CITY RAPE UNIT ESSENTIAL' See Editorial Page cl Eighty-Four Years of Editorial Freedom a ii VICIOUS High-29 Low--22 See Today for details Eight Pages Vol LXXXIV, No. 131 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, March 16, 1974 Ten Cents ------ t, ', film IF' YOUSEE NE WSIAPPEN C ALL . Y AFSCME settles Washtenaw County officials and union council 55 of the American Federation of State, County and Munici- pal Employes (AFSCME), the county employes' union, reached a tentative agreement on a two-year contract after a seven hour mediating session yesterday, a union spokesman reported. The threatened work stoppage for Monday has been called off, the spokesman, Edward Limoges, said, and the union is asking all employes within the bargaining unit to report for work at their normal starting times Monday. An employes' meeting scheduled for Monday morning has been replaced with a ratification meeting Thursday at which contract de- tails will be revealed and the members will vote to ac- cept or reject the new contract. Were you aware? If yesterday seemed more unprosperous than the usual Friday it may have been because it was the Ides of March. According to tradition, the March 15 was the date of the murder of Julius Caesar, a most fatal day. "The Roman calendar was originally defined in terms of the waxing and waning of the moon," says Prof. Bruce Frier of the Classical Studies department. "It is one of the most difficult calendar systems ever invent- ed," Frier says, "not even the Romans liked it much." Women' s symposium. Today Markley hall is sponsoring a symposium for and by women to provide them with exposure to alterna- tives in careers and life styles. From 9 a.m. to noon career workshops in law, government, business, public relations, economics, media, journalism, public health, social work, nursing, engineering, education, adminis- tration, science and. research will be conducted. Then after lunch, from 1-2:30 p.m. "Career and/or Marriage?" will be discussed. From 2:30-3:30 p.m. Women and the Law will be the topic and the last hour of the day will be devoted to a skills workshop - resume writ- ing, interview skills and job finding. 'U' grad makes top Dr. John Holloman; a 1943 graduate of the University Medical School, has been named to the post of President of New York City's Health and Hospital Corporation, that city's top hospital administration position. Hollo- man, 54, was chosen from a field of 160 candidates, and his selection marked the culmination of a drive headed by the black community to have a black man named to head the city's hospitals. Commenting on his appoint- ment, Holloman was quoted by the New York Times as saying that when he assumes his new duties, "the most important person will be the patient." " Happenings .. . ... begin at 9:30 a.m. with a conference on Schooling in Corporate America in MLB. The conference continues through tomorrow with various speakers, workshops and discussions. For more information, check with the sponsors of the conference, Program for Educational and Social Change . . . from 12:30 to 8 p.m. 25 crazed Frisbee teams from California, Massachusetts, Toronto and the Midwest will compete in the First Annual U-M Open Indoor Frisbee Tournament in the Intramural Bldg. All are invited to watch or participate . . . there will be a benefit showing of the film Alice in Wonder- land in E. Quad Aud. at 7, 9 and 11 p.m.. . and a benefit is scheduled at 8 p.m. in the Markley snack bar featuring 10c beer and two bands, Clear Spot Blues and Clyster. The $1 donation will go to a Red Cross emer- gency fund to be sent to the Gold Coast of Africa to fight the famine there. Beer belly Fred Feitz of Griffith, Ind., noticed the left rear door of his truck coming open Thursday afternoon while traveling I-94 and stopped to investigate. The west- bound trucker discovered that the bed of the truck had given away under the weight of 1,000 cases of empty beer bottles. Reitz discovered the truck's condi- tion near the Race Road exit east of Jackson. . By RON LANGDON Protest against proposed control of student organ- ization finances by the Office of the Student Auditor (OSA) has brought a concession from the administra- tion, but campus film groups still claim the University is treating them unfairly. In the latest of a long series of hotly contested actions, the University's executive officers last week set up a committee to review and amend proposed guidelines for auditing of film groups by the OSA. RELATIONS BETWEEN the University and several campus film organizations have traditionally been volatile. New World Media leveled new charges this month against various sectors of the administration, claiming exorbitant costs and arbitrary scheduling changes for campus facilities are causing the group heavy financial losses. g roups The review committee was created after a recom- mended set of stringent accounting guidelines met with strong criticism from Student Organizations Board chief Eliot Chikofsky at last month's executive officers meeting. The executive officers are the University's top administrative officials. Under the proposed guidelines, all student organiza- tion finances would be handled strictly within the OSA if the organization wished to use University buildings and facilities. THE REVIEW COMMITTEE, which includes SGC members and staff from the Office of Student Services (OSS), plans to rework the auditing proposal and re- vamp the OSA's procedures, according to chairman Edward