POLITICS AND PROTEST: WASTING TIME See editorial page YI rL A6P D3a iti SUNNY High-40 Low-21 Fair and warm turning cloudy, colder Eight Pages Vol. LXXIX, No. 126 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, February 28, 1969 Ten Cents ONE DEAD, MANY INJURED: SGC Nixon s Rome sets * .0 visit touches off violence- ROME (3) -Italian Communist ning battles through the heart of the U.S. presence in Vietnam. the demonstrators led the first serious the city. Greek junta and "American im- disorders of President Nixon's The wail of sirens could be perialism." European fence-mending mission heard in the conference room of Milan and Naples also were hit yesterday with riots that left one the Quirinal Palace where Nixon by student-worker demonstrations dead and scores injured, met with Italian President Sara- against Nixon, and Communists The violence erupted after the gat. claimed that anti-Nixon outbreaks President, heartened by a rousing Just two blocks away, thousands occurred in Pisa, Foggia, Matera, sendoff in West Berlin, had been of students, shouting "Nixon go Ravenna and Massa Lombarda. hailed by welcoming crowds in the home!" and "Mao, Mao, Mao Tse- The student who died in Rome Italian capital. tung!" hurled stones and fire- was Domenico Congelo, 24, an ed- At least 35 policemen were in- crackers and jabbed police with ucation major. He fell from an jured, scores of students bloodied pointed sticks. upper story window of the Uni- versity of Rome Teachers College, and 139 rioters arrested after run- The students lambasted NATO, whih wa occe by legit fwhich was occupied by leftists and besieged by rightists. Fellow students were soon talk- .,ir of Congelo as a martyr for SOr I egra dsthe ir cause. The scene was in stark contrast to one earlier in the day when a " crowd of cheering Romans sur - rounded Nixon after his jet landed at Ciampino Airport and hoisted the President to their shoulders. ,3y RICK PERLOFF Hundreds of thousands of citi- zens had cheered Nixon in Berlin The chairman of the sociology department curriculum where he reaffirmed the U.S. committee last night agreed to call a special committee meet- commitment to defend that iso- ing Sunday in response to student demands for parity on lated sector. the department's executive committee. Paraphrasing President John F. The undergraduate sociology union has been granted Kennedy's 1963 "I am a Berliner" three voting members on the six-man curriculum committee speech, Nixon said: "In the sense* - that the people of Berlin stand for However, the curriculum committee is only an advisory body freedom and peace, all the people to the department's decision-making executive committee. of the world who want freedom' Members of the student union are truly Berliners," last night unanimously voted to The Rome demonstration began ask the curriculum committee to in Piazza Esedra near the main meet Sunday to pass on their de- train station. A hodgepodge of mands for parity to the executive students, workers and organizers committee. from the Communist Party and its u- However, curriculum committee ally, the Proletarian Socialist vX Le U Ie chairman Prof. David Segal said Party-about 5,000 in all-massed' yesterday he does not favor un- with plans still indefinite. dergraduate representation on the The demonstration suddenly got executive committee. "As it stands off the ground when two jeeps now, I would not recommend their filled with helmeted Carabinieri proposal to the executive commit- came barrelling at the demonstra- By SAM DAMREN tee," he said. tors, scattering them. The Eastern Michigan Univer- Karen Schwab, a member of That galvanized what had been! sity Faculty Council has set a vote j the union, responded to Segal's a formless and unaroused gather- of the entire faculty next week on 1 comment saying, "I think it is un- ing. a proposal criticizing administra- fortunate that the curriculum Italian workers and students, tion handling of recent demon- committee, which is supposed to joined by students from the Con- strations. be a forum for student opinions, go, Guinea and Somali and a doz- The proposal was originally pre- appears unresponsive to our de- en Arabs who said they represent- referendum on language Rome police arrest a bloody dcne LEADER ARRESTED, BEATEN: New clash at . By ROBERT KRAFTOWITZ Student Government Council last night placed a refer- endum on abolition of the language requirement on the ballot for the March 18-19 election. The faculty meets Monday to debate the highly-contested issue. However, the literary college's key curriculum committee has already recommended only a change in the requirement to allow substitution of sequences in selected non-language departments, SGC last night asked the faculty to ignore the com- mittee report and "accede to the mandate of the student body, which is to abolish the requirement." Council members said they set the referendum because they fear the faculty will not end the re- quirement at Monday's meeting.I At-large member Mark Rosen- baum, who co-sponsored the re- - Associated Pres ferendum proposal, predicted the oo O trt student body "will recognize their h i i stake in this decision and over- whelmingly support abolition of the requirement." By LANIE LIPPINCOTT Last night Interfraternity Coun- The Fraternity