STUDENT FUNDING OF IM FACILITIES See editorial page Y Siri gan Iadt CRISP Iligh--60 Low--40 Clear and cold Vot. LXXIX, No. 18-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, June 3, 1969 Ten Cents Four Pages APPROVAL UNLIKELY Bylaw draft FBI to Assembly, Apartment ceiling at 517 S. Division T enants protest alleged, abuse By LIORNA CHEROT Tenants in the rent strike, particularly the residents of 517' S. Division, 808 W. Washington and 425 S. Division, will be picketing this morning at Ike's Barbershop, 117 E. Wash- ington, a. business owned by their landlord, Ike Kozminski. Protesters will leave from the Student Activities Bldg. at 9:30 a.m. to demonstrate against alleged physical and verbal harrassment and negligence on the part \of Kozminski. The tenants hope to create a public confrontation with Kozminski. The picketers will -carry signs which they say repeat bits of dialogue be- sent SGC *.;:'. By ERIKA HOFFh__ The ad hoc commnittee to draft new Regental bylaws .yesterday dissolved after com- pleting minor revisions in its report. The proposed bylaw draft - product of more than a year's work - will now go to Senate Assembly and Student Government Council for con-' sideration Despite the wide controversy that surrounds certain provisions of the draft, the committee will 4 ask Assembly and SGC to endorse the draft in its entirety. However, the present draft is not expected *. to win approval from SGC. . If, this happens, a new joint committee will be formed by SGC x and Assembly to further revise . the bylaws. This negotiating comn, mittee would be required to submit a report to President Robben 4 Fleming by Sept. 2. The committee itself was unable to reach, a consensus on the pro- posed draft, and members decided x to submit the report in its present form without reaching consensus. The Assembly will consider the bylaw draft at its June 16 meet- Police investigate bombing at ing, and SGC will begin considera- -________________ tion next week. However, SGC officers have said ACCEPTS WEAKER VERSION: that SGC will not endorse the by- laws in their present form. Marc Van Der Hout, executive fu vice president of SGC; has raised stn cntro innth proose Office of Student Services (cur- rently the Office of Student Af- fairs), professional school control oer non-acadei behavior an a iy a ms ovr n naa e i e air n the order of judicial precedence between the proposed University Council, Central Student Judi- NEW YORK (P)-The faculty ity students who staged a pa ciary, and SGC. Senate of the City College of New campus take-over in April Assembly chairman Prof. Joseph York yesterday rejected an/ ad- May, would have moret Payne of the education school has missions plan demanded by black doubled the proportion of min objected to the section which pro- and Puerto Rican students which students at CONY by Septe vides for seating two students as would have more than doubled the 1970 Regents on grounds that the by- proportion of minority students at The plan was condemne law draft is an inappropriate place CONY. most "andidates for city office to ask for such student representa- It did so by adopting an al- reverse "quota system." tion. He did, however, support the ternative under which an extra . The city-supported tuition idea and said he would support 400 students from ghetto schools college now has about 500 b such a move at a latter time. would enter the college next year and Puerto Rican students a In a letter to Fleming, the com- without having to meet current the 20,000-member student b mittee recommended that SGC admission standards. Some of them were adm and Assembly separately consider The faculty group's action was under special programs ou endorsing the report in its present only advisory. Final decision rests normal entrance requirement form, but also admitted that com- with the city's Board of Higher The dual admission plan lo mittee members had not agreed Education, governing body of City eventually to a student bod on certain sections. University, of which City College which half would enter unde The letter also specifies that is a division. present academic requirem Fleming assume the responsibility The plan negotiated with minor- and half would come from seli of judging whether there is enough agreement on a new bylaw pro- posal to warrant bringing it before uardsm en remove the Regents for adoptioi. The committee also recommend-; ed that Fleming return the prob-e area lem to SGC and Assembly if the negotiating committee is unable to draft an acceptable proposal. The committee yesterday madej By The Associated Press a minor wording change in the Governor Ronald Reagan announced yesterday that controversial section 7.07, part 2, National Guard will be withdrawn from Berkeley and which gives the faculty of some g professional schools the power to state of emergency lifted from the city at 6 a.m. today. control students' non-academic The city ,hit by rioting over a "people's park," dis behavior on grounds that it affects two and one-half weeks ago, xias been quiet for several d their professional status. Reagan, in a statement, said he was taking the actio The clause formerly required eagan, in a sta s ai he wasvtasing th aio professional school faculties to the request of officials of the University of Californi publish "clear" behavioral stan- Berkeley and Berkeley ,city officials. dards. The California Highway Patrol has been around The word "clear" was eliminated campus since Feb. 5 to control a series of disturbances inv Abrams of the Medical School who ing students and nonstudents at the campus. The G said that it required the school's has been on duty since May 15. standards to be too detailed. "It's Reagan's statement read: impossible to anticipate all situ- ".i.o ations," he said. "At the request of officials of the University of Califo Van Der Hout said any discus- and the City of Berkeley and with the concurrence of local See BYLAW, Page 3 enforcement agencies, the state of extreme emergency wh investigate- ROTC blast $y TOBE LEV Agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation searched for clues yesterday afternoon in the bombing of North Hall, the 'administrative center and classroom building for tfie University's ROTC program. An explosive placed under a staff car parked next to the building Sunday night detonated, igniting the building and shattering one wall and several dozen windows. Deputy Police Chief Harold Olson said yesterday he did not know what type of explosive had been used, and that there were no suspects at this time. -He added that at this point all the police are able to do is study the area of the bombing to discover what was used and where it could have been obtained. a FBI investigators arrived in fl--I Ann Arbor yesterday afternoon.