LOOPHOLES FOR THE RICH See Editorial Page Y Eighty-Four Years of Editorial Freedom' Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, January 15, 1975 a it WHITE High-2S Low-6 See Today for details Vol. LXXXV, No. 87 Ten Cents Eight Pages DETENTE HOPES SHAKEN IFYOUSEE 11S KAM CAL, LZDA Files gather dust University students haven't exactly been flocking to take advantage of a new federal law which grants students access to portions of their own academic records. According to Marion Jackson, director of Literary College academic counseling, only a "couple of dozen" students came in last month requesting to see their files. The law went into effect November 19 and granted access to all parts of the records including letters of recommen- dation and counselor comments. Over Christmas vacation Congress amended the measure, because of stiff opposition from to the law from educational institutions. The new version, signed in law by President Ford December 31, provides continued secrecy for letters of recommendation which were written with the knowledge that the contents were to be kept confidential. However, counselor com- ments are still subject to student perusal under the new, amended version. " City in red Ann Arbor is back in the red with the 74-75 bud- get facing a projected deficit of $184,000 - and the fireman's wage increase and Police Department command officers' contract still remain to be taken into account. City Council was told the bad news Monday night by City Administrator Sylvester Murray, who refused to comment on more possible layoffs of city employes. The news came as a real disappointment to council, which enjoyed a $702,- 000 surplus from the '73-'74 budget. Number, please? We reported in this column yesterday that the student-run radio station WCBN has moved from 89.5 to 89.3 on your radio dial. That's not quite true: actually, the new wavelength is 88.3. The change was made to accommodate EMU's new ra- dio station, WEMU. If you have any trouble with the new frequency, call WCBN at 761-4300. Happenings ... ... begin bright and early at noon with a lecture by author Joseph Heller in the Pendleton Room of the Union . . . also at noon, there will be a lun- cheon discussion of "Values in Personal Relation- ships" in the Guild House . .. the Women's Com- munity Center will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the third floor conference room of the Union to discuss a possible women's bookstore and coffeehouse . . the Tae Kwon Do Club will meet to demonstrate their Korean karate techniques and also to offer an introductory lesson. That'll be at 7 p-.m. in the Barbour Gym . .. and, by the way, if you missed getting into one of Project Outreach's projects, there will be a clearinghouse of projects today from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at 554 Thompson. - ~ " Against war Senate Majority Leader Mike Mansfield urged the nation yesterday to tone down its talk of war over oil in the Middle East. "Self-sufficiency and negotiations, not confrontation, must fdrm the basis of this nation's policies on energy," the Montana Democrat said at a Senate Democratic caucus. "The less talk of war in the Middle East in order to bring out petroleum or whatever, the better for all concerned." 0 Eartha and CIA Entertainer Eartha Kitt, who recently made headlines for reportedly being the target of the CIA investigations, resurfaced yesterday to criti- cize the agency and the treatment she has received since her 1968 attack on the Vietnam War during a White House reception. "I have suffered much ridicule and hostility, not to mention problems with my career," said the singer. She said after the White House incident most of her night club, hotel and TV talk show appearances were cancelled and she was not asked back. She added that the reac- tion has forced her to work outside the country. "Now I have learned from press reports that, in addition to everything else, the CIA has been stick- ing its nose into my personal affairs . . . This is too much." On the inside.. . . . . shop around for bombs and other military equipment the easy way on the Editorial Page - . the Arts Page features the Hopwood winners . . . and, on the Sports Page, Marcia Merker writes about "shinty," a very old Scottish game. On the outside .. . U.S., Soviets break trade pact Dean recal Ois talking to Colson NEW YORK (1P) - Former White House counsel John Dean said yesterday he was told Richard Nixon was confident after talking with Chief Justice Warren Burger that the Su- preme Court would rule in the former president's favor in the suit over the White House tapes. Dean said he was told about the alleged conversations by Charles Colson, a former White House aide. THE INTERVIEW with Dean was aired last night on the "NBCaNightlysNews." Spokes- men for both Burger and Nixon denied Dean's assertions, NBC said. NBC Correspondent Carl Stern asked Dean how Nixon thought he would win the court fight. ". . He seemed to have confidence," Dean replied. "And I'm told he had some conver- sations with the chief justice, Chief Justice Burger, shortly after this suit was filed or somewhere along the line and it gave him