Representatives cil added its support for abolition. Assembly FERA), speaking for In- Although only the literary col- terfraternity Council, last night lege requirement is under consi- gave unanimous support to the deration, students in all schoolsg a no u ageprequirth and colleges will be asked to vote ents. language require- on'the referendum. today, Monday and Tuesday to Hoever, ballots marked by stu- In another motion the FRA as ease tension and discuss black pro-: Hwever, llt mae b t a body endorsed the rent strike, posals. He had originally suggested dents in the literary college will be some dates next week, but was counted separately. Thus, the col- FRA could not endorse the rent "convinced" by the students to lege's faculty will be presented strike for the IFC because its start the class-halt today, with the opinion of the students function in IFC is to deal with ex- In Newark, black students va- in their school. ternal affairs. cated Conklin Hall yesterday A motion to restrict the referen- Fraternity Presidents Assembly morning, as university President dum to students in the literary is expected to vote on the rent Mason Gross signed an agreement college was overwhelmingly de- strike next week, said IFC presi- which substantially granted the feated. dent Gates Moss. Black Organization of Students' Council President Michael Koe- Ron Natale, external vice presi- (BOS) demands. The agreement neke said the curriculum commit- dent of the IFC presented the mo- calls for: tee has ignored "the large mass of tion to abolish language require- -Two admissions officers ac- student opinion in its delibera- ments saying "They are not ef- cused of racism to be shifted to tions," and urged the faculty to fective or educationally valuable." the admissions staff of the profes- accept the outcome of the referen- The two-point motion on Ian-. sional school immediately. dum guage said: A minority report of the com- -All freshman applications to mittee, which will also be con- -"two year language require- be decided on an individual basis, sidered by the faculty, recom- ments do not contribute to know- as opposed to a set criteria of col- mends replacing the present lan- ing or understanding a foreign cul- lege boaid score, high school guage requirement with an en- ture or mastering a communication r'ank, etc. trance requirement. art"; -A black officer in the dean SGC Executive Vice President -"students should share in the of students office, to be approved Bob Neff called the minority re- decisions of University require- by BOS. ' port "horrendous." ments." A black recruiter for the ad- "A referendum will allow the Natale, as he presented his mo- missions office, to be approved by students to express their dissatis- tion, said "It is ironic that when BOS. See SGC, Page 8 people in fraternities are most Faculty at Newark were some- active on campus, IFC has been what angered that they were not " the most inert and conservative consulted on the final agreement. ro t O s bodyon campus." He said the aim Traveling downstate to Camden of FRA is to change the role of College Press Service Despite a driving rain, student strikers and police confronted each other at the University of California at Berkeley yesterday for the first time since last week's full scale battles. The strikers marched through campus buildings and surrounding city streets, breaking at least 50 windows. There were almost as many police on canipus as demonstra- tors -- about 200. Police made 12 arrests and beat at least two per- sons. One arrested strike leader, Ysi- dro Macias, was beaten uncon- scious and hospitalized with severe head injuries. The police broke up several attempts by strikers to block the main campus entrances. riving the demonstrators into the street. Chancellor Roger Heyns said the strike "has turned into a street war of violence and des- truction" and that he would not meet again with leaders of the Third World Liberation Front "un- til conditions are altered." Heyns was to have met with the strike leaders at 2 p.m. but called off the meeting when chunks of concrete were thrown through two windows in his office. Meanwhile settlements w e r e reached yesterday at three cam- puses of Rutgers University, the New Jersey state college system. At the main campus in New Brunswick, dean of the college Arnold Grobman met with blacks and agreed to call off classes for 4 sented Wednesday td the council, mands for giving students a great- which consists of the chairmen of er voice in deciding the course of EMU's 17 departments. their educations." However, council c h a ir m a n The union will meet March 13} Omar Robbins explained yesterday to decide what action to take in; that the chairmen declined a vote response to Sunday's meeting. on the proposal because they did The union also demanded last not believe they could speak for night that the curriculum commit- their departments on this issue. tee recommend to the executivej The entire faculty will meet to committee a proposal to restruc- vote next Wednesday. ture the deparment's method of The proposal, suggested by Prof. making tenure decisions. Larry Hockman, calls for: The proposal, first presented by -amnesty for 14 students ar- the Sociology Graduate Student' rested during last week's demon- Association Wednesday, calls for strations; establishment of separate student --criticism of the administra- and faculty committees whichI tion's use of police without con- would 'both make tenure recom- sulting the. faculty; mendations. -acknowledgelnent of. black de- The student committee wouldbe mands.