NIXON GO HOME See Editorial Page p .. 4bp A& Awn t AL t gal t it FLAKY High-O Low-3S See Today for details Vol. LXXXV, No. 23 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, October 1, 1974 Ten Cents Ten Pages .-; resident to } I OUSE E EwAPPEN C A-rL Y Laurels The Black Theatre Workshop has been awarded a $100,000 grant from the Michigan Council for the Arts. The grant will enable the theatre to increase the number of black productions at the University, and also allow the theater groups to tour the Ann Arbor-Ypsilanti-Detroit area. Their first production for the year will be "The Gentleman Caller" and "The Electric Nigger." The plays will be presented Oct. 30 and 31 and, like all their productions, will be free to the public. Fojtik's cash Kathy Fojtik, the incumbent Democratic candi- date for county commissioner, has issued a com- plete and up-to-date disclosure of her campaign expenditures and income and challenged her op- ponents to do the same. Fojtik revealed that, to date, she has received donations from 48 contribu- tors amounting to a total of $653.50. The average contribution was $13.61, and the largest was $25 donated by five individuals. Fojtik has promised that her weekly campaign income and expenditure reports will be available upon request. Electricity hike Still another price hike has arrived for those of you who already feel you've suffered enough, and this time the villain is Detroit Edison. The company announced yesterday that customers will be paying an average of 47 cents more per month for electricity under a Public Service Commission ruling. The three-member board ruled unanimous- ly to authorize Detroit Ed to raise its rates by $30.3 million. Chairman William Rosenberg an- nounced that 70 per cent of the increase will be carried by commercial users. The average home- owner will see a 47 cent increase, and, for apart- ment dwellers, it's be 28 cents. Happenings .. . ... are definitely on the sparse side today. The Public Access Television Committee will meet in the basement of the Ann Arbor Public Library at 8 p.m. . . . William Muschenheim will lecture, on the "Architecture of India and Iran" in Rm. 2104 of the Urban Planning Building at 4 p.m. . . . and "A Survey of Oil Spill Containment and Cleanup Meth- ods" will be discussed in Rm. 311 W. Engineering Bldg. at 3:10 p.m. . . . peace activist Nancy Wood- side addresses Indochina week's noon luncheon at the International Center. Times a-changin' Beginning Sunday, Oct. 27, the nation will re- turn to standard time. Congress passed the bill yesterday and President Ford is expected to sign it into law soon. The bill modifies an experiment in year-round daylight saving time approved by Con- gress last December as an energy conservation measure. But the time change during winter forced many children to leave for school in darkness, touching off parental complaints. The measure saved only about one per cent of electricity usage per month. Daylight time will begin again Feb. 23. Zombies? We're all about to become "walking zombies," according to the Senate Internal Securities Com- mittee. In a 430-page report, Sen. James Eastland (D-Miss.) claims that the country has become "caught up in a marijuana - hahsish epidemic that probably eclipses, in gravity, the national epi- demics that have had so debilitating an effect on the population of a number of Middle Eastern countries." Eastland said he conducted hearings earlier to counter contentions that marijuana is harmless, and opposed any relaxations of anti- marijuana laws. The senator warned: "If the can- nabis epidemic continues to spread . . . we may find ourselves saddled with a large population of semi-zombies of young people." Fuehrer's finale A capsule of cyanide took Adolf Hitler's life, not a bullet fired in brave Third Reich style. At least, that's the latest theory promulgated by French historian Alain Decaux. Decaux, during a recent radio interview in Paris, said he based his theory on recent documents of Hitler's autopsy. The So- viet doctors performing the autopsy purportedly found debris of a cyanide capsule between the jaws of the dead Nazi leader. "The legend of Hitler killing himself with a pistol, a noble act accord- ing to Nazi ideology, was fabricated by his fol- lowers," said Decaux. On the inside . .. . . . the Arts Page features a review on Joan Baez' concert as seen through the eyes of Daily writer Steve Hersh . . . Tom Cameron recaps the Big Ten football weekend on the Sports Page . . and, on the Editorial Page, Alan Resnick looks at the economic summit. 