NIXON IN FLINT; ' BALANCING ACCOUNTS See editorial page iritan 43atl SWEATER high-GO0 Love-47 Windy and cooler, showers ending by afternoon . _.. 1 Vol. LXXIX, No. 36; Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, October 10, 1968 Ten Cents Tn Paes .. ,e C ,T ,1 4 nr p' ADC NEEDS NOT MET: County dept. declares welfar By JIM HECK The $91,000 fund set up Sept. ji0 to clothe 1,300 county children for school has been depleted. As a result, the Social Services Department announced yesterday that unmet declared needs of $36,- 566.83 can not be supplied by the department. On Sept. 10, after several days gf demonstrations and mass ar- rests, the County Board of Super- visors, Social Services' Board and a contingent of county welfare rMothers receiving Aid to Depend- ent Children (ADC) monies agreed to, a total allocation for the emer-; gency of $91,000. e fund depleted csowithdraw roritieS from J protest, 9 ., I Cominissilo CBy JIM BEATTIE Eyewitnesses of violence at the Democratic National Conventior in Chicago are being sought in Ann Arbor and throughout the na- tion by the National Comnissior on Causes and Prevention of Vio- 1lence in America. The ldcal offshoot of the com- mission has begun collecting ac- counts of police-demonstrator- media confrontations "too get a factual reconstruction" of t h e evenits in Chicago. With the cooperation of t h e maw School, John Pfarr, '70L, is administering the eight-page writ- ten questionnaire, sketched bythe national commission and distribut- ed nationally at various centers. Tjrustee asks 0nve i VeS h g1bu e' z i. ; k i The sum was to be appropriated mainder of the original sum, Brose on the basis of need, not exceed- said, will be given on the basis ing $70 per child up until Oct. 9, )f need to ADC families who have after which mothers declaring been added to the 'public assistance needs greater than $70 per child rolls since Sept..10. would be paid on a pro-rated basis with the remainder of the $91,000. day the County Board ofngSuer- According to Alfred Brose, the visors failed in several attempts to Social Services Director, a total pass resolutions delineating' t h eI of $16,559.48 was requested by responsibilities of the Supervisors 468 of the 474 eligible families, should such an incident occur More -than 1.,300 children received again. money, but oily 123 of them re- quested less than the maximum1 Supervisor Fred Lnde (R-Ypsi- of $70. lanti), chairman of the Ways and Brose said the Social Services Means Committee of the board, Department issued total clothing managed to get enough support to' vouchers of $90,054.15. The re- defeat a resolution asking a "re- _view of the total public assist- ance program . . so that emer- gencies of this kind should never Mm . rO 'J occur again." Lunde has consistently main-i es.tained that an emergency_ as ]'( ', claimed by the ' mothers never vio len ce existed. He apposed the terms of the Sept. 10 settlement and at one Pfarr, who has been interview- i point marched in a counter-de- ing people at the Lawyers Club for monstration. the past two evenings, insists all At the meeting Lunde voiced his information is "given voluntarily strong opposition "on the grounds and is absolutely essential." that the ADC mothers won by the However, the Ann Arbor Anti- tactic of disorganizing this coun- War Mobilization, an affiliate of ty board." the National Mobilization to Ends -the War in Vietnam, "strongly In a I~rinted statement circulat- tresWarny ietnamwstronChicgy ; ed by Supervisors Beat F. Nielson urges anyone who was ilk Chicago ' (R-Ann Arbor), Richard Walter- from Aug. 26-20 to refuse to di- house (R-Ann Arbor) and Mildred vulge any.information, including Harris (R-Ypsilant)d,, the super- names, to the Chicago study team of the national commission." visors asked the University "to "We feel," the mobilization take a hard look" at the methods steering committee statement can- of teaching in the School of Social tinues, "any information may pos- Work. The statement indicated sibly be used to prejudice t h e that a number of social work stu- cases of the over 600 demonstrat-, dents assisted themothers during ors arrested during the conven- the demonstrations and negotia- tion." bns-, Panhel Associationi shelves Sguideaction By LISA STEPHENS Black sororities Alpha Kappa Alpha and Delta Sigma Theta withdrew from Panhellenic Association at their meet- ing last, night. Citing "weak Membership Committee Report recom- mendations, and the possibility of continued use of discrim- inatory mechanisms to' rush," the two houses walked out of the meeting when discussion on a proposed amendment to drop rushing privileges immediately for 16 houses bogged down. The 16 houses concerned have not szgned and returned a statement saying that they- - -- --Associated Press 1T 01 Tiger victorysetss do not use a system of binding alumni recommendations in pledging new members. 