a' 7 Page 2-Thursday, October 20, 1977-The Michgan Daily House-Senate committee stalls utility handling of energy devices : First witness confirms Korean bribes in TV ethics hearing WASHINGTON (AP)-Members of a Hotse-Senate conference committee were eyeing - possible compromises yesterday to enable utilities to install hvtne insulation and other energy- PROPER INSULATION ' AMOUNT IMPORTANT $KOKIE, Ill. (AP) - Too much inlation can be just as bad as too little insulation when it comes to saving money for heating and cool- ing, says Mario J. Catani, an engineer and director of the Portland Cement Association's building con- struction department. Qatani says homeowners must work out a combination of insulation and building materials that will yield the maximum in energy savings. For concrete or other heavy ma- sonry walls, about 11/2 inches of wall insulation is the optimum amount, Catani says, adding that too much insulation can actually increase heat- ing fuel costs by negating the effects of solar energy on the roof and walls of a house. OPEN HOUSE * Saturday Sunday * October 22 ( Z InIA . . 3150 CARPENTER ROAD 1 * . 971-9510 1 a inma m=== - saving devices when requested by con- sumers. As the panel sought accord on its first energy issue, President Carter hinted that he might cancel or postpone his overseas trip next month if Congress does not finish work on an energy bill by then. fHE CONFERENCE panel is trying to reconcile the wide House and Senate differencesin the energy legislation. Carter, who favors the House bill because it contains most of his energy proposals, met with House Democrats on the negotiating panel yesterday to discuss strategy. Two House conferees told reporters af- ter the White House session that Carter had promised to remain in Washington until the House and Senate differences have been resolved. ONE DIFFERENCE between the bills concerns whether utilities should be allowed to install home insulation. Under the House-passed bill, utilites could do this work directly. They also could install a variety of other energy- saving devices, such as furnace modifications designed to save fuel.. Under the House bill, the utilities could loan consumers money to pay for the improvements. The Senate bill prohibits utilities from doing the work or the financing themselves, although it permits them to help consumers mike the necessary arrangements. CARTER TOLD the House members of the committee that the nation would be "deeply disappointed" if Congress doesn't enact an energy bill this year. Two members of the conference panel, Reps. Henry Reuss, (D-Wis.), and Thomas Ashley, (D-Ohio), told reporters that Carter vowed to put off his four-continent trip if necessary to stay in town to voice support for his energy proposals. Ashley said Carter was "willing to stay in Washington and help us ... as long as it takes." Carter is scheduled to begin the overseas-trip on Nov. 22. WHITE HOUSE officials said that Carter's suggestion was calculated to discourage opponents on the conference panel from trying to delay votes on key issues until the President had left town. If such tactics are tried, Carter stan- ds ready to make good on his promise to cancel his trip, the officials said. But Reuss and Ashley said they ex- pected the conference panel to com- plete its work before the trip is scheduled to begin. WASHINGTON (AP)-A South Korean embassy, of- ficial ended a brief courtesy call on a congressman by leaving an evelope stuffed with $100 bills, a Capitol Hill secretary told a House committee yesterday. Nan Elder said that when her boss, Rep. Larry Winn Jr., discovered the envelope was filled with money, he told her, "Return it or get rid of it." THE INCIDENT in September 1972 was part of what was described as a South Korean government effort aimed at the "seduction and buying of American leaders, particularly in the Congress." "Because of what has come to light in our investigation, buttressed by the present attitude of the South Korean government, there are compelling indications that the South Korean government. . . was engaged in an effort to influence members of Congress by giving them valuable gifts," special counsel Leon