0 tes ify on pardon WASHINGTON (IP-President Ford has told a House subcom- mittee he will personally appear to testify on why he gave for- mer President Richard Nixon a pardon. The President told Chairman William Hungate (D-Mo.) of the House Judiciary subcommittee in a brief letter yesterday that he would personally respond to the 14 questions raised by two resolutions before the subcom- mittee. Ford said he would like to arrange the personal testimony within the next 10 days, Hun- gate said. THE QUESTIONS Ford agreed to answer are on details of whether White House Chief of Staff Alexander Haig suggested the pardon and whether Ford's granting of it was based on any knowledge of Nixon's mental or physical health. Nixon offered to return Ford's pardon. See story, Page 3. Hungate said it would be the first personal testimony by a sitting president before Con- gress since that of Abraham Lincoln. The chairman said White House research shows that only Presidents Lincoln and Wash- ington testified before Congress while they were in office and that Theodore Roosevelt testi- fied before Congress after he left the White House. BEFORE THE subcommittee are so-called resolutions of in- quiry introduced by Reps. Bella Abzag (D-N.Y.) and John Con- yers (D-Mich.) which, if ap- proved by the House would de- mand the answers within 10 days. In a "Dear Bill" letter, de- livered to Hungate's office shortly before 8 p.m. EDT, the President said: "This is to advise you that I expect to appear personally to respond to the questions raised in House resolutions 1367 and 1370. "It would be my desire to arrange this hearing before your subcommittee at a mutually con- venient time within the next 10 days." REP. ABZUG asked for de- tails on when and who first mentioned the pardon to Ford, whether it was Haig during the week Nixon resigned as Presi- dent and what promises or con- ditions were set for Nixon's pardon. Her resolution also asks See FORD, Page 2 Ford Hungate Strachan gets- delay; cover-up trial begins WASHINGTON (Reuter)-Federal Judge John Sirica yesterday dropped one of six defendants from the Water- gate cover-up trial as defense and prosecution lawyers fought a last-minute battle over using the ill-fated White House tapes before a jury. On the eve of the long-awaited trial of top-level aides to former President Nixon, government prosecutors and a battery of defense lawyers met behind closed doors to hash out trial procedures. THE KEY ISSUE involved whether the jury should be allowed to have written transcripts of recorded conversations Nixon had AP Photo Don't wiorry, it's now loded Cuban Premier Fidel Castro speaks to reporters in Havana Sund ay with Sen. Jacob Javits (R-N.Y.). Javits and Sen. Claiborne Pell (D-R.I.) are on a fact-finding tour of Havana, signaling an apparent thaw in American-Cuban relations. Doctors optimistic for despite cancer By AP and Reuter WASHINGTON-Betty Ford's doctors reported yesterday that they found some cancer cells in lymph glands that were re- moved along with her cancer- ous right breast. Doctors at Bethesda NavalI Hospital, where the operation took place on Saturday, said only two of 30 lymph nodes showed microscopic signs of cancer cells. THE BLOOD vessels were not affected, there was no lin- ical evidence that cancer had spread to other areas of the body, and the doctors remained optimistic for Ms. Ford's pro- longed survival. The First Lady and President Ford were said to be pleased at the outlook. The lymphatic system drains metabolic waste material given off by the body's cells as they take food and convert it into energy. These wastes are drained to the lymph nodes through vessels in the body much like blood vessels. Arriving for a hospital visit in lymph last night, Ford said he was optimistic about the pathology report from the doctors. "It's I think good, but there also are some questions raised," the President told reporters in a cautious and serious tone. AS FOR Ms. Ford, he said: "With her strong, fine attitude, I think everything will work out all right. When asked whether the physicians had given him any indication there might be some danger, Ford replied: "I have full faith in the doctors." is. Ford nodes The report-which despite its optimism cast a big question mark over the President's po- litical future-said studies would be made to determine if Ms. Ford should undergo X-ray, hor- monal, or chemical therapy. The 56-year-old Ms. Ford ap- peared to face a long period of convalescence a n d restricted activity, and possibly drastic treatment as well to fight any re-emergence of the cancer. HOPEFUL NEW research re- sults reported yesterday by leading breast cancer research- ers appeared to brighten Ms. Ford's chances of defeating the disease. A National Cancer Institute spokesman confirmed laze yes- terday that three scientists prominently involved in t e in- stitute's Breast Cancer Task Force had met "with Navy med- ical officials to discuss Ms. Ford's case." The institute, in suburban Bethesda, Md., is across the street from Bethesda Naval Hospital, where Ms. Ford is recuperating. TIHE SPOKESMAN de dined to reveal the nature of tie dis- cussions, but it wasF _)e:cued they met with Ms. Ford's doc- tors to discuss applying the new research findings to nvr care. If no cancer cells had been found, Ms. Ford's long-term sur- with his aides on Watergate, or tapes played in court. - Before meeting with both sides yesterday, Judge Sirica granted an order for a separate trial for Gordon Strachan, a one-time aide to former White House Chief of Staff H. R. Haldeman. Strachan was indicted last March on charges of obstruct- ing justice and lying to a grand jury about $350,000 in campaign funds paid to the original Water- gate burglars, supposedly to help pay their legal fees. JUDGE SIRICA, in a brief order for a new trial, agreed with Special Prosecutor Leon Jaworski that Strachan had raised "significant questions" on whether the government's evidence against him was taint- ed. Strachan had protested the use of testimony he gave in the cover-up case on grounds that he had an informal agreement of immunity from the prosecu- t ion. Judge Sirica closed yester- day's final pre-trial hearing to the public and ordered lawyers on both sides not to tell repor- ters what took place inside his guarded courtroom. DEFENSE lawyers had ear- lier said they would move to limit the use of some 30 tapes the prosecutor wants to use as crucial evidence in linking the five former Nixon operatives to the cover-up conspiracy. Haldeman, who faces up to 25 years in jail for his alleged role in the cover-up was the only defendant to show up at today's -hearing. Ile joked briefly with repor- ters outside the courtroom about his newly sprouted sideburns, a marked change from his short crewcut when he servedsasthe ex-president's top aide. THE OTHER defendants, for- See COVER-UP, Page 2 simply be allowed to listen to the Senate vuotes halt of aid to Turkey By AP and Reuter The Senate last night voted an unconditional cutoff of mili- tary aid to Turkey, brushing aside Administration claims thatsuch a move would under- mine American diplomatic ef- forts to secure a negotiated set- tlement in Cyprus. It adopted 57-20 a money-bill amendment by Sen. Thomas Eagleton, (D-Mo.), to penalize Turkey for using U. S. mili- tary equipment in the invasion of Cyprus in July. THE AMENDMENT to a con- tinuing money resolution substi- tuted for milder language pro- posed by the Senate Appropria- tions Committee, which would have allowed the aid suspension to be lifted upon certification by President Ford that Turkey was making a "good faith effort" to negotiate an agreement be- tween Greece, Turkey and Cy- prus for troop withdrawal in Cyprus. Eagleton contended that Tur- key was in violation of U. S. military sales and foreign as- sistance laws by using U. S. weapons for other, than defen- sive purposes. He said Presi- dent Ford has no choice under the law but to cut off further See SENATE, Page 7 Council recommends boycott of freon-containing aerosols By DAVID WHITING City Council last night voted to urge all citizens not to buy or use freon-containing areosol pro- ducts in view of their potential danger to human life. After Uliversity Prof. Ralph Cicerone warned coonril of the freon danger uncovered by his re- cent research, a resolution opposing use of aero- sol cans was passed by a 7-4 vote. CICERONE and other scientists have learned that the freon gases contained in aerosol cans rise to the stratosphere and cause the ozone layer there to break down - allowing larger amounts of ultra-violet rays into the earth's atmos ohere. SANDBERG CRITICAL Student govt. report faces tough battle By JEFF SORENSEN A controversial report advo- cating massive reorganization of student government appears headed for substantial opposi- tion fromrseveral student, fac- ulty and administration groups. The Commission to Study Stu- dent Governance (CSSG) is ex- pected to officially approve the r e p o r t' s recommendations -a proposal that CSSG mem- bers expect will draw loud criti- cism from the faculty. The report also asks Student Government Council (SGC) to call a constitutional convention and reorganize itself into a pro- posed Michigan Student Assem- bly (MSA). Some assembly representa- tives would be chosen in an at-