U.N. RESOLUTION See Editorial Page Y figp Daiti, ELYSIAN High-r Low-30° See Today for details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVI, No. 144 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, March 27, 1976 10 Cents Eight Pages CMJ SEE N PNM MCAI%-.Y' Survey note The recovery in consumer sentiment, now a year-old, has picked up momentum in the past few months, according to a study done by econ- omists at the University's Survey Research Cen- ter. Survey director Jay Schmiedeskamp and Survey founder George Katona reported that the improvement has occurred among all income groups - low as well as high - and all atti- tudes and expectations sampled in the survey showed improvement without exception. Attitudes toward buying cars and houses showed especi- ally strong gains, the report noted. Unemployment blues In other economic news, unemployment in Washtenaw County dropped from 11.4 per cent to 10.6 per cent for mid-January to mid-Febru- ary, the Michigan Employment Security Com- mission announced. The agency attributed the decline to an increase in government, auto, and electrical manufacturing jobs and predicted the rate would continue its decline until June. Happenings... ... figure skating will be the order of the day at Yost Arena from 10 this morning till 4; tick- ets are available at the door ... Guild House will have readings at 9 tonight ... a commu- nity workshop on marriage and divorce will be held by the Feminist Legal Services in Room 100 at Hutchings Hall from 9 this morn- ing to 1 ... WCBN presents a live recording of Jimmy Cliff at the Michigan Theatre last November starting at 10 tonight ... Community High School will have a World's Fair this week- end: today from 6 p.m. to 11 and tomorrow from noon until 6; there will be live entertain- ment and cultural displays ... and Elijah Lang- ford will present the "Best of Saturday Graffiti" on WCBN at 5:00; the program will include in- terviews with Les McCann and Shakey Jake. The cost of justice Thirty-seven federal and appellate judges filed a complaint in the U.S. Court of Claims Thurs- day, saying they are entitled to a 34.5 per cent increase in pay and allowances to compensate for inflation. They join 44 other federal judges who filed af ist on Feb. 11, and their lawyer - former supreme Court Justice Arthur Gold- berg - said that the two suits will be con- solidated, bringing the total number to 81. One of the new complainants is District Judge Julius Hoffman of Chicago, who presided over the stormy trial of the "Chicago Seven" on charges stem- ming from police riots at the 1968 Democratic National Convention. Peace without honor The United States is to deliver a message to the Democratic Peoples Republic of Vietnam suggesting exploratory talks on establishing more normal relations, Rep. Gillespie Montgomery (D- Miss.) said yesterday. He said Secretary of State Henry Kissinger had told him the message would be delivered by the U.S. Embassy in Paris to Vietnamese officials there. Montgomery added that he hoped the U.S. initiative, if accepted by Hanoi, would lead to the repatriation of the remains of those known to have died in South- east Asia. So there Hanoi's major newspaper, Nhan Dan, replied yesterday to President Ford's assertion last week that North Vietnam is governed by "a bunch of international pirates." In an editorial broadcast by the official North Vietnam News Agency, the newspaper said Ford's comments 'were aimed at pleasing the dark forces in the United States," which are "working out aggressive global strate- gies of 'international pirates,' to use this phrase in its fullest sense." The newspaper added that "the North Vietnamese people firmly reject the odious slanders of the Ford-Kissinger clique." Crunch Two six-passenger gondola cars snapped loose from their cables and plunged 100 feet to the snowy slopes of Vail Mountain yesterday, killing three persons, officials said. A spokesperson for Vail Associates said eight other persons were injured and an ambulance shuttle was set up through the center of the ski resort community to Vail Valley Medical Center. They saidsome of the injured were being transported to St. Anthony Hospital in Denver, and the identities of the victims were not immediately available. On the inside .** ... the Editorial Page highlights a Pacific News Service report on carbon dioxide pollu- tion ... Arts Page presents a review and inter- view with Arlo Guthrie ... and Sports Page pre- views that afternoon's showdown between Michi- gan and Rutgers. Turkey to reopen U.. Argentine junta names leader From Wire Service Reports BUENOS AIRES, Argentina - The United States recognized Argentina's new military junta yesterday. The junta designated the army commander, Gen. Jorge Videla, as president of the republic. Ruling with the 50-year-old Videla on the three-man junta are the commanders of the air force and navy. EIGHT PERSONS were reported killed in political violence since the coup early Wednesday. Unchecked political violence that claimed an estimated 1,700 lives during President Isabel Peron's 21 months in power was a key factor in her ouster. The American note, calling for continuation of diplomatic relations, was delivered by U.S. Ambassador Robert Hill to the new military foreign minister, Adm. Antonio Vanek. Yesterday, 48 hours after Mrs. Peron was overthrown in a bloodless coup, the junta had intervened directly in a broad spectrum of Argentine national life. f THE NEW military rulers started a purge of the civil service and moved to consolidate the power they intend to hold for at least the next three years. The junta already has reopened banks, lifted press censorship and issued a stream of communiques outlining how they will run the country during the initial five-day "clean-up" period. They have also outlawed five leftist parties in a move to check opposition. INFORMED SOURCES said several hundred civil servants have been fired and many arrested. See ARGENTINA, Page 2 bases Faci ties to wateh By AP and Reuter WASHINGTON - T h e United States and Turkey yesterday signed a military agreement w h i c h, if ap- proved by Congress, will re- open some 26 U.S. military bases that had been closed by the Turks. The agreement represents a major step toward ending the crisis of confidence