AN UNWARRANTED CRACKDOWN See Editorial Page Y itrA6 47DAit FRIGID High-S7 eeLaw--34 eeToday for details Eighty-Three Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXIV, No. 13 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, September 20, 1973 Ten Cents Ten Pages IfYOUJ SEE NEWS HAPPEN C7&trDAIY Pilot TFs join strike Sixteen of the 17 Pilot Program resident fellows yes- terday passed a resolution in support of the tuition strike. Specifically, they called for a reevaluation of the tuition rates, adequate financial aid for all students who need it, re-establishment of in-state status for all teaching fellows, and a list of other demands, including "significant student involvement in all administrative decision-making." Dog's owners sought The small dog who was a victim of a hit-and-run cyclist on the Diag Tuesday is reported resting comfortably at the Dun Vegan Animal Clinic and will probably be re- leased today. There's one problem, however. It seems no one has claimed the poor little pup, and the man who saved him has no idea who to return him to. The dog is part-terrier, 16 to 18 inches tall and from one to three years old. He is tan with black ears. If you suspect this might be your dog, please call Dr. Harper at the clinic and let him know. (Ph. 761-7523). Regents to meet The Regents hit town today and tomorrow for this month's docket of meetings-several closed, a few open. Today the Regents will hear a public comments session on the subject of public disclosure of salaries of Univer- sity employes. Tomorrow the board is expected to vote on a motion submitted by Regent Gerald Dunn (R-Lan- sing) which would require the University to disclose its salary lists. Also slated for tomorrow's public meeting is a vote on formal approval of the recent tuition in- crease and this year's University budget, both okayed by telephone vote last month. The meetings will take place in the Regents' Meeting Room, first floor Ad. Bldg., at 11:00 a.m. both days. Frat burglar nabbed Two Phi Gamma Delta fraternity members received minor knife wounds early yesterday morning as they surprised and helped apprehend a prowler. According to city Police Chief Walter Krasny, the two, Michael Sta- niec and Edward Neff, were awakened around 5 a.m. to discover a would-be burglar in Neff's room. They attempted to subdue the man and received relatively minor cuts. The prowler, identified as Tyrone Rich- ardson, 23, was finally takeninto custody by police. Happenings... . ..include a PIRGIM meeting tonight at 7:30 in Rm. 4203 of the Union. The meeting is open to anyone who chooses to attend . . . a mobile van jam-crammed with specialists in veteran's counseling will be over in Ypsi- lanti from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. near the corner of Washing- ton St. and Michigan Ave. Interested veterans should check it out . . . the Ann Arbor Camera Club meets to- night in the basement of the Ann Arbor Public Library. Camera buffs unite, and all that . .. and the Bach Club meets tonight at 8 in theaGreene Lounge in East Quad. Refreshments will be served. UA W-Chrysler detente The United Auto Workers and Chrysler reached agree- ment on a new contract to cover 10,500 white collar work- ers, bringing all 127,500 UAW members at Chrysler un- der tentative new agreements. The white collar pact was not officially announced, but top officials of the two main locals involved, and a union spokesman said agreement had been reached and a ratification vote was set for today. Details of the pact were not announced. The un- ion's Chrysler Copncil met meanwhile to approve the contract agreed on earlier for 117,000 assembly line workers, and send it to the rank and file for ratification. " Sextuplets in danger Doctors and nurses in Denver worked to combat a lung disease in three of the remainig five Stanek sex- tuplets, born Sunday night, after the smallest of the six babies, Julia, died from the illness, hyaline membrane disease. Catherine and Nathan Stanek were given blood transfusions overnight and Wednesday. Catherine was listed in poor but improving condition at Colorado Gen- eral Hospital and Nathan was in poor condition. Steven, the third infant with symptoms of the disease, was re- ported in fair condition but improving. Jeffrey Stanek's condition dropped slightly from good to fair, doctors said, and John was still in good condition. More silence Lt. James J. Pelosi, who graduated from West Point in June after enduring 19 months of a now-outlawed punishment called silence, says he is still shunned by some of his comrades. "I thought I would leave the non- sense that went on at West Point back at West Point," said Pelosi, a second lieutenant who is undergoing basic officer training at Ft. Benning, Ga., along with 150 class- mates from the U.S. Military Academy. "But other peo- ple apparently, didn't feel that way," he said in an inter- view. On the inside .4. Guest writer Charles Rooney takes a look behind the Chilean coup on the Editorial Page . . . The Arts Page features a story on the University's Medieval and Ren- naisance Collorinm by Jim Schiop . . . And on the Sports Pages find out all about the slinging Stanford Does By AP and Reuter A spokesman for President Nixon strongly denied yesterday that the White House is putting any kind of pressure on Vice President Spiro Agnew to resign. Deputy White House Press Sec- retary Gerald Warren labeled as false news reports that say or hint "a disposition by the White House or the people in the