CEASE-FIRE FOR NIXON? See Editorial Page 3kSi au :43 a t t DRY OUT High-SS Low-37 See Today for details Eighty-Three Years of Editorial Freedom Vol LXXXIV, No. 47 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, October 30, 1973 Ten Cents Ten Pages We are number one If the big. 'U' doesn't make it to the number one spot in college football, we can take solace in the fact that we do rank first in, at least one department. According to a recently released study, the 'U' has the highest non- resident tuition rate of any state or land grant school in the nation. In-state fees ranked only sixth among the schools, but if present trends continue, insiders say, we stand a real shot at overtaking the leaders. Chavez nominated The Romance Languages Department announced yes- terday that it will submit the name of Cesar Chavez as a candidate for an honorary degree to be presented at the May commencement exercises. In making the nomination Prof. Frank Casa called Chavez, "a repre- sentative of a movement toward human dignity." The nomination is only the first step in a selection process that will ultimately be resolved by the Regents. Tuition payment Those students petitioning for in-state residency status who have not yet been informed of the decision on their cases are expected to make their second tuition payment by Oct. 31. According to 'U' officials, money will be refunded for those who do eventually qualify for the lower tuition rates. Happenings ... are varied on this Tuesday. Former POW James Warner will address the College Republicans Club on the topic, "Political Process and Political Prisoners." The speech will be held at 8:00 pm. in Lecture Room 2 of the MLB . . . there will be a teach-in entitled, "Behind the Arab-Israeli Conflict" in the Union Assembly Hall at 7:30 pm. The teach-in will be sponsored by several organiza- tions including the Arab Students and Young Socialist Alliance . . . "Career Opportunities for Women" will hold a second in a series of lunch hour disussions today at noon in the League Conference Room No. 4 . . . there will be a LSA coffee hour at 3:00 pm. in the Blue Room of the Residential College. Driving donkey Largely as a result of the Watergate scandals, the Democratic Party has opened up a bigger leader in popularity over Republicans than at any time in the last decade. The claim is made by pollster Lou Harris whose latest survey indicates that 53 per cent of the public would now vote for Democratic candidates for congres- sionalseats as opposed to a paltry 31 per cent still stick- ing with the GOP. The Dems 22 per cent advantage con- trasts with the 56-44 per cent margin they had in the popular vote in last year's election for the House. Media assault Presidential aide Patrick Buchanan yesterday con- tinued the assault on the TV networks that his'boss began in a Friday night address to the nation. Appearing on CBS' Morning News program Buchanan advocated legis- lation to break up what he called "the excessive power" of broadcast networks to dominate the flow of ideas to the American public. Nixon Friday night called the net- works' coverage of recent events, "outrageous, vicious and hysterical." Buchanin suggested that eight networks be created as opposed to the present three. Such a sys- tem he maintained would' foster greater competition and presumably blunt the impact of anti-Nixon reporting. " Kelley ruling Attorney General Frank Kelley ruled yesterday that In- dian tribes have a significant amount of local autonomy with regards to crimes committed on reservations around the state. Kelley said the tribes could legally es- tablish their own police forces which would then be eligi- ble for assorted federal grants. Both the federal and state governments, however, would still have jurisdiction over violations of their own laws. 0 viva la difference Though they hold an international reputation for sex- ual freedom, the French, according to a recent poll, are not quite as kinky as one might expect. An overwhelming 76 per cent of those surveyed said the sexual liberaliza- tion ofrecent years had not affected their sexual be- havior. 