Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesdav. April 9. 1 9 I eT HEMCiGA AL Ti.jp UcV Y Anrl 17,1 7V0 D SIX YEARS' SERVICE: Manning To Leave LSA Post; AppInte By MARCIA ABRAMSON John J. Manning Jr., admin- istrative assistant in the literary college, will. leave the University at the end of next month to be- come Assistant Dean of Students at the University of Connecticut a.t Storrs. Connecticut, with 17,000 stu- dents, is the largest state univer- sity in the northeast. * Manning said his new post will include areas or work similar to what he his been doing here, such as academic discipline. New Duties "The Dean of Students at Con- necticut has a somewhat closer connection to the academic world," explalined Manning. "The Dean reports directly to the provost ,(chancellor) as the/deans of each individual college do, not directly to the Regents as the Vice-Presi- dent for Student Affairs does here.,, Manning will also be a lecturer in the English department at Connecticut, as he has been at the University. He recently earned his doctorate and wrote a 611-page dissertation on his specialty, the 16th century. "I think a teacher has to be a Renaissance man, and this posi- Lion has been for me the most per- fect way of implementing on a day-to-day basis my own educa- tional values and philosophy," panning explained. Functions as Teacher "Whether counseling or taking formal action, I'm functioning as a teacher, not,.a counselor or an administrator. I can be identifiable as a port in a storm-a delightful visibility," he added. Manning said'Connecticut is somewhat unlike Ann Arbor. Most students do not live in apartments, and the area is rural. "Most of the weekend action drains off into oston'or New York City-Storrs is about halfway between," he ex- plained. Manning came to the University in 1962 as a graduate student and teaching;assistant./ He took his present post in 1964.In addition to teaching and counseling, until last year Manning was a resident director in the dormitories, first in West Quad and then in Fletcher Hall. Seek Successor The administrative board of the literary college will choose a suc- cessor for Manning. "I assume he'll be chosen from within our own structure," Manning said. He did not know exactly when the de- cision would be made. Manning was the third faculty. Dean at Connecticut member to hold his post. He was preceded by James Robertson, as- sociate dean of the literary col- lege. "The position called administra- tive assistant was created some years ago as an opportunity for" Junior faculty members to work closer to the administration and to students," explained Robert- son. "Manning spent a great deal of time with students and showed great energy and patience. He was always willing to talk." "I've tried to drive a wedge into the alleged impersonality of the University," Manning explained. "I've also tried to institutionalize it. Here this kind of attitude has been available for appointments." LBIJ Conference To Set Site for" Vietnam Talks (Continued from Page 1) Vietnam that the President will hold at his all-day conference., U.S. officials said Phnom Penh could not handle the communica- tions requirements that could arise if a full-scale conference were called. TheU.S. does not have an embassy there, after Cambodia broke diplomatic ties in 1965. The United States wants to hold the talks in Geneva, but specula- tion is that a compromise will place them in Vientiane. Sources in Phnom Penh said Hanoi wants to maintain a sharp distinction between the military talk to arrange a cessation of American attacks north of the demilitarizedzone on the one hand, and future political peace negotiations-possibly within the framework, of the 1954 Geneva Conference-on the other hand. Hanoi almost certainly would demand the participation of a fullscale delegation from South Vietnam's Communist National Liberation Front, the sources said. Cambodia's Prince Norodom Si- hanouk has repeatedly offered his capital as the site for the Viet- nam peace conference-but he lacks diplomatic relations with the United States. The sources added the American suggestion of Geneva was unlikely to be acceptable to the North Viet- namese. Repeated claims by Hanoi that U.S. planes recently bombed a North Vietnamese province far to the north of the 20th parallel brought a denial meanwhile from Secretary of Defense Clark M.' Clifford. "There have been no United States attacks north of the 20th parallel since the President's speech eight 'days ago," Clifford said. Hanoi Radio charged Thursday that U.S. planes dropped 50 bombs on a heavily populated area in the northwest,, corner of North Viet- nam. "The North Vietnamese are er- ror," Clifford said in his state- ment. "American planes have not bombed the province of Lai Chau." The Communist allegations had raised concern among adminis- tration officials that the curr'ent effort to establish contact might be adversly affected. Clifford said that at his request Gen. Earle G. Wheeler, chairman of the Joint Chiefg of Staff, checked with commanders in the field "and in- formed me that there was no pres- ent evidence of any such bombing attack." Clifford said the probe showed that no U.S. attack W'as conducted within 200 'miles at Lai Chau, which is near the Laotian border. Clifford said that between 7 a.m. and noon Thursday, the period in, which Hanoi claimed the raid oc- curred, "the northern most attack by U.S. aircraft