White House to force the resignation of the vice president, or that the White House is exerting pressure on the vice president to resign" or that the White House has been the source of stories that Agnew was think- ing about resigning. EARLIER IN the day, however, Vic Gold, former press secretary to Agnew, charged that top White House aides Melvin Laird and l Nixon want Sources claim White House pressure Alexander Haig Jr. were encour- aging rumors and reports about Agnew's legal troubles so that stories about Agnew would over- shadow the Watergate scandal. "This is all calculated by the White House toukeeptthe Agnew story alive," Gold said in an in- terview. "I'm blaming the White House at the highest level. Mr. Haig and Mr. Laird. "It is my contention that this stuff about the vice president is a great distraction from the Wat- ergate and the White House is de- lighted with it. "Isn't it odd that three weeks ago the country was talking about the President resigning and now they're talking about the vice pres- ident resigning? Some people may think that's a coincidence. Some people think that storks bring ba- bies. I'm not that naive." J. MARSH THOMSON, Agnew's current press secretary, acknowl- edged that certain individuals at the White House might be encour- aging the current furor over Ag- new's possible resignation, but he said he thought that anyone who believed that this reflected offic- ial policy was overreading signs. the "Under no circumstances do we regard it as a conscious concoc- tion of anybody in the White House," Thomson said. "I refuse to believe that it representsrany- thing close to official policy. It is rather the expression *of private opinion." THE NEW YORK TIMES said yesterday that one of Nixon's as- sistants was reported by sources with excellent access to the White House to have said flatly that Ag- new must go. Agnew Another aide was known to have made suggestions to columnists that the subject of Agnew's de- parture from the Administration might be appropriate for specula- tion, the newspaper said. A SPOKESMAN for Agnew again rejected speculation that Agnew might resign, and his close friends maintained he intended to finish his second term as vice president and that he would be proven inno- cent of accepting illegal payments. But there has been increasing evidence in recent weeks that Nix- on and Agnew - who in the past out? has complained he had little to do withinthe Administration - were growing apart.r THE WHITE HOUSE has done nothing'to refute the evidence. Told by a reporter that his refusal to comment on the resignation spec- ulation could be interpreted as a "kiss of death" for Agnew, War- ren said he refused to comment no matter how the questions were phrased. Nixon and Agnew have not met privately since the news of Ag- new's alleged involvement in graft first surfaced. Many White House observers believe Nixon would like John Connally to become vice president, as a way of advancing the Texan's drive toward the GOP presidential nomination in 1976. Dispute settled; Sly be concert to held at Hill By DAN BIDDLE For a while, it looked like Sly might be up to his old tricks: with only a few days remaining before the first scheduled Ann Arbor concert of Sly and the Family Stone, local sponsors and University officials were still sweating over the contract for the use of Hill Auditorium. But Vice President for Student Services Henry Johnson and promoter Ron Palmerlee emerged smiling from a round of eleventh-hour negotiations last night to announce that Sly and his band will indeed play tomorrow night at Hill as AP Photo The other side of the fence A band of street urchins squeeze between the bars of an iron fence surrounding the courtyard of a Buddhist pagoda. The children are crowding to view a recent ceremony in Saigon. They are typical of the children left orphaned or otherwise homeless by the war. Junta allw privat investment in.Chi tIle 'smaj or copperlmi n es SANTIAGO (Reuter) - Chile's ing to build during his three years' industrial sectors, with special em- COPPER EXPORTS traditionall new military government will open rule before his death in last week's phasis on copper to exploit current bring in 85 per cent of Chile's fo up the big five copper mines na- coup. copper price rises on the world eign currency earnings. tignalized under the late President The officials said the new gov- market, the officials said. Copper production last year wa Salvadore Allende to private for- ernment will spearhead efforts to According to a television broad- 716,900 metric tons. According t eign and Chilean investment, offi- restore the economy by raising cast by Admiral Jose Toribio Me- officials here the Allende govern cials said here yesterday. copper production to one million rino, a member of the four-man ment had forecast a drop in 197 They said the new government -tons a year. And it will accept military junta, copper production to 680,000 tons because of labo will pursue liberal economic poli- private foreign and Chilean invest- is already back to normal after troubles including a 45-day strik cies based on private enterprise. ment in the big five copper mines, the coup. at the giant El Teniente Mine ear THIS APPARENTLY heralds the they added. "Without doubt, and without mir- lier this year. demolition of the socialist economy THE MAIN production effort will acles, we will very soon reach a Officials said the governmen which Allende, a Marxist, was try- be in the mining, agricultural and million tons of copper," he said. was eager to exploit the rise it planned: THAT IS, IF Sly shows up. The unpredictable maverick of rock music has punctuated his career with late arrivals and no-shows, but Palmerlee and Sly's New York booking agent vigorously asserted last night that Friday won't be one of those nights when everyone arrives except the band. The show is set for 8:30 p.m. with tickets going for $5.50, and Palmerlee says he expects a fast sell-out. LAST NIGHT Palmerlee and other representatives of the Black Pre-Law S t u d e n t s Association (BPL), the sponsors of the event, inked a contract with the Univer- sity sending all profits from Sly's show to the Martin Luther King scholarship fund for black students in the law school. Earlier in the week, University officials had voiced fears that the whole operation would collapse; they said BPL had on several oc- casions failed to produce $1,000. needed to pay for use of the audi- torium. But Johnson, Student Accounts Auditor Maurice Rinkel, and BPL's people met for nearly two hours last night and afterwards declared with mutual relief that the show will go on. BPL says some 500 tickets have been sold and the rest of the 4,300 seats are up for grabs at Discount Records on South University, Little Things on North State St., and the Union. CSJ vid special SGC .-vote By BILL HEENAN A five-judge Central Student Ju- diciary panel last night shot down Student GovernmentsCouncil's plans for a Sept. 24 special con- stitutional election. Speaking for the court, CSJ Chairman Ron Henry ruled the election "null and void" because of procedural violations by SGC of the new All-Campus Constitution. THE UNANIMOUS de- cision came on a suit filed Monday by former SGC member David Smith. Representing Smith before CSJ was former SGC Treasurer David Shaper, the author of the new charter. Last week, SGC approved plans to hold a special election for voters to reconsider the new constitution which had originally been approv- ed last spring. The plan - known as "10-10-10" - calls for a greatly expanded SGC to be selected by a highly See CSJ, Page 2 y r- as to n- 3 or e x- nt in Strike demands in-state status for TFs; slates rally, pickets copper p r i c e s on the London market from last year's average of 48.55 U.S. cents per pound to more than 65 cents currently. THE JUNTA'S decision to accept foreign investment in the big five copper mines - Chquicamata, El Teniente, El Salvador, Exotica and Andina (Rio Blanco) - indicated that the copper industry was about to be de-nationalized. The U.S. Kennecott, Anaconda and Cerro corporations owned the mines before the Christian Demo- crat government of President Edu- ardo Frei - which preceded Al- lende' s government-took a part share in them. By JACK KROST A well-attended but disorganized mass meeting of the tuition strike last night resulted in the addition of a new demand-that of restored in-state tuition status for all teach- ing fellows-to the original three strike demands. Thekmeeting alsourged students to picket the Regents at their pub- lic meeting tomorrow, following a rally scheduled for tomorrow at 11:00 a.m. on the Diag. THE PLANNED tuition strike centers around two groups - Stu' dent Government Counciland the Student Action Committee (SAC), an ad hoctgroup which is behind most of the organizing for the strike. The original three SAC demands, which were endorsed by Student Government Council (SGC) include rollback of tuition; full implemen- tation of the 1970 BAM (Black Ac- ergetic crowd of about 150 dwin- dled down to about 50 by 10:30, which is when the decisions were finally reached. SGC members were not avail- able for comment on whether en- dorsement of the fourth demand would be on the agenda for their meeting tomorrow. SGC President Lee Gill did not attend the mass meeting. THE ADDITIONAL demand was adopted from a list of a possible four, proposed by several residents of Alice Lloyd Hall. Discussion on the other three was tabled when consensus could not be reached. The meeting was started with a brief speech by SAC organizer Mar- garet Gyetco, after which inform- al discussion on goals and tactics had been planned. HOWEVER, ORDER quickly- broke down as the meeting was at- See NEW, Page 2 Loud Bobby battles a silent Bilie today, HOUSTON (Reuter) - Fifty- five-year-old Bobby Riggs and 29-year-old Billie Jean King were a study in contrasts yes- terday on the eve of their $100,- 000 winner-take-all "Battle of the Sexes" at the Houston As- trodome tonight. It is probably the most bally- hooed a n d intriguing tennis match of all time. Riggs, as fast-talking and cocksure as ever, continued to bounce around town with an en- tourage - including two well- endowed "bosom buddies" - promoting the best-of-five sets match and exuding confidence.ts He also granted interviews to all comers in his hotel suite in between gulping down more than 400 vitamin pills a day. BUT THE normally ebullient and talkative Billie Jean King remained in seclusion, apart THEY WERE nationalized July 1971 under Dr. Allende unanimous vote of both houses See INVESTORS, Page 7 in by of IN U.S. TODAY Szuba allowed to leave Chile By CHUCK BLOOM After agonizing delays, Michigan swimmer Tom Szuba and seven others h ave finl2v escnped :he will land on American soil early this morning. The plane, according to State De- nartment sources. had been read- going boy but when we talked to him last Saturday, he sounded very quiet. Obviously he has been touched by all the killing he has