Twelve Pages Ann Arbor, Michigan Ten Cents MSA elections certified Alkrnd, Tyler take posts after monthof uncertainty AP Photo A SISTER AND the daughter of the late Rep. Leo Ryan, the California congress- man who was murdered in Guyana during the Jonestown People's Temple incidents, listen to a House panel report on the incident. House' Jonestown investigation released By BETH PERSKY After nearly a month of review and discussion, Vice-President for Student Services Henry Johnson yesterday released his decision certifying last month's Michigan Student Assembly (MSA ) election. The University Board of Regents asked Johnson to decide the issue of election certification after a controver- sial decision by the Central Student Judiciary (CSJ), the student judicial body, not to certify April's election. JOHNSON'S decision takes effect immediately. Jim Alland and Laurie Tyler of the Student Alliance for Better Representation (SABRE) party were elected president and vice-president of MSA in the April election, and 34 representative seats also were filled. Johnson said this is the first time in seven years a University administrator has certified a student government election. SEVERAL SUITS were filed against MSA. One, filed by the People's Action Coalition (PAC), alleged that residents of East Quad, Bursley, and Couzens were not given a fair chance to vote. The Regents entered the process when a letter urging certification of the election, written by former CSJ Justices Richard Barr and Tom Potter, was sent to Interim University President Allan Smith and to the Office of Student Services. Smith placed the item on the April Regents' agenda. THE REGENTS then asked Johnson to decide the issue of election cer- tification after the Central Student Judiciary (CSJ), the student judicial body, decided not to certify the election. The CSJ decision was challenged by some students who claimed CSJ had made procedural violations, and were concerned that the costs of a second election would outweigh its benefits. "I see very little reason, as opposed to any other year, for not having cer- tified this election," explained Johnson. He said it would "serve to the detriment of the student body in general not to at this point certify the election." JOHNSON BASED his decision on a report given to him last Wednesday by the Student Development Office (SDO). Johnson said he has "deep concerns about the development of MSA," and See JOHNSON, Page 2 Women 's Title, IX complaints answered By JULIE ENGEBRECHT The Athletic Department has respon- ded to allegations of sex discrimination made by two women's track team members, and those responses will be presented to the University Board of Regents tomorrow in Dearborn. Regent Sarah Power (D-Ann Arbor) requested the report after the two women, LSA sophomores Sheila Mayberry and Blaise Supler, gave a presentation concerning the charges during the public comments portion of the April Regents meeting. THE TWO STUDENTS filed 16 specific allegations against the Athletic Department charging discrimination on the basis of their sex. They said they complained without success to officials since December 1978 about the See TRACK, Page 12 WASHINGTON (AP) - Congressional investigators said yesterday they cannot rule out the possibility that a Peoples Temple death squad is stalking the nation's leaders, seeking to carry out the last wishes of the Rev. Jim Jones. The investigators, reporting to the House Foreign Affairs Committee after a six-month probe into the murder of Rep. Leo Ryan in Guyana, said the possibility that cultists had a "death list" marking national leaders for assassination "should not be totally discounted." "I THINK the people are there," staff investigator George Berdes told the committee. "They may no longer be part of an organized hit squad but I think they are there." Berdes and two other investigators said Peoples Temple members developed a hit list of nearly 40 people, including members of Congress and national leaders, immediately after the deaths of cultists in Guyana during a mass suicide-murder rite. The investigators refused to give details of their evidence. Asked flatly if a death squad exists, Berdes replied: "Because of the delicate nature, the chemistry of the people involved, I don't want to turn the answer to that question into a self-fulfilling prophesy." IN A WRITTEN report, the commit- tee investigators concluded that "there is evidence to suggest Jones and some of his key lieutenants discussed and had 'understandings' to eliminate various individuals, including national political leaders.. Time may diminish the possible threat of this factor." Underscoring their concern, the staff investigators delivered their report un- der heavy security. Police guarded each door, and those entering the room passed througn metal detectors. Ryan, three journalists and a cult defector were shot to death at an air- strip near the Peoples Temples set- tlement in Guyana last Nov. 18, while attempting to investigate reports that Jones, the cult leader, was holding people against their will. While Ryan and his party were under attack, Jones See REPORT, Page 2 MAY APPROVE FINAL VERSION NEX T WEEK: SAACFA report almost ready By PATRICIA HAGEN ment, period," said SAACFA Chairwoman Patricia Longe. A faculty-student advisory committee has formulated a In March 1978, the Regents adopted a policy of selling tentative draft of a resolution recommending that the stock in companies that did not affirm the Sullivan Principles University divest itself of stock in corporations that violate in their dealings in South Africa. The Sullivan Principles are any of a series of standards while doing business in South a list of standards designed to prohibit various forms of Africa. racial discrimination. The faculty Senate Assembly Advisory Committee on SEVERAL PEOPLE alleged at last month's Regents Financial Affairs (SAACFA)-which includes two voting meeting that at least two firms did not follow the Regents' student members-yesterday discussed the draft and policy. The Regents, however, decided to explore alternate scheduled a May 24 meeting to approve a final version to be courses of action rather than divest the University of stock in submitted to the Regents in June. - the two firms. THE REGENTS requested the report from SAACFA in LIKE THE FIRST SAACFA report to the Regents in Mar- March after student protestors disrupted their meeting. The ch 1978, the current proposed draft recommends divestment demonstrators have demanded immediate University from stock in companies that do not adhere to the Sullivan divestment from corporations that do business in South Principles or equivalent standards in their dealings in South Africa, claiming that such foreign investment supports the Africa. The current draft also recommends divestment from apartheid system in that country. companies that: The-tentative draft "would require divestiture under cir- * approve new capital appropriations in South Africa cumstances specified.. . . It would not recommend divest- deemed necessary for corporate implementation of the. -, .See SAACFA, Page 2