CITYWIDE RENT CONTROL NEEDED See Editorial Page S1it'~g~~ Ad&W :43atty CHILLIER High-38 Low-24 See Today for details Eighty-Three Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXIV, No. 69 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, November 29, 1973 Ten Cents Ten Pages u iFYOU SEENE&S RAMPECALL rDA lY False aarm Overheated and smelly transformers at the Univer- sity radio station WUOM brought the Ann Arbor Fire Department out in force, yesterday evening, to the LSA building. Five fire engines plus the Fire Chief's car were called to investigate the ominous smell emanating from the fifth floor of the building. Although personnel at the station still didn't know exactly what the problem with the equipment was at press time, they assured us that electricians have been called, and that "the (radio) show must go on." " Autoworkers' forum Workers in the Motor City's auto plants will be the featured speakers at a "Forum on the Detroit Auto- workers' Struggle" being sponsored tonight by the Attica Brigade. The workers will discuss, among other things, the ever-growing rift between the United Auto Workers and rank-and-file union members. The forum is in Lecture Rm. 1 of the Modern Languages Bldg. at 8 p.m. Co-sponsors of the forum include the Human Rights Party's Labor Committee, the New World Film Co-op and the Radical Student Union. " Picketing scheduled The Farah Strike Committee announced yesterday a shift in its schedule of local picketing. Picketing of Feigel's department store on Main St. is now set for 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. on Fridays and from noon to 2 p.m. on Saturdays each week until Christmas - an at- tempt to capitalize on peak hours for Christmas shop- ping. According to committee spokeswoman Sylvia Brill, the boycott of Farah slacks has thus far caused the company to shut down two of its manufacturing plants, one in Victoria, Texas, and one in Las Cuces, New Mexico. " Lettuce' report The students of Alice Lloyd Hall yesterday voted by a 6-1 margin to continue the University's boycott of non-union lettuce. That policy, which has been in effect for over a year and a half, is in danger of being rescind- ed today at a meeting of the .Housing Policy Board. Earlier this month, the University Housing Council, an advisory body composed solely of students, recommend- ed ending the dorms' participation in the boycott effort. Happenings... . . . are wide-ranging and profuse. The Collegium Musicum presents "Filius Getron," an eccesiastical play, at St. Mary's Student Chapel tonight and tomorrow night at 8 p.m. . . . Michigan Women in Science are sponsor- ing a forum which hopes to be "An Analysis of Af- firmative Action," tonight at 7:30 in the Rackham As- sembly Hall. University A-A Director Nellie Varner will speak . . . There will be a public meeting tonight on Christmas safety at the King of Kings Lutheran Church, 2685 Packard, at 7:30 p.m. Harry Jottke, Federal Con- sumer Affairs director for the Cleveland area, will speak on safe toys and a safe home . . . Music by Bach, Beethoven and others is the featured attraction at the meeting of the Bach Club, tonight at 8 p.m. in East Quad's Greene Lounge . . . There will be a special meeting of the Michigan Undergraduate Economics Association to discuss tenure and curriculum at 7:30 pgm. Rm. 102 of the Economics Bldg. . . . And there will be a meeting of the Housing Policy Committee tonight in Dining Rm 4 of West Quad. Under discussn will be the proposed lifting of the lettuce boycott in the dorms. " Oil shortage a hoax? Sen. Franl Moss (D-Utah) told a Senate Interior sub- committee yesterday that last winter's heating-oil short- age may have been a creation of the major oil com- panies. Moss - lead-off witness in the subcommittee's hearings on competition in the oil industry - said in- formation gathered by his Commerce Committee indi- cated that there was "a plan conjured up by the major oil company suppliers which resulted in the shortages in the Upper Plains states." Charles Spahr of Standard Oil Company of Ohio later told the committee, "those who portray the industry as conspirators (sic) against consumers are doing a disservice." r 'Uncle Sam: A sucker Wealthy white businessmen are using blacks to front for them in getting government loans and con- tracts aimed at aiding minority businesses, according to a congressional investigator. Curtis Prins told the House Banking Committee yesterday that Nixon's "black capi- talism" programs run through the Small Business Ad- ministration (SBA) is being ripped-off by whites who set up blacks as fronts in companies which they actually control. One former SBA area chief from Richmond, Va. allegedly made some $11.7 million dollars in minor- ity loans to firms controlled by his brother-in-law. On the inside .. . . . . Marnie Heyn reviews the University Dancers on the Arts Page . . . Guest Writer Penny Kramer examines local merchants' protests against the city's bot- tle ordinance, on the Editorial Page . . . Sports Editor Dan Borus blasts college athletics on the Sports Page. O Fuel shortage has By CHERYL PILATE Despite the present energy crisis, the University probably will not be suffering any major utility cut- backs according to Plant Department sources. Widespread rumors that the University will extend Christmas vacation to conserve heating fuel appear to be without foundation. MOST UNIVERSITY officials contacted yesterday denied flatly that any such plan was under considera- tion. A high administration source, however, said an extended vacation had been considered but was ultimately rejected. The source said the administra- tion may issue a statement early next week specif- ically ruling'out such a move. "We