RENTAL WOES See Editorial Page LJ t I1j au :4a j FLURRIOUS High-T20 Low-5 See Today for details Vol.; LXXXViNo. 97 Latest Deadline in the State Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, January 23, 1976 10 Cents Ten Pages i t. u5~( XSEE S tAPp CAL i6 DNIY Perry and the cops State Rep. Perry Bullard, (D-Ann Arbor) has ac- cused an Ingham County Circuit judge of aiding in a cover up of State Police spying activities. Bul- lard said yesterday that the House Civil Rights Committee, which he chairs, will continue to in- vestigate the so-called Red Squad of the State Police despite a court order that the squad be dismantled and the files destroyed. Bullard said the order to destroy the files without making them public is "as damaging to democracy and contrary to justice as Nixon's efforts to keep peo- ple from knowing about Watergate." State Police Director George Halverson said that opening the files, even just to the persons investigated, could lead to the injury or death of police informants who helped gather information. 4 Concert cancellation The gospel singers concert scheduled for this Sunday has been postponed. Tickets will be re- funded or exchanged. Call 763-1107 for further information. A waterlogged affair Waterbeds are supposed to be great for lovers. And when the affair goes stale, you can always rip open-the bed and drown your partner. That's exactly what Californian Mark Bates, 23, had in mind. after he quarreled with his new wife, Cheryl, 23, yesterday. She claims Bates pushed her onto the waterbed, slashed it witha knife and shoved her head into the water. She said she escaped and called police, who arrested Bates as he drove from their home. He was booked for investi- gation of attempted murder, drunken driving, malicious mischief and resisting arrest. Dahling, I vant a divorce Zsa Zsa Gabor is divorcing her sixth husband because he took her Rolls Royce apart and didn't put if back together again. Gabor, 55, also charg- ed that husband Jack Ryan, who invented the Barbie Doll, promised to build her a nightclub in- side their luxurious Bel-Air home as a wedding present and failed to come through with the goods. Is that what divorce lawyers call irrecon- cilable differences? O 'Man' talk How's a boy going to grow up into a big, strong man if he's following after a mere woman? He just won't and needs a man to lead him instead, says the national president of the Boy Scouts of America. With that sexist conclusion, the scouting movement has ruled out women as Cubmasters. After all, you wouldn't want your son learning how to cook or sew, would you? "Advice from sociolo- gists and child psychologists has convinced us that leadership should be male and we believe that," said Arch Monson, the scout official. The question of female Cubmasters came up last April when a cub pack in Maryland lost its charter because a woman was the Cubmaster. Last June, the Bal- timore Area Boy Scout Council sent a resolution to the national scouting organization calling for a change in the by-laws to allow women Cubmasters. The council said there had been "changes in pub- lic opinion on the roles of women in the scouting movement" and urged study "to really determine if the man-boy relationship is that important." Happenings.... . . . happen mostly in the evening today, but if you're up for a noon lunch at the Guild House, 302 Monroe, Regent Sara Power will be giving some of her "Reflections on the International Women's Year." . . . to start off the evening, Thea Braiter- man, national chairwoman on economic and social change for the Women's International League for Peace and freedom, will lecture on "Changing the American Economy: A People's Program" at 7:00 in the Michigan League, 227 Ingalls . . . there will also be a teach-in on revolution in Dhofar, sponsored by the Organization of Arab Students, featuring two speakers and a film, in the Michi- gan Ballroom, at 7:30 . But for those of you who are looking for a more lively night on the town, check out the Old Fashioned Kegger, at the Theta Chi Frat, 1351 Washtenaw, also at 7:30, for just $1.00 thoy'll provide a band and all the beer you can handle . . . and at 8:00 science fiction freaks and writers from all over the United States will gather at the Ann Arbor Inn for what may prove to be.the largest science fiction convention ever held in the midwest, ConFusion 12, admission at the door will be five dollars. On the inside..., . . Jay Levin and Cathy Reutter tells the tale of two Trony tenants on the Editorial Page . . . the Arts Page features a review of "She Stoons to Conquer" by Jeff Selbst . . . and Rich Lerner President nominates new labor secretary By AP and Reuter WASHINGTON - President Ford yesterday nomi- nated W. J. Usery, a one-time blue-collar worker and long-time federal labor mediator, to be the