INTERIM RULES AND CONSEQUENCES See editorial page Y gitA43F l 4hr PARTLY High-72 LOw-52 Partly cloudy, partly sunny, partly windy Vol. LXXVIII, No. 39-S Ann Arbor, Michigan, Wednesday, July 3, 1968 Ten Cents Canham: Entrepreneur in the AthleticI By JOEL BLOCK peting modernity of a suburban coun- lar corporation which produces play- NCAA Indoor Track and Field Cha- newly-created post of television and s n On March 16 the ,IZegents named try club' ground and athletic equipment" and pionships in Cobo Hall for the past radio coordinator for the athletic de- takcahDnCna tosced He also is currently remodeling the teaching aid materials four years. He has turned the meet partment. indoor track meet in Cobo Hall and special room for weekly press parties. control of the corporation. He says he of the Madison Square Garden Invi- high income families in the Ann Arbor he hasn't stopped running since. In the area of intramurals and rec- has had several offers fo the company tational Track Meet, Canham made area, along with spot radio commer- reation, Canham has already begun but no longer is considering selling it. the show a sell-out. cials and newspaper ads. . Canham officially took office only to act on plans to place three tempor- Canham's entrepreneurial skills He says he wants to do the same The response has been a 12 per cent Monday, but he's already made his ary basketball courts in Yost Field served him well when he was Michi- thing for Michigan football and bas- increase in season ticket purchases maik on nMichigan athletics. He has House for student and faculty use. gan's track coach for 19 years. He ketball games and has taken steps to and the sell-out of single-game tickets innovatec a new sports clinic, giving If he can find the money, he will conducted coaching clinics in such do it. for the Michigan State game. thousands. of An Arbor youngsters buid a tennis field house, with five places as Finland, Africa, Germany, Besides expanding public relations Under the new structure of the ath- ,the free use of University athletic fa- courts for, varsity tennis practice in Trinidad, and Canada. He was a facilities in the athletic department, letic department, Canham will have cilities and free coaching sessions lith the afternoon and portable basketball pioneer in the creation of the United . he has hired two new publicity mens two associate athletic directors under five Michigan head coaches. courts for intramural use at night. States Track and Field Federation, the Will Perry, assistant sports editor of him. One will be in charge of the men's He has appointed the ' first Negro Canham's initial projects show that largest track organization in the the Grand Rapids Press, has replaced and women's physical education pro- coach to the Michigan athletic sfaff. he will carry into Michigan athletics United States, and is permanent Exec- recently retiring Les Etter as Sports gram, intramurals and recreation He is presently renovating the locker what he has done in private life. He utive Director of the United States Information Director. Larry Zimmer, while the other will cover intercolle- rooms and training area in Yost Field has built a one-man instructional Track Coaches Association. sports director of WAAM, an Ann Ar- giate athletics. House, complete with the plush car- sports film company into a million dol- Canham has been director of the bor radio station, has entered the See CANHAM, Page 6 Canhar a t n Six Pages -DiyF''Eric Pergeaux ew base 1000 continue protest; Atty. Gen. rules Hannah l GlriC1,'u uricu W "ll1 BERKELEY, Calif. (R)j - An eight-hour meeting of the Berke- ley City Council broke up yester- day with hundreds of protesters hurling taunts, curses and abuses. Enraged that the council had refused to grant their demand that a block of Telegraph Avenue near the University of California be sealed off for a July 4 rally, the audience of more than a thou- sand stormed out yelling curses and insults. The council did decide to lift provisionally the curfew in effect from 8 p.m. to 6 a.m. since Sat- urday. The demonstrations began Friday night. Shouts of "No, no, no;" "Pigs." "dogs," and "We'll kill you," and obscenities punctuated the meet- ing. The council listened to audience members plead their cause and lleap verbal abuse on police for more than six hours. It wound up the confused mara- thon session by passing a substi- tute resolution, 5-4, to offer the nearby Sather Gate parking lot for the rally. The original motion to block off Telegraph was side-' tracked in the confusion. "It is clear they would rather provoke itconfrontation between us and the police than close off a block for a day,"'said one lead- er, Peter Camejo, a suspended Berkeley student. Camejo blamed Mayor Wallace Johnson for "being the hand- maiden of the business commun- ity" in denying Telegraph Avenue to