REMEMBER THE PALESTINIANS See Editorial Page :Y r e it ga :43 a i1 COOLER High-33 Lots-19 For details see Today Eighty-Three Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXIV, No. 91 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, January 19, 1974 Ten Cents Eight Pages i ,. YET STATE APPROPRIATIONS INCREASE F OU SEE NEWS NA¢PPENCAL7o Y T 4 'U' patent rule revised The Board of Regents yesterday unanimously approved a revision of the University's patent policy which fixes the share of profits or royalties received by faculty in- ventors at 20 per cent, with the University receiving the rest. Previously, the University received all profits, except when an outside research sponsor was involved. The approved modification also permits the right of patent application to revert to the inventor if the sponsor and the University elect not to apply, in which case the University claims 15 per cent of th profits. 0 Ballot proposals certified The city clerk has certified and sent to Lansing two Human Rights Party-backed resolutions to be included on the upcoming April city election ballot. The proposals -which will be checked by Gov. William Milliken and Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley for proper wording-would re- enact the city's short-lived $5 marijuana ordinance and establish rent control measures. The proposals had re- ceived the necessary number of petition signatures to be put on the ballot. e Happenings . . .. are headlined by today's exciting basketball game with Michigan State at Crisler, 2 p.m. . . . for cinema buffs, The Seventh Seal is at the Arch. Aud., Zappa's 200 Motels is at Nat. Sci., The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly is at Aud. A., To Sir with Love is at Couzens, and The French Connection is at Bursley ... and the presen- tation of the Eva Jessye Afro-American Music Collection will take place at the Stearns Bldg on North Campus at 3 p.m. Viet protester run down The wife of an American official drove her car into a crowd of Vietnamese demonstrations blocking the United States commissary in Saigon yesterday, and authorities reported one Vietnamese killed and six injured. Billie Steward; 35, of Takoma Park, Md. was taken intp cus- tody by Vietnamese police. U. S. sources said officials were trying to obtain her release "through normal pro- cedures". The wife of an accountant with the U. S. Agency for International Development, Steward appar- ently panicked when commissary workers protesting wage cuts and recent layoffs pelted her car with rocks and leaped onto the vehicle, American witnesses said. GM layoffs Nearly 23,000 General Motors Corp. workers will be laid off for one week beginning Monday when five plants are closed to cut back on production of Mlow- selling big cars, the automaker said yesterday. Four as- sembly plants and one Fisher Body plant will be shut the entire week, a sharp drop from the nine GM assem- bly plants closed this week. GM sales of new cars in the first two days of January were down nearly 43 per cent from a year ago, with large cars taking the brunt of the energy scare. e ERA approved by Maine The Equal Rights Amendment needs the ratification of only seven more states to become part of the Constitut- tion, after Maine became the 31st state to endorse it. The Maine senate approved the amendment by a 19-11 roll call vote yesterday to join the state's house in certifying the measure. The proposal is alive in 15 state legisla- tures, but none appear to be near final action. IMF delegates meet International Monetary Fund delegates failed in a week-long meeting in Rome to agree on reforms for the world monetary system which finances international trade. The delegates left currencies floating against each other, a process recently favorable to the dollar. They scheduled a new series of meetings for March, May and June to tackle again the technical problems that have blocked reform projects for the past 18 months. Mean- while, gold climbed to a record high on European ex- chnges, hitting a peak of'$130.83 in Paris. Army hijinks A senior Pentagon official said yesterday that the use of an armored personnel carrier by Army reservists in Massachusetts to parade actor John Wayne around Har- vard seems to be a violation of policy. The Pentagon is already in hot water over documents that it secretly received from the White House, and it appears things are going to get worse. Congressmen are asking the Pen- tagon why the Harvard incident happened and annoyed Defense Department officials have demanded an ex- planation from the Army Reserv e. But they haven't got the answer yea. Wayne arrived Tuesday for a Harvard Lampoon reception and preview showing of his newest movie. A defense official surmised, "No real harm was done, and there was a lot of fun and games, but some members of Congress do not look kindly on the military forces being involved in fun and games." 0 On the inside ..'. Roy Chernus reviews the Brubecks' recent con- cert here on the Arts Page . . . John Kahler previews to- day's basketball game with Michigan State on the Sports Page . . . and on the Editorial Page, columnist James Wechsler tackles. the Nixon question. O By CHERYL PILATE Although Governor Milliken rec- ommended Thursday that the Uni- versity receive a 10 per cent increase in state appropriations, there is still the "slight possibil- ity" of another tuition hike next fall according to Vice President for Academic Affairs Allan Smith. If the Legislature approves the budget recommendation' for the fiscal year starting July 1, the Uni- versity will receive a total of $97.3 million - an $8.9 million increase over last year and the largest sin- gle increase in the governor's high- er education budget. "I AM STILL working hard to avoid a fall tuition hike, but I can- )mith I not say what the gross require- ments will be yet," Smith said. But last Oct. 31 Smith indicated that there would be no fee hike next year. "Not if I'm in my right mind," he said, "we've had our fill of trouble on this thing (tui- tion). No way should we go any higher." Lawrence Pincher, assistant to the Vice President for State Rela- tions and Planning, declined to comment on the possibility of a fall tuition hike. OF THE PROPOSED $8.9 mil- lion increase, $6.5 million is slated for a six per centcompensation salaryincrease which Milliken is recommending for all the state's lnts at new colleges and universities. However, the University request- ed a 9.7 per cent salary increase which would have amounted to $10.6 million. "Milliken's recommendation is well below what we asked for, but in relative terms, a six per cent salary hike isn't too bad. However, this won't be received with much enthusiasm," President Robben Fleming said. OTHER BUDGETARY recom- mendations include a $200,000 in- crease in student financial aid whic his only 11 per cent of what was originally requested by the University. "We are concerned that no spe- cific increase is being recommend- ed for financial aid to students be- yond a general four per cent in- crease to offset inflationary pres- sures," Fleming said. "There is an urgent need to increase such aid as middle income families find it ever more difficult to finance a college education." Other proposed increases were allotted to the Psychiatric Hos- pital, the Mental Health Research Institute and the Institute of Ger- onology. ON OTHER source of concern to he University is that not enough funds will be allocated to staff the expanded program which could be See VP, Page 8 tuition1 0 October 31, 1973 - Smith indicates there will be no fee hike next year, saying, "Not if I'm in my right mind." January 18, 1974 - Smith says, "I am still working hard to avoid a fall tuition hike . . but admits a "slight pos- sibility." 4 hike Judg( prob( Israel and Egypt sign agreement Kissinger seeks Syrian peace pant By United Press International Israel and Egypt yesterday sign- ed an agreement to separate their forces on Suez front over the next seven weeks. Secretary -of State Henry Kissinger, back in Egypt on the latest of his shuttle trips, said he would go to Syria Sunday to try to work out a similar accord on the Golan Heights front. Before flying to Syria, Kissinger planned to meet Jordan's King Hussein at the Jordanian port city of Aqaba Saturday afternoon. THE SUEZ disengagement agree- ment was signed at 12:25 p.m. at Kilometer 101 on the road from Cairo to Suez, the same desert soot on the West Bank of the Suez Canal where talks between Egypt and Israel began Nov. 11, but bogged down until Kissinger started his shuttle negotiations. Both the Egyptian and the Israeli armies will be thinned out under the pact -while Israeli troops will withdraw 20 miles east of the canal to a line straddling the strategic Mitla and Giddi Passes in the Sinai Desert. United Nationsbuffer troops will move between the new positions which replace the jagged lines left from the October war running both east and west of the canal. THE PACT specifies it is no final agreement and that the troop withdrawals should be only "a first step toward a final, just and durable peace within the frame- work of the Geneva conference" at- tended by Israel, Egypt, Jordan, the United States and the Soviet Union.i Not a single cease-fire violation was reported yesterday for the first time since the war and the signing touched off wild celebra- tions by frontline soldiers. An Is- raeli National Radio reporter on the front said Egyptian troops fired their rifles into the air and sent up fireworks, flares and shouts of joy. Israeli troops, most of them mobilized reservists, said they were very happy and hoped the agreement would speed up their release from uniform. ABOUT THE Egyptian troops left on the canal's East Bank, the agreement says only that they will be "limited in armament and forces." But Israeli Defense Min- ister Moshe Dayan said in a tele- vision interview later both the See ISRAEL, Page 2 BULLETIN Sirica. posb a sJe tape awor ski t tampering Study promised prosecution WASHINGTON, (Reuter) - In a blow to the White House, Watergate Judge John Sirica yesterday asked the Special Wat- ergate Prosecutor to investigate whether White House tapes were criminally doctored. The Judge said there were strong indications that miss- ing and partially erased