tan flail FLURRIOUS High-29 Low--9 See Today tor details See inside Eighty-Three Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXX V, No. 110 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, February 10, 1974 Ten Cents Eight Pages y President ,;, . n . - .. Pr urges truckers to, roll CF YOUSEE NEWS APPEA GL Y HRP plat form sessions The Human Rights Party yesterday held its first session of a series of platform resolution meetings and completed work on communications and health care is- sues. The meetings are being held this and next week- end to finalize the HRP platform for the coming City Council elections in April. Yesterday the HRP called for the establishment of an "Ann Arbor health authority," with broad powers to investigate unethical medical prac- tices, and for a community controlled non-profit cable TV system, in stark contrast to the present private enterprize dominated cable TV set-up. Happenings.. . .are slim today . . . The Human Rights Party con- tinues its platform convention at 1 p.m. in Rm. 124 East Quad . .. The Women's Film Festival, "Women in the Reel World", starts at noon today in Aud. E-170 P and A Bldg. . . . The .music school offers a recital in Rack- ham Aud. at 4:30 p.m. . . . and the Ark Coffeehouse, 1421 Hill, presents Ark Sunday, which this week fea- tures a study of Psalms. Ford views truckers Vice President Gerald Ford predicted yesterday the shutdown by independent truckers "will be resolved." Speaking at a news conference preceding a $1,000-per- couple reception at the Kalamazoo Country Club, Ford said, "The government has bent over backwards" in its effort to resolve the trucking shutdown. "I think that most truckers realize that it is a good settlement," Ford said. However, he added that, even if truckers reject the pact, he does not expect .the National Guard to be federalized in an effort to keep truck traffic moving. Reverse discrimination A black coach in a ghetto school has been ordered to give up his job to a white man in a discrimination case ruling. The Connecticut Human Rights and Opportuni- ties Commission ordered that Sesrie Ford be replaced by Philip Kearney as head track coach at predominately black Weaver High School in Hartford, Conn. The com- mission ruled Jan. 25 that Kearney was denied the job in 1972 because he was white. Nixon initiates bill to renew transit systems By The AP and Reuter WASHINGTON-President Richard Nixon said yesterday the federal government has met the legitimate grievances of striking independent truckers and declared, "Now is the time to get all the trucks back on the road." In a nationwide radio address outlining the administra- tion's 1974 transportation proposals, Nixon said the federal government has acted promptly "to find a responsible and just solution" to what he termed the "special hardships" that face independent truckers as a result of the energy crisis. The President acknowledged in effect that not all of the independents have accepted the solution negotiated here this week in government- industry conferences. Then he added a note of warning to some of the Daily Photo by ROLFE TESSEM Just another baaaad bonne In one of the more atypical plays from yesterday's basketball game in Crisler Arena, Ohio State's Steve Wenner (41) comes down with. a re- bound in spite of fierce opposition from Wolverines Wayman Britt (32) and Steve Grote (30). Through most of the g-me, the Maize and Blue dominated the boards, with Campy Russell snagging 19 caroms and C. J. Kupec adding 15 as the Wolverines copped another laugher, 91- 68. For details, see Page 8. LSA DEAN DENIES OFFER: strikers: "In no instance will we tolerate violence from those with griev- ances," he said. "Those who will- fully break the law can expect no sympathy from those who enforce the law. We intend to enforce the federal laws, and we will give state and local officials the assist- ance they need to )enforce their laws." In other parts of his radio ad- dress Nixon announced yesterday that he will send to Congress next week, bills to improve urban and rural transnortation systems and to restore America's railways "to their proper place in the national transportation system." One measure, a Unified Trans- portation Assistance P r o g r a m, would authorize 16 billion dollars in government aid for metropolitan and rural transportation over the next six years. A second proposal, the Transpor- tation Improvement Act, would authorize two billion dollars in federal loan guarantees to help railroads invest in their tracks, terminals and equipment, Nixon said in his radio address. Detailing legislation which he hqd promised in his recent State of the Union message to Congress, Nixon stressed that, "Government efforts