I1XON HELD TO ACCOUNT See Editorial Page Y Sir&i Ar DAitbr SPORTING High-63 Low-S8 See Today for details Vol. LXXXV, No. 9 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, September 14, 1974 Ten Cents Ei SIMON ISSUES REPORT ght Pages rUCE PWS APPENCA'Ld4MT Y Fojtik files rifled It had all the smells of another Watergate. Around 4.30 a.m. yesterday burglars slipped into the apartment of Washtenaw County.Commissioner Kathleen Fojtik (D-Ann Arbor) and stole a folder of press clippings after rifling Fojtik's files. The folder, according to Fojtik, is humorously labeled "scandal'' andcontains a collection of newspaper articles that cast her in a bad light. The intruders emptied her desk, dresser drawers and file cabi- nets onto the floor of the apartment and left the refrigerator open. "Maybe it was just people look- ing for drugs," said Fojtik, a liberal who is up for re-election this November. "But it certainly does seem strange." The burglars left a television and IBM electric typewriter untouched. Fojtik was out of town when the break-in occurred. SGC balks Student Government Council continues to hedge on its view of the LSA faculty's controversial sup- port for scholarships on the basis of academic abil- ity rather than financial need. At the Thursday night Council meeting, SGC voted down two reso- lutions -- one "applauding" the faculty stand, and one "abhorring" it. Several radical and non- white campus political groups, as well as the LSA student government, say they consider scholarship policy a critical issue and will take action if the faculty position is adopted by the University. Special bus A special football game shuttle bus will be pro- vided today by the Ann Arbor Transportation Au- thority rA 'TA) betweenthe corner of Fourth Ave. and W=I ' and the corner of Potter and Belmar (one blo:k west of the stadium). Marked "U of M Stadium," the special bus will be. leaving William at the northwest corner of Fourth Ave. at 12:15 p.m., 1:15 p.m. and 1:45 p.m. Regardless of origin or destination, one way fare for this service is 25 cents. AATA monthly passes or AATA discount tickets may also be used. Following the game, the special bus will be leaving the corner of Potter and Belmar at 4:00, 4:30 and 5:00 p.m. Dean-hunting "We haven't named a new dean yet, but we did not expect to at this time," Prof. Arthur Burks of the LSA Dean Search Committee says. Formed af- ter Dean Frank Rhodes became University vice president for academic affairs early last spring, the seven faculty members and three students be- gan their search last April. The initial 140 appli- cants are now being narrowed to 12 names. This list will then be cut in half and these remaining six names submitted to President Robben Fleming and Rhodes by the end of December. Fleming will make the final decision. Happenings .* kick off with this season's first home football game against Iowa at 1:30 p.m. today . . . but if chess is more your style, stop in at the Michigan Union where you'll find the Second Ann Arbor Classic chess tournament beginning at 10 a.m. and the Third Michigan Beginners Open beginning at 9 a.m. For those who have never played chess in a nationally rated tournament under U. S. Chess Federation regulation, now's the chance . . . then at 8 and 11 p.m., Peachy Cream Productions will tap dance'through "Tapioca Holiday" in the Half- way Inn of East Quad. Admission is $1.75 . . . and this evening at 8 p.m., Norma Diamond, associate professor of anthropology, will speak on "Why the Chinese are Criticizing Confucius" and present color slides of China in the West Lounge of South Quad. 0 Hooker in exile The State Department yesterday told former prostitute Xaviera Hollander that she is undesir- able. The 31-year old Dutch-born woman, who won fame and fortune with her racy autobiography, The Happy Hooker, needs State Department ap- proval to come back and live in the United States. Polarization Cleveland Municipal Light has painted its utility poles blue, and the city's Fine Arts Advisory Com- mittee chairman is seeing red. The arts committee chairman, Joseph McCullogh, says the color is in- appropriate and detracting, adding that the poles are supposed to blend into the general urban set- ting, not "stand out like giant exclamation points." A city official said colored poles are necessary to distinguish Municipal Light's poles from other poles. He also said the color matches the depart- ment's official color as well as that of Cleveland Transit System buses, adding, "We could have - painted them. yellow, you know." On the inside .. . Alan Toth analyzes the nation's civic faith on the Edit Page . . . Sports Page looks at the bowl races in today's college football action across the rnntrv .and ast Oa's nroduction of "'Tanio- Nob -NO Crowds protest Nixon pardon By ROB MEACHUM Close to 400 people turned out yesterday on the Diag to pro- test the executive pardon given to former president Richard Nixon. The rally, sponsored by the Ad-hoc Committee Against Par- don, featured some 15 speakers including Democratic Congres- sional hopeful John Reuther and Bernie Klein, a Common Cause representative. Each speaker addressed the applauding, pre- dominately anti-Ford crowd, for about five minutes. "THERE WAS obviously an understanding, or an agreement