1,300 signatures were collected on the Diag and in women's resi- dence halls yesterday by Colleg- iate Sorosis and Delta Sigma Theta in support of the proposed resolution. The Membership Committee Re-, port recommends that the houses oe allowed to -rush this year, but1 if use of binding recommendations is not elininated by 1970, rushing privileges will be withheld be- ginning that year. The Report also recommends that the 16 houses be fined $100 immediately, the max- imum allowed under Panhel's con- stitution. A motion was passed to suspend the rules and table all proposals and the report itself until n e x t week's meeting, postponing debate on the topic. "If Panhellenic wants to be Dave Gordon, Grad, warned "Obviou students that they "could be sub- students, t poened" because of their response tion ofg t. questionnaires, or even because and the n they came to be interviewed." "All tax monie they have to do is have someone the statem there to take your picture." he The sta said. that the ci Pf a Pfarr insisted that the question- manent t naires would be kept confidential, moieng i Slieringi diua~LLe s uenTs names LANSING 01") - Ion Stevens, would be disassociated from t h e Chairnian of the Michigan S t a t e questionnaires. He said the single University Board of Trustees, has page of volu tary personal back- asked 'Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley to ground information does go in rule if there is a possible conflict with the questionnaires to Chicago of interest involving Trustee Ken- where they will be analyzed. neth Thompson and Philip May, By national order, Pfarr was not SU vice president for business allowed to divulge any informa- d finance. tion about the progress of the Thompson, an executive of investigation. He did say, however, Michigan Bell Telephone Co., Ste- that he was "pleased with the re- vens aid, has for some time oc- sponse to the campaign so far." cupied space rented for him by The interviewing, according to Michigan Bell in a building oc- Pfarr, will continus as long as per- cupied by International Business sons'continue to volunteer inform- Machines near the MSU campus. ation: Michigan Bell does extensive', Delving into three major areas, business with the university, Ste- the questionnaire asks about: vens said. "Incidents of provocation by At the time of the rental trans- police or other law. enforcement action, Stevens said, the building personnel by demonstrators, in- was owned in part by Mrs. May. eluding (if any) assaults, throw- Thompson, Stevens said, cast a ing of missiles of any type and in- deciding vote in a meeting of the suiting language." 0oard of Trustees that prevented "Incidents of violence by the the removal of May from his post police involving demonstrators or as vice president for business and bystanders.", finance. "Incidents of violence by police May has said his family has since involving representatives of t h e divested itself of its holdings in media."j the building. Stevens asked Kelley In addition, Pfarr asked e a c h} to rule if the arrangement con- witness to make a concise state- *tituted a conflict of interest 1in- ment concerning the general be-. volving either Thompson or May. havior of the police and one stat-j In another development, State ing whether or not the demon- Treasurer Allison Green defended strators provoked the police into a pension fund loan to an apart- any acts they might have commit- ment project partially owned by ted. May's attorney, Leland Carr. The The commission is also interest- defense came in a report to Gov. ed in whether or not the bystand- Romney.. Carr is also attorney for ers of the demonstrations w e r e MSU. ' treated fairly. and asked for advice ations. "Whatev Jbe, we, as a to the boa as being d regular cot rupted by our obligat taxpayers the report There w statement on it. Coul new Th C " sly very exciting to the but uncalled for disrup- governmental functions: needless expwnditures of s cannot be tolerated," Lent said. ST. LOUIS 0PA--"There's going, atement also suggested to be a big victory dinner in De- ircuit judges make per- troit Friday." heir order prohibiting, Mayo Smith, the smiling man- in the County building ager of the Detroit Tigers, the county prosecutor couldn't help but sound confident on handling these situ- after his men 'routed St. Louis: 13-1 yesterday. The victory ver our procedure 'may squared the World Series at three a committee, recommend wins apiece and sent Mickey Lo-' rd thatwe go on record lich against Cardinal pitchingj determined not to allow star Bob Gibson today in the de- runty business to be dis- ciding game.. - pressure groups. This isI Jim Northrup's grand slamho- Ltion to the citizens and JmNrhu' rn lmh- of Washtenaw County," mer off relief pitcher Larry Jas- stated.nter was the big blow in the third sate, dwhen the Tigers