Rutz, administrative associate in OSS. Rutz says the committee intends to amend the proposed guidelines so as to authorize creation of a par "review and advisory board" composed of students and staff. The board would be empowered to arbitrate dis- agreements over funding controls, and to eliminate, as much as possible, the red tape in the delegation of facility rights to student organizations and in the handling of organization accounts, according to Rutz. However, the rule that student organization finances be handled only through the OSA is not subject to review, Rutz says. UNIVERSITY OFFICIALS give several explanations for the proposed restrictions. Maurice Rinkel, auditor for student'organizations, explains that the regulation was designed to establish greater safeguards against the possibility of private individuals profiting from the use of University facilities. Tom Easthope, assistant vice president for student over finances services, cites a need for safeguards against groups profiting from the University's tax-exempt status. The University does not pay taxes on the auditoriums and equipment that film groups use. "If you want to have preferential treatment, you've got to have accountability," Easthope says. IN ADDITION, several sources say the University must insure that student organizations do not run up financial obligations they can't meet. The University has covered "several hundred dollars" worth of stu- dent organization debts so far this school year, ac- cording to Easthope, and is now trying to collect .these debts from the organizations The proposal has met with bitter opposition, how- ever, from various student organizations, most notably See 'U', Page 2 'WON'T DESTROY PRESIDENCY' Nixon reiterates no-quit' pledge Protesters' welcome N 0 Nion to C hicao By CINDY HILL special To The Daily CHICAGO - "Beware the Ides of March!" cried a would-be Cas- sandra in the crowd of roughly 3,000 that cane out to greet Presi- dent Nixon yesterday. The Ides of March have come and gone. So did Nixon. And if there was any particular reason for him to "beware," during his first, brief visit outside the South since his 1972 "mandate," he didn't seem conscious of it. It was another of those occa- sions which has become a Nixon trademark:ra non-appearance. The man who ran a non-campaign in 1972 carefully avoided his consti- tuents and was whisked in and out of Chicago without anyone - ex- cept maybe the entourage of 850 Secret Service agents and police officers - noticing it. He never saw the crowd that waited hours on a cold, drizzly March day to see him. See CROWD, Page 8 Claims not guilty of impeachable crimes By AP and UPI CHICAGO-Repeating his declarations of innocence in the Watergate scandal, President Nixon yesterday vowed he will finish his term in the White House because "resignation is an easy cop-out" and "I will, not be a party to the de- struction of the presidency of the United States." While hundreds of demonstrators, most of them anti- Nixon, shouted noisily in the streets outside, Nixon offered his most emotional no-resignation pledges to date before nationwide TV cameras and a friendly audience of business- men. The Executives' Club of the plush Conrad Hilton hotel provided a forum for an hour-long question-and answer session in which Nixon took aim on European leaders' actions as well as critics of his own Daily Photo by KAREN KASMAUSKI ANTI-NIXON DEMONSTRATORS and a Chicago policeman wear similar stern expressions during yester- day's protest outside the Conrad Hilton hotel, where the President spoke to a gathering of businessmen. The sign at left shows the word "apprehended" plastered across the face of each key Watergate figure- except Nixon's. 8 PER CENT INCREASE.: Regents vote in dorm rate hike actions in the Watergate affair, warning "the day of the one-way street is gone" in the Atlantic al- liance. IN RESPONDING to 14 questions during the meeting the President also: " Cautioned Arabs not to at- tach conditions to lifting of the oil embargo. He said this would slow down U. S. peace efforts in the Middle East. * Declared he would not grant House impeachment investigators a "fishing license" to paw through confidential White House files; called for the House Judiciary Committee to follow the Constitu- tion in defining an impeachable offense, and again urged prompt resolution of impeachment moves. * Ruled out his personal testi- mony in the Watergate coverup trials of former White House aides, and indicated "there may be evidence" he owes more fed- eral income taxes because paper- work on donation of his vice presi- dential files was not completed in time. 0 Shed little new light on con- flicts in his past statements on when and what he was told about hush money payments to Water- gate defendants, but said he did not mean to imply that his aides were giulty of any kind crime. Nixon volunteered that he want- ed to correct "what may have been a misapprehension" result- ing from his news conference statement March 6 that former White House counsel John Dean told him of hush money payments made to Watergate defendants. Nixon said yesterday he considered it Dean's statement an allegation rather than a fact. NIXON'S third - person conces- sion that "there may be evidence he (Nixon) owes more tax" came soon after Washington sources said the White House has failed to provide - and reportedly lost - a key document for a congression- al probe of the President's income tax status. Key ,Arab says oil embargyo to