STUDENTS AND f HE DEPARTMENTS See editorial page 5k 43bU :4Ia itj DULL ITi gh--:O Low-21 Cloudy and warmer. slight chance or rain Vol. LXXIX, No. 115 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, February 15, 1969, Ten Cents he s multi-billion dollar 'need-to k By STEVE NISSEN. "The need to know principle" as up a few minutes later and after ficials" of the CIA, Goodwin said, seemed to be honest sincerity, areas he was cleared for. I saw were in special to the Daily it was eventually explained to us, a quick conference with our rep- ina tone of voice which prompted 'We are working not only for our no one in the corridors whose own. LANGLEY, Va.-Nestled incon- is an iron clad rule of the espion- resentative, Goodwin agreed to go a murmer of skepticism. country, but for peace through badges were marked for more than Anotl spicuously in a forest not far from age business. No person who works ahead with the briefings cn sev- Everyone really expected a lec- out the world." two or three of the areas. designat the capital sprawls the massive fothCIwihtepsilex ersigou cndins who _we for the CIA with the possible ex- eral rigorous conditions. ture from a simple-minded public About 20 minutes from Wash- The main lobby is very large loke headquarters of the Central In- ception of the director and his No cameras or tape recorders relation hack rather than top CIA ington, the bus turned off the and almost completely devoid of by, tnigence Agency, the largest and close assistants, is ever given ac- highway and was waved on furniture. A single inscription is and we most controversial espionage net- cess to any information unless he wudaealoedadinadibweficas work intherswesrnorld, - s yno reproduction of the briefing Goodwin's speech could have through a security gate leading etched in the wall. It says, "And ord fro Until yesterday no newsman had hat infoe ation in the d k " in any form whatsoever would be told us a great deal about the toward the CIA's main building. ye shall know the truth and the as opo ever received an official briefing i ti discharge permitted. The entire session was tone of our briefing, for his style, Nowhere were there any signs truth shall nake you free." and dig or attended a press conference of his duties. to be taken as "off-the-record," as we later learned, was char- identifying the facility as the CIA There were two other notices. men. at the CIA's Langley nerve center. Stated more simply, only the for our own information nly. acteristic of the CIA's leadership. headquarters. 'One small notice One instructed all personnel to Usher top four or five men in the CIA Later, a third stipulation was He adeptly sprouted euphem- on the gate said that the area is wear their badges at all times. we were Waeier wther trea ons or ever know what each of the made: we were forbidden to take isms like a funeral director help- U.S. government property. The other warned that no cameras K. Whi five top CIA officials, including agency's divisions are doing at the notes at any time duringAhe near- ing a man plan his future burial. Entering the main building we could be taken into the building. the CIA the executive director of the moment. ly two-hour session. 'Some of the questions you may were given special badges identi- We took a short walk through "Wha agency, yesterday gave 20 college Bef9re our briefing, we were The ground rules having been have about the CIA, we can't an- fying us as visitors and limiting the corridors to th conference has bee editors a brief glimpse of the given absolutely no information agreed to, we were loaded on the swer because it wouldn't be ip the our clearance. room where the briefing would be CIA pr CIA's multibillion dollar opera- on where the conference would be bus, where Goodwin reiterated national interest," G o o d wn Later. it was explained that the held. tion," h tion. held or who would speak.,All CTA that it would be an off-the record warned. badges are worn by all personnel WYe passed several offices on the our brie It-was a frightening look at a Public Relations Director Jack briefing. "We are like a university." he and are printed with at least one way. One was marked "Immuni- professi very different world governed by Goodwin would say was that we "We are the silent service of said in a' conversation while on letter in a series A through. H. nation" where CIA operatives ap- stand wv the "need to know" principle and were to assemble in the lobby of our government." he said, "and route. "We have libraries and re- Each letter apparently correspond- prently are innoculated before it opera guarded by an elaborate system the Shoreham Hotel at precisely this is the first time we have ever searchers just like any univer- ed to a particular section of the gding abroad. Our escorts were It wa of security badges, locked doors, 9 a.m. done this." The -briefing would sity," he commented. building and the more senior or careful to position themselves so for it im and armed guards. The CIA's chartered bus dhoved be conducted by the "senior of- And later, he added with what important the person the more none of us could wander off if we. Eight Pages rfow clined to explore on our Ler office was cryptically ed as SB OPS. Personnel passed in the corridors inquisitive as we walked tors are undoubtedly rare were very obviously visit- ai our shabby appearances, sed to the very clean cut nified dress of the CIA ed into a conference room. greeted by Col. Lawrence te, executive director of t to do about our image n a vexing problem for the actically from its incep- ie said. "The purpose of fing is to allow prospective anal journalists to inder- hy the CIA exists and how tes." s the wrong thing to say. imediately conjured up the See CIA, Page 2 i LOCKOUT? Landlords pla strike strategy By JUDY SARASOHN throw those students out immed.