FUZZY RESEARCH GUIDELINES See editorial page I *it 43au 743atly FAIR AND COLD high-40 Low-20 Partly cloudy, warmer tomorrow Seventy-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXVIII, No. 60 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1967 SEVEN CENTS MSU: Land Grabat Landran By MARK LEVIN ealuated in 1941 at $00 an ace is contacted to build an office building on "An offi Copright.1967 The Michian Daily today worth $5 000r the site The building was completed this ing board EAST LANSING-In 1941 , hen John Rising property values have indeed past summer. A portion of the building is education Hannah succeeded his father-in-law proved profitable for local real estate leased to the International Business purview o Robert S Sha, as president of the dealers. University administrators have Machines, Inc. IBM does a substantial Michigan M an tate College, landhtee wta shaed in the benefits r amount of business with MSU ,I 194s hcheap and plentiful * The secretay of the Whitelsy poulty sc As the renamed Michigan State Uni- ! From 1940 to as recently as 193, foundation is Harry Hubbard, a Lansing to acquire o :- Hnna accumulated some 180 acres ofgtoaure x f versity has blossomed into an educat- Hannah attorney. One of Hubbard's clients is S- - . .land adjacent to the campus. He says Township, g , .ional institution of international reputa- ln daett h aps esy Heatherwood Farms Dairy, which Iva.fs MUo tion. many changes have come to pass he purchased the land for retirement cntly awarded a $545,000 contract to Steadily -rStudent apartments have sprung up all purposes, but sold the parcel this past supply MSU with dair roducts over the environs. A complex computer ly for nearly $1 million to the Walter What is the ty o t ae s network is nOw an essential cog in the Vee R este ay f ant ii agrc administration of the University. Even i.M Ve-Prnt f Bsiness Article IV section 10 of the 96s3 the school's dairy proved inadequate and and Finance and Treasurer Philip J icigan constitution states: sodehiser was closed this spring when it could May is on the board of the Neller Cor-eNo member of the legislature noCsUanyms y .gs 'i x SF ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~no longer fill the ever-expanding student pn.saeofcrsalb neetddrcl opn population's need for milk. 0 Vice President May himself and the or indirectly in any contract with the acre, accc lHannah, in the wake of his ac- Philip Jesse Company, a holding com- state or any political subdivision thereof News artic MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY President John Hannah, left, recently sold land worth close to $1 complishments at MSU has become a pany whose secretary- treasurer is May's which shall cause a substantial conflict In an i million to the Walter Neler Real Estate Company, a Lansing firm which allegedly discriminates in nationally prominent figure and is cur- wife, purchased land fronm the Whiteley of interest. The legislature shall further ad Neller, the sale of housing. MSU Vice-President for Business and Finance and Treasurer Philip J May, Gently chairman of the U.S. Civil Rights Foundation on Michigan Avenue, op- implement this provision by appropriate firm, confi right, is one of the directors of the Neller Company. May's wife is also secretary-treasurer of the Commission posite the MSUJ campus last year. After legislation." Philip Jesse Company, which owns an office building partially occupied by International Business And as enrollment soared and the securing a $1.1 million mortgage from Attorney General Frank Kelley's recent erty, but u Machines and which was built on a mortgage from Michigan National Bank. Both IBM and Michi- campus mushroomed, so did land prices. Michigan National Bank (MSU's chief opinion on conflict-of-interest clarifies ported sale gan National Bank conduct business with MSU. For example, land adjacent to campus fiscal agent), the Philip Jesse Comapny the matter further. SIX PAGES icer or member of the gov-ern- of state institutions of higher is a state officer within the f Article IV, Section 10 of the Constitution of 1963." 0, while still a specialist in :ience at MSU, Hannah begai land in neighboring Meridian across the street from the r boundary on Hagadorn Road. increasing his holdings until 1963. Hannah reportedly hoped o retii'e there and continue his ,al research. rthis past summer, Hannah 80 acre nestegg to the Neller for an estimated $5000 an ording to an August Detroit ,le. iterview with The Daily, Rich- a director of the Neller realty nrmed the purchase of the prop- vould not comment on the re- price. See 'LAND,' Page 2 ALSO ARRANGE DEBATE: Law Students Petition, Hatcher Elected in Gar y; 'Talk-i By RON LANDSMAN A protest staged by University Law School students aimed at a Dow Chemical Co. recruiter result- ed in a debate yesterday noon at- tended by over half of the school's student body and a collection of over 200 names on a petition against the chemical company. Protesting law students also held a "talk-in" for most of the morn- ing in front of the office used by the Dow recruiter, although they did not prevent anyone from see- ing him. The debate, entitled "The Uni- versity, the American Corpora- tion, and the War: A Moral Di- lemma," featured Dean Frances1 Judge Stall 7 0 .0 1 9 Against Dow Taft Wains Cleveland Race Allen and Professors Joseph Sax tion concluded "we, the under- and Alfred Conard of the Law signed, ask only that the Michigan School, and the Dow recruiter, a Law School inform the Dow Chem- University