Subscribe, FREE ISSUE' to the Daily - hone 764-0558 p Sir 43au PAOitjp FREE ISSUE Vol. LXXX, No. 1-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, MoV 7, 1969 FREE ISSUE Detroit public schools lan joint pro By SCOTT MIXER Bureau of School Services, school students by showing them The proposed education school itiate a revision and updating of established library system fres- result i Many of the chronic problems Leach and Dr. William L. Cash, they can handle college-level program would allow education the library system of the Detroit ently operated in a traditional On th faced by educators in cities will be assistant to Fleming for human work. At the same time they will students to take classes, live and public schools. Members believe manner. are Car under study as the Detroit public relations, suggested the liaison, be receiving preparation for col- student teach in Detroit's inner the library should be a 'service for Secondly, new equipment and erintend school system and the University They submitted their proposal to lege courses. city over a two-year period. providing instructional materials. organization must be introduced instruct begin to move toward a produc- Fleming who in turn contacted Eleventh and twelfth graders " The University probably will This approach, Leach says, ex- into old buildings. Space and deputy tive coalition of resources and Drachler. Detroit school adminis- would be eligible for the courses, form a team to study the exact pands the perspective of the structure limitations may impede adminis personnel. trators were immediately niter- which would be similar to other academic location of the ninth capacity of the library beyond a some of the more sweeping Cutcheo President Robben Fleming and ested in the formation of the p r o p o s e d college preparatory grader. There has been no pre- book-loaning service. "Instruc- changes, such as complete audio- for sta D e tr o i t School Superintendent committee, Leach explains. courses now awaiting funding. vious in depth study, and the tionla materials implies a whole visual departments and equip- Sain, a Norman Drachler each have Leach outlines five primary University officials hope the cur- committee hopes to define a ninth spectrum of new educational in- ment. Leach explains. tendent named six representatives to 'a areas of initial concern for the rent Martin Luther King Memor- grade student as either a junior or novations, including microfilm. Committee members have also executiv liaison committee to formulate committee. ial Fund campaign will support a senior high school student and audio departments, and visual discussed the possibility of con- On th joint programs. The committee 0 The committee will be work- some of the effort. , set a precedent to be followed aids," he explains. centrating several innovative ed- versitya which convenes monthly already ing toward establishing a precol- 0 The University Education elsewhere. The committee is faced with ucational practices in a particular ard L. C has met twice. lege education program for disad- School may begin preparing ! Steps will be taken to tie two major problems in the Detroit Detroit school and the use of the urbans Named as chief liaison person- vantaged high school students. teachers for specific assignments in University television program- school system's 245 libraries, University's Rackham Extension mann, nel for the Detroit schools and The program may include some in Detroit schools. The committee ming with the five Detroit tele- Leach says. First, it must re- in Detroit for the pre-college pro- School the University are Dr. Charles J. courses in Detroit schools taught may formulate a combined pro- vision stations to offer University educate librarians to appreciate gram. Lowther Wolfe, executive deputy school by University faculty. gram with the Education School, lectures and classroom activities the potential of an expanded At the second committee meet- educatio superintendent, nad Dr. Kent W. The program will be aimed at which is considering a new urban in Detroit schools, instructional materials service, ing an agenda was proposed for Shaw, a Leach, director of the University e n c o u r a g i n g borderline high education program. 0 The committee hopes to in- which means an attack on a well- a June 5 meeting which should ary coll Eight Pages 'ects n some definite action. te committee from Detroit 1 L. Byerly, associate sup- ent for improvement of ion; Julia M. McCarthy, superintendent for school tration; Aubrey V. Mc- n, deputy superintendent ff relations; Leonard F. ssistant to the superin- and Charles E. Stewart, 'e administrative assistant. e committee from the Uni- are William L. Cash; Rich- "utler, special assistant for affairs; Charles F. Leh- assistant dean of the of Education: Malcolm , associate dean of the an school, and James W. .ssistant dean to the liter- ege. Purdue sleep-in con inues Tenants. Union Students hold union, o vacateoa building By RICK PERLOFF special To The Daily LAFAYETTE - After consultation with high university officials the Purdue Union announced early this morning that it will allow approximately 350 students to continue their six- tdday sleep-in at the Union. On Monday night 229 students were arrested for trespass- ing in the Union, and the administration yesterday had decided that the Union would be closed at 1 a.m. However, the director of the Union, J. 