Vol. LXXXVIII, No. 17-S ~mi ~iy~u AILY Thursday, May 25, 1978 ich g n.Sixteen Pages Ann Arbor, Michigan Ten Cents Council approves budget Daily Photo by JOHN KNOX Pied pipers Flautists Chester Burke (left) and Ed Seymore drew a modest crowd of music maniacs at their informal concert in Nickel's Arcade yesterday afternoon. SENATE CONFEREES COMPROMISE: Energy impasse broken WASHINGTON (AP) - House- The conference was named to recon- - although a major departure from the Senate energy conferees approved a cile wide differences between House original administration proposal - compromise plan for natural gas and Senate versions of the energy plan puts the energy plan back on the pricing yesterday, ending an impasse Carter submitted to Congress in April legislative track and leaves taxes the on President Carter's energy program 1977. only major section of the five-part plan that has lasted since December. While the House gave the President remaining to be resolved. By a 10-7 vote, Senate conferees went most of what he wanted, the Senate Conferees previously reached ten- along with the proposal to lift federal rejected the major elements - in- tative agreement on parts dealing with price controls on domestically cluding the oil tax and Carter's energy conservation, coal conversion produced, newly discovered gas on Jan. proposal to keep price controls on and electric rate-setting. 1, 1985, and to provide for about a 10 per naturalgas. These parts are now expected to be cent increase in gas prices each year moved to final floor votes in both houses until then. THE GAS-PRICING AGREEMENT See ENERGY, Page 9 HOUSE NEGOTIATORS had accep- ted the messure on Tuesday by a 13-12 1~ for the plan yesterday bythe same U. . to m onitor disa margin. UNITED NATIONS (AP )-The United States has offered buildup in Europe an Congressional analysts said the com- to serve as the "eyes and ears of peace" to help make disar- "IT WILL BE in promise would cost consumers an mament work for a world spending almost $1 million a minute policy unilaterally estimated $9 billion through 1985 - or for weapons. toward a multilater somewhere between $20 and $50 each The American proposal-to help set up monitoring systems Pact nations havea1 year in higher heating bills for the like one in the Mani Desert between Egyptian and Israeli for- Mondale saide average family of four that uses gas. ces-was unveiled yesterday by Vice President Walter Mon- monitoring methods Leaders predicted the plan would dale to a special U.N. disarmament conference. detection projects receive final approval by both houses, NEARLY 130 officials, including 20 heads of state and 53 make disarmament although probably by close votes and cabinet ministers, are scheduled to speak at the conference. The Sinai proj with the prospect of a possible filibuster The five-week session was called so the 149 U.N. member agreement between in the Senate. countries could search for ways to halt the nuclear weapons Secretary of State H race and divert the nearly $400 billion spent on arms each year involved, providing IT WAS THE first time the full to peaceful purposes. - buildups. negotiating panel has been able to While pledging the Carter administration's commitment to MONDALE SAIL agree on anything since it first took up reduce arms sales and curb nuclear weapons, Mondale said "no larger in real te natural gas pricing shortly after the United States cannot reverse the arms race by itself. in the broadest seto 'Thanksgiving. He accused the Soviet Union of an unprecedented arms Big chunk goes to repair potholes By DAN OBERDORFER City Council last night approved a $37 million budget, including $1.5 million to be channeled into repairing Ann Ar- bor's deteriorating roads. Among the changes were drastic cuts for the forestry department, the city airport and golf courses; an increase in parking ticket fines; $50,000 for a tor- nado warning system, and a $2,500 raise for City Administrator Sylverster Murray. The city attorney's office was refused permission to hire another lawyer. AFTER AN HOUR and a half of discussion, Council voted -I to change by $328,500 a general fund budget proposed last month by Murray. Seven votes were needed in order to override Murray's blueprint. The seven-member Republican caucus voted as a bloc to pass its amen- dments. Councilman Earl Greene (D- Second Ward) was the only Democrat to approve of the amendments. The budget akes effect July 1 and runs through next June. THE REPUBLICAN caucus also an- nounced it would modify by $500,000 the Community Development Block Grand (CDBG) budget, about half of which will go toward road repairs. The original CDBG budget had been ten- tatively approved by Council last mon- th. The funds are provided by the federal government for improving neighborhoods. The roads will receive $50,000 more than under Murray's plan. Council will See COUNCIL, Page 14 rmame n t nd told the delegates: creasingly difficult for us to sustain our unless there is more rapid movement ral effort at restraint." He said Warsaw tank advantage over NATO of nearly 3-1. experience in the Mideast shows that s such as aerial photography and ground can create the confidence necessary to work. ect is part of the 1975 disengagement Israel and Egypt negotiated by former Henry Kissinger. About 200 Americans are g assurances against surprise weapons D THE United States has a defense budget rms" than two decades ago and is engaged d arms control negotiations in its history. See U.S., Page 14