do not anticipate any cutbacks in either elec- tricity or natural gas," said University Physical Properties Director John Weidenbach. BECAUSE THE University is heated with natural gas, it is unlikely that it will be affected by the 15 per cent heating oil cutback ordered by President Nixon Sunday night. No electricity shortage is foreseen either, although the University outlay for electricity has grown 273 per cent since the 1969-1970 school year. The increase in cost is due to an increase in con- sumption (7-12 per cent yearly) as well as rate hikes LAST SEPTEMBER, the Detroit Edison Co. which supplies about 70 per cent of the University's elec- trical power, raised its rates more than 13 per cent. The University now spends more money on various forms of energy than any other budgetary item ex- cept salaries and wages. li ttle eff Last year the University spent approximately $5,900,000 on electricity, heating fuel, and motor fuel. This year it is estimated that $6,700,000 will be spent on e n e r g y, $400,000 more than was originally budgeted. Part of the extra money for fuel will be taken out of the surplus tuition collected by the University. The Regents approved that allocation at their November meeting. In the face of increased utility costs, an Energy Conservation Task Force (ECTF) has been formed to investigate methods of electricity and fuel con- servation. Composed of three professors, seven administra- tors, two researchers and two students, the ECTF has formulated a number of energy-conserving sugges- tions. c t on ' ONE OF THE major goals of the ECTF is to enlist the cooperation of University consumers in reducing energy consumption. The committee has recommended that the tem- perature in all University buildings except the Hos- pital be kept at 65-68 degrees and during vacations that the thermostat be kept between 55-60 degrees. The task force has also recommended that artifi- cial lighting in hallways and commons areas should not exceed 20-30 foot-candles. (A foot-candle is the amount of illumination of a standard candle over a circle one foot in radius.) ALTHOUGH M A N Y thermometers h a v e been turned down, ths temperature in many buildings has See NO, Page 2 RUMBLING TRUCKS BLAMED Mor( WASHINGTON (Reuter)-A White House lawyer testified in federal c o u r t yesterday that more gaps exist on sub- poenaed t a p e recordings of President Nixon's conversa- tions about the Watergate af- fair, but he said there was a logical explanation f o r the gaps and there was no reason to believe v o i c e s had been erased. gaps White House Counsel Fred Buzhardt told the court the gaps apparently o c c u r r e d when the secret tape record- ing system was apparently ac- tivated by background noises at the White House, such as trucks rumbling by outside. THEORETICALLY, the tape re- cording system should only have been activated by someone speak- ing in the President's office. Buzhardt said that technicians discovered In tapes Johnson names members in new probe o f SGC By STEPHEN SELBST Vice President for Student Serv- ices Henry J o h n s o n yesterday announced the names of those who will serve on his controversial com- mittee charged with the task of re- organizing the Student Government Council. Johnson also announced that the new body, known as the Student Governance Commission, will hold its first organizational meeting to- morrow. The group will be com- posed of 14 students, four faculty members and four members rep- resenting the University staff. THE COMMISSION was created last month by the Regents in re- sponse to what they termed the "rock bottom level" of interest in student government. The action followed a. fall SGC election that managed to attract a paltry 950 voters, less than three per cent of the student body. An interim report on the group's progress is slated for presentation to the Regents at their December meeting. A final report is supposed to be ready by the end of the winter semester. ACCORDING TO Johnson the copying the tapes discovered the new gaps. Disclosure that there are more gaps in the tapes came just one week after White House lawyers told Watergate Judge John Sirica that an 18-minute segment was accidentally erased in a conver- sation President Nixon had with former Chief-of-Staff H. R. (Bob) Haldeman. THAT CONVERSATION t o o k place June 20, 1972, three days after discovery of the Watergate break-in and bugging. Prosecutors believed the Nixon-Haldeman dis- cussion could help prove the Pres- ident's guilt or innnocence in the Watergate cover-up. The White House had previously said that no tapes existed of two other conversations the President had about Watergate. Prosecutor Richard Ben-Veniste disclosed that when the originals of the tape recordings were copied on Nov. 14 technicians noted dur- ing the copying process that a meter they were watching appear- ed to indicate places on several of the tapes, where there were no voices. BUZH4ARDT acknowledged that there-were places on some of the tapes where there were no con- versations in progress. But he said these were places where the machine was apparently turned on by background noises. He said technicians told him there were periods on the tapes lacking any identifiable conversa- tion, but that these were not in the nature of the 18-minute gap that had been the subject of testi- mony the last several days. EARLIER IN the day the White House announced that Nixon will release information about his per- sonal finances that will lay to rest misconceptions and allegations of unethical conduct. Presidential Spokesman Gerald Warren disclosed yesterday that separate packages of documents will be provided to all members of Congress and all state governor3. Warren