Thursday, September 25, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Mayor vetoes CDRS plan; Republicans may launch recall campaign i I E PoocSev_. CIA opened mail of govt. officials Moore led dual life: i (Continued from Page1) (Continued from Page 1) week should he enact his veto, said following the Mayor's ac- tion yesterday, they will launch a petiton drive against Ann Ar- bor's unique preferential voting (PV) system next week adding that a successful drive may compel them to initiate a recall campaign. Under the city's first PV elec- tion last April, voters were giv- en three choices for Mayor. No candidate received a clear ma- jority, so the second choices of the candidate who finished third were re-distributed among the other two candidates. It was this tally system that is credited with elevating Wheeler into of- fice over Republcan incumbent James Stephenson. ACCORDING to Councilman Roger Bertoia (R-Third Ward), starting a recall campaign be- fore attempting to repeal PV, would be "premature". "Pragmatically, it doesn't pay to go ahead with a recall right now because it would take too much effort (out of a PV drive)," said Bertoia. However, if the Republicans garner the 4,000 signatures nec- essary to put the issue back on the ballot this April, Bertoia said the GOP may then carry through on its recall threat. COUNCILMAN Ronald Trow- bridge (R-Fourth Ward) admit- ted yesterday that he doubted the Republicans could get the 10,000 signatures necessary for a recall petition, over the isolat- ed veto action. "But I'm working a list (of grievances a g a i n s t Wheeler) right now to justify a recall at some point," he added. Wheeler, however, has called the recall threats "ridiculous," saying they bother him "about as much as a fly on my coat." IN outlining his veto which he said he regretted, but felt was necessary, Wheeler cited ten reasons for his action. The foremost reason was a reitera- tion of Wheeler's long-held po- siton that the vetoed resoluton "approves a series of projects and not a coordinated and in- tegrated program, the primary objective of which is the devel- opment of viable neighborhoods by providing decent housing and a suitable living environment and expanding economic oppor- tunities, principally for persons of low and moderate income." Wheeler also offered a "four- phased schedule" for develop- ing a revised CDRS program, the first phase being yesterday's allocation of emergency funding to existing community pro grams. By October 20 Wheeler hopes to have completed phase two of his program, which calls for council review of all proposals previously submitted to the CDRS Advisory Committee, "with the objective of giving final or tentative approval to agencies and activities which meet essential conditions." PHASE three involves selec- tion of a new CDRS comhttee, and the development of an amended CDRS proposal by Oc- tober 31. The final phase would be the development and submission to HUD of a plan for second year federal funds available next summer. Accompanying the veto was the mayor'stentative plan for the development of a human services agency by Jan. 1. The agency, he said, would act as an "umbrella" for employment,: community service, human rights, recreation, neighborhood development and informal com- munity service components. VERSITY COURSE 414 ETERMINISM: APPRAISAL" his tenure as President - and that mail of other Presidents had been scrutinized as well. The aide later withdrew that statement, saying he had mis- understood committeehinvesti- gators, and Church himself con- firmed the narrower version. CHURCH said that all the let- ters intercepted by the CIA were either sent from Communist Bloc countries or mailed from the United States to persons in those nations. And Church said that one of his own letters, written to his mother-in-law while he was in the Soviet Union, was included in correspondence found by his committee's staff while probing the CIA mail-opening operation -a project which was begun in 1952 and not closed down until Feb. 15, 1973. Church's first statement on the matterdyesterday morning offered no detail but implied a wider scope to the mail surveil- lance than he later outlined. IN PART, he said, "We want to know why the CIA opened the mail of organizations such as the Ford Foundation, Harvard University, and the Rockefeller Foundation or why mail to and from persons such as Federal Reserve Chairman A r t h u r Burns, Rep. Bella Abzug, (D- N.Y.), Jay Rockefeller, Martin Luther King Jr., Richard Nixon himself, Hubert Humphrey and Edward Kennedy . . . should have been regularly opened and scrutinized by the CIA." Sen. Walter Mondale (D- Minn.), also said among those on the CIA "watch list" were double Nobel prize winner Linus Pauling, author John Steinbeck and labor leader Victor Reuther. CHURCH told of the CIA's mail opening operation as his committee questioned James An- gleton, former CIA counter- intelligence chief and National Security Council member Rich- ard Ober, who once worked for Angleton. Angleton insisted, the overall operation had been