FAN MAIL See inside I4i an :4Dwi6ty DEPRESSED High-46 Low--33 See Today for details Eighty-Four Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXIV, No. 151 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, April 9, 1974 Ten Cents Eight Pages I ,---n i' IF)CU SEE HEWS CAME1t (UjXNDY Talks extended Bargaining representatives from the University and its construction trades employes, currently negotiating over new contracts, agreed last night to have a fact-finder appointed by the Michigant EploymentRelations Com- mission (MERC) to help resolve outstanding issues in the negotiations. The existing contract, which originally expired at midnight, March 31, was thus extended until the issues are resolved or the fact-finder makes his recommendations, according to MERC union negotiating procedures. The union, representing some 275 construc- tion employes, and the University will petition MERC for the fact-finder appointment by Wednesday. Optional retirement The Senate Assembly yesterday sent a proposal to the Regents which would provide retirement benefits to outgoing University faculty members at an optional early age. The plan, which came out of the faculty's negotiations with the administration, lowers the present minimum retirement age to 55 from 60 with full pension, life insurance, and medical benefits for early retirees. Originally, the assembly opposed the University's efforts to make room for youth in the aging, largely tenured faculty, but in social work Prof. Harold Johnson's words, "Many professors would love to retire early if they could still pay for the groceries.' 0 Levin declares Michigan Democrat Sander Levin formally announced his candidacy for governor yesterday. Levin, the Demo- cratic contender in the 1970 gubernatorial race, nar- rowly lost that election to Gov. William Milliken. Levin yesterday called for a change in state leadership, saying "While it's easy to blame Nixon for all our problems, Milliken has earned plenty of the blame." Leading Democrats believe Levin to be the party's front runner for the nomination since former Detroit mayor Jerome Cavanagh announced last month he was leaving the race to' undergo a cancer operation. The only other announced candidate for the nomination is f o r m e r American Independent Party member James Wells. Wedding bell blues A wedding reception turned into a Motor City street brawl after a departing guest was ticketed for running a stop sign. When the dust cleared 30 minutes later, eight policemen were slightly injured and 11 guests- including the bridegroom-were taken into custody. Red- ford Township police said Sunday they were ticketing the guest outside the reception hall when a brother of the bridegroom ran outside shouting. Within minutes, police said, 125 angry wedding guests poured out of the hall and began attacking the officers. Police from seven neighboring communities were called in to help. Committee openings Student Government Council is looking for students interested in serving on the following University com- mittees: Teacher Awards; Advisory Committee on Rec- reaction, Intramural, and Club Sports (ACRICS); Pro- gram Evaluation; Student Organizations B o a r d; and Office of Student Services Unit Committees on the Health Service and Special Services and Programs. Sign up for interviews in the SGC offices on the third floor of the Union. Interviews will be held tonight and tomorrow. Happenings . . ... are a mixed bag today. Peter Eckstein, economics professor and candidate for the state senate will speak in the Adams House Lounge of W. Quad at 7 p.m. SThere is an exhibit by Ann Arbor's woman painters at the public library, today through the 27th . . . The Anthro Dept. is sponsoring a lecture by Leslie White, professor at the University of California, on "The Con- cept of Cultural Systems" in 25 Angell Hall at 4 p.m. . . The Student Legal Aid office will hold a clinic for hassled tenants 3:30-5 p.m. in their offices, 4310 of the Union . . . Michigan Women in Science are spon- soring a discussion on "Experiences of Liberated Hus- bands" at 8 p.m. in Rackham's W. Conference Rm. on the fourth floor . . . a discussion of "National Health Insurance: Perspectives on the Nixon Administration Proposas" will be held in the Public Health School Ad. at 3:15 p.m.... The final Future Worlds lecture of the semester is this afternoon at 2 p.m. in Hill Aud. John Todd, director of New Alchemy Institute East, will speak on "New World Planning." Admission is free. Shades of prohibition .The government wants to do away with the fifth of whiskey, also the quart, pint and half-pint. If the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (ATF) has its way, these familiar measures will be replaced with the three- fourth, a half, three eighths or a fourth-liters, that is. "There are several' good reasons to change to metric sizes," an ATF official said yesterday. "For one thing, it will mean a substantial reduction in the number of bottle sizes. This should be an aid to the consumer." Public hearings on the subject will be held sometime in the near future. On the inside *.. Arts Page features a review of the Javanese gamelan concert by former Arts Editor Diane Levick . . . George Hastings writes about the Pistons on the Sports Page and our readers get their day in court in today's Editorial Page. Henry tops the I iabe with No. 715 ATLANTA (P)-Henry Aaron, undaunted by the swirl of controversy surrounding his quest for base- ball immortality, became the g a m e' s all-time home run king last night when he smashed the 715th of his illustrious career. The 40-year-old Atlanta Braves superstar left behind