UN-AFFIRMATIVE ACTION See Editorial Page Y p 414t ' C4tg an &t144p UNINSPIRING High-43 Low-29 For details see Today Eighty-Three Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXIV, No. 63 Ann Arbor, Michigan--Saturday, November 17, 1973 Ten Cents Six Pages # I -IFYU SEE NE46S L-MAP NCA LL7D. Legal warning Late last month 'U' law Prof. Joseph Vining warn- ed that special Watergate Prosecutor Archibald Cox had been illegally fired. This week's ruling by U.S. Dis- trict Court Judge Gerhard Gesell confirmed Vining's suspicions, but the good professor isn't content to sit back and say 'I told you so.' He suggested yesterday that by their "unquestioning willingness" the American people let the President get away with an illegal act and "take the law into his own hands." Vining further warn- ed that unless Congress sets up new guidelines, there is a possibility that new special prosecutor Leon Jawor- ski might eventually meet the same fate as his pre- decessor. Strike threatened Custodial employes of the Ann Arbor school system have rejected the Board of Education's latest contract offer and union President Woodrow Shelton says the workers will not be at their posts on Monday without a contract. Though neither side in the dispute is willing to discuss details, Shelton commented that the Board's latest proposed contract included a wage hike be1w the rise in the cost of living. Negotiations are scheduled to resume this morning. Correction In a Today item in yesterday's Daily concerning the use of teaching machines in education, we incorrectly quoted psychology Prof. Wilbert McKeachie as saying he was opposed to the concept of computerized teach- ing. McKeachie, in tact, feels that compterized teach- ing can potentially solve many of the problems teaching machines have created. Marty supports boycott A spokesperson for Marty's clothing on N. State St. announced last night that the store has agreed to support the Farah pants boycott led by the Amalgamated Cloth- ing Workers Union. Pete Goldstein, who represents the Amalgamated says he's happy with the agreement and that "the picketing is off at Marty's." He further agreed that Marty's could sell its leftover Farah slacks. Mean- while the Union will continue protesting working condi- tions in Farah factories with local picketing at Feigel's Clothing store. Hlaber for labor University economics Prof. William Haber, formerly dean of LSA and presently advisor to the executive of- ficers, was named head of a three-member panel of ar- bitrators for the Detroit teachers strike yesterday. Ha- ber, who has been an arbitrator for 30 years, recently helped settle a Detroit police strike. Happenings .. . . . the Black Students' Arts and Cultural Festival tops a light file of happenings on this Saturday. The festival which features art, photography exhibits, craft demonstrations, poetry reading, a jazz symposium and musical entertainment will be taking place at East Quad beginning at 11 a.m. . . . Neil Simon's The Prisoner of Second Avenue will be presented at the Power Center at 3:00 and 8:00 p.m. . . . those crusing in the vicinity of Lafayette, Indiana can stop in and see the Wolverines take on the Purdue B3oilermakers. Those re- maining at home can pick up the game on assorted ra- dio stations. Kick-off time is 1:30 p.m. 0 Sirica speaks U.S. District Court Judge John Sirica said yesterday he is opposed to legislation calling for court appoint- ment of a special Watergate prosecutor. He set forth that view in a letter to Sen. James Eastland (D-Miss.), chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, which has been conducting hearings on the legislation. The bill asking the court to appoint a prosecutor has picked up 55 co-sponsors in the Senate. Catholic action The U.S. Roman Catholics threw their support be- hind Cesar Chavez's United Farm Workers in the union effort to conduct free elections among farm laborers. The call for a nationwide boycott of table grapes and head lettuce was the first concerted political action the Catholic group has ever taken. In offering the resolution Bishop Joseph Donnelly of Hartford, Connecticut said, "Chavez's union offers the best hope of protecting the legitimate rights of one of the most disadvantaged groups of workers in the American economy." L.A. blaze Officials in Los Angeles yesterday expressed fear that the death toll in Thursday night's fire at the 60- year-old Stratford Hotel Apartments might climb as high as 52. Although many residents