Fridoy, May 1, 1973 THE SUMMER DAILY Poge Three Throngs attend Little eague game as girl ballplayer makes her debut 495 and 561 . . . M are yesterday's wianiag Michigan Lottery numbers. Dope note PHILAI)ElPIIA-Two Iranian nationals facing charges of hashish possession tried to have their case dismissed on grounds that the trained dog that sniffed out their a I 1 e g e d cache represented an illegal search. The prosecution subpoenaed the labrador. retriever, Wanda, and three times the dog picked the hashish filled box out of frve that had been placed in the courtroom. Animal note THE EVERGLADES, Fla. - Jimmie Tiger knew his 800-pound pet alligator had come home when it started croaking like a ths-and bollfrogs outside his thatched-roof hut. Tiger, 60, a Miccoosukee Indian, thought he had seen the last of his bellowing tet weeks ago. Happenings ... . are mostly masical today . . . there will be a recital of Vietnamese music in the Union Gallery at 7:30. The event is part of the Vietnamese art exli- bition sponsored by Medical Aid for Indo- china . . Hudson Ladd, carillonneur, is giving a recital at the Baird Carillon, 7 p.m. . . there will be another folk dance at Barbour Gym from 8 to 11 p.m. A2's weather Chances are those May flowers will get another drenching today, as we'll see var- iably cloudy skies and a 50 per cent chance of precipitation. High temperatures will be near 70 with a low between 45 and 50. By IAURA BERMAN Carolyn King, the lanky 12-year-old cen- terfielder from Ypsilanti, made her official Little League debut last night as a cheer- ing-and booing--crowd looked on. Wearing the Orioles' No. 9 uniform, her ltng bland hair tied in pigtails with blue r i b b ot s, she straddled the plate as cameras. c 1 i c k e d fitriously and boys heckled. "SHE STANDS like a girl," said one young baseball player from another league "that doesn't have any girls and better not get any." After she walkedl to first base, her brother Gregg, 10, and a Little Leaguer himself, complatined that "those last two balls sure looked like strikes" to him. "These kids are here to win a ballgame, not to be celebrities," said one disgrtmtled bystander. "There are more press people here than players They should have call- ed the game when it first got overcast and waited fin' all the excitement to die down." S. B. STANTON, the Little League dis- trict administrator from Jackson w )o has called Carolyn's L ittle League staIns "against the whmle ptrpose of the pr- gram," refused to comment about Ypsi- lanti's threatened disqualificattion from the Little League. "Whe" we reach a decision, it "ill be the Little League who decides, not the news media," lie said. There did seem to be a disproportio'ate number of press representatives watchitg from the sidelines. In the bottom half of the fourth inning a Yankee fouled a line drive into Doris Biscoe, Channel 7 Action News reporter. THE BALL connected with her head and she, very gracefully, slumped into the arms of the newsman standing beside er. Then she fluttered her eyelashes and went into shock. BUT THEN Carolyn was back in cen- terfield, striking various authentic-looking baseball poses: hands on knees, head hunched forward waiting for the pitch. She picked up a line drive the shortstop missed and hurled it off to second base-but the runner was safe. Carolyn went to bat again in the top of the sixth inning when the score was 15-0 and struck out. The game ended like that, the score 15-0 in favor of the Yankees. She was as good as the boys but they weren't anything to brag about. THEN THE TV cameramen swarmed around her while she giggled and blushed and looked very tired. Her words were all but drowned out because of the hordes of kids surrounding her, trying to be on television. "I bet there'll be five people watch- ing the game next week," said the bay from the league without girls. Then he spit in the sand and walked away. Daily Photo by TERRY McCARTHY SMILING CENTERFIELDER Carolyn King is embraced by her mother after yesterday's tradition-shattering Little League game. COMPUTER BOGGED: -SGC ballots uncounted By DAN BIDDLE Two weeks have passed since ' Student Government Council held the second of two trouble-plagued all-campus elections. The winter term has ended, the flowers have come out, the Little League has re- instated its famed female fielder. But don't ask who won the SGC election. The second SGC election, that is. Council invalidated the original March all-campus vote after spending about $10,000 to put it together and then discovering that some- body defrauded between 300 and 1500 ballots. To guard against fraud in this second election, SGC President Bill Jacobs and former Election Director Ken Newbury devised a new election procedure which they termed "flawless." However, the procedure has not yet produced any re- suilts. Why? According to Velna Knapp, Rack- ham's part-time SGC vote tabulation boss and full-time computer wizard, the vote count has been held up by the massive flow of exams to be graded in the same computer that adds up the votes. She says the count probably won't get under way until Monday at the earliest. The unprecedented "re-run" election was held under the watchful eye of uni- formed Sanford security guards in Water- man Gym during the April 23-27 pre- registration period, with an extra voting day on April 28 for. those who did not pre-register. Jacobs cancelled the last scheduled Council meeting and officially stated that he was placing the new election under the security guards' "total" jurisdiction with' out approval from SGC. Jacobs then apparently empowered con- troversial former SGC Treasurer David Schaper to oversee the second voting. Schaper denies that he is acting in a capacity very similar to that of SGC election director (a post vacated by a disheartened Ken Newbury several weeks ago), but admits that he is "more or less in charge." He maintained Wednesday that his ac- tivities are "part of my job" as "executive assistant to the president for financial affairs." The financial affairs post was created by a personal order from Jacobs at the final SGC meeting in April. Earlier, SGC had voted to suspend its own chief capa- city as a funding organization until its mangled financial books could be cleared. Schaper refused Wednesday to explain how the new election process could be seen as "tart of his job" as financial assistant. Residency case leaves unans14 In the wake of Judge William Ager's monumental decision to strike down the University's key require- ment for granting residency to out of state students, a good deal of am- biguity remains as to what specific effects the ruling will have, The following information is an at- tempt to deal with some of the ques- tions raised by Ager's opinion. * The exact criteria for granting residency are now quite unclear. The judge ruled that Ann Arbor voter registration was not proof' of resi- dency by itself, saying that the in- tent of the student to remain in the state after graduation should be the principal consideration for granting residency. However intent is diffi- eredquestions cult to determine. It is still required on the extra tuition they hav that out-of-state students live in the since March 1, 1972. There r state for six months to establish resi- a question, however whether g dency, as Ager did not strike down ing seniors will be able to col that rule. they left the University before ! Out - of - state students enrolled ing for the resident status. on or after March 1, 1972 and who * The official estimates of t think that they can gain resident ing's cost to the University's status must apply for that status range from $21/ to $12 million within the three months following non-resident students current Ager's release of a judgement in the rolled would receive resident case. The judge released an opinion cost would probably be closer Wednesday which explained the rea- $12 million figure-and force soning for the specific recommenda- stantial tuition increase. tions he will make in the judgement * If you are an in-state s -recommendations that will further and concerned about a jump clarify the situation. tion, hold tight. The judge's rul SIf students are granted residency be stayed pending appeal, tho after following the above procedure, reapplication rebates processr they will be eligible to receive-rebates ahead on schedule. 'e paid emains raduat- lect, as apply- the rul- budget . If all tly en- cy, the to the a sub- student, in tui ling will ugh the may go