Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, September 25, 1974 Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, September 25, 1974 Mayor defends changing voter registra tion (Continued from Page 1) The mayor was referring to his objection to registration workers last year who left the fish- bowl to recruit voters at Alice Lloyd Hall. Monday night Stephenson explained that he supported dropping the fishbowl site because it is a "mass confusion area where student can be peer-pressured. In the past this has resulted in unintended registration by students." ASSERTING THAT "our duty is to make regis- tration facilities available," Stephenson claimed Monday, "We clearly meet that duty." Ins response to Monday night's resolution,. Democrat and Human Rights Party (HRP) coun- cilpersons charged the majority Republicans with discrimination against students. Councilman James Kenworthy (D-Fourth Ward) said at the meeting, "We have a ten- dency to lose sites in the campus area." He added, "It seems people are playing politics with voter registration sites." KENWORTHY CHARGED, "The real aim of this is a non-registration drive. DICK GRIFFEY presents: THE 1974 STEVIE WONDER FALL TOUR fSTEVIE WONDER WITH Wonderlove PLUS The Commodores FRI., SEPT. 27-8.30 P.M.. at OLYMPIA STADIUM TICKETS: $7.50, 6.00 Tickets At-Olympia, Grinnell's & Hudson's MC. Honored at Olympia 5920 OLYMPIA.STADIUM Detroit Grand River (313) 895-7000 48202 OPEC refuses blame for oil costs (Continued from Page 1) Arab League in Cairo said speeches by Ford and Secretary of State Henry Kissinger sharp- ly criticizing the high level of crude oil prices had shocked the Arabs. In ' Caracas, a government source said Venezuela is study- ing the possibility of increasing U.S. and other foreign oil com- panies income tax payments by between 10 and 15 per cent on f each barrel. A member of Venezuela's rul- ing DemocraticAction party claimed that "every day the president of the United States shows that he is badly informed and advised" on oil matters. CELESTINO ARMAS added that "the situation could ser- iously affect the traditional and cordial relations between de- veloped and industrialized coun- tries." Venezuela is the world's fifth largest oil producer and third ranking exporter. In Beirut, Lebanon, the Arab press accused the United States of waging a war of nerves against Arab oil producers in an effort to force price cut- backs. "THE UNITED States wants to appear to the world as the good guy fighting the Arab oi producers who are the villains" wrote Michel Ahou Jawdeh in the independent newspaper Al Nahar. At the ministerial conference in Vienna earlier this month, OPEC kept oil prices frozen but increased royalties and taxes paid by the companies to the governments in producing coun- AP Photo tries by 3.5 per cent. The OPEC official's statement was not a formal communique but it clearly reflected the ndmill to policy of his organization. welcomed HE SAID, "We know that our pening in oil has been wasted for a long time . . ." and added that "if the people in the United States and other industrialized coun- tries would like to share our 'F standard of living we might II Ifind a common solution for deal- ing with the oil situation." * OPEC members include coun- E tries in the Organization of Arab Petroleum Exporting Countries but also the non-Arab states of Indonesia, I r a n, Venezuela, Ecuador, Nigeria and Gabon.. S &IQ $2.50 ~ f the s ribune re"' FRI.-SAT. igencer nny"' John Sentinel Roberts Record A LMn f Sweet stratns of Schubert Then Alcantara conducts the opening concert of the Ujiversity Symphony Orchestra last night in 11111 Auditorium. The program consisted of w arks by Schubert, Liszt and Richard Strauss. NO ARMS INVOLVED: ~L- Energy hangups Hanging from a crane, a workman prepares a wi generate electricity for billboard lights which ' delegates to the Ninth World Energy Conference of Detroit last Monday. WuEDNESDAY is SINGLES NIGI and WCRN Broadcasts LIVI from 341 S. MAIN DANCE, ROCK, and ROLL I 0 By KENNETH FREED AP News Analysis WASHINGTON - The United States has little in the way of hard weaponry to back up the Ford administration's tough- talk concerning a new oil crisis. Pre'sident Ford, Secretary of S t a t e Henry Kissinger andt Treasury Secretary Wiliam- Si- mon in the past week have warned of a disastrous interna- tional economic disruption if the price of Arab oil is not low- ered. FORD AND KISSINGER, par- ticularly, indicated)the Western! industrialized