THE RECRUITMENT MUDDLEr See editorial page Y gilt 471 A6r ""atly GUSTY Hligh-30 ~'A- 10 Partly sunny; continued mild. Seventy-Sevon Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXVIII, No. 117 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1968 SEVEN CENTS Project 1 1esearchers 'Stuck' WithSe ; By DAVID SPURR stuck now," said Norman, "and Robert E. Burroughs, Director Laughlin were all unable to give this all the time," Norman point- we have to follow the rules of of Research Administration, and a date or any other specific cir- ed out. Later, the University "bills suProject 11, the University'sgame." Rowland H. McLaughlin, an en- cumstances of the project's re- the government" for reimburse- super-secret Defense Department tegm.Rxa pioject started last summer in Although the government con- gineer working on the $216,000 classification, however. ment on such projects. tract was signed by Vice-President project, also said they did not Norman said the government Project 1111 (the number is Thlnd, is ney cpete, tsn- and Chief Financial Officer Wilbur know whether the contract had "has the power" to change the simply for accounting purposes) t hre and specific sponsor may K. Pierpont last September, and been fully executed. extent to which all projects are is being conducted by the Geo- never be known, unless the gov- by the Stanford Research Insti- When asked how the project classified. physics division of Willow Run nver be no unessy thgv tute (SRI) in December, Project would be listed in the Reporter. He said the reason this partic- Laboratories. McLaughlin and a einentdide t1111 has not yet been listed in the Norman said it would have to be ular contract might not yet be David E. Willis, head of the geo- A. Geoffrey Norman, Vice-Presi- Reporter, a University publication called simply "classified," and fully executed - even though the physics lab, are the two Univer- An f Research, however, says it which lists all research contracts added that "We normally don't project is almost finished-prob- sity researchers directly involved nt foriginally supposed to be by name, nature, price and spon- accept that arrangement." ably would lie in delays by the with the project. Both men are that way. According to Norman, sor. The University sent two re- agency issuing the contract. specialists in the field of acoustic the University agreed to go ahead Normally, the publication lists searchers to Thailand last sum- "In federal agencies," Norman and seismic research. on the project last summer, think- contracts shortly after they are mer after receiving a "letter of said, "there is a program group The University currently has ing that it would be no more clas- signed. intent" from the government - and a group for fiscal and busi- contracts for some $10.3 million sified than its other secret projects Norman said the project would an authorization to proceed with ness affairs." The program group in classified research. The Fac- they would at least be able to be listed when the "paper work the work. The work, done on a sends a letter of intent which is, ulty Senate will vote tomorrow on name it. is fully completed. We list every- sub-contract from SRI, was later he said, "just as solid as a con- a resolution that would endorse But the Defense Department thing." He added that he did not classified to the hilt, according to tract." most classified contracts except apparently re-classified the proj- know, however, whether the con- Norman, when "the SRI intro- The University can then begin those so secret - like 1111 - that ect while University researchers tract had been signed by both duction produced complications." work. "The National Aeronautics their name and nature cannot be Geoffrey Norman were working in Thailand. "We're parties. Norman, Burroughs, and Mc- and Space Administration does revealed.R TEN PAGES crecy obert E. Burroughs WILL GO TO MSU: Dewey Meets Coaches, Athletes in Spor By FRED LaBOUR The Big Ten's investigation of apparent conference rule violations by Michigan athletes and coaches will continue at least until the end Sof this week, Assistant Commis- sioner and Examiner John Dewey said last night. Dewey disclosed that he has spent the last few days interview- ing Ann Arbor businessmen as well as athletes and coaches. "We're talking to many of the people mentioned in The Daily ar- ticle which made the allegations concerning the violations," said Dewey. "I'll be here all this week." Working alongside Dewey have been Bert Katzenmeyer, assistant athletic director, and an ad hoc committee appointed last Friday by the Board in Control of Inter-, collegiate Athletics. The commit- tee, chaired by Prof. of mathe- matics Edward Halpern, is com- posed of the nine faculty members of the Board. According to Hal- pern, the committee is attempting to come up with its own evaluation of evidence and its own conclu-! sions.! "We plan to coordinate inter- viewing efforts with the Big Ten and the NCAA if they