THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, March 19, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday. March 19. 1974 1 1 JUDGE SIRICA RULES BE A APRIL, 1974 PART 1 MARCH 18-24 UNION G YALLERY 1st FLOOR MICHIGAN UNION painting * sculpture * jewelry photography * prints by Cares/ Czubay/ Feldkamp/ Gordon Handler/ Holcomb/ Peters/ Russler/ Eisenstadt-Schreier/ Schreier SPECIAL GALLERY HOURS FOR BFA SHOW EVERY DAY 10 A.M.-5 P.M. Telephone: 761-2924 Rodin (Continued from Page 1) judgments. The report is a simple and straightforward compilation of information gathered by the grand jury and no more." REPS. PETER Rodino (D-N.J.) and Edward Hutchinson (R-Mich.) -the chairman and the senior GOP member of the House Judiciary Committee-said they were pleased at the decision. "The grand jury report was ob- viously intended for the committee and the committee should have it," Hutchinson said. The grand jury had recommend- ed that the materials it turned over to Sirica be given to the House, the judge said, because the evidence has "a material bearing on mat- ters within the primary jurisdiction of the committee in its current in- quiry." ogetsp Sirica said it is up to the com- mittee to decide whether to accede to a request by President Nixzn's lawyers that they be allowed tol review the report. Yesterday's opinion was Silca's last major act as chief judge of the U.S. District Court for the Dis-1 trict of Columbia. He relinquished the title at midnight, on the eve of his 70th birthday, tut will re- main an active judge. THE JUDGE HAD to decide two questions in connection with the report and a satchel full of evi- dence that accompanied it: wheth- er the grand jury had the power to make such reports and whether the-court could disclose them and to what extent. On the first question, Sirica cited a number of precedents and said the court would be unjustified in Nixon, denying the grand jury authority to issue the report. "The grand jury has obviously taken care to assure that its report contains no objectionable features," he said. On point two, Sirica said that the grand jury recommended "not pub- lic dissemination, but delivery to the House Judiciary Committee with a request that the report be used with due regard for the con- stitutional rights of persons under indictment." To that he added: "The court be- lieves that it should presumptively favor disclosure to those for whom the matter is a proper concern and whose need is not disputed . delivery to the committee is eminently proper, and indeed, ob- ligatory." Because the report is not an in- report dictment, Sirica said, "the Presi- dent would not be left without aj forum in which to adjudicate any charges against him that might employ report materials. The Pres- ident does not object to release." IN THE HEARINGS on the re- port March 6, lawyers for Halde- man and Ehrlichman said they feared the material might leak out, despite committee assurances that all precautions would be taken. Sirisa said he could not justify bottling up the report on such speculation.} House Speaker Carl Albert (D- Okla.) said that "offhand, it seems to me it was a very good ruling," and Majority L e a d e r Thomas "Tip" O'Neill (D-Mass.) said the ruling "will help expedite the mat- ter" before the committee.. Arabs end boycott; retain high Prices., (Continued from Page 1) May,"* one company official '*re- ported, due to the time it would take to resume shipping Arab crude oil to U.S. refineries. This may cause the Nixon ad- ministration some troubles, accord- ing to administration officials, who termed the lifting of the embargo a mixed blessing. They said it could give the na- tion a psychological boost while making it harder for the President to sell Congress on his plans for American self-sufficiency in oil. One oil company executive said: "We are looking to import more oil. How much we get and whether it will be enough to meet demand is still up in the air." CONCERNING THE continuation of the boycott in Europe, Arab spokespersons said that exports to West Germany and Italy will also increase to the pre-embargo level as they have in recent months to France, Britain, Belgium and Ja- pan-all considered friendly coun- tries. Yamani made it clear that the embargo against Holland would re main in