INVESTIGATING CIA ACTIVITIES See editorial page A16' r4 A& g 4fit t an ~~IAt& WINTRY High-25 Low-2-10 Partly cloudy; little chance of snow. Seventy-Sevee Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXVIII, No. 116 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1968 SEVEN CENTS TEN PAGES DEMAND FOR PARTICIPATION: 300 Students Picket at U of D; Tentative Strike Set for Friday By KEN KELLEY "I sincerely hope that Carron Threatening a strike unless their will give in to us tomorrow, for demands are met, three hundred the good of the university," said students demonstrated peacefully' outside the student union at the University of Detroit yesterday, protesting what they consider lack of student participation in univer- sity decision-making. A meeting between Student Gov- ernment leaders, sponsors of the t Student Government Vice-Presi- dent Anthony Constantini, '68. "If not, we will definitely proceed with plans for a general student strike starting Friday, in which students will boycott their classes until he comes around." The students submitted a listI protest, and University of Detroit of 23 points to Carron yesterday. President Malcolm Carron, S. J., Principal among these were the was scheduled for this afternoon demand that the all-student Aca- to try and iron out differences. demic Affairs Board have equal say Public Housing Plan Debated at Hearings By DAVID SPURR mum of 24 units on each site. City Council's hearings on public This replaces a former plan for housing last ngiht drew repre- iseven sites; each with a maximum hous tig lasf nt drew eipr- I of 39 units. in the hiring and firing of teach- ers and questions of faculty tenure, and that "the administration make the educational quality more reflective of the price we are pay- ing," according to Student Gov- ernment President Paul Sak, '68.1 "We are no longer going to justI sit back watching the tuition rise without a comparable rise in the quality of education at the Uni- versity of Detroit," added Sak. Two weelps ago the Jesuit col- I lege of 5,000 raised tuition rates 30 per cent. The students complain that they weren't consulted prior to the decision, and as a result are demanding that each year the Stu- dent Government president be a full member of the University Budgetary Committee. dRev.Carron denied that students weren't informed about the tui- tion hike. "At various times our Vice-President for Student Af- fairs Francis Arlinghaus tried to tell them about it." MSU's Daugherty May Sue for Libel Football Coach To Consult Lawyers; 'Perturbed' Over Charges in Daily By FRED LaBOUR Michigan State football coach Duffy Daugherty said last night that ire is planning to °consult his attorneys about the possibility of filing a libel suit against The Daily be- cause of a recent stcry which revealed apparent MSU vio- lations of Big Ten rules. "We work hard within the spirit of the rules," Daugh- erty said lhst night. "It's omr whole life. Anytime you call us liars or cheats we re bouno to be very much upset and perturbed apout it." Earlier yesterday Daugherty told reporter David Condon of the Chicago Tribun of the possibility of a libel suit. "Anyone who suggests I'm dishonest had better be able to prove it." Condon quoted Daugherty as saying, "I'll find " the extent of their insurance wnter Term and sue them (The Daily) for 1 the whole darn bit." Daugherty told The Daily last i E nrollment, night that he "hadn't seen an original copy of the article yet," De e but added that he would turn it over to his attorneys when he had. By MARCIA ABRAMSON -Daily-Andy sacks NEW ENS[AN STAFF Staff selections for the 1969 Michiganensian were approved by the Board in Control of Student Publications recently. They are, from left to right, Thomas R. Copi, photo editor; Sue Schultz, editor; Chrystie King, business manager; Linda Grossman, copy editor; Peggy Hensley, managing editor; and Dan Omohundro, design editor. .* sen~a ves o Lwo opposing opin- ions: citizens who endorse the Housing Commission's new plan for greater dispersal of housing sites, and those who contend this proposal does not go far enough in decentralizing the sites. The viewpoint put forth by most citizens who spoke to the council is typified by a statement from a representative of the Ann Arbor The Ann Arbor City Council voted 9-1 last night to endorse a new Housing Commission plan for low-income, federally subsidized public housing. The Housing Commission will now proceed to acquire the mine sites for which it now has options. Councilman Robert F. Jagitsch cast the only dissent- ing vote. Democratic Party: "The original plan bothered us immensely. This one is far from perfect but we need it (public housing) so des- perately that we endorse this pro- posal." Two groups, the Dover-Parkside Association (90 famlies) and the Fifth Ward Association for Per- manent Progress, were represent- ed by spokesmen who said they opposed the present plan because it "falls decidedly short of achiev- ing the objective of as much dis- persal as possible" among the gov- ernment-subsidized low-i n-c o m e housing units. - City Council has not yet seta But Carron admitted that "I date on which they will vote on didn't go out and ask, 'what do you OCTOBER CONFE the proposal. - fellows