Page Two Cheating criticized IN VARIOUS instances, ac- -no credit for the exam in cording to the committee report question; and punishments included: -four months suspension. -a letter of reprimand; One professor called the com- -a letter of reprimand and a mittees supposedly light disci $75 fine; plinary actions "scandalous," - --------~ while another faculty memberj termed the committee's actions $ 3 ~'""a farce." $13per day Judiciary Committee member FLATE RATE Mary Crichton, of the German Department, said that some of the accusations were "justified" NO Mileage but she did not elaborate.1 OTHER committee members $89.50 could not be reached or would1 not comment on the opinions, WEEKLY voiced at yesterday's faculty CHEVETE, PNTOmeeting. CHEVETTE, PINTO, English Professor Eric Rab- VEGA kin said he did not want the That's Why We're Called report to be publicized becausei the committee's lenient attitudei ECONO -CA R might encourage dishonest prac- j 438 W. HURON tices. ANN ARBOR Associate Dean of LSA Char-. les Morris pointed out that the1 663-2033 student members of the com- mittee were "not a factor in, leniency." El I H-t MICIG(AN LDAILY i I uesday, January 13, 19 10 Sharp-eyed salesmen swindle sheep' (Continued from Page 1) buys it for $3,300 cash as an in- vestment for his upcoming re- tirement. NASSBELIEVES the person' who signed the contract will send him - the contract's now owner - a check for $78.56 each month for several years, as specified in the contract. He is puzzled, then outraged, when no payments come. Had he been present when the contract was signed, he would under- stand. Nass finally complained to the Arizona attorney general's of- fice and, with Peterson, testi- fied in a trial against former Great Southwest officers. But he said he. never received a payment on the contract he bought, nor had he seen a cent of his $3,300 investment. North Platte, Neb., October, 1971. Gordon Johnson answers his telephone and gets a friend ly invitation to a free steak dinner at a local restaurant. "WE'D LIKE to tell you and some of the other nice folks in North Platte about the wonder- ful things that are happening in Arizona," says the voice "We're going to give you the opportunity to get in on the ground floor on some choice land. No obligation, of course.' Johnson, goes, gets a free steak and a sales pitch of in- credible intensity. "Their salesmen wouldn't let me say no," he recalls. "They told me there was a land boom going on in Arizona and prices were skyrocketing. They had films and slides and maps and posters. They showed m charts and figures and govern- ment reports. They showed me how, if I bought a lot, I could sell it for twice as much in two years. And if I didn't like it, I could have all my money back so there was no way I could like and only a fool would refuse a deal like that." "YOU KNOW," he says "they were, nice people. And i just sounded too good to pass up." Johnson buys lot No. 448 for U A Tired I of Being a Slave to a Cigarette? Because of What Cigarettes Are Doing to Your Health? Worried I E i Ready to kick the habi t If Your Answers to These Questions Are YES- We Invite You to Attend the Free Public Kick-off Meeting of the Ann Arbor Smoking Withdrawal Clinic's January-February Session. I JANUARY 14 $250 down and $87 a month for for years. Thirty months and $2,860 in payments later, Johnson, stiff with arthritis and readyto re- tire, flies to Arizona to inspect his-property. He finds 'it, with some difficulty, in a barren wasteland 100 miles north of Phoenix - at the bottom of the Gila River. MONTEZUMA Development Corp., which sold Johnson Lot No. 448, according to a com- plaint filed with the Arizona attorney general's office, is bankrupt. Gordon Johnson and Virgil Ness are victims of what many desribe as the two most com- mon land frauds being perpe- trated on. the American public today. Complaints filed with state consumer agencies show that the victims of these frauds come from many social and economic levels - the wealthy, the middle class and the noor. But state and federal officials say they do not know the over- all cost of the swindles becalse most of the victims swallow their losses and say nothing. "THEY'RE TOO embarras- s sed to complain," says Conrad paying after $600. I still have phone book. This is the dinner+ - Goodkin, Wisconsin deputy the contract. I save it as a re- invitation. You can expect about commissioner of securities. minder. .. I won't be so fool- a two per cent return. Then hei "The ones you do get here are ish again." dispatches a crew of salesmen1 pretty much the tip of the ice-* - maybe a dozen - for the , berg." There are a lot of versions of dinner. In the state of Washington, the land hustle. Let James "We would start, with films,, - for example, officials of the Cornwall tell his. He was one slides, posters and an openingJ . government's Real Estate Di- of its more successful practi- talk. This is the big show. The vision (RED), say 20 out-of- tioners, earning $12,000 a week Arizona land story, America1 state developers registered to at one point, he says. Cornwall, and apple pie. sell land in Washington are 39, a former divinity student DURING DINNER, one. clos-1 " 'very dubious" in terms of the and used car salesman, was er salesman sits with two cou- . value of the land they're sell- president of Great Southwest ples. There's only small talk, : ing. The 20 have registered 51,- Land and Cattle Co. from ' polite conversation. The closer - 592 lots. Total selling price: January, 1971,. until the com- feels them out, finds out whe- t $588.4 million. pany dissolved in April, 1972. ther the husband or wife con- "And this is only a drop in trols the purse strings. He picks the bucket . . . only the ones RECENTLY, HE SAID, "I his best shot - the couple he' we have a record of since we have with the help of God re- feels will most likely sign a1 come into existence in Janu- habilitated nystelf to the point contract that night. ary, 1974," says Ross Baker, a that I am . . . a part of the "After dinner he leaves one RED investigator. 'answer and not a part of the couple to another closer, takes - ANGUS McLEOD, chief of problem." his best shot aside. and starts the Nevada Real Estate Divi- Cornwall was indicted on 66 to work them. He always starts Itsihne sas 3 toE4stegDi- counts of fraud in connection with the investment story, be- sign, says 35 to 40 firms regis~with the sales of securities in- cause that's what's going to otered in Nevada sell very re- volving Great Southwest Land' make his sale. No matter what e mote land with not other deand Cattle Co. He pleaded guil- anybody says they want land velopment or population growth ty to three counts -and 63 were for, investment is the' biggest' expected for many years-if at dropped. Maricopa County At- appeal. Everybody wants to I all'" torney Moise Berger promised' make some money. Every-' "It's perfectly legal," says Cornwall probation in return body's greedy. McLeod. "The people are just for testimony against Ned War- The closer hits them with tpayinga lot more than the land ren Sr., a Phoenix businessman everything. He pulls out folders .is worth." charged with bribing a former of charts and graphs. He shows According to the U. S. Office Arizona real estate commis- them how the price of land is of Interstate Land Sales Regis- sioner in connection with Great skyrocketing, how lots 'he sold' tration, 42 states have laws Southwest's operations. last year have increased 50 per regulating sales of subdivided cent in value already. This is land. Typical is Utah's two- CORNWALL and the state eir big chance. year-old Uniform Land Sales claimed that Warren was the, "YOU WANT A retirement Practices Act, requiring full mastermind behind G r e a t home, a vacation home, fine, he disclosure of all legal and phy- Southwest, and that Cornwall tells them. But are you gonna sical aspects of the land being was merely a puppet. But the complain if the lot doubles in 7 sold and prohibiting promotion- Arizona charge against Warren vpl in two years? d al "tactics that go beyond the was dropped for lack of evi- "He gives them alpresenta- t bounds of fairness." dence and Cornwall 'didn't tes- tion that they're not equipped YET, SAYS Robert.Thurman, tify. He recently was sentenc- to argue with. He overwhelms counsel for the Utah RED, not ed to 5 to 10 years in state pri- them. They don't understand I a single criminal action has son. because it's all doubletalk, but been filed under the act in the "The sales operation is pret- they don't ask. If they do, he's year he's been with the RED, a ty standardized," said Corn- got an answer for everything. situation not uncommon in well in an interview in Phoenix He just grinds them into the states having such laws. before he went to jail. "The de- ground until he burns 'em -! "Most buyers are very coop- veloper buys a large parcel of gets a down payment and a I erative - with the developer," land with a very small down signed contract." says Robert Blakey, deputy I payment on a lot-release basis. In out-of-state land sales, fed-. Arizona attorney general for That means he pays off each eral law requires that the buy- consumer frauds. lot as he resells it. His financial er get an inspection privilege, "Some of the people who buy stake in minimal. He takes no the right to see and Rnnrove the this land are unexcelled in their stake in minimal. He takes no land within a specified period stupidity. They don'h read, they personal risk. before the sale is final. If he just sign. Guy shoves a paper "He gets some