become in- volved in this," Halpern said., "This way these people won't have to sit through several interviews of the same type." Dewey said he will definitely be going to Michigan State University soon to investigate the validity of other apparent conference viola- tions as reported in The Daily. "We'll have to determine if there ts Probe were violations in these particular Michigan State situations," Dewey |said. One Ann Arbor businessman, G. H. Hoag, manager of the Michigan Theatre, has denied statements at- tributed to him by The Daily. In a story which appeared in last Friday's edition, The Daily quoted Hoag as saying he distributed 3,000. free passes a year to atlhetes. Hoag later told the Chicago Daily News that he didn't know4 "where they (The Daily) got that figure. I've been in this business for 48 years and I haven't given out 3,000 tickets in all that time." "Why," Hoag continued, "I also give tickets to the wonderful Michigan marching band, and to the Glee Club, and hell. even to the staff of the Michigan Daily." Philip Duey, director of the Men's Glee Club said this week that the only time they had re- ceived free tickets was about 15 Syearsago after they donated a concert to the memory of a de- ceased quarterback. "We all were invited to go free for taking part in the performance," Duey said.' Jim Lunsden, student business manager of the Glee Club said, "I have no knowledge whatsoever of members of the Glee Club ever re- ceiving any free theatre passes." Band Director William D. Re-: velli also said this week that "In some years we have been invited to one movie during the first week, of school but usually not too many of the bandsmen attended. I don't think any of us have gone in the last two years." When Hoag was reached fort t comment he said "I believe it would be best not to be mis-l quoted anymore." U of D Students Rally, Announce Strke Teach-In By KEN KELLEY Student leaders at the University of Detroit scheduled a boycott of all classes for tomorrow after a four-hour discus- sion yesterday with Detroit President Rev. Malcolm Carron. The announcemnnt came before a previously scheduled torchlight parade participated in by 350 Detroit students. The student leaders are d'manding a greater voice in university decision-making. A teach-in will be held today on the Detroit campus. "Were going to show the administration just how serious we are," says Paul Sak. '08, president of Detroit student gov- ernment. He added chat the meeting with Carron proved fruitful to some extent, but - _Daily-Thomas R. Copt that the major demands of OSS COM ES TO TOWN Dthe students were refused. Charge K as The student government submit- elations and Planning Arthur M. Ross arrived in Ann Arbor yester- ted a list of 23 points they claim d Meeting which begins today in closed sessions. Currently Conmmis- needed immediate approval by i I hington, he is scheduled to take office July 1. Ross will replace re- on ued ay The major Is ones called for the president of 5 harvin L. Niehuss. the student government to be a permanent member of the uni- -r vi-miW. hir&at' ? pncomitte*" e a "d 'UT' Law School Group Crticizes War Policy MR.f New Vice-President for State Re day for the February Regents' N sioner of Labor Statistics in Was] tiring Executive Vice-President M REGENTS TO DEC I By PHILIP BLOCK Over half the Law School fa- culty and approximately 350 law students released a petition today calling for a de-escalation of the Vietnam War. The statement was made in con- junction with similar releases by faculty and students from over fifty of the nation's leading law schools. would gain maximum support," said St. Antoine. According to St. Antoine the omission of any specific recom- mendation for a change in policy was another measure to insure that the statement would appealt to as wide a spectrum of support- ers as possible. "We feel that a statement signed by a' good 'portion of a; conservative body such as the lawG In announcing their opposition school will have the greatest ef- Ai to the present policy of the United feet." States, the law teachers and stu- The soliciting of the law stu- dents . claim that "the terrible dents' signatures was carried out violence the war is inflicting on by the ad hoc Student Committee the people of Vietnam is destroy- for Peace in Vietnam. ing the society we seek to pro- ...-...-. .