ELIMINATING BAD MEMBERS FOR SGC See editorial page C I I 4c Inkt 43gau :43 a t ty CIOUDY AND MILD Hligh-45 Lo"-37 Chance of showers, turninz to snow. Seventy-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXVIII, No. 69 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1967 SEVEN CENTS EIGHT I SECURITY CLAUSE: Clause Stirs ' By JIM HECK A University employe's refusal to sign an employment agreement has sparked a growing contro- versy which may cost Alice Fial- kin, an assistant in research in the public health school, her Job. When Miss Fialkin applied for a position on Nov. 1, she refused to comply with the "Employment Agreement" section of the ap- plication. The section gives the in Application 1' Controversy Regents Exceeds Say. Rules Action 'W. Reister, of the occurrence he declared the action was "a cleri- cal error" and added that all non- academic employes "must sign the agreement or they cannot work." Miss Fialkin says she won'tt sign the agreement. Dean Myron: M. Wegman, of the public health school, says he is "completely amazed" that such a statementk exists. Prof. Roy Penshansky, Miss Fialkin's boss in the department* "SECURITY STATEMENT: I understand that if I am em- ployed by the University I may be assigned to work on U.S. government contracts and that a complete investigation of my past employment activities will be made. I understand further that (1) any false statement or willful omissions in connection with my applications for employment or in connection with any such investigations regardless of when discovered by the government or by the University; (2) my failure to cooperate satisfactorily in any such investigation; or (3) the failure of any military agency to clear me will be sufficient cause for my dismissal." -"The University of Michigan Application for Employment." ..s...................s......*...f i:*: "It's atrocious," Miss Fialkinj said, "that I have to sign some- thing which denies me my civil liberties. It makes me a part of an ever-expanding military so- ciety." "It's a housekeeping detail." Reister explained. He called the section a "catch-all." On Notice "It's an attempt to put on the application." Reister continued, "the kinds of approvals we need and puts the employe on notice of what would ensue if he is as- signed to a military contract." Reister explained that if an investigation is carried out, the, employe is told about it before- hand and required to sign forms indicating his cooperation. He was asked about the possibility of em- ployes being integrated into con- tract work without; their know- ledge, and the using of the signed statement to carry out an Investi- gation. "I guess I'd be surprised," he answered, "if you could put an employeinto something he didn't know about. "I'm not going to say we wouldn't do it," he added. "I assume it's there to cover us,' Reister said. "The total statement is a clearance." Jurisdiction o Deal With Councl1 On Conduct Authority (:olxlhle1(I Faculty 2ommittee Report Lal(ding Student Rule-Making Power By PAT O'DONOHUE Student Government Council has "exceeded its juris- diction by purporting to abolish existing University rules and regulations," the Regents said yesterday. In a prepared statement presented at their monthly meeting, the Regents claimed, "Without Regental approval, such legislation is totally without effect. Previously existing regulations therefore remain in force." SGC has abolished freshman women's hours and driving regulations which establish certain conditions for having4 a car on campusm The Regents "commended" the --'ib u University the right to carry out an investigation of the employes and the right to fire employes who do not receive military clear- ance., But Miss Fialkin was hired anyway, and given a shorter form to sign - one whith deleted the employment agreement and which is usually reserved for clerical or janitorial applicants. Yesterday, when The Daily in- formed Personnel Officer Russel University, Deliberate COLUMBUS, Ohio (CPS) - When college presidents get to- gether there are a number of subjects they can discuss-student and faculty unrest, the need for educational innovation, the cam- pus and the war, and academic freedom..'i But one topic usually dominates their deliberations: money. And so it was when administrators from the nation's largest state univer- sities gathered here this week for' the annual meeting of the Nation- al Association of State Universities and Land Grant Colleges (NAS- ULGC). Russell Thackery, NAS- ULGC executive director, articu- lated the financial problem at, length. In a strongly worded annual report, Thackery said that even the idea "that society is the pri- mary beneficiary of the education of its members"-the rationale for public higher education-is being challenged. Alliance Threatens Thackery explained that this. threat to public higher education is coming from an alliance of "a few people in private education" who are in "sheer panic over their own financial problems," "Federal and state officials caught in the squeeze between tax resources and needs for public financing," and those "who will support any argu- ment to reduce taxes for any pur- pose except protection of their; : f.,n...r. s v..7 t~nras~t " of public health says he is" upset" about the form, an Taylor, president of Local of the American Federatio State, County and Municipal ployes (AFSCME) says he surely" do something about