'C. Smalley, an- nounced that following consultdions with the president ofver the university, Frederick Hovde, and the student body presi- dent the Union would not beA closed last night. R ege ts Student speakers at the Union G< called for a classroom boycott to { dramatize the demand for amnesty ET for students arrested Monday. A% cl se /About 75 State troopers were called to Purdue late yesterday afternoon when over 8100h students eno se h occupied the University sai School0 istration building. Plaiiiclo thes 11 1As the troopers entered the -' By ARTN HRSCmtA building around 7 p.m., however, ;REFERA FRO LSD~ ByMATN 3ISH1lEN most of the students were in the ILriiiL A so* University School will begin. process of leaving and the 100 or to cosenex mothfollowing so remaining voted to leave under to cosenex moththe, threat of expulsion by Gov. the Regents' decision last week Edgar Whitcomb. AU junior high school will be ministration building said they, faces trial for ( conspiracy case By HAROLD ROSENTHAL The Tenants' Union, facing an attempt by seven landlords to obtain a permanent injune- tion against the rent strike, has decided to accept binding arbitration for 101 remaining eviction cases rather than seek jury trials. Legal spokesmnan Dale Berry yesterday explained that the Ten- ants Union accepted arbitration P because the rent strike wants to - a o .cc rr : focus its legal efforts on the in- junction case. In a trial scheduled to start May 26 the* landlords will attempt to show that the rent strike in- volves a conspiracy to violate ex- isting and future leases and to obtain libelous articles in The Daily. "Our chances of winning are good," said Fred Arnstein of the [ia n maces Purdue student ;:r <'. t ails for stul Berry Glotta terminated this year, and the elementary s c h o o 1 will be closed in June 1970. The regental action, which cli- maxed severalweeks of contro- versy, camne after Wilbur Cohen, dean-designate of the education school, told the Regents he sup- ported the administration recom- mendation that the school be closed. Some 50 parents of University School students attended the spe-1 cial Regents meeting and their representative, Ojars Riaj in, ex- pressed opposition to closing the school when he was allowed to speak. Several faculty members who have opposed closing the school, See REGENTS, Page 5 too, were protesting Hovde's re- fusal to grant 'amnesty to those Rarrested in tip union Monday. o 1 0 The protest had started over o f tuition hikes. Meanwhile at Dartmouth Col- By ERIKA HOFF lege in Hanover, N.H., about 60, studens seized th ., adinistati Senate Advisory Committee on buildn s seized e a ministiio University Affairs discussed the fought back with a court order question of academic accredita- ordering them to leave. The stu- tion of ROTC at its April 29 dents eventually left. They were meeting and recommended that testing Reserve Officers Training Senate Assembly's Academic Af- fairs Committee undertake an ex- Corps on campus tensive study of the issue. At the University of Wisconsin,tuh Madison, Mayor William Dyke said Education Prof. Joseph Payne, he would reduce the number of thednewly elected chairman of police who had been patrolling SACUA, said SACUA members streets. Students leaders earlier agreed that a thorough study of yesterday urged the protesters toI ROTC is necessary before any cease disorde's and to review Senate action can be taken. grievances 'with a committee. SACUA action on the ROTC C accreditation issue came in response to a letter from Dean William Hays of the literary college asking for a Sen-! ate Assembly review of the ques- tion. The literary college curriculum committee har ecommended that the college withdraw credit fromk all ROTC courses, but the college'sj executive committee declined to act on the proposal. Instead, the executive commit- tee suggested that Senate Assem- bly formulate "a set of policy statements and recommendations that might be addressed to the Regents." AFRO-AMERICAN SEMINAR Lomax di sc, sses By JUDY SARASOHN The University might become a "white anglo-saxon middle- class cookie cutter unless it stops acquiescing to the status quo," says author Louis Lomax. Lomax, who wrote Negro Re- volt spoke Monday at a public session of the Afro-American re- treat being held here this