broken down feels the land is not as repre- under their nose, they sign." grading equipment, roughs insented in the contract, he gets TELEPHONE interviews with some roads, stakes out his lots a refund. land purchasers who have filed and that's his inventory. This isi complaints show a common cheap, largely worthless land., "THAT'S WHAT we tell1 strain. The approach, the patch, These 80x100 lots have an ac- them," says Cornwall, "but it's1 the deception, the awakening tual value of maybe $50. He's bull. If the sheep (the buyer), are, with little variations, iden- going to sell them for $3,000 to would read his contract he tical. And' always, the same $5.o00. would see the only way he's 'tag line: "But they seemed like "He picks a target city and going to get a refund is if he such nice people . . sets up a boiler room in a .ho. can prove misrepresentation. Ms. Bernhard Benn of West: tel - 8 to 10 girls with tele- And how's he gonna do that?i Allis, Wis., who bought a lot phones - and they call an ad- Everything we promised him+ at River Ranch 'Acres, Fla., dress list or just go through the - the trees, the lakes, the says: "That guy was talking so fast, he had an answer for everything. He just' kept sho- payments were too high. He cut them in half. I said I was afraid to buy without seeing. He said (Continued from Page 1) long delayed is evidence that we'd get a money-back guaran- LAST WEEK'S election is the the leadership wishes to per-t tee. He said they were going- culmination of an often bitter petuate itself.i to put in roads and utilities and struggle by the CDU against Criticism of union operations: a big, deluxe recreation com- what they see as a self-serving is widespread. The present con- nlex The didn't do anythin local hierarchy and unwarrant- tract with the University is re-t The They e anythng. ed interference by the United garded as grossly inadequate byu -land is worthless. I stoppedAuto Workers regional organiza- many union members. roads, the utilities, the shop- ping centers, the golf course- it was all verbal. Nothing in writing. "When they come down to in- spect the land they're met on the site by another salesman. He's called a reloader. He's a specialist. and he's very good at his job -- which is not only to convince the sheep to keep the lot, but to sell him one or two more. It's hard to believe, but the reload rate, is fantastic. Most people who start out screaming for a refund wind up taking a second lot." "THEN YOU START build- ing the house for them. You build them a dream, a com- plete package, and by the time you're done their heads are in the clouds. They're seeing things on this junk land that were never there and never will be there. They're totally snow- ed, totally caught up in this dream. Aud, believe it or not, this is not hard to accomplish. There's something magical about land. Everyone of us would like to own some. It's dif- ferent from every other com- modity. 'There's a permanence about land, a mystique, and it all works for the seller." * * * The traffic in bad mortgages is a major problem in some states. Last spring, Florida's state controller, Gerald Lewis, an- nounced an investigation into a scheme that has robbed as many as 80,000 investors of up to $1 billion. Lewis says. the scheme involved the sale of high interest notes secured by fike first mortgages on lots in Florida land developments. He says at' least 57 corporations are involved. THE STATE is suing to get at least some money back. "The typical victim is not the well-heeled, sophisticated in- vestor.". says Lewis. "He's the middle-class retiree who stands to lose everything he's worked a lifetime for." Ike Elivabeth Butler, a 67- year-old widow from Hialeah, Fla., whose savings account was wined ont by phrchase of a worthless contract. "I SAW THIS ad in the pa- per that said you could get 14 per cent on your money," she recalls. "I called them up and this man came out and told me I could make $3,900 on ny $2,500. He said I couldn't lose because I .would get a deed to property in a development they owned. He sounded so convinc- ing." l election unexpectedly sinificant effect, the new leadership should mark- edly change union policies. The CDU will press fdt fur- ther changes in the local bylaws to create more direct democ- racy in the union's government. Connecticut was the first state to have' a written con- stitution. 7:30 P.M. ROOM 5 University of Michigan Student Health Service 201 Fletcher-Ann Arbor YOU PLAN ON QUITTING SOMEDAY, WHY NOT DO IT NOW? SPONSORED BY: MichiOan LungRAssociation University of Michigan Student Health Service L U UDC Rthisv eek Bridge-Chess- Backgammon (coffee & tea), 8-11 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 15 H I LLEL 1427 Hill St. I i r d h .