Murray knew of investment scandal, Levin charges (Continued from Page 1) you should have known." "I did not know," Murray said. Russell also said that Levin's appeals hearing, scheduled for this. Tuesday, will be a farce since Murray, who fired Levin, was re- sponsible for choosing the three members of the appeals board. MURRAY FIRED Levin last Oct. 5 in a city hall shake-up that followed revelations that the controller's of- fice had entered into an arbitrage agreement with Merrill Lynch, the investment firm. The city, under the transaction, borrowed a treasury note, sold it, and used that money to buy another note it hoped would be more profitable. Levin apparently found out six months after making the investment that Merrill Lynch had been lying and the city was actually losing money on the deal, so he entered into the possibly illegal June 30-July 1 arbitrage transaction for which he was fired. On June 30, the Merrill Lynch investment counselor, who has since been fired, returned the $1.4 million to Levin so that the loss would not show up in the city's budget. The next day, Levin gave the money back to the Merrill Lynch representative for reinvestment. "He (Levin) is definitely being made a scapegoat," Russell said. "Marc was singled out of all the employes. All of his action had the approval of his immediate superior." LEVIN'S immediate superiors were former City Controller Lauren Jedele, who retired after the contro- versy, and Assistant City Controller Steven Hendel, who was demoted for 90 days. Assistant Administrator for Finance, Patrick Kenney, was repri- manded. Administrator Murray said in a September report explaining the controversy that he took full respon- sibility, saying he "failed to imple- ment adequate controls which would ensure that he had knowledge of any unauthorized departures from ap- proved investment practices." "There are statements in that report that Mr. Levin and I will raise questions about," Russell said. "It's our position that he (Murray) knew, or should have known. This thing could not go on without the knowl- edge of higher city officials. He (Levin) had very little voice in this." ACTING CITY Attorney Bruce Laidlaw, however, said yesterday, "I think it will be quickly revealed that Marc was not just some low-level accountant who did what he was told. He could transfer millions of dollars just by picking up the phone." Responding to Russell's charges that the appeals board would be biased since all the members were picked by Murray, Laidlaw said: "The people were picked in an attempt to comply with the rule that they be peers on the level of Marc's." If the decision of the appeals board is unsatisfactory to either party, they may appeal to Murray himself. Laidlaw said that Murray offered to waive his final say in the matter, but Levin declined the offer. LEVIN HAS BEEN in California since his ousting. Russell said yester- day, "Marc is having serious prob- lems getting a job. His personal life is in shambles. He's not even eligible for unemployment right now." Russell 'said that newspapers "from New York to California" have reported Levin's involvement in the Ann Arbor investment crisis, and he blames city officials for "blatantly ignoring the city charter" and publi- cizing the disciplinary firing. "Marc is just being screwed," Russell said. "We did not take any steps to publicize it," Laidlaw responded. "We did not have a press conference, a press release or anything." Historical status for 'U' bldgs.? AP Photo PTIAN PRESIDENT Anwar Sadat, right, gives King Hussein of Jordan a traditional embrace before Hussein departs Cairo for Amman yesterday. Hussein and Sadat were meeting in an effort to repair the rift among Arab nations result- 'om Sadat's peace initiative in the Middle East. (Continued from Page 1) WILLIAM STURGIS, assistant to the financial vice-president, said, "This really dilutes the value of the (National Preservation) Register." Sturgis said that in the case of Barbour-Waterman there was 16 months of "airing every- body's views," before the decision was made to tear the building down. Review Board member and Archi- tecture Prof. Kingsbury Marzolf, who abstained from the vote, called the pro- posal significant only for its "nuiscance value." Marzolf said that although the measures would be "less restrictive than they (University officials) think it will be," the University will have go through the review process to obtain approval for most of its projects. Washo agreed with Marzolf's predic- tion. "This changes absolutely nothing," he said. State and federal laws already re- quire owners to show that money from the government will not damage buildings on or eligible for the National Register. Vote brings variety to LSA-SG (Continued from Page 1) CAIRO (AP)-King Hussein, trying to mediate the Arab dispute over President Anwar Sadat's peace overtures to Israel, unexpectedly returned to Jordan yesterday after his talks with Sadat were cut short. Syrian President Hafez Assad, meanwhile, toured the Persian Gulf trying to get Sadat's bankrollers to use financial pressure to