THE Summer Daily I Vol. LXXXIII, No. 23-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, June 9, 1973 Ten Cents Twelve Pages ight By GORDON ATCHESON Daily Newss Anatysis Voters in Monday's school board election will face a wide political spectrum of candidates ranging from the radical left to the far right, although most gravitate toward the moderate middle. Eight candidates will be vying for three positions on the board. By far the most liberal are Diana Autin, the Human Rights Party entry, and Ienry Alting. The con- servatives include Merrilyn Martin, Paul Weinhold, and Wendy Barhydt, while those displaying various shades of moderation are Patricia Pooley, Charles Votaw, Judith Wood. With the exception of Autin, the can- vie in School Bd. race didates are running on a non-partisan basis. CAMPAIGN DEBATE seems to have centered around violence in the public schools, community control, and the basic curriculum. Recently the city schools have been hit with a rash of violent incidents including several riots and stabbings. Many of the outbreaks have had racial overtones. Per- haps the solutions to the discipline prob- lem differentiate the candidates most clearly. Autin favors non-compulsory education as a partial solution because "forcing attendance fosters hostility." She also sees more student control of curriculum and a less -competitive grading system as im- portant steps in ending disruptions. ALTING POINTS OUT the board "cannot legislate an end to violence." He believes the problems must be studied by student- teacher groups on the individual school level. He, like Autin, blasts the alternate school concept, which would segregate "trouble makers" from the rest of the student population, as "a detention camp policy." The three conservatives have come out in favor of the alternate school. Martin has particularly pushed the concept but Weinhold and Barhydt express a wait-and- see attitude. Weinhold suggests potential problem children should be diagnosed and helped at the elementary school level. Both he and Martin favor a more strict grading system. VOTAW AND WOOD indicate they do not currently have a definite postion on the alternate school and say more study of the concept would be desirable. Votaw em- See 8 CANDIDATES, Page 10 Don't forget to vote in Monday's School Board election. lMcCord asks court to overturn conviction Cites perjury by campaign official WASHINGTON (UPI) - James McCord, facing sentencing in one week, asked a federal judge yester- day to reverse his Watergate bug- ging conviction or grant a new trial because of "massive efforts in this case to obstruct justice" - includ- ing perjury by a Nixon campaign aide. The former Nixon campaign se- curity chief, whose post-trial alle- gations led to a new grand jury in- vestigation and a wave of govern- ment resignations, made his plea in a motion filed with Chief U. S. District John Sirica. McCORD CHARGED he was denied at his trial in January the defense that "he was acting under the direction of his superiors at the White House." He also asserted that "on his own knowledge," he believes that Jeb Stuart Magruder, former deputy Nixon campaign director, committed perjury at the Water- gate trial when he testified that no one higher than former White House aide G. Gordon Liddy was involved. Magruder's testimony, he said, was "central to the whole theory of prosecu- tion," and that it appeared Magruder's tainted statements were "knowingly and intentionally used by the prosecution" at the trial. MeCORD SAID he was "enticed by high government officials" into the bugging operation and was unaware at the time of the existence of the White house team of "plumbers" - of which Liddy and fel- low conspirator E. Howard Hunt were members - that was secretly established to plug leaks of classified security docu- ments. By his own ignorance of the existence of this secret unit, McCord said, he was denied the trial defense "that he was acting under the direction of his super- iors at the White House and under a color of law." Also citing allegations of payments to the Watergate defendants to plead guilty and remain silent, McCord told Sirica he was denied his 14th Amendment guar- antee of protection under due process of See McCORD, Page 10 Doily Photo by TERRY McCARTHY Marcus Welby, M.D. Robert Young reacts to demonstrators during his commencement address last night to this year's graduating med school class. Young told the crowd that they could help provide personalized medical care. See story on page three. s Secretariat runs for Triple Crownoal See BckPage~