-'- The rent strike officially be- iately." 4gins today, and if all goes as plan- mitteeroe en tbeiketatny- ned, nearly 1,500 student tenants landlord ould illegally evict as wvill withhold their Feb. 15 rent~ anlodwoldilealyevcta payments. If landlords do notice a mark- ed decrease in their rent receipts, the next move in the tenant-land- lord battle will be up to the apart- Sment owners. What will' the landlords do then? Patrick Pulte says that the landlords of the property that his company, Patrick Pulte, Inc, man- agers have different opinions of what action to take. Most of * them, he, says, « ould "just as soon R eport Hoover to retire Informed sources reported Thursday .that J. Edgar Hoover, director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, would retire from his post next Jan: 1. On th'at date, Hoover will be 75. In a story by Sol .Friedman in the Miami Herald, the informa- tion was attributed to "certain at- torneys-general" gathered in Washington for a State Attorn- eys-General's conference. The FBI yesterday denied the report, Hoover°, who holds an all-time record for tenure in a federal agency, took over the FBI in the 1930's and organized the bureau into a crime' fighting machine. Hoover introduced a new breed of college-educated crime fighters who helped break up gangsterisin in the thirties and who collected the evidence that sent alleged German spies Julius and Ethel Rosenberg to the electric chair. More recently, H o o ve r has' blasted against ' "Communists" and "pseudo-liberals," p a r e n t s who failed their children, and "midget politicians". many as ou strixing tenants. Many tenants have been scared initially by notices to quit which were sent to them by their land- lord. The notice toquit is not an eviction notice, but a notice announcing that legal action will begin, said Dale Berry, the mem- ber of the rent strike committee in charge of the legal defense. In order to evict a tenant, a landlord must have first made a demand for payment of r e n t according to Michigan law. This demand is in the form of a notice to quit. If the tenant does not pay his rent within -7 days, the landlord may then initiate legal action for a summary eviction. Berry and David Goldstein, also a law student on the strike steer- ing committee, both emphasize that a landlord may not evict a tenant for nonpayment of rent without a court order. The legal strategy of the rent strike according to Berry is to use the legal defenses available to delay a final judgement against the striking tenant. If the judge- ment can be delayed for a signi- ficant amount of time - from 2- 4 months - the landlord, might be convinced before then to settle with the Tenant's Union's de- mands. At a press conference yesterday, David Shapiro, a member of the rent strike steering committee said that as little as a month's loss of rent for a landlord with a 20 - 30 per cent concentration of striking tenants would hurt him significantly financially. Besides using various I e g a I de- fens's Goldstein says that as few as 300 eviction cases would be needed to flood the courts, which would also delay action. Another way of avoiding evic- tion is simply for the tenant to pay his rent. In most cases, if the judgement is in favor of the landlord, the tenant may still be able to avoid eviction by paying his back rent and court costs within 10 days of the final court judgement., See RENT, Page 2 i 1 } i k E i Guard fromM protests By JIM HECK r Special to the Daily MADISON - Wisconsin Chancelor H. Edwin Y o u n g said yesterday in an after- noon news conference that the National Guard and out- side police will be removed - from the campus area. He did not indicate whether the Guard would be deacti- vated. About 85 city police clubbed fleeing students down a main street last night after more than 1,000 demonstrators sat down in an in- tersection directly in front of the state capitol. <: Thecdemonstrators left the in- tersection before police arrived and began walking slowly back to campus when two lines of city police and a paddy wagon began to charge them. After a brief charge the police began walking quickly abreast pushing students off sidewlaks in- to building entrances and side ,streets. vithdrawn isconsin;. continue -Daily-Jay Cassidy Student circle march blocks Madison Street Unrest at Mladison preeipit, by inaction on black deima By JIM HECK The reasons for the strike were said they did not Daily News Anal sis legitimate. .segregated, unlike The blacks had made 13 de- gationist blacks at MADISON - The chaos that m-ands.n the administration sities. catapulted this sprawling Big Ten which were apparently refused The original d campus into the headlines earlier outright Thursday morning, after black studies progi this week has obscured the issues the first violent days of demon- almbst a year ago which first gave rise to the dis- strations. Until Thursday and since then the dire order. since, the administration remain- cial scholarship To most white students here ed tightlipped about the situation. worked at quieting the strike and all that ensued be-' However, the 13 demands were no progress has bee dn Mnnd h, b k t made to the unresponsive admin- proposed program There were seven arrests buty:. only two of those were students. There were no immediate reports .;},":<<.;i:}}.