force. He said the position of Holland and Denmark remained "unfriendly." "THERE MUST be a change similar to what happened with the rest of the Coimon Market," Yamani said. "Now only ,Holland and Denmark did not ask for the complete withdrawal of Israel" from Arab territories occupied in 1967. The move to end the boycott had been led by Egypt and Saudi Arabia in recognition of American peace efforts in the Mideast. IN WHAT appeared to be a sig- nificant split in the Arab view of the use of the oil weapon, Libya and Syria opposed lifting the em- bargo. Yamani said their opposition was "a question of timing." He said all Arab countries had agreed to the move in principle. Algerian oil minister Belad Ab- desselam said Syria and Libya did not think the proper time had come to reward the United States. YOU ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TO A RECEPTION ARTISTS ON MARCH 18 AT 8 P.M. FOR THE ECTF ACTION HAVE YOU NOTICED') U, plan cuts fuel costs WE'VE EXPANDED TO SERVE YOU BETTER! Come In and Check Out Our NEW Stock Items: 0 Student Office Furniture By DAVID LIEBERMAN circulation in 40 to 50 central cam- The ECTF has been meeting Do you freeze while studying at pus buildings. since September and is coordinat- the UGLI and boil attending classes The estimated savings from this ing the energy conservation pro- in Angell Hall? $1 million four year project will grams within the University. Are you annoyed at the Univer- offset the cost within six years IN UNIVERSITY Housing the re- sity's apparent disregard for en- according to Don Wendel, director duction in electrical waste will ergy conservation, as seen in the of plant operations at the Univer- save about $17,000 this year ac-, widdly varying temperatures in sity. cording to Associate Director of University buildings? The proposal was prepared by Housing Claude Orr, who is also IN AN EFFORT to correct this, Hoyem Associates and approved by a member of the ECTF. the University Plant Department the University Energy Conservation Sitt hi dimlylit off. in will take bids this summer for a Task Force (ECTF) last month. tSting in is Aci y-ies Bu ice in C e n t r a 1 Environmental Control the Student Activities Building, Orr System (CECS), which will monitor CONSERVATION efforts by the described the two phases of energy and control the air temperature and ECTF and others at the University saving in the dormitories. since September have resulted in The. first step, already imple- savings of five per cent in elec- mented, includes lowering dorm tricity used and ten per cent in temperatures, reducing the use of Study m steam used according to Wendel. current light fixtures and eliminat- But this savings will not be re- ing unnecessary heating of kitchen flected in the University's utility ovens. I AL YL bill because of the steady increase The second phase consists of per- this summer in utility rates. manent changes made in the dorms I * SCM and Olympia Typewirters * Full-Line Electronic Calculators 9 Great Assortment of Office Supplies I SGift Ideas OFFICE SUPPLY HOUSE CLASSES: JUNE 17 -JULY 22 Anthropology 0 Art History Italian * Classical Civilization Painting " Cinema * Sculpture Etruscan Archaeology Program TRINITY COLLEGE/ ROME CAMPUS DR. BORDEN W. PAINTER, JR. Director Hartford, Conn. 06106 (203) 527-3151, Ext. 218 'GRADUATE STUDENTS WELCOME! GRAD I ' 613 E. WILLIAM-665-3763 Mon.-Fri. 8-5; Sat. 9-1 I 111'r- FA N0 HOUR WEDNESDAY 8-10 p.m. West Conference Room, 4th Floor RACKHAM dmpm U L PESTr. C.Re-Y BUD, Gor 4 Field Enterprises, Inc., 1972 9* . e ~I r* Or maybe you'd dig Liberia. Or how about Ethi- opia? Or Watts? If it's action you're looking for, we can give you plenty. Because we gre ACTION-a growing movement of volunteers out to help people help themselves., We're far away-in the Peace Corps-helping peo- ple in developing countries overseas. We're right down the street-in VISTA-helping LOOK Nb& FOR M~E: ACFioN E 1 R. II_ - - - Jacobson's Open Thursday and Friday Until 9:00 P.M. Saturday Until 5:301 Night P.M DAILY OFF ICIAL BULLETIN March 19, 1974 , Extension Service, Engl: Poetry Day Calendar reading, L. Goldstein, D. Tall, Aud. 3, Materials, Metallurgical Engineering: MLB, 4:10 pm. E. T. Turkdogan, "Reflections on Re- Law School: Thomas M. Cooley Le- search in