have to concentrate on achieving the goals of flexibility, economy in use of energy re- sources and balance in the avail- ability of diverse forms of trans- portation." Two thirds of the 16 billion dol- lars aid for metropolitan and rural transportation, he said, would be allocated to state and local govern- ment for application in areas in which they believed the money could be spent most effectively. Rh odes to head Minj Ford Kearney 0 Solzhenitsyn summoned The prosecutor's office of the Soviet Union issued a summons calling on the dissident author Alexander Solzhenitsyn to appear for an interview, friends of the writer's family said yesterday. Sources said officials tried to hand the summons to Solzhenitsyn's wife last Friday but she refused to accept the document on the grounds that it did not state the reasons for which Solzhenitsyn was being asked to appear and that it had not been properly drawn up. The Soviet press has de- nounced Solzhenitsyn as a traitor following publication outside the country of "Gilag Archipelago," his book about prison camps under the Stalin regime. Ups and downs What goes up does not necessarily come down. The three Skylab astronauts found that out after undergoing 13 hours of medical examination yesterday aboard the recovery ship the USS New Orleans. Gerald Carr, Wil- liam Pogue and Edward Gibson all grew an inch or so in height during their record 84 days in space. But the increase quickly disappeared upon the men's return to earth. Doctors believe their height change was caused by the expansion of cartilege in the spine due to weight- lessness. The expansion is lost under the effects of earth's gravity. 0 Kidnappers keep silent The father of kidnaped newspaper heiress Patricia Hearst said yesterday he hoped the continued silence from his daughter's abductors did not mean that she was dead. "Maybe they just want us to sweat it out some more, maybe they want to extend the publicity. I just don't knuw," said Randolph Hearst, president and edi- tor of the San Francisco Examiner and chairman of the Hearst Corp. "I certainly hope to God the reason isn't because Fatty is no longer alive," said Hearst. The FBI circulated composite sketches of the abductors and consulted experts on radical groups. They said many callers claimed : to recognize the sketches of the kidnapers. But agents said there were no new leads in the kidnaping and the Symbionese Liberation Army which is claiming it holds her issued no further word. On the inside .. . the Sinday Magazine features Backstage with Dylan, by Daily editor and investigative reporter Dan Biddle . . . The sports page has all the inside informa- By CHERYL PILATE High University sources have confirmed that LSA Dean Frank Rhodes is one of several people under consideration to assume the presidency of the University of Minnesota. During a time of major changes in the University's administration, it is also rumored that Rhodes is being considered to replace Allan Smith, the University's Vice Presi- dent for Academic Affairs. ALTHOUGH RHODES denied that he is being considered for either post, a source close to Rhodes said that it is "common knowledge"that Rhodes is a can- didate for the Presidency of the University of Minnesota. Rhodes, who at first declined to comment, said "I haven't heard anything and nobody has contacted me about any job offers." Rhodes is allegedly on the final list of candidates being considered by the Regents at the University of Minnesota - which has a stu- dent enrollment of 50,000 sprawled over five campuses. A reporter for the Minnesota Daily, the University of Minne- sota's student newspaper, said that the Regents have not yet inter- viewed any of the candidates but that they plan to do so in the near future. A high administration source has confirmed that Rhodes is also the most "prominent candidate" be- ing considered to fill the vacancy left by Vice President Smith who will be retiring before the begin- ning of the 1974-75 school year. The administration source claim- ed that Rhodes is the only can- didate "competent enough" to fill the post. "Rhodes has settled the faculty disputes that plagued LSA before he came, he has kept the college out of debt and he has earned the respect of many people," the source continued. Rhodes, who is a former Uni- versity geology professor, was hailed as an "innovator" and was greeted with optimism by advo- cates of changes in the literary college when he first assumed the Deanship two and a half years ago. Trucking shipments returning to normal By The Associated Press Cargoes of meat from the Mid- west and produce from the South began rolling toward the Northeast yesterday amid growing indica- tions that the 10-day-old