the proposed rally Johnson denied charges that po- lice had started the disturbances Friday night by moving in when; Telegraph was already clear. He refused to lift unconditionally the, curfew which was clamped on; Berkeley the past two nights. The disorders have resulted in, augmenting Berkeley's 200-man See BERKELEY, Page 2 not in conflict of interest ey asks litation on land transactions Notes danger in permitting officials to buy property near state colleges By STEVE NISSEN Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley issued a report yesterday clear- ing Michigan State University President John A. Hannah of any conflict of interest involving land transactions near the MSU campus. Although Hannah's business activities were not in vio- lation of the conflict of interest provisions in the 1963 state constitution, consideration "might be given" by university governing boards to limiting? -Associated Press Enforcing Berkeley curfew -Daily-Eric Pergeaux Undue police foirce: Equal above the law By HENRY GRIX About one police officer out of ten in U.S. high crime rate areas is at least occasionally brutal.. However, police brutality is not necessarily an outgrowth of police prejudice. A Center for Research on Social Organi- zations survey indicates use of unnecessary force by uni- formed patrolmen seems to-be indiscriminate. "Prejudice does not necessarily carry over into discri- nation," says Prof. Albert J. Reiss Jr., chairman of the soci-. ology department, who conducted the survey. Yet three- fourths of the officers in pre-'!-- Democrats both-Dupont and Vivian Wes to Jerry... to Mary? By URBAN LEHNER Daily News Analysis Vivian and Dupont. The regu- lar meeting of the local Concerned Democrats. A confrontation, of sorts. Vivian: "I hope to win the nom- ination for Congressman from the second district. I wish Jerry Du- pont second place on the ticket. I will ask for your help then, and I'm going to be damn disappointed if I don't get it."I Dupont: "This district should go Democratic, but the voters who would support us are apathetic. The party needs workers who will get them out to vote . . . A can- didate who stands on issues can get the party workers . . . I stand for issues which concern those in this district who are interested in politics, the potential party work- ers." And so on. Dupont, in his late twenties, the Concerned Demo- dominantly black districts in the three major areas studied expressed prejudice. In fact, about two-thirds of those reported to have suffered undue force were of the same race as the policemen involved. It appears lower income Ne- groes and whites receive com- parable, if unfair, treatment by the law enforcing agencies in big cities. This seeming enigma was dis- covered by observers trained to assess police behavior ano atti- tudes. During the summer of 1966, the 36 observers patrolled precincts with police, listened in on inter- rogations, watched arrests and* recorded 3,826 nonriot encounters between police and 10,564 citizens. The observers, mostly law stu- dents, befriended police and work- ed with them saying they wished to analyze the reaction of citizens to police. While Reiss' figures reveal "po- lice operate' without respect to the race of an offender," his data also show that lower income groups, including, the majority of N e g r o e s, have proportionately more encounters with police than the middle class community, and, are thus more apt to encounter $1,242,OO) HUD LOAN 'C to build on North Campus By STUART GANNFA A new co-op will be built on North Campus with the first loan from the Department of Housing and Urban Develop- ment to a private student group. HUD yesterday granted In- tercooperative Council a long term loan of $1,242,000 for con- struction of the new co-op be- hind Baits Housing. ICC has been working toward a federal loan for 12 years, said Luther Buchele, ICC head, with the help of 'Assistant Director of Student Community Rela- tions Dr. Peter Ostafin. The new co-op will house 210 residents, 72 women and 138 men. Construction is scheduled to begin in October. ICC hopes the building will be ready for occupancy in fall 1969. . The loan will be repaid over the next 50 years from ICC revenues. Buchele said the loan also is the first federal grant made to any student cooperative, as well as the first awarded to a stu- dent group not directly con- nected with a university. The three story co-op wil contain nine separate houses on the second and third floors. All will be connected to lounge and dining areas on the first floor. "The concept of the building is to create the intimacy of a house," Buchele said. "Our res- idents don't like huge, imper.. sonal groups or the long cor- ridors of a dorm. They wantto feel at home and they don't want the isolation of a large apartment house either." Lounges and dining rooms