week. The idea for the conference emerged from meetings between members of the Black Student Union and President Robben Fleming. Participants in the conference include faculty and resource neonle from other ,iniversities role iot become involved with each other. Lomax said the University has alowed itself to become the power arm of the establishment and must take the blame for the perpetuation of inferiority myths." The University should have gone to the forefront to get rid of these myths, Lomax added, but the questions were never raised in the classrooms and the University did not take a role of leadership, Lomax claimed. Instead it resorted to becoming a "cookie cutter," he said. Lomax asked, why professors The academic affairs commit- tee, which would conduct the pro- posed study of ROTC, acts as an advisory committee to Vice Presi- dent foi' Academic Affairs Allan Smith. Contacted after the meeting, Smith said he intends to act on SACUA's recommendation, but suggested that the question of credit foi ROTC is pertinent only: to the literary college. "None of the professional schools currently give credit for ROTC," said Smith. "The engineering school, which supplies a large ROTC, does not give any academic credit for ROTC courses. However, some courses in the engineering school do count towards fulfill- ment of ROTC requirements." In other action. SACUA dis- cussed a letter from Smith rec- ommending that the University institute a policy requiring all departments to givernon-tenured professors adequate notice of dis- missal or denial of tenure. "Presently," said Smith, "each department has a different and often unclear policy on how long in advance professors are told whether they will receive tenure or be reappointed. Smith said a clear University policy is neces- sary to give professors who believe they have been treated unfairly some basis for appeal. "The recommendation made by my office," Smith said, "is very similiar to the policy outlined by the American Association of Uni- ', -rc , 7Pvna -n.c " Tenants Union. "The charges are UNREST: absurd. They are charging us with CAMPUS irreparable and immediate dam -________________ ages, yet they have been saying no one has been harming them." "They think this will end the L uber Com te rent strike," Berry said. However, 1, br 0 1 111 1 e he predicted that a defeat would not preclude future organizing. "If we win," he added, "it may prove to be the decisive victoryi for the rent strike."L U r pt The suit charges that the ulti- mate goal of the rent strike is an attack on the concept of private LANSING (i--Aiming to prove the Legislature is not property. Ninety-one defendents "fiddling while the state's higher education system is burn- are named; twelve are charged ing," the Senate Committee Studying Campus Disorder prom- with n the complaint as ises a report to the people Friday. leaders are Berry, Stuart Katz, Sen. Robert Huber (R-Troy) announced the report on David Goldstein, Peter Denton, the Senate floor yesterday as a few colleagues joined him in Nancy Holmstrom, Barry Cohen, denouncing recent campus protests. Janet Handy, Mary Crawly, Al- "superfluous" a letter to Gov. Ian Kaufman, David Shapiro, Huber termed"William Steven Marston and Maria Maz- Milliken from Senate Majority Leader Emil Lockwood (R-St. zaloni. Louis) who proposed a meeting of college and university The plaintiffs are Apartments officials to discuss various- Limited, Arbor Forest Apartments, methods of coping with cam- Charter Realty, Brady Anderson, I 'Charlotte Van Curler, WilliamI pus ,disturbances.ro e ts Sr L. Ship- Huber cited "how difficult it is'nseadRbtp man. to get cooperation" in an investi- See RENT, Page 5 gation and says' it would take" "four months for (the governor) to catch up with us" if he took Linde mr eri Lockwood's suggestion. I The majority leader maintained, 1 however, that a move by the gov- I* '0 r nam ed Regent ernor would "not stop the com- mittee." "I don't feel it would be Lawrence Lindemer returned to a duplication of efforts," Lock- A National Emergency Commit- theUnvesits R demen tre last wood said, explaining that some tee of Clergy and Laymen Con- month as Gov. William Milliken university trustees already had In- cerned About Vietnam, Michigan appointed him to fill the vacancyi dicated a desire to know how dis-. CALCAV, and the Interfaith created Apiil 10 by the death of. orders were handled on other Council for Peace in Ann Arbor Alvin Bentley. campuses. will lead a protest at the annual Lindemer was originally ap Huber mentioned a previous stockholders' meeting in Midland, mpointed, to the Regents inMay,- move by Central Michigan Uni- Michigan today. 1968, by former Gov George Rom- versiy to organize such ameet- Dick Fernandez, a member of ev asa byrmplaemGent for Robering and said the effort "slowly the National Emergency Commit-