Fridoy, August 23, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAIL Preferential balloting to be on November ballot II hIc By BARBARA CORNELL In next April's city election, Ann Arbor voters may be able to rank the mayoral candidates in order of preference rather than casting a ballot for a single hopeful. All that will come to pass if a proposed City Charter amend- ment appearing on the Novem- ber 5 general electionb allot authorizing preferential voting is approved. THE HUMAN Rights Party (ttRP) conducted a petition drive this summer to get the issue placed before the voters. Earlier this week City Clerk Jerome Weiss validated those petitions-meaning the amend- ment will be on the ballot. Under the proposed preferen- tial voting system, voters cast both first and second choice ballots for mayoral candidates. In the event no candidate gar- ners a majority of first place votes, consideration of second place tallies goes into effect. The candidates receiving the lowest first choice vote total is dropped from consideration. The second choices of those persons who cast their first place votes for that candidate are then counted. THESE VOTEStare then dis- tributed among the remaining mayoral contestants. The pro- cess-dropping a candidate and considering his supporters' sec- ond choice votes-continues un- til one hopeful receives a clear- cut majority of ballots. IIRP spokesman David Good- stan said that the party pro- posed the system to "eliminate the d-ngers of vote-solitting" hetwreen the Democrat and IRP candidates. Ile claims that split- ti-2 is resonsible for the "mi- nority' Ren-blican - controlled towernment now in city hall. At one time preferential vot- ing wos used in eight or nine cities across the state bit was dis-ontinsed over 25 years ago. Goodman explained that with the emergence of a third party in Ant Arbor nreferential elec- tions h-ae become necessary. HRP HOPES that the prefer- ential system will "see that the mayor is relatively acceptable to the majority of voters," ac- cording to Goodman. He claims Mayor James Stephenson is not acceptable. Stephenson was elected in 1973 with slightly less than 50 per cent of the vote and his success was in part attributed to vote splitting in the city's liberal-radical constituency. Goodman said that HRP pro- posed preferential voting for the mayor's race only because to institute it on a ward by ward basis for City Council represen- tatives would be "unfair," HRP has long considered the ward system to be an inad- equate means of electing coun- cil members. House unit says Nixon broke law Continued from Pate i1 "WE FEEL constrained to point out, however, that it was Richard Nixon who impeded the FBI's investigation of the Wa- tergate affair by wrongfully attempting to implicate the Central Intelligence Agency," the minority report says. Freshmen to face housing shortage (Continued from Pate3) "The freshman will be taken care of and will have rooms to stay in," Feldkamp says. "But in strange ways." LAST YEAR, 23 students were billeted at the Bell Tower Hotel for nearly two months until space became available in the dorms. That cost the University up to $7.60 per day per student more than if they had stayed in the residence halls, And despite the initial allure of living in a hotel, the students quickly became disenchanted with the arrangements.,The 23 constantly found themselves shifted from room to room to make space for arriving con- vention delegations and other guests. "We've been reduced to living out of suit cases," one of the students moaned last September. "And believe me, it's no fun." Feldkamp, however, refuses to view the current housing dilem- ma as bleak, because he hopes a number of students will short- ly cancel their dorm reserva- tions. He adds that temporarily hous- ing students in the hotel is the best solution. "We will not over- crowd our residence halls to provide the necessary spaces," Feldkamp says. "We could squeeze an extra bed in here and there, but we will not jam more persons than there should be in a room." "It was Richard Nixon, who created and preserved the evi- dence of that transgression and who, knowing that it had been subpoenaed by this committee and the special prosecutor, con- cealed its terrible import, even from his own counsel, until he could do so no longer," they added. Nine of the 10 restated their opposition to Articles II and III, but Rep. Wiley Mayne (R-Iowa) said the evidence released on Aug. S would also have caused him to support Article II if it had been available when the committee voted. At the center of the major- ity's case for the second and third articles is Nixon's rela- tionship with his chief White House aides, H. R. "Bob" Hal- deman and John Ehrlichman and former Atty. Gen. Jahn Mitchell. Through the testimony of wit- nesses and other evidence, the majority constructs a picture of a president firmly in charge of the White House and his re- election campaign and fully in- formed of everything his asto- ciates were doing. The dissenting Republicans re- jected the view that Nixon knew everything his aides were doing. Also included in the report were statements in support of the articles which the commit- tee discussed but rejected, one dealing with the secret bomb- ing in Cambodia and another with Nixon's income tax pay- ments. Classified Alphabet bomber Muharem Kurbegovic, arrested Tuesday night In connection with the bombing of los Angeles International Airport, is silent, as he has been since his arrest, as he is led to a Los Angeles court- room yesterday. He was arraigned on three counts of murder and other charges. Three were killed and many injured in the Aug. 6 bombing. Kurbegovic, 31, is an alien from Yugoslavia. 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