NIXONIZATION OF PROTEST See Editorial Page 111k ig au :4E a it] REVOLTING High-35 Low-22 Cold, very cloudy, chance of snow Vol. LXXX, No. 61 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, November 13, 1969 Ten Cents Twelve Pages t Student fee, books tore vote: Not the last word By JIM BEATTIE Daily News Analysis The largest turnout in several years for a Student Government Council election seems likely to resolve very little besides the elec- tion of candidates who in fact interested students less than any of the three referenda on th? ballot. It was no surprise that students voted 10-1 in favor of the book- store proposal, and whether the bookstore will be created now de- pends only on the eligibility of the student-faculty controlled store for the state sales tax exemption offered to educational institutions. As of now, the store is expected to qualify for the exemption. And although students voted 3-1 in favor of the second referendum for student control of tuition money used for University con- struction, it is very unclear what significance the vote on this re- ferendum will have. University administrators were quite noncommittal about the ref- erendum yesterday. "We're always interested in student opinion on this kind of subject," said Presi- dent Robben Fleming. "But it's also very hard to get at such a complex matter in a simple refer- endum question." "Given the simple question ask- ing if students want to control their tuition, the only thing that surprised me was the fact that the margin was not higher," Flem- ing added. "On the whole I think the issue is a very complex one with little general student under- standing." Acting Vice President for Stu- dent Affairs Barbara Newell echoed the same sentiment, say- ing, "I don't think anyone was surprised at the outcome, and the referendum was worded loosely enough so that I don't think any- one really learned much from it." SGC President Marty McLaugh- lin admitted that the University is not legally bound by any refer- endum, but still believes the refer- endum may have psychological value. "Before the administration does anything which the referendum concerns, it will undoubtedly keep in mind that there was a refer- endum which clearly expressed student sentiment on the issue" he says. The most immediate effect of the referendum will probably be its influence on decisions made concerning the proposed new in- tramural facilities to be funded by as much as a $15 per term assessment against student tui- tion. But the proposal is now incom- plete and cannot be evaluated by either students or faculty, and it will certainly~ not be ready for some time since the three-week vacation of Vice President f o r Academic Affairs Allan Smith has postponed any work on the pro- posal. "The proposal is not ready to be discussed," said Fleming, "so I really can't say what effect thc referendum will have on its con- sideration." "The whole thing is up in the air right now, because the pro- posal is in the hands of Allan Smith, and he will be out of town until Dec. 3," added McLaughlin. The only action currently be- ing taken on the IM proposal is by Senate Assembly's Student Re- lations Committee, which h a s r drawn up a list of questions con- cerning the IM proposal that will be transferred to Smith by Mrs. Newell. But these questions also w i ll probably not be answered u n t i 1 after Smith returns. When action is taken, it seems more than like- ly that the administration will re- gard the referendum as little more than an interesting com- mentary on student opinion. Since every organized group-of students from Inter-Hotfse As- sembly to the Tenant's Union ex- cept Engineering Council has al- ready officially opposed any IM assessment that has not been ap- proved by students in referendum, any move to assess students with- out their consent seems certain to create a storm of opposition. Indeed, the ambiguity of t h e student fee referendum seems to have been matched by only the anti-climactic nature of the book- store resolution. Despite the great support which it received, the bookstore issue was largely resolved before t h e vote, which only made previous actions of students and faculty official. "The bookstore was pretty hard to vote no on," McLaughlin said. "The Regents, who are the most conservative group on campus, had already approved it, and the students had taken the whole in- itiative to force the results we got in the first place." The administration also believ- es it was the events earlier in the term which pulled out voters on the bookstore question, quite ob- viously the pace-setter of t h e election. "No one was surprised by the bookstore vote," said Fleming. "We had always proceded on the assumption that the proposal had a large amount of support among the students." "The issue certainly had great publicity on campus, and stu- dents just wanted to demonstrate the feeling that there was large student support for the issue and that it did not concern only a few people," he added. But McLaughlin felt that re- cent events such as the adver- tising campaign by local book- stores against the referendum added further to the size of the vote. "The ad campaign by the local bookstores produced a student backlash because the ads were so insulting to intelligent students," he said. Of no actual effect, of course, was the resolution calling for the immediate withdrawal of all U.S. troops from South Vietnam. But See BOOKSTORE, Page 8 I SECOND COMING: EMU board ba c s paper By JIM NEUBACHER a 1 t y 1 1 1 j 1 t z i t G 1 E I F t 1 1 YPSILANTI--In a 5-1 decision last night, the Eastern Michigan University disciplinary review board upheld the right of the staff of the Second Coming, an underground