confidence that he was going to win the lawsuit. "THAT WAS some time in the spring of 1974?" Stern asked. "I don't know the precise time," Dean said. "But I do know that from those calls he had a confidence he' was going to win the lawsuit." A spokesman for Burger said the chief justice told him that "at no time in the whole year of 1974, at no time during the whole year of 1973 did he talk to President Nixon. Chief Jus- tice Burger said that he had never talked to President Nixon at any time about Watergate." NIXON LOST the court battle over the tapes, and their subse- quent release drove him to re- sign the presidency Aug. 9. Dean was released from pris- on only last week. Colson re- mains imprisoned. While he was in prison and See DEAN, Page 8 _ -S-__A__ _________(_ Agreement to boost emigration nullified Daily Photo by E. SUSAN SHEINER POPULAR NOVELIST Joseph Heller speaks at yesterday's Hopwood Awards presenta- tion. Heller's address, which consisted of readings from Catch-22 and Something Happen- ed, was warmly received by the audience. NoveitJoseph Heller highlights Hopwvcood showuis WASHINGTON (M - In a blow to detente hopes, the United States and the Soviet Union have nullified the 1972 trade agreement and canceled an apparent understanding to increase Jewish emigration from Russia, Secretary of State Henry Kissinger said last night. In a statement Kissinger said Moscow considered the new trade agreement act signed by President Ford this month an interference in Soviet domestic affairs. "THE A D M I N I S T R A- TION regrets this turn of events," said Kissinger, whose detente policy has dominated foreign affairs for several years foreign affairs for several, years. "It has regarded and continues to regard an order- ly and mutually beneficial trade relationship with the Soviet Un- ion as an important element in the over-all improvement of re- lations." He said there is no reason to assume that the Soviets would exacerbate tensions in other areas. He said he assumes "our policy of detente remains. in force." And yet, he said, "should the decision herald a period of in- tensified pressure, the United States would resist with great determination and as a united people." THE 1972 trade agreement is the basic accord between Moscow and Washington that laid the foundation for normal- izing trade between the two na- tions. It included authorization for American trade credits to the Soviet Union and terms for settling the Soviet World War II lend lease debt. The Jackson-Vanik amend- ment in the trade bill passed by Congress last month tied non-discriminatory tariff treat- ment to an increase in Jewish emigration. Separate legislation, meanwhile, limited an extension of the 1972 trade credits to $300 million over a four-year period. Kissinger, in responding to reporters' questions, s a i d, "When the Soviet Union looked to the totality of what it had to gain against intrusion into its domestic affairs it reached the decision we have today." THE SECRETARY of state said the Sovie'ts noti- fied the United States of its objections by letter last Friday and follow-up conversations since then. Moscow informed Washington that it would repudiate any statements claiming it had giv- See TRADE, Page 2 By DAVID BLOMQUIST It could almost have been another in the endless series of afternoon guest lectures that University departments so frequently sponsor. A noted English professor from New York was coming to give a reading from the works of a well-known American novelist. Well, almost. The English professor (and novelist) was none other than Joseph Heller, author of the nearly classic Catch-22 and the new best seller, Something Happened. HELLER'S READING was the highlight of the annual Avery Hopwood Underclass Crea- tive Writing Awards ceremony, held yesterday afternoon at Rackham Auditorium. Ten fresh- persons and sophomores received awards to- talling $900 in a brief presentation preceding the lecture. The audience of 800 -- unusually large for a Hopwood lecture - instantly warmed up to Heller's crisp, Brooklyn-accented wit. Dressed in a Brooks Brothers-quality brown jacket and a light grey pullover, the writer looked and sounded more like the City University of New York English professor than a leading con- tender for the Pulitzer Prize in fiction. In fact, the opening part of the lecture some- what resembled a literature interpretation speech. Heller rather amusingly discussed one of his prose style devices - modeling para- graphs around famous quotes from great lit- erature. "I'M NOT the first to use lines from some- See AUTHOR, Page 5 HENRY KISSINGER: "Should the decision herald a period of intensified pressure, the United States would resist with great determination and as a united people." Ford to ask for -more tax rebates WASHINGTON (A)-President Ford, , already seeking a one- shot $16 billion tax reduction to counter the recession, let it be known yesterday he ivill ask Congress for $22.5 billion in ad- ditional permanent tax cuts. Press Secretary Ron Nessen said the proposed $2-a-barrel tax on crude oil and taxes on wind- fall profits of oil companies would add some $30 billion to federal revenues. This