CHANGING OF THE GUARD See Editorial Page f:J t Yi ir4 4i TROPICAL High-25* Low-8* See Today for details Latest Deadline in the State Vo. LXXXVII, No. 90 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, January 20, 1977 Ten Cents Ten Pages 00OJ see NLWS IA P~C.L. DA-MY What's your problem? Bet you never knew it until now - you've always had a secret craving to work at The Daily! Remember those nightmares you had as a small child in which you ran through the night, seeking security in the sound of dark, pounding machines? Hell, that just meant you wanted to be near our Associated Press wire! And the time you tripped and hurt yourself in front of an ad-. vertising agency, only to get yourself put up there for the afternoon until your mother came to pick you up? YoW subconscious was telling you to join The Daily business staff when you got a little older. And the themes you wrote in the sixth grade about being a great big basketball play- er or an Olympic swimmer? Just the start of a stint on The Daily sports staff. Why be unhappy any longer? Come to The Daily mass meeting next Tuesday, January 25, at 9:00 p.m., or watch this space for the times of some dorm get-togeth- ers next week. Let your subconscious be your guide. A resignation Walt Borland, treasurer of the Michigan Stu- dent Assembly (MSA) since October of last year, resigned his position at Tuesday night's assem- bly meeting.-Colleagues say Borland is boning up on his studies for graduation, and that he feels he doesn't have enough time to serve as treasurer. MSA members appointed an interim treasurer. Happenings . . ..don't kick off today until 4 p.m. when the Advisory Committee for Recreation Intramural and Club Sports (ACRICS) meets at the Central Campus Recreation Building ... also at 4, John Varey of the University of London's Westfield College will lecture on the "Staging of Plays in the Corrales of Golden-Age Spain" in the MLB Lecture Rm. 2. The talk is sponsored by the Dept. of Romance Languages ... then, at 7 p.m., the U of M Sky Divers are holding their first jump course in1047 E. Engineering ... at the Gay Community Services Center, 612 S. Forest, Suite B tonight at 7, there will be a meeting of the Gay Academic Union ... The Spartacus Youth League is holding a forum entitled "What Next for the Palestinians: Pax Americana or Prole- tarian Revolution in the Near East" at 7:30 in Conference Rm. D of the Michigan League ... and if yu're capable of being in two places at once, at 7:30 you can attend a poetry reading with Martha Merrill and Bob Walker at the Guild House, 802 Monroe ... and if you can't find any- thing to do at 7:30, how about dropping in at the Michigan League for a meeting of the Inter- varsity Christian Fellowship - you'll find the room number listed on the board just inside the door ... at 8 p.m., the Ann Arbor Democrats will have their general meeting at the Public Library, where the discussion will focus on the chief is- sues comprising the Democrats slate for the April city elections ... finally, the Michigan Women in Science are sponsoring a panel discussion at 8 p.m., in the East Conference Rm. of the Rack- ham Building. The topic: "What's a Nice Girl Like You Doing in Graduate School?" Refresh- ments will be served. Hua still around An official Chinese spokesperson dismissed re- ports Tuesday that former Vice Premier Teng Hsiao-Ping has become China's premier.. "The premier of the state council is comrade Hua Kuo- Feng," the spokesperson said. He said the report of Teng's appointment, which appeared in the Hong Kong newspaper Ming Pao, was absolutely groundless. For the past week wall posters have demanded the rehabilitation of Teng, who was purged last April and brandedh a rightwing "cap italist roader." Some posters have called for Teng to be made premier. r ! Mood of the campus Turbulence will return to the nation's college campuses - but it will come from teachers rather than students, a man who saw much of the campus violence a decade ago said yester- day. "I see more turbulence," said Dr. Clark Kerr, president of the University of California at the height of 1960s antiwar demonstrations. Kerr, basing his forecast on the results of a survey of 25,000 U. S. university teachers published yes- terday, said tension on campuses will increase as teachers become more willing to strike to get their demands. Meanwhile, the same survey showed college students have become more con- servative about executions (only 36 per cent be- lieve capital punishment should be abolished) and busing (74 percent oppose it), but are more lib- eral about women's equality and marijuana - 55 per cent of the nation's undergraduates believe the weed should be legalized. On the inside .. . Ybu'll find stories on gymnastics and wrest- ling on the Sports Page ... the Editorial Page devotes all its space