were saved, the building's open stairwells allowed flames to Sweep through the lower floors, trapping residents on the upper floors. Such open stairwellg had been declared illegal in 1973, but the apartment owners were given four years to comply with the ordinance. On the inside . . . . . Roy Chernus reviews the modern Jazz Quartet on the Arts Page . . . a piece on SGC and affirmative action appears on the Editorial Page . . . an account of 1t tnight's ioe hattle with Michigan State graces today's Rege: By REBECCA WARNER The Board of Regents yesterday ordered the University's executive officers to come up with a plan for returning about $1 million in excess tuition revenue to students who paid fees this term. Final ac- tion on the proposed refund is scheduled for the Regents' Decem- ber meeting. The motion, proposed by Regent Paul Brown (D-Petosky), recom- mends that arrangements for re- bate, reduction of tuition rates for next term, or waiver of part of next term's fees be made to cor- rect an error in the recent 24 per cent fee hike which brought the University a $3.75 million surplus Area rally culls for Nixon's removal By CHERYL PILATE About 150 p e o p 1 e gathered to demand the impeachment of Rich- ard Nixon at a town meeting held last night in Rackham Aud. 'The meeting, which was spon- sored by the Impeach Nixon Com- mitteeband the Union of Radical Political Econimists (URPE), fea- tured a broad range of speakers including State Rep. Perry Bullard (D-Ann Arbor) and Kathleen Foj- tik, Washtenaw County Commis- sioner. CHARGES OF "perjury, bribery, and conspiracy" were repeatedly leveled at Nixon. "We have evidence to believe that Nixon has committed these felonies," Bullard declared. Pointing to the ITT scandal, the milk deal, and the "Vesco deal," Bullard contended that the charges leveled dgainst Nixon "aren't er- roneous." Jim Hood, a local fire fighter, exhorted, "It's time Nixon stepped down from his throne; his lying has been the cause of much human suffering." Although Congressman Marvin Esch (R-Mich.) was not present due to a "too heavy" schedule, Bullard spoke of Esch's response to the impeachment question. "It is reprehensible for the Sen- ate to pre-judge the President," Bullard quoted Esch as having stated in the Congressional Record. COUNTY Commissioner Fojtik, a Democrat,, called for the im- peachment of Nixon "through the system." She also endorsed Vice President-designate Gerald Ford because "middle - America won't help impeach Nixon until Ford is in office." Other members of the community demanded that Nixon berbrought to trial to face his 'c r imi nal charges." NOTING THAT many speakers criticized the low turnout, the meeting's chairwoman commented, "this means that those present will have to work even harder and dedicate themselves even more." The Impeach Nixon Committee currently has 4,000 signatures in a petition drive to impeach the Pres- ident. The Human Rights Party is also circulating an impeachment peti- tion, which has drawn 20,000 sig- natures state-wide. ts agree to tuition refund Details to be worked out at next over projected tuition revenue needs. THE ACTION followed allocation of $2 million of the excess cash to cover new salary and tuition com- mitments to the University's teach- ing assistants. The Regents excluded about $800,000 from the refund proposal on the grounds that this revenue was generated- by unexpected en- rollment of 529 extra students, rather than by the tuition hike. The excess enrollment was intended to cover an expected loss in new std- dents due to the fee hike, but the loss failed to materialize. In proposing the motion, Brown said he felt the surplus must be "returned to those who paid it." "IT'S AN individual situation; it's not a question for a majority," he said, rejecting the idea of a decision through committee de- liberations. "If there's one student who wants his money back, it's our duty to return it." Brown urged speedy action on, the refund, so that the students who paid the excess will be the ones paid back. "I do not think that it's fair . . . to benefit a student who comes next year-he's not the one who paid it," he explained. Prior to the vote on disposition of the $1 million surplus, 20 mem- bers and supporters of the Student Action Committee (SAC) staged a protest action, and one represen- tative read a statement criticizing the Administration for its handling of the tuition hike and the resulting excess funds. THE REFUND motion passed 