- FUTURE WORLDS IS BACK!! GEOGRAPHY 303; PROFESSORS: Karen DeCrow, Rollo May, Jon Kozol, David 3 CREDITS Brower, Jerry O'Neill, Nicholas Johnson, Dick Gregory, Susan CREDITSBrownmiller. Julian Bond LIMITED ENROLLMENT; FEW SPACES STILL OPEN January 27th-Karen DeCrow; President of National Organization of Women (NOW) UAC MUSKET MASS MEETING For "HELLO DOLLY" WEDNESDAY, JAN. 14, 1976--7:30 P.M., 2ND FLOOR, MICHIGAN UNION AUDITIONS-January 15-17, 1976 MEDIATRICS presents BUTCH CASSIDY and the SUNDANCE KID ROBERT REDFORD, PAUL NEWMAN JAN. 16, 17 TIME: 7:30 P.M., 9:30 P.M. NATURAL SCIENCE AUD. ADMISSION: $1.25 All tickets ao on sale an hour before the first show THE COLLABORATIVE ... UAC-Michigan Union Art Classes LEARN THECBASICS IN BATIK. DRAWING, ETHNIC CLOTHING. JEWELRY, LEADED GLASS, MACRAME, PA INT ING, PHOTOGRAPHY"., POETRY, SCULPTURE, SI LKSCREEN, SOFT SCULPTURE OR WEAVING. $20. for 8 classes. Classes start January 26 in the Michigan Union. Call 764-3234 (Union Gallerv) or 668-7884 (UAC Arts and Crafts Guild) for further information. UAC Etc. presents THE NATIONAL MARIONETTE THEATRE JAN. 28 AT i P.M. ADMISSION: ADULTS $2.50 JAN. 29 AT 8 P.M. CIDE 12 MENDELSSOHN THEATRE CHILDREN $1.25 Tickets are on sale at UAC Ticket Central (lobby of Michigan Union) and at the door. THOT PRODUCTIONS DEADLINE: For 2nd issue of THESEWEEKS art smaqazine is Jan. 21, 1976. ART, GRAPH- ICS, WRITING, PHOTOGRAPHY .. . For more information call 763-1107 ECLIPSE JAZZ presents Les McMann WED., JAN. 21-8 Shows: 8:00 & 10:30 p.m. also appearing: MIXED BAG Tickets: Mich. Union, Discount records and The Blind Pigi COMING-CAROLE KING-Jan. 26, 27 FOR MORE INFO CALL 763-1107 r i FREE E! . tic on, with which the clericals THE RUDOLF STEINER INSTITUTE OF union is affiliated. THE GREAT LAKES AREA The UAW's often heavy announces a course in the art of ed "guidance' of the 1 CHORAL AND INDIVIDUAL SPEECH affairs has caused consid resentment within the u taught by GERALD JUHR ranks. The seeming acquie according to the methods inaugurated by R. Steiner of the local leadership t The course aims at developing awareness, technique and ofWthenloleas creative expression in regards to the artistic and spiritual UAW involvement as potential of human speech. them subject to some o PLACE: THE RUDOLF STEINER HOUSE-1923 Geddes Ave. resentment. TIME: SATURDAYS, 10:00-11:30 A.M. 9 To the CDU, the fact th Introductory lesson: Saturday, Jan. 17--FREE same people have continu Course of ten lessons begins Saturday, Jan. 24 Dositions of power sinc COURSE FEE: $40.00 STUDENTS: $25.00 local was organized over a ago and elections have .be ~ r Counse ling, Servi ces. Counseling Services provides individual, couples, and group counseling free of charge for enrolled students. TO MAKE AN APPOINTMENT: SECOND FLOOR, HEALTH SERVICES--764-8313 8-5 MONDAY thru FRIDAY WALK-IN SERVICE: THIRD FLOOR, MICHIGAN UNION Noon-5 MONDAY thru FRIDAY MARRIAGE AND FAMILY DIVISION: North Campus Commons-764-8339 PEER COUNSELING, INFORMATION, AND REFERRAL: DIAL 76-GUIDE-24 hours per day MINORITY PEER COUNSELING AND INFORMATION: SOUJTHOLJADI ORRY- 1 nm.-10 n m Mondav -hand- local's erable nion's esence o this made f this at the ued in e the year een so THE leadership has "walked over everyone's rights" claims the outspoken Weeks, now ap- parently the local president. She' promises a far more militant stand against the University. Upcoming negotiations with the University will include de- mands for a substantial across the board wage increase, a cost of living clause and longevity pay. The final outcome of the elec- tion is still somewhat unclear, although a recount should not affect the results too drastically. THE NEW officers will be in- stalled at the next membership' meeting later this month. Un- less a recount should have an 1'IF Mlt lEIG4N DAWlY Volume LXXXVI, No. 88 Tuesday, January 13, 1976 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News tonne 764-0562. Second clas postage paid it Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. Published d a il y Tuesday through Sunday morning during the Univer- sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subseiption rates: $12 Sept. thru April (2 semes- ters); $13 by mail outside Ann Ar- bor Summer session published Tie- fisy thr~ugh Saturday morning. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor: $7.50 by mail outside An Arbor. MODIFY YOUR UNDESIRABLE BEHAVIORS IF YOU WANT TO: 1) Lose Weight 2) Stop Cigarette Smoking 3) Increase Study Skills 4) Stop Biting Finger Nails' 5) Exercise More Frequently 6) Meet More People 7) Complete Your Dissertation 8) Change Other Minor Maladaptive Behaviors Students in Psychology 414 (Advanced Laboratory in Behavior Modification in Cooperation with the Institute of Behavior Chane, will work with you in chanoing SI[ I III ,I