81 per cent said they would be shocked by group sex while 88 per cent claimed they would be offended by the sight of two males kissing. An impressive 25 per cent, however, did say they would have no objection to ap- pearing in a sex film. Town for sale Can't find the right gift for that person who has every- thing? Herman Cotter Jr. will sell you most of Cantwell, Alaska, a town complete with restaurant, motel, air strip, two wells and a ready-made 200-plus population. The asking price is $750,000. Cotter, who owns every- thing but the railroad station, post office and.a few private lots, says he's tired of owning and running Cant- well, and will be moving to Anchorage. Cantwell lies on the Anchorage-Fairbanks Highway 205 miles north of Anchorage, Alaska, On the inside - . . . an interview with Arlo Guthrie by Diane Levick appears on the Arts Page . . . Stephen Sedbst writes about the problems of SGC on the Editorial Page . . . Dan Borus pens a piece about Clint Haslerig on the Sports Page. Stranded Egyptians get By The Associated Press The first emergency supplies reached 20,000 Egyptan troops stranded in the Sinai Desert yester- day and Israel offered to swap 7,- 000 Arab POWs for 450 Israelis held by Syria and Egypt. Egypt denied claims that Israel ever held Suez city at the southern end of the Suez Canal. MEANWHILE, Israel's 75-year- old premier, Golda Meir, paid a flying visit yesterday to Israeli troops inside Egypt west of the Suez Canal. Meir wore a beige dress and carried a white handbag as she flew in an Israeli air force Cox: New power for prober is p-- necessary Supports law to let court pick him WASHINGTON (P) - O u s t e d Watergate prosecutor Archibald Cox testified yesterday that a new special prosecutor by-law should be able to bring court action to obtain evidence from the White House. Cox told the Senate Judiciary Committee that frustrations and delays he encountered in trying to get evidence from the White House \make it imperative a new prose- cutor have such legislated power. HE ALSO REPEATED state- ments that he now has concluded Congress should pass legislation providing for appointment of a new prosecutor by the federal District Court here. Cox, on leave as a Harvard Law School professor, said there is some doubt about the constitutionality of such legislation but heahas decided after further study that the doubt is "not a very serious one and I'd be prepared to run the risk." President Nixon has announced that a successor to Cox will he appointed later this week by acting Atty. Gen. Robert Bork, but 53 senators have introduced a bill providing for a new prosecutor ap- pointed by U.S. District Court Judge John Sirica. Similar legisla- tion has been suggested in the House by more than 100 members. COX TESTIFIED at a Judiciary Committee inquiry into his dis- missal by Bork, on Nixon's arier, after he refused to accept i direc- tive not to pursue in court his efforts to obtain tapes, notes and memoranda of presidential cnver- sations. He said acceptance of the direc- tive would have established a "very dangerous precedent" and would have been seen by mary as a cover up. He said it would have led to later instructions interfering with his independence and the con- duct of investigation. Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.) asked if a prosecutor could fully perform his duties without access to White House documents. "I DON'T SEE how," Cox re- plied. "That's where the informa- tion is." See COX, Page 10 'Mayor calls for election fund control By GORDON ATCHESON Because of the scandals that havearocked the federalgovern- ment, Mayor James Stephenson has anpounced he will present City Council with an ordinance strictly controlling campaign spending in local elections. Stephenson made the announce- ment during last night's council meeting. The ordinance will totally ban campaign contributions from organizations, place a $100 limit on individual contributions, and re- quire all candidates to file detailed contribution statements prior to the election. Israel offers to swap POWs with Ar helicopter to Israeli positions on both sides of the canal, including visits to positions on the west bank taken by Israel in the latest Mid- east war. Israeli and Egyptian officers met for a third time yesterday in Is- raeli - held Egypt on the Cairo- Port Suez road. They took up the prisoner of war issue but no details were released. They agreed to hold further meetings. Maj. Gen. Shumel Eyal said in Tel Aviv that Israel wanted to trade 7,000 Araba prisoners for 450 Israelis he said were held in Egypt and Syria. Eyal told reporters that Israel held 6,800 Egyptian POWs, about 300 Syrians and a few Iraquis and Moroccans. He said Egypt held about 350 