between Nixon and Ford," shouted Reuther. He added that N i x o n "committed offenses against the Constitution" and that the nation has "lost a mea- sure of our Constitution" by his pardon. Reuther noted that his oppon- ent in the upcoming November election, Marvin Esch (R-Ann Arbor), was not present. A statement by Esch was to have been read at the rally but nev- er arrived. Klein termed the pardon "a blow to the criminal justice sys- tem." STATE REP. Perry Bullard (D-Ann Arbor), who is running f or re - election. exclaimed, "Ford has sabotaged democra- See PARDON, Page 8 Gill salt to inflation predicted Econ advisors see nine per cent rate WASHINGTON (A - Treasury Secretary William Si- mon said yesterday he expects inflation to continue at about current rates for the rest of the year, thereby estab- lishing a virtual consensus among top administration economic advisers that little relief is in sight. Simon estimated that by the end of the year prices will still be rising by nine per- cent or more. He thus echoed earlier analyses from Alan Greenspan, chairman of the President's Council of Economic Advisers, and White House economic coordinator Kenneth Rush, who is slated to become ambassador to France. Doily Photo by PAULINE LUBENS A LOCAL RESIDENT pauses to admire a collection of photographs highlighting Ann Ar- bor's historical buildings at a fund-raising reception for the restoration of the Cobblestone Farmhouse. Architecture and Design Profs. L ester Fader and Harold Himes took the pic- tures of the 19th and 20th century buildings. A touch of the old days starts farm fund raiser By SARA RIMER The Haymaker's punch was flowing, the coventry tarts were fast disappearing, and the down-home strains of old dance tunes started feet tapping laft night at the Univer- sity Museum of Art. Two hundred people dressed in contempor- ary, formal wear attended the museum's 19th century-style reception planned to kick-off a fund-raising drive for the restoration of the Cobblestone Farmhouse in Burh Park. "THE PIGTOWN FLINGERS," strumming out their old-time notes on instruments like the fiddle, hammered dulcimer, and mandolin banjo, eased any of the uncomfortable formal- ity that can accompany benefit exhibitions and their well-heeled patrons. Smiling at the lively tunes, Cindy Quacken- bush commented, "The music takes a little of the stiffness out of this." According to Cobblestone Restoration Asso- See OLD-TIME, Page 2 RUSH INDICATED in an in- terview that the inflation rate might still be above 10 per cent at the end of the year. "The picture is not as optimistic as it was two and three months ago," he said. Greenspan had said in this week's economic summit pre- liminaries "in the immediate period ahead, it does not appear as though the inflation rate is turning down." Theestimates, coming after back-to-back monthly wholesale price increases at annual rates in excess of 40 per cent, amounted to at least tacit con- firmation that the government is having- a tough time reining in the current inflation. C O N S U M E R prices now stand 11.8 per cent ahead of a year ago. After last year's 8.8 price in- crease, administration econo- mists forecast an inflation rate of seven per cent for this year. The estimate supposed declining interest rates and a, tailing off of the food and fuel increase, which powered most of the '73 inflation. However, after the year start- ed off at a 12 per cent rate, a d m i n i s t r a t i o n econ- omists boosted their forecast and projected an inflation rate which would slow to 8 per cent by year's end. BUT IN A SPEECH prepared for delivery in Phoenix, Ariz., Simon said, "At the end of this year, after the food and fuel and other special factors have receded, our price level will probably still be rising by some- thing in the neighborhood of nine per cent this year. perhaps more.". The speech was prepared for the Republican Trunk 'n Tusk Club and released in Washing- ton. Simon attributed the current inflation primarily to political decisions: increased spending and easy money. He reaffirmed his support for the current ad- ministration policy of reduced spending and tight money to re-. duce demand and thus relieve the pressure helping push up prices. He ALSO endorsed elimina- tion of savings account interest ceilings, encouraging consumers to spend less and save more. Major oil exporters* et hike tax, royalties VIENNA, Austria 0) - The world's 13 major oil exporting countries agreed yesterday to boost taxes and royalties on crude oil by about 33 cents a barrel. In addition, some unidentified members of the Organization of Oil Petroleum Exporting Coun-d tries (OPEC) announced a "vol- untary cut-back in their pro- duction level," apparently in part to sustain prices during the current period of excess supply. MEANWHILE, the Federal Energy Administration (FEA) said yesterday that oil com- panies may have overcharged the public $100 million or more, using an obscure regulation which was not supposed to be adopted. FEA General Counsel Robert Montgomery told reporters the agency had deleted, in drafting oil allocation regulations, a loophole which might be inter- preted to let the companies col- lect twice for the same oil. But Montgomery said the pro- vision somehow crept back into the final regulations