it: The parts of the agreement have caused the controversy in the second paragraph o1 zection entitled "Employ Agreement" on University: academic application form, 'very d Al 1583 n of Em- "will tthat y are Amazed f the "I don't believe it's there," ment Wegman said. "We have nothing non- in our office at all that requires 8. that type of clarification. I'm completely amazed by it." f LATTE Some 30 students, in remembran dinners, celebrated Thanksgiving in the Markley courtyard. Winne of course-and a splendid time w OPPOSITION JUS Wegman said he would look into Ofiiasthe matter "immediately." S oe Penshansky said he was told that Miss Fialkin was given the short form, because the long form 0 "was a clerical error." it 1Rn an ces IPenshansky saw no reason why n a c sthe University should accept the I fl l 4 criteria of a government agency Bowen, president of the University in deciding the "acceptability" 01 By AVIVA KEMPNEI of Iowa, says the states are bearing its employes. too large a share of the burden for Things to Say "We have to get into the area higher education and that federal of civil disobedience. After trying funds must supplement, rather' Uaylor said he knew nothing than semae estipn , source ofabout it, but added "I feel suz e'y all the legal means at our dis- than eplace, existing sources of that we will have things to sy posal, we are justified in opposing in ~~~~~~~bout it and things to do aboutths arflwri an wy But, though they agreed on the t d n do ssibl Dr njamnSpock need for federal funds, the edu- it in our bargaining session wit co-chairman of the National Con- cators there were divided over how the University. c rma of e Ntios Cn- ! rvlorsai he oul conactference for New Politics (NCNP), the money ought to be channelled Taylor said he would contact: and used, the individual bargaining leaders said last night. At a press conference, Clark for "consultation" on the matter Speaking before an audience of Kerr, former president of the Uni- befog e issuing any public state- about 300 people at Ann Arbor versity of California, said five ment High School, the political pedia- funding proposals are usually of- Reister gave no indication when trician said the new mood of mil-' fered: tax credits for parents and ire would contact Fialkin almut itancy demanded such tactics as students paying tuition, general her ;tatus as an employe. burning draft card and protesting federal grants to the states, funds "I'm looking into that matter recruiters from Dow Chemicall See UNIVERSITY, Page 2 nrw." he explained. Corp., the Central Intelligence Agency, and other such agencies. Spock also philospohized on the rle of "new politics" and clarified Y og J e s T o 11)D ebcte roeo"nwplitcs"anthe position of the controversial; Black Caucus at the NCNP con- Moderate Viet Resolution ventin held in Chicago this L -Daily-Jim Forsyth report of the Faculty Assembly St u d e n t Relations Committee R DAY PILGRIMS H UNT I*u)apoe h l l (SRC) approved by the Assembly ce of the work the Pilgrims had to go through to catch their festival Monday. The Regents called the early yesterday with an Interhouse Assembly-sponsored turkey hunt report "a generally constructive document." rs were awarded four complementary Thanksgiving dinners-turkey The SRC report favored SGC's was had by all. delegation of non-academic dis- ciplne to students and was drafted TIFIFD- in response to SGC's recent change in the booklet "University Regu-: lations." The SGC action exempts stu- dents from disciplinary action by academic conduct rules not creat- any student judiciary for any non- ed by students. ! ! 3The SRC motion said the Uni- so n- * E d" gi e ce veriyhad the responsibility t 1Se L eC"workable guidelines" con cerning general student conduct and that these guidelines "should 13 demands which were later ac- Spock said the board consists! not be considered as rules; except cepted by the white delegates. of 12 whites and 12 Negroes. Three that such conduct is considered The fifth demand, which alien- of the whites are professors and intolerable to the educational ated many Jewish backers, con- function of the University com- demned the "imperialistic Zion- the majority of the Negroes are munity and should be subject to ist war" without implying anti- moderates from the Southern appropirate discipline." Semitism. Spock contended that Christian Leadership Council and The Regents formally accepted this demana xa part of a y.ciy the Mississippi Freedom Demo- a request from SGC to provide for bolic show of faith to the Negroes cratic Party (MFDP). a "public comments period and "does not commit the party ,iduring each public meeting of the to anything." Board of Regents" to be placed However, 80 per cent of NCNP's BULLETIN on the Regents' discussion agenda. financial backing was withdrawn DETROIT (IP)-United Auto a Bruce Kahn, SGC president, said as a result of the controversy. Workers Union skilled trades- Its about time they come to a Spock observed that Russell saw men last night approved a pro- decision on that, they've known the "American backing of Israel posed contract with Chrysler about the request for months." as another imperialist impulse of Corp., assuring the sigining of The Regents' statement con- the United States like her involve- the labor pact with the firm, tended that "There need be no ment against black revolutionists the union said. breach between Student Govern- in