SUNDAY MAGAZINE See inside p *ir0 Dztill COLDER High-T29 Low-10 For details see Today Eighty-Three Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXIV, No. 104 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, February 3, 1974 Ten Cents Eight Pages I fi)r - YfcUSE NEWS KAPPo CLA ty Scholarship offered If you're a member of Phi Eta Sigma (the freshman honor society) and are a senior planning to go on to grad school, you may be eligible for a $300 scholarship. The Phi Eta Sigma Honor Society is offering 13 such scholarships based on "scholastic record, evidence of creative ability, evidence of financial need, promise of success in chosen field and character." If you're in- terested you should get in contact with Bert Hornback at 1621 Haven Hall to apply. Deadline is Feb. 15. 0 White House SPECTACLE Sen. Sam Ervin and Leon Jaworski step aside! SPECTACLE-a New York/Ann Arbor based group specializing in weird happenings-has announced its members are going to Washington D.C. to use art to get to the bottom of the Watergate scandal. Acording to a SPECTACLE statement released yesterday, the group plans to bring a machine called the "Space Litter" to the White House in an effort to recreate the missing 18 minutes of Watergate tape. The machine, according to the statement, will "extend an antenna into the thick White House atmosphere and extract from it those missing 18 minutes! The recreated tape will be played for all to hear." We can hardly wait. 0 Happenings... .. today are mostly musical. University Music Professor Louis Nagel will give a piano recital at 4:30 p.m. in Rackham Aud. There is no admission charge .. .The Ark Coffee House, 1421 Hill, adds a new item to its musical program, called "Ark Sunday." The new program centers on music in religion, with the first session at 4 p.m. . . . For those more interested in rock 'n roll there will be a benefit for the People's Food Co-op at Primo Showbar at 8:30 p.m. featuring Rabbits and Sojourner Wolf Cathouse Band . . . and for movie buffs, the Couzens film co-op is showing Shaft at 7 and 9 p.m. in the Couzens Cafeteria. .. tomorrow State Rep. Perry Bullard will speak on the energy crisis at 11 a.m. in School of Natural Resources Rm. 1028 . . . there's also a women's basketball game at Crisler Arena, 7 p.m. 0 Train robber nabbed One of the bandits in Britain's $7 million Great Train Robbery was arrested in Rio's fashionable Copacabana section, police said yesterday. The man was identified as Ronald Biggs, 44. British reporters said he was living with a 22-year-old Brazilian woman. Biggs reportedly commented after the arrest, "I've longed for the green fields of England-I'm glad the run is over." Biggs was sentenced to 30 years in prison in 1964 for master- minding the Aug. 1963 train robbery. He escaped from a British prison in 1965. Only about $1 million of the $7 million loot was recovered. 0 Bolivian miners strike Bolivian miners yesterday posed a new threat to the government by deciding on a 48-hour strike in solidarity with farmworkers whose revolt was put down by troops this week, killing nine farmhands. According to radio reports reaching La Paz from southern Bolivia, some 4,000 tin miners resolved to walk out of the nation's two most important mines. The strike call was made at a mass meeting held in defiance of a government-imposed state of martial law. During the farmworkers revolt, troops were under order from right-wing President Hugo Banzer to act ruthlessly to crush what Banzer has called an international communist conspiracy. 0 MIT to launch yo-yo Students at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology have built "the world's largest yo-yo," and what's more, they plan to drop it tomorrow from the roof of a 21- story building and keep it going with a giant mechanical "finger." The monstrous yo-yo, created by 'Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering James Williams and 10 students, is made of two 26-inch bicycle wheel rims connected by a steel shaft. The string is a heavy- duty braided nylon cord. To keep the yo-yo going, Williams and his students concocted a nine foot aluminum beam, or finger, run by a 1.5 horse power motor. "Next year we're thinking of making a giant frisbee," Williams says. " Groundhogs disagree Groundhog