THE TRAVEL TAX TRAUMA, See Editorial Page Y L it4 D~ait' FRIGID Ilig-h-15 Low--o Chance of Snow; variably cloudy. Seventy-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXVIII, No. 114 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1968 SEVEN CENTS 'The $porting9Life' at ichiganS By JOEL BLOCK player, walked up to an adjacent campus. Warren Wardwell, city the football team and to the he rea Second of a series pay telephone, flipped a dime into manager of the Butterfield thea- school. I've got nothing to hide got Copyright, 1968, The Michigan Daily the slot and dialed the operator. ter chain in East Lansing explain- about the issue, everybody else Daug EAST LANSING - Trying to "I'd like to make a long distance ed how the discount process works: does it. It's just the same thing "In make a long-distance phone call call to Chicago and charge it to "All four theaters (the State, as they do in Ann Arbor." schoo from Michigan State University's 355-1212. You'll have to verify the Michigan, dampus, and the Glad- The football staff also takes and g South Case Hall here can be time- call at 10 a.m. tomorrow, it's my , mer) have lists of players on the care of the hearty appetites of five o consuming, coach's number." varsity and freshman football their hard-working athletes. The even4 The six-story dormitory located A check of the MSU faculty and teams. A player has to show his players are handed "grill passes" to hi: a short punt away from the vast staff telephone book showed that ID card and pays a $.25 service which provide them with tasty was g Spartan athletic complex is the 355-1212 is the phone number of charge to get into the theater. -' bedtime eating at the snack bars But residence of many MSU athletes. Gordon Serr, Spartan offensive "A player only gets to see a located in the dormitories (includ- "Whe About 1 a.m. Friday morning I line coach. movie once during the engagement ing Case Hall) and the campus Duffy was waiting for a student to finish Assistant Coach Al Dorow quali- at the theater. His name is check- Union. One freshman football he a his call on a first floor pay phone fied the charging of phone calls to ed off on the list so he can't give player-turned wrestler-lamented East I at South Case. coach's telephones. "The players his ID to a friend, to me that the coaches wouldn't Big "Don't wait for that guy to get can charge their calls to us only "We also try to give passes to give him any more passes because schoo off the phone," a baseball player in a case where they have troubles visiting teams if we can catch the he was struggling to make his cruits standing nearby told me. at home with their parents or manager to give the tickets to him. wrestling weight. In; Glancing at the phone booth the something like that," he said. We only gave discounts during the Dorow denied the existence of MSU'; athlete continued: "He's a football Michigan State's practice of football season." the grill passes. "The only thing Al Do player and he gets all his long dis- giving football players.free phone Wardwell was asked where he the athletes have are their regular a fres tance calls paid by his coach. It's calls is apparently only one of got the football lists from. "I can meal tickets to use in the dorms. oppor a slush fund, you know." several practices which may vio- only tell you that I get the lists You're not supposed to do those yours 'So I went upstairs to the third late Big Ten rules. from someone, but I can't tell you things," he said. in its -Daily-Thomas R Copt floor and made my call. As I was Michigan State football players who," he replied. MSU also works hard at getting ing." getting off the phone Ron Curl, also get discounts at the four Why does Wardwell do it? "It's the best prospects to come here. Big MSU's Duffy Daugherty a hefty MSU freshman football ' major movie theaters near the a form of gratuity, of good will to One freshman football player says EIGHT PAGES ate lly enjoyed the treatment he from head Coach Duffy herty and his assistants. my senior year in high , Duffy came to Chicago ave a big hotel banquet for f us in the Chicago area. He invited our parents to talk n about Michigan State. It reat." Daugherty didn't stop there. n I came up to visit State, paid all my expenses and so paid my parents' way to Lansing." Ten rules prohibit the Is from giving parents of re- a free trip to campus. a letter dated "6 Mar. '67" s offensive backfield coach row wrote a boy who is now shman football player, "The tunity for a summer job is plus MSU will do anything power to assist you in work- Ten rules prohibit recruiters - See MSU, Page 2 CURFEW CONTINUES: U.S. Intervenes In Orangeburg S . ietnamese, U.S. it I1 A Stronghold in Saigon ORANGEBURG, S.C. (P) - A second dusk to dawn curfew was ordered to calm this riot scarred town yesterday, even as the. U.S. Justice