SUNDAY MAGAZINE I iri ig xt :43 L tti DECLINING High-72 Low-47 See Today Eighty-Three Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXIV, No. 10 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, September 16,'1973 Teri Cents Eight Pages and Supplement " " I~~F. IOUSE NLv5 APP~ICAL 7DAMLY New feature This morning, Sunday Magazine makes it first ap- pearance as a regular feature of, The Michigan Daily. Sunday Magazine is an exclusive feature of The Daily not available in any other newspaper. In it, we will attempt to provide a slightly different, more in-depth perspective than that made possible by the deadline pressures of daily journalism. Every Sunday morning, Sunday Magazine will present feature stories and es- says on arts, politics, lifestyles and attitudes in Ann Arbor and the University community - another in .a series of efforts to upgrade and expand service to our^ readers. Happenings . t .the Association of Jewish Grads and Faculty is holding a Bagels and Lox Brunch, at Hillel (1429 Hill) at 11 this morning . .. at noon the TV Center's Dicken's World: The Radical Reformer will be shown on WWJ- TV (Channel 4) . . . Monday night at eight, the Women's Research Club presents a lecture on Lipopro- teins in the West Conference Room of Rackham. . . and the Committee on the Status of Women in Graduate Education invites all new graduate women to an orienta- tion reception Monday night at 7:45 in the Rackham Building Amphithe'atre on the fourth floor of the Rack- ham Bldg. Prats quits Police at the Argentine border city of Mendoza re- ported that the Chilean General Carlos Prats - al- leged leader of a loyalist revolt against the country's junta - was allowed to slip quietly into exile yesterday after swearing that the counter-revolt had never taken place. Meanwhile, the Mexican embassy in Santiago said it was sheltering 332 persons seeking asylum from the junta. Some of these, together with President Al- lende's widow, were expected. to be flown out of the country. on a plane dispatched from Mexico City. " King dies King Gustav IV Adolf passed away peacefully yes- terday after a four-week struggle to recover from major surgery. The 90-year-old monarch's heart had begun to falter, an early evening medical bulletin said. Palme in trouble Swedish voters decide Sunday whether to continue the more . than 40-year rule of Social Democrats or bring a non-Socialist coalition to power. Late polls indicated a close contest between Prime Minister Olof Palme's socialist group and the loose Center-Conserva- tive-Liberal coalition of Torbjoern Faelldein. Sakharov speaks Andrei Sakharov, Soviet physicist and civil rights champion, appealed yesterday to the U.S. Congress to give better trade terms to the Soviet Union only if Soviet Jews are allowed free emigration. Rejecting official ob- jections that such a requirement interfered in Soviet internal affairs, Sakharov said it was needed to defend international law "without which there cannot be mutual trust." 0 Democratic telethon Stars of the Democratic party joined entertainment celebrities in Burbank, Calif., for a national telethon seeking money for past and future elections. "America Goes Public" was the title of the show, aimed at wiping out the party's $3.1 million debt from 1972 and raising a similar amount for next year's Congressional races. Senatorial stars arrived by private plane for a round of locl Democratic parties and the telethon, broadcast from 7 p.m. to 2 a.m. EDT on the NBC television net- work. Among the senators: George McGovern, Edward Kennedy, Henry Jackson, Hubert Humphrey,. Walter Mondale, John Tunney, Alan Cranston. " Job for Moynihan? Daniel Moynihan, a Democrat who now is U.S. ambassador to India, may be given a job in the State Department hierarchy under Secretary-designate Henry Kissinger. Moynihan has been in Washington for a week, one of several top diplomats here for consultations with Kissinger. 'Canvention' opens Some 550 persons from 38 states and Canada are attending the third annual convention of the Beer Can Collectors of America. called "Canvention," by the mem- bership. The canventioners brought an average 250 cans each to trade. Karen Boaden, Toledo, Ohio, said she doesn't collect cans "but my husband does . . . I thought my husband was nuts, but now I see this and there are a whole lot of nuts around." On the inside .. . the first edition of Sunday Magazine begins on Page Three. This week's magazine includes a story on the Ann Arbor Blues and Jazz Festival as well as book reviews and other features . . . Sports Pages Vested By GORDON ATCHESON Plagued by uncompromising vested in- terests and numerous other problems, a