Pyrometalurgy & Metalurgi- tures, "The ^uture of Imprisonment", cal Engineering", 3210 E. Eng., 11 am. N. Morris, "Prison as a Coerced Cure," School of Music: Trumpet Student 100 HH, 4:15 pm. Recital, Recital Hall, 12:30 pm. Psych Film Series: "Up is Down", Mat: J. Serrin, Univ. of Minn., "Ax- "Eye of the Storm", "Reggie", "The iois of .Classical Mechanics", 3212 AH, Orange and the Green", Aud. 3, MLB, 3 pm. 4:30 pm. Arch & Design: M. Flinn, "The Law School Student Senate: Seminar, Sense of Greece and Rome", "Odyssey j"The Rights of the Accused", 120 HH, in Imagination", Arch. Aud., 3:30 pm. 7:30. Kelsey Museum, Anthro. Museum, WUOM: Symposium 74, Discussion. History: W. McDonald, Univ. of Minn., Student Financial Aid Programs, 8pm "Excavations at Messenian Nichoria: Music School: Baroque Trio, Rose- Cross Disciplinary Contributions to mary Russell, mezzo-sopran, Rack- Greek Archaeology", Aud. A, AH, 4 pm. ham Aud., 8 pm. J. Salistian, saxo- P & A: Seminar, A. Brailford, "The- phone, Recital Hall, 8 pm. ory of the Interaction of Dislocations Romance Lang., Classical Studies: C. with Electrons & Photons, Randall witke "Alienation in the World of Lab, Rm. 2038, 4 pe. Senecan Tragedy", Lec. Rm. 1, MLB, 8 Seminor, v. Barger, Univ. of Wisc., pm. "Phenomenology of Deep Inelastic Neu- Psychiatry: "T.S. Eliot and the Waste trino Scattering," Colloq. Rm., 4 pm; Land: An Instance of Creativity Fol- Aerospace: L. Friedman, "The Jup- lowing a Psychiatric Ilness, CPH, 8 iter-Orbiter Mission", Aero. Sp. Eng., pm, H. T. Trosman. 4 pm. Residential College: Astronomical Fm F Festival. E. Quad. Ad., 9 pm. Summer Placement / 3200 SAB, Phone 763-4117 /' "rCamp Maplehurset, MI Coed. Inter- WWW view Tues. 3/19, 1 to 5. Arts/Crafts, all 2500 titles I Waterfront, WSI Age 21, Drama, and 20% DI SCOU NTCamp Ma-HI-Ya, Mich. Soc. Wk in. 20% DISCOUNT terview Thurs. 3/21 9:30-5. Openings at include bus boys, kitchen help, exper. BORDERS ;waitresses,; cook, .dish washers. BORDERS *God Humor Corp Det. MI. Inter- view Weds. 3/20, 9:30 to 5. Excellent summer job - out door - good pay. 316 S. State Camp Tamarack, MI. Coed. Interview Fri., 3/22, 9:30 to s. general & special. SALE THRU MARCH 24th ists positions open. open nightly till 10 p.m., Camp Sea Gull, MI Coed. Interview Sun. 11 -6 Tues. 3/26, 1 to 5. Guitar, waterfront, drama, dance arts/crafts, riding. Join The Daily Ad Staff Phone 764-0558 GUITAR LESSONS Private instruction in all styles. Beginners can take advantage of our six-week class guitar program, just $12.00; materials included. Our studios also accommodate instruction on flute, recorder, banjo, piano, oboe, clarinet, saxophone, bass, and drums. For enrollment call: ANN ARBOR MUSIC MART 769-4980 336 S. STATE STREET (Open 9:30-9 daily; Sat, till 6:00) -nstrument Rentals Available at Student Rates- FILMS NOON at International Center W. Quad, Madison St. 10:00 p.m. at Ecumenical Campus Center 921 Church St. March 20- SAD SONG OF YELLOW SKIN Absorbing and disturbing documentary which focuses on three young Americans living in Saigon. One lives with a group of Vietnamese child-men who work as shoe. shine boys; another, a Journalist, tours a barbaric neighborhood called "The Grave yard"; the third is John Steinbeck, Jr., who lives on on incred- ible island of Peace in the Mekong Delta. Not a film about death in war, but about what little life there is left with war all around. March 27 - BUT WHAT IF THE DREAM COMES TRUE ? Incisive documentary about an upper-class family whose dreams of affluence and social insularity in exclusive Birming- ham, Michigan are realized. What they have achieved and how they Ive. A revealing study of one segment of an American lifestvle f1 I' FOR YE k HE :.HEAD )EL.A." .:.. . * 0 F ; x ''i I i V our own poor get a decent shot at life. And we're even a group of college students-in University Year for ACTION-working on special com- munity projects while earning credits toward a degree. The Peace Corps. VISTA. University Year for ACTION. That's a lot of ACTION. And we need a lot more people. Our number is 800-424-8580. Why don't you give us a call. And make a date, today. Clipon and Pierced Earrings $3 Delightful savings on gold and silver tone earrings in a wide variety of shapes and styles. A smart idea for gifting now or DON'T CRAWL UNDER