weather forecasters yesterday came out with mixed predictions for the next six weeks. Punxu- tawney Phil, ground forecaster for Punxsutawney, Pa., barely cast a shadow when he emerged from his burrow. Som Light, longtime president of the Punxsutawney Groundhog Club, was initially mystified by Phil's move, but recovered his aplomb to interpret the wan shadow as meaning six more weeks of mild winter weather. In a conflicting report, Jimmy, the "official" weather groundhog of Sun Prairie, Wis., climbed from his burrow through new-fallen snow yesterday and definitely saw no rays of sun. Thus, he forecast an early spring-at least for the Wisconsin prairie. On the inside . .. . . . Sunday Magazine features a, story by Daily staffwriter Stephen Selbst on the business of bars and liquor licences . . . and the Sports Page has all the details of Michigan hockey, basketball, wrestling and gymnastics action. Governors to restore 1-itrucker, By The Associated Press have the shutdown co Federal officials yesterday they get a pledge the asked the nation's 50 gover- prices will be rolled nors to restore peace to Amer- kept at lower levels. ica's highways as a shut down Meanwhile, Pennsyl a Milton Shapp said he by independent t r u c k e r s today in Washingtonv spread to 20 states causing presidential assistant V widespread layoffs in some in- and governors ofe dustries. states to discuss wayst the shutdown by thei Reports of scattered vio- drivers. lence increased last night, and THE VIOLENCE th; scores of truck stops reported- companied the shutdowi ly closed in the shutdown that yesterday. Truckers al will have idled more than keep their rigs movin 10,000 workers by tomorrow, being shot at in Virgini Iowa, Tennessee, Texa FOOD became a major worry as A woman trucker in O shippers of produce reported sharp was hauled from her drops in truck movements, and at beaten until two non-si least a dozen meat packing plants ers arrived armed with and slaughterhouses reported they In Pennsylvania, som had closed or curtailed operations. National Guardsmens Against that background, feder- el energy chief William Simon and three Cabinet members - Com- merce Secretary Frederick Dent, Labor Secretary Peter Brennan a nd Transportation Secretary Claude Brinegar - emerged from a meeting Saturday night in Wash- ington and sent their appeals to the nation's governors for help. THE FOUR MEN signed tele- grams that deplored the continu- ing violence associated with the By DAN BIDD shutdown and said they were pre- and JEFF DA paring actions to alleviate trucker When Bob Dylan's cc grievances, at Crisler Arena last They promised to encourage music mogul and Dyl truck stops to sell diesel fuel to- moter Bill Graham day, to set up a toll-free "hot line" show's 13,600 ticket ho to deal with price-gouging and fuel h i s investigation of supply problems and to permit ticket scalping and "h purchase of at least half a tank of the people who knew1 diesel at every stop as February done." gasoline allotments become avail- After telling the audi able. first time in 16 citiesc But the federal officials did not that we've had a heav make any promises to lower the ticket scalping," Graha skyrocketing prices of diesel fuel, ed concerned over Det and that is the main grievance er Robert Bageris' inv cited by spokesmen for the striking a large-scale scalping independents. "The main reason we IN LOS ANGELES, an official of (Bargeris) was to pr Overdrive Magazine, one of the Graham said after his leaders in the move to have a crowd. "I'm surprised. truckers' shutdown, said a recent derstand it. Maybe I survey showed the price of diesel in my judgment of1 fuel averaging 47 cents a gallon trusted him." across the country. THE DAILY repor Trucker spokesmen said they that Bageris, president want diesel fuel prices rolled back Enterprises'and Detroi to about 33 cents a gallon, the of the Dylan tour, w, price they said existed last May. with other Bamboo si And they said they would seek to systematic rerouting an nti di b van wo with W. eigh to ind hat un c tten ing ia, as a; hio veh trik :h a ne 2 stoo asked peace strike nue until over highway overpasses a n d esel fuel Guard helicopters were put into ack and service patrolling highways in an effort to prevent trucks from