Israelis and Syria had about 100. IN WASHINGTON, acting Egyp- tian foreign minister Ismail Fah- my, a close associate of President Anwar Sadat, arrived from Cairo and met immediately. with Secre- tary of State Henry Kissinger. Pahmy did not speak with report- ers. In Cairo, Egypt said its 3rd ar- my on the east bank of the canal "is valiantly standing firm, its morale is high and supplies are reaching it." It was the first official comment on the status of the 20,000 troops Israel says it has cut off on the east bank. THE OFFICIAL Middle .East News Agency iss ter Deputy Prer Hattem met wit of the UN emerge force. It said: "The 3 ing firm. The 3rd ed heavy losses forces arrived y in the southern s It said Israeli City had fallen u "Suez still is in THE AGENCY U.S4 supplies "resisted all enemy efforts to at- rtb s . .tack it after the Oct. 22 cease-fire ib s ..forcing the enemy to with- drwfrom its outskirts . .. The statement added that more ued the report, af- than 2,000 UN troops have taken up mier Abdul Kader positions on the west bank, includ- h representatives . ing some who entered Suez city ency peacekeeping yesterday morning. 3rd army is stand- Egyptian amphibious vehicles picked up emergency supplies at a army . . . inflict- pier six miles north of Suez city until emergency under the eyes of UN officials and esterday morning Israeli troops, Associated Press re- sector." porter Daniel Grebler said. claims that Suez pG were false, adding THIRTY LOADS floated across Egyptian hands." the 200-foot waterway, Israeli e said Suez city , See SUPPLIES, Page 7 detente shows signs of strain By WILLIAM L. RYAN AP Special Correspondent A dispatch of Tass, the official Soviet news agency, hints that Moscow is taking a long and thoughtful new look at the turmoil in Washington, as if wondering whether to hedge Soviet bets on the fruits of dentente. At the same time, indications of new strains on the fragile Soviet- American "era of negotiation" come from the American side with news that the Nixon administration is urging Congress to shelve temporarily the President's recommendation to liberalize trade with Moscow. OBVIOUSLY, the Middle East crisis has opened cracks in the structure of the U.S.-Soviet detente. has done that Moscow is wondering about the Nixon administration's staying power. As is. custoniary in cases where the Kremlin treads cautiously, the dispatch got into the subject obliquely. But Tass never puts out an officially unsanctioned message, and it can make its point simply by quoting others out of context. In this, Tass suddenly deviat In fact there is a hint in what Tass A News A nalysis ed from the extraordinarily wary, AP- Photo A WOUNDED EGYPTIAN prisoner of war from Egypt's 3rd Army is helped to a truck by a fellow'POW (right) and an Isreli soldier (left) near the city of Suez, Egypt. A 100-truck convoy with non-military supplies for the 3rd Army trickled through Israeli lines at the bank of the Suez yesterday as Israeli and Egyptian officers held their third face-to-face meeting in an attempt to discuss an exchange of prisoners of war. Meanwhile, criticism mounted within Israel over Prime Minister Golda Meir's acquiescence, reportedly under heavy U.S. pressure, in the emergency resupply effort. Waslitenaw-H ill area objective treatment Moscow has given what it calls the "Uotergeitskoye Dyelo"-the Watergate Affair-and related U.S. explosions. Is Moscow ,removing those kid gloves? LEONID BREZHNEV, the Soviet chief, was euphoric about the prospects of the U.S.-Soviet detente in his visit to the United States last June. But the Middle East war now seems to have applied some kind of punctuation mark to that process. An announced Soviet intention to send troops, ostensibly to oversee the cease-fire, triggered a U.S. alert to military 'units, and for a few hours it- had the look of nuclear brink once again. Brezhnev complained indignantly that the Americans overreacted. Evidently, official Moscow now sees it all as the desperation of an administration needing crisis to absorb public attention. The Russians have been in such situations. Only six months ago Brezhnev, defending his policies, restructured the Politburo to remove an inconvenient non- believer or two. And the Russihns have a way of imputing their own foibles to others. THUS, MOSCOW probably seeing what it believes to be a groggy Washington staggering from ceaseless punches, is likely to speculate