} of any serious injuries. Wisconsin State Senator Gor- 'u-uti Q don Rosleip (R-Darlington) said n ~ds P"e1D ngoersaolice cleat J1U~~ last night he is asking for the Plc e resignation of President Fred Har- want it to be vey Harrington and an investiga- NOCONSENSUS many segre- tion of 150 Wisconsin faculty *CmNSbers. other univer- mmes Harrington has been in Wash- J J1 8sc y r campus area I -JL ington for the past several days and has remained silent concern- ing the demonstrations. After the demonstrations ended this afternoon black student lead- ers reaffirmed their pledge to disrupt the university throughout the weekend and next week but1 "without any violence." swry Daep.rorum studies requirements BY DAVID SPURRL gi ivonay wnen oacx sudents 11 VU1 i1V11 11YGQUlll entered lectures and announced istration long before any of the that they were striking against the I violence erupted. 'university. Whites were invited to Of those 13, two were crucial join, and at least 10,000 students For one, the blacks wanted a responded. Negro studies program, and they Hara d A LESSON IN LOVE teach-win amuses, bores By DAVE CHUDWIN They came by the hundreds, hanging from the balconies, standing on chairs, filling the doorways of the Union Ball- room. More than a thousand had to be turned away, Some came to find love, some to learn about love, and some to make love. They flocked to hear Robert Rimmer, the paunchy, graying author of The Harrad Experiment, but few paid at- tention to him as the night wore on. "We live in a society that ran'cnr C.rP C ,zp'" pVvmmnr cc.r lengthy resume of his new book Proposition 31. "We are devel- oping new patterns of mar- riage," he said. "At the rate things are moving a' group or corporate marriage will be the only way of survival." "Some of these ideas are very Utopian," Rimmer added. "Read what I write and see if you can think of something better," he concluded. The audience ap- plauded loudly, not so much the presentation as the ideas of love, sex, and a middle-aged man presumably liberated from mid- ."without--nyvie . The scholarship ram was laiming a job well done, one Nearly 80 students and faculty members debated the language initiated at the requet of blacks black leader told the Daily, "We requirement and a proposal to offer all history courses for four hours . to recruit and help support inner don't need to get involved in this credit at the history department forum yesterday. city blacks who would not nor- hang-up of violence. All we need .A call for "violent objections" to the four hour proposal of Prof. orally be qualified to attend the to do is keep the pigs runniing. Bradford Perkins went unanswered. university. There's no need to confront them There was no vote taken on the proposal. now. They've'got bullets, all we've The hour and a half discussion 'of the language requirement went Their crucial - and the most got is heads." less smoothly and reached no consensus. controversial-demand is that the Four to six groups of 350-600 Tes smt n reached the nsus university admit students who persons spent the morning run- The meeting discussed the importance of the languge require- were expelled from Oshkosh State ning from one intersection to an- ment in undergraduate education and the department's graduate University last fall, sother until police dispersed them. degree requirements. Although administration offi-I Demonstration marshalls kept "Some feel that a weakness of cials have derided the demand as all students away from the police American history as a'discipline is H abe" tur s foolish, the students argue that and moved the crowds onto the its isolation," said Prof. Raymond < I the state-wide university system sidewalks when police moved in. I Grew. "American history students is closely-knit unit and that such At 11 a.m. the first major con- who take a language would bene- d a demand is not unreasonable. frontation occurred at Park Street fit by having access'to document u The demand gained consideri-and University Avenue. University written in other languages." !able credibility when a committee is a major six-lane boule- He added that, "The study of Former Literary College dean appointed by Vice Chancellor F. yard running one block vest of languages is one of the great t'a- William Haber has refused an of- Chandler Young recommended the capitol building. ditions of historical scholarship." ferI by Gov. William Millliken to that the Oshkosh students be ad- Guardsmen were first called to Several students countered they become the state director of labor. mitted, if Oshkosh refused to re- disperse the students at about were not concerned with becoming "I found the offer attractive, admit them. 11:15 at which time more than professional historians, and 'that exciting and a fine opportunIty Young Is scheduled to appear'1500 demonstrators were blocking'the argument should not be made Yongi shduedt apar1the street. . on that basis. but I declined because of a heavy on television tomorrow night to Later students massed around They argued that the depart- schedule of writing, speaking and discuss the administrative action Bascom Halls at the statue of menthas an obligation to provide conference engagements that X and reaction to the student de- ba hm H Lil nandhthenatqui eme tsn leat to t revsdu-could not break" Haberexplainedi . Abraham Lincoln and then requirements relevant to the stu-colntbra"Herxpied mands and protests. mrri'har tn~ tha nrmininfretinn aan ma no' nina hnm "I also want to remain at the _: .: : ; ,.