CITY COUNCIL ENDORSEMENTS See editorial page - C, r 111k i6r Aai FAIR AND MILD High--70 Low--49 Partly cloudy with chance of showers. Vol. LXXViII, Nb. 150 Ann Arbor, Michigan, Friday, March 29, 1968 Seven Cents Big Ten Athletic Heads To Evaluate DISC( By HOWARD KOHN Neither Commissioner Bill Reed sing said similar practices exist- admitted he employed athletes on passed in 1957, which prohibits available to athletes on their Be Executive Sports Editor nor Examiner John Dewey are ed there. The original Daily in- a part-time basis from 1958-67. tendered athletes from receiving campuses "without the approval disc Big Ten athletic directors will talking about the information un- vestigation also disclosed that Some of the most recent athletes any aid beyond their regular of the athletic departments." view wrestle with the question of dis- covered. "It would be premature Spartan athletes had long dis- employed were Cazzie Russell, '66; scholarships as rmeward for their "We are devoting a lot of time of ti counts to college athletes from to give you our conclusions now," tance telephone privileges. George Pomey, '65; Carl Ward, athletic achievements. to this issue because we don't "A collegetown merchants at the next Reed says. A recent Daily probe revealed '67; Dick Wells, '66; Bill Yearby, "I think we have over-reacted want people to say we're sweep- haus conference meeting May 14-18 in Five local businessmen admit- that drugstores owned by How- '66; and Barry Dehlin, '67. All to the disclosures," Reed says. ing anything under the rug," scale Minneapolis. ted giving discounts and free mer- ard Wikel also have an estab- were on tenders. "They would be much more sig- Reed says. did" They will decide if athletic dis- chandise to varsity athletes upon lished discount policy for varsity Conference rules prohibit ath- nificant if an organized fund Along with the conference in- recoi counts are a clear and present presentation of an 'M' Club card. athletes. letes on tender from accepting within the athletic department vestigation, a faculty committee whe violation of conference rules. Managers at Tice's Men's Shop, Thomas Copi, '69Ed, was one of part-time jobs during the aca- had been found." at the University has been ex- math Hinging on the decision are The Brown Jug, M i c h i g a n several former employes at the demic year. At the time they were aiscosed, amining the allegations. Chaired possible penalties against the Theater and State Theater and drugstores who told The Daily Sources also said athletes have Dewey stated his opinion that by Prof. Edward Halpern of the Re University and Michigan State the former manager at Michigan that they had given free meals been and still are employed at "discounts would be in violation mathematics department, the ize o where discount practices were re- Pharmacy told The Daily that to athletes. (The other ex-em- Thano's Restaurant. Athletes if given to the exclusion of the committee was commissioned by ties vealed in an independent Daily they had given discounts with the ployes wished to remain anony- mentioned included Jim Berline, general student body." the Board in Control of Intercol- he h investigation in February. prior knowledge of the coaches. mous.) '68, and Ernie Sharpe, '68. Reed stresses that the Big Ten legiate Athletics. disco Triggered by The Daily probe, Several athletes corroborated Two businessmen have also Until the athletic directors de- office has undertaken a fact- Halpern says the committee will tices Big Ten examiners interviewed that they had received discounts provided athletes with part-time cide, Reed does not wish to clas- finding mission to study piefer- be finished by the end of next hear coaches, athletes, administrators and free gifts. One of the coaches' jobs in apparent violation of con- sify discounts as violations. He is ential treatment of athletes week and will report to the Loard Th and businessmen at the two also said he knew of the practice. ference rules. unconvinced that they violate the around the conference. as soon as possible. He would not main schools. They completed their in- Athletes and the manager of Roy Snyder, former owner- spirit of Part Two. Rule Seven, Both Minnesota and Wisconsin comment on the committee's find- judg vestigation this week. Butterfield theaters in East Lan- manager of Michigan Pharmacy, Section Two of the Big Ten code have said that discounts may be ings. mati Twelve Pages uints sides studying" The Daily's osures, the committee also re ed the general undertakings he athletic department Ve've tried to conduct an ex- tive study on a much broader than what the conference Halpern said. "We will make mmendations to the Board a we evaluate all the 1:ifor- on." ed does not want to general- n the scope of discount prac- throughout the Big Ten. But as referred to movie theater unts as "time-honored prac- which do not strike at the t of the rules." e athletic directors have re- Led silent, refusing to pre- e the case before all infor- on has been assembled. Students To Ask Lansing Looting, Tn Ros in r Iudnt (;pi Violence f Erupt Protest -M n-*w .