thing the tuition rate Groups which joined the Demo- should be.'" crats in endorsing the plan in- Students also complain about cluded the League of Women Vot- relations with Arlinghaus. "We are U ers, CORE, the Ann Arbor Coun- misinformed about many things," I cil of Churches, and the Human said Constantini. "There has been Relations Commission. a breakdown in communications0 Several people objected to the as far as the OSA is concerned.' present plan because, they said, Arlinghaus declined to comment taxpayers would have to bear the ion the possibility of his meeting burden of paying off the govern- with the students along with Rev. ment loan to the city. Carron and about the demonstra- By JIM NEUBACIiER Taxpayers Not Affected tion, saying only "I have no re- The Engineering Council will The program will in fact be fi- action to the demands at this time sponsor a conference of leaders nanced in such a way that tax- --they're academic." from Big Ten engineering colleges payers are not directly affected: Some of the demonstrators car- next October as a first step to pos- $3.69 million from Washington { ried placards reading "Let the sible establishment of a Big Ten will be paid off through revenue students decide what happens to Engineering Council. from rents and bond interest, the money," while many chanted Five delegates from each Big with the government making up "Tuition, Tuition-Higher, High- Ten university, with the exception for any deficit. er," as they paraded around the j of Indiana which does not have an Spokesmen from the Ann Ar- campus. engineering college, have been in- bor Civic Theatre opposed a par- "They are free to demonstrate.""vited to participate.. ticular part of the new plan which said Rev. Carron, "but they should The purpose of the conference, would set up four housing units not interfere with the rights of according to George Marek, '70E. adjacent to the theatre, on city- others." Rev. Carron called the conference publicity director is to owned land the theatre now oc- demonstration "a flop," saying "improve communication between cupies. A member of the theatre there were only "40 or so students" the schools." The proposed two commented that if the units were as far as he could see. day schedule calls for exchange of built. "I wouldn't consider it safe Rev. Carron also said he told for any woman to walk past Re.Cro'losi etl ideas concerning curriculum devel- Sthere." the students "rather bluntly that opment, placement services, and I don't believe in their having any student - administration relation- Those particular units are right in the hiring or firing of ships. planned for aged people, faculty, and I won't consider pla- cing a transitory member of the e medid xtsv e Student h t campus community such as the Council members did extensive .J.. IUIO president of Student Government sounding out of students and fac- -who changes each year-on the 'fity before taking the suggestion I Ti l N IC KtbR bbudget committee." to engineering college Dean Gor- I a- T T.._ TT ..7 .w [T7 ... ..L .... .. .m" ~RENCE-:* Sponsor Council Ten Engineers, 'Within Rules' "We were doing some of the things The Daily said wa were do- ing, but they were within con- ference rules. We have been wronged and I have been portray- ed as dishonest," he continued. Daugherty also told Condon that the allegations already had af- fected his recruiting. "Last night I talked to a couple of Ohio kids delegates and miscellaneous ex- penses such as speaker fees, ad- vertising and printing. Chris Bloch, '70E, head of the conference planning committee, explained that big businesses in the area often contribute funds for projects of this sort, believing that it will be to their advantage in the long run to help to produce better engineers. A group'of Engineering Council members plans to visit each of colleges involved to explain the conference to school officials. Ex- planatory letters have been sent out, and replies have been received from the deans of all the schools indicating support for the confer- ence. The proposed conference will be run on a workshop basis, with each of thn eiplpoatac frnn-i n crhnnl nt.- I Lnee Ueges Cc ionm1 s as1o1 aU- we would tending, one of five different dis- and each cussion sessions in the morning ation," h° like to have at State, asked about the situ- told the Tribune. "Peo-I and another in the afternoon. "We plan to discuss things like curriculum and the 'credit gap,' Marek said. "Why do engineering students work harder and longer each week for the same amount of credit as other students?" Another tonic of general in- ple have to realize that we are3 not under investigation. People who read those charges are going to think less of Duffy Daughsrty." Big Ten Assistant CommissionerI and Examinar John Dewey has, told The Daily that he intends to investigate Michigan State after i terest, he said, will be the develop- completion of his Ann Arbor ment of an inter-school placement probe. service. "Right now," Marek said, John Fuzak, Michigan State's' "we help find part-time employ- faculty representative to the con- ment for students from our school ference said yesterday that there alone. But there is no reason that were indications that those who a student at the University of Min- have charged rule violations in nesota who lives in the Detroit connection with MSU athletes area shouldn't be able to take ad- weren't conversant with Big Ten vantage of our close contact with rules. Detroit industries, and vice-versa." 'Possible Violations' t En gin lCouncil Asks No R o R~~eutig.an But Dewey has also told The, Daily that he thinks there could be possible violations concerning the allegations mentioned in the, article. He did say, however, that speci- fic instances reported would not be violations under certain cir- Picket City Hall Before the hearings, a group of Police are investigating the social work students, welfare reci- shooting of a student in his Burs- pients and other citizens picketed ley Hall room at about 2 p.m. yes- in front of City Hall to demon- terday afternoon. The student, strate in favor of the new plan. James Howlett, '71, was shot in Professor Max Shain of the the mouth and is presently at School of Public Health, who took . University Hospital being treated part in the demonstration, said for a broken jaw. Doctors say his of the Fifth Ward group, "They're condition is good. r in favor of not having any public Police believe Howlett was shot housing. Ask them." by another student, but at present Bettie Magee, a University fac- say they have found no suspects ulty wife, said that many of those or motives for the shooting. No opposing the plan were uing witnesses have been located. "transparent and flimsy disguises However, students on Howlett's for racial prejudice." corridor say that a "friend" of The present proposal calls for Howlett's who lives not far from nine housing sites s c a t t e r e d Bursley was with him yesterday throughout the city with a maxi- afternoon. don J. Van Wylen. "Reactions of He also criticized student de- the people we talked to were over- ns for dormitory improve- whelmingly favorable," Marek said. !ments and increased security pro- "The list of advantages to be tection. "It makes their demands gained from such a conference is too broad in nature," he com- a long one." e A total of 34,773 degree, post- graduate, professional and exten- sion students are enrolled at the University this semester, a drop of 1,665 from fall term. However, this figure is still 1300 more than last winter, according to figures released yesterday by the Office of Registration and Records. The College of Literature, Sci- ence and the Arts reported an in- crease of nearly 1100 students over last winter, rising to 15,249 from 14,182. L S A enrollment dropped 794, less than five per cent, from fall figures. Flint College increased from 910 last year to 1002. Social work rose from 592 to 676, nursing from 749 to 783 and public health from 320 to 374.. Medical School Increase Medical school, enrollment rose from 1463 to 1518, including grad- uate students in certain sciences and postgraduate physicians. Largest drops were recorded in business administration, from 1262 to 1163, and education, from 3199 to 3149. Business administration and engineering registered the high- est decrease rate from fall enroll- ment, eight per cent. Business ad- ministration dropped from 1271 to 1163. Engineering fell from 4531 to 4160. Art School Declines Enrollment in architecture and design fell six per cent from 811 last fall to 762 this winter. Winter term figures do not in- clude enrollment at Dearborn Campus, where students are regis- tering this week. More 'than 700 students are expected to enroll there. Some 2698 of the total enroll- ment consists of extension stu- dents, a drop of 248 from last win- ter and 71 from fall term. The only other enrollment which increased from last winter was dentistry, which added 10 students. There was no change in the school's enrollment from fall b~erm. Five Per Cent Decrease Enrollments in the law school, music and pharmacy dropped about five per cent from fall fig- ures. Law school enrollment de- creased from 1059 to, 1003, music from 870 to 826 and pharmacy from 234 to 222. The number of nursing students decreased by four per cent from fall term, from 816 to 783. All of the colleges and schools in the University expect to main- tain current admissions policies to continue slow increass or main- tain current size. The major exception is the literary college, which has been forcsd to cutback enrollment next fall to maintain an appropriate total enrollment. By GEOFF STEVENS mented. "I think we have a good Student Government, and I'm glad they'rej becoming concerned," he con- tinued. "But they must realize they're only one segment of the academic community." Student Government has plan- ned other activities to emphasize Van Wlen has given his full sup- port to the project. He plans to speak at the kick-off dinner on the opening night of the confer- ence. He has also promised to work together with the Engineering Council in order to raise funds for the projects. "Essentially, we're going to work to raise funds their demands, including a torch- through some outside sources," he ' light parade tonight. "We're going said. Ito let them know we're serious' The projected cost of the con- about this," concluded Constan- ference is over $2,400. This in- ' tini. cludes food and lodging for 45 LIBERAL DISSENT Ferency