A CITY COUNCIL: REJECT SUPERVISQRS See editorial page L7 L 4131 4br :43 a t t NICE fiigh-65 Low-43 Sunny, warmer with northwest winds Vol. LXXVIII, No. 161 Ann Arbor, Michigan, Thursday, April 11, 1968 Twelve Pages Congress Passes King Aides .Still To Run l Ve Twelve w.aaes fb h-a In' Kansas City Housig Measure Po;r Mardh 1)ATLANTA, Ga. (R) - Martini Jo111sonT err iPassagerVicsor' Luther King, Jr.'s followers said Urre oilOthr Leislaionyesterday they would carry on UrgesActio on oher Lgislaian.with his planned poor people's tai ILA 'Very WASHINGTON UP - Congress passed and sent to the White House yesterday a civil rights bill with a sweeping ban against racial discrimination in housing. President Johnson announced he will sign the measure "at a very early date." "The only true path to progress for a free people is the one we will take when this legislation is made the law of the land," Johnson said. "Through the process of law, we shall strike for all time' --~~- - the shackles of an old in- campaign in the national capital. going by way of Memphis, Tenn., where King was assassinated a week ago. "We shall continue our assault on the poverty and injustice in Memphis." said the Rev. Ralph Dl. Abernathy, 42. King's successor as president of Southern Christian Leadership Conference 4SCLC). King was shot while standing on a second floor landing of a M'emphis motel after returning there to lead a march of striking, sanitation workers whose cause he had taken up. His killer has not been found. Abernathy, King's closest asso- ciate and jail companion many times, said at a news conference the SCLC staff would return to Memphis within the next two Grad School Fears Empty Departments justice." Johnson told an impromptu news conference at the White House that the open housing pro- vision is "a victory for every American," and he urged Congress to complete its work on other leg- islation that offers hope "for mil-, lions of Americans who now look to it for action." Alar-ming N.J. Guard On Trenton Standby By T e Associated Press Five Negroes were shot to death in another night of violence as snipers exchanged shots from roof tops and cars with police and National Guardsmen on Kansas City's east side yesterday. A police spokesman called the situation "very, very; ser- ious." He said, "It was bad last night, and it's a whole lot worse tonight.' Police Chief C. M. Kelley said -it was "very alarming." The National Guard requested more ammunition. Col. Richard Shelly said the Guard was moving in 700 more men, bringing the total on assignment in the city to almost 3,000. A National Guardsman, two firemen and a policeman were wounded. Several civil-. . ians were taken to hospitals with wounds, police said. One G en. Abrains fireman was in critical con- yJILLCRABTREEThisugesed1heweeks. He said also the start of By h This suggested the President is demonstrations for jobs or income Since the National Security ready to call for action on an in Washington would be delayed Council announcedsdin February assortment of welfare, urban re- about two weeks beyond the April that graduate students will no newal and job-creating bills, all 29 date announced earlier. longer be exempt from the diaft, calculated to ease tensions in vio- Abernathy said congressional officials of the Rackham School lence-torn slum areas. aprvloh ivlrgt-os of Graduate Studies are worried approval of the evil rights-hous- that many of their departments With one exception, major civil ing bill was not' a solution to may not be filled rights organizations and rights slums or ghettos. Although there are already 'a leaders hailed passage of the bill. "This is a great stride toward! Althughthee ar alead afreedom for white Americans, but sufficient number of qualified ap- The exception was the Congress plicants to fill the departments, 'of Racial Equality, which called it is barely a step in the right officials fear many students may direction for black men," Aber- not show up at matriculation nathy said. "This is not a solution time. Assistant Dean Byron L. KING FUND 'to the problem but merely a step Groesbeck explains' that most ap- nin the right direction." c pns t a- Panhellenic Association and Before Abernathy spoke, chair-1 plications are received and evalu- Markley Council eachdonated man Joseph Lowery of the SCLC, ted before February, and many $100 ,to a Martin Luther Kingabrdodietsanucdth students accepted at that time board of directors. announced the stuent aceptd a tht tme scholarship fund "in the hope Iformal election of Abernathy as may since have been drafted. that the administration sets one president of the organization Departments haidest-hit by the up." which King headed from its draft will be those in science and Panhel also unanimously founding in 1957 until his death.1 the humanities, Groesbeck says.proosasomaeeb "He is our leader because we 'These departments accept. all ap-' supre proposals made 'by "H suredrbcuswe deprtments accng eptenal a black students yesterday to es- have chosen him," Lowery said. plicants showing the potential to tablish the scholarship and an The board also reaffir ned a com- o graduateworkendowedchair to be filled by a mitment to the Memphis and Snce the graduatescholanc Negro; to immediately imple- Washington campaigns and elect- e dpts all qua r fied applicants in ment the suggestions of the ed to the board King's widow,: these departments already, admit- Defense Department's Greene singer Harry Belafonte and bus- ting an excess of students would Report; and to increase Univer- inessman Cirilo McSween of Chi- mean lowering our admission st ciiyi h n ro cago as treasurer,'a post held by standards. We will accept a drop sity activity in the Ann Arbor a t in enrollment before we do that,' community. Lowery confirmed there had been Groesbeck adds. Both groups' passed resolu- discussions of racial and poverty "Where we formerly admitted tions urging other student issues by some SCLC staff mem- students with-for example-a 3.8 groups to follow suit. bers and political figures who at- grade point average and a score tended King's funeral Tuesday in of 700 on graduate record ex- the bill a "hoax against black Atlanta, where thousands paid aminations, now we admit them people" final tribute in a massive march.j with a 3.6 and a score of 675. The National Association for "Actually I think there was very students are still very highly The little discussion," said Lowery. studntsare til ver hihlythe Advancement of Colored Peo- -- . . -- - T Tear Gas Disperses Kansas City Crowd IN RIGHTS COMMITTEE: Debate Over State Hous Centers on Tactics for f By JIM NEUBACHER House Minority Leader William ed yesterd The state fair housing bill, now Ryan., (D-Detroit), has urged is no nee before the House Civil Rights House leaders to put aside their The fede Committee, has become the sub- other work and take immediate overlappir ject of debate once more. But this action on the bill, which was re- vides that time the debate is between the cently sent to the House from the federal co supporters of the bill. Senate. However, he has been un- Informe Both the R b ,li d ' able to convince the GOP leader- '-~-fnt - l- --Associated Press *ui. arres~s came 1InILUo headquarters by the carloads.' Police said their command post in the area was under sporadic rifle fire. The police academy in the same vicinity was severely damaged by fire, one of several " B i l touched off by arsonists armed g B with fire bomrs. Police Chief C. j, UM. Kelley ordered police and guardsmen to shoot fire bombers. Snipers and the arsonists used assSR e hit-and-run tactics, shooting and starting fires from one vantage point then driving in getaway cars ay and claim that there to another as more police ap- d for a state-wide bill. proached. The spokesman said the -ral bill contains some fires were too numerous to count. ng provisions,, and pro- Last night's deaths raised the they be enforced by the number killed in three;,nights of urts. violence to six. d observers in Lansing The New Jersey National Guard however, that this sort was placed on standby alert for ion has existed since the possible use in Trenton. Schools il1 was passed by the there were closed and a curfew t month, and is not like- imposed after a night of violence w any more, brought destruction to the fringes criticized the attitude of the state capitol building. A come prominent Negro teenaged Negro was shot to death ho charge that the open Tuesday night by a white police- bill is worthless, and man who was %trying to arrest forgotten. University him on a looting charge. Fires Albert H. Wheeler, were set and Negro youths roamed of the Michigan confer- the streets into the'early morning the NAACP, said in a hours, shouting: "They killed a, last Friday's memorial boy for stealing a shirt." r King, "State legislators Gov. George Romney yesterday ng their time in Lansing began pulling 3,000 National about a fair housing law. Guardsmen out of Detroit and can just forget it." eased a five-day state of emer- Duu ue npu ncan ana iem- ocratic leaders in. the House are in favor of the bill, but now they do not agree on the best course of action to take to steer the measure through the House. The bill, if passed, would outline certain acts as "unfair housing practices," and would prescribe the functions of the state civil right commission in investigating com- plaints. qualified, we are not downgradin Som tf ebr mtwt ing ple, apparently aware of CORE's aspirants," he said, but declined standards." reaction, said: "There isn't any to say who was involved. "There Groesbeck added that the en- question about our gratification at w o a ings." rollment drop in the chemistry, the vote. Despite the deprecation mathematics and zoology departs it has received in some quarters, ments will be especially noticeable, it will be genuinely valuable." aS fl AT because there is not likely to be In passing the civil rights-open L OW Os an influx of female applicants to housing bill by a vote of 250 to fill the gap. "These are simply |171, the House rejected a charge ee not women's fields," he explained.