DEFENDING EDUCATION CHANGES See editorial page Y r 41 , i i a nr :43 ily IBID High-73 Low-50 Cjance of thunderstorms, clearing tonight. Vol. LXXVIlf, No. 33-S Ann Arbor, Michigan, Wednesday, June 19, 1968 Ten Cents Six Pages Report shows stu dents favor no-hours rule By PHILIP BLOCK A University Survey Research Center report on the experimental "no-hours" and visitation policies enacted last January shows the majority of residence hall students favor the continuation of'both policies. University officials, have said the results of the survey would be a vital factor in deciding whether to continue the experimental policies. "At this time the general feeling is that no changes in the present policies are necessary," explained University Attorney General Kelley t of i rul es N' MSU VP In confii nterest Regen ts face full agenida By HENRY GRIX The Regents will be confronted' with a load of contrgqversial busi- ness at tomorrow's mdnthly meet- ing. They will receive a report from the Ann Arbor City Council rec- ommending that student driving regulations be enforced until a "definite physical and financial plan" is established for handling an increase in vehicles. Student Government Council abolished all student driving reg- ulations last March, but the Re- gents failed to approve the re- moval of restrictions which pro- hibit freshmen, sophomores and juniors from having automobiles on, campus. Freshman are also not allowed to use motorcycles here. However, the joint University- City Committee on Student Ve- hicle Regulations recommended the removal of driving restrictions from sophomore and junior stu- dents. Regent Otis Smith, who ques- tioned the failure of the medical school to recommend Dr. Albert Wheeler for a full professorship at last month's meeting, said last week he will pursue that issue. At the May Regent's meeting, Smith asked whether Wheeler has not been advanced "because he's not competent or because he holds some provocative political views." Wheeler, chairman of the state conference of the NAACP, has served nine years as an associate professor of dermatology and microbiology. The Board of Governors of Uni- versity residence halls will sub- mit a progress report on the ex- perimental elimination of women's hours approved by the Regents last January. The report concerns the policies employed by those dorms where freshman and soph- 4 omore women with parental con- sent voted to set their own curfew. President Fleming indicated last week he may submit to the Re- gents a draft of a University Council bylaw prepared by an ad hoc committee of students and faculty. Housing Diretor John Feld- kamp last night. The survey, released yesterday, partially fulfills the Regents' re- quests that the Board of Gover- nors of University Residence Halls conduct a thorough review of the two policies at the end of the 1968 winter term. At their meeting last week the! Board decided that they would not be able to meet formally im mediately after the completion of the report.4 EHowever, Feldkamp said that he would soon meet with indi- vidual members of the Board so that some kind of repor' on their intentions can be communicated to Vice President for Student Affairs Richard Cutler before the Regents meeting tomorrow. VARIOUS ATTITUDESdi The report, entitled "Attitude' and Opinion Survey - Freshman Women's Hours and Visitation Policies," examines a range of student attitudes from satisfac- tion with policies adopted by re- spective residence halls to feel- LAST ISSUE ' This is the final issue of The Daily for the spring half-term. The Daily will resume publi- cation next Wednesday. ings .about any inconveniencesj caused by the liberalized policies. "There is a positive relationship between the liberalism of the house visitation policy and stu- dents' satisfactioni with it and with their particular house," the report said. However, the survey discovered that for nearly all students neither the changes in visitation nor the adoption of a "no-hours" policy for women had any effect on their choice of residence for the fol- lowing year. PARENTAL PERMISSION Concerning the granting of no-' hocrs privileges to freshmen, about half the students polled felt that parental permission should be required for this privilege. The majority of those who ad- vocated a parental permission re- quirement felt that this stipula- tion should only be applied to freshman women. Over 80 per cent felt the remov- al of hours had no "adverse ef- fect" on freshman women. The survey is based on samples of 4,885 questionnaires turned in by residence halls students and staff at the end of the winlter semester. Martin new tracki coach Burnley first black appointed to athletic' staff ! By JOEL BLOCK The Board in Control of Inter- collegiate. Athletics yesterday, an- nounced the appointment of Dave Martin as head track coach. The board also appointed Ken Burnley and Jack Harvey as his assistants. Burnley is the first black coach in the history of the University. - Martin replaces Don Canham, who succeeds H. 0. "Fritz" Crisler as Michi an's athletic director. Canham as head coach of the track squad for the ,past 20 years. Burnley was a sprinter on the Michigan' teams from 1962 to 1964. His appointment comes two months after black students staged a lock-in at the Admin- istration Bldg. in which one of the major 'demands was for the hiring of black coaches. Martin, 31, was a middle-dis- tance runner for Michigan in the early '6's. He ran the half mile, mile and steeplechase events, holding a Michigan record of 4:06.9 for the mile until last year. He still holds the Michigan record for the steeplechase and won All- American recognition while com- peting under Canham's super- vision.k. Harvey, also an All-American, as captain of the 1967 track squad. He holds tht Big Ten out- door shot put record and took sec- ond in the NCAA indoor cham- pionships.f Last year Harvey