REGENTS SHOULD OPEN MEETINGS See editorial page SirF D a1 Aj CLOUDY. COLD Hligh--40 Low-I10 Warming with a chance of rain by afternoon Seventy-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom VOL LXXVIII, No. 67 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1967 SEVEN CENTS TEN PAGES Circuit Judge Rules PA 379 Covers 'Employes * * * * * * * * * t' Not Exempt From State Law University employes are public employes and are covered under the provisions of Public Act 379 of 1965, Washtenaw County Circuit Court Judge William Agar ruled Tuesday. Agar denied a request for an injunction against the State Labor Mediation Board and two unions made by the University, Central Michigan University and Eastern Michigan University. The unions involved in the suit were the Washtenaw County Building and Trades Council and the American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employes (AFSCME). Agar noted universities are autonomous under the state constitu- tion, but added the constitution was "not meant to exempt the Regents and Boards from all laws passed by the Legislature." PA 379 authorizes public em- S ployes to form unions and bargain CSU To O ust collectively, but prohibits them --;from striking. Con-C on, Non-Student Issues Pass; Koeneke, Knlo Pilack Power Protesters The University originally refused to comply with the act because officials said it infringed upon the autonomy granted to the Regents by the State Constitution. wie s Lej ad Westei'dale, Quiim, Loweii, Shermaii In Constitutioiial Convention Carries 2-1; Non-Student Membership Still Legal By URBAN LEHNER Students voted to hold a constitutional convention and to allow non-students to continue their membership in campus organizaions, in elections completed yesterday. Voters also elected six at-large members of Student Government Council: Michael Koeneke, '69BAd, E. 0 Knowles, '70, Sam Sherman, '68, Andrew Quinn, '69, Thomas Westerdale, Grad, and Sharon Lowen, '71. The constitutional convention is scheduled for next semester to restructure SGC. The issue was placed on the referendum at the request of student organizations who feel that SGC is currently "unrepresentative." Council must now devise a formula for g oosing delegates to the convention. The report by University Activities Center President Donald Tucker, '68, out of'which the constitution- i al convention idea grew, pro- posed a tentative plan to select delegates by an intricate peti- tioning process. WILBERFORCE, Ohio (P)-Offi- The University, together with cials at the predominantly Negro Central and Eastern Michigan Central State University-scene of Universities, filed suit in 1965 to violent rioting-moved yesterday have the act declared inapplicable to weed out what they call organ- to autonomous state institutions of ized Black Power elements on higher education. campus. Non -compliance School officials confirmed that In September of this year, Uni- some radical students may be ex-!I etme fti er n- se adsversity noncompliance with PA379 gelled.' led to a week-long strike by skilled Central State President Harry tradesmen and building service Groves ordered the school closed employes seeking University rec- until after the Thanksgiving holi- ognition of their unions as col- Sdays following Monday night's lective bargaining agents. rioting that resulted in 94 arrests. Patrol Campus The strike ended when the Uni- Most students had left the cam- versity agreed to tentatively rec- pus by Tuesday night, but armed ognize labor unions to press the National Guard troops patrolled court case. -Daily-Bernie Baker -Daily-Richard S. Lee OVER 5800 STUDENTS VOTED yesterday to hold a Student Government Council constitutional convention and to allow non-students to maintain their membership in campus organizations. In the elections, completed yesterday, Michael Koeneke, '69 Bus Ad, E. O. Knowles, '70, Sam Sherman, '68, Thomas Westerdale, Grad, Andrew Quinn, '69, and Sharon Lowen, '71, were elected to six SGC seats. the campus amid intermittent rain and snow. Highway patrolmen and Greene County sheriff's deputies sealed BULLETIN WASHINGTON (AR) -The House approved a $460 million cut in antipoverty funds late last night and then passed a bill extending the program for another year. After a long string of defeats in their efforts to revise the program, the Republicans suc- Last month, the State Labor Mediation Board created two bar- gaining units for University non- academic employes-one made up of 60 powerhouse employes and the other comprising 250 building tradesmen. No units were formed j for the other 2,500 employes be- cause the SLMB said they had not shownsufficient interest in form- ing a union. Bargaining Agent In a recent representation elec- tion for University powerhouse em- ployes the International Union of Operating Engineers was chosen as a bargaining agent. SGC Administrative Vice- President Michael Davis, Grad, said that Council would prob- ably not make its decision be- fore the Thanksgiving break. E i' { SESQUICENTENNIAL CONFERENCE: Big Cha To Stal i ceeded at the last minute in cutting its authorization from The Washtenaw County Build- the $2.06 billion sought by Pres ing Trades Council, the AFSCME :dnth $J.ohnson og1.6 byllios-and the Building Service Employes dent Johnson to $1.6 billion. Internatioal Union are vying for , the right to represent the other, off the university, setting up five employe groups. checkpoints at campus gates. The SLMB has not yet set dates Though the rioting was touched for the other representation elec- off by the expulsion of one stu- tions. dent, university officials say a Executive Vice-President