LY G Lit ~iAan ~i~art& VOTE TODAY! VOTE TODAY! Vol. LXXVII, No. 135 Ann Arbor, Michigan, Tuesday March 12, 1968 Seven Cents ROCreating the Riht Ati By RON LANDSMAN Showing the proper attitude The ROTC programs all sus- Force cadets go to camp be- grade and an "aptitude grade," b First of Three Parts is a requisite for all of the over tain at least a 50 per cent drop- tween their junior and senior according to Navy Lt. William A Some courses require thirty- 700 University students in the out rate among freshman and years and Navy students take Obenshain. "This includes re- u page term papers and enough Army, Navy and Air Force sophomore students, but juniors a cruise each summer, liability, appearance, attitude, s4 reading to keep students up all ROTC programs. Any student and upperclassmen on the two "I learned more from one personal behavior and self ex- a night several nights a week. In who meets basic physical re- year program are required to summer cruise than from two pression ratings by instructors," o s.. . . . . . . . . ...other classes, students do what quirements is eligible for the sign a contract with the De- years of classes," one Navy he explains. "These qualities y r ti r" IIt sectfULIMIt EForsythe also answered charges that Stegeman occupied most of "We ought to try to tell the Albert Terrace before first sub- "e o ug httstrey atgobtallthemitting a performance bond, as people this is really a global con- demanded by the city and promis- flict," Dodd said. "We've failed to ed by Stegeman before occupancy tell the people there's a good rea- of any units last August. son for paying all this blood and " elthe treasure." "The developer delayed in te resBkB."rpresentation of this certificate for Sens. Bourke B. Hicken'ooper several weeks;" the report main- (R-Iowa), and Sparkman also twins. went to bat for the administra- Stegeman presented a check bond three months after it was Sen. Wayne Morse (D-Ore ), required. He stopped payment on the only member of the commit- the check, however, and the city tee who opposed the Tonkin Gulf would not honor his bond until resolution in 1964, saidhe had January. known all along that the United Councilman Robert Weeks (D- States provoked the incidents Third Ward) declared "No rea- which led to the resolution. sonable person can deny that at He said he maintained his view the very least there is some hanky- despite "all the snow jobs that the panky involved here. In recent in- administration and my colleagues cidents the city team has been re- on this committee tried to do to markably outclassed, out man- cover up our provocation." euvered, and outpointed." Ai-s k Hits Archaic Protest Techniques By DAVID FRITSCH power and to be able to bring" Author and social organizer change," said Alinsky. "Not hav- Saul Alinsky slung barbs at uni- ing organization results in lack of versities, Republicans and sit-ins representatives to deal with the in a speech Sunday as part of the rest of society, which is basic to University Activities Center "Sym- the democratic process." posium '68." Alinsky pointed out that the Speaking on "Dissent: Old and next census will show that about New," Alinsky called sit-ins "ar- "three out of four" Amnericans be- chaic." He pointed to his tight long to the middle class. "All of with Eastman Kodak as an exam- the poor are a minority in a ple where sit-ins would be inef- middle class nation," he said. fective because of the "vast, un- "Therefore they must look for al- personal nature of the economy." lies among the middle class." Be- Declaring that "the procedures of cause of this, about 40 per cent dissent are going to have to face of the people in Alinsky's training the nature of the opposition," he institute for social organizers are cited his "proxies for peoule" being trained to work among the campaign and his training organ- middle class. izan as new tatics Alinsky both defended and ex-j President Richard M. Nixon the bulk of their support. But how Sen. Eugene J. Mc- Carthy (D-Minn.), does percent- age wise in taking votes away from Johnson, and what support New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller drains away from Nixon with a write in will have a direct bear- ing on the future pattern of the national campaigning. Vietnam Issue At issue in bothsinstances is Johnson's conduct of the Viet- nam war. Nixon says that if elected he would end the conflict but has refused to spell out how he would accomplish that result. McCarthy has said the way to stop the war is to accept a coalit- ion government in Saigon, "be willing to tell the American people the truth about the war, however bad," and "be willing to make a fresh start." In turn, McCarthy has been ac- cused by Johnson's supporters in a write in drive for the President of being guilty of "fuzzy think- ing" and a willingness to surren- der to the Communists. The John- son camp split over charges that Hanoi would be pleased if Mc- Carthy should win the primary. Antiwar Sentiment In a state in which the Demo- cratic vote is not expected to go over 45,000, McCarthy's supporters would call anything over 25 per cent of the total a demonstration of antiwar sentiment worthy of his carrying the battle against John- son's policies into more important primaries. He concentrated in brief talks on what he called the Democratic administration's ",failure in lead- ership" of the nation. He said New Hampshire voters will demonstrate in the first round that the whole country wants a change in govern- ment. No Jokes At no point did Nixon mention Rockefeller or any other Republ- "Fleming Installed in Gala Affair By STEVE WILDSTROM Managing Editor In recent years, the Michigan Legislature has repeatedly at- t-rd-i tn nlanPc a ciling on out- tobbnWighFlminwa ,empeL O P U11 I wish I coud continue o Robben Wright Fleming was int of-state enrollment at the Uni- agree," Case said, "but I'm more augurated as the ninth President versity. and more convinced that what of the University yesterday, The inauguration ceremony also we're doing is wrong. I've come The colorful ceremony took included salutations by represen- very close to feeling that there's place in Hill Aud. before an audi- tatives of the State of Michigan, a line to be drawn between hon- ence of about 4,000, including the students, the faculty, the oring our commitments and pig- 1,100 representatives of other uni- alumni and other state universi- headed pursuit of a course that versities, learned societies and ties and colleges. Lt. Gov. William ;las become more and more educational institutions. G. Milliken represented Gov. sterile. Fleming, 53, was formally in- George Romney. vested in office by Regent Rob- Student Government Council "Mr. Secretary, you don't have ert Briggs. Regent Paul Goebbel Administrative Vice President Mi- to persuade this committee to be was originally scheduled to pre- chael Davis, speaking for the stu- steadfast and patriotic, 'or that side. but was not present because dents, told the delegates and it's a good thing to honor com- f.r+ nf' h mitments. You really don't. ti s G 3 'y '4 _I J i i I