SGC STUDY DESERVES CHANCE See Editorial Page C I 4c Eighty-Three Years of Editorial Freedom D~aiI BRRRISK High-47 Low-32 See Today for details Vol. LXXXIV, No. 51 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, November 3, 1973 Ten Cents FOUND OUT ON SEPT. 29 Eight Pages Nixon ouster backed Pilpt program students at Alice Lloyd Hall have voted overwhelmingly in favor of President Nixon's impeach- ment. Out of 274 votes cast, 81 percent endorsed the ouster. Armed with the results of the referendum, the "pilots" sent two telegrams to Congress, one to Rep. Marvin Esch (R-Ann Arbor) and another to Peter Rodino (D-N.J.), head of the House Judiciary Committee, which is currently looking into grounds for impeachment. 0 Happenings .. . . . are topped by today's football game against In- diana at 1:30 p.m. . . . the Leningrad Philharmonic performs tonight at 8:30 at Hill Aud. . . . while on the movie front, the thirst-inducing Lawrence of Arabia plays at Aud. A, the French Connection at the Nat. Sci. Aud., Wait Until Dark at the Bursley, and You Can't Cheat an Honest Man is at Couzens. Kennedy sees NATO crisis Sen. Edward Kennedy told the Senate yesterday that the Nixon administration, in helping solve the Middle East crisis, "has needlessly created a crisis in the Atlantic alliance." The Massachusetts Democrat said the administration's Oct. 25 decision to alert U.S. troops worldwide without consulting European allies was the latest step in permitting relations with Europe to de- teriorate. U.S. ponders Suez pullback Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir has sounded out President Nixon and Secretary of State Henry Kissinger on the idea of a pullback of Israeli and Egyptian forces from opposite banks of the Suez canal, sources said yesterday. But she has stressed in talks in Washington that Israel's immediate concerns are an exchange of prisoners of war and a lifting of the Egyptian blockade of the Babel Mandeb Strait at the entrance to the Red Sea. GM recalls cars General Motors Corp. yesterday recalled some of its brand-new 1974 cars. GM said its Oldsmobile division was asking owners of about 2,600 Cutlasses with reclining seats to return the cars to dealers so that a nut and bolt can be added to the bracket supporting the back of the seat. The company said some of the brackets were im- properly welded. GM also said it was asking owners of 6,263 light-duty 1973 trucks to return them to dealers for replacement of possibly-defective wheel clamps. Churchill snubbed dukedom Britain's wartime leader, Sir Winston Churchill, turned down a royal offer of a dukedom when he retired as prime minister in 1955, Queen Elizabeth has disclosed. The Queen, attending a ceremony at which a bronze statue of Churchill was unveiled Thursday in Parliament Square, told of the time she had offered him a dukedom -the highest rank beneath royalty in the British aris- tocracy. "I thought that when he resigned as prime minister and would no longer play an active role in party politics, I might honor his wholly exceptional achievements by offering him a dukedom," she said. "But he wanted to spend his last years where he had passed almost all his adult life-in the House of Com- mons-and indeed he had no need for distinction greater than the name of Winston Churchill." Navy barracks scrapped Treasure Island, a U.S. Navy base in San Francisco Bay, has a brand new ruin. After spending more than 350,000 dollars, the Navy has decided it does'not need the block of barracks it is building. The $2 million project was halted this week on orders from Washington. Said a Navy spokesman: "The most recent analysis of personnel needs did not support completion of the barracks. It would have been fool-hardy to continue to build just to save face." Allende widow speaks The widow of the late President Salvador Allende of Chile urged the United Nations and other international organizations yesterday to condemn the current military regime. Hortensia Allende told 500 delegates to the National Congress of the Union of Italian Women in Rome that the junta which seized power Sept. 11 has embarked on a reprisal program of "unheard-of ferocity and cynicism." She said, "Salvador Allende did not die. His name represents a symbol that must guide those who fight for a real progress and against fascism." The gift that says it all His colleagues on the Texas Constitutional Revision Commission have given President -Nixon's new Watergate prosecutor a parting gift. Inside a wrapped package, Houston lawyer Leon Jaworski found two reels of re- cording tape. On the inside ..*. .., Marnie Heyn discusses the Thailand student move- ment on the Editorial Page . . . on the Sports Page, Clarke Cogsdill previews today's Indiana game . . . and Nixon Kids meet animals at Mott clinic By JUDY RUSKIN Llamas and donkeys and ele- phants! Oh my!r The circus came to town yester- day, or more specifically, to the eighth floor of Mott Hospital, the childrens' unit of University Hos- pital. SOME 60 "children of all ages" gathered in the large playroom to watch the antics of Nellie the Baby Elephant, Jenny the Donkey, Win- kie the Clown, and Brownie the Llama. The entourage, which also in- cluded a shy baby cougar, a slimy boa contrictor and several furry bunny rabbits, was provided by The Wonderful W o r I d of Animals, which is currently booked at the national guard armory here. The mini-circus is part of a con- tinuing program of entertainment