Africa.n ment and the Regents. The Re- - -_-_-. gents will sympathetically consider proposals for revision of the pres- ent system. They have established uproper administrative channels for i s ~i~vLthis purpose. The Regents cannot abandon their constitutional au- Court uing On PA 379 Vice-President and Chief Fin- ancial Officer Wilbur K. Pierpont, told the Regents yesterday at their monthly meeting that the Uni- versity "is going to study" the court decision of Public Act 379 and will possibly make a recom- mendation to the Regents at their next meeting. PA 379, an amendment to the Michigan Public Employment Re- lations Act, allows . public em- ployes to form unions and bar- gain collectively, but denies them the right to strike. The Regents are expected to appeal to. a higher court a de- cision handed down Tuesday in Washtenaw County Circuit Court which upholds the constitutional- ality of PA 379 in relation to University employes. Constitutional Autonomy Because of its constitutionally autonomous status, the Univer- sity has maintained that it is exempt from the provisions of the act and that all relationships with employes are within the exclusive jurisdiction of the Regents. During the meeting yesterday, Regent Otis Smith (D-Detroit) turned to students in the back of the room holding signs pro- testing war research, and said "The Regents are neither blind, deaf nor dumb . . . we understanddl your concern and are discussing the problem." The Regents reportedly discus- sed classified research at. their private meetings and the admin- istrative officers indicated that they probably wouldn't accept a project similar to the Thailand project again.- Approve Rents The Regents also approved the criteria for use and rental scale set up by the Board in Control of Intercollegiate Athletics for the n e a r 1 y completed University Events Bldg. There will be a trial period of at least a year and a half, according to Pierpont, to see how these rental rates work out. At the end of this trial period, the rental policy will be reviewed. Pierpont said, "We're thinking of increasing the rates at Hill Aud., the rates are probably too low." By GREG ZIEREN A moderate resolution urging. a new drive for peace negotions' based on land reform and a bomb- ing pause in Vietnam was sent' to the floor of the National Con- vention of Young Democrats in Hollywood, Fla., yesterday. The proposal, seen as essentially, supporting President , Johnsoni was voted out of committee by a 17-5 vote and will be presented on, would be adopted and added, "I am committeed to getting this resolution." Reed explained that the origin- al ten candidates had been "nar- rowed down to three." He said that his group was looking for with another candidate, Peter Masselo. The pre-convention fa- vorite and strong Johnson backer Spencer Oliver, who resigned a Job on the Democratic National Conmmittee staff to run, appears The concerns of new politics,j he explained, are a peaceful and just world, better race relations and the end of poverty. Possibly Damaging Citing as hi cus leader and ber Carlos R that "Negroes faith of the w: convention to equal. "The Negro not expect th s soUr BlakCu-By MARK LEVIN is source Black Cau- The U.S. economy will snap out [NCNP board mem- of its current dullness next year, Russell, Spock said unless the proposed 10 per cent sur- s were testing the charge on income taxes is enacted phite radicals at the dicts Prof. Daniel Suits of the allow them to be;ped t t allo thm t beeconomics department. "Whileholding down price levels es," he noted, "did enactment of the surcharge would 1e whites to accept do serious damage to unemploy- j i m . persons and pruperiy the floor today when the con- to be "failing," Reed claimed these symbolic demands. They ment. Considering who would be Education leaders point to cut- vention will elect its natural of- Reed added that though he o- were surprised when we did." unemployed and where they would backs in federal funds and the in- ficers and consider several Viet- posed Johnson's Vietnam policies, During the NCNP convention, be idle, it would seem to me in- privte gi to kprpaeith n nam resolutions. "I will support whomever the , Negroes met secretly in private advisable to raise taxes at this booming enrollments as signs of However, Arthur Aaronson, '68, party nominates." sessions and drew up a list of time," Suits explained. the "crisis." They agree that the a member of the University dele- -_--- funds to meet these needs must gation and one of the leaders of coefrom the Federal Gover'n- the peace caucus, told The Daily M SU T u t e e e e i i n oa n h c momedr v to d 5b SU Trustees Defer Decision on Hannah, ment, that the minority resolution, H. Edwin Young, president of which calls for unconditional halt the University of Maine, saidthefIdefi tely be ombing, lthe f ostM a N ew Conflict of Interest Charged the money because it has the tax-: Committee "Unrepresenative" M a ;N w C n lc of nt r s C hge federal government must provide deiieyb as o h lo ing power that states lack. Howard Aaronson claimed thatithe By WALLACE IMMEN !burg is presently construction su- the time. But President Hannah committee was "unrepresnetative Special To The Daily perintendent for MSU. threatened to resign if the trustees J of the convention as a whole" and EAST LANSING-The Michigan Hannah said at the meeting, attempted to fire May. As a result, U-W Job