BRANDING.A MAN FOR LIFE See Editorial Page Sir Ctg A6F 4br :43 a t ty SUNNY High-6S Law--40 See Today for details Eighty-Three Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXIV, No. 39 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, October 20, 1973 Ten Cents Six Pages Nixon offers compromise deal on tapes, orders prosecutor to cease legal appeals 7rIFYWUSEE NEWS KAPPENCALL6DAILY Fleming appointment University President Robben Fleming has been named to yet another commission concerned with form- ulating higher education policy. This time he will work with the National Board on Graduate Education to pre- pare a report on federal policy alternatives toward grad- uate education. The study will focus on three areas of specific concern - graduate student support, research and institutional support. Money for the study will come from the Ford Foundation and the Carnegie Corporation. SGC denials Former Student Government Council members Sandy Green and Dave Hornstein both vigorously denied yester- lay ever having expressed the belief that SGC President Lee Gill is guilty of the charges he now faces. T h e statement contradicts assertions made by newly-elected SGC representative David Faye at last Thursday's SGC meeting, when Faye said the two spoke to him privately and said they believed Gill is guilty. Faye said last night that Green only "said he thought several weeks ago that Gill might be guilty." He remained adamant about Hornstein. Hornstein, however, said "Faye doesn' know what he's talking about. I will be at next week's meeting to refute Faye's allegation." ! Rent measure The Human Rights Party (HRP) Thursday night ap- proved an extensive rent control amendment to the City Charter which the party hopes to place before the voters in next April's municipal election. Basically, if passed 'by the voters, the amendment will set limits on rents and landlord profits. Also a rent control board would be established to control rent increases. To place the measure on the ballot HRP must collect 3,500 signatures before Jan. 1. The petition drive should begin sometime next week. Grape boycott Grape boycott leader Richard Chavez led s o m e 450 supporters including Michigan House Speaker Wil- liam Ryan and Rep. Perry Bullard (D-Ann Arbor) in a protest march on an A&P outlet in East Lansing yester- day that has refused to stop selling grapes. Chavez, brother of United Farm Workers President Cesar Cha- vez, said Michigan was one of the most critical states involved in the boycott effort. Happenings-... . ..are topped by today's football game against the Badgers of Wisconsin. Aside from the gridiron action which should get under way at 1:30 p.m., there will be the traditional homecoming halftime show . . . the Revelli Band Hall will be dedicated today at 10 a.m.... the annual Mud Bowl game will be ,played on the lawn of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon Fraternity House on the corner of Washtenaw and South University at 10 a.m... . Judy Collins will perform at Hill Auditorium at 8 p.m. .. .there will be an enormous game of capture the flag at 6:30 p.m. in the Arb. Participants should meet on the river road near the railroad bridge. UFO convention The municipal airport in the southeast Texas town of Palacios will be the site of the first recorded UFO Fly-in. Palacios Mayor Bill Jackson has extended an open invitation to all UFOs cruising around the country, or the world for that matter, to show up at the city's airport tomorrow. Jackson reasons that no UFOs have ever visited earthlings simply because no one has both- ered to formally invite them. ERA advances The faltering Equal Rights Amendment got a sorely needed shot in the arm yesterday as the AFL-CIO an- nounced plans to drop its long-standing opposition to the measure. The amendment, which guarantees equal rights to women, has been approved by 30 state legisla- tures. It has been defeated or tabled in numerous other legislatures, however, largely as a result of organized pressure exerted by conservative women's groups. The union's support for the measure is expected to improve its chances for passage, particularly in several major industrial states. On the inside .. . . . . An interview with singer John Mayall written by Gloria Jane Smith appears on the Arts Page . . . Erich Schoch pens some short subjects on the Editorial VP Smith Ervin OKs plan; announces resignation~ By REBECCA WARNER University President Robben. Fleming yesterday announced the resignation of Vice President for Academic Affairs Allan Smith from administrative service. Smith, 62, has often been at the center of conflict between adminis- trators and students. However, University officials denied Smith's