Inside: Election'84 A complete guide to Tuesday's contests Ninety-five Years LW fuToddy IOf L ICold and sunny with a high in the Editorial Freedom 45 Vol. XCV, No. 50 Copyright 1984, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-- Friday, November 2, 1984 Fifteen Cents Ten Pages Council has doubts about free zone Associated Press Sikh cars burn in NewDelhi after being set ablaze by Hindu supporters yesterday. Riots against Sikhs broke out in the capital and other Indian cities after the assassination of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi. By GEORGEA KOVANIS Ann Arbor city councilmembers are lukewarm about the roles they will be given if a proposal to make Ann Arbor "nuclear free" is passed by voters Tuesday. The proposal calls for the establishment of a city commission, made up of three councilmembers and two citizens. to review all Defense Department and Energy Department contracts accepted by city firms and the Univeristy. HOWEVER, only one out of eight . councilmembers contacted yesterday said they had no reservations about serving on this commission. Others were hesitant. Most said they weren't qualified or able to make the time they feared would be needed to serve on the commission. Some said they would consider filing a lawsuit on behalf of the city council questioning the proposal's con- stitutionality if it becomes a law. Council members Lowell Peterson (D-First Ward) and Gerald Jernigan (R-Fourth Ward) could not be reached for comment. If the proposal, put on the ballot through a citizens' initiative, is passed, "the design, research development, testing or production of nuclear weapons; delivery systems for such weapons; command, control, and communications systems for, such weapons" would be prohibited. Violators would receive 90 days in jail and a $500 fine for each count every day the violation. FREE ZONE opponents say high- tech firms will be discouraged to locate in the city and that existing companies will move out of the city. The proponen- ts also say the proposal is a violation of researchers' first amendment rights. They say, making the city a nuclear free zone would be telling people what they could and could not think about. Ann Arbor Mayor Louis Belcher agrees and said he is ready to battle this proposal if it passes at the polls. He said he will encourage city coun- cilmembers to file a law suit questioning the proposal's con- stitutionality. And he will not appoint commission members until the proposal is declared constitutional. "I would probably agree to file a suit," said Councilmember Doris Preston (D-Fifth Ward). She added that councilmembers are unqualified to serve on the commission. "I DON'T THINK councilmembers have the expertise to make the decisions that have to be made under that amendment," she said. "I don't know anybody who would have the time or expertise to put into this." Others agree with Preston. Councilmember T. Richard Deem (R-Second Ward) said he too would probably support a lawsuit although he added that he's not sure if it's city council's role to file a suit. COUNCILMEMBER Larry Hahn (R- Fourth Ward) said he couldn't make a decision on the possible lawsuit. "I'd have to think about that," he said, ad- ding, "I think that it might be questionable." Hahn, who as a city councilmember could be eligible to serve on the com- mission, said no one on city council is qualified to review technical contracts. "I would say their review would be from a layman's standpoint. None of us are engineers, none of us are attorneys. " he said. COUNCILMEMBER Jeannette Mid- dleton (R-Third Ward) said she too is undecided about filing suit if the proposal is passed. She said her decision would have to be based on what grounds the suit would be filed and challenging. Kathy Edgren (D-Fifth Ward) said she wouldn't agree to file a suit on behalf of city council because it's likely that other parties will file suits See COUNCIL, Page 3 Riots sweep India -1 NEW DELHI, India (AP) - Soldiers were ordered to shoot rioters on sight in six major Indian cities yesterday to stop lynchings, beatings and arson that have killed a reported 157 people in northern India since the assassination of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi. The Soviet Union accused the United States yester- day of actively supporting the Sikh separatist movement in India and charged that "reactionary imperialist forces" were behind the assassination of Indira Gandhi. "We strongly resent Soviet allegations that the United States and the CIA were involved or inspired this act of political terrorism," a State Department official said. President Reagan told reporters "there was always the danger" the Soviets might try to exploit Gandhi's assassination. Hindus were reported to have hanged Sikhs, beaten them to death, and burned their shops, cars and homes in revenge for the prime minister's death Wednesday at the hands of two of her Sikh bodyguar- ds. Sikhs number 13 million in the predominantly Hin- du nation of 73 million people, whom the 66-year-old prime minister ruled for 15 of the last 18 years. For the first time since India's independence from Britain in 1947 the army was called into the capital to help police maintain law and order. When roaming Hindu gangs defied a round-the-clock curfew declaration, authorities ordered troops to shoot rioters on sight. Black smoke from burning buildings, shops and cars billowed over the city of 6 million. 