special city committee charged with study- ing and formulating, recommendations on the feasibility of rent control apparently will be unable to completely fulfill those duties. Information obtained by The Daily in- dicates the group's final report, although revealing inflated rents and a low com- petition market, will fail to make sub- stantive policy recommendations. THE 15-MEMBER volunteer "Blue Rib- bon Citizens Commission" representing both landlord and tenant interests will interests shortly announce its findings as a series pared to t of facts. against. Preliminary reports show that the lo- The con cal rental market is somewhat less com- cation, an petitive than normal, rents and percent- ceived not age of tenant income spent on rent ex- the group' ceeding national averages, and that ten- members, ants are generally unhappy with the pres- time and ent situation. from fulfil Yet from all indications the final docu- Ev Ehr ment will urge further study rather than economics concrete proposals on current conditions termed th and the applicability of artificially im- productive posed regulations. the meetii COMMISSION MEMBERS admit the ticihrly b group has become a data collection agency weight." rather than an agency willing and pre- - THE LA plague- take a firm stand either for or plete their committee's flicting concerns, lack of dedi- delays were nd refusal to abandon precon- pedo any m ions about rent control impeded ation of ren s progress, according to several Commissi while others claim inadequate economics g data prevented the commission landlords't lling its task. ports and lich, a University graduate in sion by con and a commission member, ly minor po e discussions "'tedious and un- Gordon S( e." He claimed people entered ty and a cc igs with closed minds and par- he had not lasted the businessmen as "dead for the grou siires includ ANDLORDS often failed to com- cation. rent reports on time stalling the progress. Ehrlich claims the an intentional attempt to tor- ove toward favorable consider- t control. oner David Kiefer, also an raduate student, confirmed the unwillingness to complete re- said they "hurt the commis- tinually bickering on seeming- ints." chott, president of Huron Real- ommission member, explained completed much of his work p because of outside time pres- ding a previously scheduled va- panel THE COMMISSION has suffered from a lack of serious dedication on the part of many members. Three persons have resigned since the group's inception and seemingly the bulk of work has been done by about five of the remaining members. Also the commission became factiona- lized along landlord - tenant loyalties. "These two defined camps entered with preconceived notions which didn't change much," commented Sandra Rauch, an urban planning expert working at the In- stitute of Social Research. "It was difficult to work in that en- See FACTIONALISM, Page 2 Wolverines HEATER SWEETER Wallop Iowa, 31-7 Bo 's boys net, 440. *yards on the ground By FRANK LONGO Special To The Daily IOWA CITY-_The Michigan Wolverines struck a solid first blow in defense of their Big Ten co-championship by smashing Iowa 31-7 yesterday before 52,105 disappointed Hawkeye fana- tics in Nile Kinnick Stadium here. The Maize and Blue maulers stayed mainly on the ground in dispensing .with Iowa, trampling over 440 yards of Astro- turf, while completing only three of nine passes for 35 yards. Junior quarterback Dennis Franklin also threw two intercep- tions, the same number he threw in the entire 1972 season. "I'D CALL this a rather typical first game," commented Michigan AP Photo Memphis station owners protest Phase IV Memphis service station owners who hive closed their stations to protest Phase IV price controls attempted to blockade the Exon Company USA petroleum depot yesterday. The service station owners cleared the area after a warning from the police. Roughly 200 of the city's 500 service stations have closed in protest. OVERTIME KEY ISSUE Chrysler strike goes into mastermind Bo Schembechler, who with the Maize and Blue to 39-6. "I saw some things I liked and some things I didn't like." What he liked was the running of tailback Chuck Heater (133 yards including a 56-yard jaunt to set up the first touchdown) and. fullback Ed Shuttlesworth (88 yards), along with Franklin's ball- handling wizardry. "Michigan did a great job on the counter-option. That's what killed us," lamented Iowa coach Frank X. Lauterbur. "Franklin did just a great job as far as execution is concerned." In pitching to Heater, Gil Chapman,' and later Gordon Bell, Franklin continually held the ball until the last split-second to suck in the Hawk