Department filed suit to desegregate one of the commun- ity's trouble spots-its only bowl- ing alley. Six months of behind the scenes talks about the "whites only" policy of All Star Triangle Bowl exploded into nightime dem- ADA Votes To Snrnort onstrations and riots this week. Three Negro teen-aged students were shot to death. The Justice Department's suit, filed in Columbia, accuses the owners of the bowling alley and an eating facility in the estab- lishment of violating the Ci nl Rights Act of 1964. A department spokesman :n Washington also announced a preliminary investigation is be- ing conducted by the FBI to de- termine any violations of federal law in connection with the three deaths and the wounding of 50 other persons. More than 600 National Guards- JL v k-./ a~ar~r vsUv men remained in the city to aid police with the 5 p.m. to 6 a.m. McCarthy ,curfew. 1 The curfew, ordered by Gov. Robert McNair, and a mass exo-' WASHINGTON (-American dus by most of the 1,800 Negro for Democratic Action yesterday college stofdents at two predomi- endorsed Sen. Eugene J. Mc- col leggsawspenor-} Carthy's bid to wrest the Demo- nantly Negro colleges was gener-:.,... ally credited with insuring at least cratic presidential nomination a temporay racial peace. from President Johnson. By a vote of 65 to 47, the liberal Refuses to Integrate organization's governing board The bowling alley, owned by IOWA TOP adopted a resolution committing Harry K. Floyd and his wife, has support for the Minnesota sen- been the repeated target of Bob Sullivan (20) hooks over I ator but recognizing that substan- student desegregation attempts. Jim Pitts (24) jockeys for positi tial numbers of its members do Floyd has refused to admit Ne- Iowa won yesterday's game 99-8 not agree that any candidate groes, saying "I have a right to loss out of seven Big Ten gan should be endorsed at this time. run my business anyway I see One of those who disagreed, fit." He declined comment on the Gus Tyler, vice president of the Justice Department suit. UAC PARLEY: AFL-CIO International Ladies' Informed sources said Floyd Garment Workers Union, said the had offered to desegregate the action of the governing body establishment, several months agoa means that "Americans for Dem- if he was guaranteed earnings of L a d ord % ocratic Action is finished" as aE$60,000 for the first year of de- coalition of individual liberal segregated operations. leaders and mass groups such as persons who talked with Floyd T his union. reported he was concerned that T oF S ea Union Opposition his all white clientele would be- Tyler told newsmen that the gin to dessert him. By DAVID SPURR vote represents a decision by "a gntUnssersmyDAVIiSCR couple of thousand people and 'Ted Andres, who runs a gift University Activities Center open lops off support of major pro- shop, said most businessmen were forum on off-campus housing or- gressive unions" which he said ' concerned and together with city iginally scheduled for Wednesday totl aoutfiv mllin mmbes.councilmen tried to persuade has been cancelled because most total about five million members. Floyd to make some arrange- Ann Arbor landlords have refus- The endorsement resolution was , Fodt aesm ra e oprii~t. adotedaftr te bardrejcte ments for accommodating Ne- ed to participate. adpted after the board rejected 'mnDaniel McCreath, '69, chairman a compromise that would have groes. toBth Sides of UAC's Contemporary Discussion left endorsement of presidential ToCommittee, said the forum was candidates to local groups of ADA. "There were a number of people cancelled after his committe cal- The successful resolution was who tried to eliminate the prob- led most of the Ann Arbor apart- offered by John Kenneth Gal- , lem by talking to both sides,"' ment landlords but got "no co- braith, national chairman of Andres said- operation at all." ADA, economist and a former am- A group of Negro students who The forum was intended to be bassador to India. said they took part in Thursday a public panel discussion of Immediately after the board night's incident claimed yester- apartment rental problems. The meeting John C. Roche, one of day that they were fired on panel was to be composed of repre- President Johnson's assistants, without warning by police and sentatives from Student Housing announcedhhis resignation from denied reports that students had Association, apartment landlords, ADA. Roche is a former national firearms. and officials from the University's chairman of the organization. _.._-_Off-Campus Housing Bureau and The resolution stated ADA's Ann Arbor city administration. opposition to the Vietnam war UAC committee member Victor "not because we are preoccupied Adamo, '70, said he had received with this one issue, important a "flatly negative" response from though it is, but alsobecause it isW ar