ALOHA$) See editorial page 1Mw A 74IaiI CLOUDY High--82 Lo*-59 Warm and chance" of rain Vol. LXXVIII, No. 37-S Ann Arbor, Michigan, Saturday, June 29, 1968 Ten Cents, Six Pages New Cutler' position not P VP post The new administrative position slated for Vice President for Stu- dent Affairs Richard L. Cutler after he leaves his present post in August will not be a vice presi- dency, President Robben W. Fleming said yesterday. Cutler has told friends and ,% staff he will receive an appoint- ment "comparable to his present post." Earlier. a high University source said Cutler's new job would, be a vice presidency. NEW DUTIES 1 Fleming said he intends to bring a proposal on the new po- sition before the Regents for disrt cussion, but that he has not yet detailed the vice president's new duties. "Dating back to January," Fleming said, he has considered appointing Cutler to another post, but that the new position was "never framed in terms of a vice presidency.'' 'GUARDED SECRET' "I think Mr. Cutler has very great abilities," the president con- tinued, and "I do have a proposal I want to talk about with the Re- gents." Cutler declined to comment on his new appointment. One high official has called Cutler's new post "the most * closely guarded secret in the Uni- versity." He said Cutler has told associates for some time that he -intends to stay with the Univer- sity after leaving the OSA. COMPARABLE' The search to find a replace- 4 ment to fill Cutler's present posi- tion not yet begun formally. A successor must be found be- fore the vice president will leave the OSA, an informed source said several weeks ago During his three year tenure as 'f vice president, Cutler has been a controversial figure in University. affairs. During the past year he has been the subject of mounting student criticism for a number of actions. . Senators defend nomination By The Associated Press Democratic senators bitterly de- nounced yesterday a move by Re- publicans to block the appoint- ment of a new Supreme Court chief justice and associate justice in the waning months of Presi- dent Johnson's term. "A blatant political maneuver" and "the worst of hypocrisy," Sen. Daniel Brewster (D-Md), called the GOP drive to block confir- mation. Sen. Frank Moss, (D-Utah), charged the Republicans with po- litical motivations "so blatant and so transparent they should be disregarded in total." 'DERELICTION', Moss said Johnson has the duty under the Constitution to fill Su- preme Court vacancies and "fail- ure to fill such vacancies within a reasnoable period of time con- stitutes a dereliction of duty:" Democratic Leader Mike Mans- field of Montana said "there is no such thing as a lame duck presi- dent." Sen. John O. Pastore (D-RD. said the lame duck argument. is idiotic and noted that three seh- ators have announced plans to retire next January. He asked if they should be barred from voting4 in the Senate." A petition objecting to John- son's nominations was circulated Wednesday soon after Johnson named Justice Abe Fortas as chief justice and U.S. District Judge. mer Thornberry as associate J justice. -Daily-Andy Sacks Stop lumphrey movement? * *aily-Thms .Copt Innis discusses black power New acting CORE head asks black ghetto rule War critics seek op en convention CHICAGO (AP - Critics of the Vietnam War will meet here this weekend to begin a drive for an open Democratic Convention in August. A newly formed group, named Coalition for an Open Convention whose aim is to have an anti-war candidate win the Democratic presidential nominiation called the conference last Monday. A large number of supporters for Sen. Eugene McCarthy are members of the coalition. McCar- thy, a sharp critic of the John- son administration's war policies,' is scheduled to arrive in Chica- go early tomorrow afternoon. A spokesman for the McCarthy for President Committe of Illi- 'Miami readies police for GOP convention nois said yesterday that the sena- tor is not expected to attend the conference in the Sherman House but is coming to a rally tomorrow night in the Auditorium Theater. PRIME MOVER Allard K. Lowenstein, Demo- cratic candidate for Congress in New York's 5th District and a prime mover in calling the con- ference for an open convention, has said the meeting has no of- ficial connection with McCarthy's candidacy. He also said it is not a "stop Humphrey movement." Lowenstein, who was a New York leader of the attempt last winter to deny renomination to President Johnson, has said the conference's task will be to "ex- plore how the results of the pri- maries can be validated in the American system." Lowenstein, 37, who helped power the movement that coa- lesced 10,000 college students into a potent volunteer political force for Stn. Eugene J. McCarthy, is going to promote his candidate in Chicago. KENNEDY MEN Men from the McCarthy camp, and former Kennedy supporters are expected at the conference; today and tomorrow. Among them are Paul O'Dwyer, Democratic nominee for a U.S. Senate seat in New York; San- ford Gottlieb, director of thel National Committee for a Sanel Nuclear Policy; the Rev. Jesse Jackson and Hosea Williams. of-I ficials of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, and A.: A. Rayner, a Negro Chicago al-; derman. Also on the roster were four persons listed as delegates to fthe Democratic National Con- vention that will open Aug. 26 in C h i c a g o; Channing Phillips, chairman of the District of Co- lumbia delegation; and Actreess Shirley MacLaine, Gary Town- send and Richard Vargas of the, ( ten Robert P. cGriffin of micn- igan, who initiated the petition and got 18 signatures-half the GOP senators-has threatened a filibuster if necessary to block the confirmation of Fortas and Thornberry. Mansfield said if a filibuster develops and cannot be broken he assunes Chief Justice Earl War- ren will decide not to retire at this time but will stay ,on for the new term which begins in Oc- taber. 'PERSONAL INTERESTS' Sen. Stephen M. Young (D- Ohio), accused Richard M. Nixon of trying to butt into the naming of Supreme Court justices. "Mr. Nixon thinks he has a per- sonal interest in this," said Young, who declared the court was never intended as "one of the spoils of political victory." Earlier this week, Nixon sug- gested Johnson should not have made the appointments, saying: "It would have been much better for the prestige of the court had it been kept away from this kind of fight that is now developing." By ANN MUNSTER "The only cure for white rac- ism is Black Power," Roy Innis, acting chairman of CORE, told an audience that was 75 per cent white in an address sponsored by Ann Arbor CORE last night at the Community Center. "The average white has no choice but to be a racist in this system," Innis said. "I therefore cannot wait around for whites to change the system so that it will meet my needs." Innis, associate national dirgo- tor of CORE, has taken over as di- rector for Floyd McKissick, who is suffering from a back ailment. Innis defined Black Power last night as "control by blacks of the institutions that give them goods and services."' ' He said that "individual racism is not a very dangerous brand. Racism becomes a problem when it is institutional, when the indi- vidual racist functions as an agent of an institution armed with the powers of that institution." "White racism is something that effects almost everyone in this country," Innis continued. "Cer- tainly every white." Innis contends "There is no rea- son anyone should feel guilty about racism. Guilt only leads to suppression, and suppression does not work. It comes out in the form of extreme white liberal- ism." "Black people must reject seg- regation, and they. must equally reject integration as an alterna- tive. "In a heterogenous society such as ours, with clearly defined fac- tions, black and white, there are three possible forms of organiza- tion. Most people have only been able to think of two." Integration in a biracial society would merely result in black peo- ple finding themselves permanent- ly in a minority position, he said. Innis insists that his purpose is to "propose alternatives to the present disaster course which this country seems to be on." He defined "black power" as the methodology for implementa- tion of the goals of black nation- alism. He contends "nationalism is on- ly a bad word when th6 word, black is added to it." According to Innis, nationalism is a very natural response to the state of being oppressed in, the land of the oppressors. He said that black nationalism derived to a great extent from the example' of Jewish nationalism, and he pointed outsome amusing paral- lels between black and Jewish experience. He also pointed out the similar inability of blacks and Jews to' designate a promised land, but said he favored New York for the location of a black state, and "certainly hoped they would not get stuck with Mississippi." Court fre~es" loceal r esister An Ann Arbor Resistance mem- ber who was arrested Thursday for refusing induction into the armed services was released on $1000 personal recognizance by the federal district court in De- troit yesterday. Arnold Bauchner, a former Uni- versity graduate student in the social work school, refused in- duction at Fort Wayne in Detroit two weeks ago. No date was set for the trial. Two Federal Bureau of Inves- tigation agents arrested Bauchner two days ago as he was walking into Perry School. He was held overnight in the Washtenaw County jail on what police called "an open warrant" and driven by FBI agents to Detroit yesterday morning for arraignment. ErnestGoodman, a Detroit at- torney who was present at the court on other business, spoke for Bauchner during the proceedings. Observers were surprised at the swiftness of the arrest. Most ar- rests for failure to comply with selective service regulations take several months. School to retai 'Kids' community t0 receive $11,250 Over CEO action By MARCIA ABRAMSON The Children's Community School will receive an $11,250 grant from the U.S. Office of Edu- cation despite the recent refusal of the Washtenaw County Citi- zens Committee for Economic Op- portunity to act as legal transfer agent for the funds. Diana Oughton, a school staff member, said .they originally thought federal funds could not be received directly by a. private school but instead had to be transferred through the CEO, the local community action agency for the federal Economic Opportunity program. However, the restriction was dis- covered to apply only to grants from the Economic Opportunity program and not to funds direct- ly from the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, which includes the Office of Ed- ucation. PILOT PROJECT The grant will provie a pilot~ project for 15 children inkne kinder-gre ,hohtidgae.Ms garten through third grade. Miss Oughton said the funds will prob- ably allow the school to increase enrollment from 24 to about 30 students. "We'll also be able to pay the staff-they were only paid spor- adically before," Miss Oughton added. Previously the school depended on private donations and fund- raising drives. Staff members had predicted extreme financial diffi- culties if the grant was lost. The CEO's refusal to act as transfer, which termed the exper- imental school "too controversial, evoked some criticism in the com- munity. CHAIRMAN RESIGNS Dr. Albert Wheeler, CEO chair- man, cast the tie-breaking vote against the grant. Wheeler re- signed Wednesday as chairman and cited among his reasons for quitting the dispute over the school grant. Bill Ayers, director of the school, said many of the criti- cisms against the school were dis- torted. Shortly after, the CEO refusal, the county Board of Supervisors voted to assume the CEO's func- tion as community action agency for the Economic Opportunity program. Board members have re- peatedly criticized the CE for "individualism" and lackluster performance. NEW BOARD With Wheeler's resignation, the CEO board yesterday chose Paul Wasson, treasurer, as temporary chairman. The group will be re- organized next month and a new board elected. The grant will specifically pro- vide the school with enrichment services, reduced class sizes, social services for the children and their families, medical and dental ex- aminations and hot lunches. Federal education consultants will advise and evaluate the school. MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (A-Flak jackets, sniper rifles and a six- foot fence hidden by a flowering hedge are some of the pillars in a defense perimeter planned for the convention hall where Republicans will nominate their presidential candidate. - e Miami Beach Police Chief Rocky Pomerance said Friday his problem is "a peculiar dichotomy, maximum security with low visi- bility policing." Pomerance said two areas out- side the fence would be set aside Police arrest 77 protesters 'at Capitol WASHINGTON (,P) - Police arrested 77 persons yesterday as they demonstrated on the Capitol steps in support of the Poor Peo- ple's Campaign. 4 The group included about 30 Quakers-members of the Society of Friends-who held a half-hour meeting or service on a sun-baked Capitol plaza before joining the others to be arrested. Demonstrations on Capitol grounds are illegal. . The Rev. Ralph Abernathy, president of the Southern Chris- tian Leadership Conference and leader of the antipoverty cam- paign, was arrested Monday for staging such a demonstration. He now is serving a 20-day jail sen- tence. 4 Among those jailed yesterday were Hosea Williams, 42, a husky, bearded Negro who is' a demon- strations leader for the campaign, and the Rev. Norman Davis, a white Catholic priest from De- troit. It was William's second arrest .6 this week. He was freed on bond for picketing and that plans 4ad been made to prevent any demon-i strations, such as lie-ins, that could disrupt the proceedings. "We are prepared and com- pletely determined that this con- vention will be a peacable one and that delegates and alternates will be free to come and go at their will," Pomerance said in an interview. The City Council approved last Wednesday a police request to purchase what was described as security equipment for the conven- tion. The list included 40 shot-! guns, 20 combat flak jackets, three 30-06 Remington rifles with telescopic sights described as "sniper rifles," and 50 smoke grenades. Lt. Walter Philbin, chief of se- curity planning for the police, said, "With the climate of the nation the way it is now, we feel we have to have them." Another defense lies in the abil- ity of the island city to seal its; causeways and bridges, "but only! under the most adverse and se- rious conditions as a last resort," Pomerance said. Both Pomerance and Mayor Jay Demer concentrated on the fence as "the first line of defense, the point of delineation" in security, for the Convention which begins Aug. 5. "At first we euphemisticallyj called it controlled access for parking," said Pomerance, chief of police in this tourist mecca for five years. He said the city was anxious to keep up its image as a playground. This week hedges were planted on the outside of the fence, shielding it from view on the side facing the main street, Washing- ton Avenue. "We've combined aes- thetics and function," the chief said. "It would be a relatively sim- ple matter to make it a totallyk secure operation, with tanks and blocking off streets, but then you'd Voters elect precinct delegates ini August for county conventions By NADINE COHODAS First in a series Michigan citizens are going to vote again August 6. But many of the 30 or 40 per cent of the elec- torate who actually vote may not know what the election is , all about. Along with nominating candi- dates for county, state, and na- tional offices in the upcoming primary, Michigan voters will elect precincthdelegates for the Democratic and Republican coun- ty conventions. The procedure for both parties is the same since election regula- tions are part of the Michigan California delegation. state statutes . Precinct delegates are elected: for two year terms in even year elections. The number of dele- gates in a particular precinct for any one party is determined by the number of votes cast in that precinct for the party's secretary of state candidate in the most re- cent general election. Virtually any party member can file as a precinct delegate candi- date. In the past, both parties ad- mit they have experienced diffi- culty in finding enough people to run for convention' delegates but this year, because of demands for change in both parties, partisan interest has picked up. In election years the delegates meet for three conventions usual-' ly in May, August and November. The May convention selects delegates to the state convention from which delegates are chosen for the national convention. The August convention, which takes place a few days after the election, orients new delegates to the system and sharpens the par- ty's platform. This platform is later presented to the party's state platform committee where it may be incorporated into the state platform itself. Also at the state conventions, the parties nomlinate candidates for statewide offices which do not fall under primary election pro- visions. This year, one seat on the State Supreme Court, and two numbers of each of the state ed- ucational boards (the University's Board of Regents', the Wayne State University Board of Gover- nors, the Michigan State Univer- sity Board of Trustees, and the A large percentage of precinct delegates from both parties in Washtenaw County are hard line party workers. Most of them have been delegates for several terms, ranging from four years in office to 12. This year, particularly in the, Democratic Party, the heated in- terest caused by the Humphrey- McCarthy split is the chief reason why candidates are assuming this active role. MORE STUDENT FUNDS Extra aid offsets tuition hike By ALISON SYMROSKI Daily News Analysis The Regents decision yester- day to hike tuition $60 for in- state and $240 for out-of-state students is not expected to cause major enrollment chang- es. Students presently on schol- arships probably will not be af- fected by the increase because additional funds have been made available for student aid. Similarly, it is not antici- pated that out-of-state appli-, cations will be significantly de- creased. There are 3,800 in-state stu- dents currently- at the Univer- sity on scholarships, explains John Bishop, Grad, a member of the Presidential Advisory Committee. The amount of tuition in- crease for these students totals generally competing with pri- .vate institutions for these stu- dents. Since the University's tuition still remains lower than most private schools, out-of- state enrollment should not be affected greatly by the tuition hike. It should be noted that the legislature demands out-of- state students pay 75 per cent of the cost of their education. The tuition figure used by the state is an average of the cost of graduate and undergraduate education. Since graduate ed- ucation is about six times more expensive, undergraduates will now pay more than 75 percent of the cost to educate them. SGC member at-large, Mi- chael Davis has doubts about the way student fees are being spent. He feels "students and faculty should have a part in sulted about the increase, "but it was practically already a foregone conclusion that there would be one. We just dis- cussed how this should be dis- tributed," he added. Bishop, currently writing his economics dissertation on how to subsidize undergraduate edu- cation, believes that a gradu- ated tuition plan is "more de- sirable." However, he feels that the same thing can be done by scholarships if the stiff aca- demic requirement is eliminat- ed. Presently, when tuition is raisied, the extra revenues are distributed to students through the use of scholarships. Thus, a plan in which tui- tion is distributed (graduated fees) before it is collected will have basically the same resilts, Bishop explains. :..