-H-..1- Olson said the FBI was notified of the bombing because federal property - the Army staff car -- t0X11w was involved. 'T'h FBIT agn were iinavail- -Daily- North Hall -Jay Cassidy able for comment ysterday. " rejeci agents tween them and Kozminski, such as "I ask him to fix the" screen, the Big K says, 'You dirty S.OB." The signs will also carry a caricature of the landlord. Jim Brough, 808 W. Washing- ton; Ruth Ryan, 517 S. Division; and Judy -Pashby, 425 S. Division j claim they have been either phys- ically or verbally abused by Koz- minsky when they asked him for repairs. All three tenants also have complaints about Kozminski's up- keep of the buildings. Miss Pashby says there is no certificate of compliance for her building, which means there are so many housing code violations that city code stipulates the building should not be open except under special cir- cumstandes, such as when emer- gency housing is being provided for poverty-stricken families. The three tenants also say they are without electricity. B o t h Brough and Miss Ryan say that thy were recently notified that Kozminski would no longer pay electricity and gas bills. Miss Pashby says her heat was cut off in February. Wlien she had the wires re-at- tached, Miss Pashby claims, Koz- minski clipped them again. City Council authorizes police stud By NADINE COHODAS City Council at the request of Mayor Robert Harris, has taken the first step toward easing ten- sions between Ann A r b o r resi- dents and the police. At a special meeting Thursday night council authorized the cre- ation of an ad hoc committee pro- posed by Harris to study police- community relations. The mayor emphasized that the committee's existence does not im- ply lack of confidence in local po- lice agencies, and City Adminis- trator Guy Larcom.said the com- mittee should not be viewed as a 'citizens' review board." Harris' resolution said, "Recent local incidents between police and black citizens indicate that prompt action to alleviate community tensions is necessary." T h e seven-member committee will study "both t h e immediate a n d underlying causes of these tensions" and will make recom- mendations to council for appro- priate action. See COUNCIL, Page 3 artial and than ority imber d by as a -free black mong body. itted tside s. oked y of r the nents ected d high schools and w: to meet those stan However, the pl gradual implementat 300 to be admitted tI basis of "potential" grades. The vote favoring tive plan was 40 to 3 Senate is an 87-m 'There are about] members at CCNY. The Faculty Senat add 300 special stu tember and 100 mor These would push th freshman class to a including 675 who v mitted under already cial programs ford students. Figures released 1 Senate spokesman new specially admi next year will make tion of the freshman 60 per cent white cent black and Puert is approximately t white to nonwhite high schools. About 24 per cento freshman class are n mitted under norr procedures and unde grams for students meet academic requ These students nov two special admissi One is a rule whi top 100 in class'star city high school to e versity even if the below the minimum The other is a pr SEEK - Search f Elevation and Knowl enrolls minority stu academic qualificati vides remedial classes ling for them. Next term's CityC man class is expect 275 students from th program and 400 frci Olson also admitted that there __seemed to be some similarity be- tween this bombing and the bombings last fall of the Ann Ar- bor Central Intelligence Agency office and the University's Insti- tute for Science and Technology building on North Campus. "All of these bombings occurred at roughly the same time of night and the extent of damage was similar," Olson said. eUniversity officials briefly tour- ed the wreckage early yesterday. However, they said there did not ithout having appear to be any structural dam- idards. age resulting from the explosion. an proposed Chris Carey, managing editor of ion, with only the University news service, says his fall on the the University has made no esti- rather than mate of the damage done. "I'm sure repairs will be done as the alterna- soon as possible without inter-. 2. The Faculty fering with the investigation," he nember body. said. 1.800 faculty The car under which the ex- plosion detonated was a military e's plan would staff car assigned to Col. H. K. dents in Sep- Reynolds, the commander of the e in February. Army ROTC unit at the Univer- he size of the sity. The. 1967 Ford was destroyed record 3,000, by the explosion. would be ad- "I really don't know anything existing spe- about the explosion," said Rey- disadvantaged nolds yesterday. by a Faculty "Certainly the explosion h a s showed that nothing 'to do with whether there tted students will be ROTC on campus n e x t the composi- year," he added. A student-faculty class close to committee is currently studying and 40 per the issue and is scheduled to re- o Rican. This port early in the fall. the ratio of University officials said the car in the city's was normally parked at the site where it was found last night. of the current Police said there was no evi- nonwhites ad- dence that the building had been nal entrance entered. r special pro- The two rooms which appeared who do not most heavily damaged by the blast irements. were the