stifle the Egyptian leader's one-man peace cam- paign. IN BRUSSELS, Belgium, Secretary of State Cyrus Vance said before leaving on his own Middle East tour that Sadat's planned Cairo peace talks next week could lead to "an agreement in principle covering a comprehensive settlement." He said Washington and Moscow are deeply divided over the talks. "I do not believe they (the Russians) would support in any way the Cairo conference," he said. Vance, who spoke with reporters at the end of a meeting of Atlantic alliance foreign ministers, was scheduled to arrive ein Cairo late yesterday, Sadat and Hussein met for 2 hours Thursday night, and Egyptian newspapers and Jordanian diplomats said the talks were to resume yesterday, but 10 minutes after a grim- Slooking Sadat arrived at Kuoben P'alace for the expected meeting, the two rode off to Cairo airport and the Jordanian monarch flew home. THIS PROMPTED speculation that Hussein's mission had failed, at least for the moment. He had met Wednesday with Syria's Assad with no apparent results. Assad arrived in Kuwait yesterday from Riyadh, where he met Thursday with King Khaled of Saudi Arabia and Crown Prince Fahd, the Saudi prime minister. Saudi Arabia is the chief contributor of oil wealth to impoverished Egypt. There was no indication the Syrian president had suc- ceeded in getting Khaled and Fahd to put pressure on Sadat by threatening to cut off their crucial financial support. After Assad departed, the Saudi information minister, Mohammed Abdo Yamani, said King Khaled has "expressed hope that Allah will help the Arabs reunify their ranks and achieve their aspirations." The Syrian president was going today to Qatar, another oil-rich state on the Persian Gulf. A leading Egyptian newspaper editor who accompanied Sadat on his historic trip to Jerusalem told a news conference "I HAVE READ letters between President Sadat and King Khaled," said Moussa Sabri, editor-in-chief of Al Akh- bar. "I know that there were many contacts between President Sadat and Saudi Arabia. Saudi Arabia is backing the visit. So are Kuwait, the Gulf coast, Sudan, the Emirates, Morocco and Tunisia." "Syria will come back with Egypt because there is no alternative," the editor commented. "If the Syrians want to make war, they can't alone. If they are struggling for peace, we are struggling for peace." Hussein, attempting to breach the gap between Assad and Sadat, came to Cairo Thursday from Damascus. The Syrian government press and radio reported he failed to shake Assad's opposition to the direct Israeli-Egyptian dialogue engineered by Sadat. ' The king had been expected to follow Assad to Riyadh, but instead he went home to Amman. There was no explanation, and it was not known if he might go to Saudi Arabia later. Preparations continued for the second stage of Sadat's peace initiative-talks opening in Cairo Wednesday between Egypt and Israel, along with U.S. and United Nations representatives, to make preparations for a general Arab- Israeli peace conference in Geneva. UNCONFIRMED reports said Hussein might send an ob- server to the conference, but informed sources said he would hesitate to do so if that would threaten his relations with Assad. Another mediator trying to bring Sadat and Assad together asgain, U.S. Secretary of State Cyrus Vance, flew to Cairo yesterday from a NATO meeting in Brussels. Officials said he was able to arouse only lukewarm support among America's European allies for the Egyptian-Israeli peace ef- fort. The Soviet Union, criticized by Washington this week for refusing to attend the Cairo peace talks, lashed back at the United States. Tass, the official Soviet news agency, said Vance's efforts to make the Cairo meeting a success were "in direct contradiction" to the recent joint Soviet-American declaration on the Middle East, "which says Geneva talks must be held before the end of the year." ANOTHER APPROACH is taken by Irving Freeman, who ran with the For- ces of Goodness and Niceness party. "I look at this from a student govern- ment orientation rather than an academic one," he said, adding that his first goal is to rewrite the LSA Election Code. Earlier, however, Freeman de- scribed his candidacy in a different light: "I didn't run for the seat; I ran for the (election) subsidy. I wanted LSA-SG to pay me to put out a sheet on PESC," he said, referring to his alleg- edly slanderous campaign material against the Program for Educational and Social Change party. Victorious independent candidate Katherine Friedman espouses a view somewhere between Freeman's and Stechuk's. She is urging "a combina- tion" of both academic action and some changes in the student government aspects of LSA-SG. "I'd like to see stu- dent government as powerful as it was in the 60's," Friedman said. She voiced a desire for action on issues such as the distribution requirement, too. BULLSHIT PARTY member Mike Spirnak called money matters his first concern. Though he said he plans "not to forget the student," Spirnak's priori- ty is to review the LSA-SG budget and see where the funds from each stu- dent's mandatory 