that if the boss is in difficulty, so is everything he stands for. If the Tass dispatch is a herald of flagging confidence in the Nixon staying power, the detente could be about' to enter a mark-time phase, at the least. Witches see another government scandal'.. NEW YORK (UPI) - A pre- divorce so he can marry a well Halloween survey of 260 Ameri- known actress who has appear- can witches, who claims to have ed in several pornographic predicted Spiro Agnew's resig- movies; nation as vice president a year " A woman will be named as a g o, h a s forecast another president of a leading labor un- S"huge" government scandal un- ion and another will be signed .' related to Watergate, according by a major baseball team on the to the results released yester- West Coast; day. " A.new medical discovery i The survey, conducted by an will wipe out one of the na- organization called the New tion's major diseases; and, York Center for the Strange, 0 The Dow-Jones industrial gave these predictions from average will hit an all-time v witches for the next year: high of 1100 and then fall back * Gerald Ford, nominated as to 800 within the next six successor to Agnew, will resign months. within three months of becom- Results of the survey were an- { ing vice president; nounced by Robert Carson, pub- * The governor of a large lic opinion research director of Eastern state will announce his the center. gg..o.::;::::..iA: "a":4i: ry:4 " { ; . : } :" ; p v zoning By WILLIAM DALTON A proposed zoning change in the Washtenaw-Hill area to allow state- lv fraternity and sorority mansions to be used as rooming houses, has been attacked by students and the University as threatening to in- crease the market values of such structures and to price co-ops out of the used-fraternity business. The rezoning amendment, pro- posed by Kelly Newton of Kiem Realty, would allow reuse of the 42 fraternity, sorority, and cooper- ative houses as rooming houses, a use prohibited under the city's cur- rent R2B zoning standards. THE. CITY'S Planning Commis- sion approved the proposal two weeks ago stating that the decline in popularity of fraternities and soroPitiesat the University has left many such structures "under-util- ized" and incurring financial dif- ficulties and failure. The zoning change, which must still be approved by City Council, has created some skepticism about whether the move will actually save the structures. One person critical of the pro- posal is Bing Frederick, Inter-Co- operative Council (ICC) vice-pres- ident and development chairman, plan o P of this market and impair future hopes of expansion," he said. "Newton, who proposed this zon- ing change, is a realtor-and his motivation is that he stands to make several thousands of lollars out of this change. If he's success- ful, he's opened the door to 42 frats, sororities, and co-ops," Fred- erick said, "and who comes through that door landlords." There are only two former frat houses non-operationl at the pres- ent time, Frederick said, one at 715 Hill, and 1018 Fuller, and not t h e "abundance of abandoned buildings as Newton's proposal would have people believe." Newton's proposal was sourred by his realty company's efforts to sell property at 1501 Washtenaw- the only offer he received was for the purpose of a rooming house. But ICC questions Newton's real motivations when he sought a gen- eral change of the R2B zoning code in the Washtenaw-Hill area, instead of getting a zoning var- iance for that prticular property. FREDERICK SAID that Kiem is particularly interested in getting ius three per cent commission on the $165,000 price tag on -the 1501 Washtenaw building. Kiem first received the offer to sell the building, and being a mem- ber of the Ann Arbor Real Estate Board, the availability of the See REZONING, Page 7 NATIONWIDE SURVEY 'Deans rate professional schools, By PAUL.TERWILLIGER Carolina; Forestry at University of California at Berkeley; Journalism Chicago, Columbia, Harvard, Michigan and the University of at Columbia; Medicine at Harvard; Optometry at Berkeley; Public California at Berkeley have the highest number of professional schools Health at Harvard; Theology 'at Yale; and Veterinary Medicine at the. rated in the top five in the country, according to a recent study of 1180 University of California at Davis. professional schools in 17 different fields0 Basically, the top five Universities had six oi seven of their pro-