5-2, with Regents Robert Brown meeting (R-Kalamazoo) and Lawrence Lin- demer (R-Stockbridge) opposing. The Board named the sum $1.08 million as the amount to be refund- ed to the students, but the figure was based on quick calculations. The actual amount returned may in fact be slightly higher or lower. Subtracting the $2 million allo- cated to the teaching fellows and the $800,000 that was generated by unexpected enrollment from the initial $3.75 million surplus, one emerges with a figure of about $950,000 for actual refund to stu- dents-substantially less than the Board's $1.08 million estimate. All figures are approximate, how- ever, and -come from rough esti- mates made by members of the Board. The only safe prediction at this point is that the refund will be in the neighborhood of $1 million. THE EXECUTIVE officers had opposed immediate disposal of the surplus, favoring instead creation of a contingency fund to cover "unanticipated expenses" in the next year. The Regents rejected this proposal. Proposals to allocate $60,000 of the excess to the financial aid of- fice for personnel costs and $150,- See REGENTS, Page 3 Nixon sees end to ol emba.rgo, OKs pipel ine WASHINGTON (UPI)-Declaring there is a possibility the Arab oil embargo will be lifted, President Nixon signed legislation yesterday p e rmit i n g construction of an Alaskan pipeline to provide 11 per cent of the United States' current petroleum needs by 1977. / Daily Photo by DAVID MARGOLICK RECENTLY FIRED WORKERS picket last night in front of the American Health Spas - formerly the American Massage Parlor - on Fourth St. The workers were protesting their recent firings, which they say came as a result of efforts to form a union. Workers0 stage protest Vice President-designate Gerald Ford added credence to the likeli- hood of an embargo lift, testifying to a congressional hearing that he had just been told "1ne or more Arab countries" are voluntarily re- leasing oil to the United States. Ford added he has not yet con- firmed the report. But well - informed A r a b oil sources downplayed the rumored change in the embargo. "So far there is nothing to indi- cate any change in this position," one source said~ Commented an- other, "Unless there is a complete Israeli withdrawal under the pro- visions of the U.N. settlement, I can hardly see how Arab countries could lift their oil embargo." THE PRESIDENT described the pipeline bill, which provides a fed- eral right-of-way, as part of ihe nation's goal to achieve self-suf- ficiency by 1980 and added that environmentalists who oppose the proposed 789-mile, $4.5-million pipe- line would "have to cooperate." He also indicated hewould seek to repeal "a couple of the clinkers" in the bill-amendments g i v i n g broad new powers to the Federal Trade Commission (FTC). The pipeline, to be built by a consortium of firms to carry oil from the Alaskan North Slope to the warm-water port of Valdez, has been seen as a partial, long-ranve answer to the current embargo by Arab oil-producing countries on shipments to the United States. BUT NIXON' SAID at the bill signing ceremony that there was a "reasonable possibility that at some time in the future we can see some change with regard to some of the Arab oil-producing countries and the attitude towards exports to the United States and Europe . . ." He based his pre- diction on "the real progress that we have made inthe Mideast.' "While that can happen," he added, "even if it happened to- morrow, we'd still have an energy crisis this year." Nixon said that when the pipeline is completed in 1977 it will carry about 600,000 barrels of oil a day, or about 11 per cent of the nation's daily demand. It has been esti- mated that the direct and indirect effects of the Arab embargo have deprived the United States of be- tween 1 million and 1.5 million barrels a day. SPEAKING to the environmen- talists who previously have suc- ceeded in blocking construction of the pipeliAe, Nixon said that safe- guards in the bill would protect the Alaskan ecology. In any case, he said, environmental concerns will have to'come second while the na- tion deals with its energy crisis. "In the long run," he said, "we can have both." The environmentalists, who ear- lier obtained a court ruling that the pipeline violated right-of-way laws, were expected to file new law suits against it. MEANWHILE, with administra- tion officials at odds over the pros- pects of gas rationing, Senate Dem- ocratic Leader Mike Mansfield