to today's inauguration of Jimmy Carter ... and Arts offers Lee Donald- son's story on the New Black Repertory Com- CARTER ATTORNEY GEN. CHOICE OK'D Bell approved in 10-3 vote Hayden sees new movement rsing By ROBERT WALT "A grass roots movement of economic democracy is growing in this country, rising out of the frustration of the shadow of the -1960's," said Tom Hayden, speaking to a standing-room-only crowd at Rackham Auditorium last night. Hayden, a former Daily editor, founder of the Students for a Democratic Society (SDS), and activist in the civil rights and anti-war movements, spoke of a new way of dealing with our traditional national problems. "THE UNITED States is coming out of an age of expan- sionism and is finding out that the old way of dealing with problems no longer works," said Hayden. Sporting what he would call his "non sellout" clothes, Hayden looked as casual as the colleagues he addressed. "College grads can't find work, the middle class dream is crumbling, and the sick cannot get health care," he said. "While all this goes on, everyone is demanding more. "THE POOR are still poor but now they demand more See NEW, Page 9 Blacks protest Senate Judicars decision By JEFF RISTINE Special to The Daily WASHINGTON - The Senate Judiciary Committee yesterday approved the nomination of Judge Griffin Bell as U.S. attorney general, a move one civil rights activist called "a battle cry of attack on black Amer- ica. The vote of consent for president-elect Carter's choice as the nation's chief law enforcement officer was 10-3, with Michigan's Democratic Sen. Donald Riegle voting "present." IN A FINAL day of hearings before the committee, Bell was criticized again and again by black witnesses who attacked his record on civil rights as a Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals judge and his membership in private clubs which exclude black and Jewish persons. The head of Washington's NAACP, Clarence Mitchell, said he was disappoin'ted by the outcome of the committee vote, and Doily Photo by BRAD BENJAMIN Tom Hayden vowed to continue the fight against Bell by attempting to block formal approval in the full Senate. The Senate is scheduled to meet today shortly after Carter is sworn into office to confirm tOf annointment of his cabinet selections, all of whom have now been cleared by appro- priate committees. SADAT GIVES IN TO MOB: Cairo By AP and Reuter CAIRO - President Anwar Sadat, confronted by violent demonstrations which left many people dead, injured and ar- rested, yesterday suspended government-ordered price in- creases on several key com- modities. Authorities ordered a 14-hour curfew in several cities and gave riot police orders to shoot anyone outside without a pass. Four hours after the curfew went into effect at 4 p.m. po- lice reported they were still battling demonstrators at sev- eral locations, one near the People's Assembly in Cairo and another at a string of nightclubs on the road to the Pyramids. IN THE DOWNTOWN area of Cairo, however, streets were generally quiet. There was no vehicle traffic, though a few people walked about. The reported deaths tonight brought the unofficial fatality toll to 30 with some 400 in- jured. In the Cairo suburbs of Shu- bra and Babel Shareya, eye- witnesses said anti-riot squads opened firetand used tear gas bombs on thousands of rioters during six hours of post-cur- few fighting in the two suburbs, the poorest and m1ost densely populated in Cairo. ' Firemen and ambulances con- verged on the areas, described by one witness as a "battle- front." rocked by ri0 Sadat, who has been pressing richer Arab nations for more financial aid for his impover- ished country, returned to Cairo from the winter resort of As- wan to deal with the crisis. THE DEPUTY prime minister for economic affairs, Abdel Mo- neim Kaissouni, who was re- sponsible for the price increas- es, submitted his resignation 'but it was immediately refused by Prime Minister Mamdouh Salem. The riots broke out Tuesday after the government ended price subsidies on many items, jumping prices on food, gaso- line, cigarettes and other prod- ucts. Most of the increases amounted to only pennies, but they would total a sizeable per- centage of the average Egyp- tian's monthly ,salary of $80. A quarter of this goes for hous- ing, education, medicine, cloth- ing and utilities, leaving $60 for food and all other items. By giving in to the demon- strators' demands, Sadat again opened the question of whether Egypt can make the necessary reforms to put its economic house in order. A MINISTRY of Interior state- See RIOTS, Page 2 S (11(1 ,- MITCHELL said. he hones the ninner body of Congress will S'onsHder Bell separately, de- lnving their vote on the Atlanta iedqe to allow for further de- hate. He told reporters that Sen. Daniel Moynihan (D.