The Michigan Daily-Saturday, June 30, 1979-Page 3 AGREES TO REPA Y $40,000 Diggs admits taking kickbacks From UPI and AP WASHINGTON - Rep. Charles Diggs, (D-Mich.), yesterday confessed he received $40,000 in payroll kickbacks from his staff in the mid-1970s, and agreed to repay the money and accept House censure without a prolonged Ethics Committee hearing. The committee promptly voted 11-0 to accept the offer and recommend the House censure Diggs, already convic- ted on 29 federal payroll-padding and mail fraud counts and facing a three- year sentence which he is appealing. Voters in Diggs' district in Detroit overwhelmingly reelected him last November despite the conviction. DIGGS TOLD the committee, "I ad- mit I was personally enriched" by $28,385.02, which was received from four other employees. But he said in those cases he did not intentionally violate any rule. "I apologize to my colleagues for the discredit that I have brought to the House by my conduct," Diggs said in a letter read by attorney David Povich. "I sincerely regret the errors in judgment which led to this proceeding." The committee cannot bind the House, which still could vote to expel the 13-term veteran, its senior black member. Diggs already had given up key committee and subcommittee chairmanships pending his court ap- peal. CENSURE, WHICH is the severest punishment in House rules short of ex- pulsion, traditionally means the mem- ber is publicly rebuked at a House See DIGGS, Page 6 Pair charged with cocaine possession By TIM YAGLE Two Ann Arbor residents were arraigned in U.S. District Court in Detroit yesterday on charges 'of "con- spiracy to possess with the intent to distribute cocaine," according to U.S. Attorney Thomas Kramner. Sandra Lopez, 31, and her brother, John Lopez, 29, were arrested Thur- sday night at 617S. Forest by agents of the federal Drug Enforcement Ad- ministration in Detroit. The agents con- fiscated 1,000 grams of cocaine, Kram- ner said. , KRAMNER, OF the Control Substan- ces Unit in the agency, could not disclose the street value of the drug, as it currently is being examined for purity. The maximum penalty upon convic- tion is 15 years in jail and/or $25,000 in fines, Kramner said. Officials did not know whether the two suspects are part of a drug ring. FEDERAL DRUG Enforcement agents staked out the house, and were inside the house with the suspects for more than an hour Thursday before' emerging from the residence with them. Dr. Erwin Salisbury, landlord of the house where the two were apprehen- ded, said yesterday he was surprised at the arrests. "Gosh, the people I got in there are responsible people," he said. "All the tenants have always been responsible." AP Photo REP. CHARLES DIGGS (D-Mich.) yesterday admitted to violating a House rule in using employe salary money to pay personal debts and said he would accept censure from the full House. today- Adieu The Fourth of July long weekend again puts the Daily on hold. This is the last issue until July 6. En- joy the vacation! The mail standard New standards for sizes of envelopes go into effect July 15, according to Postmaster Richard Schneeberger. Envelopes and cards measuring less than three and a half inches high or five inches long will be returned to the sender starting that day. En- velope and greeting card manufacturers have had three years to prepare for the new standards, so few retailers should still be stocking odd-size material, Schneeberger said. Also post cards will have to be at least seven-thousands of an inch thick. Freedom of information and the college press The federal government currently is contem- plating action against the Daily Californian, the student newspaper at the University of California at Berkeley, because on June 13 the paper printed a letter the government considers classified. The let- ter was written by four atomic scientists to U.S. Sen. John Glenn (D-Ohio), and deals with infor- mation, both public and classified, about ther- monuclear weapons. The letter speaks to the gover- nment's lawsuit against The Progressive to prevent publication of an article on the hydrogen bomb. Daily Californian editors may face 10-year-prison sentences and $10,000 fines. The Daily Illini, the student newspaper at the University of Illinois, joined the Daily Californian and printed the letter in its June 26 issue. The Illini stated that it received the copy of the letter and a cover letter in the mail. An editor's note above the letter, which appeared on the Illini's editorial page, said the paper printed the "letter in the name of freedom of information." The Michigan Daily has not yet received a copy of the allegedly classified material similar to the one sent to the Illini. Happenings ... ... kick off the holiday weekend with a poetry reading by Stephan Dunning and Isaac Eickerstaff in West Park at 2 p.m.... there will be reading the play, Hadrian VII at the Canterbury Loft, 332 S. State St., at 8 p.m.... The Lighthouse, a Christian performing group, will do their thing at 8 p.m. in the Mendelssohn Theatre . .. Leo Kretzner will play the dulcimer at 9 p.m. at the Ark ... FILMS: Ann Arbor Co!op-Young Frankenstein, 7 p.m., and 10:20 p.m.; Start the Revolution Without Me, 8:40 p.m., both in Aud. 3, MLB ... Cinema Guild - The Fury, 7:30 p.m. and 9:30 p.m., Old A & D Aud. ... Cinema II-Smiles of a Summer Night, 7:30 p.m. and 9:30 p.m., Aud. A, Angell Hall ... SUNDAY, James Dapogny, jazz pianist, will perform during Brunch on the Terrace at the Campus Inn at 10 a.m. and again at noon. Call 769- 2200 or 769-2282 for reservations ... Robert Wolf, music student, will give a recital in Hill Auditorium at 4 p.m.... the Spartacus Youth League is spon- soring a meeting to discuss organizing sit-down strikes to protest the closing of Chrysler Corp.'s Dodge Main plant in Hamtramck. The meeting will begin at 7:30 p.m. at the P.'R:C;U. Club at 2320 Caniff Ave., three blocks east of 1-75. Call 1-868-9095 for information and/or rides ... Joe Hickerson, ar- chivist of folk songs for the Library of Congress will be at the Ark at 9 p.m.... FILMS: Cinema Guild-Chaplin shorts, 8 p.m., Old A & D Aud... MONDAY, Hudson Ladd, carilloneur will preform magic with the bells of Burton Tower from 7 p. m. until 8 p.m. ... TUESDAY, nothing is planned. FILMS: Ann Arbor Film Co- op-Minstrel Man, 7 p.m., Desperate Search, 8:30 p.m., both in Aud. A, Angell Hall ... WED- NESDAY, Hudson Ladd will again provide musical cheer with the Burton Tower bells between 7 p.m. and 8 p.m.... enjoy the fireworks at the Ann Arbor Airport on Airport Rd. near Ellsworth Rd. The sky will light up at sundown ... THURSDAY, it's American Heritage Night at the Michigan League from 5 p.m. to 7:15 p.m. The menu is from the Mexican Border states... the Palestinian Human Rights Committee will meet in Conference Room 3 of the Michigan Union at 8 p.m. On the outside The odds are on catching some rays today, but you'll have to wait until the afternoon when the skies clear and the rain stops. The high will be 82, and the low near 60*. now r 'r P " s P ^ .. . .. ^. ^. <. . . . t .. I, !_ . I.. I _ _ i.. d a s rx >" / _ " " L r " a L a ! ' ,r a 'a i r r a a Y . r M' " . k 'r f". ti b. b W - L