SUPPORTING RENT CONTROL Y itia Da it FRISKY Tighs26 Low-16 See Today for details See editorial page Eighty-Three Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXIV, No. 113 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, February 14, 1974 Ten Cents Twelve Pages I U SEE NWDWSA PPENCkAL y Regents confer The Regents gather here today and tomorrow for their monthly schedule of meetings. Topping this round's agenda is a proposal to reorganize the University's ath- letics operation that, if passed, would make intramural, club and recreational sports a separate division and create an assistant directorship and a budget for women's intercollegiate athletics. The Regents will also discuss a plan to make Stockwell coed next fall. A recent Medical Center Review Committee Report which suggested establishment of an Allied Health Professions school and a vice presidency for health affairs will also be a topic this month. The Board meets in the Regents' Room on the first floor of the Administration Bldg. Open meetings include a Public Discussion at 2 p.m. today followed by a Public Comments Session at 4, and a public meeting tomorrow at 11 a.m. Dope note 1,900 pounds of suspected marijuana were seized early yesterday in a vice raid at an East Saginaw home. The haul has an estimated street value of $500,000 and a pos- sible value of $1 million if cut and sold as lids and joints. A young man and his wife were arrested in the raid. Coed johns coming? The University Housing Council, an all-student ad- visory body, voted unanimously yesterday to support a resolution which states, "Students living in residence halls shall democratically determine the use of bath- room facilities on their own corridors." The issue will be discussed at the meeting of the student-faculty Hous- ing Policy Committee on Feb. 20 at 2:30 p.m. in Dining Room 4 of West Quad. Happenings ... . . on this 1974 Valentine's Day begin at noon for women students who are interested in a discussion on career opportunities in computer science and the Federal Government, in Conf. Rms. 4 & 5 of the Michigan League . . . also at noon, there will be a meeting of the secretarial sub-committee of the Women's Commission in the Wolverine Rm. of the Union . . . then from 4 to 6 p.m. there will be a meeting for students interested in studies in religion program in 407 Mason . . . at 7:30 p.m. State Representative Perry Bullard will be speak- ing on Corporate Accountability, Impeachment and In- vasion of Privacy at Bursley Hall's East Lounge . and to end the day of hearts and flowers, Lisa Crawford, professor of harpsichord at Oberlin Conservatory, will present a harpsichord concert in the school of music recital hall at 8 p.m. . . . James Del Rio, Detroit Re- corder's Ct., will speak in faculty lounge of the Michigan Union. 7 .m. Open to everyone, refreshments, sponsor- ed by Black Pre-lawyer's Association . . . The Farm- workers Support Committee is meeting at the north door of the Union at 3 p.m. before picketing Wrigleys . . students protesting the oil companies will meet at the Fishbowl for a 1 p.m. march to the Engineering Building. Nixon's health OK President Nixon yesterday was pronounced physically, and emotionally well after ' an annual physical checkup that took on political o v e r- tones because of the pres- sures of the Watergate scan- r dal. The 61-year-old Nixon - who says he will not resign as long as he is phyically able to carry on his jot) - isf in "excellent shape," his doc- tor, Air Force Maj.-Gen. Wal- ter Tkach, reported after the two and one half hour exam- ination. Six specialists exam- ined the President at t h e nearby Bethesda Naval Hos pital. "There is no evidence whatsoever of mental strain, and I don't see any evidence of physical strain." Tkach re- ported. He added that the President was in "a very good frame of mind." Navy racism? Ten black American seamen charged with assaulting white sailors in a race riot aboard the 6th Fleet flag- ship Little Rock accused the U.S. Navy of racism yes- terday and said they were being denied a fair trial. The seamen blamed the violence that broke out Nov. 8 aboard the guided missile light cruiser, on tensions that built up in a month at sea during the Middle East war because the captain allegedly failed to act on their complaints of racism. The ten seamen and an eleventh black sailor charged in an earlier incident aboard the cruiser said at a news conference in a Naples hotel that they considered their impending court-martial il- legal because it was convened by Capt. P. K. Cullins, 45, commander of the Little Rock, who was directly involved in the incident. 