sent 15 men to das no discussion of the the platedagainst loser Ray Wash- and no action was taken burn and three others. It unctha biraf qiic n enth game duel Thursday with left-handed Mickey Lolich. also a two-time Series winner. Morning showers delayed the start for 10 minutes and umbrel-' las sprouted in the crowd of 54,- 692 at Busch Stadium as the rain resumed in the last of the sev- enth inning. The lights were. turned on all during the dark, cloudy afternoon. Play was held! up for 49 minutes by rain in the' last of the eighth. By the time the ;game was re- sumed only a handful of fans re- The Series thus followed the a lily-white organization," said same pattern as 1967 when the Carol Goings, president of Delta Cards opened up a 3-1 edge on Sigma Theta, "they shall do so Boston only to drop two in a row without the help of Delta Sigma before Gibson bested Jim Lopberg Theta or Alpha Kappa Alpha." in the final. The only teams to1 With the uithdrm o f ha+xe ch Gibson finale mayge apt rihts By GEORGE MILLER Sophomore women may be freed from the dormitory resi- dence requirement today as the Board of Governors of the Resi- dence Halls meets to act on the issue. Approval, followed by similar action by the Regents, would per- mit sophomore women to live in non-University housing beginning next fall, if they so desired. The board's two voting stu- dent members are expected to vote in favor of eliminating the requirement. At least three facul- ty members have expressed no strong objection to the proposal, but two of these were quick to add that they want to evaluate the ideas to be brought forth at today's meeting before making a decision., Jack Myers, president of Inter- House Assembly and a member of the board, has said that he will re-introduce the motion, post- poned from last month's meeting, today. IHA formally' recommended that the requirement be abolish- ed two Weeks ago. Myers seeks favorable action by the board because he believes that "sophomore women deserve, the apartment privileges that so- phomore men have had'for years. It's part of a natural progression of steps." Senior women were granted permission to live outside of the dorms in the fall of 1962, and junior women could do so begin- ning in the fall of 1965. Men have always had such freedom, Myers believes. 1 . mained in the rain-soaked stands. Some press box wags thought it should have been declared a TKO, as soon as it became legal to III 1 . iS1111d"1". . y 1 1C 4ij UUl 4 V come back from 3-1 deficits were the Boston Red Sox in a best-of- 9 set in 1903, the Pittsburgh Pirates in 1925 and the New York Yankees in 1958. Once again Gibson, who last worked Sunday in the rain de- layed game at Detroit, will have three days' rest while his oppo- nent. Lolich. will have had only two days to recover from Mon- day's winning effort. It was apparent early that this See POW . . . , Page 9 tes trend nt OK's budget i i i it wasieoiggest zeries in- save the battered Cards' from ab- ning since Hack Wilson mis- sorbing further punishment. judged a fly ball at Philadelphia --- - -------- ___ _ in 1929 and opened the gates for 10 runs by the Philadelphia A's against the Chicago Cubs. The A's, trailing $-0 at the time. also } win tine winarawai of ti e two houses, there are now no black women in any sorority belonging to Panhel. Student Government Council of- ficials said last evening that if Panhel is unable to take conclusive and sufficiently strong action to censure the 16 houses at their meeting next week that SGC's Membership Committee may step in to investigate. The 16 houses affected are: Al- pha Chi Omega, Alpha Delta Pi, Alpha Epsilon Phi, Alpha Gamma Delta, Alpha 'Phi, Alpha Xi Delta, 'Chi Omega, Delta Delta Delta, Delta Gamma, Gamma Phi Beta, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Kappa Al- pha Theta, Kappa Delta, Pi Beta Phi, Sigma Kappa and Zeta Tau Alpha. Alpha Kappa Alpha and Delta Sigma Theta issued a statement following their walkout saying, "Our position is self-evident. There exists in Panhel a mechan- ism for discrimination, that of binding alumni 'recommendations. "All women of Panhel are aware of this mechanism and they refuse See BLACK, Page 10 F sent 15 men to bat. The final score didn't quite _... Vim. CURRICULU LSA to adoto Ue u un y A.JUsoaru o zupervis- match the New York Yankees'1L V V II. 1 n L LL1L( 1 1 L i ors adopted a 1969 budget of $7,- 18-4 rout of the New York Giants 114,373 at their meeting yesterday. in 1936. From Wire Service Reports -An overwhelming majority of This represents a 19 per cent in- Julian Javier's single with two -oac m erw ant underity - crease over 1968. out and two on in the ninth administrators and faculty has uate cumriculums drastically re- The full 5.5 mills property tax saved the Cards from. suffering uncovered widespread agreement vised. Only 10 per cent see this asI will be levied