Consumers talk at electric bills HARRISBURG (AP)—What common bond exists between a 67-year-old retired state employe from the affluent Harrisburg suburb of Camp Hill and two housewives from the depressed anthracite fields? Outrage over fuel adjustment charges on their electric bills! Marie E'erfetto and Theresa Bordick got lost driving from their homes in Old Forge, near Scranton, to Harrisburg. They had trouble finding the Public Utility Commission office at the Capitol. William P. Coombs drove over the Susquehanna River from his home. After 30 years of work in state government he had no trouble finding the PUC office. All three are customers of the Pennsylvania Power and Light Company, the Allentown-based, utility which ironically has one of the lowest fuel adjustment charges of any power company in the state. All three also live in all-electric homes. But they're afraid . that the charge the. utility adds to their bills to help pay for the soaring cost of fuels to produce electricity is more than they can afford. Coombs, who founded the Pennsylvania Association of Older Persons in 1969, says his electric bill about every two months runs over $2OO. The last one was $245 with a fuel ad justment charge of $75. The charge has)been as high as $B5, he said. He says it may eventually cost him his-home. "The fuel adjustment charge added onto the increasing bill has forced me to borrow money every time the bill comes due. The only recourse I have is to put my home up for sale because I can't keep borrowing," Coombs said. His complaint is that utilities add on the fuel adjustment charge without prior approval of the PUC and with inadequate public accounting. "I'm not out to kill PP and L; don't get me wrong. But I'm not convinced they're doing this thing the way they should. In effect, they're getting a rate hike without PUC approval," he said. So far, ,Woombs says he hasn't gotten any satisfaction from the company: "Sure, I've been to PP and L a number of times. Finally, they sent some guy to my house and he gave me a fairy story. He kept pointing to space heaters and saying they would raise my bill. And I kept telling him that we hadn't been using the heaters. Publicity grounds for legal a battle Boyle attorneys MEDIA, Pa. (AP)—W.A "Tony" Boyle, the once powerful president of the United Mine Workers now' ailing in a federal prison, today seeks to set aside his conviction of murdering a union rival on grounds that excessive publicity denied him a fair trial. The 73-year-old Boyle, convicted last April 10 of first degree murder for arranging the assassination of Joseph "Jock" Yablonski, and his wife and daughter, won't be present in Delaware County Common Pleas Court when opposing attorneys make their legal arguments before a three-judge panel headed by Judge Francis J. Catania, who had presided at the UMW safety WASHINGTON (AP)—James M. Day, director of the federal agency that enforces coal mine safety laws, resigned yesterday following along campaign for his ouster by the United Mine Workers union. Day's resignation as head of the Mining Enforcement and Safety Administration is effective - July 1, an Interior Department spokesman said. Day was reported out of town and could not be reached for comment. However, an ad ministration source said that opposition to Day by UMW President Arnold Miller and other labor leaders was a major factor in the resignation. Miller has said Day is industry-biased and has failed to aggressively enforce coal mine safety laws passed by Congress. A holdover from the Nixon administration, Day was appointed to the office in August 1973 soon after it was created to administer mine health and safety standards. Before creation of the agency, these standards had been enforced by the Bureau of Mines. Richardson has ski mishap ST. ANTON AM ARLBERG, Austria (UPI)—U.S. Ambassador to Britain Elliot Richardson and his wife Anne narrowly escaped injury yesterday when they were buried by a small snowslide while skiing on the Arlberg slopes. Richardson said they managed to dig themselves month-long trial. Boyle is in custody at Springfield, Mo., where he is completing a three-year sentence for making illegal political contributions with union funds. His three mandatory life sentences for murder, if upheld, would be servedin a Pennsylvania prison. 1, The Yablonskis were slain Dec. 31, 1969, as' they slept in their Clarksville home in rural western Pennsylvania, about 30 miles northwest of Pittsburgh. Eight other persons have either confessed or been convicted in the slayings. Special Prosecutor Richard A. Sprague had charged Boyle ordered Yablonski complaints' force director to resign out and were not hurt "It happened while we Were_ skiing on .a slope near here with two of our children and one English friend," he said. "I and my wife were, hit by the snowslide, the others were not affected. I did not report the mishap to the authorities." Austrian' -police said they • "I' m not saying their costs haven't gone up. BM until there's been ani audit, I don't think the electric companies cgtsay they're 4pen and above board." Coombs thinks the probleth is particularly acute for senior 'citizens. . "We're operating on a very restricted income. The amount of social security we get has never been adequhte. And many i?eotple don't have the benefit of another pension besides social security;" he said. So Coombs, Mrs. Perfetto and Mrsi Bordick all went to see PUC Cotnmissioner Herbert Denenberg this week. They want him to press for fast action on an investigation of the fuel adjustment allowance. The women.brought along a stack of petitions which they said were signed by 6,581 PP and L customers in Wilkes- Barre, Scranton and dozens of small tOwns in the northeast. Mrs. Bordick got the grassroots customer revolt started in January after the Tri-Boro Banner, a weekly newspaper, published her written complaint of the utility charge. Several similar articles in the newspaper brOught 40 telephone calls from other customers and a decision to circulate petitions. Their stories also prompted a visit from PP and L representatiVes to Old Forge in February. "They gave us a snow job,"- said Mrs. Perfetto of the meeting. "You had to be a lawyer or an economist to un derstand their explanatibn. They should have spoken to us as housewives.':' "They told us you have to change your life style" to cut electric bills] fumed Mrs. Bordick. "I'm using 600 kilowatts less per month this year than last year but my electric bill is higher. How much do I have to conserve? Do I have to turn the heat off? I have two children in my house," added Mrs. Perfetto. The Bordicks pay an average of $B9 monthly for electricity, $2l of that for the fuel adjustmerl. charge.. The Perfetto's atonthly bill is about $lOB with the hie' adjustment in the 25 to 30 per cent range which the PUC says is average. Denenberg, whose gubernatorial iappointment to the PUC still awaits Senate confirmation, sympathizes, as he always has, with the consumers. , "As a just published U.S. Senate study concludes, the fuel adjustment allowance cost to consumers nationally was $6.5 billion last year, more than the total rate increases of the previous 25 years," Denenberg said in a statement. Under a new program, the regulatory agency - wants: —a general investigation of the allowance. —audits of the allowance by the PUC staff as well as by the utilities. separate listing on utility bills of the charge; a practice which PP and L and some other utilities have, already started. seek new trial killed and then • authorized $20,000 in union funds to finance it. "This man used the blood and sweat of miners for killing," Sprague said after the guilty verdicts which he called : "the end of the line" in a case that attracted in ternational 'attention. Boyle's appeal for a new trial will be• argued by Charles Peruto, like Sprague a former assistant district attorney in neighboring Philadelphia. "We are going to stress the excessive pre-trial publicity," Peruto said, but declined to give any further details on grounds that the court had imposed a ban on pre-hearing discussion. From the beginning. Day was a con troversial appointment. Both the UMW and the United Steelworkers Union called for his ouster, along with a ,number of coal-state congressmen. In a statement, the UMW hailed Day's decision to step down and urged that "the new director of MESA he someone with long experience in coal mining ~and a "proven record of commitment to mine safety." The UMW complained that Day had little experience in coal-related fields when he was appointed to the post•.' Day, 44, worked for the Central Intelligence Agency' , from 1953 to 1959 and was a practicing attorney in Washington from 1959 until 