0 On the inside N. Marcia Merker previews the Michigan-Michigan State track meet on the Sports page . . . Marnie Heyn reviews John Neihardt's new three record set on the Arts Page . . . on the Editorial Page, three eminent Daily staffers slash Hunter Thompson's Future Worlds' «...n e.r #. #iw xrn~o ~l~nr <+ T-,11.it HPC By STEPHEN HERSH The Housing Policy Committee (HPC) has taken issue with the Housing Office's recommendation that the rising cost of maintenance and services be offset by an eight per cent dorm fee increase for 1974-75. Members of HPC, a student- faculty policy board, contend that the Housing Office could cover in- flated costs by either enconomiz- ing in non-vital areas of next year's budget or dipping into monies which normally are deposited else- where. THE BUDGET suggestions from HPC have added a new angle to fig/ts increase In dorm A ternate budgets proposed to forestall 8% hide the growing dispute over the role of student policy boards in Uni- versity decision-making, with hous- ing officials maintaining that HPC and similar groups can only offer advice, not policy. Such measures as replacement of professional dorm employes with student workers, and removal of such operations as the Student Activities Building,ahave been sug- gested by HPC to reduce Housing expenditures. These measures could, in the committee's view, balance inflat- ing prices on such items as food, electricity, and sewage treatment. The committee suggests that if these cutbacks wouldn't be enough to stem higher costs, inflating prices cannot be balanced, deficits should be covered with monies normally deposited into the Build- ing and Equipment ("B and E") fund for major dorm repairs, and the General Student Resident Re- serve .(GSRR) for excess housing money. ACCORDING to HPC member Ron Beck, there are two factors of equal importance behind the committee's position. First, fol- lowing Vice President for Student Services Henry Johnson's descrip- tion of the committtee as "merely an advisory board," HPC fears it may have practicaully no control over how "B and E" and GSRR monies are spent. The committee says it will not approve allocations into funds that it may not control in the future. The second factor behind the anti-fee increase position is de- scribed by HPC member David Faye: "I think it's absolutely ri- diculous to force students to pay higher rates when the extra money needed is available from eise- where." An eight per cent hike would mean a rate increase of approxi- mately $100 for each dorm resi- dent. ASSOCIATE Director of Housing Claude Orr maintains that spend- ing the funds that would normally be deposited into GSRR and "B rates and E" is unfeasible. Orr says that the student housing repair budget, which pre-supposes normal 1974-75 GSRR deposits, will create a GSRR deficit. He holds that the GSRR money must be deposited because it is needed desperately. Director of Housing John Feld- kamp states that implementing a plan including probable failure to make "B and E" deposits for next year would be "acting in bad faith, and acting illegally." He cites the University's bond inden- ture mortgages with the Detroit bank that loaned the dorm con- struction funds. See HPC, Page 2 ends -pI/1 act Oil with conference I- signing, of By AP and Reuter WASHINGTON - The tur- bulent 13-nation Washington energy conference ended yes- terday with an agreement to meet quickly with producer nations to ease the oil crisis. Although France objected to key provisions, Secretary of State Henry Kissinger called the three-day meeting a complete success. FRANCE disagreed on many points but signed the communique as a whole. The efforts to compromise the French views with those of the other 12 nations sent the confer- ence, originally scheduled only for Monday and Tuesday, into a third day of sessions. At a news conference after the last session, French foreign minis- ter Michel Jobert indicated he felt that the proposals went be- yond common Market principles, which provide for an economic, not a political community. JOBERT complained that he "never quite understood the na- ture of this conference and as a matter of fact, as the days passed by, I never could find out what the nature should be." All of the foreign ministers, in- cluding France, agreed that solu- tions to the world's energy psrob- lems should be sought in consulta- tion with the producer countries. The American-promised compro- mise machinery which France ob- jected to established a coordinat- ing group headed by senior offic- ials. The group was instructed to "direct preparations of a confer- ence of consumer and producer countries which is to be held at the earliest possible opportunity and which, if necessary, will be pre- ceded by a further meeting of consumer countries." FRANCE DISSENTED, but the remaining 12 nations all "concur- red in the need for a comprehen- sive action program to deal with all facets of the world energy situ- ation by cooperative measures." Kissinger emphatically declared the United States does not con- sider itself to be in a confronta- tion with France. He said he had read some articles in the Euro- pean press about a divorce be- tween France and the United States. "That is absolutely not true," he said. KISSINGER told reporters that he thinks international efforts to meet the energy crisis will result See WORLD, Page 7 AP Photo Expelled Soviet author Alexander Solzhenitsyn, left, and his host, West German author Heinrich Boll talk to villagers yesterday after the Soviet author arrived at Langenbroich. Banished from his own na- tion, Solzhenitsyn will stay at Boll's summer home. Banished Soviet author arrives, in ry. ,,a By The AP and Reuter about my family . . . said the deplaned. LANGENBROICH, West Ger- 