resignation has any motivation but a wish to return to academic and professional pursuits as a law professor and attorney. "I'VE HAD "14 years of administration and I want to go back to teaching," Smith remarked yesterday. He served as dean of the law school for five years previous to his appointment as vice president in 1960.. Fleming, who made the public announcement at yesterday's Regents' meeting, called Smith an "absolutely superb vice president" and claimed, "His contribution to this University is just beyond all measure." Although the Regents acknowledged Smith's move, no formal action was taken on the resignation because his date of departure has not been set. SMITH IS expected to leave his position between April and the end of the summer, however. Smith told the Regents he did not want to dwell on the resignation See 'U', Page 3 egents to establish joint committee or, in sgi Cox will fight By AP and Reuter WASHINGTON-President Nixon refused last night to turn over Watergate related tapes to special prosecutor Archi- bald Cox, but-said he would prepare an independently-author- ized summary of their content to be made available to both the Senate investigators and the Watergate grand jury. In a statement, Nixon said Cox rejected this compromise solution to the explosive tapes case but that the arrange- ment had been agreed to at a White House meeting last night with Chairman Sam Ervin (D.-N.C.) and Vice Chairman How- ard Baker (R-Tenn.) of the Senate Watergate Committee. NIXON SAID he has felt is necessary to direct Cox "as an employe of the executive branch to make no further attempts by the judicial process to obtain tapes, notes or memoranda of pres- idential conversations." Nixon also announced that he would give unlimited access to lis- ten to the tapes to.Democratic Sen- ator John Stennis of Mississippi. HE SAID Stennis had agreed to listen to every tape recording sought by the court and verify that a statement the President will make on their contents is full and accurate. In what potentially could create an unprecedented legal tangle, Nix- on let it be known that he will not abide by a 5-2 federal appeals court ruling which upheld an earlier decision by U. S. District Judge John Sirica that the tapes should be surrendered. At the same time, Nixon said he would not appeal the ruling of the U. S. Circuit Court of Appeals to the Supreme Court and thus would avoid a constitutional confronta- tion. LEGALLY, the case now goes back to Sirica, who, if he wished, presumably could object to the solution proposed by Nixon and accepted by Ervin and Baker. In a statement later from his office, Cox said: "In my judg- ment, the President is refusing to comply with the court decrees. A summary of the contentof the See NIXON, Page 3 John 'iDean' r0 admits to, charges Of cover-up WASHINGTON (J) - John Dean pleaded guilty yesterday to being part of a conspiracy to thwart the probe of the Watergate break-in. Dean has testified that the con- spiracy may have included Presi- dent Nixon. The ousted White House counsel entered his guilty plea to a single charge of conspiracy before U.S. District Court Judge John Sirica who r.eleased him on his personal recognizance.1 DEAN'S ATTORNEY, Charles Shaffer, read a letter from special Watergate prosecutor Archibald Cox in which the prosecutor agreed to bring no further charges if Dean cooperated fully with the in- vestigation. Dean, fired by Nixon April 30, See DEAN, Page 3 By STEPHEN SELBST University Vice President for Student Services Henry Johnson announced plans for a committee to investigate Student Government Council during yesterday's Regents Meeting in the Regent's Room of the Administration Bldg. The investigation, said Johnson, was spurred by this week's, all- campus election, which w a s marked by the lowest voter turnout in University history. "WE WANT a student govern- ment, but we want a good, strong student government here at the University," said Johnson. "This is the feeling of both the Univer- sity executive officers and the Re- gents." The sentiment was echoed by University President Robben Flem- ing. "I hope the student govern- ment will receive thisin the spirit in which it's offered," Fleming said. "If the Regents wanted to destroy student government, the easy way to do it would be to abolish the fees and let student government exist on a voluntary funding ba- sis," he added. THE REGENTS were concern- ed with what Johnson called the "rock bottom level" of student in- terest in SGC. Johnson emphasized that their concern was not simply with the current Gill administration. He said that the Regents had been concern- ed for some time, but that the cur- rent election had served to focus that concern in a