Th rae Thursday, February 27, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Pcge" Thursday February 27, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY .aae Th... __ FOUR CAMPUSES QUIET Agreements, tough policies end student protests (CPS) - Demonstrations of the last couple of weeks on sev- eral campuses 'have died down ' either because students received their demands or the university officials put down the protests. At the University of Chicago last weekend, hundreds of stu- dents ended an occupation of the s c h o o I 's administration building which had lasted more 4 than two weeks. The students were protest- ing the firing of a popular so- ciology professor and demand- ing that students be given 50-50 representation on committees which make hiring and firing decisions. Their demonstration ended as the university administration of- fered to renew the contract of Mrs. Marlene Dixon for one year, and she refused the offer. The self-styled "radical so- ciologist" would not accept the offer because it was a "token gesture." She had been turned down last month for perma- nent hiring by the Sociology Department, where she worked half-time. The graduate Com- mittee on Human Development, where she spent the other half of her time and which paid her salary, approved her re- hiring, but the Sociology veto was enough to fire her. Ninety-seven of the students occupying the administration building were notified by the administration the second day of their protest that they were suspended from the university. Eighteen of those students have appeared before a faculty dis- cipline committee. Their "sen- tences" have ranged from sus- pended penalties to suspension for one quarter. At Sir George William Univer- sity, where students destroyed the university's computer and did $1.8 million damage to the school's administration build- ing before police drove them out and arrested 79, officials have instituted a hard line on uniyersity security. The arrested students, who ALL CAMPUS MIXER %ja'tihe Cinpire TOMORROW 9-12 South Quad Feb. 28, March 1 THE SERVANT DIRK BOGARDE screenplay by Harold Pinter 3 ACADEMY AWARDS 4, will be charged with arson, con- spiracy and public mischief, have been jailed awaiting preliminary hearings. Arson alone carries a maximum penalty of life im- prisonment, a minimum of seven years. Students remaining on the Sir George campus have been hit with seven "emergency regula- tions" to govern the campus. They were told that breach of these regulations means suspen- sion or expulsion. They include: -- establishment of the uni- versity's right to check identi- fication of anyone in a univer- sity building, and to eject "un- authorized" people; --no "unauthorized person" is to attempt to stop anyone from access to any of the school's facilities; - no threats of violence to any person; - no disruption of activities or events. Biology professor Perry An- derson, the target of racial dis- crimination charges which started the protest, was rein- 1stated to the faculty, but t h e chairman of the biology depart- ment resigned the next day to protest Anderson's original su- pension. The University of Pennsyl- vania campus returned toenorm- al yesterday following a six-day sit-in which ended after stu- dents won their demands relat- ing to the school's expansion in ghetto areas. The agreement reached by the students and university trustees provides for the fol- lowing: - trustees to lead a 10 mil- lion fund raising drive for com- munity renewal programs; - a commission of students, Mfaculty, trustees and community leaders which will have the veto power over all development plans; - the university annually paying the commission's costs of $75 thousand; - the university replacing any housing demolished in uni- versity expansion. The newly formed commission met with Philadelphia Deputy Major Charles Bowser yesterday afternoon and was provided a meeting with U.S. Housing and Urban Development Secretary George Romney within two weeks. At North Carolina A&T Uni- versity in Greensboro, an as- sistant professor who was one of six teachers called "incomp- etent" last week by students who also called for immediate firing of the six, has filed a $250,000 criminal libel suit against two student government officers. -Associated Press The old and the new Apollo astronauts Russell Schweickart and David Scott chat with Alan B. Shepard Jr., chief of the astronaut office, and the first American to make a space flight. The two astronauts are suited up for a practice run of the 10-day earth orbit flight they will begin Friday along with Astronaut James McDivitt. However, mild sore throats and nasal conditions ailing all three space voyagers may force NASA to postpone the jaunt. Dr. Charles Berry, director of medical operations for the space agency will examine the astronauts this morning and make a recommendation on whether or not the flight should be delayed. TREND TOWARD APATHY: European suspicions may stall effective organization the news toda by The Associaed Press and College Press Srrice THE PARIS PEACE TALKS move into their sixth ses- sion of full scale negotiations today. Although U.S. chief delegate Henry Cabot Lodge says he has detected "some progress being made," informed sources say they expect some "diplomatic wrangling" at the session. South Vietnamese Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky is likely to make a strong protest to the North Vietnamese and Na- tional Liberation Front over the Viet Cong's recent shelling of cities in the South. Ky has said he would urge his government to resume the bombing of North Vietnam without American help should the shellings continue. In Vietnam yesterday, the Communist's n e w offensive pushed to within one mile of the big U.S. air base at Bien Hoa. U.S. intelligence officers speculated that Saigon, only 15 miles to the south, was the goal of the drive. " * 0 MILD ILLNESSES contracted yesterday by all three Apollo 9 astronauts threaten a delay of Friday's scheduled launching. Apollo