SGC GOOFS ON ROTC See Editorial Page \:L AdIP BaiIy WET High-39 Low-27 See Today for details Eighty-Four Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXV, No. 77 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, December 7, 1974 Ten Cents Eight Pages a HIGHEST IN 13 YEARS 1 IFYO sE 5F HAPPB CALL z"AIyY Kambly responds Dr. Arnold Kambly, the owner and operator of a local psychiatric treatment facility, yesterday denied charges that he has obtained about $16,000 from the federal government under false pre- tenses. Administrator of the controversial Univer- sity Center, Kambly was arraigned Thursday on 16 counts of filing billing statements with the gov- ernment for services never given patients. Kambly said that as a standard procedure he and many other doctors bill patients for missed appointments, and this accounts for money in question. Also, Kambly condemned State Attorney General Frank Kelley for acting "unethically" in pressing the charges without consulting him first. 0 Stagflation solution? A pair of University professors have drawn up an eight-point attack plan which they say could be the answer to America's inflation recession pre- dicament. The plan includes greater federal spend- ing on vital programs, revival of a WPA-style labor pool for unemployed persons, tax credits for firms taking on new employes, and abandonment of plans for both balanced budgets and tax increases. Econ- omist William Haber, who advises the University's executive officers on money matters, and Dr. Malcolm Cohen, research co-director of the Labor and Industrial Relations Institute, contend that quick, massive federal action on the employment front is the only way to keep the recession from turning into a full-force depression. "The waste of human resources," the professors state, "is a tragedy which we must overcome." 0 Happenigs... . .It's a busy day. The basketball team takes on Tennessee in Crisler Arena at 2 p.m. . . . the Ski Team sponsors a "ski swap" equipment sale from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. in the Ice Coliseum at 5th and Hill . . . MUSKET presents the new musical comedy Jericho at 8 p.m. in Mendelssohn .. . As- sistant Music School Dean John Smith's new pop band, Amazing Blue, will play Christmas music out at Briarwood from 1 to 3 p.m., if you like melodic shopping . . . the Professional Theatre Program presents The Sty of the Blind Pig in the Frieze Bldg.'s Arena Theatre at 8 p.m. . . . Sarah Megee Martins and Jane Tavalin Schwartz present their masters dance theses performance at 8:30 p.m. in the Education School's Schloring Aud. . . . and at the same time in Hill, the Musical Society rings in Christmas with Handel's Messiah. 0 Montana bull The shah of Iran's brother wants to come to Montana to stalk down a bull moose for the Royal Museum of Iran. He made his request to Jack At- cheson & Sons, Inc., a firm specializing in pulling off worldwide hunts. The firm was eager to start the chase, noting it might be good for international relations. The Montana Fish and Game Commis- sion has turned to the State Department for guid- ance. The commission chairman feels we might get an oil agreement out of Prince Abdorreza's penchant for a bull moose. 0 Bugging the mail Workers in the main Salt Lake City post office woke up with a jolt yesterday when about 100 crickets hopped out of the morning mail. The cur- ious crickets were members of a group of 1,000 insects doomed to become food for birds and rep- tiles at Salt Lake City's Hogle Zoo. The rebel cric- kets engineered their escape by eating through the plastic foam containers in which they were ship- ped from Louisiana. 0 French disconnection Eddie Egan, the drug-busting New York police detective whose exploits provided the material for the novel and movie "The French Connection" got shot down in his new career as a restaurant owner. Egan says financial troubles have forced him to close his 14-month-old Florida establishment, The Lauderdale Connection. Egan returned to the trade that made him famous, explaining that he had to take a job with a local detective agency to make ends meet. 0 Ont the inside. .. Turn to the back page for our weekly Hap- penings calendar . . . on the Editorial Page, PIR- GIM reports on the dubious safety of expensive toys . . . the Arts Page features a trio of reviews, including MUSKET'S performance of Jericho .. - and on the Sports Page, Fred Upton writes of the hockey team's trip to Notre Dame. on the outside ... Will there be snow? As another major storm moves toward us from the Gulf, warm air will .nIP..i a ai-nhn 1n thsmornina hrm Uemployme t Econ. building catches fire By JEFF DAY The economy is going up in smoke. Yesterday, in keeping with the times, the Economics Building caught fire, sending several of the nation's finest economists into the cold, fearing for their valuable research. ALTHOUGH the fire, which began at 3 p.m., drew scores of onlookers and only a slightly smaller number of firemen fire officials described the damage to the building as light, and it appeared that no research had been lost in the blaze. The fire, which damaged three offices in the century-old building, was ignited while a workman was installing a new heating system