Research both Charter Realty and Apart- blighting every liberal and pro- ments Limited gressive program here at home." Over 400 French and Japanese Richard Barnhill of Apartments Full Support university scientists have appealed Limited told Adamo it was his The resolution continued : to their American colleagues to agency's policy not to participate "Under these circumstances, a refuse to allow their universities in any discussions of the type majority of the members of the to be used for military and secret described. ADA national board, reflecting research. However, co-owner Kenneth ADA atioal oard refectng - a .Barnhill, told The Daily, "I didn't the feelings of a large majority Citing the "ethical and profes- know hwe had been invited." He of the rank and file of our or- sional responsibilities" of the ,n w e a e i wt.H SAIGON fA') -- American and South Vietnamese troops reported killing 212 enemy in battles north of Saigon last night as allied forces tried to trap and destroy holdouts among the 4,000 Com-; munist guerrillas who had surged into the capital 12 days earlier. In the northern city of Hue, South Vietnamese troops and freshly reinforced U.S. Marines inched forward into areas held by the enemy since the Commu- nist lunar new year offensive be- gan Jan. 30. At the northern border, B52 bombers maintained saturation raids around Khe Sanh, where 5,000 Marines were tensed for an expected attack from about 20,- 000 North Vietnamese. Associated Press correspondent Lewis M. Simons reported from Marine headquarters at Da Nang that during the previous 24 hours Communist gunners hit the Khe Sanh combat base and Marine positions flanking it with 125 rocket and artillery rounds. Eight Marines were reported wounded. Over North Vietnam, Air Force Phantom jets returned for their second raid in three days on the Phuc Yen airfield, 18 miles north- west of Hanoi, where two or three Soviet made twin jet IL28 bomb- ers were seen Thursday. It was the first sighting of the Beagle bombers in the war. The U.S. Command discontin- ued today -its daily casualty re- ports on the Red push. The last U.S. report said 27,706 of the en- emy were killed between 6 p.m. Jan. 29 and midnight Friday. South Vietnamese military head-j quarters reported 28,452 enemy dead as of 6 a.m. today - nearly capturing one. Nine government troops were killed, two wounded. Nine miles farther north, sol- diers of the U.S. 25th Infantry Division continued to flush out guerrillas around the district two of Hoc Mon, where they were be- lieved to be regrouping. The infantrymen, working with armored columns, added 105 en- emy dead to the 303 killed in the area Friday. U.S. losses were put at five killed, 31 wounded. Not all the Communists were running. Some continued to hold 20 square blocks of Cholon, the" capital's Chinese section, and were fighting house to house. Others' clung to residential and business blocks around the race track at Saigon's western edge. Viet Cong fired 20 rocket rounds early today into the Bien Hoa air base 12 miles north of Saigon, killing one American and wound- ing 20. A U.S. report said damage Elsewhere, U.S. gains were re- ported in the area of Da Nang, 380 miles northeast of Saigon. Marines of the 3rd Division re- ported killing 46 enemy four miles south of the big Da Nang base. A few miles south, near Hoi An, elements of the American and 4th Infantry Divisions said they killed 173 Communists while suffering 12 killed, 43 wounded. In another was light. A Vietnamese spokes- clash in the area, American troops man said he understood a number reported killing 30 of the enemy. of planes were damaged. Near the southern tip of South At Hue, 410 miles north of Sai- Vietnam, Red guerrillas were re- gon, U.S. Marines mopped-up ported to have burned 1,000 houses pockets of guerrillas in the new in Bac Lieu, a provincial capital. section of the city. Across the The government said nine guer- Perfume River, South Vietnam- rillas were killed and two captured. ese troops still fought to take the Five Vietnamese soldiers died de- walled Citadel, once home and fending the town. fortress of Vietnam's emperors. The Viet Cong attacked another Guerrillas and North Vietnamese southern provincial.capital, throw- regulars appeared to hold large ing 800 men against Tan An in the portions north of the river. - Mekong Delta, 45 miles southwest of Saigon. Other Vietnam war action as outlined by communiques and other sources in Saigon.yesterday: * PLEIKU--Communist lobbed 30 mortar shells at the U.S. Army's Camp Holloway at Pleiku, in the central highlands 140 miles south- west of Da Nang. Four soldiers killed 36 wounded. * TAN AN-About 800 Viet Cong attacked Tan An. -Daily-Thomas R. Copi S LAGERS owa center Dick Jensen (4) as on with Iowa's Dick Agnew (10). 