- tect." pp However, the 27 faculty me-n- ew $ 5M * bers and the students feel that L their opposition to the war does not necessarily imply the "ad- vocacye s aprecipitate withdrawal To Explore UJ of United States forces or an abandoment of allies in South By LESLIE WAYNE Vietnam." The group believes that lawyers The University's $55 Million can play a significant role in Program pushed past the $72 showing that opposition to the million mark yesterday with the war comes not only from a few donation of a $500,000 endowed extremists but from "many moder- chair aimed at studying the prob- ate citizens at all levels of so- lem of human understanding. ciety and of all political views." The gift, the Mary and Charles At a Washington press confer- R. Walgreen Jr. Endowed Profes- ence, Dean Louis H. Pollak of sorship for the Study of Human Yale University Law School an- Understanding, will permit the nounced that the draft petition University to choose a leading has been signed by more than scholar in any field or discipline 500 law teachers and 4,000 law offered by the literary college to students around the country. undertake a concentrated study! Prof. Paul M. Bator of Harvard of this problem. Law School added that although "At this moment." Dean Wil- no systematic poll was taken of liam Haber of the literary college * all law professors, the statement said, "we do not know what par- was sent to many law schools and ticular department will receive 'U'Land2 For City By ALISON SYMROSKI The University may provide land for Ann Arbor's propsed pub-I lic housing program, according to1 City Administrator Guy Larcom. Larcom reported last night thatt the hope that the University will make available a site on Plymouth Rd. "helped finalize the nine-site plan." This plan, which was endorsed 9-1 last night by City Council, calls for construction of 135 low-rentl units on nine sites scattered throughout the city. This replaces, an earlier plan calling for con-t struction on only seven sites. The Housing Commissiof said that the new plan - was possible1 rof essorship nderstanding' C j t ,1 t the University for its $55 Million due to locating two new sites. Tb# program. commission previously said only Walgreen, of Winnetka Ill. s that the sites are in the Packard currently board chairman of W 1- and Plymouth areas, claiming that green Drug Stores of Chicago. He the exact locations could not be has served as a director of the revealed since the commission does University's Development Coun- not yet have the options on them. cil, the fund-raising arm of the However, the commission as- University. sured City Council that these are In addition, he is a menber of in effect, "sewn up." the executive committee of the Housing Commissioner Joseph President's Club, a group com- Edwards said last night that posed of more than 500 Michigan "hopefully one of the nine sites friends and alumni who have giv- would be a piece of land to be en the University at least $10,000. supplied by the University." "I t r i i t i ^ it ( i i E it :1 :r ,it ii t 1 .41Dby Wl ae Wayne State University Pres- scheduled at 8 per cent be elimin- ident William R. Keast has been II(ated to provide funds to increase charged with spending a total of !dormitoryosecurity. Carron refused $20,961 of university funds on "the ty affirm either at today's meet- , finer things of life," in a copy- ing, although he did say he would righted story in the South End, Siconsider lowering the salary in- W$Us student newspaper. crease to 5 per cent. -Dr. Alfred H. Whittaker, a mem- "With the recent rash of mug- ber of the WSU Board of Gover- gings and other crimes on cam- nors reacted to the information re- Larcom explained that there are calls for the actual construction pus, the administration must get j vealed in the story by culling several University sites in the Ply- of only 135 of the units and the the money to make it safe to walk Keast's action "ill-considered and mouth area being discussed. The purchase of the additional apar-t- ion campus at night," says Sak. He unintelligent." final decision for this, however, ments. Therefore, it is feared that describes the meeting with Carron "I will very definitely bring the lies with the University's Board the government may reduce the I "sane arguing," and says that matter up at the next Board of of Regents, he said. The regents size of the bond that it had orig- 'steps were taken to establish a Governors meeting, Whittaker will meet tomorrow. inally agreed to. joint student-faculty board to de- # said last night. "We are trying to Lace H ee o s tcide on course changes and grad-. watch costs very carefully as it Larcom explained that another However, others think the gov- in ytmiadKes' cinwsvr i is, and Keast's action was very site in the Plymouth area not ernment might under-write more "ng systems. -ill - considered. T h e itelligent owned by the University is avail- money if this proves to be neces-d "But the main issue of students 1hiniderd.haeentelignt able Hoeve ths stelocteda say. ommssinerEdwrdssai deciding on the hiring and firing ting would have been to consult abl . However this site, located a sary. Commissioner Edwards said e ahr tl inttkncr the board about such extraordin- quamter to a half a mile beyond of teachers still isn't taken care a atheorsbutsc.etaodn Northwood Apartments, is parto the feeling of the city seems to of," adds Sak. Another meeting, aN60acrtewudevpmedt ar. The be "to go back to Chicago and beg h Carron is slated for today Keast was unavailable for com- a 60-acre undeveloped area. The withment. However, WSU