tapes had been tampered with but he added that the court refrained "from actually accusing any person or persons." JUDGE SIRICA said he had taken his investigation as far as he could and he was asking Special Watergate Prosecutor Leon Jawor- ski to convene a grand jury to look into "lawful destruction of evidence and any related offenses." His ruling came after a, day in which gaps in two more Presiden- tial recordings relating to Water- gate were disclosed and White House lawyers cross-examined six technical experts who had report- ed an 18-minute gap on another key tape was caused by five, and possibly nine, separate and con- scious efforts. Judge Sirica's decision to turn the investigation over to the Spe- cial Prosecutor marks the end of the court's probe into the tapes. AP Photo Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Dayan points out th area of a planned Israeli troop withdrawal from the Sinai Penninsula according to the agreement signed yesterday with the Egyptians. In a national television interview, Dayan said, "This time I really hope we are disengaging from a state of war." HRP-Stephenson discus Rcampaign spending law By JACK KROST agreed to changes in the ordinance litical opponents and to S THE COURT originally asked for nine tapes but the White House said later that only seven of the conversations sought were actual- ly put on tape. The 18-minute gap is on one of the seven tapes sub- sequently handed to Judge Sirica. The handing over of the probe to Jakorski's office is seen by ob- servers here as a big blow to the White . House which undoubtedly had hoped Judge Sirica would de- cide there was not enough evidence to warrant further inquiries. Jaworski's office said in a state- ment issued after Judge Sirica's decision that its intention was to conduct, in conjunction with the FBI, an exhaustive investigation into all phases of the matter. Any relevant information would be re- ferred to a grand jury, it added. THE PRESIDENT also faced fresh pressure from the Senate. Watergate Committee in a battle for tapes and documents that has been raging since mid-1973. Word of the two new gaps - one of 57 seconds and the other of 38 See SIRICA, Page 2 look for In a smoke-filled-room style meeting between Mayor James Stephenson and Human Rights Par- ty leaders yesterday, the mayor agreed to some critical changes in the city's proposed campaign spending ordinance. Although HRP didn't get the mayor to commit himself on all the supposed "loopholes" they see in the reform law, they did score a' few points for their positions. THE ORDINANCE in question was giveninitial approval by City Council last January 7. Controver- sial provisions and other kinks in the ordinance are currently being ironed out by a three member Council committee, then the revis- ed law is to be voted on for final approval. A public hearing on the present- lv bare-bones ordinance is sched- uled for this Monday. In promising his committment to change the unfinished ordinance, Stephenson emphasized that he was speaking strictly on his own, and not on behalf of Council Re- publicans. STEPHENSON is not a member that would mode up the dates to disclose campaign finances by five days, Instead of requiring political can- didates to file campaign statements five days before an election, Ste- phenson agreed to stretch the re- quirement to ten days. THIS ALTERATION would give opposition political parties more time before an election to go over the campaign statements of po- improprieties. Stephenson did not concede, how- ever, to two major changes the Hu- man Rights Party is seeking: -an upper limit on the amount that can be spent in a campaign, and -extending the ban on cam- paign contributions from cbrpora- tions, such as businesses and labor unions. Corporations are currently pro- See CHANGES, Page 8 White House Counsel Fred Buz- hardt: "It would be wrong to condludeon the basis of Judge Sirica's decision that any indi- vidual within the White House is guilty of impropriety or wrong doing . . 'EXORCIST' SCARES AUDIENCES Film triggers psychiatric visits CHICAGO (Reuter) - People have entered hospitals for mental treatment after seeing the film "The Exorcist," a Chicago Psychia- trist, Dr. Louis Schlan, said here yesterday. Dr. Schlan, who said he was treating two people who saw the film, told reporters: "Several people have become clinically ill - unable to function adequately in their usual capacity - some to the point of requiring hospitalization after seeing the film." "THE EXORCIST," which is playing to packed houses around the country, is a detailed study of a 12-year-old girl possessed by the seen the film and have no desire to," he added. A theater manager said many of the people who see the film want to be scared and also want to know whether they are stronger than those who walk out of the movie halfway through the showing. A Chicago minister, the Rev. Arthur De Kruyter, has promised to deliver a sermon in his church on Sunday calling on people not to see the film. DR. DE KRUYTER said he believed there is an increasing interest and awareness of the spirit world in the materialistic culture. "'The