as part of a building renovation project. The workman inadvertently lit the insulation on an older pipe while he was installing a new radiator pipe in the east end of the building. UNAWARE of the smoldering pipe, the workman left the room to get spare parts. He returned to see flames shooting up the wall. Describing his efforts to ex- tinguish the fire he said, "Back there, it was impossible. Thirty seconds was all you could take." See ECON, Page 2 eaches 6.5o Fed. board lowers I)andiscount rate WASHINGTON (M - Nearly six million American job seekers were out of work last month as the unemploy- ment rate jumped to 6.5 per cent, its highest level in 13 years, the government reported yesterday. (Michigan's unemployment figures for November jumped 1.5 per cent to 8.8 per cent - dramatically higher than the national figure - and the Michigan Employ- ment Security Commission predicted the statistics next month would nudge or touch 10 per cent.) THE NOVEMBER increase in the jobless rate, from October's 6 per cent level, prompted the White House to acknowledge the economy is deteriorating more rapidly than anticipated. Meanwhile, a pair of government moves made it possible for large businesses to borrow more easily and savers to collect higher interest on their money. In a move to stimulate the Board approved a cut in the discount rate in the New York and Philadelphia areas to 7.75 per cent. This means banks pay less when they borrow money and thus can charge lower in- terest rates to customers. AND A pair of federal agen- cies approved higher interest rates on savings in amounts of $1.000 held over the long term. With Christmas fast approach- ing more Americans now are out of work than any other time since 1940, when the nation was coming out of the Great De- pression and gearing up for World War II. There were about 8.1 million unemployed then. This made up 14.6 per cent of that era's smaller labor force. The Labor Department report- ed that 462,000 more workers joined the unemployment rolls last month, bringing the total without jobs to a seasonally ad- justed 5,975,000. That was 1.9 million more than in Novem- ber 1973. Nearly half of that 12- month increase was among workers who lost their last jobs. THOUSANDS more job lay- offs have been reported in the automobile and other key indus- tries since the government col- lected the November employ- ment figures and these are ex- pected to push the December unemployment rate to nearly seven per cent. White House Press Secretary Ron Nessen said the 6.5 per cent unemployment rate is "a source of great concern" to President Ford. Nessen said the entire economic situation is under review and hinted the ad- See UNEMPLOYMENT, Page 2 Doily Photo by PAULINE LUBENS CITY FIREMEN work at clearing away the rubble of the fire that damaged three offices in the Economics Building yesterday. No one was hurt in the fire, which started when a workman's torch ignited insulation along a heating pipe. economy, the Federal Reserve State J obless 't rate hlt DETROIT (UPI) - One of every 17 persons without jobs in the United States lives in Mich- igan and state employment of- ficials expect the figure to go up again next month. Statistics released yesterday by the Michigan Employment Security Commission showed un- employment in the state in No- vember was 8.8 per cent and in the Detroit area 9.1 per cent. THE FIGURES are the high- est for any November since 1959, a recession year that hit hardest at the auto industry-as does the current recession. The unemployment figure for the entire country in November was 6.5 per cent-or 6 million persons without work. The. number of jobless in Michiganuwas 342,000, or one in 17 persons unemployed nation- wide. MARTIN TAYLOR, the De- troit director of the Security Commission, said the December report will be higher because November figures did not in- clude the huge pre-Than.Ksgiv- See STATE, Page 2 "TORPEDOES" GO VERNMENT CASE: Hunt's attorney denies ater gate WASHINGTON (UPI)-Howard tion and defense objections Hunt's Watergate lawyer testi- as far as he knew the $1 fied yesterday he had no rea- he received as Hunt's la son to believe the massive sums was for legal fees and no paid the Watergate burglars more. were intended as hush money, "I HAD no information t provoking prosecution com- lieve that any money pa plaints he was trying to "tor- Mr. Hunt was for his si pedo" its case. . . . ," Bittman shouted a William Bittman, called as a point, pounding his fist o court witness at the Watergate witness box. cover-up trial over both prosecu- "Mr. Hunt never indicat ExSG Pres. Gill drops out of sight By TIM SCHICK, DAVID BLOMQUIST, and DAVID BURHENN Controversial former Student Government C o u n c iil (SGC) President Lee Gill has apparent- ly quit his latest job and drop- ped out of sight allegedly leav- ing a trail of bad checks and unpaid bills through the cityaof Chicago. Gill, who has been accused of misusing $16,000 in SGC funds d u r i n g his six-month tenure as Council president, was >: last seen leaving a Chicago apartment five weeks ago in aG car with M i c h i g a n license plates hauling a rented trailer. Left behind were angry apart- ment and hotel managers withL unsettled accounts for room