CITY RENT CONTROLS NEEDED See Editorial Page Y itiR n A6F SLOSHY High-67 Low--45 See Today for details Eighty-Three Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXIV, No. 25 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, October 4, 973 Ten Cents Ten Pages x IFYaU SEE NvS HRAPPONCALrY Forum guidelines released Plans for the all-campus town.meeting on the tuition hike continued to gel yesterday, as the Office for Stu- dent Services (OSS) released a set of guidelines. Ac- cording to OSS plans, it will go something like this: Fri- day at 3 o'clock people will get together in the Rackhamr Lecture Hall to talk with President Fleming about tui- tion. Fleming will start tiings off with a short statement, followed by questions from representatives from The Daily, SGC, the Student Action Committee (SAC) and teaching fellows. Aftet that, members of the audience will be allowed to submit their own questions. The whole thing will be run by OSS Vice President Henry Johnson. The meeting will end "promptly" at 4:30. Shakespeare a sexist? Prof. Marvin Felheim, director of the American Studies Program and a Shakespeare expert, says the bard's. plays were riddled with sexist stereotypes--passive, sub- missive, fragile women, and wives willingly subordinate to their'husbands. But blame .society, not Shakespeare. Felheim says the bard's plays were simply a reflection of his times, disclosing "a fairly accurate image of women-and attitudes toward them-during his era." Happenings .. . meetings and lectures top a heavy file for the restless and curious . . the Anthropology Department presents a lecture by Jay Ruby - "Jean Luc Godard as Anthropologist"-at 7 p. m. in the Rackham Ampithea- ter .. . the History Undergrad Assoc. meets at 7:30 p.m. in rm. 1412 Mason Hall to discuss course evaluation .. . the Student's International Meditation Society presents an introductory lecture on transcendental meditation at 8 p.m. in the UGLI Multipurpose Rm . . . the Bach Club meets at 8 p.m. for music (medieval) and food (quiche) in the Greene Lounge, East Quad . . . the Chile Support Coalition will be holding a meeting at 7:30, 2nd Floor, SAB. . . there will be a meeting on Women on Commun- ications at 7:30 p.m., 2040 LSA Bldg. . . . and the Me- dieval and Renaissance Collegium is holding a coffee hour in the Cook Rm., N. Entry, Law Quad at 4 p.m. " A correction In yesterday's story about the Campus Coalition party and its bid for seats in the upcoming SGC election, The Daily inadvertently omitted three of the party's candi- dates. They are: Jeff Schiller and Robbie Gordon, both running in the residential constituency category; and Bob Matthews, the CC candidate for the Engineering seat. Some good news ... The president of the American National Cattlemen's Association predicted yesterday that prices of some beef cuts would drop by as much as 30 per cent in the next few weeks. John Trotman said the price for live cattle had dropped from a high of 56 cents a pound in August to 40 cents a pound last week and that retail prices should reflect the reduction soon. . .. and some bad Cost of Living Council Director John Dunlop says more gasoline price increases can be expected, despite the 2.5 cent per gallon hike the council approved Friday. The hikes are justified, Dunlop said. 0 Roosevelt denies charges Elliott Roosevelt, appearing before a Senate subcom- mittee in Washington, described as vicious lies allega- tions that.he was the middleman in a plot to assassinate Bahamian Prime Minister Lynden Pindling. A convicted stock swindler accused the son of former President Franklin D. Roosevelt in testimony before the same Sen- ate subcommittee two weeks ago. Poison gas Winds yesterday pushed a mile-long cloud of gas across central Alberta as hundreds of fearful Canadians fled their homes. Eleven persons were treated at a hospital for nausea and symptoms of gas poisoning. Tragedy in Iowa Five mn were killed and several were injured when the 2,000-foot broadcasting tower of Cedar Rapids, Iowa station KCRG buckled and fell. One witness said several of the victims were on the tower and were thrown into nearby fields and ditches. 0 On the inside .. . . . . Charlie Stein writes about "Big Burger and the Deltones" on the Arts Page . . . the Editorial Page fea- tures an analysis of competition in the Ann Arbor rental housing market . . . and sportswriter Bob McGinn has a column about Tom Slade - the man who slipped from the no. 1 to no. 5 Michigan quarterback - on the Sports Page. in4 -1 Shoppers flock to unfinished Bria rwood By JUDY RUSKIN I It's official-the brand new, not quite completed, chrome and plastic Briarwood Shopping Mall is open for business. Located on a 155 acre site off State Rd. and I-94, Ann Arbor's first " enclosed shopping c e n t e r staged its grand opening yester- day. Crowds of shoppers and the just plain curious strolled through the covered walkways peering at the shop displays, examining the mer- chandise and making purchases. Approximately 121 stores and services will eventually grace the 933,457 square feet that is Briar- wood proper. But as of yesterday less than half the stores had been completed. DORIS SORENSEN, promotion director for Briarwood, indicated that 30 stores opened yesterday and that by Friday another 30 would open. However, a count made by a se- curity guard patroling the- mall showed only 17, stores actively do- ing business. Several more were scheduled to open later in the day. "I didn't think we were going to make it," said a sales woman at Casual Corner, a women's clothing store. "The place was a mess. We didn't get our cash register 'til this morning and we still don't have electricity in the back." The sounds of drilling, hammer- ing and sawing filled the air as workmen added finishing touches to the stores. Wearing overalls and paint splattered clothes, the work- men were almost as numerous as customers. The entire mall reeked of paint, plaster and wood shav- ings. GARY MILLER, Briarwood man- See BRIARWOOD, Page 7 Doily Photo by STEVE KAGAN' SHOPPERS SIT AND REST by one of the pieces of modern sculpture inside the Briarwood Shopping Mall. The stores line "Lollipop Row" named after fhe large red disc in the foreground. SUPPORTS PETERSEN Ni;xon Baltimore grand jury cautioned judge BALTIMORE P)-The Baltimore federal grand jury investigating Vice President Spiro Agnew was warned by a judge yesterday to disregard news stories involving the inquiry because they "frequent- ly are wholly or partially inac- curate." U.S. District Court Judge Walter Hoffman, specially assigned to handle the Agnew probe, summon- ed the jury to an extraordinary public hearing-after meeting pri- vately for an hour and a half with lawyer for Agnew and the Justice Department. At the same time, supporting Agnew's efforts to find the sources of news leaks, Hoffman gave the vice president's lawyers broad au- thority to subpoena Justice Depart- ment officials, newsmen and any- one else they feel could help them get this information. THE JUDGE'S unusual order said Agnew's counsel "may take . the depositions of such persons as they deem appropriate and neces- sary upon at least 48 hours' notice to the Department of Justice in each instance." Hoffman also directed clerks of district courts anywhere in the United States to "issue such sub- poenas as may be required." The depositions are to be sealed and not made part of any public file, Hoffman said, in enjoining Agnew and the government from disclosing the names of those sub- poenaed or discussing their testi- mony. He lectured jurors for 18 minutes TF on their responsibilities in investi- Ag See JUDGE, Page 2 po def ends proe of Agnew Calls graft charges against VP serious' WASHINGTON (P) - President Nixon yesterday defended the ac- tions of Asst. Atty. Gen. Henry Petersen, the man who has been conducting a vigorous investigation of alleged corruption on the part of Vice President Spiro Agnew. Agnew has' charged that Petersen' was "out to get him." But Nixon, in what appeared at least a partial abandonment of the vice president, said, "If I did not support Mr. Pet- ersen's handling of the investiga- tion he would have been re- moved . Nixon called the allegations that Agnew had received illegal kick- backs and had taken bribes "ser- ious and not frivolous," but de- clared that the vice president should be presumed innocent. Noting the "rather white-hot at- mosphere" swirling around Agnew, Nixon said he hopes Agnew "will not be tried and convicted in the press and on television by leaks and innuendoes." AND HE SAID he had never ask- ed the vice president to resign. Nixon ranged over other foreign and domestic issues in the half-hour news conference, his third in five weeks, as he said: SECRETARY OF STATE Henry Kissinger will visit Peking Oct. 26- 29 to pursue trade and other issues of mutual concern. Kissinger also will visit Japan while in the Far East. -He will travel to Europe him- self "in three or four months" and also to Japan before the end of next year with the precise timing of the trips dependent both on for- eign consultations and on " my re- sponsibilities on the domestic front." -Three declarations of princi- ple, rather than one, are being ne- gotiated for signing during his vis-. its to Europe and Japan. One is in- tended to update the Atlantic Al- liance, another deals specifically with economic issues and the third is a more general declaration to "breathe new life and new pur- pose and new spirit" into relations with U. S. allies. -On the political scene, he won't endorse any Republican contender, to succeed him in the White House until "they have been tried in the field of battle" in the presidential primaries. r -He wouldn't discuss possible changes in his economic game plan and declined to take sides in a de- bate over whether the nation's un- employment goal should be four per cent or five per cent. THE PRESIDENT was smiling and appeared relaxed when he ap- Vice President Agnew Repo1/norters study here. in special, By BOB SEIDENSTEIN While Detroit strikes, Newark de- teriorates and Washington worries, 15 journalists from those and other areas are taking an eight-month sabbatical from the daily trials of their jobs and turning to the aca- demic environment of Ann Arbor. The Congressionally funded Na- tional Endowment for the Humani- ties is providing fellowships for working journalists to engage in studies of their own choosing at the University or at Stanford Univer- sity in California. In addition, three international journalist fellows are studying here at Michigan. PARTICIPANTS IN the program have varied experiences and inter- ests. Most of them seem to agree,. however, that a federally funded hiatus in academia is a welcome change from the workaday blahs. For James Ingram of The.Mich- igan Chronicle, a black newspaper in Detroit, the program offers an "opportunity to get into an aca- demic setting for the first time in my life and a chance to exchange ideas with the fellows." DtritmlTIPTRBureau (Chief Rich- AP Photo ELLING NEWSMEN he never asked the Vice President to resign, President Nixon emphasizes that gnew faces "serious charges." At a White House news conference yesterday, Nixon also voiced sup- rt for Asst. Atty. Gen. Petersen's investigation. CITY WAITS: Delay in Federal grant stalls implementation of TEL TRAN By STEPHEN SELBST When TELTRAN was approved by city voters last spring, much was said, about the system's poten- tial to alleviate the dreary trans- portation situation in Ann Arbor. But the implementation of the sys- tern is at a standstill. the hands of the city. The city's grant application is buried in the bureaucracy of the Congress and the Departmenta of Urban Mass Transportation. "We're simply waiting for the money to come through so we can begin work," Henry Bonislawski, a operation of the system, such as radios, benchces, and shelters. When voters approved the TEL- TRAN package, they authorized a 2.5 mill property tax increase. This revenue, about 1.5 million dollars, would constitute about three quar- ters of the annual operating bud- The city may also be l u c k y enough to save some money. Con- gress recently passed a measure which would increase the amount of federal support from two thirds to four fifths for such a project. THIS COULD RESULT in sav- ings of up to one half in funding