41p. 4br tr4tA n.- ttu, - - _._ .. .. . .... ., A._._ AL., .. A:..4.: _.,., T.......I..., A......ra ] 1(]'11 T..... ('.....a.. C ., 4.1. VnnAc r Vol LXXX I, No. 59-S Ann Arbor, Michigan- I uesday, August 3, 19 /1 I en C~ents tight rages I Council votes to place third party Billboard protest Signless picketers march last night outside the City Council meeting to dramatize their demands for laws to restrict billboards in Ann Arbor. HOUSE VERSION: Draft extension bill held bycommittee WASHINGTON (A) - The two-year draft-extension bill, already in trouble in the Senate, hit a parliamentary standoff in the House last night, apparently ending chances for congressional approval before September. "There'll be no bill tomorrow," House Rules Committee Chairman William Colmer (D-Miss.) said yesterday, meaning the House would not act on the draft bill today as scheduled because Colmer would not 4* clear it. Unless Colmer's committee resolves the tangle that led to his de- cision, the only way the House could even get the draft bill to the floor is with an unlikely two-thirds vote. Speaker Carl Albert said he doubts the House has any choice but to take the draft bill off its calendar. Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield had said earlier it was "quite unlikely" the Senate would pass the bill before Congress starts a month-long recess Friday, even if the House passed it today on schedule. The parliamentary tangle came after Colmer's committee voted 9 to 6 to permit two challenges hat could open up new House-Senate dis- putes in the bill. Rep. William Steiger (R-Wis.) is challenging the Oct. 1 effective date set by conferees for a $2.4-billion military pay raise. Both the House and Senate had passed identical language making it effective the month after enactment. Rep. James Broyhill (R-N.C.) disputes a section limiting the "sole surviving son" provision to the Vietnam war. Neither house had made such a limitation. The provision gives draft exemptions to men and women in a family that has already suffered one member killed in 4 combat. question By CHRIS PARKS City Council moved unani- mously last night to let the voters of Ann Arbor decide whether locally based third parties will be allowed on the city ballot. By a voice vote, council pass- ed a resolution which will place on the city ballot an amend- ment to the city charter which will set provisions by which a party can achieve local recogni- tion. Under the terms of the reso- lution, to qualify a party must file signatures equal to 10 per cent of the total vote gained by the successful candidate in the last mayoral election. In addition, according to the act, in each election the party's candidates must gain a total of at least 10 per cent of the win- ning mayoral candidate's vote in order to stay on the ballot. In the past parties could only gain a place on the ballot if they had statewide recognition. This requires about 15,000 votes. The proposed charter revision now goes to the governor who is obligated to give a ruling on it meTrsI within 30 days. members If the governor, disapproves of city's fails the amendment it will return to Buhr. (Se council. A three-fourths major- ity is required to place it on the city ballot over the governor's objections. - Questions have been raised as to whether the measure will meet with the governor's approval, however, as an informal opinion rendered by Maxine Virtue, of the state attorney's office has termed the amendment illegal. The proposed amendment origi- WASHINt nates from a report from the matic 49 t Mayor's Commission on Third yeterday Parties and Related Matters. yesterdayl The commission, was formed in federal following complaints from the Lockheed Radical Independent Party that ing the cn present laws governing ballot says it n recognition were too strict. ruptcy. The commission's report re- The bill commended that local parties House last: able to gain signatures equaling now goes to 1 per cent of the total gained had sought by the last successful mayoral Nixon ha candidate, be placed on the bal-' as "in the lot. American r on ballot 'G EMPLOYES of the Buhr Machine Tool Company and of the Radical Independent Party last night protest the ure to enforce its anti-strike breaking ordinances at e Story Page 6.) ,iate approves Aiheed loans GTON (P) - In a dra- 48 vote, the Senate approved $250 million loan guarantees for Aircraft Corp., assur- mpany of the cash it eeds to avoid bank- was passed in the Friday, 192 to 189, and President Nixon, who it. iled the Senate vote best interests of the people." Stokes chosen as grad dean Political science Prof. Donald Stokes has been named Dean of Rackham Graduate School by President Robben Fleming. Stokes, whose appointment became effective Aug. 1, is replacing Stephen Spurr, now president of the University of Texas at Austin. The one-time chairman of the political science department and program director of the Institute for Social Research's Center for Political Studies, has been at the University since 1957. Stokes was chosen by Fleming from a list of seven candidates submitted by a special search committee. The committee, appointed consisted of seven faculty members and two students. Psychology Prof. Wilbert McKeachie, who headed the committee, said he was "pleased" with Fleming's choice and added that "I think Stokes should be a very capable dean." { McKeachie said the three-month old committee screened "over 130" people suggested by the faculty, alumni and various other groups before turning in the seven names in mid-July. "I think we did a very thorough job," he said. In accepting the appointment, Stokes said "a good deal of Michigan's strength as a university lies in the excellence of its graduate programs. We have no finer tradition than the quality of our graduate instruction. I have accepted this ap- pointment because I believe in that tradition." He added "I am convinced that faculty and students alike are prepared to support imagina- tive changes in our graduate programs." Fleming, in announcing the appointment, called Stokes "an ideal person to lead the graduate school in this period of increased national aware- ness of the need to reorder priorities. A social scientist, Dr. Stokes is aware of the need for increased numbers of well-educated social scien- tists and humanists." Stokes received his B.A. in 1951 from Prince- ton University, and his PhD. in 1958 from Yale University. He said in a statement: "This action will save tens of thousands of jobs that would otherwise have been eliminated. It will have a major impact on the economy of California, and will contribute greatly to the economic strength of the country as a whole. It will help ensure that the nation's larg- est defense contractor, and its largest airframe manufacturer, will continue serving the nation's needs." Nixon emphasized that the measure "provides no federal dollars to the Lockheed Corp.; it merely provides a' government guarantee for a loan which will be made entirely through private institutions." Daniel Haughton, chairman of the board of Lockheed said the company is gratified. "Further, let me assure the people of this nation and the members of Congress of Lock- heed's dedication to repaying the guaranteed loans without loss to the government," Haughton said. Vice President Spiro Agnew was in the presiding officer's chair had his tie-breaking vote been needed. The suspense - packed vote marked the finale of more than two months of controversy and debate in which the administra- tion warned of peril to the econ- omy if Lockheed was allowed to go under. Opponents led by Sen. William Proxmire (D-Wis.) said bailing out the firm would be a blow against free enterprise. Donald Stokes