law graduate, R. W. ical Co. that we . . . deplore this Barker, '54L. company's contribution to the "This is the first time we've been war." asked to participate like this," Strong Statemnent Barker commented. One of the organizers of the pro- The petition, which contained test termed it "an extremely strong over 200 students' and six profes- statement from a legal point of sors' names, accused the govern- view." ment of "committing war crimes Allen refused to give the peti- every day," adding that "the Dow tion the sanction of the Law Chemical Co. immorally aids and School and declined to sign it him- abets these crimes by voluntarily self. manufacturing napalm." The debate was held before an Recognizing the right of the em- overflow audience of about 500 ployer to interview students when people in 100 Hutchins Hall at both parties were willing, the peti- 3 noon. Sax drew loud applause from the audience alnost everytine he soke. He argued that, although theelectoral system is no longer Is Stu d en effective, there are other means of individual political action. ..- 7f l/ru .. Nunn Wins Kentuckiy; i t S.F. Poll Backs War' White, Tate Elected in Boston, Phila.; Williams Wins in Mississippi Race ByJIMHECK Civil rights, the Vietnam war, and the Johnson admin- istration's domestic policies played an important role in mayoral and gubernatorial elections last night across the nation. Despite an unexpected Democratic victor in Gary, Ind., Republicans registered significant gains in other contests. As the national guard and police from three neighboring states looked on, Richard G.Hatcher, a Negro Democratic councilman, last night slipped past his Republican opponent, Joseph Radigan, to win the mayoralty of Gary, Ind. With all precincts reporting, Hatcher carried 41,042 votes to Radigan's 37,186. Concession Radiganconceded the race shortly after midnight last night after one of the nation's most hotly contested elections. Last week Hatcher asked the Indiana courts to postpone the election because he feared "illegal election procedures." The courts denied postpone-- Political Effectiveness fscipline at I lachson1It is a blunt fact that the rele- vant decision making bodies today By JIM NEUBACHER initiated by the university to dis- are institutions such as universi- Wisconsin Federal District Court cipline the protesters would have "Tbe and corporations," he said. Judge James Doyle ruled yesterday a chilling effect on other students must work throught theiti to extend a previous restraining and might prevent them from ex- The result is that protesters order prohibiting University ofi ercising their constitutional right must use the ectlyleralsne Wisconsin officials fronm takingI Doyle 's ruling does not prevent of saying to the government, any final disciplinary action the luniversity administration from through these bodies, 'No, we won't against students involved in a mailing complaints or notifying support your policies.' " demonstration last month. studeits that they have broken ;Conard and Allen both disagreed In extending the restraining or- existing regulations, but does pre- with this stand, though for dif- der, Doyle ruled that it would re- vent them from beginning hear- ferent reasons. Conard maintained ir r i~ rffpn T'1i t h1 A.1} udP-IYIAP ;e gs - .}ta~ h nc no of rrAnv n -Associated Press SETH C. TAFT (left), won a close victory last night over Carl Stokes, a Negro, in the election for mayor of Cleveland. Stokes was making a second bid for the position. Richard Hatcher (right), scored a close upset victory over Joseph Radigan in the Gary mayoralty race. Hatcher managed to win the election without party support. I mainin ei ecL untl a uree-ug panel rules on the constitutionality of university regulations governing students protests and activities on -'ampus. Restraining Order The restraining order was first issued after a demonstration Oct. 18 protesting the presence of a recruiter for the Dow Chentical Co. on campus. More than sixty per- sons were injured at that time W when police were forced to use night sticks and tear gas to dis- perse the demonstrators. The decision by Doyle to extend the restraining order represents a victory for the student plaintiffs in the case. They had contended that a university regulation pro- hibiting demonstrations not car- ried out through "recognized legal means of protest" was so vague and general that it could conceiva- bly infringe upon their First Antendntent rights. Counsel for the students, Wil- liant Kunstler, well known Ater- ican Civil Liberties Union lawyer, ilso argued that any proceedings Heating Plant Selects, Union, Entployes in thte University's heating plant voted Monday to use the International Union of Oper~- ating Engineers (IUOE) as their bargaining agent with the Univer- sity. The skilled trades employes held Three Judges ~ at~ Lhe cese 1Of UemiOC- IN--Ir-T t rF I[ UI. Three Judges racy is the electoral process. We NORMAN OPTIMIS'II :, Doyle has requested the Chief have been swindled once, but we: Judge of the United States Circuit should go out and see that it Court of Appeals of the 7th Dis- 'doesn't happen again." trict it Chicago to choose two Research Ocials Divi other judges to sit with Doyle on People Unconvinced the three-judge panel that will de- He went on to say that the fail- cide. on the constitutionality of the tre up to now was due to "limiting university regulations. ourselves to an intellectual group. On usew Pentagon uueuJ Faculty and students of the Uni- We haven't convinced the