1970, when he was named director of the office of hearings and appeals for the Interior Department. Day's appointment to head MESA was made without Senate confirmation, 'hut Con gress has since voted to put the post under Senate scrutiny. had no knowledge of the in cident. Richardson said he called his personal assistant, Tony Ripley, at the London em bassy and informed hint about the mishap. The couple went to Arlberg in western Austria Friday Boyle's defense at the trial was headed, by Charles F. Moses of Billings, Mont., .the state where the defendant had begun his rise to labor power. Boyle, a foilner coal miner, had headed the i 200,000- member UMW for 11 years, succeeding the legendary John L. Lewis. Yablonski had organized a reform movement in 1969 in an unsuccessful challenge to topple Boyle, losing the election three weeks before he was killed. Now Yablonski's lawyer son, Joseph Jr., is chief counsel for the union. MEATBALL HOAGIE $1.25 THE CATTLE CAR I'enn Slate In\ national Film FestiN al { so_ AMERICAN LIFE IN FILM , The Magnificent Ambersons (Orson Welles - 1942) Wed. March 26 The story of the declining magnificence of an American dynAty at the turn of the century. Rebel Without A Cause (Nicholas Ray - 1955) Thurs. March 27 James Dean, Natalie Wood, and Sal Mineo in the classic story of a modern misfit. ts• On The Waterfront (Elia-Kazan - 1954) Fri. March 28 The classic drama of the New York docks; v 47 Academy Awards, including Marlon Brando for best actor. • The Graduate (Mike Nichols - 1967) Sat. March 29 Asocial satire starring Dustin Hoffman with music by Simon and Garfunkel. A Thousand Clowns (Fred Coe - 1966) Sun. March 30 An object 17sson on love versus non-conformity and a classic comedy starring Jason Robards. The Misfits (John Huston - 1961) Mon. March 31 Scripted by Arthur Miller, a story of the "modern" west. Starring Clark Gable, Marilyn Monroe, in their last film appearance. ADMISSION' FREE 7 & 9 PM Kern Auditorium • Kissinger,Ghorbal confer WASHINGTON (UPI) Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger last night assured Egyptian Ambassador Ashraf A. Ghorbal that the United States was determined to continue its efforts to achieve peace with justice in the Middle East. Ghorbal met with Kissinger after the secretary bad had an earlier discussion with Israeli Ambassador Simcha Dinitz. Neither ambassador would disclose substantive details of their discussions with Kissinger. Diplomatic sources described the nature of Kissinger's assurance to Ghorbal. Dinitz said his meeting with the secretary was a general review of the new situation in the Middle East and the prospects for the reopening of the Geneva peace conference between Israel and the Arab countries. Dinitz said the possibility of a return to the Geneva con ference table always had existed but as far as he knew no decision had been made with regard to it. "However," he said, "we have said on a_ number of occasions that we do not rule out a return to Geneva. We never thought it would be a particularly effective forum, but a declaratory forum. However, if the situation develops that Geneva is reconvened, naturally we would have to see the thing as it comes." Dinitz said Kissinger had said nothing to imply he thought Israel might have been responsible for the Middle East diplomatic The Daily Collegian Wednesday, March 26, 1975- stalemate by holding fast to its position. "We have had very useful talks," Dinitz said, "and I was happy and pleased to 2 ArademyAwani Nominations Best Actress-Gena Rowlands triggielutvtaike CINEMA 116 Helster St./237-7657 Starts FRIDAY SPECIAL LIMITED RETURN ENGAGEMENT 11=1 STATE 121 W College Ave 737.7111 . Nightly 7:15 & 9:45 P.M CATHAUM 118 W College Ave./237-3351 6 ACADEMY AWARD Nominations! ACADIA cousnrs 4 , NORM ON TIE JP ORIENT EXPRESS" including BEST ACTOR Albert Finney BEST SUPP. ACTRESS Ingrid CINEMA 1 116 Heisler 51. 1 237-7657 .) • hear from the secretary that the United States is deter mined to continue its efforts to achieve peace with justice in the Middle East." PG WWII ‘411141C1 SiGial(ll Nightly ... 7:10 - 9:30 PIRLICIAI PERKS UFPNITO4 al Assxatar C 4 Ur ',OI , .IINESESTS A 011118MOLPht ROUE) MIN GCCOuCTGY El= TODAY & THUR 2:00-4:00-6:00-8:00-10:00 An all NEW film inspired by the novel, "AIRPORT" by Arthur Hailey. AIRPORT 197530. m, A UNIVERSAL. PICTURE TECHNICOLOR' FWIA11190N"