for hospitalized children, sponsor- ed by the hospital school and ac- tivities department. Other visitors to the eighth floor have ranged from rock and roll bands to Dr. Marcus Welby (Robert Young). SIGNS dotted the large room, warning the many adults present, "This is a children's show. Do not stand in front of them." The patients, several in wheel- chairs and others in moveable beds waited eagerly for Nellie and her friends to disembark from the hos- pital elevator. Nellie, although just a little tyke as far as elephants go, still needed an entire elevator to herself. "I like the llama best,"bubbled five-year-old Jeffrey as the shag- gy South American beast ambled past. Unperturbed by the chaotic atmosphere around him, Brownie calmly thrust his soulful-eyed brown and white head into the face of a nearby hospital worker. "Watch out," someone warned. "He spits." The llama, that, is. WINKIE, a myopic middle-aged man dressed in a baggy, striped BR( clown suit, asked the excited group Hos See KIDS, Page 2 a vi lew tapes were missing Prosecution still not hiappy with rationale. By AP and Reuter WASHINGTON-President" Nixon knew two subpoenaed Watergate tapes were missing more than a month before the White House acknowledged in open court that they didn't exist, a presidential aide testified yesterday. After two days of a federal court hearing,.the Watergate prosecution force still was not satisfied that it knows all the circumstances surrounding the phantom tapes and the hearing was scheduled to resume Tuesday with White House aide Stephen Bull still on the stand. Prosecutors suggested yesterday that it would be helpful if the White House supplied a tape from June 4, when Nixon played back a number of his own recorded conversations during a 12 hour session in his bugged hideaway in the Execu- tive Office Building. They wanted to determine if the June 4 tape contained a playback by Nixon of one of the phantom recordings. But the June 4 tape is not among those ordered disclosed by a federal appeals court, and a White House lawyer objected to turning it over. The judge sus- tained him. On Monday, another chapter in the Watergate affair will resume in the same courtroom when U.S. District Court Judge John Sirica hears the motions of five Water- gate defendants to withdraw their guilty pleas and a motion for a new trial by James McCord Jr., who was convicted in the case. Bull told the court yesterday that he was reviewing a batch of White House tape recordings at Nixon's request at Camp David, Md., on Sept. 29 and found that conversa- tions of June 20, 1972 and April 15, 19'3 were not in the tapes. Not until last Wednesday did the White House publicly acknowledge that the two recordings were non- existent. A week before, White House lawyers had said in court they would comply with an order that called for the productin of. nine Watergate-related presidential tapes. Meanwhile, the White House said yesterday Nixon would make avail- able to the federal courts a memo- randum he made of his conversa- tions with former White House counsel John Dean III on April 15, 1973. Presidential spokesman Gerald Warren said Nixon dictated a memorandum of his frecollections of the meeting shortly after the See NIXON, Page 2 UN sends new force to Mideast UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (A) - The U. N. Security Council last night authorized the dispatch of troops- from Canada, Poland and five other countries to the new Middle East peacekeeping force. The approval broke a weeklong U. S.-Soviet deadlock over East- West balance on ,the force. In se- lecting Canada, a member of NA- TO, and Poland, a Warsaw Pact country, the council specified that each would provide logistic and supply soldiers, rather than front- line observation troops. The other five countries approv- ed were Panama, Peru, Nepal, In- donesia and Ghana. The 15-nation council acted with- out a formal vote following days of negotiations in private meetings. China declared it was disassociat- ing itself from the decision. AmDassador Huang ffua of China said the peace force represented "further intervention in the Middle East, with the superpowers acting as bosses behind the scenes." In Washington, Foreign Secre- tary Mitchell Sharp of Canada said yesterday after meeting with Egyptian Foreign Minister Ismail Fahmy that Fahmy has no objec tions to a Canadian peacekeeping role. Doily Photo by KAREN KASMAUSKI OWNIE THE LLAMA has a friendly chat yesterday with Chris Myer, a patient in Mott Children's pital. Brownie and some of her circus friends, including Nellie the Elephant (in the background), paid sit to their youthful fans in University Hospital's childrens' section. AVERAGE 5.5% RAISE: Disgruntled employes charge 4U, misled them on wage hik By CHERYL PILATE Discontent is b r e w i n g among many University employes who c 1 a i m the administration misled them into thinking they would re- ceive a wage increase. Despitewan average University wage hike of 5.5 per cent, which went into effect Sept. 1, some em- ployes may actually receive the same salary they did last year. WHILE ALL employes are slated to receive a 2.5 per cent cost-of- living pay raise plus an average "merit" hike of 3 per cent-for a total of 5.5 per cent-some workers may in fact take a small pay cut or receive the same salary. The possible loss of a pay hike for some workers results from complex financial numbers game. In the past, professional and ad- ministrative