° composed of both graduate and Black. students have set 11 de- undergraduate students. mands, including tuition based on: If the proposed student and fac-: family income, a black studies pro- ulty committees disagreed, the de-4 gram, a black dormitory, appoint- cision would be made by a joints ment of a black vice president for committee composed by an equal minority affairs, and establish- number of students and faculty. ment of Martin Luther King and The students are also pressing Malcolm X scholarship funds. for curriculum changes such as The EMU campus was quiet yes- expanding the number of inde- terday as black students called off pendent study courses, changing class boycotts and picketing. the department's emphasis on EMU President Harold Sponberg methodology, and reduction in the; will meet with black leaders today requirements for a s o c i o 1 o g yj in closed session, major. ADOPT MILDE-H Gover-n ors defea ed Al Fath guerrillas, began marching toward the Quirinale Palace. That is where Nixon m e t with Saragat. Two hundred carabinieri sitting in 14 jeeps stopped the march. Tenants By JUDY SARASOHN Rent strikers didn't expect land- lords to be friendly about with- holding rent payments, and their expectations apparently were ac- curate, SI claim heat cut So. Miss Lewis got a friend to Abbott reportedly had to make climb down through a window, two calls to get the furnace going. where he found that the door to Mrs. Karow says she was told the the basement through her apart- furnace was completely out of oil: ment had been bolted shut from and that it was necessary to re-: the inside. light the pilot. Residents of 549 Packar'd, an Heasfonthfuacws The $45 oil delivery and service Wednesday. President Gross and 1 H e a l s o a a v h r f o u n d t h e f u r n a c e w a s ,k t e u i v r i y s D a n o t d n old, large house managed by Ar-; not working. chre'ilbeutdfo e teuiest' eno tdn e lt iaect bor Management, have charged; rent in escrow, Mrs. Karow says. Affairs Earl Clifford met w ith their landlord, Edward Kloian, Miss Lewis says they tried the The Karows had also joined the black students and agreed to 16 of turned their heat off because they restart button, but it didn't work, their 24 demands. tundterha f eas hyIrent strike. day for 40 of the 150 stud( joined the rent strike, so they called Abbott Oil Co. dyefareste drn thd According to both the Karows' Grosstalso said that as top ad- were arrested during th Kloian was unavailable for coin- Other tenants in the house, and Lewis' leases, the lessor, Klo- ministrator he would not tolerate protests last fall. mnent all day yesterday. Thomas and Naomi Karow, opened ;.'rcs y n rfssro d ir ian, is responsible for the heating. racism by any professor of admin- District Court Judge S. One of the tenants, Virginia an account with Abbott to get 1I istrator. He added that he himselforeda45ayxtni Lewis, returned from work and some oil into the furnace. They The three tenants and a mem-t ordered a 45-day extensio found her apartment unusually could not find out what oil com-I ber of the rent strike steering would initiate proceedings against recommendation of probe fon eraaten nsalyIIany university employe guilty of}fieRoRner"TeP cold. When she tried to check the ; pany had the original account. committee, David Goldstein, in- fier Ron Rinker. "The pt furnace she found both doors to Jay Huntington, head of Abbott D rtmenat of Bulding an deSci racisf- e University of Wisconsin restedsaddtional tie I the basement locked. 'Oil, said he did not have the ear-DeatetoBuligadSf- AthUnvrtyfWscsn rseddiinltmei She says at least one of the I ser account and opened one with ty Engineering that the heat had militant student proteste's smash- to pay their fines and cou ooshas be st broen andunf the arons baue "ee only inh been turned off. ed windows, overturned chairs and said Rinker doors has 'been broken and un- the Karows because "we're only in disrupted classes in five buildings. He explained that thec locked until very recently. the business to sell oil." Lloyd said he is investigating The outbreak began after a not legally discharge an noon rally called the assess pro- til his sentence is fulf RESOLUTIONcBesidestsnvestigatingothergress of a student movement for either by paying the fin the university to accept black stu- serving the alternate sen the tenants ought to speak with dent demands. About 300 students seven days in jail or on Kloian about the furnace running attended. The demands include gang. .1 1.. out of fuel. an autonomous black studies de- The 40 students have However, Miss Lewis and the partment. paid their fines and cour Karows say that after informing:i Kloian that they were striking that the Reagan res- conference by President Nixon, indicated and withholding their rent pay- like a "hot potato." the investigation suggested by Reagan is cmnts, Kloir service and that he I ne 'nor's move did cause not necessary because the justice department could not be responsible if he heat 1g governors who in- "presumably