|that it was knuckling -under to A id R eSide The enrollment drop in these Negro rioters. departments may also affect un- The bill, previously passed by dergraduateeducation, according the Senate after months of dawdl- to Groesbeck. ' ing debate, cleared the House Experiments in higher educa- "The chemistry and math depart- while armed troops still patroled tion are always expensive and thel ments needs almost the same vol- outside the Capitol because of the Residential College is no excep-4 ume of teaching feiiowt as' psy- violence that followed the assas- tion. chology and English. We just sination of Dr. Martin Luther Initially, the high costof opera- don't have them," he said. King Jr. tig the new educational unit had ___ -_- prompted speculation that the i { t ship, and the bill will probably of oppositi remain in the background until federal bi after Easter. Senate las House Speaker Robert Waldron, ly to groA (R-Grosse Pointe) explained that Ryan< tomorrow is the legislature's dead- taken by line for the passage of bills in their leaders, wl house of origin. Waldron and housing 1 other legislators fear that if the should be Senate-passed fair housing bill is Professor moved up ahead of the long list chairman of House bills waiting consider- ence of t ation, many of these bills would -speech at die for lack of time to consider services fo: them. are spendi Ryan also said that the House bickeringa could extend its deadlines for bill Well, they '1.o Loinmand ,Viet Troops WASHINGTON (P)--.President Johnson announced yesterday that IGen. Creighton W, Abrams will succeed Gen. William C. West- moreland as commander of U.S. forces in Vietnam. Johnson also announced at an afternoon news conference that he has accepted the resignation of Postmaster General Lawrence F. O'Brien and nomiriated W. Marv- in Watson, presidential appoint- ments secretary, to succeed him. Abrams, who punched, a hole through German lines in the Battle of the Bulge, has a repu- tation as an aggressive, hard- nosed boss, intolerant of second- rate performance. "He won't be content to let the other side hold any initiative at all," says an associate. Abrams, born in Springfield, Mass., Sept. 15, 1914, was grad. uated from West Point in the 1936 class with Westmoreland. O'Brien, who was close to the late President John F. Kennedy, is expected to join the campaign his brother, Sen. Robert F. Ken- nedy of New York, is now waging for the 1968 Democratic presiden- tial nomination. O'Brien -told him yesterday morning, Johnson reported to the news conference, "he would like to resign." The President said: "I told him what I have told other members of the cabinet- that since I am not going to be a candidate, now is the time for them to make decisions for their (families and their future." ew Funds tin I I -A ....._ .,.., .. .. a.... . t 4 i huk O4 17 e passage by a couple of days. "I'm sure he wants it passed," Ryan is cautiously optimistic Ryan said. "Wheeler was probably might have existed. But now that about passage of the bill once it attempting to point'out that there the Residential College has ma- : comes out of committee, and is up are other problems in need of im- terialized as an operating institu- for a vote. "We're winning the mediate consideration." Wheeler tion, there is no real danger that battle of public opinion," he said. said yesterday that this was, in- the program will be dropped." There has been some apprehen- deed, his actual intention,'i and Robertson cites recent budgetary sion, however, that legislators op- added he felt that the open hous- changes as evidence for the will- posed to the measure will point ing bill had important merits oft ingness of the University to back to the federal civil rights bill pass- its own. gency order. But he warned Mich- igan residents that any future disturbances would be met swiftly with "over-action and preventive action' by authorities. In Stamford, Conn., in the wealthy New York suburban area of Fairfield County, a policeman escaped injury during the night See KANSAS, Page 12 ( college would be abandoned. How-t ever, recent evidence of increased financial support and the anti- cipation of lower costs per student ended such speculation. Residential College Dean James Robertson, says he sees "no signsj of the University withdrawing its present support of the Residen- tial College. "Before, when the college was; just a plan on paper, this threat U Employes To Hold Vote The representation election for 2500 University service and main- tenance employes will be held on Thurdsay, April 25, under the direction of the State Labor Med- iation Board.' The voters - all workers in the' service and