57 dead Hospital sources in New Delhi said 60 people were killed in the capital and 6 were injured. United News of India reported at least 55 others died elsewhere in India, including 20 in central Madhya Pradesh state, where 12 Sikhs were lynched by a mob at the Morena train station. Thousands of Hindu youths roamed the capital burning cars, buses and buildings believed to belong to Sikhs. Rajiv Gandhi, 40, who was selected by leaders of the ruling Congress Party to succeed his mother, met with opposition leaders yesterday night and issued an appeal for peace saying, "This madness must stop." After an hour-long meeting with Gandhi, national opposition leaders pledged their full support to his ef- forts to curb the violence. They issued a joint appeal See GANDHI'S, Page 5 WARM aims to place 'weatherization'on ballot By VIBEKE LAROI Weatherization As Responsible Main- tenance (WARM), a group concerned with raising standards in rental housing, announced a petition drive yesterday to get a weatherization proposal on April's city ballot. WARM is a coaltion of individuals and organizations including the Public Interest Research Group in Michigan (PIRGIM), Student Legal Services, and fraternities who hope to get the 5,000 signatures needed to get the proposal on the ballot by the Jan. 3 deadline. MEMBERS OF WARM are concer- ned about the rising cost of living in the city because of high heating bills, said Jeff Ditz of the Ann Arbor Tenants' Union. The high cost of heat has a great ef- fect on low income families and "con- tributes to the pains of poverty," said Blondeen Munson, a paralegal at Legal Services of Southeastern Michigan. For some people it is often a choice between "paying heat bills or rent," she said, and not paying the rent may win over freezing. "We need a lot more than what this proposal calls for," she added. "THE PROPOSAL calls for better in- sulation in ceilings and attics and weatherstripping and caulking in door and window frames. No major struc- tural changes would be required and the materials would cost about $300 per house, said Dan Kaller, a graduate student involved in WARM. Keller added that such weatherization would increase energy efficiency about 15-25 percent per household and save $3-5 million a year. Landlords who violated the ordinance would be punished by a fine of $1 to $50 for the first offense and $1 to $100 for the second offense. No violations would be punishable by jail. THE ORDINANCE would not apply to nonprofit cooperatives or subletters, or if changes would require "extraor- dinary and unusual structural change." With the present rental situation, Ditz said, "there is no voluntary incentive for landlords to make it safe." A voluntary system will not work, Kaller said, because there are "little, if any incentives for landlords with a tight housing market." THE VACANCY rate of rental housing in Ann Arbor was 1.63 percent in September 1984. In the fall of 1982 the vacancy rate was 13.7 percent. A similar weatherization proposal was defeated in April 1983 because of the higher cost of requirements lan- dlords would have had such as in- stallation of storm doors, windows, and dual setback thermostats, and in- sulation of hot water pipes, Ditz said. Another reason it was defeated, said Student Legal Services Attorney Jonathan Rose, was an advertising campaign by landlords against the See PETITION, Page 5 Mobbing Mondale Associated Press Presidential candidate Walter Mondale and Geraldine Ferraro pledged an election upset to a frenzied crowd estimated at 100,000 yesterday in Manhattan's Garment District. Mondale said he could "feel victory in the air" at the traditional campaign stop, where only 15,000 had turned out for then President Jimmy Carter four years ago. -TODAY- Halloween, Part 1 " UKE-BUSTERS" Michael Kelly, Anne Morley, Andre Graves, and Leslie donned terrifying masks for Halloween to emphasize their mes- sage: "No nukes is good nukes." The masks, created by University graduate Michael Kelly, depict what human faces might look like after exposure to a nuclear eninsion. Kelly. who holds a Master of Fine Arts degree, is before and after a holocaust. The "Nuke-Busters" hope to teach people about nuclear war and especially reach those who aren't aware of what effect such a war could have.. "Some people think they'll survive," Kelly said. Halloween, Part 2 SUDDENLY, THE lights started to dim. Creatures en- tered from stage left, running down the aisles 'screaming and yelling and congregating in the center of the stage to begin a Richard Simmons style aerobatic class. No, the stage was not Hill Auditorium where the University Orchestra performed its annual Halloween concert. It was the center of the Law Library Wednesday at 10 p.m. The Law Library School Fraternity, the Barristers, were per- forming their annual initiation rites for the latest members of the house. Upon completion of the exercises a Barrister clad in an overcoat and a painted face started calling off names and the new members came running from a door, pt to have the $31,000 luxury car exempted from about $900 in local motor vehicle taxes. "The value of the car is too high to be tax exempt," Douglas County Commissioner Steve McCollister said Tuesday after the county board rejected the exemption request. The Rev. Maurice Hart of the Pathway of Light Cathedral had asked the car be exempt from taxes because he uses it for church duties. Under the tax rate in effect next year for people living in the Omaha School District, the car's property tax would be about $888. Hart said he drives a Mercedes because it lasts longer and has a cheaper annual operating cost than other models. He said he drove another Mercedes for the last nine years and nut 250,000 miles on it. I C