For daily subscriptions, phone 764-0558 4 CIA INTERVENTION See Editorial Page YI L Ski Y A&F :43"tty MALAMUTIVE High-16 Low- -8 See Today for details Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVI, No. 84 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, January 8, 1976 10 Cents Eight Pages At IFUvSEE frw5 APPD4 cAL -lyy Let the buyer beware? The campus branch of the Washtenaw County Legal Aid reports that the city's Housing and Safety Department has not been complying with the local and state laws regarding housing in- spections. According to Legal Aid, the city inspects rental housing units less often than the once every two years required by law. Also the city collects minimal fines for the code violations they do re- port, the Legal Aid office charges. These problems could at least partially be solved if the city hired more building inspectors, the office says. Sounds good to us. Dope nole A dope ring described as "by far" the largest such operation in Michigan history is being metho- dically busted by the feds. The U.S. Drug Enforce- ment Administration said yesterday that agents have arrested 12 of 21 persons named in a federal igdictment on charges they conspired in a multi- billion dollar marijuana operation based in Detroit. A 13th defendant, authorities said, was already in custody in a state prison where he is serving a life sentence for murdering another defendant. The DEA regional director, Treodore Vernier, said that other defendants were arrested in San Fran- cisco, San Diego, Tucson, Boston, Providence, and Lawrence, Kansas. Vernier said the 21 were in- dicted by a federal grand jury in Detroit that spent months investigating an alleged wholesale mari- juana ring that handled about 15,000 tons of pot obtained in Mexico. Consumer courtship Detroit Edison is back in the news again, but instead of requesting the usual rate hike this time, the utility is attempting to win the harts of con- sumers. In taking what seems to be an enlightened approach, Edison filed a brief in the U.S. Supreme Court yesterday supporting its practice of allowing customers to trade in burned-out light bulbs for free ones. The southeast Michigan utility, facing a challenge to the practice from retail drugstore owners, said elimination of the free bulb program could cost Edison customers more than $3 million a year. Several retail drugstore operators have challenged this practice as a violation of federali anti-trust laws. Edison won in two lower court decisions, but the high court agreed in October to hear the retailers appeal. Leon Cohan, Edison vice president and general counsel, defended the com- pany position, stating that a decision favoring drugstore owners would sacrifice the public's in- terests to those of retail businessmen. And of course, Detroit Edison is always on the side of the consumer, right? Happenings .. * could teach you something today. There will be a mass meeting of the Arts Chorale at 3 p.m. in Aud. C, Angell Hall . . . Dr. Arthur Tarr of the USGS Earthquake Techtonics Division will lecture on the "Seismotectonics of Puerto Rico" at 3:30 in Rm. 1528 of the C.C. Little Bldg. . . . there will be a mass meeting of Project Outreach at 7:30 p.m. in Hill Aud. . . . all students interested in fencing for academic credit should attend a meeting at 8 p.m. in the Red Carpet Lounge at Alice Lloyd . . . and there will be a meeting for potential boxing enthusiasts at the same time and same place. Sinister deaths Ann Arbor's VA Hospital is not the only place where mysterious respiratory arrests have occur- red. A New Jersey county prosecutor has reopened an inconclusive 10-year investtigation into 13 "sus- picious" deaths at an Oradell, N.J. hospital. The inquiry had postulated that an insane surgeon might be responsible. Bergen County Prosecutor Joseph Woodcock has obtained a court order to exhume several of the bodies in order to search for traces of the drug curare, a respiratory de- pressant similar to Pavulon, the suspected cause of death of six patients at the VA Hospital here. Dr. Stanley Harris, administrator of the Riverdell Hospital, said the target of the investigation is a South American doctor who was on the hospital staff at the time. Curare has been knowns for its use by some South American Indians as a poison on arrowtips. On the inside . . . . . Marty Porter tells students how to locate loopholes in their leases on the Editorial Page .. . Sports Page features coverage of last night's hockey game with the national team from Czecho- slovakia . . . and Jim Valk reviews Lucky Lady on the Arts Page. .S. auto sales lag in Soviet ships head for Angola WASHINGTON ,P)-The pres- ence of two Soviet ships near strife-torn Angola was noted by the White House yesterday as further evidence of continued Soviet involvement in the Afri- can nation. "The President views this with the same dismay as he views the over-all Soviet inter- vention in Angola," said Ron Nessen, press spokesman for President Ford. MEANWHILE, NBC News re- ported that South Africa will pull its troops out of Angola soon in hopes the move will strengthen efforts to negotiate a settlement. NBC diplomatic correspondent Richard Valeriani said: "The Administration has re- ceived word the South Africans will be out of Angola within the next 48 h o u r s. Diplomatic sources say the decision to pull out was made by the South Afri- cans themselves, and was not the result of pressure from the United States. "NEITHER South African' nor State Department officials will comment on the recordtbecause, as one of them put it, the situa- tion is too delicate. "The South African nation is designed to strengthen the hand cf anti-Soviet countries whenthe Organization of African Unity holds its special summit meet- ng on Angola next week. "With the South Africans out by then, it will make it easier for the AUO to apply diplomatic pressure to get the Russians and the Cubans out as well and to promote a political solution in- volving all three competing fac- tions in Angola." THE RUSSIANS were said to be continuing their involvement however, according to Nessen. H° said the presence of the So- viet shins near Angola is further evidence of "continuing Soviet involvement in an area where they have no legitimate in- tersts." In London, a British govern- ment statement called for an i-mediate cease-fire in Angola, the withdrawal of foreign troops and a ban on arms deliveries. The statement was issued af- See SOVIET, Page 2 .975 Foreign autos score big increases DETROIT (UPI) - Im- ported autos grabbed a rec- ord 18.3 per cent share of a depressed 1975 U.S. a u t o market that saw the "Big Four" American companies slip to their lowest point for a non-strike year since 1962. Together, t h e domestic and foreign automakers re- ported yesterday t h a t 8.6 million cars were bought in the United States last year. THAT'S OFF 2.5 per cent from sluggish 1974 levels and nearly 25 per cent behind the record 11.4 million cars sold in 1973 before the twin effects of an energy crisis and a recession sent the industry into a two- year tailspin. Imports accounted for 1.6 mil- lion sales, 12 per cent above last year and the third highest year in history. Domestic automakers sold 7,050,120 cars, 5 per cent below 1974, 27 per cent behind record 1973 and the worst for a non-strike year since 1962. Among the imports, perennial leader Volkswagen slipped to second spothbehind the Japanese Toyota with another Japanese model, the Datsun, a close third. VW sales slipped 20 per cent from 1974 and were -the lowest since 1962 as it gave up the im- port lead it held for more than 20 years. TOYOTA SOLD 283,909 cars, a 19 per cent gain but still 38,000 fewer cars than the smallest American automaker- American Motors. Datsun sales jumped 37 per cent over 1974. Most domestic and foreign auto executives expect sales in 1976 to reach at least 10 million cars with General Motors Chair- man Thomas Murphy predicting a high 10.2 million car sales. They agree the entire gain will be in the domestic car market with import sales holding at about 1.6 million cars. "We're entering 1976 in an economic climate considerably improved from that facing us at the beginning of 1975," said Bennett Bidwell, Ford sales vice president. "With consumer con- See DOMESTIC, Page 3 Daily Photo by STEVE KAGAN Cancelled Czech The Michigan hockey team got a taste of international competition last night as the Czechoslovakian national team came into Yost to battle the Wolverines. Here a Czech puckster fires a shot at Michigan goalie Rick Palmer and Palmer makes a nice stick save. Defenseman John McCahill prevents any attempt at a re bound shot by checking another Slovic player. COMMUNISTS WAN T SHA RE OF POWER: Italian governmIent collapses By AP and Renter ROME, - The Italian govern- ment resigned last night follow- ing a decision by the Socialist Party to withdraw its support from the 13-month-old coalition. Health Minister Antonio Gul- lotti told reporters the govern- ment's decision to resign was made at a 15-minute cabinet meeting. PRIME Minister Aldo Moro immediately went to the Quiri- nale Presidential Palace to hand in the government's resig- nation to President Giovanni Leone. The government was Italy's 37th since the fall of Fascism in 1943 and had lasted 411 days, making it the 10th longest in the country's postwar history. Leone asked Moro to stay on as caretaker premier while po- litical parties hold talks aimed at forming a new government. IN withdrawing their back- ing in parliamentary voting, the Socialists - a Marxist group that is Italy's third largest par- ty - complained the Moro gov- ernment had ignored their ideas for solving the country's eco- nomic ills. They also charged non-Communists are prejudiced against the Communist party. The government's end came as an authoritative Washington source claimed the CIA is fun- neling $6 million directly to members of the Christian Dem- ocratic party and the Democra- tic Socialists, a party distinct from the Socialists. There was no known link between the funds report and the govern- ment collapse. Leaders of the two parties, as well as top officials of the Re- publican party, denied receiv- ing any CIA money. The Re- publican party had been named by the New York Times and the Washington Post as receiv- ing such funds. THE Socialists, though not members of the coalition, had provided its majority in parlia- ment. But it issued a state- ment after a party meeting yes- terday asking for a broadly based government that was both "consciousof the emer- gency nature of the situation" and more open to the contribu- tion of the Communists. The Socialists have long been pressing for the Communists to have a bigger say in govern- ment even if not part of the cabinet, but the Christian Dem- ocrats have consistently refus- ed. Court denies Nixon control of documents By AP and UPI WASHINGTON - A three-judge federal appeals court said today former President Richard Nixon might "distort or destroy" the records of his years in office and refused to give him control over presidential tapes and documents from his administration. The court said that former President might attempt to make documents public so as to improve the historical record of his administration. "THAT RISK might rationally be thought by Congress to be considerably magnified by reference to the circumstances sur- rounding Mr. Nixon's departure from office," the panel said. The court said Watergate revelations are "too familiar and too well-recorded elsewhere to merit elaboration by us." But it said "the temptation to distort or destroy the historical record might be thought by Congress to be less resistable in the event that the materials provided some foundation for allegations that misconduct took place." Nixon had filed suit contending that the 1975 Presidential Re- cordings and Material Preservation Act infringed on the separa- tion of powers, invaded Nixon's privacy and infringed on his rights to free speech and association. See COURT, Page 3 Students upset over dorm lottery plan By BILL TURQUE Several students and mem- bers of the University Housing staff expressed dissatisfaction and reluctance yesterday over the prospect of another re-ap- plication lottery, to determine who will return to the dorms next year. The plan, the product of a student/staff committee which studied the reapplication prob- lem, lists several categorical exemptions to the lottery - meaning that those who meet the criteria will be assured of dorm space regardless of their success or failure in the draw- ing. IN ADDITION to incoming freshpersons (who do not par- ticipate) and handicapped stu- dents, s o p h o m o r e foot- ball players, Residential Col- lege sophomores, and Bursley residents who are either fresh- persons in the School of Music or upperclasspersons in the College of Architecture and Ur- ban Planning are among those, 'It's unfortunate that we have to have a lot- tery .. . but we do not have enough student housing.' -Peter Schoch, director of off-campus housing H-ouse to act on pot bill By TIM SCHICK A bill reducing Michigan's marijuana penalties is expect- ed to be voted on by the state House of Representatives after [ IX Rent strike saga continues By JAY LEVIN Tenants continue to withhold their rent, court hearings are beginning, and two the fund to expand greatly when all Janu- ary payments are collected. COOPERMAN termed Sunrise's young, recogoize the AATU as a bargaining team. Smirise Associates brought suit against members of the tenants union last month