50-cent donation are channeled. Spirnak and Freeman are pressing their suit against the election even though they won seats. Freeman ad- mits that because of his victory, he might have a difficult time proving that the alleged election violations had harmed his campaign. The suit, which names Assistant Election Director Michael Harwood and LSA-SG itself as co-defendants with Election Director Yemen, seeks to in- validate the election and force Yemen, Harwood and LSA-SG to pay fines of $200, $100 and $600 respectively to the igjured parties. YEMEN, who said Thursday he "can't anticipate the outcome of the suit," reacted succinctly to the suggestion that he might be fined. He said: "Bull." The suit will be decided by the LSA Adademic Judiciary, a non-political body of seven students appointed by LSA-SG primarily to consider cases of academic misconduct. Judiciary Chair- man Steve Diamond said: "We generally hear cases of plagiarism, cheating and falsification of records - violations of the academic code of con- duct. Almost never do we get involved in anything like this." Diamond said the case probably will not be decided until January. The elec- tion results, he added, will stand until then. IN ADDITION to the candidates, three constitutional amendments were on the ballot to complete a month long reorganization of LSA-SG. All three passed by considerable margins. The amendments serve to reduce the power of the president, and reduce the quorum required to transact business. at meetings. Other aspects of the reorganization, according to LSA-SG President Dick Brazee, were designed to increase the visibility and credibility of LSA-SG and promote alternative educational programs in the college. Conferees in House and Senate agree on, payroll tax increases When Life goes 'to the movies,you'II pictures that werl never on the screc see" r' U Y r . r r r r a . r p 'e *n. f WASHINGTON (AP) - House and Senate conferees working on legisla- tion to keep the Social Security sys- tem solvent broke up in deadlock last night over an unrelated issue after agreeing on payroll tax increases that would, within a decade, more than triple the maximum amount any worker could pay. A Senate rider to- provide tax credits of up to $250 for higher educa- tion tuition was the issue that stymied efforts to pass legislation this year. THE SYSTEM that pays benefits to 37 million persons and collects taxes from 108 million workers is threat- ened with exhaustion of its reserves within five years. Senate conferees unanimously in- sisted on the tuition payment plan and House conferees were as ada- mantly opposed. Sen. Russell Long, (D-La.), the conference chairman, set no date for returning to the negotiating table, saying he would await word from the House members. "THE BILL IS not dead, it is only sleeping," he said. SQUIRTS! The agreement on the payroll tax increases followed intense pressure from the White House and the congressional leadership to bring a Social Security funding bill to a vote before Congress adjourns for the year. Whether a vote will occur this year in light of the deadlock is uncer- tain. Originally, Congress was sched- uled to vote on the bill next week. The maximum paid equally by workers and their employers cur- rently is $965.25 per year. THE CONFERENCE agreement would set the 1987 figure at $3,046. However, the ceiling would apply only to those earning at least $42,600. If the present law were left un- changed, the maximum tax in 1987 would be $2,012. The bill would raise Social Security taxes a total $227.3 billion from 1979 through 1987. Under the compromise, there would be no Social Security tax increases next year beyond those already provided for under existing law, which raises the maximum tax to $1,071 in 1978. THE CONFEREES also agreed to increase substantially the amount retired persons might earn without losing part of their Social Security earnings limit would go to $4,000 next year and increase in $500 increments to 1$6,000 in 1982. After that, the auto- matic adjustments would resume. The increase, however, would apply only to those 65 or older. Persons re- tiring at earlier ages would continue to be covered by existing law. THE. PANEL ALSO dropped a Senate proposal, supported by the Carter administration, that would have levied higher taxes on employ- ers than on employes. Also dropped in the compromise was a House provision 'for loans from the general treasury when Social Security re- serves run low. The propoAl to provide tax credits for tuition would cost the govern- ment about $1.2 billion a year. That was one of two unrelated pro- visions tacked onto the Social Secur- ity legislation. However, the confer- ees had reached a compromise on a series of unrelated welfare amend- ments. The key element of that com- promise is an immediate $187 million federal grant to help states, cities and counties pay their welfare costs. Sen. William Roth, (R-Del.), spon- sor of the tuition tax credit proposal, challenged the House conferees to let the full House vote on it without their endorsement. . '~ - V"'~ '7m ~WU'~IA in& ~