been having, so if you see him (you can't miss him) why don't you dig into your pocket and see if you can come up with some spare change? Rose Bowl Today is the last day to buy dividua tickets to see the mighty Wolverines trounce the hapless Tro- jans of USC in the Rose Bowl on New dear's Day. Tickets cost $15.50 apiece, andtare:available at Crisler Arena from 8:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. You must have a validated student ID, and tickets are one to a customer. Happenins... ... begin, as they usually do on Tuesdays, with a noon concert in the Pendleton Center of the Union. This week Val Zimmerman plays the trumpet with an instrumental ensemble . . . This week's lunch- eon discussion at the Ecumenical Campus Center, 921 Church, features Astronomy Prof. Freeman Miller talking on "The Viking Exploration of Mars: The Search for Life." Lunch is 75 cents . . . David Bien discusses "Institutions and Social Mobility inl7th Century France: Le Bourgeois Gentillhom- me," that's 3:00 in rm. 2,012 of the MLB . . You can take in the 23rd annual Student Medical Re- search Forum, at 3:00 in the Furstenburg Student Center . . The U-M Ski team meets at 7 in Ander- son rm. of the Michigan Union . . . The film "Rape: Law, Justice, and Public Opinion" is be- ing shown at 7:30 in rm. 100 of the Law School .. . Jim Veneris, a former Korean War POW sneaks on his 23 years of experience in China, at 7:30 in the Union Ballroom . . . Amnesty International holds an organizational meeting for an adoption group as an offshoot of the Latin American Teach-In, at 7:30 in rm. 3204 of the Union. Oral cr(f1Iuln II The Supreme Court refused yesterday to hear arguments on the constitutionality of a Virginia law prohibiting hubsands and wives from having oral sex with each other. The Court let stand a U. S. Court of Appeals decision upholding the con- viction of a Virginia Beach, Va. couple, who were sentenced to two years in jail for engaging in oral sex. Aldo and Margaret Lovisi were convicted in 190 on the basis of nhotographs of them in action with a third narty, one Eirl Dunn. Dunn and Mr Lovisi testified that they took the photouraphs The circuit court held that "once a married corn- pile admits stranners as onlookers, federal pro. tection of privacy diTSST'n'." Kithe ien r nn... ...Keith Richbiilru recounts his taoatin in De- troit on the Editorirl l P)-~ .On :\rts Pap-~ Ste- obnh n Trkovr r ''i-r-z ('> (' nr +r,ne f '"()i, Mic higamua: By JIM TOBIN their servicet First of two parts They have al High above State Street, on the top floor of the Michigan Membersh Union tower, there is a room in which no one but twenty men year-has ext and their forbears are allowed. There are some old decorations, ly been a part a heavy, se'arred table, a great deal of dust. It is the home of a president of t University tradition that has perhaps been more revered and more besieged than any other. 'The room is the "wigwam" of the Tribe of Michigamua. 'The M ONCE A WEEK, Michigamua's "fighting braves"' gather there lwith wide to smoke a peace pipe, talk, discuss financial matters, and revel the proud in their association with an institution that has been considered a laughingstock, a sexist group of elitists, and the student body's of fi iility highest honor. No one knows what they say, what they do, or even who they are. That knowledge is forbidden to all outside the society itself. editor, and bu For 75 years, the group has convened several times each\ sented through month to hold a playful-serious meeting with an American Indian chem," or chi format. It has always been considered an honor to be invited into the Tribe. Members are selected for their leadership qualities, OCCASION Test of a tradition to the University, and their "regular guy" nature. ways been seniors, and they have always been men. ip in the Tribe - which is not to exceed 25 per ended across the campus. Athletes have traditional- of it; posts such as president of student government he Union (once a powerful position), editor, sports tichigamua ideal, taken by members ly varying degrees of seriousness, is warrior - strong and wise, a symbol usiness manager of the Daily have been well r8bre- h the decades. Every year, the Tribe selects a "sa- ef, to lead it, as well as several other officers.. NALLY, an "honorary sachem" is chosen by the Tribe by a strict set of criteria involving service and leadership. They are usually members of the faculty or administration, though University Regents have also been voted honorary sachems. The active Tribe members are known as "fighting braves"; the graduates are "old braves". The Tribe occasionally dresses in traditional Indian garb, and btaves often speak a make-believe Indian dialect that attaches the suffix "-um" or "-erp" to verbs. ("Tribe wish'um to send'um smoke signals which bring'um much happiness and peace to all old braves at this season.") They engage in rituals which the group's founders modeled after Native American customs, and adopt special names that are related to their activities, their appearances, their manner, or their real names - Sky Walker (a high-jumper), Bellowing' Bull (a loud speaker). IN 7/5 YEARS the Tribe has had manny 'm"mb'rs who wvent on- to national prominence. President "Flionpm Bak" Ford, the late U. S. Supreme Court Justice Frank "Wild A-"-%'" 1tirnbv, Time \Iagaine Senior Editor Leon "Soundum off" Jaroff were braves, as were many men who went on to highly s'!':essf.l bsiness careers. See MICHIGAMUA, Page 2 Supreme Court t~o rule onNixon documents WASHINGTON (AP) - The Suppreme Court said yesterday it will decide whether former President Richard Nixon should control records of his admini- stration, including 888 reels of White House tape recordings. The court agreed to hear ar- guments by Nixon's attorneys that Congress violated the ex- President's rights to privacy and invaded the powers of the presidency two years ago when it gave control of the massive records to the General Services Administration (GSA). A THREE-JUDGE federal court in Washington has upheld the Presidential Materials and Recordings Preservation Act, discounting arguments by Nix- on's lawyers. If the Justices agree with the lower court, an estimated 42 million pages of documents, including about 200,- 000 prepared or reviewed by Nixon, and the tapes will re- main with the GSA. If the Supreme Court rules in favor of Nixon, the material would be shipped to San Cle- mente, Calif., the ex-President's home since his resignation in 1974. The court will hear argu- ments in the case next year. AFTER THE Watergate scan- dals forced his resignation, Nix- on asked the government to ship the documents and tapes to San Clemente. The GSA agreed to let Nixon retain title programs curb energy consumption By LINDA BRENNERS How many times have you bundled up for the cold trek to the UGLI, walked in and removed your coat - only to put it back on as you notice your skin turning color? Or perhaps you've seen the University's checkerboard pattern of classroom lighting (one on, one off)? In either case, you're a victim of the effects of relatively successful University initiatives in cutting back energy consump- tion. Although energy conservation programs at the University can- not keep pace with the skyrocketing rate hikes levied by utility and, gas companies, reductions in energy usage have decreased costs by over $1.5 million a year. ° DON WENDEL, director of University plant operations, says that the general fund buildings on campus (all those but hospitals, athletic and housing facilities) h a v e undergone energy-saving changes. For example, since 1973 more than 1.5 million watts of fluores- cent lighting have been removed from areas determined to be above the standard lighting level. Such moves resulted in a $140,000 saving. Ornamental exterior lighting has also been decreased, but the amount of street lamps lighting the campus has not been af- fected. "Security will not be sacrificed to spare energy," Wendel says. Other steps taken by the University to reduce energy use in- See 'U',-Page 9 case to the presidential materials in a pact that required Nixon to donate a substantial portion of them to the government at a later date. That agreement was sidetrack- ed, however, when Watergate special prosecutor Leon Jawor- ski requested a delay in hand- ing over the documents to Nix- on. The former President sued, and Congress then passed the legislation. THE ACT CALLS for, the GSA to govern public access to the -material. The Senate has re- jected one set of proposed reg- ulations for such governing, and another proposal is pending. The material is available to Nixon but such access is sub-i ject to GSA regulation. In their appeal to the high court, Nixon's attorneys said the materials reflect the former President's "entire personal, po-ldi litical and official life." They said he "never intended the re- cords ... or his diary to be re- viewed by anyone other than himself or his family." ,The Justice Department and several groups who filed friend of the court briefs opposing Nix- on's bid for control said the presidential records are govern- ment property, even if Nixon mixed personal records with those of the office he held. In other action yesterday, the Court: * Agreed to consider whether mandatory death sentences are valid for murderers of police officers. The Court has already upheld capital punishment in principle, but said states can- not pass laws making it man-, datory for specific crimes; * Agreed to dedide whether height and weight standards for Alabama prison guards discrim- inate against women; * Refused to accept jurisdic- tion in a Delaware school de- segregation case, passing it on to a circuit court of appeals. Daily Photo by BRAD BENJAMIN And 40 in the shade We'd all like to believe it isn't really winter. But the Ann Arbor Bank and Trust Company might have gone a little too fpr, claiming the tempera ture was 50. Wasn't it more like 15? FIRST REQUEST DENIED: Pierce By GEORGE LOBSENZ His petition for a recount re- jected by the State Board of Canvassers, former Democratic' congressional candidate Edward Pierce has embarked on a mul- ti-pronged campaign to obtain recounts in 124 precincts throughout the Second district. Pierce, a local physician, lost in his bid for the U.S. House of Representatives by a scant, 344 votes to his Republican chal- lenger, former state Senator Carl Pursell. PIERCE CAMPAIGN officials said yesterday that their candi- date is pursuing several alter- natives - including legislative and legal action - in his effort to obtain recounts in his nip- and-tuck race with Pursell. Pierce filed petitions last Fri- day at a State Board of Can- vassers hearing asking for re- counts in virtually all district absentee ballot precincts and most of the machine b'allot pre- cincts in Livonia. AT THE HEARING, Pierce lawyers argued that vote totals of various candidates on the Democratic slate did not jibe with abnormally low Pierce tal- lies. Alleged mix-ups in the tabulation of absentee ballots were also cited. Rather than referring to a state law governing recounts in general congressional elections, the Board denied Pierce's re- quest on the basis of a prior ruling made by Michigan Attor- ney General Frank Kelley on a similar case in 1974. In that case, Kelley ruled against a recount requested by pursues recount four major options available in face of the Board's decision. One option Pierce is already exercising is a request that Kel- ley issue a new opinion on re- counts in general congressional elections. The procedure here calls for a member of the Mich- igan legislature to formally pre- sent such a request. Yesterday, Rep. Perry Bul- lard (D-Ann Arbor) said he was prepared to make that request today. It is expected that Kelley will hand down a decision swift- ly if asked. BULLARD SAID the chances of Kelley reversing his previous opinion are slim, despite a strong argument for the right to a recount. Bullard maintain- ed that Kelley in his 1974 rul- See PIERCE, Page 6 Pierce Gilmore goes beor pardon boardtoa SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - Death row inmate Gary Gil- more called members of the Utah Pardons Board "cowards" in an obscenity-laden letter demanding that he be executed, a board spokesman said yesterday. Gilmore, scheduled to appear before the board today for a hearing on whether his death sentence should be commuted to life in prison or referred back to court for rescheduling of exe- cution, wrote the board that "I do not seek or desire your clemency. "THE SENTENCE WAS SET - I accept it. Utah State Su- preme Court approved. Let's do it, you cowards." The letter, dated Nov. 22, was received by the board last Wednesday and made public yesterday. Gilmore, convicted of murder, was originally scheduled to die on Nov. 15, but Gov. Calvin Rampton stayed the execution .;.:~