Thursday, July 1, 1976 Oil decontrol plan THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five halted by WASHINGTON ( P)-The House and S e n a t e refused minutes apart last night to block Ford administration plans to decon- trol the price of heating oil and diesel fuel, effective midnight. The House, by a 208-194 vote, and then the Senate, by 52 to 32, turned down efforts to block the decontrol plan, which opponents contended could add more than $120 to the average consumer's annual fuel bill. DISAPPROVAL by e i t h e r chamber would have blocked de- control. The key vote in the House came on a procedural motion that would have opened the way for debate and a direct vote to disapprove the Federal Energy Administration's proposal for de- control. Two separate decontrol orders were involved. But after losing the procedural motion affecting the first, Rep. John Dingell (D- Mich.) told the House it had made its will clear and he would not pursue the matter further. IN THE debate preceding the vote, proponents and opponents disagreed sharply as to whether decontrol would mean higher prices for users of diesel fuel, home heating oils and kerosene. Dingell said a price rise of one cent per gallon would add $16 to the average consumer's Judge faces TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (M - G. Harrold Carswell, a former fed- eral judge whose U.S. Supreme Court nomination was rejected by the Senate in 1970, was in- dicted by a grand jury yester- day on charges of attempting a homosexual act with a plain- clothes vice squad officer. The t w o - c o u n t indictment chargedthat Carswell commit- ted battery on vice squad offi- cer George Greene and attempt- ed an "unnatural and lascivious act" with Greene last Thursday. THE CHARGES are misde- meanors under Florida law with a maximum combined penalty of 14 months in jail. Greene said he met Carswell in a shopping mall men's room that police staked out after merchants complained of homo- sexual activity. Greene said he and Carswell drove to a wooded area where Carswell touched him against his will-an act constituting bat- tery under Florida law. NEITHER the officer nor the indictment elaborated on the type of physical contact alleged- ly made by Carswell. Carswell, 56, has been in se- clusion at Tallahassee Memorial Hospital since shortly after his Congress stnal bill. He and others have contended that the price rise might be as much as eight cents a gallon. Proponents of decontrol, led by Rep. Clarence Brown (R- Ohio), argued that on the con- trary, scrapping of controls wo'ld probably bring prices down. They contended that the present system of price and al- location controls prevents dis- tributors from shopping around for the best prices and that sup- plies are ample. IN A RELATED development yesterday, the Federal Energy Administration announced that it will hold the controlled price of domestic crude oil at the June level during July and August because actual prices earlier this year had exceeded allowable limits by some $60 million. Under the temporary freeze, the price of so-called "old" oil -that taken from wells in pro- duction before 1973 - must re- main at an average $5.20 per barrel, while "new" oil must not exceed the average June level of $11.63 per barrel. In announcing its action, the energy agency said preliminary data showed the actual com- posite prices for February and March exceeded the allowable levels by 16 and 8 cents a bar- rel, respectively. sex charges arrest and has been unavailable for comment. His defense attorney, Murray Wadsworth, said Carswell is be- ing treated for "nervous exhaus- tion and depression" and his condition is improving. THE CASE against Carswell was presented to the Leon Coun- ty grand jury by State Atty. Harry Morrison, who indicated previously he was considering only a battery charge against the former judge. Morrison was not immediately available for c o m m e n t on whether he asked the grand jury to charge Carswell with attempt- ing to commit a homosexual act or whether the grand jury acted on its own. Carswell, married and the father of four children, is a member of a Tallahassee law firm. HE WAS a 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals judge when then-President Richard Nixon nominated him to the Supreme Court in 1970. The Senate rejected the nomi- nation as opponents charged that Carswell was a mediocre judge and had openly endorsed racial segregation when he cam- paigned for public office in Georgia years before. Two-legged anteaters Mike Carlin, Paul Leroy, and Kevin Johnson gobble down pinches of tasty ants in a Seattle, Wash,, ant-eating contest. The winner, who managed to eat 154 of the little fellers in three min- utes, is not pictured. Can't really blame him, either. FBI admits role in burglaries WASHINGTON (') - FBI Di- rector Clarence Kelley confirm- ed yesterday that the FBI was involved in "a limited number" of burglaries against domestic targets as recently as 1972 and 1973. In a statement issued to re- porters, Kelley said he learned of thse break-ins after officials reviewed files discovered in the FBI's New York office. THE NEW York files were discovered last March 17, and the FBI notified the Justice De- partment on the same day that the material concerned relative- ly recent burglaries, he said. "The FBI under my direction is cooperating with the Depart- ment of Justice in a full and complete investigation to deter- mine all the facts of this mat- ter," Kelley said. Kelley had said at a news conference last July that the FBI conducted no burglaries against domestic targets after 1966. "I WAS speaking with the best knowledge that was fur- nished me at the time," the director said in the new state- ment. He noted the FBI told the Senate Intelligence Committee about 238 burglaries against 14 domestic targets from 1942 to April 1968. He said the report to the Sen- ate Committee also referred to 'additional entries which we were then unable to document." HE SAID he only learned of the more recent burglaries after the FBI launched a nationwide search for files dealing with such operations in connection with a pending lawsuit. The director referred to recent news reports that the depart- ment is investigating burglaries conducted during the past five years to determine whether FBI agents committed criminal vio- lations of the civil rights of Americans. The five-year period is sig- nificant because the law pre- cludes pr-oecutions for civil rights violations which happen- ed more than five years ago. Kelley said that when he said there were no domestic break- ins after 1966, "I knew of none." Ie said the July 1975 statement svas based onithte recollections of current officials at FBI head- quarters and on a July 1966 memo in which then Director J. Edgar loover banned future burglaries. The population of the United States reached 200 million in 1967. ..... ______ DON'T WASTE - YOUR BREA TH SOMEPLACE ELSE Say It First in the Classifieds. CALL TODAY 764-0557 NORTH CUT CANOE LIVERY and SALES NU" H '.x TE Scenic CANOE H100114s TRIPS LAKEEI 27 DOWN the 'Cut' * C North Cut Canoe Livery 4 CA NOE . L"E" & Sales, Hioqins Lake County Road 100-Near DEER at H ia ains Lake South State 1R rk. Pick-ups at 12 mile bridge or at 24 Mile I 1 Houahton Lake exit. The Cut is 24 miles of un- spoiled wilderness scen- G1TON erv. Phone: 517-821-9521 "HAVE YOU DISCOVERED THE CUT?" when someone drinks too Don't hesitate because your r sli"nI MI tI)II Y much and then drives, it's the friend may have been drinking o 1 x 1; silence that kills. Your silence. beer. Beer and wine can be just as I tX0 l. NIAtYAN 2002 It kills your friends, your intoxicating as mixed drinks. I I n s m ,r, relatives, and people you don't even And don't think that slaek I ,d ". i . 1 ," - know. But they're all people you coffee will make him sour. Black could save. coffee never made anyone sober. !I If you knew what to say, Maybe it would keep him awake I c:; _ ____ maybe you'd be lessquiet. Maybe long enough to have an accident. G L ~~~~~~~~~ ... -- fewerpeoplewould die. But that's about all. FRIENDS DON'T LETRIENDS .ht you shuld say is, "I'll The best way to prevenst a DIV DRN( drive youhome." Or,"L me call a drunkfombecoming a dead drunk cab." Or, "Sleep on my couch is to stop him from driving. tonight." Speak p Don't et silence be tbolast sounc li eoros. "°"" °°'° "°" "" " L f