strike by independent truckers w o u 1 d be largely over by tomorrow. Transportation Secretary Claude Brinegar said in Washington yes- terday that reports being compiled by the government showed truck traffic in Indiana, Illinois and Michigan at about 80 to 90 per cent ofenormal rates. And he said "even in the states where the slowdown has been most critical, truck movements yester- day were reported to be approach- ing normal." THERE CONTINUED to be sig- nificant pockets of resistance to accepting the proposed strike set- tlement, which includes a six per cent surcharge on freight rates in- dependent drivers receive for their cargo and guarantees of all the diesel fuel they need. Brinegar, federal labor - energy expert W. J. Usery and other me- diators continued yesterday their efforts to persuade drivers to climb back in their rigs. They were hav- ing some significant success. The Fraternal Association of Steel Haulers, which claims to rep- resent one-fifth of the nation's esti- mated 500,000 truckers, recom- mended its members to accept the proposed settlement. Steel haulers locals began voting yesterday, and most of them reporting went along with their leadership's recommen- dations. But one steel haulers local in Ohio rejected the agreement. W. T. Hayes, an official of the 35,000 member Council of Indepen- dent Truckers, one of the dozens of loosely organized groups of in- ,dependent d r i v e r s which have sprung up overnight, said that they voted to accept the agreement. SOME SCATTERED acts of vio- lence continued to be reported, and state police and National Guard patrols remained on-duty in at least eight states to escort moving convoys of trucks. In Tucson, Ariz., truckers ended their blockade of a large truck stop yesterday, but other drivers See NIXON, Page 2 Representative Bullard opens new constituency office in city By ROB MEACHUM Yesterday marked the opening of State Represen- tative Perry Bullard's new "Constituency Office," located at 225 E. Liberty. When asked what the purpose of the office is, Bullard replied, "I'll be damned if I know." However, he later remarked that "people need information on what's happenin' in Lansing, and this will save them a long distance telephone call." Staffed by volunteers who will provide information, explain issues and provide other services, the office will be open Monday through Saturday from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. AVAILABLE AT THE office is a wide assortment of state house and senate journals, copies of bills introduced in this session, and other pamphlets on topics ranging from the legal rights of women to the responsibilities of bicyclists. Constituents will also be able to get assistance when they have problems with local governmental agencies, according to Bullard. The office is being financed by the state Democratic Party and Bullard himself. "I pay $15 every month out of my own pocket," said Bullard. The building was initially rented by the Democratic Party from the "little old man" who owns it. PRESUMABLY TO HELP out in the rent payments, there will be a fund raiser on February 19 at the Fifth Forum theater. The movie "Five On The Black Hand Side" will be shown. When asked about the recent Detroit Free Press article concerning his use of a state owned car, Bullard replied, "they're just quibbling." The reporter "just got carried away as usual; he must have had nothing better to write about," Bullard added. Bullard also claimed that he was misquoted in the Free Press story. See BULLARD, Page 2 Rhodes .............. ........, .... ..... :.... ,... : .w . . . . .........:......... . . . . ..a:. . . . .......,.....,... ..... ..... ..... .: :::.::. ....::.. . . . . . . . . . . . ...xY:,"ra: :rA:.;.; . BRITISH Coal miners walk out despite govt. appeals LONDON (/P)-Britain's 280,000 coal miners walked off their jobs at midnight last night, ignoring govern- ment appeals and precipitating what may be Bri- tain's worst economic crisis in decades. The miners walked out despite a decision on Thurs- day by Prime Minister Edward Heath to call general elections Feb. 28. Heath made it clear that the miners' pay demands, which his government has re- jected as inflationary, will be the major issue of the campaign. and forced industry into a three-day work week. THE STATE COAL BOARD said yesterday coal stocks at the pits fell to 9.7 million tons last week. The official danger level is 7 million tons. It said another 13.3 million tons were waiting at electricity power stations. Coal provides 70 per cent of Britain's electricity and supplies 45 per cent of all its energy needs. The power shortage has forced the giant British Steel Corp. to schedule a 50 per cent production cut . ~ .MEMO