- %U./ R X wlkf f%-001 M prw %.aW v ' 60W a/ By DAN SHARE - some 30 students to Lansing to Student Government Council speak with their representatives, today will open the campaign to The students' arguments will pressure the state Legislature to centefor fuds and the irrationality of restore cuts made in the Univer- ofudanth rtinlyof sity's appropriations. Eight stu- arguments that out-of-state stu- dents will go to Lansing and talk dents are a burden on the state. to key members of the House The State Senate has approved Appropriations Committee. a $61.3 million appropriation for The trip will allow the students the University for the coming to sound out attitudes of the com- year. This represents a cut of $3.4 mittee members and give SGC an million from Gov. Romney's re- idea of the kind of opposition ',quest and a $14.5 million slash in faced in the Legislature. the University's budget request. The major push will come next University officials have indi-4 week when SGC president Mike cated that if the cuts made by Koeneke, '69BAd, expects to send the Senate are not restored, a $348 hike in out-state tuition will be necessary. A mailing campaign will ask 5000 select alumni to write their representatives and urge the Leg- islature to restore the cuts. Koeneke said that a basic rea- son for student involvement in this area is that "students can give a different kind of lobbying force than the University. I doubt that the University can have much effectiveness at this point. In- dividual students can," he ex- plained. A position paper distributed at last night's meeting pointed out that once an individual completes a Michigan education, whether or not he remains in the state - and contributes his talents to the state's' welfare - is not a fun- ction of his place of residence be- fore entering school. In other action, SGC abolished the Student Traffic Advisory Board (STAB). Mike Davis, Grad, called the move "another sign that traffic regulations for stu- dents are over and done with." Abolishing STAB reaffirms the position taken by SGC last week that Council will have nothing to do with any reinstitution of driv- ing regulations. "There aren't any driving regu- lations, so there isn't any need for anradvisory board," explain- ed Carol Hollenshead, '71. 'She added that the board has not been meeting for the last few weeks. SGC also voted to ask the Re- gents for an increase in its ap- propriation from 25 to 50 cents a student. Counoilw ill run a $3,000 deficit this year:. The request is similar to one made last April and rejected. Ex- ecutive Vice President Bob Neff, '69, who made the motion, 'said that the move is "a safeguard in case we don't get incorporation." Sam Sherman, '68, said that he does not expect the request to be granted since SGC funds are appropriated from the office of; Student Affairs budget, which has already been drawn up for next year. Miss Hollenshead said, "I don't expect to get the increased funds, but trying will give an impetus to our incorporation plans." SGC also approved plans of the Student Housing Association to direct pressure for the eight- month lease at owners of Apart- ments Limited instead of the managers. During emphis u tsDLifts Travel res trictionis To Issue Passports For Previously Listed 'Off Limit' Countries Mayor Sets Curfew, C alls Emergency Legislature Rushes Control Measures; 48 Hurt by Fighting -- a a.----------.MEMPHIS, Tenn. OP)--A protest The State Department will noi by up to 6000 Negroes, led by no longer prosecute people who Martin Luther King, burst into travel to countries previously list- ?shattering violence yesterday, and ed as "off limits." The decision sporadic looting, burning and at will, in effect, eliminate as of to- least one incidence of sniping con- day restrictions on travel to all tinued into the night. countries except Cuba, Commun- One 16-year-old Negro youth ist China, North Vietnam and {<:::. isth Ci or t V n dwas killed and 48 other persons, Nr th orea d t " including four policemen, were in- Passports will be issued for tra- jured, police said. vel in these countries, but they Police using tear gas and night will not be validated and pro- sticks s e en tections will not be guaranteed. match after young Negroes using Previously revoked passports will rc ad clus beg reaking be reissued as long as theon- o and looting downto er's swear not to use them to adloigd enter any of the restricted coun- stores. tries. -Associated Press Even after an emergency dusk- The State Department admits A MEMPHIS POLICEMAN levels his night stick on a looter during violence that erupted during a to-dawn curfew went into effect, its decision was the product of a civil rights march led by the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., in behalf of striking sanitation police reported more looting, and number of recent court decisions workers. Tennessee Gov. Buford Ellington yesterday afternoon declared a state of emergency, fmen were ke buy h which have gradually undermined pae h iyudracre n ree 00ntoa urse noteae numerous fires set throughout the its claimed authority to impose placed the city under a curfew and ordered 4000 national guardsmen ito the area. Negro district. tr'avel restrictions. At midnight, fire officials re- . The suit which brought today's NOR TH CAMPUS1 S TE-o ported 148 alarms from the down- changes was that of Prof. town Negro district, five of them Staughton Lynd of Yale Univer- major blazes. A fire department sity in the United States Court spokesman said almost all were of AppProgramstM aycGranrtouched off by gasoline bombs. of Appeals last December. '[.V'(TO t-ra n tNational Guardsmen, called In- The State Department had re- to the riot earlier in the day, yoked Lynd's passport in 1966 af- rode each fire truck as it answered ter he went to North Vietnam onn _ '' L iI I 1 c "cll hog alo tns wN i Funds for N w 1 ,CC H allotrogs higof toes a peace mission. He was later re- E Ui r1 41 tUt'/~~ Police officials reported that fused a new passport to go to five shots were fired at officers. 