defense before flipping the pigskin to his tailback. WHAT SCHEMBECHLER prob- ably did not like were the penalties, and the turnovers. The Wolverines were penalized 6 times for 70 yards and fumbled twice, losing the ball once, to go with Franklin's two in- terceptions. These things are just not supposed to happen on a Schembechler - coached team. The Hawks fared much worse, though. Earle Douthitt fumbled the opening kickoff for Iowa. In all,, his team fumbled the ball away four times, including once on the Michigan three-yard-line. Greg Koss, who also pulled in an interception off Iowa quarter- back. Butch Caldwell late in the game, recovered the' Hawkeyes' first bobble on the opening kickoff to give Michigan a first down at the Iowa 20. Three Wolverine run- ning plays netted minus-two yards against the fired-up Iowa defense and Mike Lantry jogged in to boot a 39-yard field goal. ON THE ensuing kickoff, Douth- itt raced 49 yards before Dave Brown collared him on the Michi- gan 41. On Iowa's first offensive play starting quarterback Kyle' Skogman fumbled and Steve Strin- ko recovered for the Wolverines. But that drive didn't last long either as Heater fumbled the ball See WOLVERINES, Page 7 i upped his won-lost record with the prices textbooks By STEPHEN SELBST With the massive tuition strike and ever-spiraling inflation, saving pennies on anything is of para- mount importance to most Stu- dents. And, according to a survey re- cently released by the Public In- terest Research Group in Michigan (PIRGIM), that's about the only difference in prices among the University's three, major book- stores. PIRGIM, ONE of a national group of PIRG organizations founded by Ralph Nader, is a non-partisan, non-profit group sup- ported by voluntary student con- tributions to conduct projects and research in the' community in- terest. Their latest survey shows that your best bet in regard to books is either the University Cellar or Follett's, with the difference be- tween the two (U Cellar was slightly cheaper) attributable to statistical error. But if Ulrich's is the only place that's got the book for your history course, don't worry. THE PIRGIM survey shows that, although Ulrich's has a 99.9 per cent chance of charging more for any given book than either of the other two bookstores, the difference amounts to only $1.25 out of a $50 book purchase. The PIRGIM survey checked prices on books for 30 different courses, ranging from introductory to graduate level courses. second day; takscontinue- DETROIT (UPI) - Labor negotiators returned to the bargaining table at Chrysler Corp. yesterday, eleven hours after the United Auto Workers (UAW) struck the nation's third largest automaker for the first time in 23 years. Top bargainers for the union and company made no statements to newsmen, continuing the total news blackout that began Thursday night. It was lifted for one hour Friday for the announcement that the strike. was beginning in the United States and Canada. "WE JUST literally ran out of time," UAW President Lednard Woodcock told -newsmen packed into a crowded pressroom at Chrysler's world headquarters in nearby Highland Park Friday night. Negotiations that began July 18 failed to resolve a variety of issues, Woodcock said, including union demands for voluntary overtime, health and safety measures, special provisions for skilled trade and salaried workers and a wage increase. A new lapel button appeared on union members during the first day of the strike. The green button said "We Can Work It Out." CHRYSLER HAS 127,500 workers in the United States and Canada See UAW, Page 2 FINDINGS DECIDE FUTURE FLIGHTS Psychiatrists study Skylab crews CAPE KENNEDY (Reuter) - A previously undisclosed psychiatric study now being made of the three Skylpb crews will help determine the selection of U.S. astronauts for inter-planetary or other long space flights in the future. Air Force Col. Dr. Terrence Mc- flights and observations by various flight surgeons. "The study is necessary for 'the future," Dr. Charles Berry, direc- tor of life sciences for the National Aeronautics and Space Administra- tion (NASA) told Reuter. "We have to take into considera- Berry stressed that there is no indication of any psychological problem with any member of the Skylab crews. He has found astronauts to be "guys thaturecognize situations that are dangerous and who react normally ...they are not guvs of As a result, this posed problems for some of the men. Astronauts are not trained to become public figures overnight . . Berry spoke of Col. Edwin (Buzz) Aldrin, the only astronaut ever to have entered a mental hospital. He said Aldrin's attempt at read- J '.: