Wednesday, June 18, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven ednsdyJue 8,195 HEMIHIANDALYPae!e' e Dorm meal rebates to face tightening House defeats effort to cut trust fund from energy bill (Continued from Page 1) opposition to it, and he makes all the final decisions, no mat- ter what." Freeman added that as early as May 14 student committee members told Feldkamp that students should be warned of the changes. "I've brought up cancellations all along," he ex- plained. "Since we're changing things, t h o s e people affected should be allowed to cancel." HOWEVER Feldkamp insist- ed the matter requires individ- ual consideration. "Somebody who benefited from a previously e r r on e o u s interpretation (of meal rebate standards( doesn't persuade me he should be au- tomatically considered for a cancellation." Meal rebates, according to Freeman, are not illegal opera- tions but an understood part of dorm life. "The student signs a lease and he's getting a whole package. If the package is al- tered, he should be allowed to get out." He also questioned the legality of Feldkamp's intentions to dis- criminate b e t w e e n students whose diets were restricted for reasons of religion and those with personal objections, such as vegetarians: "I'M UNALTERABLY opposed to it. People who for matters of conscience do not want to should not be forced to eat the food-it's as simple as that." Feldkamp said that meal re- bates previously cost the dorm system $60-$70,000 a year "be- cause students off the meal plan are scattered throughout the system and there can be no staff reductions." He added that labor costs constitute 60 per cent of the food service budget. Using added funds from meal rebates along with other dorm service cutbacks recommended by the Cost Reduction Commit- tee in areas such as mainten- ance, Feldkamp feels, "we can easily do a break even budget." However Freeman claimed that the committee as yet had developed no final package of recommendations to erase the total projected deficit. "I'd like to know how Feldkamp knows what the committee plans to institute," he said. WASHINGTON ({P) - The en- ergy tax and tariff bill survived a new attack yesterday as the House rejected .an attempt to wipe out the measure's propos- ed energy conservation and con- version trust fund. By 247 to 162, the House de- feated an effort by Rep. Wil- liam Steiger (R-Wis.) to elim- inate the trust fund from the energy legislation MONEY FROM the trust fund would go toward research and development of new energy technology. The fund would be fed by taxes that the bill would levy on some business use of oil and natural gas, as well as receipts from new duties on im- ported petroleum. The House, starting on a second week of action on amendments to the energy bill, already has killed proposed fea- tures of the bill which w : u 1 d have boosted the federal gaso- line tax and would have put a tax on gas-guzzling new cars. House voting on the energy measure resumed shortly after the Ways and Means Commit- tee agreed to consider a sweep- ing set of complex and contro- versial general tax-revision is- sues in a pair of legislative packages, including possible ex- tension of the newly enacted general tax cuts. FOLLOWING a closed-d o o r committee session, committee Chairman Al Ullman (D-Ore.) said there would be a two phase legislative approach to tax re- vision, starting soon with hear- ings aimed at getting "a tax re- form bill on the floor in Oc- tober" for full House acion. This initial bill would be fol- lowed by a second legislative package of tax revisions on which hearings would begin in November, Ullman said. Tax cuts enacted earlier this year for in ividuals are sched- uled to expire at the end of tie year. VARIOUS tax cuts for busi- nesses enacted this year a r e o heduled to expire over the next two years. Other isues to be examined as part of the first package, Ullman said, are capital gains and losses; capital formalion including fast depreciation, in- vestment tax credits and the in- tegration of corporate and in- dividual taxes; and shelters. The first package alao will in- clude consideraion of various tax-simplification matters invol- ving deductions for child care, alimony payments, and expens- es attributable to business use of homes and rental of vacation homes, Ullman said. ASSORTED issues involving foreign income also would be considered in the first package, Ullman added, along with var- ious problems involving prepar- ers of income tax returns and the tax-exempt status of condo- miniums and homeovner as- sociations. Somt liberals on the commit- tee complained that including capital gains and losses .and capital formation issues in the consideration of the first pack- age may mean the measure will be loaded doon to the point where tax revision efforts will produce no bill this year. However, Ullman, said includ- ing those matters, "just makes it tougher to meet the sched- ule . . . it will mean a lot of hard, intensive work." MANY of the items to be studied by the committee had been part of last year's tax-re- vision drive which bogged down in constant argument over as- sorted complicated tax propos- als and resulted in no legisia- tion getting on the books. For its second package, Ull- man said, the committee agreed to focus on estate and gift tax- ation, and the tax treatment of single persons and married couples. Happiness is making you look great U-N Stylists at the UNION City, police gear-up for heated contract talks (Continued from Page 1) The statistics also showed that in 11 of the 32 cases, the arbi- trators selected the last offer of the public employer, while in the remaining 21 cases the unions emerged victorious as their last offers were selected. An additional factor in favor of the command officers is the fact that Joseph Valenti will enter the arbitration process as the union's arbitrator. Valenti is reputed to be one of the most powerful union leaders in Mich- igan, and played a big part in constructing the healthy officer contract which Council recently rejected. EVEN THOUGH the proposed union contract amounted to considerably more than Murray had stipulated for the command officers in his budget, Police Chief Walter Krasny stated yes- terday that the union will hold firm to its financial stand dur- ing arbitration. "I am reasonably sure," said Krasny, "that we will not back down on any salary demands." Krasny also hinted that the union may even up their salary demands. HOWEVER, Assistant Admin- istrator Patrick Kenney pre- dicted yesterday that arbitra- tion would probably not result in increased salaries. He suggested that additional cost items, such as free parking at city hall and extra insurance benefits, may be won by the union. He also stated that the arbi- trators' decision would be bind- ing "unless we take the final decision to court." If the arbitrated contract goes over the budget as the latest contract proposal did - and it appears it will - both Murray and Krasny have proposed that the amount could be made up within the current police budget over the year by personnel at- trition. BUT MAYOR Albert Wheeler said yesterday that the city will go into arbitration hoping to win the option of laying off police within this unionized de- partment. "I don't think the arbitrators can make us sign a no lay off provision," said Wheeler. "Some of them (the command officers) are going to have to go." U.N. CHARTER WAS ON COTTON FIBER NEW YORK OP) - The 51 nations that signed the Charter of the United Nations each re- ceived an original copy of the historical document written on 100 per cent cotton fiber paper, says the Cotton Fiber Paper Council, Inc. ".,.. . 2:i":i: t t........aa.:z t :, :x, . :: :..e. :sO..ttt g t fttttJr.":.. i:-'t..,.....,.:..,..si.,4......J...,..... 4 ".t . . s- "i. ka :}J .~ ' - IVI 500E. LIBERTY ANN ARBOR 761-6212 OPEN A CONVENiENT STUDENT CHARGE Open Thurs.-Fri. tit 9 pm. , , . v.. ? }(i;V :: ?% ? t' . 4..-.-::".p...4 5 5. :i.4 ' "y\'::'?:nttt~itt - - .. 4. 5!:::.4'. 5a'555q PAUL MUNI in 1932 I AM A FUGITIVE FROM A CHAIN GANG Mervyn Leroy's powerful drama of an innocent man sent to a southern chain gang who becomes a desperate criminal in the process. One of the first depression movies that took a hard look at social realism. It also features Muni's master- ful performance and one of the greatest endings in American cinema. FRI.: Hitchcock's SHADOW OF A DOUBT CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT AT OLD ARCH. AUD.0 7:30 & 9:30 Adm. only $1.00