Jaworski told the House ethics committee. Jaworski made the statement in opening remarks as the ethics panel began a nationally televised hearing into what could become one' of the worst scandals in congressional history. HE SAID THE Seoul regime has withheld cooperation in the investigation because he would not agree to drop the probe before it reaches into the South Korean government. A former official of the Korean embassy identified the visitor to Winn's office as Dong Jo Kim, then the am- bassador and now the South Korean minister of foreign af- fairs. Elder said Winn, who was in a hurry to leave the office, left the envelope unopened in his desk. Later, he called Elder and told her to see what was in the envelope. "THERE WAS more money in the envelope than I had ever seen in my life," she testified. "There was a stack of hundred dollar bills.. . about an inch high." Elder said she tried to locate the visitor through the Korean embassy and was told he was paying a call on another congressman. The second congressman was not identified. She said she located the Korean, he returned to Winn's office, and she gave the money back to him. ANOTHER WITNESS, Jai Hyon Lee, former official spokesman for the embassy, described high level staff meetings in the embassy at which Korean Central In- telligence Agency officials outlined plans to use money and favors to assure continuing support of the United States for the government of President Park Chung-hee of South Korea. Lee said the Park government was "very much worried about the possibility of losing United States support-mili- tary, economic and political." Lee left his embassy post in June 1973 and received political asylum in the United States. He now teaches journalism at Western Illinois University. The former embassy attache told the House committee that only about 10 embassy officials, including the am- bissador, were allowed to attend discussions of the in- fluence-buying scheme. 44~ 4 A J g Just for the health of it. Get moving, America! March 1-7. 1977 is National Physical Education and Sport Week Physical Education Public Information American Alliance for Heaith. Physical Education and Recreation 1201 16th St N W . Washington. DC 20036 ::::...:::::: .:......v..v... .. ......... ............ ... ... .... . . +. .......... ... . . . . . .. .... n ... A .... ... ...... ..... .. ...... ....... ...... ....... ..... ...... .:. *. PROFS UNEFFECTED: Senate sets retirement age at 70 i ~ 2 So smooth. Easy to sip. Delicious! Comfort®'s unlike any other liquor. It tastes good just poured over ice. That's why it makes mixed drinks taste much better, too. K WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate passed legislation-yesterday that would give most American workers the choice of whether to keep on the job until age 70. 4 But tenured university professors and some high-paid business executives could still be forded to retire at age 65 under the proposal. THE BILL, which eventually could affect about 70 per cent of the U.S. labor fore, now goes to a conference com- mittee which will try to work out dif- ferences between the Senate bill and one passed earlier by the House. Sen. Harrison Williams Jr. (D-N.J.), chairmain of the Human Resources Committee, said the Senate bill, passed 88-7, would end discrimination against elderly workers. "It is a matter of basic civil rights that individuals be treated in em- ployment solely on the basis their ability to perform a job," he said. "A fundamental need of older people is to remain an active member of society." WILLIAMS DISPUTED opponents of the bill who claimed that giving workers ,five more years on the job would reduce employment oppor- tunities for the young, women and minorities. He .said the Labor D'epartment estimates that raising the mandatory retirement age to 70 would result in an increase in the labor force of about 200,000 people a year at most. The law would not become effective until Jan. 1, 1979 to give businesses time to adjust to the new retirement age. But all contracts agreed to through collec- tive bargaining must be in compliance with the higher retirement age by Jan. 1, 1980. ONE OF THE main points of