new sec- retary of labor. Ford expressed confidence in the ability of the 52-year-old Usery to handle "this very tough job" in a year when Ford said there would be a number of prospective labor disputes in such major industries as the rubber; automotive and trucking fields. IF CONFIRMED by the Senate, Usery will succeed John Dunlop, who resigned recently because he felt he no longer had the confidence of labor after Ford vetoed the common site picketing bill, which would have given unions the right to strike an entire con- struction site. Asked if he thought he could get along with labor, Usery, sitting in the Oval Office with the President, said, "I enjoy the confidence of many people in the labor organization. I think we can work, together." Usery said he would administer his new department "fairly and impartially." USERY'S nomination came at a time of tension be- tween the President and the AFL-CIO labor move- ment. The AFL-CIO and the Independent Teamsters Union were enraged when Ford, this month, vetoed the pic- keting bill after promising Dunlop he would sign it. Usery is highly regarded by both management and labor and one of his first tasks will be to try and re- store communication between the administration and the unions, which in Dunlop's view was destroyed by the president's veto. PRAISING Dunlop as "a man of extreme talent, and practical knowledge," Usery said they had worked together closely "'o help maintain a high degree of labor-management peace during a period of consider- able economic stress." Last July, with strikes threatened against the Postal Service and the railroads, Usery shuttled tirelessly between the separate negotiations for nearly 48 hours, winning peaceful settlements in both disputes. "He never looked tired," said an observer. called If necessary, he sometimes resorts to unorthodox tactics. He once hid C. L. Dennis, president of the Brotherhood of Railway Clerks from then-Atty. Gen. John Mitchell and the Justice Department who wanted to arrest Dennis for defying a congressional order to end a strike. Usery hid Dennis in various hotels around town until the strike ended and the congression- al order became moot. USERY WAS passed over twice before for the Cabi- net post, both by former President Richard Nixon and by Ford when he tapped Harvard economist Dun- lop for the post last March. Ford said both he and the American people were "very fortunate" that Usery was available and "will- ing to assume this very tough job." Usery, who has served for seven years in govern- ment posts, was a maintenance machinist for the Armstrong Cork Co. from 1949 to 1955.and then became grand lodge representative of the International As- sociation of Machinists and Aerospace Workers AFL- CIO where he began his career in labor negotiations. Usery cease-fire in Lebanon By AP and Reuter BEIRUT, Lebanon-Presi- dent Suleiman Franjieh an- nounced yesterday that all of Lebanon's warring fac- tions have agreed on a cease-fire and "fundamen- tal principles for a political solution" to end the nine- month-old c i v i1 war be- tween the country's Mos- lems and Christians. But fighting went on in Beirut long after the 8 p.m. (1:00 p.m. EST) deadline. AS THE. cease-fire formally went into effect, the- chatter of machine gun f i r e still echoed throughout the center of Beirut. Observers said it would be necessary to wait until at least today to know whether the truce was taking hold. The cease-fire deadline was set by a "joint supreme mili- tary commission" made up of representatives of the Lebanese and Syrian armies as well as the Palestine Liberation Army (PLA) to supervise "an end to the fighting and a return to normal life." PALESTINIAN sources said last night that the military had decided theceasefire would be followed by the withdrawal of armed forces so that roads would be safe from 2 p.m. (7 a.m. EST) today. All military and police bar- racks whichhad been occupied would be cleared of gunpersons. Displaced civilians would be returned to their homes and bodies would, be exchanged be- tween the rival forces. All detained soldiers would be released together with military equipment. THE SOURCES said regional committees would be set up to supervise the ceasefire. They would be three-person groups made up of a Lebanese, a Sy- rian and a Palestinian. The Voice of Palestine Radio said the road from Beirut south to Sidon which had been closed by fighting around Damour would be reopened today. The agreement also calls for the return of all Christians, Moslems and Palestinians to the areas they occupied before the war; retreat of all armed men to their bases, including troops of the PLA who came from Syria this week; redistribution of political power to end Chris- tian dominance and give the Moslems an equal voice; and machinery to improve the eco- nomic lot