DOCTORS FIGHT SUITS See Editorial Page Y Eiht igIa Eighty-Four Years of Editorial Freedom :4it WINTRY High--37 Low-19 See Today for details Vol. LXXXV, No. 67 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, November 21, 1974 Ten Cents Eight Pages IrMU 5 E EWfWHAPPENCALL , LY Student regent? A bill that would allow students to sit on the University Board of Regents fell one vote short yesterday of the 20 needed for passage in the state senate. Nineteen senators, including sponsor Gilbert Bursley (R-Ann Arbor), voted for the measure and 14 voted in opposition. However, four senators were absent yesterday, so another roll call vote will be taken today, according to Doug Smith, Bursley's legislative aide. He says chances are "at least 50-50" that it will pass. The measure states there is "no conflict of interest involved in a student regent." Damman probe State Attorney General Frank Kelley said yes- terday he will make a full public report once his office completes its investigation of conflict of interest allegations against Lt. Governor-elect James, Damman. But Kelley gave no indication of bow long the probe would take and Damman himself insisted that the allegations already have been proven false. At a news conference yesterday, he flatly denied that he had ever voted on any land use plans involving the holdings of a land investment firm in which he was a partner. Such an- action would have constituted a violation of the conflict of interest provision of the Troy city charter. Happenings.. lean toward labor and politics today. The interim steering committee of Concerned Clericals for Action/UAW will meet at 7 p.m. in Room 711 of the North University Building . . . The Stewards Council of the Graduate Employes Organization meets at 8 p.m. in Rackham Amphitheatre to con- sider action to the latest bargaining stalement .. . the Health Care Collective meets at noon in room 2209 of the Union . . . the Oxford Famine Relief Committee is asking students to join in the na- tionwide Fast for a World Harvest by giving the cost of a day's food to the famine fund through Newman Center, 663-0557 . . . Charles Chomet of Citizens for Better Care will speak on Consumerism and the Nursing Home Patient at 3:30 p.m. in the Public Health School's Francis Aud. . . . the Polish Club elects new officers at 8 p.m. in the Inter- national Center's Rec Room . . . The cross-country ski club meets at 8 p.m. in the Old Heidelberg's upstairs dining room . . . Jeff Cohen speaks at 7:30 p.m. in Rackham Amphitheatre on "A Decade of Dirty Tricks." Cohen claims the major political assasinations of the last 11 years were part of a conspiracy . . . Campus Weightwatchers meets at 5:30 p.m. in the League's downstairs cafeteria ... and two free Women's Studies Films, The Black Women and Fear Women in Angell Aud. C at 8 p.m. 0 Dems drop hints Three prominent Democrats reportedly will an- nounce their bid for the party's presidential nomi- nation soon, while a fourth says he would support an independent challenge to the two-party race. Sen. Henry "Scoop" Jackson (D-Wash.) will an- nounce his candidacy in mid-December, according to the Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Georgia Gov. Jimmy Carter reportedly will also announce next month, while Rep. Morris Udall (D-Ariz.) is ex- pected to state his intentions in New Hampshire this weekend. Former Minnesota Sen. Eugene Mc- Carthy said Tuesday he supports an independent challenge to the Democrats and Republicans be- cause voters were not given a proper choice in 1968 and 1972. He would not say if he was considering making such a challenge himself. 0 Dope note Officers became suspicious when they spotted a car that was too low slung to be a sports car in San Ysidro, Calif. So they investigated and found 748 pounds of marijuana in the trunk, police said. The motorist, Rojas Avalos, a Tijuana, Mexico, leather worker, was taken into custody late Mon- day for possessing marijuana, police said. 0 Blackbird reprieve The Army has granted 10 million blackbirds at least a two-week reprieve in its plan to spray them will a chemical that will cause them to freeze to death. The project has been scheduled since early this month for forest lands near Fort Campbell, Ky., and the Milan Army Ammunition plant in Tennessee. The Pentagon contends huge winter con- centrations of the birds there pose a threat to health and to aviation. " Porn fighters The Rotterdam, Holland city budget for 1975 includes $58 for the purchase of sex magazines. The money is allocated to "the fight against pornography. Our officers should be able to see what they are supposed to fighf" a city spokes- person said. On the inside .. . . . . the Editorial Page features a continuation of the interview with Jeremy Rifkin by Marnie Heyn and Ann Marie Lipinski . . . the Arts Page features a review of 100 Aker Wood by George Lobsenz . . . and Bill Crane discusses fan apathy towards the big game on the Sports Page. 