'England because he refused to By MICHAEL THORYN total of $300 million per year at oeprative residences in Canada. at the intersection of Beale and sw~ear he would never return to North Vietnam. Inter-Cooperative Council may a ceiling interest rate of three per A student co-op in Oregon has Hernando, the main trouble spot. The court ruled unanimously have found the source of funds cent. been the only co-op to receive a Policemen put on bullet proof that the passport should have been to build low-cost housing for more The University has offered JJC loan from the program. vests, and national guardsmen, returned because its seizure viola- than 200 students after years of 2.9 acres of land on North Cam- A lot of momentum came out of armed with sniper scopes, moved ted the Fifth Amendment right of search. pus at $15,000 an acre. The site .the conference held at the Uni- into the area. free travel. The court decided that ICC is asking for a $1.18 million overlooks Baits Housing and Zeta versity during spring break for Mayor Henry Loeb, acting un- the State Department has author- loan under the College Housing Beta Tau fraternity. organizing student co-ops on a der new laws rushed to passage ity to say where a passport may be Program of the Department of The University is prevented much larger scale," said Nancy by the state legislature in Nash- legally used but may not control Housing and Urban Development. from acting as a co-signer of a Meyerson, Grad, ICC education ville and signed by Gov. Buford travel. The program authorizes lending a loan agreement under provisions chairman. See MARCH, Page 8 - of the Michigan Constitution. g__ Counci__Recomme_ ds A ~~~However, the Housing Act which k$atoie oe o h rga y oni ?states that "approval of the pro- E ec Rornm ien ject b h institution may be accepted in lieu of cosignature." Adoptio o P s a Plan CUierityna V icer t aPass Fail ;r":fI Chief Financial Officer Wilbur do -Daily-James Forsyth Carey McWilliams Me Wiliam sUrges Dissent in Politics By JAMES JENSEN The lack of response to dissent Carey McWilliams, editor of is due to "25 years of rot in the "The Nation," placed the United political system," McWilliams States "on the threshold of revo-j said. "Political parties are not lutionary politics" as he spoke atune to the times," he added, last night at the League ballroom. j noting that they are organized McWilliams urged college stu- outside the Jurisdiction of the dents to preserve the value of Constitution and federal law and dissent and concern themselves work with an "antique structure with politics. He said the passive, unchanged since the days of cynical attitudes taken toward: Tippecanoe." politics in some dissent should be Many Failures avoided.Ot her rea sons McWilliams cit- i E ' TCokyo Riotelrs Hit Hospital TOKYO (A'-About 400 radical students armed with staves and rocks stormed the new U.S. Army hospital for Vietnam war casual- ties at nearby Oji yesterday in a wild, bloody surge that resulted in 111 injuries. Police said 169 students were arrested.-Among the injured were 75 policemen, 27 students and nine bystanders. All were taken to hos- pitals and many were reported in serious condition. - - ed were the lack of correlation between foreign and domestic policy, the disintegration of co- alitions of interest groups be- tween the parties and the failure to recognize the new issues and their respective constituencies. Looming over these problems is the fact that Americans today cannot relate to their historical values, which need to be rede- fined for use in the present. Saying that only men can make moral decisions, McWilliams ex- plained that those who feel mor- al decisions cannot be made through politics have a lack of trust in the people and no Aai h that the truth can bring change. K. Pierpont has sent a letter in By GREG ZIEREN essary approval "basically a for- support of ICC to Washington. Engineering Council last night mality." Other University offices are approved a recommendation for a Dean Gordon Van Wylen of the working on a detailed eight-page 1 pass-fail program for technical, engineering college was optimistic application form that asks such j social science and humanities about faculty approval of the plan questions as average family income electives which may become ef- and said the proposal would prob- of students and number of sub-'fective as early as next fall if a ably come before them this spring. standard units owned by the cor- curriculum committee and the "If it passes, the pass-fail program poration. Engineering College faculty ap- will be in effect for next year," ICC is a non-profit corporation prove the plan. Van Wylen added. owned by 320 co-op members in 11 Sophomores and upperclassmen; Oppose SGC Incorporation houses. Members save $400 a year with a 2.00 or better grade point In other action, Council ap- over dormitory rates by doing all average would be eligible for the proved a resolution against the their own work: pass-fail option. Pass-fail would proposed incorporation of Stu- The loan effort was encouraged be elected during the first two dent Government Council on the by Trevor Thomas, director of the weeks of the term, in contrast to ; grounds that more "in depth re- College Housing Program, who at- the literary college program where search into the problems and re- tended the TCC Student 'Housing'ntf r1ontc min+.i - no ai h.a - ,enonsihilitie nf incornnration" is A ~ .:;