Page. TWo THE MICHIGAN DAI0 Friday, March 26, 1976 Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAIL"~ Friday, March 26, 1976 is our Specialty at SUMI KO'rS The complete Oriental experience from decor to food, SUMI KO'S serves the finest in authentic teriyaki, tem- pura and yakiniku in one of three Japanese dining rooms.s To complete your generous, yet mod- estly priced, Oriental dinner there is hot sake or your choice of imported and domestic beers. A LITTLE BIT OF JAPAN-... +--SO CLOSE TO HOME. call 485-3981 PV makes appearance on ballot again The largest selection of hard aluminum MEASURING TOOLS in the country STRAIGHT EDGES/T-SQUARES METRIC RULES/L-SQUARES CENTERING RULES TRIANGLES/CURVE STICKS INKING RULES and many others. (Continued from Page 1) group of people who go to polls knowing that their second choice votes will be counted. The majority of the people nev- er have their other votes count- ed." Democratic Party C h a i r- woman Lana Pollack rebutted Henry's allegations. "To say that PV does not provide for the one-man, one-vote principle, a person must be confused, dis- honest or both," she said, majority of the voters. The mayor at the time, Republican James Stephenson, was elected in 1973 with only 48 per cent of the votes. This sparked local Democrats to blame Stephen-1 son's success on the left-wing Socialist Human Rights Party (SHRP, then called the Human Rights Party). TO COMBAT the Democrats' claims, SHRP worked success- fully to get PV on the ballot and have it instituted. K --A I tl P M P t t 1 1' W H I L E members of the In last spring's mayoral race, GOP would like to see PV go, no candidate received the re- they do not advocate returning quired 50.1 per cent of the vote to the old system because, "If to win on the first count. Third' you're going to have a majority place SHRP hopeful Carol mayor," Henry declared, "then Ernst's second choice votes the only fair wayis to have run- were then redistributed, and off elections." Democratic candidate Albert A run-off system would entail Wheeler took the mayor's seat a mayoral primary with a lat- with a 121-vote victory over in- er race between the two top cumbent Stephenson. contenders. Stephenson and his GOP col- PV was originally put on the leagues responded by calling 1974 ballot to ensure that the the process, which required a mayor would be approved by a switch from voting machines to JEWISH COMMUNITY CAMP Seeking Staff for Summer Positions INTERVIEWS ON CAMPUS, TUES.' MAR. 30th & WED., MAR. 31st, FOR: paper ballots, too unwieldy for The possibility of facing an- voters and decided to put PV to other election using paper bal- a court test. lots still does not please Weiss, THEN, as now, the GOP ar- even though he predicts no ma- gued that PV violates basic jor problems. The high cost of democratic principles because counting the PV votes on paper it undermines the one - man, cost the city some $80,000 in the one-vote concept. last election - twice the nor- But the Republican charge mal fignre. Weiss commented, that PV is unconstitutional lost "That figure may drop a few some credence when Circuit thousands next year, but it's Court Judge James Fleming' still double what the election ruled last fall that the election would have cost us with (vot- process was constitutional. ing) machines." Fleming's ruling is now being appealed by Stephenson in the C O U N C I L M A N Henry Michigan Court of Appeals. contended that the GOP idea of A CITY HALL staff analysis run-off elections "would be less of the 1975 election also punch- exnensive than preferential vot- ed some holes in the GOP at- ing, denending on how they tacks against PV. The City Hall were run." report, released last summer, By the time next April's stated that voters had no trou- mayor's race rolls around, the ble with PV. The report pointed PV issue may be moot. Because out that cit yelection workers preferential voting is intended were confused about handling to deal with an election in which the unfamiliar paper ballots the no clear majority emerges, it process necessitated. is totally inapplicable in a two- It appears the confusion PV cnhdidate race for the mayor's generated at the other end of seat, the voting machine last year The only viable third party in will not be repeated. City Clerk Ann Arbor is the SHRP and its Jerome Weiss said yesterday, power has been rapidly waning "I'm sure the problems would since 1972. The socialist party be all worked in the next elec- has not won a seat on council tion. Most of the (election) for two years, and if it does workers had never used paper not capture a spot this April, ballots before. Now they know it will be hard pressed to what to do." I make a showing next year. Old SDSers return a 0 0 r tVmumrcrnamrtmr7m'1^ m(rtr m m rm mmn(m ,,. 