valuable. He cited leads it provided in the still unsuccessful pursuit of Kathy Boudin, a woman alleged- ly seen running from an explo- sion which destroyed the Green- wich Village bomb factory of the Weathermen, a radical left- ist group, on March 6, 1970. "When we went back through the mail program letters we found she had written from Mos- cow 30 to 40 letters to people in the United States," Angleton said. "These were the only leads the -FBI had. She's still a fugi- tive. It raises in anyone's mind the question of whether she's in Moscow." But Church said the pro- gram's value must be balanced against the harm it did to the constitutional rights of Ameri- can citizens. "In the future, intelligence organizations had better honor the Constitution and the laws because that's what freedom is all about," Church said. Radical and informer (Continued from Page 1) attempt."And as a result, there tests on whether she is sane is an open investigation based on enough to stand trial on a what she said. charge of attempting to assassi- "It just so happened that the nate the President. shooting occurred at this time,"; the source said. MOORE will spend about two;I months in a light, cheerful room: MOORE, an informant for the at San Diego Metropolitan Cor- FBI, local police and the fed- rectional Center, opened Dec. 2 eral Bureau of Alcohol, Tobac- by the U.S. Bureau of Prisons. co and Firearms (ATF) gave It is one of the three federal' her most recent information on facilities in the nation designed federal gun control violations, specifically for psychiatric work- the source said. ups on prisoners before trial or W. H. McConnell, assistant sentencing. to the director of the ATF, said The warden at the facility in Washington: said yesterday there are no spe- "Contact with Mrs. Moore is cial plans to house Moore, or to . ith beef up security. vestigation and we decline to Warden J. D. Williams said, discuss anything." "She'll be treated like all the others." The 45-year-old Moore, a di- vorcee with a 9-year-old son, THERE are no bars in the had lived on the fringe of the 22- story downtown building, Bay Area radical world while which cost $13 million. The resi- slipping information to the FBI, dents are given private rooms ATF and San Francisco Police. with piped-in music, a dressing table, a reading lamp and a THE FBI said it ended its con- ,private toilet. tact with Moore in June after "She gave federal firearms she publicly admitted her year- agents a bit of information with- long efforts a stheir informant. in the last two or three days," In the 48 hours before the shot said one law enforcement source was fired at Ford, Moore hinted the day after the assassination to police what was on her mind. Because of the effects of the new CRISP reqistration sys- tem, the PIRGIM fee is now collected in the manner ori- cinally petitioned for by 1 6,000 UM students. You have been assessed a $1 .50 fee for PIRGIM on your tuition bill. For those students who do not wish to support the group, PIRGIM announces: PIRGIM FEE I REFUND GIRLS! GUYS! WHAT WOULD YOUR MOTHER SAY IF YOU JOINED A FRATERNITY FIND OUT Join THETA XI THE COED FRATERNITY RUSH - SEPTEMBER 21-25 - 7-10 p.m. OR CALL 1345 WASHTENAW 761-6133 or 665-0334 (the house with the white- pillars) SIMCHAT TORAH Hakafot-singing and dancing with the Torah and the Jewish people. SATURDAY NIGHT, Sept. 27 at 7:30 p.m. At HILLEL 1429 Hitl-663-3336 IOUSBU 4kc epi.~coat , Aertt %un4.Mwrt 2i. n.gdcvtctn i an arbor, lM a'4 9i8105* telepfote 665-0406 THE HOUSE IS OPEN The big, blue house on the corner of Catherine & Division is open-to you and everyone from 9:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m., Tuesdavs through Sundays. Some folks find it a cood place to read the paoer, study, come by with a friend for coffee, or make friends'with someone at the House. - If You want some help with a problem, or simply want to talk with someone, there are people around who are easy to talk to, including the two chaplains. If we can't help, we might know someone who can. Pot-luck picnics on Fridays around 6:00 p.m. Feast of Thanksqivinq on Sundays at Noon. CHAPLAINS; The Rev. Andrew Foster The Rev. Bruce Campbell i t r MINI COURSE--UNIV "BIOLOGICAL D A CRITICAL NOON LUNCHEON SOUP and SANDWICH--S50c MAHMOUD DIALLO Natural Resource Economist, has traveled. ex- tensively through regions of Sahel drought, speaks of "RECENT DEVELOPMENTS IN THE SAHEL" FRIDAY, Sept. 26 at GUILD HOUSE 802 MONROE (no reservations) A. AVAILABLE. Mon., Sept. 29-Fri., Oct. 3 Student Accounts Office 2nd Floor, SAB 8:30-12:00, 1:00-4:30 B. SIMPLY 1. Take your' .D. to SAB. 2. Fill out form brief at SAB. 3. Receive a $1.50 credit on next tuition bill. Public Interest Research Group in Michigan SEPTEMBER 29-OCTOBER 6 Mini course will consist of five days of quest lectures of 3:00 and 7:30 p.m., discussions, workshops and a weekend retreat all revolving around the idea that human behavior is fixed by biology alone. For more information call POINT 30. Sign up at 4101 Nat. Sci. 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