Barnstorms for Peace By MICHAEL THORYN Zolton Ferency, speaking to about 100 people at an open meeting of the Young Democrats, said he is "touring the country on behalf of peace, -McCarthy, and an open Democratic national con- vention." Ferency, former state Democratic chairman who was defeated as candi- date for governor in 1966, said he sup- ports the cause of Senator Eugene Mc- Carthy - to unseat President Johnson. "Bobby Kennedy was really recon- sidei'ing his decision not to run about ten days ago. If enough people had en- couraged him, he would have jumped in," Ferency said. "I did my best. I put out my pressdrelease, but no dice. "Kennedy came out with a statement saying that he 'could not foresee any circumstances that would make him de- cide to challenge the President,' " Fer- ency said. The lackr of liberldissent onnthe a dove on Vietnam, Ferency said "all Presidential hopefuls look pretty much the same. "They would rather not get involved in black and white issues," Ferency ex- plained. "These days, everyone's against crime and violence." President Johnson's State of the Un- ion Message said there was an air of restlessness because the ship of state is nmoving into new, uncharted waters, "but really, we are in an ocean of turmoil," Ferency said. Ferency claims that people admit we werf wrong to get into Vietnam. "But now they say we have a committment. We are committed to a gross error," he cotinued. Hr, hopes the national convention in Chicago in August will "drag out issues and discuss them." However, unless therc is a sudden shift in both parties. "we will have an election between Tweedle-dee and Tweedle-dum." Engineering Council circulated a petition earlier this week pro- testing the placement of any re- strictions on meetings with re- cruiters. Nearly 1400 signatures were collected. However, Prof. Carl Legatski, head of the Ann Arbor chapter of the American Institute of Chem- ical Engineers and originator of the petition, feels that not many more signatures will be collected. The petition aims to preserve the policy that employers' repre- sentatives, meet privately with students rather than facing a public forum. Engineering Coun- cil decided to sponsor the petition when the Student Relations Com- mittee of the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs recommended open forum dis- cussions earlier this month. The Student and Faculty Ad- visory Committees to the Bureau of Appointments unanimously passed a similar resolution yes- terday. The two committees met in joint session in the Union to hold open hearings and consider the resolution. Most Agree "Most engineering students were in agreement with the present policy," said Wally Rhines, '68E, president of Engineering Council. Dean Gordon Van Wylen also thought the present policy was fair and added that he would be willing to invite any company representative to meet with stu- dents on an organized and cour- teous basis. University President Robben W. Fleming said he would bring the matter before the Regents, al- though it is not on the formal agenda for this Friday's Regents meeting. Infringe On Rights The petition stated that making nmnn v rpresentatives nrtici- the administration of the engi- cumstances. neering school. Dewey and University Assistant Van Wylen agrees with present Athletic Director Bert Katzen- policy and opposes mandatory meyer continued their, investiga- public forums for all employers' tion into apparent Michigan vio- representatives. lations of Part 2, Rule 7, Section Resolution 2 of the Big Ten code concerning The appointments bureau ad- illegal financial aid to athletes. visory committees' r e s o l u t i o n Working alongside Dewey and; urges "that during the winter Katzenineyer will be an ad hoc' term 1968 the University invite committee appointed last Friday employing groups deemed contro- by the Board in Control of Inter- versial by this Committee or by collegiate Athletics petition of 100 students or more to send a representative to the campus to discuss the controver-;:;> sial policy or operations in an -- open forum, including questions from the floor, procedure to be set by the joint Student-Faculty Advisory Committees to the Bu- reau of Appointments." Evart W. Ardis, director of the bureau of appointments andI chairman of thie faculty commit- tee,:wa pointed out that it was un- derstood" that the resolution. would be followed on a voluntary basis this semester.>; ; Members of the faculty com- mittee include Dean James Wal- lace of the music school and Pro- fessors John Young of the engi- neering college and Donald Hill of the English department. Mem- bers of the student committee in- elude Tom Westerdale, grad, - Kathryn Bolton, grad, and How-' ard Rontal, '71 DUFFY DA UGHERTY i E I Dow Representative To Speak On Corporate Policy at Forum By DAN SHARE resolutions demanding that cor-' The recruiter on campus for the Dow Chemical Corporation has porations using the University's next three days is not expected agreed to participate in a public ! facilities to recruit, be required to to participate in any policy dis- forum at the University some time engage in public discussion of their cussions. As Al Wolf of Dow told next week. policies. The Daily in a recent interview: a :=-5:'