-N.Y..) rniaht be sympathetic to black's nhiections against Bell. Onlyn Rtblican senators - Charles Mathias of Maryland, Jobn Hem III of Penn. and John Chaffee of R.I. - voted a7nt Bell's confirmation. Mathias, his voice breaking with emotion, said he would find it "impossible" to approve Bell even if he had been nomi- nated by a Republiean Presi- dont. After his brief statement which nreceeded the committee S.ote, Mathias stared' down- ward at his hands as if on the verge of tears. M I T C H E L L called Ma- thias "a man of real cour- aee." Riegle said he has told the n-esident - elect of his reserva- wr a tions concerning Bell but chose not to interfere withbthere- sity commendation. He said he vot- ed "present" because of the 'act. stren th of the language sup- ship norting Bell in the committee's Nhat formal statement of approval. "I think there is something wrong, in this case, with this nominee," Riegle said at one atis- pint in vesterdav's hearines. f an "The fact that there is this the kind of onnosition ought to tell s something . . that there are eleme-ts missing in this ap- rate pointment." WASHINGTON (P) - A rare annual decline in grocery prices helped hold inflation in 1976 to the lowest rate in four years, the government reported yester- day. Year-end figures from the La- bor Department showed consum- er prices rose a moderate four- tenths of 1 per cent in Decem ber. For the year, they were up 4.8 per cent. THIS WAS the best annual price perfor fanc o the economy has shown since 1972, when gov- ernment-wage price controls held increases to 3.4 per cent. It also was a sharp improve- ment from the seven per cent increase redorded in 1975 arnd farS 'btertAnthe 12.2tperncent jrm ie 1974 i-nd the 8.8 pern nflation rate in 1973. Falling prices for beef, pork and poultry led a nine-tenths per cent drop in grocery prices last year, the first over-the-year da mne im 15 years, the govern- ment said. In 1975, grocery prices rose 6.2 per cent. FOOD PRICES rose two tep nts'an e . per cent eebr iaft dropping in 1ovember, be- aefinger cfostsfor beef, eggscoffeapnoultry, fruits,' vegetables andre s ta u ra nt meals. Coffee prices jumped another 6.8 per cent last month, bring- ing the rise for the year to 57.9 per cent. Prices for nonfood 'commodi- See INFLATION, Page 2 AFSCME talks ,g o on By STU McCONNELL Local 1583 of the American Federation of State County and Municipal Employees (AFS- CME) meets Sunday to discuss the progress of its contract negotiations with the University. But unlike the ongoing, Graduate Employe Organiz- ation (GEO) negotiations AFSCME's talks seem headed tor a settlement rather than a stalemate. The 2300 members of AFSCME, 'which repre- sents maintenance men, food service workers, custodians, nurses aides and other service per- sonnel on campus, have been without a contract since a two-year pact expired December 31. BOTH SIDES AGREED to a one-month exten- sion of negotiations, and University and union representatives are optimistic about a settle- ment. "We haven't really come to settlement," said William Neff negotiating team. an impasse o of the Univer "GEO was the renewal of a first contr This is the fourth renewal - the relation with the union is farther along. We know m will work and what won't work," he added. AFSCME's Art Anderson said he was sr fied with the pace of negotiations and that if agreement isn't reached by the end of month a strike is not the only alternative. "If we're still progressing at the same we are now," Anderson said, "I'd have no re vations about recommending another two-v See AFSCME, Page 2 RIEGLE agreed with See SENATE, Page 2 the ~~-~ Transition:. New job for peanut From wire Service Reports WASHINGTON - A Georgia peanut farmer yesterday, break- fasted with his wife and daugh- ter, signed the trust documents that will remove him from the day-to-day control of his peanut business, packed his bags and :; headed for Washington where he will be sworn in as the na- tion's 39th President today. The new guard of Democrats crowded the capital to rejoice' as their mnan enters the White House, for Carter was on his way, promising "a new day, a new beginning, a new spirit for our country." The eleventh 0ou Ford bids i~.high 'post A f are Well w From Wire Service Reports WASHINGTON '- President Ford cleaned out his desk yes- terday, telephoned his farewells to world leaders, and pardoned Tokyo Rose..And in his last day in office, the lame duck leader approved what amounted to a token change in the ru s on clemency for Vietnam-er de- serters, but rejected blanket amnestyv. Also, in the Ford Administra- tion's final communication with Congress, a plan was submitted that would automatically re- move all federal gasoline price and allocation controls March 1 unless either the Ho.use or the Senate vetoes the nronosal with- P:; " 't: .... Itofil - -