55-year-old author. He brushed many -Banished from his own aside any questions. "You must IN MOSCOW, Solzhenitsyn's wi country, a tired and stunned Alex- understand my situation. I cannot Natalya Svetlova said last nig ander Solzhenitsyn arrived here hold a news conference and an- she and her three sons will foll yesterday to begin a new life in swer your questions now." He add- him into exile, "but when, wh exile in the West. ed he would refuse interviews for . . . we just don't know." "Now I simply have to collect several days. Natalya Svetlova spoke to new myself and to understand my situ- He said he first learned he was persons soon after her husba ation," he told the press before to be expelled at 1 p.m. Moscow telephoned her from a distant We telephoning his wife in Moscow. time yesterday, about two hours German country retreat. It w He made his brief remarks in the before the scheduled departure of her first contact with Solzhenits courtyard of the country retreat of the flight for Frankfurt. since he was dragged out of h German author Heinrich Boll in Only one person met the author Moscow apartment by secret po1 the rolling Eifel mountains near in Frankfurt. Gerlinde Kutschera, agents Tuesday evening. here, Solzhenitsyn's first haven an airport employe who had learn- At about the time Solzhenits outside the Soviet Union. ed that Solzhenitsyn was aboard the was calling his wife, the Sov "You understand, I am very plane, rushed to the ramp and government made its first domes tired. I am worried. I am worried handed him a single rose as he public announcement thatt --- author had been banished. AP Photo SECRETARY OF STATE Henry Kissinger speaks to a group of Washington reporters yesterday on energy matters. The briefing ended the three-day 13-nation energy conference. Dorm residents urge UFW grape boycott ife ght ow ere ws and est was syn her ice syn iet tic the By CHARLES COLEMAN Students in. University Housing have gathered forces and started a campaign urging dorm residents to boycott non-union grapes as well as non-union lettuce. The campaign, which has been in the planning for almost three weeks now, varies from dorm to dorm. However, the main goal of the organizers has been to obtain sig- natures on petitions circulating throughout the dorms which call for the University Housing Council (UHC) to approve the boycott of non-union grapes in the residence halls. The group of students plan to present the petitions to UHC on Feb. 26. THE PETITION simply calls for the addition of grapes to the United Farm Workers (UFW) boy- cott of lettuce already in effect in the dorms. If approved ,the boycott would last for an indefinite amount of time, as long as the nationwide boycott continues and no substan- tial interest in revoking the boy- cott appears. This latest effort to support the UFW- boycott comes at a time when even the lettuce boycott in residence halls has come under fire. Conservative elements in the dorms have, within the past year, circulated petitions to put lettuce back on the dinner tables. When the issue arose in UHC, it was narrowly vetoed and the boycott reaffirmed. During last week's Student Cov- ernment Council meeting, Council- See DORMS, Page 7 Democratic hopeful opens local campaign By JEAN LOVE Making his first appearance in what he plans to be a strong cam- pus campaign, Democratic candi- date for the U. S. House of Repre- sentatives John Reuther acknowl- edged that Republican incumbent Marvin Esch will not be easily beaten. < "It's more than Esch's record that we have to look at - it's the entire Nixon Administration," Reu- ther told a small crowd in East Quad's Greene Lounge last night. STRONGLY supporting the im- peachment of President Nixon, the f 30-year-old nephew of former Unit- Broadcasters ended the Wedines- day evening news broadcast with a 25-second statement t h a t the author of "Gulag Archipelago" has been "stripped of citizenship" for actions "incompatible with being a citizen of the USSR and detri- mental" to the country. "Gulag Archipelago," a detailed study of Stalinist prison camps published in Paris last December, brought down an intense and con- certed official attack on the novelist and former camp inmate. The attack culminated in a sum- mons to the prosecutor's office last Friday-whichSolzhenitsyn's wife refused to accept-and the arrest Tuesday. SVETLOVA SAID her husband reassured her during their 15- minute telephone talk that he felt tired bt all right despite his 26- hour ordeal. le told her he was first taken tn eot n irsnn the feared iail Valentine peddlers id lovers' market is loverly for business By SARA RIMER Judging from Valentine's Day sales, Ann Arbor is one helluva loving town. Shoppers are rushing to buy everything from the traditional sweetheart cards to Alex Comfort's The Joy of Sex. According to Chris Swanson, manager of Logos < gift shop, many of the more popular cards this year feature the "Peanuts" characters because they have a "nice blend of reality and humor." One typical card finds Charlie Brown saying, "I got to thinking about you at lunchtime today. And I got so excited . . . I tied my peanut butter g sandwich in a knot." ACCORN TOn Tn wnean "es neanla e