Mar- Black Power movement is in- yin L. Niehuss said he was un- volved. nL.Nhs adhewsn- voled'aware of the decision when con "We're going to clean that Black aced by Theco i atnight. Power thing out and this gave us Other University officials were the opportunity," said John H. not available for comment. Bustamonte, chairman of the school's board of trustees, com- Appeal Plans menting on the rioting that re- It could not immediately be sulted in the hospitalization of one learned whether the University highway patrolman and damage to planned to appeal, although of- campus dormitories. ! ficals indicated some weeks ago "It is not just something to be that an appeal probably would be shoved aside and dealt with as a filed in the event of an unfavor- normal student demonstration," able ruling. Bustamonte added. The University, along with other 'Well Financed Group' state universities and colleges is Contacted at his home in Cleve- currently planning court action land, Bustemonte said that cam- c pus Black Power advocates were against two other state laws a "well financed, highly organized which they claim infringe upon disciplined group." ? their autonomy. 'POWER, NOT IMPOTENCE': By MARCY ABRAMSON "The problem of reducing fer- tility concerns attitude and mo- tivation rather than technique," Prof. Paul Demeny of economics department, a director of the Uni- versity's Population Studies Cen- ter said yesterday. Commenting on four world papers on fertility trends in the modern world Demeny spoke at the opening session of the final m a j o r sesquicentennial con- ference, "Fertility and Family Planning: A World View." There has been no evidence of a world "explosion" in contra- ceptive use, according to sociology Prof. Norman B. Ryder, director of the University of Wisconsin's and Ecology. Ryder said a majorI change in attitude is needed in order to bring about the reduc- tion of 40 million births needed tol curb the "population explosion." The declining influence of soc-r io-economics status on fertility control was emphasized in papers written by Prof. David V. Glass of the London School of Econ- omics and Political Science and Prof. Dudley Kirk of StarnfordI University's demography depart- ment. 3 3{ i i 4 I V E t 7 i }} i3 I i l The approval of the student- 0 -~ community organization ref eren- nge in Attitudes Needed dum will continue to allow non- student members of student or- ganizations. About 15 groups in the student-community category now exist, including Young Dem- u la t *,l 1 1' o ionocrats, Voice, Ann Arbor Tutorial i 'Population Explosion'E i (.j Project, Inter-Cooperative Council and Indonesian Student Club. "Information, health, and edu- j ciation. called the papers, especi- "The role of marriage will be Council voted last April to cation items were found to be ally those by Glass and Ryder, , crucial in future population de- allow the formation of student- more closely correlated with ter.- " 'a significant addition to our velopment," Glass said. "Changes community organizations b u t tility than economic, industrial knowledge and a sophisticated ex- in the age of marriage will cause agreed to leave the issue up to and urban development," Kirk ample of demography which will a pendulum movement." student-wide referendum at the said. This is encouraging, he add- undoubtedly have a major impact Each of the four researchers was: request of several campus groups, ed, because the devolopment of of future decisions." j given an opportunity to speak including Interfraternity Council these factors can be accelerated Coale, commenting on Kirk's after Hauser, Demeny and Prof. and Panhellenic Association. more easily than economic and report, suggested that there my be Duncan of sociology department Both referendum questions had industrial factors to reduce popu- different kinds of cultural resist- and director of the Population Stu- been expected to pass without lation growth rates. once to fertility control in different dies Center. Duncan discussed the difficulty. The key question today. Kir'k areas of the world, perhaps due to techniques used in compiling data Frs added is, "Can fertility eduction deep-seated cultural factors. for the reports. For the first time in five years, be initiated and accelerated ahead day. -- G eleions weehl vrto of its 'normal' pace within theE srg general framework of soc~o-eco- ---it- [Flai Elections director Paul Milgrom, noms development?"f o - S'70, estimated the voter turnout at 5800. Because many did not Ryder's findings were riubstan- vote for the four candidates to tiated Prof. Ansley J. Coale, sir- w"ty eentdrn ector of the Office of Population F o1 i 11n eVts1 1 s the referendum and because no Research at Princeton University, ' count was made of the total num- who said that his study of de- cutwsmd ftettlnm clining fertility in Europe found By DAVID KNOKE "We have questioned whether ber of ballots, precise tallies were little connection to socio-eennomicd Graduate school Dean Stephen it is good educationally, socially unavailable. factors. Spurr yesterday outlined to the and economically to keep candi- Milgrom attributed the lack of ^ - - -'t-- rs. - -. - I ... 