LEAKS AND SPILLS See editorial page .:J'.i E LIEt :43 tti PARTLY CLOUDY High-24 s Low-- 8 See Today for details * Vol. LXXXVIII, No. 116 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, February 18, 1978 Ten Cents' 10 Pages Miners to consider new coal contract By AP and UPI WASHINGTON - Labor Secretary Ray Marshall carried a new industry contract offer to representatives of the striking coal workers yesterday in an effort to settle the 74-day coal strike. President Carter, meanwhile, told a news conference in Cranston, R.I., that he had asked the negotiators to "stay at - the bargaining table until a final set- tlement is reached." THE PRESIDENT warned of "more serious action" if the talks fail. Gov. William Milliken said yesterday Michigan's economy could be "vir- tually immobilized" if the coal strike is Striking United Mine Workers gesture in protest at unguarded coal trucks near Sullivan Indiana, yesterday. The trucks had been hauling coal for three days under police escort. ALSO ACT ON HIGHWAY PLAN: not ended quickly and asked the state's residents to begin conserving energy immediately. "Because of the record-long national coal strike, we are rapidly approaching a critical stage in our ability to generate electricity in Michigan," Miliken said in a televised address. Milliken said the state's two major electrical utilities - Detroit Edison and Consumers Power - have a 49-day supply of coal left. SOURCES CLOSE TO tle negotia- tions between the United Mine Workers union and the Bituminous Coal Opera- tors Association said the revised indus- try proposal included four major changes in the tentative agreement which was rejected overwhelmingly Sunday by the union's bargaining coun- cil., Included in the reported new industry offer was a proposal to eliminate penal- ties against miners taking part in wild- cat strikes - a key provision the miners had found unacceptable. Another key proposal would restore a cost of living formula to protect miners', wages against inflation. THE 39-MEMBER bargaining coun- cil composed of regional union leaders must approve any contract settlement before it can be submitted to the 160,000 striking miners for ratification. This would be done through a secret ballot, a process expected to take 10 days. However; the sources, who declined to be identified, said the bargaining coun- cil'sapproval was uncertain. Top industry representatives presen- ted Marshall with the revised offer at a secret pre-dawn meeting in the White House Roosevelt Room that lasted until 5 a.m. Marshall met with two key in- dustry representatives, J. Bruce John- ston of U.S. Steel and Bobby Ray Brown of Consolidated Coal. Neither of the two men, both powerful figures within the industry, partici- pated in face-to-face talks with union officials on Thursday. Marshall was reported upset that the industry was represented at the joint talks by second- echelon executives, and the meeting with Brown and Johnston wasarranged- and kept secret until Carter announced it. "THE NEGOTIATIONS are difficult and delicate," the secretary told reporters in a brief statement. "The mood is neither one of disap- pointment nor undue optimism," said Marshall, adding that it would be un- wise for him to comment further. An aide to the secretary, who de- clined to be publicly identified, had said earlier, "We have to be relatively close or at a settlement" by day's end or "it's time to talk about options." The aide did not elaborate. But Carter, in an in- terview with reporters Thursday, hin- ted the administration might resort to the Taft-Hartley Act to end the strike. J { TH1rent .O Regen ts hike dorm rnt7,4% Library Search Committee and the eight-member residents told the Regents that the match By BRIAN BLANCHARD Education Search Committee each to forward three comparing apples and oranges." :h up "is like The Regents passed without further comment yesterday morning a 7.4 per cent residence hall increase for next year. The board also voted unanimously to allow a 'U' consultant to work out the details in a plan to run a new four-lane road south of Fuller to bring traffic into the Medical Center from the northeast. During the final session of this month's meeting in the Administration Building the Regents also heard an outline of the criteria that has been used in the selection process for the Dean of the Education School and the Director of the Library. THE UNIVERSITY has asked the ten-member to six unranked candidates for consideration. Attributing the housing rate hike primarily to in- flation and utilities costs, the University will charge 7.4 per cent more for unmarried housing and add 13 per cent to the amount now paid in family units. At Thursday's session Norman Snustad, acting associate housing director, compared the 35 per cent increase in family housing and the 32 per cent hike in unmarried rooms between 1974 and 1978 with the 34 per cent rise in the Consumer Price Index over the same period. DURING THE PUBLIC comment period following r the presentation, three Northwood apartment The residence hall rate for a double room will jump from $1,638 to $1,759 next year. Also during the morning session in the Regents' Room of the Administration Building, the Regents found themselves "in general agreement with the elements of a transportation system" described to them Thursday evening by a private consultant studying University Hospital traffic access. THE PROPOSAL calls for a short, four-lane stret- ch of road next to the Huron River, a single, well- marked entrance to the Hospital area, and a cam- paign to encourage people to use car pools and buses. See DORM, Page 8 _ _ _ 3: : D.C. trip leaves MSA hopeful for tax credit By MARK PARRENT Kent Barry, testified before the Hous e Michigan Student Assembly President Jon Lauer and Stu'dent Organizations Board Director Michele Sprayregen returned from Washington yesterday- satisfied their tuition tax credit lob- bying has positively influenced several legislators. The two went to Washington to lobby for financial aid legislation. They talked with many congressmen and several senators, and Thursday Lauer, along with MSU student body president Ways and Means committee. MSA paid $200 of Lauer's expenses while Sprayregen paid her own way. "IT SURPRISED me how responsive they were," said Lauer. "They were really interested in what we had to say."