said the documents will refute suspicions of shady dealings by the President and allegations that the administration dropped anti-trust charges against Interna- tional Telephone and Telegraph Corp. (ITT) and permitted in- creases in milk prices in return for political contributions. HE DECLINED to say whether copies of the President's income tax returns would be provided but gave an assurance that the infor- mation released would be thorough and complete. Warren said two of the issues to be discussed were allegations that Tricia Cox, the President's elder daughter, paid no taxes on a prop- erty investment in Florida and that a one million dollar invest- ment trust had been created for Nixon since he took office in 1969. The White House spokesman said it was possible that the first pack- age of information, dealing with Nixon's personal finances, woaild be released this week. Daily Photo by STEVE KAGAN Flying fingers Guitarist Narcisco Yepes delights the audience with a selection played on his custom-made 12 string guitar. Yepes performed under the sponsorship of tha University's Musical Society last night at Rack- ham Aud. RULES COMMITTEE VOTE: House action hreatens camp aig reformbl VP Johnson group will explore such questions as new modes of student govern- ment, election procedures, appro- priation and budgetary controls, incentives for student involvement, limits to SGC event programming See JOHNSON, Page 2 Conviet's extradition sought, in Fahr ease By DAN BIDDLE The Eaton County prosecutor's office in Charlotte, Mich. yesterday issued a first degree murder warrant for the arrest and extradition of Orville Leland Davis, the escaped convict who may have kidnapped and killed University student Melanie Fahr last March. Police indicated last night that the long-awaited warrant is based on evidence that the bullet which killed Fahr was fired from a gun in Davis' possession at the time. DAVIS, who'is presently in custody in Milwaukee and awaiting trial WASHINGTON (A')-In a move that could kill chances for passage of legislation aimed at reforming the present system of campaign financing, the House Rules Com- mittee yesterday urged the House to reject a Senate passed reform plan. This highly unusual maneuver was recommended by the Rules Committee in a unanimous voice vote at a special session. The tra- ditional step would be to submit such disputes to a Senate-House conference panel. THE SENATE tacked the reform amendments on a bill calling for the extension of the federal debt ceiling. Rep. Al Ullman (D-Ore), acting chairman of the Ways and Means Committee, denouncedthe Senate's action of putting such major amendments aboard the debt ceil- ing extension bill. President Nixon must sign the legislation by mid- night tomorrow or the government will face severe financing prob- lems. The Senate-approved legislation would divert federal tax dollars to pay for presidential and congres- sional campaigns. It would also set sharp limits on the .amount of money a given candidate could spend. THE LEGISLATION was drawn up in response to the numerous financialabuses committed by the Committee to Re-elect the Presi- dent during the 1972 election. The f mmitAp rnic -i m W)millin meet on a compromise approach today before the scheduled House vote. The House had approved its ver- sion of the debt measure free of all amendments. The bill would hike the national debt limit to a tem- porary $475.7 billion through June 30, 1974. Without the new legis- lation, the limit would automatical- ly plunge to its permanent $400 billion effect Saturday when the actual debt is expected to be about $467 billion. IN APPROVING the House- passed figure for the new debt ceiling, the Senate Tuesday night tacked on a landmark provision calling for federal financing of presidential and congressional cam- paigns. Sen. Walter Mondale (D- Minn.) hailed the public financing plan as "the Senate's answer to Watergate." However, at the Rules Commit- tee hearing, Ullman said it would be a "total disaster" to take such a major provision as part of this bill since it has not been considered by congressional committees. on charges stemming from a re- lated incident, has repeatedly re- fused to offer information abouthis suspected role in the abduction and slaying of Fahr eight months ago yesterday. Davis' attorney is ex- pected to fight the warrant which orders that his client be extradited to Eaton County and stand trial for Fahr's murder. Fahr, a native of Troy, Mich., who majored in oceanography, dis- appeared early on the morning of Marchi28 after driving, a friend home in her 1970 Chevelle. The car turned up in Davis' possession 24 Senate passes bill for Saxbe approval, By AP and Reuter WASHINGTON-The Senate yesterday passed, 75 to 16, a bill intended to make Sen. William Saxbe (R-Ohio) constitutionally eligible for appointment as attorney general. President Nixon has held up submission of Saxbe's nomination awaiting passage of the legislation, which now goes to the House. CA n mAIXT C innlin..ln hon sir OAm anr - - fto ha -n c t Union exosed in skin mag cover-up By JACK KROST To the dismay of countless closet male chauvinists all over campus, the Michigan Union has purged all the "flesh" magazines from its lobby concession stand. The Playboys, Penthouses and Ouis that normally adorn the shelves were removed yesterday afternoon on instructions from the Union management. According to Union Assistant General Manager Jim Hilton, the ax fell on the pages of pulchritude because the magazines "simply weren't selling." STANFIELD WELLS, ,the Union's general manager, echoed his assistant's line commenting, "We weren't making our margin of profits." The Union brass. however, apoarently forgot to inform