page three Sit1litaz I i1y PHOTOGENIC High-75 Low-52 Sunny and pleasant .. .., -V -4AU5-)L I Tuesday, July 27, 1971 Ann Arbor, Michigan News Phone: 76 City Council hears third party proposal 54-0552 By ALAN LENHOFF City C o u n c i l last night heard representatives of its Citizens Committee on Third Parties and Related Matters d i s c u s s the prospects and problems involved in easing the p roce du re by which minority candidates may at- tain a place on city election ballots. The committee's report spe- cifically proposes alterations in the city charter to allow third parties to be placed on the ballot if they can secure signatures equal to one per cent of the number of votes gained by the last successful mayoral candi- date--or about 150 signatures. Currently, to get on the ballot, a party must have statewide recognition which is accom- plished by gathering a b o u t 14 000 signatures. Eric Chester, committee mem- -Asoc3ted Press ber and member of the Radical Independent Party (RIP), told council that no matter how his candidacy many signatures are required, nh will oppose RIP would work to be placed dent Ngyugen on the ballot. bid uependent "It's just a question of how much you want to harrass us" he added. Chester, the co-author of one of the committee's two minority reports, also argued that a new system must also include ways of o011 having "run-offs," in which vot- ers would role for a first and see- Minh in Retired Gen. Duong Van "Big" Minh announcedl for the presidency ol South Vietnam yesterday. Mir both President Ngyuen Van Thieu and Vice Presi. Cao Ky in the race, but he made his presidential I on a free and fair election, STIAR TREK:- Apollo leaves for mi spacemenl take theit SPACE CENTER, Houston (A' --Apollo 15 was launched to- ward the moon yesterday with s American astronauts set to trav- el farther on its surface, stay longer, take more equipment with them and bring more material back than ever before. Astronauts David Scott, James Irwin and Alfred Worden, along with their new moon dune buggy and their scientific payload, were hurled into a 100-mile orbit of the earth aboard the 36 - story spacecraft. Three hours after launch, the astronauts reignited the third stage rocket engine and hurtled away from earth on a path to the moon. The six-minute rocket burn boosted the spacecraft to a speed of 24,218 miles per hour, fast enough to escape the earth's gra- vity and carry the craft to the moon in a long coast. The Apollo 15 astronauts eject- ed the moon lands of the rocket and hull was abandor guided to an impt At one point is the astronauts dis switch in their Mission Control would have no im sion. The astronauts an $S-million elet Rover 1, whichI will drive a tota the lunar surface Scott and trwij hours outside t and on the lunar set up an atomi ence station whic to researchers ft They will gat pounds of moon and photograph which they hope to the- fiery be moon and the so and chc ar This aI wouldt having er from the nose electior the spent rocket a majo ned, later to be It w act on the moon. beingc n the afternoon, had ^to covered a faulty front-ri equipment, but 'throwi later said it added. pact on the mis- Doe port, have with then pumbs ctric car, called numuber Scott and Irwin ballot I of 22 miles on that pe n will spend 20 Alth heir spacecraft men qi surface. They'll rie, it c - powered sci- roaert h will feed data signat or years. parties .her up to 250 "We rock, selecting threshh ing formations Robert will bear clues 150 si ginning of the party( lar system. for ma iice. --Day-Gary vitaiti system, he maintained. MAYOR ROBERT HARRIS and City Administrator Guy Larcom remove the possibility of look on at last night's city council meeting at which the proposals office holders who win oo oo t lat night sion eei ahssep. is with a plurality but not si the third party conmission were discussed. rity of the vote. .uld also "stop people from MARCH IULIN(: coerced into thinking they __ vote for one of the two tnners or they would be ng away' their votes," he iv a rri Guthrie, author of the ttee's other minority re- b" tressed his claim that then eed r of signatures needed for designation be raised and ople be allowed to run on By ZACHARY SCIIILLER -partisan basis' as well. A new system of assigning married student housing has quietly ugh few of the council- slipped into existence, seemingly to the satisfaction of all those in- uestioned Chester of Guth- volved. seemed that most of their was over the number of The new policy, which was approved by the Office of Student Serv- res to be required of the ices Housing Policy Board at its March 9 meeting. assigns people to the housing units on a financial basis. have to set a proper Until this year, all applications were judged on a first-come-first- sold," cautioned Mayor served basis. The new policy was approved because it is the philosophy Harris. "If you only need of the board "that the financial benefits which are provided by Univer- gnatures, the Woof-Woof sity-owned family housing should be made available to those families could probably run a dog with the greatest financial need." The new system classifies each applicant financially into one of three groups. Each applicant completes a financial statement, which is then given to the Office of Financial Aids for classification purposes. That office decides into which category the prospective tenant falls. " " Apartments are then leased for three years to members of the highest priority group on a first-come-first-served basis. Before the new policy was put into effect, a tenant could live in married student housing for as long as he desired. Now, there is a reexamination of the ain, and he said last night financial status of the tenant every three years to insure that the hous- no idea what the next step ing is rented to the financially needy. legal proceedings against The highest priority is composed of those families "whose income be. is such that they would have to make significant or extreme sacrifices - , to live in Ann Arbor." The second priority includes families whose income is such that living in University Housing would be of signifi- cant benefit to them even though they could afford to pay typical Ann ' IArbor rents. The lowest priority consists of those who can easily afford to pay Ann Arbor rents. Housing Director John Feldkamp noted yesterday that the lowest - . priority consists, in actuality, mostly of people who do not fill out financial statements at all. A discussion of changing the policy had been going on for three years before the decision was made to change to a system based on financial needs. Apparently, several tenants were opposed to a system which would be retroactive. The new system does not coves tenants who were living in married student housing before June. Feldkamp said yesterday that he has received almost no com- plaints about the new system. He said that although apartments aren't assigned quite as quickly under the new system, no apartments have Eric Chester been left vacant. BOOKSTORE ACTION: Chester By TAMMY JACOBS Local radical Eric Chester was arrested last night for "cre- ating or exciting a contention or disturbance" in the Septem- ber, 1969 LSA Bldg. sit-in, but was later released on bond. Chester was picked up at a City Council meeting where he was scheduled to speak on a proposal that would make it easier for third parties to gain a place on Ann Arbor's electios ballot. Chester was originally arrest- ed with 106 others during the 1969 sit-in which led to the foundation of the student-run University Cellar bookstore. Most of those arrested were convicted in District Court jury trials during late 1969 and 1970, and about 65 are presently ap- pealing their convictions. Chester, who defended him- jailed for '69 self at his trial, was sentenced to 21 days in jail and a $280 fine- a more stringent sentence than the seven days and $240 given most of the others convicted. According to the judge, Ches- ter was given the stricter sen- tence because he had been con- victed before for similar actions. At that time, Chester says he thought he'd granted his power of attorney to Attorney Don Kos- ter, who with Atty. Dave Gold- stein is handling most of the ap- peals. However, neither Koster nor Goldstein filed an appeal for Chester, and a few weeks ago, he was told by a friend that there was a bench warrant for his ar- rest signed by District Court Judge S. J. Elden. Although he is at present free on bond, Chester's status remains uncerta he had in the him w