newspaper, to sell and distribute the paper on campus free of administrative restrictions. The review board, composed of three students, two faculty: members, and one administrator, was given final judicial authority in such cases by the EMU regents. Administrators have warned, however, that C ethey reserve the right to over- Consil er rule the board. The Second Coming also won support yesterday from the EMU Faculty Senate. In a statement to 11 W cod e the administration, the senate recommended that all newspapers be allowed to sell and distribute " eon campus-free of administrative 01n l u 1 n rtriction-as long as the paper contained the names of persons responsible for the content, and' By GARY SOLOMON was not sold in classrooms. Members of the Tenants Union The senate also asked that all and the Legal Aid Society pro- charges against the Second Com- posed yesterday revisions to the ing staff be dropped. City Housing Code at a meeting Dean of Students Thomas Aceto with Councilman Len Quenon (D- declined comment last night on Second Ward). Quenon is a mem- the review board decision, saying' ber of a three man council sub- he wanted to review it thoroughly' committee charged with drafting today. He said he had "no idea" a new housing code for the city how the administration would re- in compliance with the state's act to the ruling. 1968 Tenants' Rights Act. A spokesman for the paper The two major modifications praised the decision last night, sought by the tenant groups are saying, "We're gratified that the recognition of private escrow review board ruled in our favor, funds, and the right to place rents just as the Student Court did. This in escrow for less than "serious should convince the administra- violations' of the housing code by tion to give up." the landlord. The case camne to the review Under the draft of the code board, a court of appeals, from the proposed by the councilman, es- EMU Student Court. In a ruling crow funds would be placed in a on the case Nov. 1. the Student city fund. The right to place funds Court said newspapers were ex- in private escrow, however, is empt from an EMU rule prohibit- guaranteed by common law. If the in the sale or distribution fc city code were to legitimize pri- mercial items without the perinis- vate escrows, the tenant spokes- sion of the vice president for busi- men explained, ienters would be ness and finance. able to strike against their land- A lords more easily. accet termed that decision "un- The Tenants Union now utilizes a b, an appealed. a private escrow fund in which In the decision last night, the striking tenants deposit their rent. review board affirmed the right of The union and the Legal Aid the EMU administration to reg- Society representatives also ask ulate campus activities, but rec- that the use of private escrow be ognized a conflict because distri- extended to cover striking against bution of the newspaper by the minor housing code violations. Second Coming staff was an act of! Under the proposed code .ten- speech. ants may resort to using escrow The review board declined to only if the housing lacks a cer- rule on constitutional issues in- tificate of compliance or if the cer- volved, and thus recommended tificate is revoked. The certificate, that charges be dropped until the which ensures that the housing constitutional issues are resolved See TENANT, Page 12 by a civil court. a 1 Capital massive WASHINGTON GI'-The de- ployment of nearly 9,000 riot- trained Army troops yesterday served as counterpoint to the optimism of public officials over the prospects for peace- ful anti-Vietnam demonstra- tions beginning today. Planners hope the Saturday cli- max will be the biggest yet in the capital's era of demonstration. Organizers had obtained a pa- rade permit from a reluctant De- partment of Justice by the time first contingents of the 250,000 persons expected for the three-day rally trickled into town. But the organizers were still locked in a harried, last-minute earch for room to house and feed the participants. As of yesterday, officials said they had only 22,000 of the 90,000 accommodations they'll need by Friday night. Hundreds of local gatherings, large and small, were being readied around the nation for the weekend's Vietnam Mobilization, the second big antiwar protest in a month. In Detroit, the Student Mobili- zation Committee to End the War in Vietnam said it hopes "to close down high schools and colleges across the country to show Presi- dent Nixon and his staff that a majority of young people in the country are strongly opposed to U.S. policy in Vietnam." Yesterday, President Nixon in- vited a bipartison congressional REGE delegation to the White House toi open f join him in a telephone talk with Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge so they could affirm their sup- port of the Nixon negotiating C position at the Paris peace talks. Rep. Jim Wright (D-Tex.), sponsor of a House resolution backing Nixon on Vietnam, told 601 newsmen later at the White House-arranged news conference that his measure "has attracted such spontaneous support f r o m In both sides of the aisle that we the Sta now have 300 co-sponsors" - a licans s clear majority. The White House meanwhile Liindem announced that President Nixon tives. will be in the mansion Saturday Lin night when the Washington Mon- Dennis ument rally takes place within sent dis sight of the White House South Portico. The im Although the President will be pressed1 physically able to view the rally, as the 1 he has alraady declared his poli- from the cies will not be affected by it. to accep Vice President Spiro T. Ag- "Total new has denounced what he called there we the "carnival in the streets." And income," Atty. Gen. John W. Mitchell de- versity b clared, "The foreign policy of this per cent governme'nt cannot and will not: and the be formulated in the streets of requirei Washington or in any other street thesem of this nation." See RIOT, Page 12 "I gre girds protests for Daily-Jimo Diehl Law Prof. Layman Allen plays Equations, an educational game of "creative mathematics" with a group of junior high school students. Educational games being developed by University faculty and student are played weekly in the Center for Research on Learning and Teaching. NEW MEMBERS INSTALLED: SGC to inVestigate govern1menits II o i d0vidualV s 'io ollege s Q~~~s Colleges-| ]]] -Daily-Jay Cassidy NT LAWRENCE LINDEMER speaks at Young Republican orum at the Union last night. ollege1GO1s hold iniunication panel By LAURIE HARRIS an attempt to bridge the communication gap between te Legislature, Regents and students, College Repub- sponsored a forum last night with Regent Lawrence er (R-Stockbridge) and two Republican representa- demer, Representative Ray Smit (R-Ann Arbor),* Cawthorne (R-Manistee) and the 15 students pre- cussed various aspects of University autonomy. By LYNN WEINER Student Government C o u n c il last night voted to immediately begin an investigation to deter- mine which current school and college 'student governments' meet the requirements of student gov- ernments as determined by SGC. According to Council member Bob Nelson the purpose of the in- vestigation is to find out which organizations that consider them- selves student governments are le- Oitimate according to SGC rules. The minimum criteria include that membership of the govern- ment bodies be elected directly or indirectly by the constituents, and that provision be made for in- itiative, referendum, and recall. Council member Mike Farrell questioned the investigation. He said "SGC does have the right, and responsibility to establish cri- teria for governmental structure in the colleges, but one hesitates FOOD, LIODCIN(, Mobe faces logisetics By ROBERT KRAFTOAVITZ Special To the Daily WASHINGTON - As preparations for what could be the largest single anti-war protest in the nation's history neared com- pletion here last night, several difficult problems still faced the protest's organ- izers. At the headquarters of the New Mobili- zation Committee to End the War in Viet- nam, organizers were attempting to find adequate food, lodging and sanitation fa- But their request is dwarfed by the size of the problem. New Mobe earlier indicated that only those coming for the mass march Saturday would go unaccommodated. Yes- terday, however, New Mobe officials ad- mitted that many participants in the March Against Death, which begins at 6 p.m. tonight, would also be without lodg- ing, during their one-to-three day stay in Washington. A spokesman for New Mobe's housing problem The National Park Service has so far agreed to provide only five portable toilet facilities--one for every 40.000 people--al- though negotiations with New Mobe are still underway. New Mobe officials say the sanitation problem is especially acute because most of the public buildings along the march rout e-almost entirely government build- imrs are closed on Saturday. One Senate aide indicated they would be at the prospect of having one leg- islative body investigate another legislative body. While SGC's jur- isdiction may be described as 'un- limited,' it seems that a more ap- propriate step in regard to de- termining the validity of an indi- vidual school government. would have been to have Central Student Judiciary undertake such action." Nelson said that the SGC inves- tigation was an effort to lead to- ward democratically elected stu- dent governments in all schools and colleges and to give the stu- dents of these colleges a govern- ment more directly representative than SGC. "The puirpose of this is not a witchhunt," le said, "but an at- tempt to insure that the structures of the various student govern- ments are representative.' Council last night also appro- priated $500 to the Environmental Teach-In to be held here in March. The teach-in, which will be the first of its kind in the nation, is an effort to start nationwide ac- ion on solving environmental probleis. The project, initiated by students in the School of Natural Resources, has received the en-' dorsement and promiised partici- nembers of the panel ex-' the feeling that as long University accepts money, state, it must be willing t some state control. autonomy worked when -- re independent sources of Smit said. But the Uni- udget is now financed 50 by the state, he added, Il l "legislature is going to more knowledge of how' By)~ onls~ are spent." anrse SEA, to work ART LERNER atly fear that disruption Oti today's/ Page Three * A two-year phase-out of DDT is ordered by the fed- eral government. * Judge Julius Hoffman re- vokes bail for Chicago con- in LSA . when its nature becomes violent will lead to a polarization of re- sponsive representative action," and have an adverse affect on the University budget, said Linde- mer. He also confirmed his support of President Robben IPleming's hand- ling of the LSA Bldg. sit-in say- ing, "It withstood the tests of the times and pressures." Since the LSA Bldg. sit-in, the. Students for Effective Action (SEA) voted last night to "con- stitute the SEA as the University Course Mart Committee." Only 15 people were at the meeting, a much smaller turn-out than at their three previous meetings. SEA is a new student organiza- tion that does not yet have any formalized structure. The consen- sus was that the SEA could use its work on course mart to generate campus interest in the organiza- tion as well as to improve the edu-