people." versity of Wisconsin have set up ie concluded that the way to a 14 member ad-hoc committee change policy was to change By DAVID KNOKE universities, mostly in the east, urging changes in to investigate recruitment policies people's minds. Daily News Analysis before The Daily disclosed the would make the dev and placement services on the Allen disagreed with Sax on Research officials across the ' story, science and technolo campus. The committee plans to ' the use of institutions by indi- country showed optimism and Norman indicated that the pendent on the DO: study how obstructive demonstra- , viduals. He held to the distinction concern yesterday over the de- policy has not yet gone into effect commented. tions should be dealt with in the between personal and institutional cision of the Department of De- at the University but could ulti- Opponents of classi future.roles which Sax labeled a "mis- fense (DOD) to end all basic 1mately affect some parts of $10 on campus believet -..conception." classified research. million in classified DOD. from growing acadei S We are quite happy with the A Stanford University spokes- over secret research cane," ai d thevie-rovmot btan said that while she wasnot h t D s nto forHee archd, thwev Universityeofr: aware of theDOD policy."hangeontros on the resu "ensyv"uid h hatth IStanford does very little in h research. Higs oinio y, was eclte etby , evaltin:,f:y he - swayeogappliedsclassifiedsresearch. vesi"ty ceu-Presidemt for Re- o bbly o mos of the 18classified Thy say kn :>: "classified contracts b3 seh h A. Geoffrey Norntman, whoDOD Cnc onrt e n Tecold arators such as the U S; called it a"good development." be conducted FCithout classifica- Pennsylvania a Mu He added, however: tion.ed the Pe '.} d hOne would hope that thte Indications are tlat the re- "oeg itsr lassif S "aneinapolicy, if intplemeted evaluation of policy was the re- toni'. chdang rs a el cn- so dte Ntivnluationnc "Ifr hm nk b e y Pr now does not reduce the amtount of s ult of urging by the Federal Ithnteyno. money which DOD makes avail- ';Council ot Science and Technol- are becoming tore a able for support of basic research ogY (FCST). The FCST is cont- hospitable to war res sat utiversities." prised of najor agencies which Prof. Richard Mann o hA Pentagon research official e- have been supporting universityogepartmt. ' >::"$tat:nly{ smll.nmbe research for decades, including the; "There were othei of "exploratory development and; DOD, the Atomic Energy commis- tions, I'm sure, but study efforts" as well as con-' sion antd the National Science' front Nobel Prize u' suling arrangentents with uni- Fouitdation. even engineers are v, versifies would be classified in !'Manty university administra-. scientists are willing t ....:>$:: the future !tors through the years have been! sified contratcts." DOD policy with respect to - ~~ _ -- clasified contracts in aimlied re-T p- NT' - - A/ ment but Gov. Roger D. Brani- gan mobilized the national guard in case of any trouble. But there was no trouble as the election swayed back and forth until early morning. Cleveland re( s It uCleveland, Seth C. Taft, a 1... Republican, slipped by to defeat Democrat Carl B. Stokes, a Negro policies that state representative, in the elec- elopment of tion for mayor. gy less de- In the latest incoming returns, D," Norman Taft maintained a 4,000 vote lead fied research the pressure nic protests may be be- ve to loosen Ilts of basicr spurnings of y prime con-I niversities of inesota may} antagon imto ation policy. universities nd more in- search. "saidI f the psych- r considera- indications; winners and that few' to take clas-: over the Stokes. He continued the lead into the early morning, de- spite incoming returns from Cleve- land's predominatly Negro east side. With 99 per cent of the votes tabulated,' Taft carried 126,999 votes to Stokes' 124,909. Stokes. who was supported by, both Cleveland newspapers and who received outspoken support from Vice President HuberteHum- phrey and Martin Luther King, Jr. was seeking the mayorship for the second tinte. In 1963 he lost the position in a recount ballot by 2300 votes. Stokes sup- porters indicate he may ask for a recount again. Few Republicans There were only 34,000 regis- tered Republicans out of 326.000 registered voters. jTaft, 44, grandson of fornter President William Howard Taft, and nephew of the late U.S. Sen. Robert Taft is a Phi Beta Kappa Yale graduate. He has never be- ; Faxon Asks Ruling on XStateBoard By The Associated Press Rep.. Jack Faxon (D-Detroit) asked state Atty. Gen. Frank Kel- ley yesterday to rule on a series of questions which could place seven of the eight State Board of Education members in conflict of interest. Two of the points Faxon asked the Attorney General to rule on are: "-if persons employed by state institutions of higher learningtay sinultaneously serve as members of the State Board of Education in light of the constitutional power of the Board to plan and coordi- tate all public higher education iand advise the the legislature as to financial requirements. -"If a person employed as a legal counsel for sectarian insti- tutions may serve on the State Board of Education which has the authority to assist such schools and colleges under its rule-ntak- ing powers." Asked if he had any particular Board members in ntind, Faxon declined comntent. However. Thontas J. Brennan is an attorney whose clients in- clude the Roman Catholic Arch-- diocese of Detroit. ...... .. .. U14100111Iu u7ilIlIl at! LO 111 51fip'Ivu ic