at- nia Gov. tack. One driver was killed in that uld meet state Thursday. h Simon, J. Usery A MAJOR CONCERN was the ht other pending economic blow of the con- deal with tinuing shutdown that has spread lependent d o w n t h e Atlantic seaboard, through parts of the South and has ac- across the Midwest. continued A check of, Ohio industries yes- npting to terday showed that at least 6,000 reported workers have been told not to re- Missouri, port for work tomorrow. A similar nd Ohio. check in Philadelphia found more said she than 1,000 persons had temporar- hicle and ily lost their jobs. ing driv- At least a dozen meat-packing shotgun. plants and slaughterhouses f r o m 00 armed Texas to Philadelphia have shut ad watch down or cut back operations. tam blasts DLE ,AY oncert ended night, rock an tour pro- asked the lders to aid f organized help us find how it was ence of "the on this tour y amount of am express- roit promot- volvement in scheme. e hiredBob event this," plea to the I can't un- was wrong the guy. I rted Friday t of Bamboo oit promoter vas involved taffers in a nd high-price ;calping resale of hundreds of choice main floor seats for last night's show. Bageris yesterday repeated his denial of any involvement in a scalping ring, saying, "They (the scalpers) didn't get any tickets from us. Bamboo doesn't scalp tickets." But Bageris could offer no e- planation for the total absence ,'f bonda fide ticket purchasers from Crisler's section "B," the best seats in the house. A SURVEY of nearly 100 persins seated in that section produzed not one instance of ticket purchase through contract-designated chan- nels. SECTION "B" ticketholders told The Daily they had received their seats through "friends" or by pay- ing up to $60 to scalpers. Three named Bargerisasthesource of their tickets; two said other Bam- boo employes supplied the $8.50 tickets, all in violation of the con- tract signed by Bamboo and Gra- ham's firm, FM Productions. The contract states that promo- ters may not purchase or resell tickets in section "B" ahead of the 18th row. The ticketholders surveyed last night all sat in rows 1-17. Graham, who had earlier defend- ed Bageris as "an honest man and a guy I can trust, told The Daily he was dismayed at "obvious hanky-panky with the tickets." "Well," he added, "I guess hanky-panky really isn't the word. I'll say it right out: somebody was fucking around with this whole show." Graham said he would go to De- troit's Cobo Hall box office today to "check this thing out as fast as I can." Doly Photo by PAULINE LUBENS DYLAN: "May you be Forever Young . Dylan and fans arrive, at new understanding More wom en urged to study architecture By ANN RAUMA Since women share half the environment, it is "critical" that they are represented in its design, according to Architecture Professor Labelle Prussin at an informational meeting for women interested in achitecture. Directed at women not currently in architecture, the meeting not only answered questions but stressed the importance of increasing the number of women in the "historically male" field. "Hopefully, with more women in the field, the discrimination will decrease said fifth year architecture student June Budden. By DIANE LEVICK Despite local ill feeling over ticket hassles, Crisler Arena gleamed last night with the lit matches 'of 13,600 Dylan fans as they exchanged a new under- standing with the boy from Hibbing, Minn. Accompanied by a gloriously tight Band, Bob Dylan lived up to all expectations as he delivered his classic material and one especially meaningful cut, "Forever Young," from his new album, Planet Waves. With his opening and closing selection for the concert, "You'll Go Your Way, I'll Go Mine," Dylan Daily Review seemed to tell his audience what he has been com- municating during his entire 21-city tour: He has never been able to deal with the "prophet" image thrown upon him-and now he just wants to make music, not lead a political movement. YET DYLAN'S attitude was one of affection for his listeners. With "Forever Young" near the con- cert's end, he urged his fans to carry on by them- selves, not to turn cynical. And the song's lovely melody appeared to evoke Dylan's desired audience response: respect, not adulation. Especially memorable among Dylan's