the ghost of the legendary Babe Ruth when he connected for the historic clout in the fourth inning off left-hander Al Downing of the Los Angeles Dodgers. "Just thank God it's all ove," Aaron told the cheering crowd moments later., Aaron hammered a 1-0 pitch over the left field fence just to the right of the 385-foot marker and circled the bases for the 715th time accompanied by a large, massive fireworks display. A sellout crowd of 52,870 rose as one for a stand- ing ovation and Aaron's Atlanta teammates poured out of the dugout and out of the left field bullpen to greet the 40-year-old superstar. After Aaron touched home plate, teammates lifted him and carried him a few steps before the slugger broke away and trotted to a special box adjacent to the Atlanta dugout where he embraced his wife, Billye, and his parents, Mr. and Ms. Herbert Aaron of Mobile, Ala. He stayed with his family about two minutes before returning to the field and holding aloft the historic ball. The ball carried about 400 feet and did not get into the seats. It was brought back to Aaron by Atlanta relief pitcher Tom House. The legendary Ruth, who died in 1948, had hit 714 home runs, the last three in 1935 in a game against Pittsburgh on May 25. Aaron thus ended in a hurry the controversy that had swirled around him ever since the Braves announced before spring training they would not, use him until Monday night's home opener. Commissioner Bowie Kuhn suggested that At- lanta use Aaron as it had last year, playing roughly two of every three games. The Braves started him in the season opener last Thursday, but Manager Eddie Mathews an- nounced he would play no more in Cincinnati be- cause "Atlanta fans deserve 715." Kuhn stepped into. the controversy again. He ordered Mathews to play Aaron in Sunday's series finale at Cincinnati. Aaron played, but went hitless In three trips, striking out twice. As soon as the ball left the park last night, huge block numerals "715" were flashed on the center field message board-about 25 feet to the right of where the home run landed.' Then the message board flashed "Hank." AP Photo The shot heard 'round the world Prosecution rests in Boyle trial MEDIA, Pa. (P) - The prosecu- tion in the murder trial of former United Mine W o r k e r s (UMW) President Tony Boyle rested its case last night after the key wit- ness testified that Boyle had or- dered the assassination of Joseph "Jock" Yablonski. "We're in a fight. We've got to kill Yablonski, take care of him," William Turnblazer quoted Boyle as saying on June 23, 1969, at a meeting in UMW headquarters in Washington, D.C. Turnblazer, the first person di- rectly to link the 72-year-old Boyle to the killing, said the meeting took place less than a month after Yablonski announced his bid to un- seat Boyle as union head. THE DEFENSE was to begin presentation of its case today. Charles Moses, chief defense coun- sel, has said Boyle would testify in his own defense. "Were you present when the or- der was given?" special prosecutor Richard Sprague asked Turnblaz- er, 52, former president of the union's District 19 in Middlesboro, Ky. "Yes sir," Turnblazed replied. "Who gave the order?" Sprague asked. "Mr. Boyle," Turnblazer said. BOYLE IS being tried in Dela- ware County Common Pleas Court for three counts of murder in the Dec. 31, 1969, deaths of Yablonski, his wife and daughter. The Yab- lonskis were slain'as they slept in their rural Clarksville home in southwestern Pennsylvania. The prosecution claims Boyle or- dered the executions and financed the payoff of three hired gunmen with union funds. During cross-examination Moses read excerpts from Turnblazer's testimony last year at the trial of one of the men who was later con- victed of murder in the case. Turn- blazer admitted he .had lied then about his own involvement be- cause he was trying to protect himself. MOSES ASKED if Turnblazer had been prosecuted for perjury, for making false statements to Labor Department officials, or for embezzlement of funds. See PROSECUTION, Page 8 White House to.,answer tape' request today WASHINGTON (N-Getting no hard answer on whether the White House will turn over disputed tapes by today's deadline, the chairman of the House impeachment inquiry yesterday scheduled a meeting on subpoening the tapes if necessary. President Nixon's lawyer, James St. Clair, told the House Judiciary Committee in a preliminary letter he will deliver an official reply by today's deadline-but promised no yes or no answer on whether the tapes will be turned over. Chairman Peter Rodino (D-N.J.) announced the committee will meet tomorrow or Thursday "to decide what we should do in light of Mr. St. Clair's reply." SPECIAL COUNSEL John Doar reported, meanwhile, that the im- peachment inquiry's staff is going over last week's findings on Nixon's 4 Daily Photo by STUART. HOLLANDER GLORIA STEINEM and Democratic Congressional hopeful Marjorie Lansing field questions at last night's campaign kick-off at the Power Center. S teinem's speech on women and politics drew 1100 "friends and sisters," who heard her declare, "Some White male clubs are called clubs; others are called Congress." BACKS LANSING CANDIDACY: Steinem throws barbs at male-dominated world By SARA RIMER "The healthy thing about the women's movement is that it's organic," feminist and Ms. maga- zine editor Gloria Steinem told a crowd of about 1100 at the Power Center last night. Speaking ,at a kick-off rally for Democrat Second District Congres- sional hopeful Marjorie Lansing, Steinman urged, "Maybe together we can create a truly humanistic society," and introduced Democrat Lansing as "a feminist