100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

July 19, 1973 - Image 10

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1973-07-19

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Page Ten

THE SUMMER DAILY

Thursday, July 19, 1973

Phase4 outlined by President

(continuedtfromPage 3)
he will strive to achieve a bal-
anced budget in fiscal year 1974,
rejecting a tax increase as a way
to cool off the economy.
SHULTZ, READING the state-
ment, told n e w s m e n: "The
budget policy is a return to that
old-time religion: Balance the
budget."
As expected, the President kept
the wage standard of earlier
phases in effect. This means that
pay increases are generally sub-
ject to a 5.5 per cent wage guide-
line plus 0.7 per cent for fringes.
The Phase 4 system is the most
complex one that the adminis-
tration has tried in its attempt
to combat runaway inflation.
THE AIM of the new system
is to let prices go up only as
RRP waives
jury trial right
Rainbow People's Party (RPP)
members Pun Plamondon and
Craig Blazier waived the right
to a jury yesterday in their Ca-
dillac trial.
The two are charged with ex-
tortion, conspiracy to commit ex-
tortion, and criminal usury
stemming from an alleged mari-
juana deal earlier this year.
THE LEGAL move followed
one-and-a-half days spent quizz-
ing prospective jurors. The de-
fense, led by Detroit attorney
Hugh "Buck" Davis, decided
that the Cadillac jurors are "so
isolated from the lifestyle and at-
titudes of young people that it
would be impossible for them to
impartially decide the merits of
the case," RPP spokesman Da-
vid Fenton said.
District Court Judge William
Peterson of Cadillac will now be
trying the case. He took over
the case about a month after
Plamondon and Blazier were ar-
rested.
Although Peterson has denied
several defense motions, includ-
ing one asking a change of venue
to Washtenaw County and anoth-
er" seeking dismissal of all
charges on the grounds of po-
litical persecution, Fenton term-
ed the judge "concerned with
bringing out the truth."
Centicore
Bookshops, Inc.
336 Maynard, 663-1812
1229 S. University, 665-2604
ANN ARBOR'S MOST
COMPLETE BOOKSTORES

far as business costs rise.
For example, the price ceilings
for gas, heating oil and diesel
fuel will be based on the whole-
saler's actual cost of product
plus what ever markup applied
to a retail sale of the same pro-
duct on Jan. 10, 1973.
As during Phase 2, large com-
panies with annual sales of more
than $100 million will be required
to clear all their price increases
with the government in advance.
SOME INDUSTRIES will be
exempt from Phase 4 controls at
the outset, including the lumber
industry, most of the regulated
utilities in the country and the
price of coal under long-term
contract.
Companies with 60 or fewer
workers also will be exempt
from controls.
In releasing his freeze on food,
Nixon called on American farm-
ers to produce as much as they
can, saying he hopes reports are
untrue that farmers don't want
to raise livestock because of un-
certainty over price controls.
The new rules, said the Nixon
statement, should give the farmer
"confidence that the government

would not keep him from earn-
ing a fair return on his invest-
ment in providing food."
MA
PUT THE LIFE
OUT OF YOUR MATCHE
BEFORE THEY PUT THE UF-
,~OUT OF YOUR FORESTS.
T

I

Daily Photo by KEN FINK
Beat the heat
This young Art Fair goer found his own answer to the heat yester-
day as he browsed through the booths containing the work of both
local and out-of-state artists. The fair runs through Saturday
evening.
x-aide LaRue talks;
differs with Mitchell

TOW
. Itchen
j port
415 DETROIT ST.
ANN ARBOR MICI.

(continued from Page 3)
Ulasewicz told of being the bag
man in transferring funds from
President Nixon's lawyer Her-
bert Kalmbach to the men await-
ing trial for the Watergate break-
in.
ONCE HE stuffed $75,100 in a
laundry bag, carried it on planes
in a paper sack as he shuttled
between New York and Wash-
ington. And when the money was
refused by the first two lawyers
he contacted, Ulasewicz said-, "I
wanted to get rid of all those
cookies, $75,100."
- He placed one paper sack on
a lobby ledge, put another batch
of money in an airport locker
and taped the key under the tele-
phone in a public booth.
KALMBACH CALLED him to
Washington in late June 1972
and asked him to undertake the
assignment.
They set up a system of con-
tacting one another at telephone
booths-with Kalmbach using the

name Novak and Ulasewicz the
name Rivers.
Once, when he was carrying
$50,000, Ulasewicz said he be-
came concerned by s e c u r i t y
checks at the airport because a
man in front of him was stopped.
"So I went into a coughing fit
and I went down to the Pennsyl-
vania Railroad and took the train
home," he said as the hearing
room burst into laughter.
ULASEWICZ testified he made
four payments to the Hunts be-
tween July and Sept. 19.
The first time, he said, he
taped an airport locker key to
the bottom of a telephone in an
airport booth and watched as
Ms. Hunt picked up the key.
"What if someone had come in
and found that; Mr. Ulasewicz,
while you were watching?" asked
a s s i s t an t committee counsel
Terry Lenzner.
"WELL, HE would be very
quickly relieved of that key,"
said the burly ex-cop.

Michigan Repertory '73
T ONIGH T
in the air-conditioned POWER CENTER
WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE'S
The Comedy of Errors
IN REPERTORY THROUGH-JULY 27
POWER CENTER BOX OFFICE OPEN
12:30-5:00 P.M. MON. 763-3333
12-30-8:00 P.M. DAYS OF PERFORMANCE
Seasan Subscriptians $7.00-$10.50
INDIVIDUAL TICKETS $200-$3.00
TOMORROW
GEORGE.BERNARD SHAW'S
Mrs. Warren's Profession,
IN REPERTORY THROUGH JULY 28

FREE~
AN
12:00
7:30-1C
10:00-11

ARTS FESTIVAL
N ARBOR STREET ART FAIR

ENTERTAINMENT SCHEDULE
THURSDAY, JULY 19th

noon
1:00
2:00
3:00
4:00
5:00
6:00
7:00
0:00
8:30
9:00
1:30

STONE GROUND, light rock band
ANN MARIE SCHRAMM, song writer, singer, guitar
OKRA, jazz band
TODD KABZA & JOHN DIAN', rag-time songs, blue-grass, guitar
and harmonica
SINE NOMINE popular medieval and renaissance music; lute,
recorder, crum horn, viola do damba
Turkish folk, South Serbian Harem and Israeli dances
The Human Mime Troup, ICE CUBE ON A LEASH
THE R.F.D. BOYS, blue-grass music
HOOTENANNY, hosted by Linda Siglin of the ARK
POETRY FESTIVAL in the Union Gallery of the Michigan Union
ANN ARBOR CHAMBER ORCHESTRA presenting Beethoven and Haydn
in the Michigan Union ballroom. Donation $1 to cover costs. .
NOAH BLINDSIDE, jazz, rock and blues
FREE MOVIES-Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton silents; on the diag

Presented by U-M Artists and Craftsmen Guild
and the Ann Arbor Council for Performing Arts

,r
4 000%

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan