:Y C- t tgan 46F :43 Eighty-Three Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXIV, No. 76 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, December 7, 1973 Ten Cents Twelve Pages - T JrI f 7 C S E r I S P C A 7 T t 319 (and 068 . . . are this week's winning numbers in the Michigan State Lottery. Second chance numbers are 036 and 738, lottery anniversary bonus numbers are 506, 861, and 325, and the million dollar elimination number is 430. 0 Nixon mandate a myth? A University sociologist thinks President Nixon's following has never been as massive as his 1972 land- slide victory would seem to indicate. Prof. Donald War- ren said yesterday that as many as half the people who voted for Nixon were "former supporters of George Wallace, and their loyalty has been tenuous from the start." Warren said that a survey he conducted along with former University Prof. Eugene Litwak shows that Nixon owes his election to "Middle American Radicals." He said the plummeting of Nixon's popularity reflects the fleetingness of their support. Block busting? When you get back from Christmas vacation you may be in for a big surprise-like your street being torn up. The University has announced plans to rip up three campus-area streets-Division from Hill to Cross, Cross from Division to Packard and Monroe from Packard to Haven-in order to lay some electrical cables for the athletic and plant departments. Work will begin late in December and be completed by the end of January. They'll be out there with those lovely little air hammers starting at 8 a.m. in the mornings. Prof. supports controls University economist Gardner Ackley told the Na- tional Economists Club in Washington yesterday that Congress ought to renew the President's wage-price control authority. Ackley said economists predictions of price level changes in the last few years have been "uniformly terrible" and said it is important that the government retain the authority to curb wages and prices "until we know that the inflation problem is finally beginning to wane." Taxes to rise? A recent action of the State Court of Appeals has made it increasingly unlikely that Ann Arbor property taxes will jump 5 per cent in January. The court has denied a request from the Washtenaw County Town- ships' Association to overturn plans of the State Tax Commission to raise the "equalized value" of property in large portions of the county. The "equalized value" is the assessment of property upon which taxes are based. In 1972, Ypsilanti Township filed a suit charging that the equalized value of property in that township had been set unfairly high in relation to other parts of the county. An upward assessment of property in the rest of the county, including Ann Arbor, eventually resulted from that suit. Ann Arbor's city assessor has stated the belief that the pending property tax hike may be uncon- stitutional. He has alsi questioned the b7asis upon which equalized values in the city were raised. Happenings .. . . . . there will be a seminar on Chile tonight at 6:30 p.m. at the Ecumenical Campus Center at 921 Church St. Call 662-5529 for reservation . . . The Farah Strike Support Committee of the Attica Brigade is picketing Fiegel's Mens Store on S. Main from 7-8:30 p.m. . . . New World Media is showing a film entitled Tupamaros at 8 p.m. in the UGLI Multipurpose Rm. . . . The Chess Nuts meet tonight at 8 p.m. at St. An- drews Episcopal Church . . . and the Ark features Marshall Dodge tonight at 9. 0 Rationing put off The Nixon administration will not ration gasoline before March 1, federal energy director William Simon said yesterday. In testimony before the Senate Gov- ernment Operations Committee, Simon indicated the start of rationing program might take even longer, once any decision to ration is made. Prices up againi A record monthly increase in fuel costs drove whole- sale prices up sharply in November despite a decline in farm product prices, the government said. The explosion in fuel prices reflected the first big infla- tionary impact of the Arab oil cutoff and put into numbers what consumers know already: energy prices have gone up and will continue to rise. The Bureau of Labor Statistics said that over-all energy prices soared by a record 19.3 per cent, with costs of refined petroleum products rising at an unprecedented 34.7 per cent. Royal picnic: No ants, just lava Princess Anne and her husband Capt. Mark Phillips picnicked yesterday on the slopes of a volcano 14,000 feet up in the Andes of Peru. The royal couple lunched on cold chicken and beer just below the snow line of Mount Cotopaxi, where the air is reportedly rather thin. The newly-weds were on the third day of a part.private, part-official tour of South America. On tht e inside ... Gerald as nati Ford takes office OH1S5 vice president AP Photo NEW VICE PRESIDENT Gerald Ford flashes a broad grin and displays his confirmation papers for photographers yesterday, minutes after his nomination cleared the House of Representatives by an impressive margin. Ford was sworn in later in the day. 2,000-RIG SNA RL: Truckei as fuel CHICAGO (Reuter)-Nearly 2,000 truck drivers, protesting high fuel costs and reduced speed limits, blocked the east-west Ohio Turn- pike with their vehicles yesterday and defied police orders to move. The blockade in the Toledo area was one of the biggest yet staged in the series of traffic jams caused by truck drivers in at least 10 states since Monday night. OHIO POLICE, acting on the or- ders of Governor John Gilligan, arrested the drivers of eight trucks blocking secondary roads in Ohio and their vehicles were towed jam turnpike protest goes on away. But policemen, besieged by pro- testing car drivers trapped in a snowstorm and a 10-mile traffic jam on the Turnpike, admitted it would take a long time to haul the 2,000 trucks away. The Ohio Turnpike is part of one of the main east-west arteries across the country and links up with other major Interstate high- ways. The action by the truck drivers, whichtbegan yesterday morning on a much smaller scale, put 112 miles of the pike out of use. Representatives of the truck Current fuel crisis makes those vacation plans more difficult By JEFF DAY Going home for the holidays may be a little bit more difficult this year due to the energy crisis. A random student survey, taken by The Daily yesterday, indicated that students are adjusting their vacation plans to meet with increasing fuel shortages. "We were planning on going skiing," said Ed Snell '74. "We might not go now. We usually drive all night which will mean