helping us all to be humanists." CASUALLY dressed in jeans and a turtleneck sweater, her face framed in the renowned mane of golden hair, Steinem quickly es- tablished a warm, bantering tone with what she termed her "friends and sisters" in the audience. Talking about what she termed "a very deep kind of change, an anthropological revolution," Stein- em emphasized the importance of "examining the basic definition of politics." She defined politics as "any power relationship in our daily lives." Sharpening her definition with examples taken from daily experiences, Steinem continued, "Any time one person is habitual- ly dominated simply because of group of birth-race, class, sex, that's politics." , She built on her theory of poli- tics as male domination, saying, "When there are 100 of one type of human being typing in a room, and another type of human being typing in the executive room, that's politics." APPRECIATIVE laughs greeted Steinem's next succinctly-phrased barb. She charged, "Some white male clubs are called clubs, and See STEINEM, Page 2 taxes to determine if they involve fraud and an impeachable offense. Doar told the committee it will see the Internal Revenue Service notice to the President that he owes $432,000 in back taxes plus interest. The special counsel said the im- peachment inquiry staff also is exchanging information with the House - Senate Internal Revenue Taxation Committee staff that con- cluded the President should pay $476,000. THE POSSIBILITY of a sub- poena confrontation over the dis- puted tapes was raised by Rodino at a staff briefing for the com- mittee on progress of the impeach- ment inquiry.- Rodino also scheduled a meeting for late this month on trimming some of the 53 possible impeach- able offenses now included in the impeachment inquiry. Rodino said he may ask the com- mittee - for subpoena authority if the official White House reply to- morrow does not meet the com- mittee's demand for "disclosure of the relevant facts" on grounds of executive privilege. "If such be the claim," Rodino said, "then we will have to sub- poena the material necessary to meet our constitutional respon- sibilities." REPLYING TO questions from members he said he would not speculate on whether he might re- quest a general subpoena for all 41 requested taped conversations between the President and aides or only some of them. Rodino distributed a preliminary letter in which St. Clair said not that he would turn over the tapes by today but rather that "I am hopeful that continued joint efforts will result in a solution of the com- plex and time-consuming problems inherent in this matter." NEITHER RODINO nor Doar gave the committee any indication of how extensively the present 53 possible impeachable o f f e n s e s might be recommended trimmed from the inquiry. There has been published specu- lation that the first to go are likely to be the President's dis- bandment of the original anti- poverty nrogram, the secret 1969 Cambodia bombing and refusal to Rodino Record city budget recommended Fleming warns of personnel cutbacks By JEFF DAY The only way to deal with in- creasing wage demands will be to cut back on University personnel, President Robben.Fleming warned the regular meeting of the Univer- sity Senate yesterday. "Organization does not produce money," Fleming said, referring to the increasing trend of Univer- sity employes towards unioniza- tion. FLEMING contended that in- creased attempts to unionize were most directly due to rising eco- nomic pressure on. faculty and staff. But he labeled as false "the myth that if groups are organized, the state legislature will respond" with increased funding. While not flatly stating that a payroll cut is in store for Univer- r.+Y .,".".n ~chi. n .... - By STEPHEN SELBST C i t y Administrator Sylvester Murray made his 1974-75 budget recommendations to the opening session of the new City Council last night, suggesting a record $18.6 million spending total, up 17 ner cent from last year's $15.9 mil- lion figure. In the first session for the new Council, the oath of office was de- livered to the five new members, Colleen McGee (D-First Ward), Kathy Kozachenko (HRP - Second Ward), Roger Bertoia (R-Third Ward), J a m i e Kenworthy (D- for the position. The only opposi- tion to this move came when Nor- ris Thomas (D-First Ward) was nominated and defeated. THE NEW Council voted 6-5 t approve a proposed site for a Bur- ger King restaurant at Liberty and Maynard Sts., as part of a three-story structure described in the Liberty Commercial Center Site Plan. The Council members had had no opportunity to examine Mur- ray's budget recommendations be- fore the meeting last night, since Council members with the mass of numbers and figures contained in the 300-page document. He ex- plained that the new budget con- tained a 5 per cent wage hike for all departments, and included a request for a $2.5 million proper- ty tax increase. SEVERAL COUNCIL members expressed an interest in meeting with the heads of the city depart- ments to get explanations for ex- penditure requests. Thomas noted, "The only time we department heads is when they want more monne." the city should investigate the possibility of a local income tax, and asked Murray why he had not included such a proposal. Murray replied that he had not felt he had the power to make such a major policy decision. OPPOSITION to the income tax came quickly when Belcher told Thomas, "The only way we're go- ing to enact an income tax is by referendum." He predicted that if Council voted such a tax in, "There would be a Tea Party in the H'ron River." Kenworthv said he favored a