3 + _" n m a f O o r _ 's r r _ '- -- - _ .. _ t. . ,t ...,..t To Regents By GREG OXFORD The Regents are expected to consider a recommendation from a special presidential committee to charge $1,500 or ten per cent of gross receipts, whichever is higher, for rental of the new University Events Building. According to Athletic Director H. 0. "Fritz" Crisler, this fee schedule is on the agenda for the monthly Regents' meeting which begins today. Officials of the University Activ- ties Center have indicated concern about the fee schedule which is considerably higher than the $265 charged for use of Hill Auditorium. Some student officials have in- dicated that their organizations cannot afford the proposed rates. At a meeting yesterday with UAC officials and Maurice Rinkel, Auditor of Student Organizations, Crisler said that the presidential committee may be willing to review the fee schedule after the Regents approve it. However, if a change were made as a result of this review, it Would have to be reapproved by the Board in Control of Intercollegiate Athletes and the Regents. Crisler emphasized that the proposal, including the fee sched- ule, was not his, but the recom- mendation of a presidential com- mittee composed of himself, UAC president DonTucker, and repre- sentatives of the offices of Stu- dent Affairs. This committee met Oct. 16 and considered policy and procedure regarding the new building as spe- cified by a presidential directive. Aims, purposes, and priorities con- cerning use of the building were considered as well as the rental schedule. Prior to this meeting a study of policiestand procedures at other comparable buildings in oth- er universities and communities was conducted. After discussion by the commit- tee, a draft proposal calling for the $1,500 or 10 per cent fee schedule was agreed upon. The next day, Crisler requested amendments from the members of the committee. Several were re- ceived from the offices of Business and Finance and Student Affairs and incorporated into the pro- posal. According to Crisler, UAC did not express concern about the fee schedule until Nov. 3, the same day the Athletic Board endorsed the proposal and agreed to send it to the Regents. At that time the Rackham faculty a proposal for dates on campus for the 6-7 years a larger turnout to inclement A f a s r r dcontinuous enrollment of doctoral that the average social science and weather, and the absence of a in summary by Prof. Philip M. candidates on a non-credit hour humanities doctorates take," Spurr presidential contest or "outside Hauser, of sociology department basis. explained. SGC" referenda. t t } f Terkel Challenges Technologic By RICHARD AYERS same thing with or without a tape! rt-nnr hr hit wind. But when you I of the University of Chicago and About 60 faculty members at a "The University is one of 10 director of the Population Re- meeting in the Rackham Ampi- , schools which have received Ford theatre heard Spurr open the pro- Foundation grants to try to reduce search and Training Center. posal, prepared at the request of the amount of 'elapsed time' to the Hauser, who is also president of the graduate school executive level of enrolled time these can- the American Sociological Asso- board, for "advice and counsel by didates spend while pursuing their S - ~the whole graduate faculty over doctorates," he added. the coming months." Elapsed time is time spent while The objectives of the continuous not engaged in doctoral studies. enrollment plan, as proposed by 1 fT the executive board, are intended: jY Uses to eliminate criteria of credit-] 1 t Finalsesee ci' I.J E? hours, academic terms and geo- graphic local for doctoral students AT-LARGE thing, wo don't know what," he once they are admitted to candi- CANDIDATES (E denotes E said. dacy; to provide yearly review of! K k-E Speaking on the apparent con- dissertation progress to speed up tradiction of violence in antiwar the rate of completion; and to en- Knowles-E ............... demonstrations, Terkel explained, force a continuous enrollment pol- Sherman-E ............. "You can't compare burning icy to keep a current roster of all Quinn-E................ babies and breaking windows. The active doctoral students regardless Westerdale-E ........... less babies that are burned the of their whereabouts. Lowen-E less windows will be broken." Spurr said that under the pro- Lowen-E................ Terkel is in Ann Arbor for the posal students would be divided Hollenshead .... ..... beginning of rehearsals for the into pre-candidate and candidate Racheter ............... . . Professional Theatre Program's groups. A minimum residency of Miller................... production of his play, "Amazing four terms past the baccalaureate Bloch.................... Grace."w or two terms past the masters de- Ho.t During an interview, Terkel ex- jgree, taken xithin a five years per- Hot..................... Last fall's referendum on draft- ranking attracted a record 10,000 voters. Milgrom noted that the sec- ond day of elections prevented a "total disaster." Without it, he said, "the turnout would have been substantially less than 3000." ion Results 1 MEMBERS Elected) Studs Terkel, Chicago radio al to ao t her o n hki sl epsL broadcaster and the author of talk to a mother on the steps the best-selling "Division Street: of a housng project, or to a Mexi- Aerica,yesserdaycalle for te. can kid in a parked car at one in America, yesterday called for theth mrngoehngmgc utilization of technical change to the morning, something magic "make man free." happens. The become articulate. ' They are beginning to teach- fromj "With technical growth, you below." would think that we would feel powerful - and power in a per- "In Chicago, urban renewal is son is a great thing - but we - reform from above. While we all don't we feel impotent," Terkel oppose slums, we are aghast at said at a University Activities the depersonalization which takes Center presentation in Aud.,A last place when people are moved out ,I f l 1 I VOTES ...3517 .. <2759 .2028 .. .1920 .. .1888 ...1579 .. .1454 .. .1436 ... 1062 987 462 mamammmman i