maintenance classifi- cation on main campus, Dear- born Center, and Willow Run - will have the choice of being repre-{ sented by Local 1583 of the Amer- ican Federation of State, County. and Municipal Employes and "no union."1 The exact locations of the poll-t ing places is still to be decided,< although they will be chosen "to' get the greatest possible partici- pation," according to a spokes-l man for the labor board. Em- up its commitment to the Resi- dential College. Two months ago the University added approximately $115,000 to next year's Residential College operating budget. This money amounts to approximately half of the instructional costs of the col- lege. For this past year, virtually none of the instructional costs were provided in a separate Res- idential College budget. Only the administrative costs of the college were specifically appropriated from the literary college budget. The costs involved in supportingI the Residential College faculty were' absorbed by the various de- partments supplying the faculty members. Under next year's plan, the Residential College will pay the other departments for these fac- ulty members out of an indepen- dent budget. Robertson hopes that by 1969 the Residential College will be able to fund their entire operating costs out of this budget. Along with its attempts to ac- quire more funds, the Residential'. College is hoping to lower the, tremendous per student expendi- ture:; of the past year. These per- student costs amounted to ap- . proximately three times the funds needed to educate a student in the literary college. However, according to Robert- DOMINO THEORY Faculty Salaries: From A to B By HENRY GRIX The free enterprise system seems to be giving the University a slap in the face. "When legislators complain about faculty salaries being high. I say the pay scale is a classic example of the free enterpise system at work," University President Rob- ben W. Fleming explains. However, state legislators have been waging and winning a financial tug of war with the faculty and have severely limited salary increases for professors the last two years. Last year the University's American Asso- ciation of University Full professors salary ranking dropped from the "A" category into the "B" ranking. Some alarmed faculty members fear the University is fading into mediocrity and is losing the intellectual aura that keeps top faculty here at any cost. Faculty, they charge, are beginning to hunt and catch prime jobs in states, such as New York, where well-financed, new university systems are springing up. By January, 231 professors, associate pro- fessors and assistant professors had sub- mitted resignations. The literary college is the full professor level is most significant, not only because it is the largest absolutely and relatively, but also because of the im- portant role played by the salary paid at these rank in attracting Poth younger andy mature faculty personnel and in keeping them." Part of the danger in the resignations is that resigning may gain momentum in some departments. Prof. H. R. Crane, chairman of the physics department, a department that has not lost anyone this year, warns that "when a department begins to have losses it goes like a row of dominoes." One professor who left the University last year to teach at the University of Colo- rado at Boulder, Kenneth Boulding, says he, did not leave because of financial condi- tions. However, Boulding noted "there has been a feeling at the University that it is just holding its own. Most professors feel it has been and is a fine institution, but that it is in danger of falling behind." However, most department heads and even departing professors say morale is good and that most resignations are not due to salary gripes but are usually for personal reasons. They cite the fact that only three Aware of this problem, the University sometimes makes a desperate effort to main- tain faculty "stars" who consider leaving. Prof. Samuel Eldersveld, chairman of the ,political science department, says "one pro- fessor was impressed by the offer we made him to encourage, him to stay." Although that man left anyway and the University cannot always match outside offers, Elders- veld notes "We waged a big battle for four other men in the department and got them to stay." To recoup losses, the University, like most major schools, is engaged in what Vice President for Academic Affairs Allan F. Smith jokingly calls a "bloodthirsty" re- cruiting operation. "Recruiting is a constant process." Smith says. "We always have our eye out, col- lecting dossiers. Unfortunately, the process also works in reverse; "the University is ripe hunting grounds for any institution in the country," Smith continues. While it is a credit to this institution that "the University is known as a manufacturer of deans," it does pose a financial problem in recruiting replacements, according to Prof. -? ... . : I