Navy ROTC offices and w enter under the central administrative office. ons policies. Windows were shattered on all ich allows the sides of the building, but pred6m- nrding in each inantly in the front portion of the nter City Uni- south wing where the explosive ir average is was located. The impact of the standcalled explosion was felt at least one orEducation and one-half miles from North or Hdctin all. edge - which dents lacking Olson said he also was unclear on and pro- as to the extent of the damage, s and counsel- but guessed that it would amount to $15,000 to $20,000. He describ- College fresh- ed the damage as "extensive." ed to include Firemen were forced to break e 100-scholar through an inside wall to reach a )m SEEK. , blaze set off by the explosion. rights law WASHINGTON (M - T h e Supreme Court ruled yester- day that privately operated public accomodations cannot practice racial segregation by calling themselves clubs and admitting only whites on pay- ment of a nominal fee. The 7-1 decision put hundreds of recreation areas and other f a- cilities under the ban. But it did not extend to the last of the all- white bastions: exclusive social and country clubs which are de- finitely private. The court dealt with Lake Nixon Club, a privately' operated, 232- acre am sement area 12 miles west of Little Rock,Ark. It offers swim- ming, boating, sunbathing, pic- nicking; miniature golf, dancing facilities and a snack bar. Despite its name and a 25 cent membership fee, Justice William J. Brennan Jr. said for the major- ity, Lake Nixon is not a private club. "It is simply a business op- erated for a profit with none of the attributes of self-government and member-ownership tradition- ally associated with private clubs," he said. White people were routinely ad- mitted and Negroes uniformly kept out, he said, and the "membership device seems no more than a sub- terfuge" designed to avoid cover- age of the 1964 federal Civil Rights Law. The ruling was one of three major pronouncements by the high court on civil rights. Acting unanimously, and with the Alabama-born Justice Hugo L.. Black giving the decision, the court upheld the assignment of teachers in Montgomery on a ra- cial basis to help speed integration of the public schools. The other civil rights ruling, by a 7-1 marging With Black dis- senting, madeitdifficult for seven states and counties to reimpose voting literacy tests by saying a ban in Gaston County, N.C. must stand. In a landmark 5-3 decision, the court gave servicemen the right to be tried by civil courts--instead of by military tribunals-for crimes committed off duty that have no connection with military activities. the the pute ays. m at at the olv- uard rnia law hich HOUSE MAY RESTORE CUTS now exists at Berkeley will be I Rya n pledges more ' By SHARON WEINER State Rep. William A. Ryan (D-Detroit), speaker of the House, vowed yesterday to re- store Senate slashes in the state appropriation bill for the Uni- versity. "I expect the House will re- place some of the cuts," Ryan told a news conference yester- day. "The costs and needs of higher education are rising and must be recognized." The Senate last Thursday passed a bill which would give 1"h ._ mr'<> r -- > r nln as'Fnr o "My guess is the House will increase it," he added. iUniversity officials have said they cannot avoid a tuition hike if the governor's recommenda- tion is not met. As the bill stands now, the University falls $2.4 million short of needed revenues-a gap which admin- istrators say can only be re- placed by an increase in tuition. The Senate bill allows for an additional $400,000 expenditure for an increase in medical school enrollment and increased bene- fits for interns and residents ...im h xa - nn - - --r fni. i funds the governor's recommendation, there is no way to avoid a sub- stantial increase in tuition lev- els. They would have to go up again for both resident and out- of-state students." R y a n 's Democratic party holds a 57-53 majority edge in the House, and fiscal liberals control the powerful budget committee. Ryan said he would also try to restore cuts in the budget of Michigan State University. Michigan State was allotted $6n million by the Senate. more terminated at 6 a.m. tomor- row morning, Tuesday, June 3, 1969. "It has been, is now, and will continue to be the policy of this administration to provide to local authorities whatever state assist- ance may be necessary to enforce the law and protect thelives and property of our citizens." "Consistept with this policy, and with the concurrence of law enforcement officials in Alameda County, I also am directing that units of the National Guard be re- moved from active duty in the Berkeley area." Also, at Massachusetts Institute of Technology a panel recom- mended yesterday that the school retain its two off-campus and military-connected research facil- ities, but that an attempt be made to balance the military research Two White Panthers to face trials for obscenity charges By HAROLD ROSENTHAL The cases of two members of the White Panther Party charged with distributing obscene litera- ture to students in Milan High School last March were bound over to Circuit Court last week. District Judge S. J. Elden order- ed Skip Taube to appear in Circuit Court on June 13. Pun Plamon- don is scheduled to appear on cials and Dansfield held a -joint investigation. Taube said the students had been told that charges would be brought against them if they did not cooperate in the investigation. Dansfield took the results of his probe to Prosecuting Attorney William F. Delhey who authorized a warrant for the arrest of Taube and Plamondon. The White Panther literature, prosecution had entered as evi- dence "goes far beyond the limits set for our basic freedoms." "This is a case of suppression," Taube said. "The police, and school authorities are suppressing information and intimidating the students." Their biggest objection to the statement is the fact that it "tells people how to go about changing their lives and how things should ';'