that has strained relations be- tween the t w o countries since the U.S. Congress im- posed an arms embargo against Turkey 13 months ago. THE AGREEMENT means the United States will re- gain access to several intel- ligence - gathering facilities used for monitoring mili- tary activities i n s i d e the Soviet Union. These facilities are a m o n g - about two dozen installations in STurkey that are affected by the agreement. U.S. privileges at the Turkish sites were sus- hpendedlast July, five months after the arms embargo went into effect. The agreement, believed to provide one billion dollars in U.S. military aid to Turkey over the next four years, was signed by Secretary of State Henry Kissingereand TurkishForeign Minister Ihsan Sabri Caglayan- gil. DETAILS OF the agreement are to be disclosed to Congress on Monday. Asked at the signing cere- mony what the agreement con- tained, Kissinger joked: "We conducted most of the negotia- tions in Turkish, so I still haven't been told. I still have my coat-barely." Kissinger said there is no mention of Cyprus in the ac- See TURKEY, Page 2 Daily Photo by ALAN BILINSKY And they're off! Sigma Chi fraternity brothers enjoy annual Derby Day fun and games in Spring weather. yesterday's agreeab PERSONALITIES PLAYED DOWN: Party lines clash in Ward 3 By MICHAEL BLUMFIELD and GEORGE LOBSENZ The race for the Third Ward City Council seat this year ap- pears to be more of a contest between party ideologies than a contest between individual candidates. Both Republican incumbent Roger Bertoia and Democratic challenger Martin Black seem to agree that little distance separates their stands on a number of issues. Instead, both have chosen to recite party rhetoric and attack the opposi- tion's party platforms. WHEN ASKED what distin- guished his candidacy from Black's, Bertoia replied, "The difference is the parties we rep- resent. You can't really cam- paign against Black - it's like punching at a balloon - you campaign against the party," he said. ITY ELECTION '76 Black sees himself as repre- sentative of "the Democratic traditional interest in social policies and social issues." He charged in a public state- ment that "Republicans tend to spend money on things used by a privileged few," while he and other Democrats are more con- cerned with the needs of the "underprivileged many - the poor, blacks, elderly and stu- dents." BLACK BACKED up his statement about city Republi- cans by noting Bertoia's vote for the expansion of the City airport. le contended the fa- cility is "useful only for those rich enough to have a need for planes." He then cited a City Council meeting during which Bertoia expressed opposition to the use of any federal funds to build housing for the elderly. Bertoia is centering his cam- paign primarily on Republican See WARD, Page 2 Black Bertoia Reckless drivers alarm North Campus. students By BARBARA ZAHS A hazardous traffic problem on North Campus is causing Bursley residents to think twice about crossing Hubbard St. Residents using University buses that stop on Hubbard, behind Bursley, must cross that street to reach the dorm. At least one Bursleyite has been hit by a car this year while crossing Hub- bard, and there have been other close calls every day, according to Bursley staff and stu- dents. "STUDENTS cross in front and in back of the bus while traffic is coming from the parking lot and from Baits Housing, and this is where the problem arises," explainedBursley Building Di- rector Loretta Anderson. "Sometimes cars just come barreling down the street and don't even slow down for the stu- dents," she said. Although a state law requires traffic in both directions to stop for a school bus which is load- ing or unloading 'passengers, University buses do not fall under the law's jurisdiction. "I KNOW of two incidents in the three years that I have been building director here where students have been hit by cars after they've gotten off the bus and started to cross that street," Anderson said. Grant Sutton, a Bursley resident, was struck by a car on January 29 as he crossed from be- hind the bus. He suffered a broken leg and was hospitalized for over a month. Sutton's room- mate, Eric Wilson, a member of the Bursley Board of Governors, is one of the students push- ing for quick action to solve the problem. But students say they have been having a dif- ficult time working their way through the Uni- versity's bureaucratic maze. WILSON and Richard Barr, another member of the Bursley Board, last week presented to the Regents a list of three proposals designed to alleviate the danger to students exiting the bus and crossing Hubbard. See BURSLEY, Page 2 Daily Photo by ALAN BILINSKY BURSLEY STUDENTS alight from commuter buses and cautiously cross the dangerous Hubbard Street to their dorm. Hubbard Street has been the scene of at least one car accident and many near misses recently. Hard drink f illed : NXOn's last das By AP and UPI . NEW YORK - Richard Nixon, In the final phase of his f days as President of the United States, was portrayed in newspaper and magazine accounts yesterday as a man who drank to excess and was obsessed with suicide. His wife, the quiet First Lady, also was reported to .'' have sought solace in alcohol and began slipping down to the servants quarters at night and returning to her private bed- room with glasses full of bourbon. :$ EMU, UAW reach tentative contract By JENNY MILLER After more than 12 hours of continuous bargaining, negotiators for s t r i k i n g United Auto Workers (UAW) locals 1975 and 1976 reached a tentative con- tract agreement late last night with Eastern Mich- iran University (EMU), no details on the contract pro- posal until it has been presented to the university's Board of Re- gents and to local union ratify- ing committees. "Membership is the ultimate authority," said George Raub, president of Local 1976, in an earlier statement. "it's up to members to decide what they want," he continued. people go to school," were not affected by the strike, accord- ing to Gary Hawks, EMU's vice president for university rela- tions. Hawks admitted earlier yesterday, however, that with nearly 500 employes off the job, "We've been affected." PATRICIA Wander, an EMU student, had complained that the strikers were "getting quite