1 2 3 4 5 6 1 9 10 t 2421 E. MICHIGAN, YPSI. anouncing the Inc. MEET ROD LAVER & JOHN NEWCOMBE : TUE.MARCH 30th 6:30 - 7:30.- AT THE TENNIS TRAINER WE OFFER SIX INDOOR r PRACTICE COURTS. YOU CAN IMPROVE YOUR SERVICE RETURN, BACKHAND, FOREHAND AND VOLLEY. MEET ROD LAVER AND JOHN NEWCOMBE. HAVESOMEREFRESHMENTSONUS.BRING YOUR RACQUET AND GIVE THE PRACTICE COURTS A TRY ~ ABSOLUTELY FREE. ti It's a spewing smoke- stack. It's litterin the streets. It's a river where fish can't live. You know what pollu- tion is. But not everyone does. So the next time you see pollution, don't close your eyes to it. Write a letter. Make a call. Point itoutto someone who can do something about it. People start pollution. People can stop it. Keep America Beautiful 'i 99 Park Avenue, New York, N.Y: 10016 " Counselors " Supervisors " Campcraft Instructor * Crafts Instructor 0 Riding Instructor 0 Office Supervisor 0 Kitchen Assistants 0 Maintenance Assts. /IA4 Call or stop by the Placement Office for an appointment with the N Director of CAMP NEWMAN (Continued from Page 1) proposing) is asking people is, 'What would you do if you were president?' The idea is for all the different fragments of the 'movement' to come together and begin a conversation of how we can work together to define what a new America looks like." Disagreeing with Haber, Og- lesby stated, "It is impossible to start a mass organization today because it is impossible to deal with police subversion." out that city election workers, program, an FBI - initiated movement against various do- mestic radical groups in the 1960's, as an example. Oglesby claimed "Govern- ment intervention at a covert level destroyed the organization of the movement." Oglesby is currently a re- search staffer at the Boston- based Assassination Informa- tion Bureau, which has probed the circumstances surrounding the assassinations of Kennedy and others. See OLD, Page 10 l + i ,:: Ny . w 4^ Q 3140 CARPENTER 'x ANN ARBOR 971-4310 Presenting the ROCKPORT ; .,;. ; , 0 , , A Pubic Service of This Newspaper &A The Advertising Coun i . __ Soft Glove Leather And Fleible Crepe Soles. Great For Walking. en's $36.00 omen's $32.00 The Commanding Voice of Auschwitz what does the voice of Auschwitz command? Jews are forbidden to hand Hitler posthumous victories. They are commanded to survive as Jews, but the Jewish people perish. They are commanded to remember the victims of Auschwitz, let their memory perish. They are forbidden to despair of man and his world, and to escape into either cyni- cism or other worldliness, but they co-operate in delivering the world over to the forces of Auschwitz. Finally, they are forbidden to despair of the God of Israel, let Judaism perish A secularist Jew cannot make himself believe by a mere act of will, nor can he be commanded to do so. . . . And a religious Jew who has stayed with his god may be forced into new, possibly revolutionary relationships with Him. One possibility, however, is wholly unthinkable. A Jew may not respond to Hitler's attempt to destroy Judaism by himself co-operating in its destruction In ancient times the unthink- able Jewish sin was idolatry. Today, it is to respond to Hitler by doing his work. LECTURE: Prof. Emil Fackenheim outstanding philosopher of the Holocaust WILL SPEAK ON "This Moment in Jewish History: A Theological, Philosophical, & Mythical Understanding of the State of Israel and It's Positions in the World." At 8 p.m. Sunday, March 28 At HIL LEL 1429 HILL ST. M l LI MAST'S U 619 E. Liberty 217 S. Main 662-0266 662-6326 ________________ III____ SYMPHONY IN C The Pennsylvania Ballet MONDAY, TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 29, 30, & 31 8 p.m. in the POWER CENTER Sonte tickets still remain for the three performances of this impressive ballet company ,whose repertoire includes over 60 dance works by the world's finest choreographers. Dancing to music per- formed by its own superb resident or- chestra, the Ballet presents the following Programs: MONDAY RAYMONDA VARIATIONS (music, Glazounov) GROSSE FUGUE (music, Beethoven) SYMPHONY in C (isic, Bizet) TUESDAY MADRIGALESCO (music, Vivaldi) GRAND PAS DE DEUX from "Nutcracker" (Tchaikovsky) SEPTET EXTRA (music, Saint Saens) THE FOUR TEMPERAMENTS (music, Hindemith) WEDNESDAY POUS LEMAITRE (music, Bach) GRAND PAS DE DEUX from "Nutcracker" (Tchaikovsky) CONTINUM (music, Jan Krzywichi) a I v!