pilots James A. McDivitt, David R. Scott, and Rus- sell L. Schweickart reported they were plagued by sore throats and stuffed noses, and were immediately given several drugs to curb the illness. Space Agency officials are concerned that the stuffed noses will develop into clogged ears, which are severely pain- ful during rapid air pressure changes of ascent and descent. The astronauts are scheduled to orbit the earth for ten days during which they will make the first flight check of the lunar module, the craft that will carry three men to the moon's surface - reportedly by mid-July. APPEARING BEFORE THE WEST GERMAN PARLIA- MENT, President Nixon said the power of the Atlantic alliance must be preserved. In reference to future talks between the U.S. and the Soviet Union, Nixon said "we recognize that for those nego- tiations to succeed, it is essential that we maintain the strength that made negotiations possible." West Germany's leaders requested that German reunifi-, cation be part of the agenda of any parley. However, Nixon stopped short of such a committment. The President and Chancellor Kurt Kiesinger discussed in private West German misgivings about the nuclear non- proliferation treaty, which was approved Tuesday by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. THE FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD will keep a tight rein on money this year, says chairman William McChes- ney Martin Jr. Appearing before the joint Senate-House Economic Com- mittee, Martin conceded that last year's money policy had been too loose. He indicated that the 10 per cent surtax will slow the economy until mid-year. However, he expressed concern that the second half of the year would witness a rise in private demand and inflationary overheating. "It would be foolish to increase this risk by adding the fuel of easy credit," Mar- tin explained. GENERAL MOTORS IS RECALLING 4.9 million ve- hicles suspected of having defects, the largest number in auto history. 2.4 million cars and trucks may have exhaust systems which leak fumes into the vehicles' interiors. The other 2.5 million cars will be checked for a faulty carburetor part which could cause the accelerator to stick. GM's action is the result of an investigation which was spurred by the death by asphyxiation of four motorists last July. PRESIDENT NIXON has selected Rep. Roger C. B. Morton (R-Md.) to be the new chairman of the Republi- can National Committee. Ray C. Bliss, chairman since 1964, resigned from the post last week, reportedly because of indications t h a t Murray Chotiner, a Los Angeles attorney and a former Nixon aide, was going to be national chairman. Morton was floor manager of the Nixon forces at the Re- publican National Convention. Following the election, he sought unsuccessfully for appointment as Secretary of the Interior, a post that went instead to Alaska's Governor Walter J. Hickel. 1 U i BRUSSELS (P) - Charles de Gaulle is suspicious of the Com- mon Market. a n d says Britain doesn't qualify for membership. President Nixon is for it a n d wants Britain to become a member. Such views cloud the future of Europe's moves toward unity, but the danger seems to be less that the Common Market will break up than that it will turn into a sleepy bureaucracy that accomplishes little. There is an ominous prece- dent in what has happened to Euratom, one of the, organiza- tions making up the Common Market. Its job is to promote the development of nuclear en- ergy for peaceful uses. Member countries h ave insisted so strongly ~, on their individual rights and starved it of funds so that there is doubt it can carry on. De Gaulle is reported to have Second Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morning University year. Sub- scription rates: $9.00 by carrier, $10.00 by mail. proposed that the market be re- placed by a looser arrangement. B u t many groups in Western Europe are against trying to un- scramble the omelette. French farmers, for example, have got used to seeing their surpluses exported with the help of Com- mon Market subsidies. West German industrialists have pro- fited from the abolition of tar- iffs. Five of the market -countries back Nixon in urging Britain's membership. This support, more or less warm, comes from West Germany, Italy, Belgium, Hol: land and Luxembourg. They would like to see other appli- cants join, too: Ireland, Den- mark, Norway, perhaps Sweden. But De Gaulle says no, and he has seen to it that all major de- cisions must be unanimous. To many, this situation makes it less and less likely that West- ern Europe can meet the "Amer- ican challenge" in science and industry. So far, French oppo- sition has also largely frustrat- ed efforts to get together with Britain outside the Common Market. In 11 years the Common Mar- ket has gone far toward creating what its name implies: a vast area like the United States where people and g o o d s can move freely. But complete economic unity is still far away. There are dif- ferent currencies, different tax systems and a bewildering set of trade barriers that is some- times more effective than tar- iffs in stopping goods at nation- al borders. American officials in general consider the market an asset to t h e Western world's economy and a factor in the development of a great potential market for the United States. On the other hand, it has contributed to new competition for U.S. goods, and American officials find the mar- ket's agricultural policy restric- tive. Nixon sees the market, even with its faults, as p a r t of a strong Europe. This v i e w seems shared by such congressional leaders as Rep: Hale Boggs, D-La., who has specialized in international'trade problems. "Congress takes a fav- orable view of the Common Market,"'-he said in Washington this week. "Congress envisages it as a unifying influence in Eur- ope, and we feel that's good .. . If t h e market were dissolved, something would have to be cre- ated to take its place." 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