published last Jan. 15. JAMSHID Amouzegar of Iran, unofficial spokesman for the oil exporters, insisted the 33- cent hike should not be passed on to consumers. However, most oil companies have clauses in contracts with their customers that pass such increases along automatically. OPEC also decided that start- ing next January "the rate of inflation in the industrialized countries willautomatically be taken into account with a view See OIL, Page 8 reached in Chicago, declines comment on suit By JEFF SORENSEN Former Student Government Council President Lee Gill was contacted last night by The Daily-the first time he's been officially reached in six months -following Thursday's SGC vote to press criminal charges against him. Gill is charged with alleged embezzlement of nearly $16,000 in Council funds during his tenure as president' from May 1973 to January 1974. "I DON'T KNOW anything about it; I've never heard of the suit," Gill responded. He has been sued twice previously by SGC in actions demanding an accounting for and restitution of a total of $15,834. Soon after the first suit was filed in March, Gill left town and could not be found by SGC officials, according to Council attorney Tom Bentley, despite repeated attempts to serve him with the summons. The second suit, filed in August in Circuit Court, permitted efforts to serve Gill with the summons outside the state of Michigan. The civil suits charged that Gill allegedly opened accounts at five local banks and spent- or failed to vouch for-huge sums of Council money. THE EASE with which Gill was 1 o c a t e d yesterday has raised questions about the ser- iousness of SGC attempts, prin- cipally by eBntley and President Carl Sandberg, to contact Gill or serve him with a summons during the past six months. Although Gill has been acces- sible during much of that time period, Bentley admits that "to the best of my knowledge, he hasn't yet been served." Gill's phone number and ad- dress are readily available and are listed in the current Chi- cago telephone directory, and he has been employed by the Illinois Department of Correc- tions for muckt of the six months. GILL IS about to be hired at the Office of Planning, and Re- search of the Department of Corrections in Chicago, accord- ing to supervisor Bob Howard, who is apparently unaware of the charges b e i n g pressed against Gill. Bentley admitted' that the data on Gill's current address and place of work is "partially new to me." He also revealed that "he (Gill) has been back here (Ann Arbor) at times. I haven't personally seen him, but others have reported that they have-and I have no reason to doubt them." However, Bentley stated that after filing the Aug. 7 civil suit, SGC contacted officials at the Cook County Sheriff's Office in Chicago, and that the office sent word recently that it was unable to locate Gill. "WE SENT a copy of the summons and a complaint to the proper persons in Chicago- and they've been unable to find him," Bentley explained. Bentley declined comment on See LEE, Page 2 Govt. auditors say GSA had no right to give ixon funds WASHINGTON 0P) - Govern- inent auditors have ruled that the General Services Adminis- tration (GSA) had no authority to spend money for former Pres- ident Richard Nixon's transition to private life without first get- ting an appropriation from Con- Gill Jacobs,, sGc' Schaper deny guilt i~n gress. As a result, the GSA obtained approval yesterday to use mon- ey from a special fund appro- priated by Congress for Presi- dent Ford. GOVERNMENT documents show that the new administra- tion authorized spending up to $450,000 for Nixon a week before it asked Congress to appropriate funds for the transition. The GSA has already comn- mitted about $6,000 of that money; but Comptroller General Elmer Staats said it wasn't authorized to do so. President Ford's request for $850,000 to help Nixon's transi- tion to former-president status ran into stiff congressional op- position when GSA tried to de- fend the amount in Senate and House hearings this week. director in San Francisco. "THIS MESSAGE constitutes your authority to proceed to obligate and disburse" up to $450,000 to cover obligations re- lated to the Nixon transition, the message said. Seven days later, Ford asked Congress for $450,000 under the Presidential Transition Act and $400,000 under the Former Pres- idents Act to assist Nixon. The amount, more' than twice what former President Lyndon John- son received in a comparable period, sparked protests from members of House and Senate appropriations subcommittees considering the proposal. Sampson said Thursday the GSA already has ordered $6,000 worth of stationery for Nixon to permit the former President's office to begin answering more than 350,000 pieces of mail he X42, 000 misuse' case By DAVID BURHENN Former Student Government Council President Bill Jacobs said last night that he was "shocked" by charges that he and former Council treasurer David Schaper mishandled some $42,000 in student funds. with the lawsuit Thursday night. The former treasurer told one SGC member, "I rigged elections, and I screwed people left and right, but I never, never, took any money." According to SGC sources, the investigation into the financial ffir: of a T s he Am :nitrnfnn aval tsm lar ira- tup I I