nations would not sit placidly by while the oil producers accumulated more and more of their currency. Administration sources have outlined several possibilities un- der consideration for meeting the oil threat, ranging from+ diplomatic isolation of the Arab states to a last-resort use of military force. But an analysis of projected remedies and discussions with administration and diplomatic' sources indicate the U. S. stra-. tegy most likely to be followed is a very complicated, long- range solution that requires nearly unprecedented interna- tional cooperation. THE FIRST STEP was start- ed last week in Brussels, when 12 nations agreedstentatively on a coordinated plan to reduce their oil demand in the eventf of a new crisis while sharing the available supply. The next stage may come this weekend with a reported meet- ing Kissinger and Simon will hold at Camp David with the tWoody Alien S :John Carradine Lou Jacobi Lo aoiLouise Lasser Anthony Quayle Tony Randall Lynn Re dgrave Burt r4eynolds Gene Wider ; AFSCME for UAW (Continued from Page 1) en _Gehr, a senior secretary at! the School of Public Health, said: "Clericals for AFSCME, recognizing the great need for union representation of clericals at the University of Michigan, endorses Concerned Clericals, for. Action (CCFA) and .the UAW in their campaign to win I'm not sure about the others." After the hard-fought \cam- paign Gehr admitted there were some hard feelings in the AFSCME camp t o w a r d the UAW, "Oh yes, no question about it," but she added "at thi1f point in the election I cer- tainly don't want to hurt their chances at all," in defending foreign and finance ministers of Japan, Great Britain, West Ger- many and France. Kissinger is said to have ar, ranged the meeting in secrecy for a detailed study of ways to offset the Arabs' economic power and encourage a com-, mon front. THE THEORY is that if all the big' oil users cut their de- mand the Arabs will have no other major market and will be forced to reduce prices. Running parallel to this ef- fort, U. S. officials say will be a move to gain the support of1 lesser developed nations, in- cluding such important coun- tries as India and other mem- bers of the so-called "third world" bloc. These countries have backed the Arabs against Israel, but U. S. officials feel that sup- port may have weakened be- cause the poorer nations have been hardest hit by the soaring cost of oil and petroleum-based products. Not content to count on this hoped-for weakening,,the United States has pledged to continue and even increase its "sppplies of food as a lever to gain co- operation. from the lesser de- veloped countries. i . . __... _. . ._._ _._ .. ..-- .,- ._._..__.. __._. I AIR r 1974's MOST HILARIOU WILDEST MOVIE IS HEF "May be the funniest movie o year. Rush to see it!" ---Mnneapois "A smashing, triumphant sati - Seatte Post Inte3 "Riotously, excruciatingly fur Milwaukee "Consistently hilarious and brilliant:'it ~ore o31 such union representatiop and her pro-UAW stance. urges all secretaries and cleri- cals to vote CFA and UAW in THE EFFECT of the endorse- the upcoming runoff election." ment could not be immediately gauged, but one local observer THE DECISION to stand be- said he felt the AFSCME plug hind the UAW candidacy was could help tip the balance in reached by calling about 20 favor ,of unionization of Univer- ranking members of the Cleri- sity clericals in light of the sur- cals for AFSCME and soliciting prisingly high n u m b~e r who their views on the matter. chose the no union option in Gehr admitted there was the preliminary election. "some dissenting opinion, but The clash between the two we do believe a union is need Tt ed." Gehr herself said, "I'm massive national unions. was in favor of the endorsement, hard-fought and attracted much attention f r o m the national unions but Gehr had no figures on how much AFSCME had N? spent in their effort to repre- sent the clericals and secre- taries. ~ -- - -- - - -- "Insanely funny, outrageous and irreverent'-Bruce Willamson--PLAYBOY MAGAZINE A GREAT NEW MOTION PICTURE COMEDY Haiha Yoga exercise class Wed. 8 p.m. Rudrananda Ashram 640 Oxford 663-9287 ID. W. GRIFFITH'S (at 7) THE BIRTH OF A NATION, The first great film epic that revolutionized an industry and created an art form is still as controversial and exciting as it was when it oras first reieased 'n 191 5. Aside from that it is a fast and moving story of the Civil FME " ~' N . i" --- - - Ni /ALRESTRICTED ME