will be small to maintain the feeling of intimacy, he ex- plained. All houses will have facili- ties for coeducational living. The building was designed by the Toronto architecture firm of Tampold and Wells, who have designed co-ops for many Canadian universities. ICC completed purchase ar- rangements with the Univer- sity last fall for a 2,9 acre site on North Campus. Funds were raised by mortgaging present facilities and through contribu- tions from former members and University faculty. crats' candidate, speaking before friends and supporters, reason- ably articulate, euphonious left- liberal rhetoric. All the proper stands on foreign policy ("Viet- nam only represents the problem; we've got to get at the underlying assumptions that permeate the thinking of our leaders"), black institutions for black people, civil liberties ("I could have forgiven Johnson an awful lot had he ve- toed the anti-crime bill."). But not too radical. If it came down to Nixon and Humphrey, Dupont would swallow hard and support HHH because "the evil represented by Nixon is far great- er than that by Humphrey." When Eric Chester asked him how he could ever support the Vice President - "who among the politicians of this country is the epitome of the schlepps" - Du- pont indignantly restated his po- sition. "I didn't say I would sup- port Humphrey. I said if it came down to Humphrey and Nixon, I don't want the knife to fall on my head. I intend to vote in this elec- tion." And then Weston Vivian. Com- plete with new image. Trying to convince the Concerned Democrats that his record in the 89th Con- gress was actually very good (votes against the Nike anti- ballistic missile and HUAC appro- priations), that he had long op- posed the war ("I spoke to Presi- dent Johnson personally on a number of occasions . . ."); that he had supported Robert Kennedy but was now wary about McCarthy because "we need a candidate who can speak for the black commun- ity," But the same old-line -liberal "realistic" analysis of how to pro- ceed. Indeed, remarkably candid about it. The country is actually such activity, Kelley said. The attorney general suggested governing boards consider the limitations "in order to avoid the embarrassment as well as public criticism that could. result from such ownership." The attorney general's ruling was requested by" Rep. Jack Faxon (D-Detroit) last November fol- lowing a story in The Daily which revealed details of Hannah's real estate transactions. The constitution prohibits a state officer from entering into any contract with the state "which shall cause a substantial conflict of interest," Kelley noted. In Hannah's case, Kelley ex- plained, the absence of a con- tract with the state "leads to the conclusion that acquisition of land adjacent to the university in and of itself does not violate the con- stitutional provision." However, Kelley warned of 'po- tential dangers in permitting of- ficers of state institutions to ac- Report cr1 ticze aidoffice By JILL CRABTREE A report criticizing the policies of the Office of Student Financial Aids toward black and poor sty.- dents and recommending struc- tural changes in the office has received favorable reaction from an administrative committee in- terviewing candidates for a new office director. However Walter B. Rea, the present director who is retiring this month, said he was "not im- pressed" with the report. Rea de- clined further comment. A member of the Committee for the Reform of Aid to Students (COMRAIDS), an ad hoc com- mittee of black and white stu- dents which has presented these and other criticisms to the office, said Rea's immediate superior, Vice President for Academic Af- fairs Richard Cutler "showed an awareness of conditions mention- ed in the report and was general- ly receptive to the proposed remedies." Cutler was unavailable for fur- ther comment yesterday. The report was preparedo by Roberta Turner, a graduate stu- dent in social work and psy- chology, and Carl Jorgensen, a graduate student in social psy- chology. Both Jorgensen and Miss Turn- er are black students, and con- ducted their inquiry primarily, among black students. The re- port summarizes these individual students' experiences. Complaints cited by the report maintain: -The financial aids office has often provided "an inade- quate amount of information to students." The report cites cases when the office has informed some students only of short-term loan pro- grams, rather than the long-term MSU's Hannah quire real estate in close proxim- ity to the institution in which they exercise their delegated powers." "Their interest in their own land may affect their judgment in matters relating to physical devel- opment of the institution since it. is not at all unlikely such deci- sions will have some effect on the value of adjacent property," Kel- ley said. _,'.. :