employes could re- ceive as much as a 10 per cent hike on a merit basis, with a max- imum merit raise of 7 per cent for office and technical workers. The amount of the merit raise depends on the work habits of the employe, according to University officials. THIS YEAR, however, the max- imum merit hike is 5.5 per cent in all categories, with an average hike of only 3 per cent. Hence, a worker receiving base pay last year of $10,000-plus a merit hike of 7 per cent, or $700- may now take a merit hike of only 3-5.5 per cent, plus the guaranteed 2.5 per cent cost-of-living raise.' This, on top of the same $10,000 base figure, could amount to the same or less total salary than last year. While last year a worker could top his or her base pay with a merit hike of 7 or 10 per cent, this year the same worker, with the same base pay, can receive an absolute maximum raise of 8 per cent -2.5 cost-of-living plus 5.5 merit hike. IN THE PAST, "any satisfac- tory employe received the maxi- mum merit hike so actually there will be little or no change in the e pledge salaries," according to one em- ploye. "If all my people do outstanding work, I have no way to reward them all," said a University unit manager. "Because the wage in- creases must average 5.5 per cent, if one person gets the maximum merit hike and receives an 8 per cent increase, another deserving person may only get the 2.5 per cent cost-of-living increase," she continued. Although the new policy allows individual raises above 5.5 per cent, "all units are urged to ob- serve the 5.5 per cent average for each of the groups of staff," ac- cording to Chief Financial Officer Wilbur Pierpont. PHASE IV economic controls, which went into effect Aug. 12, allow an average wage increase of no more than 5.5 per cent. "We are only given so much money and we must abide by the Phase IV guidelines," said a spokesman from the University's compensation office. 'We were as upset about this as everyone else," the spokesman added, "but we had no choice." University employes say they are aware of the Phase IV guidelines but maintain that their normal merit hike was disguised as a- salary increase. ONE EMPLOYE said everyone in her unit felt the' University's actions constituted "a real injus- tice to all of us." Desert merchants thrive despite war By HUGH MULLIGAN AP Special Correspondent BEERSHEBA, Israel - For the first time since war erupted Oct. 6 the Bedouin market has resumed in this capital of the Negev desert. Tribal traders came across the sand Thursday from the Gaza Strip with goats and turkeys and crates of vegetables loaded on their Land Rovers and Mercedes-Benz taxicabs for the colorful weekly market. SINCE ROMAN TIMES, Beersheba has been the scene of a thriving camel market, with caravans coming out of Africa across the Sinai and, in the other direction, from Syria and Iraq across the Jordan River. Camels were in short supply this time. Only two showed up on the dusty plain where the desert sheiks spread their wares on blankets and gunny sacks in the sparse shade of a few trees. "May be next week camels come some more," prophesied a date and fig dealer, Sami Ali Fassoud, who weighed his wares on an antique set of balance scales. "Camel traders wait for all war to end in the desert before setting out." TOURISTS also were in short supply, as Ali and other traders lamented, but thousands of Jews and Arabs haggled and bar- tered noisily over the piles of nuts, eggplant, onions, hot peppers and bananas, as if a war had never taken place a few days and r a few hundred dunes away. Sephardic Jews in black frock coats and beaver hats moved > among veiled Arab ladies jingling with jewelry, bearded Druses in baggy bloomer pants and Bedouin tribesmen in flowing kaffi- yahs and jeweled daggers right out of Lawrence of Arabia. "Please," pleaded a brassmonger pushing a beak-necked coffee pot, "fifty Israeli pounds is my absolute last price. All this ar- guing is very distasteful'to me." THE FIRST RAIN of the season falling out of a thunderhead piled desert sky dampened the arguments but 'not the ardor of the merchants, happily back at their stalls after a month's absence. Some food items were still scarce, especially chickens and eggs, but even without the buses full of tourists business was brisk. Airline stewardesses find city nice place for s lort stopover By JO MARCOTTY Ann Arbor doesn't compare with Paris or Rome in terms of excitement, but for the Delta airlines flight .crews that stop over here, it's a nice change of pace. "They used to send us to Detroit for long stopovers, but that was too dangerous, so now they send us here," said Renee Manger, 24, a stewardess. "Be- sides, we like that college girl image," she added with a grin. DELTA RENTS a ninth floor suite at the Campus Inn to accommodate flying crews - from Detroit's Metropolitan Airport on longer stopovers. n- ...o.1.-- ......-,..... . - 7 lnr -n.t~in. 1~ Carol Flannery, also a stewardess, agrees. "It's a college town and has a different aspect on things. We even got invited to a frat party." The stewardesses say that the city's prime at- tractions are its restaurants, the peaceful atmos- phere, and being able to deal with college kids for a cbhnge. PERHAPS the biggest plus though, is security. "It's s, nice to be able to walk around at night and feel s-f4." s-id Flannery. Although the stewardesses like'the campus life, they are h-prv with their own lifestyles. "Flying is a great