Oj it i gau Eight y-Thiree Years of Editorial Freedomz tii AWFUL High-23 Low-3 See Today for details See editorial page Vol. LXXXIV No. 109 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, February 9, 1974 Ten Cents Eight Pages -I 41' N+"""" "..'%r. rv.. uY idr:rrrs+lr:.rr..r., .,~.:{ v:r..rfr'.4:4a:ff.;:"ii' ............ r.. rrr... rfi::: u+,vn4r: Y i:3}'r: }:::::.;%: i;';}::}}:'":i Iullard, gets a car, care of the people ment would, under the prop return the $190,000 they curre spend on intramurals and the' Pool to the General Fund. money would then be alloc directly to the new intramural gram. RICHARD KENNEDY, secre of the University, said the posed plan would give the I-Ml gram more visibility and inde dence from departments wh main interest lies elsewhere. The change, if approved, will more weight on the general ft Kennedy added, however, "It's conceivable that any additional would be added to student tui to fund women's inter-colleg athletics." The proposal has won quali accentance from the Athletic Physical Education departme The Advisory Committee on I reation Intramurals and C Snorts (ACRICS) was gener favorable to the proposal at Tuesday's meeting. DR. PAUL Hiinsicker, assoc director of Physical Education chairman of ACRICS supported pronosed change. Athletic Director Donald Cant also hailed the planned reorgan tion. "Tntranurals are the fas Qrowin thing on campus," ( nom- IN DETROIT, American Motors the announced the recall of 7,100 work- ting ers at two plants and General had Motors said it was recalling 2,200 con- persons at a Dayton, Ohio, plant. The automakers said the recalls t a were possible because delivery of of needed parts by truck had resumed. tial But there were still at least 100,- 000 out-of-work people because of been the strike, and there were new layoffs. A New York steel plant laid off 1,500 wotkers because it was not getting materials, and Westing- house said it was furloughing 1,700 employes at four plants in Ohio and one in Kentucky. osal, Food suppliers in the South and ntly Midwest said food shortages had Bell not yet shown up, but could next The week if the strike continues. There sated were scattered shortages reported pro- in the Northeast. THE GOVERNMENT estimated tary traffic up 20 per cent, and Atty. pro- Gen. William Saxbe said the Justice pro- Department was investigating pos- pen- sible, antitrust violations in con- ose nection with the strike. In Cleveland, Ohio, Leonard put Fleet, one of the negotiators who und. hammered out the Washington in- settlement on behalf of the truck- fees ers, arrived to meet with truckers ition who said they intended to keep ;iate their rigs parked until diesel fuel prices are rolled back. fied Fleet said that would not be pos- and sible, and then headed. down nts. through the state to explain the Rec- agreement to driv ers. Club See TRUCKERS, Page 8 VIRGINIA appeared headed -in the same direction. Gov. Mills Godwin announced yesterday that he has directed the state secretary to develop an Oregon-style plan to be used on a voluntary basis wherever needed in the state. In West Virginia, Gov. Arch Moore said yesterday he had re- ceived federal assurance that addi- tional gasoline supplies would be made available in five hard-hit northern counties, and asked 29 closed service stations'in the Mor- gantown section of the region to reopen. Moore said he will order National See NEW, Page 8. Federal energy chief Simon said at the time thought problems with supply were 'of a "spotty confined to "six or seven William that he gasoline nature" states." By CHERYL PILATE "I would've been better off hitchhiking," said State Rep. Perry Bullard (D-Ann Arbor) in response to charges of taking a "free ride" on taxpayers' money. Bullard, who has been driving a state-owned car for the past four weeks because his foreign-made compact car needed an engine overhaul, repeatedly affirmed that cents per mile normally paid for driving while on official business." However, Bullard was quoted in the Detroit Free Press yesterday as saying, "It's great, I'm going to keep it until they come and get it." Bullard made the remark to two Republican legislators when they jokingly asked how he had ob- tained the state - owned maroon 193 Dodge Coronet sedan. ally last iate and the ham iza- test Can- Middle American radicalsr A U~niversitv n'cin1n2p rofessr _ r