tangible way. "We wantto take a look atnthe ways in which SGC should be con- ducting itself. What sorts of things should SGC be getting involved in," said Johnson. "PERHAPS WE might also be concerned with the philosophical as- pectsdof student government, he added. "What forms should it as- sume, how should it seek to be more informed of student opinion? How can the student government be more responsive?" Johnson, however, was uncertain about the details of the plan. "I don't know what form the committee will take, and I cer- tainly don't want to be in the posi- tion of imposing an agenda upon the members," he said. JOHNSON WAS also unprepared to say who would be reresented the students on the committee. He suggested that major con- cerns within the student body should have a voice, but he wasn't sure just who the groups would be. Casually he suggested that per- haps a representative of THE DAILY, a member of SGC, some- body from the fraternities and sor- See REGENTS, Page 3 DISABLED SYRIAN TANKS litter the landscape' near Sasa, Syria, yesterday following an unsuccessful assault on Israeli armored forces south of that city. The attack was part of a general counter-offensive by Arab forces on the Syrian front. Israel ( caims- BULLETIN WASHINGTON (/P) - President Nixon sent Secretary of State Henry KissingertoMoscow early this morning for high level talks with Soviet leaders on ending the Mideast War. The White House said Kissing- er was dispatched at the re- quest of Soviet Communist lead- er Leonid Brezhnev. He was accompanied on the flight by Anatoly Dobrynin-the S o v i e t Ambassador.' Kissinger's plane is expected to arrive in Moscow at 11:30 this morning. He is expected to be there "a matter of days." pens major offensive, troopsa By AP and Reuter Israel opened its major counter- offensive on the Suez Canal front yesterday, sending tanks and men across the canal and penetrating some 20 miles into Egypt-only' 50 miles from Cairo, according to the Israeli command. An Israeli military spokesman in Tel Aviv told reporters that the advancing force had destroyed about a quarter of all Egyptian surface to air missile sites on the canal and the Israeli air force- is now able to fly over the area at will. IN MAJOR Mideast War develop- ments: * Egyptian, Syrian, Jordanian and Iraqi forces launched a major re near Cairo offensive in the Golan Heights area in a determined effort to strike hard while the Israelis were pre- occupied. Fierce tank duels were reported; * President Nixon asked Con- gress to authorize $2.2 billion in emergency aid to Israel in order to maintain "a balance or military capabilities in the Mideast"; * the Pentagon acknowledged that U.S. advisors are presently operating in the Mideast. It denied, however, that there are any com- bat troops involved in the war. It was also revealed that the U.S. is supplying the Israelis with the so- called "smart bombs" first em- ployed against Hanoi in the Viet- nam War; * three persons-two gunmen and an American hostage-were killed as Lebanese troops stormed the Bank of America branch-in Beirut where hostages had been held for 26 hours by leftist Arab guerillas; * Libya announced it is cutting off all oil supplies to the United States effective immediately. The cut-off is in retaliation for U.S. support of Israel; and * Diplomatic observers said the U.S. and the Soviet Union are try- ing to agree on a cease-fire form- ula acceptable to both sides. They said, however, that yesterday's major Israeli offensive has comn- plicated the question of where See ISRAEL, Page 3 WEEKEND FOLLIES Homecoming inspires crea tivity, madness, By JACK KROST and DEBBIE MUTNICK A plethora of imaginative activi- ties, sparked by this year's Home- coming, were met with enthusiasm and involvement by students yes- terday. Activities included both those organized by the University Activi- ties Center, with a "New Deal," 1930's theme, and others generated 1,- ;_q- - '% - --c>> r In keeping with the parade's theme of "All that meat and no potatoes," there were paper-mache hamburgers, cloth hot dogs, and even an eight-man shish-kebab, consisting of several costumed and skewered individuals, and a sign, attached saying,. "We can't go on meating like this." IN ADDITION, jugglers with painted faces, a human-sized shop- n-nu hn rn n enorningr record Spuds," marched in formation and chanted phrases decrying the pa- rade's costume restrictions. THE HIGHLIGHT of the parade, however, in many a spectator's judgment, was a surprise appear- ance by the renowned "One-String" Sam. The accomplished m u s i c i a n achieved notoriety at Ann Arbor's Blues and Jazz Festival last sum- mer for his abiliiv t "wring ......... .. ..... .... . ... W im ,