yes- at local massage parlor! By DAN BLUGERMAN Seven fired employes, including four masseuses, picketed yesterday for nearly nine hours in front of the city's only massage parlor in protest of what they called anti- union practices by the store's management. Barb, Louanne, Penny, and Con- nie-who were employed as topless masseuses until they were fired yesterday morning-paraded fully clothed before the American Health Spas (formerly the American Mas- sage Parlor) with three store man- agers who were also recently fired. THE WOMEN claim the parlor's operator, Larry Schultz, has inter- fered with their efforts to form a masseuses' union by firing them. Schultz contends the women are not employes, but "subcontractors" -in the same sense as plumbers are subcontracted by builders - paid by him to perform topless City lags far behind in Housing inspection; cites staftf shortage massages on the "Health Spa" customers. But the women say they will prepare a court action against the parlor management, and further accuse Schultz of discrimination. One of the demonstrators last night claimed this was a result of all of the women and two of the male ex-employes being gay. Connie - who joined with the other women in refusing to give last n a m e s - complained that Schultz made them work in a re- ception room that is "too cold for the sleeveless, see-through, and other appropriate colthing" worn on the job. SCHULTZ SAID he fired the masseuses and the three store managers because of their "bad attitude" on the job, but would not expand on that statement. He added, "I can't control what they do with the customers in the rooms. They are hired solely to give the customers massages." The masseuses claim they at- tempted to unionize after Schultz cut their pay by 20 per cent and added bathroom and ashtray clean- ing to their massage duties. BUT ONE of the women, Lou- anne, conceded that the issue of "subcontractor" v e r s u s employe had to be settled before the mas- seuses would take their case to SKYLAB 3's astronauts blast off flawlessly_, yesterday on thgeir way to a rendezvous with t h e giant space station orbiting the earth. Astronauts Gerald Carr, Edward Gibson and William Pogue, making the last manned American flight until mid-1975, are expected to close out the $2.6 billion Skylab program with a record holiday voyage of 12 weeks. Students, army fight " in Greece By AP and UPI ATHENS, Greece - Army troops and hundreds of policemen backed by tanks stormed the Athens Poly- technic Institute early yesterday, violently ending a three-day occu- pation of the 'school by students calling for the overthrow of the Greek government. Tens of thousands of antigovern- ment students and workers battled police in almost every street throughout the city. AT LEAST two persons were shot during the disturbances. Helmeted riot police and men in civilian clothes beat the students with staves and lengths of pipe as they ran from the school after the army intervention. The authorities moved in after tanks surrounded the school. One of the tanks which had sur- rounded the Polytechnic backed into the locked iron gates and de- molished them. Troops then moved swiftly in, firing in the air with automatic weapons. After beating students to the ground, police left the wounded ly- ing on the pavement in pools of their own blood in order to pursue more students trying to flee the area. POLICE USED tear gas and sub- machine guns in the clashes with demonstrators in the city. UPI newsman Royal Brightbill saw one young boy fall to the pavement fromga blow as authori- ties moved in after tanks sur- r r i n i t d t h A qc h n 1 a n d t h e s t u - By GORDON ATCHESON Thursday night, a catastrophic blaze gutted a Los Angeles apart- ment building killing 24 people. Ac- cording to the fire chief, lives could have been saved had the building been in compliance with the city's housing code. It could happen here. Because of a severe personnel shortage, the city's Building and Safety Department has been un- able to complete anywhere near the number of housing inspections "The city has got to make up its mind if it is seriously concerned about protecting the places in which people lime." -Asst. City Administrator Harold Rothbart inspection. However, the process also covers a building's structural soundness, electrical system, and numerous other items. lines in that area as well. ALTHOUGH city officials blame the poor record on insufficient per- sonnel - housing inspectors and