Page Two
THE MICHIGAN DAILY
Sunday, September 28, 1975
Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, September 28, 1975
Al
FIND BIG SAVINGS AT THE VAULT
I
SAVE
STEPS
MONEY
TIME
THE
IMAGINARY MENAGERIE
presents
Alice Through the
looking Glass
'ReSearch
reveals
big litter
problem
(Continued from Page 1)
"Diunern the d ism
Fight
brewing over
domestic oil prices
DRIVE IN-DRIVE STRAIGHT THRU
This SUN., SEPT. 28,
at 2:00 p.m.
(Continued from Page 1)
ning against the "oil octopus"
and the Ford energy policies,
decisively won the state's long.
disputed Senate seat.
The next day, the House voted
by 'the surprisingly large ma-
jority of 242 to 151 in favor of
keeping domestic controls and
setting a price level that is low-
er than the current one.
HOUSE Democratic Leader'
Thomas O'Neill (D-Mass.) said
the New Hampshire result add-
ed 30 votes to the majority in
favor of controls.
In the Senate, meanwhile,
some Democrats saw the New
Hampshire result as an influ-
ence in Ford's decision to accept
an extension of controls under
conditions that the Democrats
sought.
"Whether President Ford has
been reading the economic mdi-
cators or only the results of the
New Hampshire election, the
President should be congratu-
lated for agreeing to this exten-
sion," Sen. Henry Jackson (D-
Wash.) said.
JACKSON, who heads the Sen-
ate conferees in the effort to
send a congressional energy
measure to the White House,
noted that the extension "gives
the President time to ra-think
his ideas about price decontrol."
He also made clear the Demo-
cratic adamance, declaring "I
4o not believe American people
will permit a new surge of in-
flation simply to reach a paper
I agreement."
Senate Democratic L e a d e r
Mike Mansfield said yesterday
that a continued deadlock right
up to the 1976 election "is a pos-
sibility" but expressed hope
"something can be worked out.
"IF WE don't," he added,
"we'll both be blamed."
But many Democrats believe
that the blame for failure to
enact legislation is preferable,
both economically and political-
ly, to acceptance of the presi-
dential plan to force an increase
in fuel prices.
With Ford having made clear
to everyone he favors higher
prices as the best way to cut
consumption, they are deter-
mined to avoid a situation where
the voters can say they, too,
approved such a policy.
Y;tj
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OPEC nations agree to hike
world oil prices 10 per cent
(Continued from Page 1)
Other OPEC oil ministers
continued meeting in an at-
tempt to catch up on unfinished
business, including a decision
on whether to drop the dollar
as a calculating currency and
switch to special drawing rights
- an artificial international
currency created by the Inter-
national Monetary Fund and
based on the values of major
world currencies.
THE OPEC conference saw
a full-scale clash between
Sheikh Ahmed Zaki Yamani,
Saudi Arabia's oil minister, and l
Iranian Interior Minister Jam-
shid Amouzegar, the driving
force behind a majority move-
ment favoring a larger in-
crease.
The debate, unusually heat-
ed, occupied the ministers from
the moment they started meet-
ing on Wednesday.
Sheikh Yamani, OPEC's lead-
ing advocate of cheaper oil,
first demanded continuation of
a nine-month price freeze which
ends next Tuesday. He then
compromised on a five per cent
raise next week, to be followed
bv a further five per cent in
Jpnumlrv, conferences sources
said.
T 11 E MAJORITY bloc, i-
-lidinq Iran. Traa. Gabon, Ni-
'aria nnd Libya, had held out
fnr a 1.5 rr ent increase. 1Fqr-
Unr Go','P hwirR" nrPGCed fnr
ren aof 20 or even 28 rer cent.
THE MICHT(AN DAILY .
Volume LXXXVI, No. 22
Sunday, September 28, 1975
Is edited and managed by students
st the TTniversity of Michigan. News
phone 764-0562. second class postaszr
paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106.
IPubished d a i l y Tuesday through
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Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription
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local mal (other states and foreign).
Other members of OPEC are
Algeria, Ecuador, Indonesia,
Kuwait, Qatar and the United
Arab Emirates.
OPEC, even though it reflects
a moderating influence by
some oil producing countries.
F".1
The decision to accept a 10 "WHILE THE increase was
per cent raise was a major not as large as some expected,
compromise by the "hawks" nevertheless, it will have a sig-
and even some moderates, but nificant impact. It will worsen
also represented a concession inflation throughout the world
by Sheikh Yamani, who had and it will hamper the fragile
said 10 per cent was acceptable. nroce's of economic recovery.
It will hit the poorer countries
BECAUSE OF the vigor of the hardest."
Sheikh Yamani's onnoition to Treasury Secretary William
a larger increase, OPEC came Simon lambasted the 10 per
to an oen slit. But m- etn s h two bildion dollars to the
isters said they were determin-sUme oilo billansaid
ed to avoid a rift that coulditwas anprent "some of the
have impaired the organiza- more fanatical members" of
tion's massive financial power. 1 PFChad won out.
Meanwhile in Washington, "It's obvious that some of the
President Ford declared that more fanatical members (of
the 10 per cent hike would OPEC) won out, using their
worsen inflation throughout the nhonv economic justification for
world and said he strongly re- the nrice increase. But it was
gretted the move by OPEC. a purely olitical decision and
"I strongly regret the price one based on their fiscal pro-
increase announced today by I fligacy," Simon said.
Patty Hearst shows
two faces to world
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuter)-Patricia Hearst, in a week of
legal affidavits, leaked telephone calls and statements, had pre-
sented the world two contradictory faces of "Patty," the wealthy
newspaper heiress and "Tania" the gun-carrying revolutionary.
But Dr. Louis West, one of the three psychiatrists appointed
psychiatrists appointed to investigate her sanity, says if she
were allowed to go home and into the outside world again she
would quickly become a normal woman who was no longer
"Patty" or "Tania" but someone in between.
THE PSYCHIATRIC tests on Hearst ordered by U.S. District
Judge Oliver Carter last Tuesday are expected to be concluded
early next week.
Dr. West, a brainwashing expert from the University of Cali-
fornia at Los Angeles, has refused to talk with reporters since
his court appointment.
But in an' interview with Reuter two days before, he said:
"If a person who has been subject to extreme or unusual stress
commits an illegal act in the belief that it is necessary for the
preservation of her life . . . then that mental state has to be
taken into account by a court, judge or jury."
LAWYERS appointed by Hearst's family in an affidavit signed
by her last Tuesday said she was so terrified and brainwashed
by the S.L.A. that she went along on the bank robbery under
duress and has been living in a fantasy world of near-insanity
ever since.
To counter these defense arguments the prosecution released
the texts of two conversations Hearst made on tapped jail tele-
phones which tended to show she was in command of her
mental faculties.
In one of the talks with friend Patricia Tobin, Hearst said
she intended issuing a statement which would be radically
different from her court affdavit if she found she could not get
bail.
"If I find out that I can't for sure, then I'll issue a state-
ment, but I would just as soon give it myself, in person. And
it'll be revolutionary feminist perspective totally . . . my
politics are really different now from way back when."
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