'U'TA S A University-sponsored survey confirmed by independent research shows the University pays its teaching assistants (TAs) less than any other school in the Big Ten except the University of Indiana. "Michigan ranks tenth out of ten in terms of wages," admits John Forsyth, a member of the University bargaining team currently negotiating a contract with the Graduate Employes' Organi- zation (GEO). Indiana ties Michigan for the lowest salary paid to TAs working half-time. HOWEVER, FORSYTH adds that the salary statistic does not take into account an eight per cent pay raise which the University offered GEO last month. The offer would grant an eight per cent pay hike retroactive to September 1 of this year. ran~k last in Big I' Ten uate tuition costs take home $2,839. ANN ARBOR'S jor factor in the $1,096, so teaching fellows here inflated rents are another ma- difference between real wages If that raise is added to the present wage average for half-time teaching fellows, Michigan would rank not last but sixth in the Big Ten, just below Michigan State. However, in a recent bargaining session, the University declared that if GEO does not accept its wage offer by the end of this term, the retro- activity date will be moved up to January 1, 1975, making the offer good only for Winter term. WISCONSIN TAs, the only unionized group in the Big Ten, lead the conference in take-home pay. Half-time TAs at Wisconsin-those who work 20 hours a week-make roughly $4,100 per nine month academic year. TA salaries at Illinois, Minnesota, Iowa, Mich- igan State, Purdue Ohio State, and Northwestern, in roughly that order, range between $3,500 and $3,000. Presently, Indiana and Michigan bring up the rear at a rate just over $2,800. THE TAKE-HOME pay of a half-time TA in the Big Ten averages $3,220 per academic year. The same TA at the University takes home roughly $400 less, at a salary of $2,839. Take-home pay is calculated by figuring the average TA stipend for a half-time appointee, adding cash benefits such as health insurance, and subtracting graduate tuition. At Michigan the average half-time TA stipend is $3,775. The University pays $160 for each TA's Blue Cross/Blue Shield coverage, and resident grad- Govt. sel force A7 sell suks W A S H I N G TON ) antitrust laws - The government filed ished that the suit yesterday to force the ment would ta tion with appa A m e r i c a n Telephone the public." & Telegraph Co. (AT&T) to Saying thed end an allegedly illegal tion could lea monopoly over the nation's tion of respons telephone and telecom- tion's telepho munications industry. telephone serv and costing mci The Justice Department lawsuit seeks a court order "THE TELE requiring AT&T to sell off to work efficie its manufacturing subsid- signed, built a iary, Western Electric Co. single entity. It son and no ot] Inc., which is itself one of System is stru the nation's largest corpor- ations. THE COURT also was asked ID o ti to force AT&T to separate all or part of its Long Lines Depart- ment from some or all of the to j Bell operating companies. Western Electric, with over 200,000 employes, supplies the Bell System with virtually all I1XO of its telephones and communi- cations. Much of this equipment was designed and developed at Bell Laboratories, owned joint- ly by AT&T and Western Elec- tric. Long Lines is the nationwide By AP a cable chain that links the vari- WASHINGTO ous telephone companies around appointed me the country into a worldwide examine forme communcationstneworkdwe ard Nixon at1 Clemente, Cali AT&T, with total assets ex- determine wh ceeding $67 billion, is the big- enough to test gest company ever attacked in gate cover-up1 a government antitrust suit. It nonced yeste is the world's largest privately Ir, told U.S. owned company. John Sirica t Justice Department officials wanted guidan said the purpose of the civil b a c k g r o u n suit, filed in U.S. District Court health would b here, is to restore competition to the business of providing "I DON'T W telephone service and other or years of re e 1 e c t r o n i c communica- to the public tions and the manufacturing and think that is n selling of telecommunications told Sirica at equipment. trial with thej AT&T supplies more than 80 The former per cent of the nation's tele- pitalized twice phones. with a pheb. clot in a leg BUT THE RESULTS, for the poenaed by J company and customers alike, his former cJ will be a long time coming, and one of th Deputy Asst. Atty. Gen. Keith in the cover-up Clearwaters estimated that it Meanwhile,a will be at least three years be- the cover-up tr fore the case goes to trial. Nixon tried to AT&T's board chairman, John hold " a stra deButts, issued a statement that hush mon saying, "We are confident that to the original we are not in violation of the See DOCT of University TAs and graduate student em- ployes of other Big Ten schools. Since food, clothing and transportation cost nearly the same in each of the Big Ten com- munities, rent is the major variable in TAs' cost of living. In 1970, the median contract rent in conference cities averaged $121 per month. In Ann Arbor it was $152. Financial statistics which apply to half-time TAs apply for most other teaching fellows, since their stipends are figured from the same base rate. See 'U', Page 2 4 I idiarie s AP Photo Mourning at Beit Shean Israeli residents of Beit Shean mourn for two of four victims who died Tuesday when Pales- tinian guerrillas captured a local apartment