in the FBI" already conducts went offt b should have control such a probe. The tenants also say the heat-sou n d s, 1*e Agnew said there is no dispute, between ing in the building was not started liken and Massachu- the academic community and the govern- until the middle of last November. ent appeared at Rea- ment over educators' handling campus af- even though they complained By RON LANDSMAN LeVeque began the me e, tempering the at- fairs. As governor of Maryland, Agnew sent about it to Kloian repeatedly. Managing Editor spoke to the faculty, but3 Reagan~s reactionary state police last year to the Bowie State 1 Goldstein says it is a violation The mathematics department a chairman protempore, P of the city housing code if the faculty met last night to discuss fred Kaplan, was chosen. ,d yester- ents who e welfare J. Elden n on the ation of- iurpose of those ar- in which rt costs," city can- yone un- filled - ne or by ntence of a work not yet t costs. lr c;. Bob Hirshon, '70, proposed> the motion to support the Rent Strike, The motion states. - "the realtors, property man- agers, and landlords of Ann Ar- bor charge students in general and fraternity,members in particular excessive rentals," - "these individuals are indiv- idually and in combination con- spiring to control the rate of rent- als," - "these individuals place onerous conditions in their lease agreements about which the stu- dent has no power to bargain." "Therefore, the rent strike and Tenant's Union receive the com- plete support and encouragement" of the FRA, the motion said. The resolution also encourages all fra- ternity men "to join the r e n t strike and seek a redress of griev- ances." WASHINGTON (CPS)-California's Ron- ald Reagan yesterday called for a federal investigation into campus disorders, but other state governors here for their na- tional conference declined to back him. Reagan's resolution, announced at a morning press conference, called for the governors to urge the President and the 4 justice department to investigate the possi- bility of a conspiracy in disruptive campus protests. But the governors defeated the resolution after a discussion which included arguments concerning states rights and academic free- dom. Instead the group passed a statement adopted earlier by the conference's execu- tive committee that "extends its full sup- port to the President . . . relative to the preservation and advancement of higher education, which is being jeopardized on many ... campuses.". Williams said latert olution was "dropped" The California gover some scrambling amon sist that educatorss over their affairs. Gov. William G. Mil sett's Francis W. Sarg gan's press conference mosphere charged byl resolution. Both declined to give to Reagan, and stressed sent should not be di hesitated to endorsea Asked about the St vestigation of state un have said to the legisl proceed very cautiousl duly-constituted board sponsibility of handlin Ly meeting als proposal eting and executive committee and the rest left after of the faculty. Prof. Wil- "There may be real progress," Halpern said Prof. Jack Goldberg. "I'm e unqualified support d that legitimate dis- iscouraged. Milliken a federal probe. ate Legislature's in- iversities, he said, "I ators that they must y," we already have s with primary re- g (schools') internal College campus to put down black student protests. Reagan's resolution also said "There is growing evidence of nationwide coopera- tion in the planning, the nature, the timing. and the leadership in campus disruptions." It is not the purpose of campuses "to serve as staging grounds or practice fields for insurrection, rebellion, and anarchy," he said. The investigation would have sought to heating faciilties are not in good some rather harsh conflicts be- also did not attend. very optimistic because of the dis- working order. It does not matter tween the chairman and younger In his speech to- the faculty, Le- cussion at the meeting. People in if the tenant is striking, he says, faculty members and emerged Veque said specifically that he did the power structure were listening so long as there are people living with a feeling of "good will." not consider the call for repeal a to ideas from the rest of the in the building. The reason for the turnabout "vote of confidence." However, in faculty." In this case, he notes, there are seemed to lie in the opening of the letter to the faculty which Prof. Frank Raymond, a mem- also other people in the building lines of communication faculty called the meeting, and again last ber of the executive committee, who are not withholding rent. The members said occurred last night. night, LeVeque said the motion agreed. "It was a frank and open furnace the Karows are now serv- The meeting had originally been was one he "could not live with." discussion of positions," he said. icing served the entire house. called by the chairman, Prof. Wil- Despite LeVeque's protests that "There will definitely be more This is not the only apartment liam LeVeque, and the executive it was not a vote of confidence, communication in the department of Kloian that has had trouble committee to consider rescinding one faculty member said after the as a result of this meeting." ,<,;t. ft---- -4- - --t-i ~Z..- 'tflfl~vplf lip a niif4itnpi oA 2an