money, he said, would offset the income lost because of the tax reduc- tions. See related story, Page 2 FORD WILL spell out his en- tire economic and energy policy package in his broadcast State of the Union address to Congress today. Although Ford himself and Nessen disclosed much of the program in advance, the press secretary promised there will be other surprises in the Capitol Hill speech. The President has also in- vited the governors of the 50 states to a White House briefing tomorrow on his proposals.. In addition, invitations have been sent to representatives of state See FORD, Page 8 )mmlttee approves amended;ROTC credit plan By SARA RIMER The Literary College (LSA) Curriculum Committee yester- day passed an amended version of a report recommending that some Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) courses receive academic credit. But the com- mittee urged the faculty to con- front the "moral issue" at its next meeting. With the two attending stu- dent members dissenting, the pro-credit vote hinged on an amendment requiring that all ROTC courses get apprival from the Curriculum Commit- tee, which would then forward course material and instru^.tor qualifications to relevant leoart- ments and mendations. schools for re.:om- THAT PROCESS would be more rigorous than the evalua- tion u s e d for regular LSA courses and would be applied each time instructors change. While faculty and studnats on the panel thrashed out the broader implications of sup-ort- ing the military on campus, Associate Dean of Curriculum Jean Carduner emphasized that the committee is charged only with examing courses on their academic merit. Director for Academic Ac- tions Eugene Nissen and Zool- ogy Prof. David Shappirio de- manded that "the whole issue be looked at in the college," and called on Carduner to "pro- vide a cover statement that action was taken purely on an academic basis." THE COMMITTEE'S report is slated for consideration by the LSA faculty's Executive Com- mittee on Thursday. If this body supports it, as well-placed officials have predicted, it will pass to the LSA faculty for final approval before it be- comes law. Carduner explained the com- mittee's move to e s t a b l i s h greater control over ROTC: "We are being more cautious because ROTC isn't a depart- ment. Approval for courses would be tied up °with instruc- tors." While the report does not recommend credit for strictly military courses, Shappirio ob- jected to an Air Force course on National Security Forces which includes Cadet Corps ac- tivities and demanded assur- ance that all ROTC courses be reviewed by the committee. ANTHROPOLOGY Prof. Erpst Goldschmidt, chairman of the investigative sub-committee, as- serted, "ROTC can get credit if they are willing to teach courses our way." Instead of recommending that specific courses receive a set number of credit hours, the committee divided the Army, Air Force, and Navy ROTC classes into four areas, accord- ing to their similarity or equiva-, lence to courses offered in other University units. THE FOUR groups and the schools w h i c h offer similar courses would be: --history-political s c i e n c e (LSA); -management - leadership (Business Administration, Engi- neering, Education); -technical, non-military (En- Kambly may close U Center if his case goes to trial i McCRACKEN APPROVES ~Up rofspraise Ford's tax plant By STEPHEN HERSH Several University economics professors generally agreed yesterday that President Ford's new deficit-oriented economic proposals would be effective. "I think it's a good program," said Prof. Paul McCracken of Ford's proposed $16 billion tax rebate. f'It takes cognizance of the fact that there is a need to stimulate the economy, that here is also a need to move in the direction of an energy program, and at the same time not create unemployment. "THE SIZE of the tax cut is appropriate," he added, speak- ing by phone from Jackson, Miss. "It was necessary to bear in mind the amount of surplus needed, but not to overload, capital markets and squeeze mortgages." McCracken is presently an informal economic mentor to Ford. He chaired former President Richard Nixon's Council of Economic Advisors. Prof. Gardner Ackley, a former chairman of President John- son's economic advisory council, said of the tax rebate, "We don't know how much of the money will be saved and how much will be spent. Probably, though, a substantial amount will be spent, and this should reduce unemployment." "IT'S HARD to react to the plan," remarked widely-respected Prof .anu1 Hmans, "because not many details were provided. By DAN BIDDLE Dr. Arnold Kambly, the local psychiatrist who was' arrested last month for allegedly taking federal money under false pre- tenses, is reportedly ready to close his much-maligned Uni- versity Center if he is ordered to stand trial on the 16-count defrauding charge. tients at the private, residential center, which exclusively han- dles emotionally disturbed teen- age boys. Last night he denied planning to close the facility if 15th Dis- trict Court Judge Pieter Thom- assen orders him to stand trial. a "I never said anything about that," Kambly responded. "This ::... 'R5 rs