Executive expense of putting in utilities for for an increase and if this doesn't after the teach-in. Vice-President Edward L. Cush- two acres of this area if purchased work, to go to Washington." See STUDENTS, Page 5 _man said that Keast did nothing for public housing would be very - improper, and that "the same difficult, Larcom said. "It wouldatyperof thingis done at all the probably have to depend on the e ~p lo ther Universities." development of the whole parcel," Art Johnson, editor of the South he continued. End, claimed t h a t although However, Larcom feels "pretty F Keast's spending was not neces- confident" that the University will O n r ) srR arililudeaot birevashisdwhole sell between two and six acres to F or A n n A rb or A rea attitude about being President -- the city for public housing. "But it he's only here as a stepping stone is up to them," he said. By MARK LEVIN strike had not come off, he would to other ponsts." Meanwhile, the total proposed A controversial Detroit area I only have been out $5,000 because There are unconfirmeddreports program may be in danger due to newspaper owner is scheduled to he could have used most of the that Keast is being considered for its precarious financial situation. publish a morning Ann Arbor equipment on his Wyandotte the Presidency of Stanford Uni- The federal government previously daily in coming months. operation.ed asa replacement for Uni- had agreed to underwrite $3.69 Frank Beaumont, publisher of Beaumont is general manager ofearsity President Robbe rW.Flem- million for bonds to be used for the defunct strike paper, the De- the Wyandotte News Company, ing as chancellor of the Uni- the construction of 200 low-rent troit Daily Express, says publica- which currently publishes four versity of Wisconsin before that units. However, the present plan tion of the Ann Arbor Morning suburban Detroit papers including post was filled last year. Express is still at least sixty days the Downriver News-Herald. He, Keast came to WSU fr-om Cor- away. is also a stockholder in the Huron nell in 1965, replacing the late However, Beaumont refused to Valley Ad-Visor, a weekly Ann Clarence Hillberry. The South comment further on plans for the Arbor advertising publication. End quote "an administrative new newspaper. "I cannot com- The Ann Arbor News and The source who recalled that it was V of. i es ment further because of a suit Daily are presently . Ann Arbor's rare even to receive an electric of Cs S filed against me and Teamsters only daily newspapers. bill for Hillberry's home." Local 372 by the Detroit News. The - - - The allegedly improper spending Challenge Lecture Feries is being current state senate hearings concerns furnishings in Alumi phased out because the nine- about the alleged conspiracy has Bank Reon 7e s House, the top floor of whichis year-old program should be a delayed any immediate planning," used as an apartment for WSU separate budget item, explained Beaumont explained. 6 p Presidents. The South End cites Hildebrandt. The News has filed suit against I I YeJLeaSe bills involving as much as $10,000 Students cannot appeal directly Beaumont and the Teamsters for replacement of glass in the to the President but must be re- 'Union Local 372 for $175,000 for The Ann Arbor Trust Co. is at- apartment. to $16 for a tissue, box. ferred by a student loan office. what the News contends is the il tempting to persuade owners of Other bills mentioned include Indb a sdent asena Nieian legal ue of circulaton rute list. several apartments which it man- $1.200 for a marble fireplace, In a recent case. a Nigerian legal use of circulation route li,sages to accept the University lease $326.55 for "interior consultation .t , AT FLEMING'S DISCRETION: 'U' Fund Aids Variety will continue to be circulated, Prof. Theodore J. St. Antoine, who directed the circulation of the petition at the University said that the statement is a moderate one in order to obtain support from "fence-sitters who formerly; side- 'with the administrations' at- titude toward the war." "The statement is an effort to work out a compromise which this chair. It may even be some- one from an interdepartmental field." "We're looking for a per- son with a broad understanding possibly of several disciplines,' he continued, "so that he can be qualified to study several areas." The selection for the professor- ship will be made by Haber and the literary college executive com- mittee. By MARCIA ABRAMSON In the last resort, requests for emergency financial aid at the University go right to the top - to President Robben W. Fleming. Every year some $20.000 to $30.000 of alumni contributions are placed at the discretion of the Former P r e s i d e n t Harlan+ Hatcher used the fund to help support MUSKET on a recent overseas tour and to help the band travel to outstate football! games. Some faculty member's have been aided. A music studert was sent to appear with a group of college soloists in Europe. i