~ There are several tuition tax plans pending in the House. Lauer said the main differences involve the amount of the credit, usually $250 or $500, and See MSA, Page 2 D~auer Jordan's Hussein holds key to Israeli-Arab peace, says Dayan TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) - The United States wants to make a "maximum ef- fort" to draw Jordan's King Hussein in-' to the Israeli-Egyptian peace talks, Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan was quoted yesterday as saying after meeting with President Carter. "As time passes," Dayan said in an interview with the conservative news- paper Maariv, "mor and more light is shed on the questin: What is holding up progress in the negotiations with Egyp- tian President Anwar Sadat? The con- clusion is that he does want to advance without Hussein and without a fitting definition for the Palestinian issue." DAYAN, WHO arrived back in Israel late yesterday, was interviewed Thur- sday en route to New York after his Washington meetings. Asked whether the Americans accepted Sadat's view that it is essential for Hussein to join the now-stalled talks, the Israeli foreign minister replied: "Certainly an effort will be made. If it is a condition for continuation of the Dem k gov. hopefuls hit Milliken' s record negotiations - that I 'do not know. At this stage the Americans want to make a maximum effort to bring Hussein into the talks." Hussein has said he will not join the talks until an acceptable statement of principles is reached, including the Palestinian self-determination. Israel says such a principle would lead to establishment of a Palestinian state implacably hostile to Israel. DAYAN SAID of Hussein: "He, in ,fact, says that the Palestinians have to be allowed to decide for themselves. Both Hussein, the Americans and the Egyptians are building on their belief that they, the Palestinians, will prefer to be connected with Jordan." Since Dayan departed Israel Feb.6, Prime Minister Menachem Begin's Mideast peace policy has come under increased fire from the Labor Party opposition. FORMER Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin said it was "childish" of Begin to constantly refer to international law. ~-aturday- BULLETIN A bomb, exploding yesterday in Belfast, Northern Ireland, killed Daily Photo by JOHN KNOX Wires and tubes stretch down into the water to connect with the core of the nuclear reactor at the Phoenix Plant on North Campus. SAFETY OF PLANT DISPUTED: Group tours By DENNIS SABO Four of the five Democratic candi- dates in the governors race debated in Ypsilanti yesterday. But the forum tur- ned out, to be more of an assault on the Republican Party's "Palace Guard" than a fight between rivals. Speaking at Cleary College, former state Democratic Chairman Zolton Fer- ency, State Senators Pat McCollough and William Fitzgerald and former Public Service Commissioner Bill Ralls attacked Governor Milliken's "game of musical chairs." "I THINK EVERYONE knows that they structured the ticket that would be most powerful this year," Ferency said, referring to recent developments that placed EMU President James Brickley and Senator Griffin on the Republican ticket. "It's simply power that wants to "power play" was necessary because the Republican party cannot "tolerate any new leadership." "His attempts to control his primary are wrongful. I think Bill Milliken will be the easiest person to beat based on his record." Oakland County Sheriff Johanes See GUBERNATORIAL, Page 2 Sex-slayer suspect seized PENSACOLA, Fla. (UJPI) - Theo- at least 14 persons, including many children. Police suspect the Provisional Wing of the Irish Republican Army, which recen- tly embarked on a new "cam- paign of terror." " Contract negotiators for the University and the House Of- ficers Association have reached agreement on previously unresolved issues. See story, By MITCH CANTOR Local members of a national organization, Science for the People, expressed concern yesterday over the University's Phoenix Memorial Laboratory after touring the plant, which houses a nuclear reactor. The project, located on North Cam- pus, is one of over 75 of its type in the country. The lab's main work, said Bob Burn, reactor manager for the Phoenix project, concerns "things that utilize neutrons." WHAT IS DIFFERENT about the reactor is that it operates on a much lower energy level than most others of precautions were taken to p material against theft, espec it had been used, but said n problem results. "ANYONE WHO would try it away would die," he said, that the radiation from the would be very great. Burn said, however, that a to steal the unused uranium highly unlikely. "We keep su amount (of uranium) on hand if someone did break in, our is five kilograms, which is third of what you need to bomb." 'U'reactor rotect the guards are not allowed at the plant ially after because the University does not permit o security them. Another worry of the group is the and carry threat of sabotage to the reactor. explaining material "I KNOW WHAT people can learn. A lot of technicians who work at the place know more than the guy who's running n attempt the place," Ball said. would be ch a small Ball also charged that several l that even discrepancies in the records of the maximum Nuclear Regulatory Committee in only one- Washington show that some groups, o make a such as organized crime syndicates, may already be getting limited amoun- ts of uranium. i