was 35 miles south of the 20th parallel." The South Vietnamese National Assembly rejected Sunday "neu- tralism" and any possible coalition government with Communist par- ticipation. It said peace negotia- tions unacceptable to the govern- ment would be considered invalid. The assembly adopted a resolu- tion expressing its views by voice after a two-day debate. The resolution appealed to allied government to continue support of "the South Vietnamese people in their task of safeguarding free- dom and peace." Regents To Reconsider IDA Ties (Continued from Page 1) The Princeton faculty said past sponsorship of IDA "is not par- ticulaly a good symbol df the university's commitments, aspir- ations and achievements." The common complaint, magni- fied by protests of college student groups, is that thehUniversity "never saw reports that went to the Department of Defense." Norman says, "ordinarily in a consortium, the University plays a part in the direction of the con- sortium." But with 'IDA, an in- stitute Norman likened to Rand Corporation, "the University at no time validated what was done." "We do not want to have it im- plied that we have feedback from the institute and are approving everything IDA does," Norman says. The Princeton faculty urged joint action among IDA members to change the structure under which the institute is not respon- sible to the institutions. "If the sponsors cannot agree to change the structure," the com- mittee said, "then we recommend unilateral withdrawal. At this, time, however, group action seems unlikely and no school has actually withdrawn1 from the institute. IDA was originally formed after former Secretary of Defense Charles E. Wilson asked James R. Killian, president of Massachu- setts Institute of Technology, to set up a defense research corpor- ation. Killian was reluctant for MIT to go it alone and invited other schools "to share the blame of taking these people (scientists) out of purely educational work forj a while into defense work." Four other schools - Cal Tech, Case Institute of Technology. Stanford and Tulane accepted and IDA was founded. Since then, the University, Chi- cago, Illinois, California, Prince- ton, Penn State and Columbia have joined the consortium., The initial group received a $500,000 grant from the Ford Foundation to begin work, and IDA's current annual budget is about $12 million. Read and Use Classified Ads The CPA is a wanted man. ALL THE SPAGHETTI YOU CAN EAT for $1.00 EVERY WEDNESDAY Aunt Jeumnct EZTCU&H Junction U.S. 23 & 12 GOLF at DON'S PARl 3 50665 West Huron River Dr. LEAGUES WELCOME Susterka Lake HUnter 3-5010 4 .......... 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HOUSE benefit performance at the Caniterbury House April 10 and 11 Wednesday and Thursday-9:00 P.M. Wednesday-Fritz Lang's 'M' April 10-Peter Griffith, classical guitarist -Christopher & Sarah, folk singers Thursday-The Changing Rhinoceros of Soul, band April 11-John Higgins Quintet Donation-$1.25 CLEVELANDERS While you're home for the summer, you can earn 3, 6 or. 9 credits at CASE WESTERN RESERVE UNIVERSITY, SUMMER SESSION opens June 18 and ends August 9. For information-,about courses offered, write: Vice Provost for Student Services, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio 44106. ....... ... . : : :. . <: ::: CONT0LLER, ASS;CAwtipb x-x. 1~ jta. '4 1rt- i f"..O .4 i xC i :: :~s 1 -x ' <: <> E: .............. i .......... ftcii F1fo: :;:* ......M.... 3A 1 .1* se :;:; ;;:;:r::::: r ::::: sa AnKA ican InstitUte of TORAV T SOUTaha Certified Public Accountants q '- I ' ' e !' !i f P I a3j 9. ' y ^2 } na, s 2 ,; ;,;{ . :may i' §r b .,q ? ti..'' t[4 .. .+. } . .i{ ti :. , fiF ikvk S .:. I 820 FULLER WHY CART ALL THOSE CLOTHES HOME? Greene's way makes going home a cinch JUST CALL GREENE'S for one of our fabulous Handi-Hampers storage boxes. Pack all the clothes you won't wear until fall-Clothes you would ordi- narily pack up take home, have cleaned, pack up again and bring back in the fall. NOW, ALL YOU NEED TO DO is turn the Hamper over to Greene's, They clean the lot at regular cleaning prices and store it in a refrigerated moth- proof vault. When you returr in the fall, call Greene's again, your clothes will be taken out of the vault, returned to you freshly pressed on hangers and packed in neat polyethylene bags, ready for your clothes closet. PRICE? $4.95 plus regular cleaning and pressing prices-includes $250.00 insurance. Call NOrmandy 23-23-1 or Stop at any Greene's Plant for Information 4 } fuller. east G I I I I !I it ti i Designed and maintainpd to accommodate the serious student and the 'conscientious professional. Fuller East has created. its own mode of apartment living. Stop by and see -. . fuller east features .. . * two-bedroom completely furnished apartments ranging in size from very large to queen size. * many special appointments, catering to istudents' needs and desires, including private balconies and frosty comfortable air-conditioning, sound conditioning. because of the high demand for a controlled situation by graduate students and profes- sional people, eight hundred fuller (adjacent to 820 Fuller) will be reserved; for gradu- P.S. BY THE WAY, we notice that some of the other shops around town are offering the Greene's Handi-Hamper idea. But they can't offer the on- the-premise refrigerated storage vault of Greene's exclusive Microclean process. It's a plus to you at the same price. ii I