problems with gas because stations are closing early." drivers had said they would extend their protest demonstrations yester- to Illinois, but state police here said all roads were clear. IN PENNSYLVANIA, a driver claiming to be a spokesman for a group of truckers said 1,400 rigs had stopped at Lamar, Pa. He said they were waiting to see how one of the truckers' representatives fared in Washington with a list of 10 demands. Pennsylvania Governor Milton Shapp threatened to use the Na- tional Guard if necessary to keep the roads clear and New Jersey Governor William Cahill, whose state has been threatened with truck stoppages, said deliberate obstructions would not be tolerated. Transportation Secretary Claude Brinegar Monday urged truck drivers to end their blockade and promised to investigate claims by the drivers that the price of diesel fuel was rising too fast. Drivers said the prices were varying from one filling station to another and were going as high as 43 cents a gallon. The powerful Teamsters Union, which supports the Nixon Adminis- tration and has not backed the drivers' protest movement, sent a telegram from here to President Nixon saying increased costs and reduced speed limits were bank- rupting union members as well as employers. Many drivers are paid by the mile. study cals toys unsafe By CHERYL PILATE Holiday shoppers are still un- protected from "negligent, profit- minded" toy manufacturers and re- tailers, according to PIRGIM ex- ecutive director Joseph Tuchinsky. In a report releaseed yesterday, PIRGIM (Public Interest Research Group in Michigan) reports that although toy shelves arepless haz- ardous this Christmas season, "they are still far from safe." IN RESPONSE to pressure from PIRGIM and other organizations, accordingeto Tuchinsky, sales of toys on the Banned Products List, which is issued by the Consumer Product Safety C o m m i s s i o n (CPSC), have significantly de- creased since last year. PIRGIM sent 50 people into 33 different stores in five areas of the state to sample and investi- gate toys in a cross section of both large and small stores. Toys were tested for flammibil- ity, toxicity, sharp edges, break- ibility, and electrical hazards. Although the survey indicates that the number of faulty toys has dropped 85 per cent, a "large num- ber of clearly dangerous toys not covered by any federal regula- tions" were discovered by PIRGIM investigators. See UNSAFE, Page 8 Approved in House, 387-35 By The UPI and Reuter WASHINGTON - Gerald Ford was sworn in as he na- tion's 40th vice president last night, becoming the first man to take office under the Con- stitution's 25th Amendment. With President Nixon at Ford's side and with Ms. Ford holding the Bible, Chief Justice Warren Burger administered the 71-word oath in the House chamber. Among those present were the Cabinet, members of the House and Senate, Supreme Court justices and the diplomatic corps. THE FOUR Ford children were in the distinguished visitors' gal- lery and the public galleries were packed. In a brief speech stressing the hope for national unity that has been his theme since his nomina- tion, Ford said he saw neither Republicans nor Democrats in the chamber. "At this moment of visible and living unity," Ford said, "I see only Americans. "I SEE Americans who love their country, Americans who work and sacrifice for their country and their children. I see Americans who pray without ceasing for peace among all nations and for harmony at home." In prepared remarks for the Sen- ate afterward, Ford said he was grateful to senators for confidence they expressed "in the capacity of our political institutions to meet new challenges without the ex- tremes of passion and partisan- ship that have brought less sturdy republics to ruin." Ford was sworn in just over an hour after the House, by a 387 to 35 vote, completed Congress' con- firmation of his nomination as vice president. REPUBLICANS broke into ap- plause as the electronic vote coun- ters on each end of the House chamber hit an absolute majority of 218 votes for Ford's confirma- tion. Afterward, the full House and spectators jamming the public gal- leries applauded as Ford himself enteredthe chamber and joined Speaker Carl Albert on the speak- er's podium. Ford, who has been House Re- publican leader, had served in the same chamber for 25 years. DURING AN intermission be- tween the confirmation and the swearing-in ceremony, Ford went to the White House to deliver his confirmation resolution to Nixon. When he returned to the House for the ceremony, Ford, accom- panied by Nixon, was greeted with enthusiastic cheers, whistles and applause from Democrats as well as Republicans. Ford took the oath solemnly until he stumbled on the words near the end and broke into his broad, familiar smile. THE DEBATE in the House, which began about half an hour after the chamber began sitting, See FORD, Page 2 TONI DOHERTY, Nursing '75, Export of scarce ol goods up NEW YORK AP-Although petro- chemicals are in short supply at home beca-se of the energy crisis, Commerce Department f i g u r e s said the fuel shortage will probably keep her closer to home once she gets there, eliminating a lot of traveling to nearby towns to visit old friends. "We were going up north snow-. mobiling," Karen Swanson, '77, sighed, "but that uses up a lot of gas." But those students taking to the roads anyway, seem intent on ig- noring President Nixon's recently imposed 50 mph speed limit. "Drive SO?" Madeline Chang, '76, said incredulously. "I'm just learning to stick to the old speed limits." Venus Butler, '77, agreed. "I couldn't drive 50. It would take SGC reaffirms its support of BAM goals; refutes prior stand By STEPHEN SELBST Student Government C o u n c i l (SGC) last night overwhelmingly affirmed "student support for the Black Action Movement (BAM) demands," in a reversal of Coun- cil's decision last week to go on record against the use of racial condemned "the usage or quotas in any University policy." It indi- rectly condemned the University's pladge to meet a 1970 BAM de- mand for 10 per cent minority en- rollment. Last night's motion counteracting the resolution passed last week was MARTY KAUFMAN, a radical student activist, then introduced a substitute motion which supported the BAM demands and made no mention of quotas. The final resolution, which pro- claimed "student support for the Black Action demands" and put Ford Roger . Chuck Wilbur writes on the approval of Gerard as palace revolution on the Editorial Page . . Rossiter writes about the hockey team on tie