numbers with the Band were "All Along the Watchtower," "Like a Rolling Stone," and "Just Like Tom Thumb's Blues" in which the Band offered flour- ishes to what may have otherwise been a plodding melody. As Dylan wandered onto the stage with his acus- tic guitar, cheers arose in anticipation of a more "folky" set. Sure enough Dylan's voice even seemed to hark back to his earlier acoustic days-a bit more nasal and rough--when he started off with "The Times Are A'Changin'." "Don't Think Twice" continued in the same vocal vein with a harmonica break which garnered scattered applause. In spite of the audience's enthusiasm over Dylan's solo numbers, the crowd welcomed the Band's solo sets. Musical precision and, surprising- ly, even some fine harmonies marked their per- formance of such tunes as "The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down," "I Shall Be Released," and "The Weight." The Band performed nothing from their most recent album, Moondog Matinee, concentrating in- stead on the audience's favorites from the past. As back-up for the word-oriented Dylan, the Band rounded out the concert as a total, inspiring musical experience. LOWER PRICES OFFERED . Govt. pla ns privacy safeguard WASHINGTON (/P) - The Justice Department yesterdaytreleased de- tails of a proposal to safeguard the privacy of arrest information in government computers. Legislation sponsored by Attor- ney General William Saxbe would allow government agencies access to computer information only when laws or executive orders specifical ly provide for it. The door was left open for Congress to add further exemptions. AT THE SAME time, Sen. Sam Ervin (D-N.C.) announced he would introduce an even stricter bill in the Senate. Ervin heads the Sen- ate judiciary subcommittee on con- stitutional rights. CURRENTLY 28 of 325 four-year architecture students at U-M are women. One out of 34 students in the University's doctorate program in architecture are women. Prussin attributed this to "co- vertly discouraging" counseling, discriminitive employment in the field, and lack of confidence. "Historically, architecture has always been seen as a man's field. Women have no confidence in their capabilities in this area," Prussin said. "Though interested in architec- ture, a woman will be an interior designer, much as a woman in- terested in medicine will be a nurse instead of a doctor," a stu- dent present added. Students stressed the flexibility of the architecture program. Though the first two years demand required courses, "the last two years offer opportunity to combine architecture with other disciplines, such as sociology, psychology or business," explained recent grad- uate Lorraine King. "But, you should structure your program with the idea of what you want to do when you graduate. Most firms Area co-ops sell fruit, By KIRKE WILCO Second of three part Man does not live b, alone, and neither do a shops. In addition to those co-o ing non-perishable goods, t four city co-ops buying fr vegetables. They are:I Arbor People's Produce C Neighborhood Action Cen Co-op, The Pontiac Heigh Co-op and the Ann Arbor Produce Co-op. THE ANN ARBOR Peop duce Co-op currently se families. The co-op is st ing however and seekir participants. Greater nut clients mean greater econ scale. Located at 1510 Hi the co-op will hold an orgy al meeting tonight at 7:3 vegetables X bring in and distribute the fruits, s vegetables, cheeses, eggs, and oy bread nuts. rea food Presently, a second food co-op, in the Stony Brook, Bryan school area, is on the -Neighborhood Ac- ps stock- tion Center drawing boards. there are ruits and The Pontiac Heights Food Co-op The Ann has operated in the middle class o-op, The Arrow Wood Hills area for over ter Food two years. Access to this co-op is it's Food limited to Arrow Woods Hill resi- Itemized dents only. The Ann Arbor Itemizer Produce Co-on provides its members with Ale's Pro- fresh fruits, vegetables, and other erves 68 delights. Unfortunately, the Co-op ill grow- is filled to capacity with its 200 ng more family membership and cannot ac- mbers of cept any more members. iomies of ll Street, Those interested in forming a produce co-op of their own should anization- contact coordinators from the Ann p pm. Arbor Itemized Co-op. -:v-::V~:;:;;: