The Michigan Daily an Ten Cents Vol. TXXXIX No. 8-S Friday, May 11. 1979 Twenty Pages Ann Arbor, Michigc House rejects Carter's gas rationing plan CARTER HAD submitted the plan WASHINGTON (AP) - The House under a 1975 law requiring him to do so yesterday rejected President Carter's and giving Congress 60 days in which to request for standby gasoline rationing act on it. That time runs out today. authority despite an impassioned ap- The House recessed until next Mon- peal from Speaker Thomas O'Neill that day after the rationing vote, meaning "this is the only plan you have." there is no possibility the plan could be The vote was 246 to 159. revived. The vote killed the twice-modified However, the House did approve - plan that would have given the by a unanimous voice vote - Carter's president authority to order gasoline plan to require that thermostats in rationing in times of severe energy public buildings be set at no less than 80 shortages. degrees in the summer and no more O'NEILL BLAMED parochial in- than 65inthewinter. I terests for torpedoing the proposal, REP. JOHN Dingell, (D-Mich.), saying legislators looked only at how chairman of the House energy and the plan would affect their own areas. power subcommittee, said the law did "Today I'm shedding a tear for not require Carter to submit another America. This is the only plan you plan if Congress rejected his first one. have," O'Neill said in an emotional "The possibility of the president speech from the floor. submitting another plan is very slight," White House analysts had feared Dingell declared. from the beginning that modifications Voting against the measure were 106 made to pick up needed votes from Democrats and 140 Republicans. senators from large rural states would REP. JOHN Brademas, (D-Ind.), at- cost the plan support among urban tributed Carter's defeat partly to con- legislators in the House. fusion over the plan's impact on each member's district. He said many House members believed a vote for the plan would be "taking a leap into the unknown." The Senate had approved the plan eontrac ~ Wednesday by a58-39 margin. Backers of the standby plan had in- The city currently is planning to raise sisted it would be used only for a major the price of sewage service by 23 per interruption of oil supplies like another cent, and this year the increase is in Arab oil boycott and not to ease long large part due to paying for sludge lines at gas stations. hauling. "THIS IS A plan to put on the shelf in "We pay them n the basis of case this nation finds itself in a dire mileg, Ciy Ademin h bsista Syvete emergency," said Rep. Phil Gramm, (D-Texas). Murray said after he found out about And Energy Secretary James the sludge dumping last night. "If we find that he is either violating the law, Schlesinger, testifying yesterday ochrigus-for more than the ser- before the House Ways and Means or charging s rmrehntesr- Committee, asserted: "Unless there is vice he is providing, then we've got Comijteeasete"nteris problems," Murray said. a major debacle in the international Although the Ann Arbor sludge a arena - there iszero.probability of pears to be relatively free of pollutants, gasoline rationing." sai Abot, lauesin hecit'scon- But House Republican Leader John said Abbott, clauses in the city's - Rhodes of Arizona urged rejection, See CITY, Page 2 See U.S., Page 2 WHO SAYS members of royalty never get their hands dirty? Prince Khalid Talal Abdulaziz Al-Saud, nephew of King Khalid of Saudi Arabia, fills the gas tank of a friend's car in Redwood City, California. The 17-year-old high school senior com- plained about the long lines, which California's off-even rationing plan, imple- mented yesterday, was supposed to curtail. CITY WASTE DUMPED IN-ST A TE: Sludge hauler violates By JOHN GOYER The company that Ann Arbor pays to haul sludge from the city's waste treatment plant dumped sludge on farms in Michigan without telling the city and in violation of its contract, state, county, and city officials said yesterday. According to a Department of Natural Resources (DNR) official, the city also may bear legal responsibility for any harm to the environment resulting from the use of sludge as fer- tilizer on farm lands. CITY OFFICIALS discovered yesterday from the Michigan Depar- tment of Natural Resources (DNR) that the Ohio company, NyTREX, was dumping the city's sludge on a Sharon Township farm, in southern Washtenaw County. NyTREX managed to obtain "oral permission" from the DNR to dump sludge in Michigan, according to Richard Sprague, who is in charge of sludge disposal permits for the DNR. NyTREX failed for at least three weeks to tell the city it has been dum- ping sludge in Sharon Township, accor- ding to City Utilities Director Wayne Abbott. ABOUT one-quarter what NyTREX charges the city goes for fuel to haul sludge to Ohio, Abbott said. Women in By BETH PERSKY Women administrators have begun to appear in significant numbers on college campuses only in the past eight years, according to a recent study of the Office of Communications Services in Washington, D.C. The study reported the number of women in administration in state universities and land grant colleges has increased from a token few in 1971 to 21 per cent of all administrators in 1978. WOMEN ARE not prevalent in the highest level of administration, however - almosto80 per cent of female administrators are assistant or associate presidents or deans. At this University, only the dean of 'U' administration: Step-by-step gains the School of Nursing, Mary Lohr, and "They have been working to achieve be slower as a result of challenges men the dean of the School of Education, their objectives," said Brinkerhoff. are making in the courts. I don't think Joan Stark, are women, and bothfields "Over time, more than half of the ad- that's a reason for us to stop. This traditionally have been dominated by ministrators will be women." means it has to be pursued with per- women. Some women say they think recent sistent vigor," said Kate Davis, a black Affirmative action efforts seem to charges of reverse discrimination may woman appointed last week to the have begun channeling women into hurt the position of women in ad- position of clinical director of com- administration. ministration. munity health nursing of University "Women have made their way up to "I THINK it'll be difficult to continue Hospital. middle management, but women have the trend if affirmative action weakens Though the field of nursing ad- not made their way to the top slots," as it has seemed to," said former ministration is traditionally occupied said Sue Rasmussen of the University Associate LSA Dean Eva Mueller. "It by women, it is interesting to note that Affirmative Action Office. may be hard to maintain our goals. It the appointments of Davis, and of JAMES BRINKERHOFF, University may even be hard to remain where we Mayble Craig, another black woman, to vice-president and Chief Financial Of- are now because there are fewer out- the position of clinical director of ficer, said women aren't in top level side pressures (pushing for affirmative medical nursing, mark the first inroads administration because they've entered action.)" Mthe work force more recently than men. "The process of hiring women may S WOMEN, Pagez