ls. SGC OFFICIALS have been attempting unsuccessfully to serve Gill with two civil suits on the fund abuse charge for t1 several months. SGC assistant counsel Louis Lessem, howcmTer, By JO P refused comment last night on Last of Gill's apparent disappearance. American medicalc SGC voted September 12 to to be the best in the5 start c r i m i n a l proceedi-igs to those who can affo against Gill, and reaffirmed that decision during a Council Hncome groups can onl meeting Thursday night. However, for local re Maurice Preston, manager of cal attention, but whoc -. . , . .' - -. , ;, - t. P- h , r Cover-up said me in any manner whatsoever 56,000 that anything he was doing was awyer a quid pro quo, that is, silence )thing in exchange for money. In fact, everything was to the con- to be- trary." id to At least three previous wit- ilence nesses said the cash payments t one to the burglars and their law- n the yer, $429,500 in all, was to keep them quiet about high-level in- ed to volvement in the Watergate break-in plot. BITTMAN also said he had not read Hunt's Nov. 14, 1972, memo about White House "com- mitments" to its Watergate burglars until six months after it was written. The memo charged the Nixon administra- tion had committed itself to provide pardons and hush money for the Watergate bug- gin' team and had not done so. Bittman represented Hunt, one of the masterminds of the Watergate bugging, for 14 months beginning in July of 1972. He was named an un- indicted co-conspirator in the cover-up and is now believed to be under further criminal in- vestigation. Judge John Sirica called Bitt- man as a court witness in order to "get the facts out" after prosecution and defense counsel refused to vouch for his cred- ibility and argued heatedly role against calling him. The prose- cution protested again, with the jury out of the room, after Bitt- man had testified an hour. "HE WENT out of his way on the stand to torpedo the gov- ernment's case," chief prosecu- tor James Neal shouted. "I won't allow that as long as I've got life in my body." Sirica waved the protests aside. "Just because we judges sit up here in black robes, we're not nincompoops," he said. "THIS convinces me I was right when I changed my mind and called him as a court wit- ness. The jury is entitled to know the truth as to the issues and one of the issues is whether this money was hush money. This goes to the heart of the case." Earlier Friday, Charles Col- son testified that H. R. "Bob" Haldeman told him just as the Watergate cover-up was begin- ning to collapse that President Richard Nixon might appear to be part of the cover-up. "Bob said he was concerned that the President not appear to be covering up," Colson tes- tified. "I told Bob that I didn't think the President had done so." The economy at a glance UNEMPLOYMENT: Nearly six million American job seekers were out of work last month as the unemployment rate jumped to 6.5 per cent, its highest level in 13 years. With Christmas approaching, more Americans now are out of work than any other time since 1940, when the nation was coming out of the Great Depression and gear- ing up for World War II. There were about 8.1 million unemployed then. This made up 14.6 per cent of that era's smaller labor force. FORD-ECONOMY: White House Press Secretary Ron Nessen hinted that President Ford will seek new anti- recession legislation soon and that he will move toward a mandatory energy-conservation program early next year. Nessen said the 6.5 per cent unemployment rate was "a source of great concern" to Ford. Nessen acknowledged that the jobless rate had increased faster than expected since Ford unveiled his economic program on Oct. 8. LAYOFFS: Two automakers, several television and consumer goods manufacturers were among those an- nouncing job furloughs and layoffs yesterday. Ford Motor Co. announced 1,125 indefinite layoffs as a result of a shutdown of three plants next week. General Motors said it is laying off 1,036 workers. OIL: The Middle East Economic Survey reported Saudi Arabia has reached agreement with four American oil companies to buy out all their shares in Aramco and become sole owner of the world's largest oil producing company. The takeover would mark a decisive shift in the balance of petropower, climaxing a transition of several years during which the giant U.S. and European oil com- panies evolved from bosses to skilled servants of the oil states. FOREIGN ECONOMY: West Germany reported its highest unemployment in 15 years, two ailing European auto giants-British Leyland and Citroen-required emer- gency aid and Britain prepared tough energy-saving steps. In Germany. relatively one of the more prosperous coun- gal clinics offer cost health care MARCOTTY three parts care, considered by some world, is readily available ird it. But frequently, low y hope they don't get sick. esidents who require medi- can't pay the doctor's fees, rt of meroencv ce. time the doctor spends with a patient, lab test and so forth." The average rate is about $8 per visit, $7 for students. "OLD PEOPLE who are really up against the wall are charged less," Ms. Pierce said. When Pierce first opened the clinic, he was the onlv nhvsician nracticing. But now the Center