county residents for the most lopsided shutout in Se- that students 'hould and will be, undesirable; the first time. In 1968 a record ries history, given a say in academic decision- -More than half the adminis- levy of 5.42 mills was imposed on Denny McLain, second choice to making. trators and faculty polled feel the county residents.,1 injured Earl Wilson in Manager' Undertaken by the American average total cost to the student : The budget includes a 61, per, Mayo Smith's pre-game opinion, Council on Education, the poll of his college education will doubie cent salary increase for most em- made up for two ' earlier defeats shows administrators and faculty in the next ten years. This assumes ployes and a sheriff's department by Bob Gibson as he came back in overwhelming agreement that no increase in the rate of infla- budget near $1.000,000 - the larg- strong with a cortisone shot eas- students should sit "as voting tion. est single departmental allocation. ing his aching right shoulder. members on most important aca- Trustees and students were also Appropriations were increased in The Tigers' victory once again demic committees on the typical polled but only a small percentage all but two departments: social puts it squarely up to Gibson, campus." responded. However, John Caffrey, services and recreation, the Cards' strikeout ace, in a sev- The report also shows agree- a director of the report, was able ment that the gradual substitution3 to conclude that "faculty and stu- of responsibility for self-regula- dents are in greater agreement S IRF M tion instead of in loco parentis with each other than either is with as a basis for codes of non-aca- trustees." demic student conduct' seems-- --- E en department Iv of facultyPhilo dept. ien d parten Iand administrators diverged when, asked whether this movement was artment "would first no faculty of its own, to 'borrow' faculty desiraelt tho thaitwn aoutbo holds fru a set of open course from departments and either augment a only one of four administrators d allow the initiation man's salary or else reimburse his depart- agreed with them. Approximately 65 philosophy not fall under any ment for his decreased commitment to There is also agreement that students and faculty partici- t's jurisdiction. them." students will use more "direct- pated yesterday in an informal that such a loosely- The "course mart" is envisioned as "a action methods to demand changes forum on student involvement in vill solve the problem curriculum stock market." In practice, it in higher education." Again, how- departmental policy making. mental demarcations. would probably be a bulletin board where ever, there was disagreement con- The ad-hoc body discussed a who wished to study course ideas could be posted to be seen by cerning the desirability of such wide variety of issues-including ultural movement and all interested students and faculty. action. Nine out ten administra- curriculum revisions, distribution principles might need aThe coordinating body would run the tors ee hisdevelopmentas un- requirements, and institutional- picpemihned Tecodntn boywudrnte desirable,- while seven of ten fac- ized student representation on 'ces of English, philo-k- course mart, initiate courses and review ulty take the opposing view, faculty committees re, and art history." suggested courses to screen and refine pro- In addition, half of those polled'fteommceted t o id also allow the allo- posals. Approved course and faculty would felt the policy-making power of steeinfoum ciatedctmpora y s to be more flexible. then be recommended to the literary college administrators will be eroded. faculty members, graduate stu- s of inter-disciplinary Curriculum Committee for review and ap- Eight of ten administrators feel dents and undergraduates major end to be superficial, proval, the normal procedure for any pro- this is undesirable, while 75 per i nhiosnnhv The n it. By RICHARD WINTER A new interdepartmental program for the literary college will be put into effect by next fall if administrative details can be worked out, according to Dean William Hays. The proposal for the plan, currently un- der study by Hays and the college's execu- tive comfittee, was submitted to Hays as a report of Student Government Council's . Select Committee on Curricular Reform. It suggests four main features for the pro- gram: O A literary college 'open" department. "a program that would be administered in- dependently of any single current depart- ment or subdivision of the college." The "open" depa and foremost offers numbers" which woul of courses which do particular department The report states structured program 'w of crossing departn Someone, for instance 'Romanticism' as a cL as a set of aesthetic] to draw on the resour sophy, music literatur This structure word cation of credit hour "One of the criticisms courses is that they t