H unt said that the majority of the dele- State University Board of Trustees 1"It's true that Vandennburg is the trustees only issued a mild gates were "uncommitted." yesterday postponed consideration my brother-in-law, but I didn't resolution in April alerting trustees h i .TA 'gests The committee resolution "sug- f alleged conflicts of interest of know he was employed by the to possiblie criticism of their out- ~ gestsfor the consideration of the MSU President John Hannah and University." Earlier he had said, side activities. President as a possible basis for Vice-President for Business and "As far as I know he (Vanden- The MSU trustees said yester-, MADISON, Wis., () - The negotiation" a series of steps be- Finance Philip J. May pending a j burg) never did a job for this in- day they will hold a special open Central Intelligence Agency and ginning with a pause in the bomb- ruling by state Attorney General ; stitution, I was surprised by the trustee meeting as soon as possible the Air Force yesterday called .off ing of North Vietnam. The resolu- Frank Kelley. figure . . . . I smell what's coming after Attorney General Kelley plans to conduct job interviews tion further "encourages the ef- ! Kelley is investigating various on. This is an attempt at dis- rules on Hannah and May. "If on the University of Wisconsin forts of the President" toward private land dealings of Hannah crediting the university by dis- anyone has any specific allegations campus in the face of threatened seeking a negotiated settlement 'and May in the wake of published crediting me." or wants to present views, they will antiwar demonstrations. and declares the Young Demo- reports in The Daily and the De-| In an editorial the News wrote, be welcome," said trustee Don "It was their decision, not ours," crats "a part of the responsible troit Free Press. "The two cases (May and Han- Stevens.I said university President Fred majority of the American public Hannah said all the trustees had nah) while wrapped together in There was notable relief among Harrignton. who support the past and future agreed in a private meeting to one sensationalized article by the the trustees when the topic was Suits analysis was based on the 1968 forecast prepared by the Re- search Seminar in Quantitative Economics under a grant from the National Science Foundation. In a paper presented Thursday at the 15th Annual Coiference on the Economic Outlook sponsored by the University's department economics, Suits said the U.S. gross national product will rise 9.6 per cent in 1968 to $860 billion. However, a good chunk of that gain-4 per cent-will be a result of rising prices. Even so, the physical volume of foutput next year will climb more than 6 per cent, Suits predicted. "This rate of growth will supply enough new jobs to absorb the: growing labor force and to provide new jobs for workers displaced by productivity," he said. If the surcharge is enacted, Suits added, unemployment levels will rise probably to about 4.7 per cent a level comparible to 1965. Suits also explained that a hike in taxes would fall heavily on real output, the economist said, hold- ing growth to about 3.3 per cent. Proponents of the tax increase which is slated take effect Jan 1, > hope to dampen the economy enough to ease demand; reducing thority and responsibility." The Regents asked SGC to pro- vide them with a "full written report of the basis on which uni- lateral actions have been taken and for which Regental approval has not been sought. Representa- tives of Student Government Council should be prepared to confer with the 1Regents at an appropriate time." Kahn said, "I'm glad to see that the Regents are interested enough to want to talk with mem- bers of SGC about the problem. I'm sure that such public discus- sion would be mutually beneficial and I intend to respond to their suggestion by trying to work out some time when we can hold an open meeting with them." Text of Regents' Statement The Regents issued the fol- lowing statement yesterday at theirregular monthly meeting. In recent weeks, the Student Government Council has several times clearly exceeded its juris- diction by purporting to abolish existing University rules and regu- lations. The constitution of the State of Michigan places the final authority over such matters in the hands of the Regents. Without Regental approval such legislation' is totally without effect. Previously existing regulations therefore re- main in force. The Regents have constantly re- viewed and revised rules and reg- ulations governing students at the University as such rules and reg- ulations have become outmoded on November 13, 1967, a generally constructive document and they commend it. The Regents note the Committee's comment that unilateral action by the Student Government Council is without legal effect. There need be no breach be- tween student government and the Regents. The Regents will sym- pathetically consider proposals for revision of the present system. They have established proper ad- ministrative channels for this pur- pose. The Regents cannot abandon their constitutional authority -and responsibility. The Regents request that Stu- dent Government Council prompt- ly provide them with a full written report of the basis on which uni- 'AIR pressure on price and interest rates. Th o d4Jt P.O tecnonmic t~ieknn 11 i rojee fo es16 w llpget most of projected for 1968 will get most of