conten- tion in the House-Senate conference committee will be whether to ban for- ced retirement for federal workers, who now must retire at 70. The House called for such a prohibition, but the Senate left the current provision un- changed. Another fight is expected over the Senate's decision to allow university and college employers to force tenured professors to retire at age 65. The Senate bill, also unlike the House version, gives businesses the right to force executives and others to retire at 65 if they receive $20,000 or more in retirement benefits, excluding Social Security income. THE SENATE deleted from the bill a stipulation that would have kept the retirement age of all elementary and secondary school teachers at age 65, too. It was changed to 70. Voting against the bill were Sens. Dewey Bartlett (R-Okla.); Carl Curtis (R-Neb.); Robert Griffin (R-Mich.); S. I. Hayakawa (R-Calif.); James Mc- Clure (R-Idaho); Adali Stevenson (D- .I11.) ; and Malcolm Wallop (R- Wyomir). if you see . S d d .4 4 Southern Comifort H E C A R E E R greaet with: Cola o Bitter .emon Tonic o orange juice Squirt...even milk r SOUTHERN COMFORT CObPORATION. 100 PROOF LIOUEUR. ST. LOUIS, MO. 63132 F I N D R l S i i DO YOU HAVE YOUR EYE ON., DON'T WAIT UNTIL. JUNE.... RECRUITERS ARE ON CAMPUS NOW FILLING JOBS! HAVING THE BEST QUALIFICATIONS DOESN'T GUARANTEE YOU THE JOB. CAN YOU HANDLE THE INTERVIEW? The CAREER FINDER'S Booklet- "Effective Job Interviewing Techniques" Shows you How to ...Develop an "Action Resume" ...Anticipate & answer difficult interview questions. ...Control the interview and close the sale of yourself Our techniques have worked time and again and can work for you. We are confident enough in our program that we guarantee your satisfaction or your money back. MAIL THIS COUPON AND CHECK / MONEY ORDER TO ' THE CAREER FINDERS COMPANY, P.O. BOX 4, MARLTON, N.J. 08053 PLEASE SEND ME COPIES OF "EFFECTIVE JOB INTERVIEWING TECHNIQUES" FOR COLLEGE SENIORS AT $3.95 (INCLUDES POSTAGE. HANDLING & TAX). IF I AM NOT 100% SATISFIED, I MAY RETURN I THE INTERVIEWING GUIDE WITHIN 7 DAYS FOR A FULL REFUND.- NAME: COLLEGE: I ADDRESS:j ICITY: STATE: ZIP - --'-- THIS AD WILL NOT BE REPEATED. _-- _ FANTASIES -MONSTERS"NIGHTMARES- "DAYDREAMS For Used, Rare, and Out-of Print Books I Not Everyone Stays Wtlith This Game BILLIARDS at the UNION Open I0 a.m. news happen call 76-DAILY Saturday ~g Sunday Y OPEN HOS TSaturday & Sunday * ' C 0 M P A N Y f11 ci o a o c __ I, WEST SIDE BOOK SHOP 113 W. LIBERTY (Downtown) 995-1891 LIBRARIES & Individual Books Bought Also Thousands of Quality 45 W i -. . I 4 tUSED PAPERBACKS /zCOVER PRICE In Our Back Room Fiction-Poetry-Philosophy-Drama Psych-Music-Art-And More U U ;a 9-9 SATURDAY 10-6 SUNDAY + FRE E&COURT TIME * FREE R F R ESfNMENTS + VIDEO TAVOUNGE_ * TAPED 1 OURNAMENTS SN EW LO S * FRE E/VDE SE ANALYSIS + T EIi4!S MOVI A career in law without aw school. What can you do with only a bachelor's degree? Now there is a way to bridge the gap between an undergraduate education and a challenging, responsible career. The Lawyer's Assistant is able to do work tradi- tionally done by lawyers. Three months of intensive training can give you the skills-the courses are taught by lawyers. You choose one of the seven courses offered,-choose the city in which you want to work. Since 1970, The Institute for Paralegal Training has placed more than 2,000 graduates in law firms, banks, and corporations in over 80 cities. If you are a senior of high academic standing and are interested in a career as a Lawyer's Assistant, we'd like to meet you. Contact your placement office for an interview with our representative. We will visit your campus on: THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 17 In a magnificent full- color collection of paint- ings, book-jacket and record-sleeve illustrations, and etch- ings, one of the world's most popular fantasy/science fiction artists offers notes and commentary on each of his works. In Mythopoeikon, Patrick Wood- roffe details the development of his fascma- tion with fantastic art forms and subject obsessions, and his interest in "fantastic. realism' as he studied artists such as Bosch U U U U