end VIENNA (UPI) -Saudi Arabian Oil Minister Ahmed Zaki Yamani said last night the Arab oil em- bargo against the United States "will be lifted" and indicated the announcement would be made to- morrow. At the same time, officials of the Organization of Petroleum Ex- porting Countries (OPEC) said the oil producers would recommend new crude oil price increases at a Vienna meeting today. YAMANI WAS in Vienna to at- tend the OPEC meeting and a parley of Arab oil officials on to- morrow. "The embargo will be lifted," Yamani said as he left Vienna's Imperial Hotel last night. Asked under what conditions, Yamani replied: "These will be discussed Sunday. OPEC OFFICIALS said the or- ganization's economic commission would recommend to OPEC's 12 members that the price of crude oil, which has tripled in the past, five months, be increased again .April 1. The current posted price of Mid- dle East crude is $11.65 per barrel. OPEC officials also said they be- lieved an announcement easing the Arab oil embargo against the United States would be made in Vienna over the weekend. i By JO MARCOTTY University housing rates will jump an average of $100 next fall -an eight per cent increase - the Regents decided yesterday in a 6-2 vote. "We find the increase necessary if we are to continue our present level of housing services," said Vice President for Student Serv- ices Henry Johnson. "Food and utility costs have experienced the greatest increases, yet virtually every expense category is af- fected." A STUDENT-FACULTY Rate Study Committee outlined a 7.3 per cent increase in housing costs within the past year in a report released last semester. The com- mittee unanimously supports the rate hike. Under the new rates, dormitory rent will jump fron $1448 to $1566 for singles, and from $1298 to $1402 for doubles. The average increase in Oxford housing will be $46, and $48 for Baits housing. "I'M CONVINCED that there is no other way," said Regent Ger- trude Huebner (D-Bloomfield Hills.) "Just like the average American home, you've got to plunk that money down for food." One of the dissenting voters, Re- gent Gerald Dunn (D-Lansing), STATION 5 SAVED City delays fire fighter layoffs saidkduring the meetin gh"Idon' think we were given enough time to consider alternatives." He suggested that the Regents postpone their decision, but Hous- ing Director John Feldkamp re- plied that the rate must be set by March 25 so dorm contracts can be signed. "THAT'S THE same answer we receive every year," Dunn said emphatically. "$100 is a lot of money for a student, and I'm go- ing to vote no." The Housing Unit Committee (HUC) was also strongly opposed to the move. "They did not set up the Rate Study Committee enough in ad- vance to study alternatives to the hike," said HUC member David Faye. "Why should students pay for the administrators faults?" Faye and fellow HUC member Ron Beck offered some alternative solutions to the higher cost of Uni- versity housing. BECK CLAIMED that "a large part of the eight per cent will go into reserve funding accounts," used for maintenance, repairs and improvements on the housing units. 0 Rationing considered Gov. William Milliken assailed the Nixon administra- tion's fuel policies yesterday and said he would not hesitate to order gasoline rationing if necessary. "I think Michigan has suffered greater hardships than any other state in the country," Milliken said in an inter- view with-the Detroit News. He said the state was hit hard by the policies of the-Federal Energy Office in al- locating fuel supplies. On the rationing question, Milli- ken said he would spend the weekend considering all aspects of such action before making up his mind. He promised a decision by next Wednesday. On the inside.. . John Kahler previews Michigan's run for the Mid- east regional title against Marquette on the Sports Page . . . the Arts Page continues its film festival re- views, featuring a review by Bruce Shlain . . . and on tho C'A ..ri -.1 tn T'rMrv T na telQ Mnllaout Fnrida' By STEPHEN SELBST The controversial closing of Fire Station Number Five on North Campus and the layoff of eight city fire fighters has been delayed -at least temporarily-by City Ad- ministrator Sylvester Murray. Murray made the decision to "rescind the layoffs" after the firemen filed suit with the Michi- gan Employment Relations Com- mission charging the city with un- fair labor practices in relation to the layoffs. MURRAY REOPENED negotia- tions with the union yesterday in an attempt to iron out grievances; but he characterized the session as fruitless in bringing the parties closer together. The bargaining is scheduled to resume on Wednes- day. Murray said that the postpone- ment of the layoffs had come be- cause the union had filed suit and HRP to propose anti-rape resolution Beck suggested that raising the rate, the could take capital out serve funds. instead of University of the re- "The total amount of money going into building accounts is about the same as the increase. We could get by," he said. FELDKAMP DISAGREED: "If By CHERYL PILATE The Human Rights Party (HRP) announced an anti-rape resolution yesterday that would establish an all-female rape unit to handle in- vestigation of city rape cases. The resolution, which will be pre- sented to City Council Monday night, also provides for free medi- cal treatment of all rape victims --Aa~toli'h a n -irph 'The c i t y currently has no adequate way of dealing with rape.' Diana Autin, HRP adequate way of dealing with ;'t