Wednesday, May 16f-1973 THE SUMMER DAIL / Page Three GILL TO TAKE TOP SPOT SGC: A host of surprises TWO PUPPIES ponder their fate after being deposited at the Huron Valley Humane Society. It's one lives there long. i f ' r) APPENtCAL rAi Y 1 Damage deposit bill LANSING -State Representative Perry Bullard (D-Ann Arbor) has introduced a bill in the legislature requiring landlords pay five per cent interest on all security deposits. Bullard said, "If some of his (the tenant's) money must be locked away from hiss as a security deposit, he should be getting interest on it. As it is now, if the money is banked, the landlord gets the interest even though it isn't his money." The bill -- an amendment to the 1972 Landlord - Tenant Relations Act - has been referred to the House Urban Affairs Committee. Liberation "threatens" In an article appearing in the May is- sue of Psychology Today, University Prof. Judith Bardwick writes that "the libera- tion of women threatens both sexes." Bardwick claims that members of both sexes are naturally resistant to change and adds, "traditional roles provide ful- fillment as well as frustration. And the knes roles till provide frustration as well as fulfillment." Skylab problems CAPE KENNEDY - Troubles with NASA's $2.5 billion Skylab mission multi- plied yesterday when it was discovered that the failure of the solar power wings was causing the craft's internal temper- ature to soar to over 100 degrees. Space agency officials said that, among other options, they were considering sending up astronauts on an inspection mission. Happenings .. . for today are sparse, indeed. If you are into German Expressionism in graphic arts, an exhibition is being held at the SMuseum of Art ... famous diamonds are being featured at the Exhibit Museum . . otherwise, it's a nice day to sit in the Arb and stare at the earthworms. A2's weather The weather should be better today than yesterday, with a high of around 65 and an anticipated low of about 40. Towards eve- ning there will be a chance of showers combined with a gradual warming trend. Humane Society does dirty work for people By LAURA BERMAN The trucks emblazoned with police in- signia unload the prey of a day's work. Stray dogs, biting dogs, dogs that are no longer wanted are pushed and shoved into the wire kennels of the Huron Valley Hu- mane Society. And an authentic American villain-the dogcatcher-is hard at work. Others come to the wire kennels too. Those who no longer want the dogs they have raised, or who don't want to bother trying to sell mongrel puppies. People who are moving. And this unfortunate conglomerate of stray dogs, biting dogs, and dogs that are no longer wanted is the sole responsibility of Irvit Maynard, the director of the county's Humane Society. "We have to do the dirty work for other people," lie says. The Humane Society is not an inhu- mane place. The dogs are well-fed, their cages are cleaned and disinfected each day, they are separated by size into ap- propriate kennels. De-clawed cats that can't defend themselves are kept in sepa- rate cages. It is almost the kind of place you would want to leave your dog while vacationing. But the Humane Society is a sad place. Of the 11,222 dogs that were brought there in 1971, almost 75 percent were destroyed. Over 6,000 of the 7,000 cats who found their way to the Society were destroyed. And there were twice as many animals at the Humane Society last year as there were ten years earlier. People continue to dump animals with- out identification on highways when they no longer want them. And Maynard says, the student community is particularly guilty of animal neglect. He estimates that almost 25 per cent of the Humane So- ciety's animals come from the Univer- sity. "I don't think it's wrong for students to have animals," he says. "Everyone should have animals' The problem arises when students just leave their dogs to stray See HUMANE, Page 5 By DAN BIDDLE Last month's s e a o n d run of Student Go-vernment Counci's all-campus election has produced some surprising results. Lee Andrew Gill, a black political ac- tivist with a criminal record, won a land- slide victory over four other SGC presi- dential ca: didates. Gill received nearly 43 per cent of the vote on a campus that has one black student for every ten whites. AND A BALLOT rooiisal calling for optional SGC dues, expected to receive strong endorsement, was swamped by a three-to-one "no" vote. The voting on ballot questions 'el into a bizarrely uneven pattern, as sidents voted nine-to-one in favor iof reducing dues assessment from $1 to 75 cents per se- mester after trouncing a move to drop dues altogether. Assistant Elections Director Bert Mo- berg, who supervised the final computer- ized vote tablation, insisted Monday that the tightly guarded voting process "allow- ed virtually no chaice" for tie kind cif massive vote fraud which taroedoed the original Mar-h al-campus balloting. BUT MOBERG oted that the voting on proposals showed marked inconsistency. "It really doesn't nake sense," Moberg said. Gill's victory topped a stccessfil effort for the Ieftwing Students' Rights Party (SRP), which swept three of five open Council seats. THE COALITION of Liberals and Mod- erates Party (CLAMP) took the other twi seats, shutting out strong campaign efforts from the middle-of-the-road and conser- sative forces of the Stop Taxation-Open Programs (STOP) ticket, and the Re- sponsible Alternative Party. Gill, a 24-year-old ex-Chicagoan, spent eight months of a two vear sentence in Milan Federal Penitentiary for interstate auto theft before entering the Usniversity in 1971. GILL WAS successfully paroled after taking on a leadership rlde in numerous inmate organizations; parole officers and prison officials alike describe him as "a brilliant human being" and "as ciose to being totally rehabilitated as any prisoner can be." His criminal record includes nine other arrests on charges ranging from stolen gods possession to interstate flight. The flight charge stems from Gill's one-and-a-half year disappearance follow- ing arrest on the interstate auto theft charge. ALL OF THE other charges have since been dropped, but Gill told The Daily that See SGC, Page S itened by obatics? those who might go over have been voting with the GOP on legislation for a long time. In summary, the Connally departure, while not an obvious plus for the Demo- crats, does not look like more than a small- change minus. A News Analysis NOW CONSIDER WHAT it might mean on the Republican side. First, anyone can guess that it hasn't helped the disposition of Vice President Spiro Agnew, who is the GOP conserva- tive wing's most likely champion for 1976. Despite his association with the Kennedy administration as Navy secretary, Con- nally's conservative credentials are just about as valid as Agnew's; he has far more experience in both state and na- tional government; and he has as many or more potential rich backers. AND NOT LEAST, Connally came up in Texas' cut-throat politics, compared to See CONNALLY, Page 5 Connally: Who is threc his recent political acr By ARNOLD B, SAWISLAK WASHINGTON (UPI)-Some time hav- ing passed since John Connally informed the world that he has become a Republi- can, it seems safe to conclude that the Democratic Party will survive the shock. Will the GOP? Even if Connally's long-expected con- version does lure some other nominal Democrats to defect with him, the losses to his former party now seem likely to be limited to Texas and perhaps a couple of other Southern states. POLITICIANS SNIFF at no reductions of their strength, but the fact is that the National Democratic Party has been in bad odor in those parts for some time, and without Lyndon Johnson might have been shut out in Texas and much of the South during the 1960's. The loss of a handful of Texas and other Southern members of Congress does not seriously threaten the Democratic position on Capitol Hill. The potential switches do not seem numerous enough to shift con- John Connally trol of the House or Senate, and most of