of the Moslems. E:XCH OF 20 previous cease- fires proved to be, at best, just a breathing space for the com- batants to rest and rearm-and at worst, no more than pious words. But this was the first time Syria had been so closely in- volved. The involvement of the neigh- boring Arab Moslem state could be a vital factor in enforcing a ceasefire, but it is also likely to be a major sticking point with Lebanon's Christians. INTERIOR Minister Camille Chamoun, head of the National Liberal Party, has accused the Syrians of direct military in- tervention in support of Pales- tinians and left-wing factions. "The ceasefire cannot be ac- cepted under the condition we are in," a spokesperson for his party said without elaboration. Referring to Syrian and Pales- tinian involvement in yestet- day's ageeement, the spokesper- son said, "We understand their situation, but that does not mean they have to be involved in the nolitical affairs of our country.' ASKED IF the party's militia See FACTIONS, Page 7 AP Photo .Abortion Jrotested An unidentified man dressed up as a doctor and holding a bag of baby dolls leads demonstrators in the third annual "March for Life" in Washington yesterday. The marchers are lobbying for a constitutional amendment banning abortion. RC teo erosioi By MIKE NORTON An "impersonal bureaucracy" and "narrow professionalist at- titudes" have slowly been strip- + ping the Residential College ; (RC) of its unique role over the list few years, RC instruc- tor Ed Egnatios charged last night. - Speaking to an audience ofi 30 students and faculty mem-1 cher attacks r'of program bers in Greene Lounge at East Quad, Egnatios claimed that members of the Housing Office and some literary college (LSA) department heads have fostered an attitude that threatens to undermine the RC's very rea- son for existence. "THE RC was founded on the idea of decisions being shared between students, faculty, and IM Building to close in May for repairs By BRIAN DEMING The Advisory Committee of Recreational, Intramural and Club Sports (ARICS) recommended yesterday that the Intramural Recreation Building on Hoover Street be closed for four months this summer for renovation. The motion was carried with only one dissenting vote, that of committee member Richard Bailey. RENOVATIONS PLANNED for the 47-year-old structure, the first building of its kind in the country, mainly entail the com- nlot nv r- nl nr th - c n - - rnn -r~n e T ncn friliti administrators . . . on the idea that living and learning can go on in the same place . . . and that education can be flexible and p e r s o n a1, that students should be encouraged to be in- dependent and resourceful. And the thing was working! But you have people here who seem to be trying to wipe out every gain we've made." According to Egnatios, the RC first tangled with the Housing Office over alleged dope-smok- ing and sexual promiscuity in East Quad. At that time the students and their Resident Ad- visors had their way and "cer- tain people" in housing, he al- leged, have waited for years for an opportunity to gain re- venge. "They bided their time like vultures, and when they were ready they went for the neck. They cut the budget they brought in new staff, they re- wrote the job description for the new director of East Quad so that it all but ignored the exist- ence of Residential College in the building," he claimed. T n- a. - n- -r -- . ' - - Dodv Photo by SCOTT ECCKER Earl Greene (on the left), Democratic candidate for the Second Ward seat on City Council, mulls over the delevant issues of the upcoming election with First Ward candidate Ezra Rowry. City Council candidates cite public services as prime issue By GEORGE LOBSENZ The five Democratic candidates for City Coun- cil kicked off their campaigns last night at the Ann Arbor Public Library with introductory speeches before party members. In their brief statements, the candidates out- lined the issues they would emphasize in the up-coming elections. Few speakers delved into specific problems. HIGH ON THE priority list of almost all the candidates was the city's obligation to provide citizens with improved city services such as street maintenance and garbage collection. Manv conann.c wmra -, mnPr r. ; n nn-p-rP( mxih human services in response to the specific prob- lems of his ward. ON THE controversial subject of salaries for City Council members, Kenworthy had some strong words, citing the effort involved in being an effective Council member. "I put in about 40 hours a week in represent- ing my constituents," he remarked: "You can't just walk over from your law office and make a big 3-hour speech on Monday night and go home - that's not being a Councilperson." Other candidates also expressed in issues in- volving City Council policy and procedure. "1 nia o nka n hits this of e ta Crm-i