86, as Michigan suffered its sixth mes. (See page 7 for coverage.) COMMITTEE TO REPORT ' Fund Request Faces Uncertain Test in Senate Refuse aForum month lease, was the only firm th t agreed to attend." wol By JIM NEUBACHER and JILL CRABTREE The State Senate Appropria-, tions Committee is expected to re- port out a bill for higher education, appropriations early next week, but University officials are not op- timistic about their financial pros- pects. Both Lansing and University sources indicate the bill probably will not represent an increase over the $64.7 million recommend- ed for the University general fund priations Committee, declined to comment on the content of the bill. He said only that the bill would be put on the Senate calendar by "late Monday or early Tuesday, unless things go bad." When the bill is passed by the Senate, it will go to the State House where it will be considered by the House Appropriations Com- mittee, headed by Arnell Engstrom (R-Traverse City). Engstrom said some of the mem- bers of his committee sat in on the a g . L uli Vl 1 be very willing to cooperate," said half the estimated Communist Donald Wisthuff, manager of the force committed to the urban high-rise apartments, "especially campaign. if it's for the welfare of the stu- Heavy fighting at Go Vap, two dents." miles from Saigon's northern cityj In addition, Norma Kraker and limits, began after guerrillas Thomas Brown, officials in the seized an ammunition depot. A University Off-Campus Housing government spokesman said crack Bureau, had agreed to attend the South Vietnamese paratroopers Wednesday meeting. Asked why with air support recovered the de- See LANDLORDS, Page 8 pot, killing 107 of the enemy and millon less than the University requested. This is the earliest the bill has come out of committee in recent years, according to Engstrom. The bill must remain on the Senate calendar for five days before it will be considered. Last year's appropriations were not made until after the start of the '67-'68 fiscal year, because the bill was passed in different ver- sions by, the Senate and House and had to be resolved in a cdnference committee. The University was forced to operate on an emergency supply of funds until that time. Niehuss said it is traditional for the Senate to be more conservative than the House in appropriating education funds, and that at- tempts are often made in the House to restore slashed funds. by Gov. Romney in his January Senate hearings on the bill. He be- budget message. Romney's recom- lieves "the bill reported by the mencatins iepotecn ma e cu mendations reportedly may be cut even further. Frank Beadle Chairman of the (R-St. Clair), Senate Appro- , ', r', s i 7 i,: I >' y i', ' Law School To Train Lawyers For Work in Legal Aid Clinics By LESLIE WAYNE The University law school will offer a training program in legal aid for the poor to 50 recent law graduates this summer. The lawyers will be drawn from schools across the country. Upon completion of the course, they will work for the Office of Economic Opportunity (OEO) in neighbor- hood legal aid clinics throughout the country. The program, according to co- versity program will place less emphasis on teaching substantive law and will experiment with teaching cross-examination and interviewing," he points out. Substantive law subjects, cover- ing consumer protection, land- lord-tenant relations, welfare law,' will be taught by lecture. In ad- dition weekly seminars will be con- ducted in which teams of students will be required to prepare written solutions to assigned legal pirob- lems of the poor. signed." Harris says. "We will be interviewing last summer's stu- dents to see how many test cases the OEO clincs can and do handle. "We're all curious to see the ex- tent to which neighborhood legal service clinics go beyond aid to individuals and bring suits that would make changes in the legal system." The University is not involved .. the actual recruitment for the program, which is being conducted at th Tnnvn io 1-s 1 - nn Senate probably won't be higher than recommended by the Gov- ernor." Executive Vice-President Marv- in L. Niehuss, said "the uncertain, draft status of graduate students has caused legislators to expect a decline in graduate school en- rollment. This has contributed to a tendency in the legislature to cut, or at least not to raise, the recommendation." Niehuss said however, applica- tions for admission to the Rack- ham School of Graduate Studies have increased this year. He also pointed out that only a small frac- tion of the University's graduate students are eligible to be drafted. The rest are women, those classi- fied 4-F, and those who have al- ready fulfilled their military obli- gation. The announcement of cutbacks in literary college admissions for next fall has also had a dampen- .,.. ,fi rr +h lnc--a ..l- 11Na ., . . V a:: :" ;+." '$+'" ?s;nis