building. According to police, three gunmen slip- ped into the building and killed the four residents before Israeli troops stormed in and killed the guerrillas. TALKS CONCLUDED: and are aston- Justice Depart- ke its present ac- rent disregard to department's ac- d to fragmenta- ibility for the na- ne network with vice deteriorating ore, deButts said: PHONE n'etwork, ntly, must be de- id operated as a It is for this tea- her that the Bell ctured as it is." ors day nd Reuther N - A court- dical team will r President Rich- his home in San f., on Monday to ether he is well ifv in the Water- trial, it was an- rday. yer, Herbert Mil- District Judge :hat the doctors ce on how much d about Nixon's be made public. ANT . . . months cords turned over because I don't ecessary," Miller a session of the jury absent. president, hos- in recent months itis-caused blood ,has been sub- Tohn Ehrlichman, [omestic counsel e five defendants conspiracy trial. a tape played at ial indicated that get his aides to ight damn line" ey payment made I Watergate bur- rORS, Page 2 As for the impact on consum- ers, Clearwaters told reporters, "I don't believe we can pro- mise this is going to lower rates." But if the department succeeds, he said, the result "may be a downward pressure on those rates" as other com- panies enter the market and gain competitive strength. Clearwaters said government lawyers also may ask the court to force AT&T to sell off Bell Telephone Laboratories Inc., the nation's largest industrial laboratory owned equally by AT&T and Western Electric. US., Japan Aga c TOKYO (Reuter) - Presi- dent Ford yesterday concluded the political portion of a four- day state visit to Japan with warm, general reaffirmations of friendship, but no specific Japa- nese agreement on the key issue of how to cut oil prices. Secretary of State Henry Kis- singer, who called on all West- ern nations aweek ago to cut oil imports as a step toward forcing a cut in prices, disclos- ed yesterday that Japan would not necessarily have to reduce its oil imports to take part in his plan. SGC fight centers on caucu By TIM SCHICK A majority party caucus that often determines Student Gov- ernment Council votes in ad- vanceshastcaused partisan skir- mishes between Council mem- bers in recent weeks. Members of the majority Re- form Party claim their caucus is necessary to expedite Council business and achieve the goals on oi "WE DID NOT say consump- tiop had to be reduced by 10 per cent in each country," Kis- singer told reporters, in refer- ence to his speech at the Uni- versity of Chicago last Thurs- day. "We said that over 10 years the consumption of the group (of industrializednations) as a whole ought to be kept level." Thus let off the hook, the Japanese gave vague and non- commital support to coopera- tion on energy matters. Japan, dependent on Arab states for the vast bulk of its oil imports, had feared the Kissinger plan could lead to a confrontation !issue and oil embargo that would have strangled it. KISSINGER tipped his hand Tuesday when he acknowledged that Japan's use of 70 per cent of its oil for industry reduced its margin for economizing on oil. But he insisted yesterday that he had not softened his views that the Western world must conserve on oil before sitting down with oil producers to dis- cuss a price reduction. "Our position is unchanged. Our position is that the indus- trialized oil consumers have to cooperate before there can be a productive dialogue with the producers," he said. Rockefeller First vote on Rocky " Friday WASHINGTON Ol~-The Sen- ate R iles Committee yesterday put off until tomorrow any ac- tion on the nomination of Nel- son Rockefeller as vice presi- dent. Chairman Howard Cannon (D- Nev.) promised a vote then and predicted that both the com- mittee and the full Senate will approve the confirmation. CANNON SAID the vote was postponed because three sena- tors were absent. He said he hopes to file the committee's final report on Rockefeller before the close of business next Wednesday and said that schedule should give the Senate time to prepare for a vote shortly after returning from its Thanksgiving recess. Only Sen. James Allen (D- Ala.) has said he is considering voting against Rockefeller. MEANWHILE, an Associated Press survey showed that, bar- ring further disclosures, the Senate will vote to confirm Nelson Rockefeller as vice presi- dent by an overwhelming mar- I MISSION IMPOSSIBLE Studentsfles By BARBARA CORNELL and WENDI POHS Good morning 751-30-1333-2. Your mission, should you choose to accept it, is to penetrate the boundaries of the ivory tower and recover your student academic file. The photograph in front of you is the University's Board of Regents, which voted last week to keep the "confidential" material in the files under wraps until a 45-day waiting period provided for by law has expired. A - .-.- I .1..,.. under wraps Force could not have cracked the security surrounding Univer- sity files this week. One student-we'll call him IM Force staffer Barney- followed the yellow line to the literary college counseling office's file desk Tuesday and smugly handed his I.D. card to the face inside the window. "HAVE A SEAT and someone will call you," she chirped I