served as as-' istant track coach at the Univer- sity of NevadaA Under Martin, he will mainly handle the field events. Burnley holds degrees in physi- cal education and special educa- tion and has been teaching at Ypsilanti East Junior High. He is currently still competing for the Ann Arbor Track Club and has served as its president. He will coach the sprinters and hurdlers This is the first year that Mich- igan will have three coaches fort the track team. "We're adding another coach because that's what all the other schools in the Big Ten are doing," Martin said. "We also need another coach because of the number of boys, around 90, out for the track team now- adays." Martin has been assistant coach to Canham for the past five years. Report on. May cites IBM, office building States financing, construction, renta aI 1. By STEVE NISSE Special To the DaiIy LANSING-The private business activities of, Michigan State University' Vice President Philip May represent a conflict of interest, State Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley ruled yes- terday. A member of MSU's Board of Trustees called for May's resignation last night at a hastily called news conference. "The day in which Phil can be of any value to the uni- versity ... is behind us," said Trustee C. Allen Harlan. Harlan, a Birmingham Democrat, and MSU President John A. Hannah are subjects of pending Attorney General's rulings on similar conflict questions. A spokesman for Kelley New track coaches Harvey, Burnley and Martin NTR'S, H LETTERS: When you reunder 2,.0 said those opinions may be' expected early next week. Rep. Jack Faxon (D-Detroit), who requested Kelley's opinion last November following a story in Thepaily revealing May's re- lationship with International Bus- iness Machines, predicted, "May is going to have to resign or face a major challenge in the courts." 'The attorney general's opinion was critical of May's interest in the financing, construction and leasing of an -office building in Lansing whose principal tenant. is IBM. The building was constructed by the Philip Jesse Co., whose major stockholder is May's wife. MSU leased $494,437 in services fror IBM during 1967. May went on sabbatical leave in February to study financial prac- tices at other universities. He has been chief financial officer at MSU for more than 20 years. Kelley's opinion stated, "I do not bell ve that the situation in- volvingI/MSU as principal tenant in a building in which Mrs. May involved firms with /MSU business ties By NADINE COHODAS If you happen to be a literary college student plagued either by continuing scholastic maladies or a drastic drop in your gradepoint average, you can expect a letter from the college asking you not return. If your difficulties have been very serious you may receive a letter (H-notice) asking you to withdraw. More likely, you will be sent an NTR notice asking you not to reregister without consulting the LSA Administra-, tive Board, Board Chairman and Assist- ant LSA Dean James Shaw ex- plains the Board reviews the rec- ord of any student whose term or overall average falls below a 2.0 or who hasbeen on academic probation during the previous term. 'ACTION-PENDING' Of these 1500-2000 students whose records are reviewed about 350 are sent either an H-letter or an NTR notice. The remainder may be placed on, continued on, or removed from probation, or given "action-pending" status, a means of defering action until all grades are in. Regardless of what kind of action is taken, a student is wel-E come to talk with a member of the Board. The purpose of this, meeting, Shaw emphasizes, is to' give both the student and the Board a subjective view of the sit- uation. Any student receiving either anm H-letter or an NTR notice can' petition the Board for reinstate- ment. Shaw says the latest sta- tistics show 'about half the peo- ple receiving either letter petition immediately. About half of those' are reinstated. 'Kids School' to answer CEO Children's Community School director Bill Ayers will argue for the school on WOIA radio at 9 a.m. today to answer the refusal of the Washtenaw County Citizens Committee for Economic Oppor- tunity to act as intermediary for a crucial $11.250 grant to the school. The refusal motion termed the, school "too controversial." A pri- vate school cannot receive funds directly from a federal agency. School staff members met last night to discuss alternate fund- ing, but were unable to determine any specific sources of funds. "It's clear they don't want us to have the money for political reasons," Ayers said. The Board consists of six fac- ulty members, two chosen every year for three year terms, two students from the Literary Col- 1ege Steering Committee and seven ex-officio members who set. policy. Actual decisions in these cases, however, are made by the ex-officio members. The ex-officio members of the Board include Assistant Deans James Shaw and George Anger- son, and Prof. Otto Graf of the Honors Council. Administrative aide John Pyper will take over the Board position recently vacated by John Manning, former assist- ant to the dean. Charles Mor- ris, assistant professor of psy- chology, will fill Pyper's post. Both of these changes are effec- tive July 1. Rounding out the ex-officio membership are administrative aides Allen Smith and Robert Kusch. REVIEWING CASES In reviewing NTR cases Shaw stresses the Board tries to avoid the "mere arithmetic" of add- ing honor points. "We attempt to exercise a sensitive reading of the transcript. "When necessary, we review an entire academic file," he says. Shaw says the Board "tries to determine the readiness of a stu- dent to continue here at this time profitably." He comments that many times a student is ready to continue his education at the, present time but would be better off on another campus. LATER TIME In other instances a student may be able to continue profit- ably at the University but at a different time, depending upon his personal circumstances. The Board takes into account the courses a student has taken as well as his grades. A student doing satisfactorily in every class but his foreign language, for ex- ample, may be sent an NTR notice since he cannot receive a degree without passing the lan- guage requirement. NTR notices may also be sent to students who have built a cushion of good grades in courses outside the literary college but who are doing poorly in their LSA courses. Shaw says these letters serve as "early warning" devices for anticipating scholastic problems. NO WAY TO TELL Of the students who are given permission to re-register, Shaw says about half succeed and the other fail regardless of their grade point deficit. But he adds there is "no clear indication which half will suc- ceed. This still puzzles us. No single bit of evidence provides an Ct New EY6rk Democrat vote cOse ALBANY, N.Y. (A')-Gov. Nel- son A. Rockefeller automatically picked up 71 Presidential conven- tion delegates in New York's pri- mary election last night, but po- litical allies of the late Sen. Rob- ert F. Kennedy and Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy were locked in a close fight for the Lemocratic senatorial nomination. The Kennedy ally, Nassau Cop- ty Executive Eugene H. Nickerson, took an early 2-1 lead in the race to oppose Republican Sen. Jacob K. Javits. But midway New York City councilman Paul O'Dwyer, a staunch McCarthy supporter, surged into the lead. Joseph Y. Resnick, a supporter of Vice President Hubert H. Hum- phrey, trailed. With 8,504 of the state's 13,40$ districts counted, O'Dwyer had 191,222 votes, Nickerson 183,613 and Resnick 149,023. McCarthy also wor nine presi- dential convention delegates in early results, as his supporters de- feated slates organized in behalf of Kennedy and Humphrey. Slates of delegates organized on behalf of Kennedy, Humphrey and McCarthy competed for 117 of 123 Democratic presidential dele- gate posts to the national conven- tion. With the assa sination of Kennedy, delegates pledged to him generally said they would go un- committed to the convention. The Democratic state commit- tee later will name 67 more dele- gates-at-large, bringing the total to 190. The Republican commit- tee will appoint another 10, for a total of 92. Rockefellers delegate haul was assured because of supporters of Richard M. Nixon contested for only 11 of the 82 Republican con-, vention seats. When there is no formal contest, there is no way of writing in other names. Rep. Emanuel Celler, easily won renomination in Brooklyn. .Adam Clayton Powell, the Har- lem Democrat ousted from Con- gress in 1967 on charges that he misused public funds and for de- fying court orders in a New York slander case, appeared to have won renomination. LEADERS EXPECT AT LEAST 40,000 TODAY Poor People mo1bilize for march Atty. Gen. Kelley, has a substantial interest should be permitted to continue. "It is my opinion a conflict of interest does exist between May's obligations to the public as Vice President for Business and Fi- nance of MSU and his personal financial transactions involving the Philip Jesse Co. and its contractural arrangements," the opinion continued. "I am astonished at the rul- ing," May said. "I cooperated with the Attorney General and pro- vided him with all the informa- tion he requested . ..'apparently he has distorted the facts to See ATTORNEY, Page 2 WASHINGTON to) - Tens of thousands of Americans con- verged on the Capital yesterday for a mass march to demon- strate support of the Poor People's Campaign and urge an end to poverty and violence in a troubled nation. The eve of the march was marred by a fight between a group of campaigners and po- lice on a corner of the White House grounds. Protest leaders predicted yes- terday at least 40,000 persons will take part in what they expect to be the largest appeal to the conscience of the nation since the 1963 civil rights march on Washington. The demonstrators join the campaign, conceived by the late Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. as the last opportun- ity for the nation to heal its sores of poverty without repe- tition of the racial violence that has rocked American cities in recent summers. King was assassinated by a About half a dozen arrests were made. The incident apparently be- gan when a group of marchers refused to cross to the other side of the street as they neared the northwest corner of the White House grounds. At the Agriculture Depart- ment, meanwhile, a n o t h e r group of demonstrators briefly used a new tactic in the around- the-clock picketing they began at the agency last week. About six of the group began pound- ing on a metal barrel with sticks. Asst. Agriculture Secretary Joseph M. Robertson asked them to stop. They took a vote and decided against it. But la- ter they stopped. The campaigners have been. at the department frequently in protest of hunger in Amer- ica. Before King's death, he had hoped for hundreds of thou- sands of participants in the mass march. But organizing MSU trustee upholds decision to host SDS LANSING (IP)-Barring the "de-g spicable" Students for a Demo- cratic Society from campus would only have made them martyrs, a Michigan State University official said yesterday. Don Stevens, chairman of the MSU Board of Trustees, made the statement in reply to a state sena- tor's demand to know why SDS was allowed to hold its national convention on campus last week. yI cted "the flying of the red flag and the pictures of Lenin and Marx hanging in the convention hall." "Signs and placards posted about the convention border on vulgarity to put it mildly," he added. "In my opinion, the MSU Board of Trustees should ask the univer- sity president to put an end to this sort of irresponsible activity which is repulsive to the people of EMMOMMER"m