MELVIN LAIRD: HIS ANSWER TO WAR See editorial page IL SirAO ~~Iait UNCOOPERATIVE High-G0 Low-38 Cloudy'and cool today; rain tonight Vol. LXXIX, No. 12-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, May 22, 1969 Ten Cents .s Flint campus report recommends expan A,""""'LimitedBy SHARON WEINER and should continue to be more than just The chief officer of U-M-F would be separation of the U-M-F budget from the of reasons for Limited autonomy, degree requirement a facility for those who live in the Flint called either chancellor or' provost and overall University budget "is likely to than the existex re-evaluation, and expanded enrollment community and who might not otherwise would be directly responsible to the presi- strengthen the case of those who may in The commit and facilities are among the recommen- have an opportunity for a university edu- dent of the University. a short time urge complete separation make more Jibe dations of the special study committee on cation." Under the arrangement, however, the from the University. This we are told, options. the future of the University's 12-year-old The report recommends that the Uni- Flint campus academic heads would still would be unfortunate and perhaps even Flint campus. versity "move with warranted expediency be responsible to the University vice pres- disastrous as far as the Flint College is The committe The report, completed last week and to obtain the additional space for the ex- ident for academic affairs. concerned." tion of an urban T released yesterday by a committee which pansion of facilities" which will be neces- outreach andr mcludes University administrators, faculty sitated by this expansion of enrollment. The report also stated that "the commit- The committee suggested a number of oriented prograr members, a student and a Flint business- The University is already studying "the tee is of the view that there is no reason general guidelines for handling the rapid In expansion man, is presently under consideration by possibilities of acquiring ground space" to why the U-M-F should not achieve a sub- growth and change of the academic sys- mittee suggest the University's executive officers. The accomodate this expansion, the committee stantial degree of autonomy within the tem at Flint College in the coming years. special attentio committee was appointed last August by noted.' framework of the University." The committee suggested, for example, fine arts and soc Vice President for State Relations and The committee also recommended that It should be added, however," the com- that "the wisdom of a fixed set of distri- In the area of Planning Arthur Ross. the three units of the campus-Flint Col- mittee stated, "that if at a future time bution requirements should be seriously mittee noted tJ S' The comimittee predicted, on the basis lege, Graduate School of Business Ad- there is adequate demonstration by the examined. Today's student faces a system undergraduates of statistical information, that enrollment ministration and the graduate extension University and the Flint community of a of requirements which may not encourage County, within . at the four-year Flint College would in- service be more closely consolidated and mutual desire to terminate such a relation- him to develop the intellectual assertive- that there are crease to 1750 by next year and to 5000 by that. all the programs be administered ship, then a completely autonomous insti- ness or critical thinking which are the in privately o' 1980. under one unit known as "The University tution could result." goals of liberal education. Students should the campus. Vice President Ross The committee said the Flint campus "is of Michigan at Flint" (U-M-F). However, the committee warned that be allowed to develop a better personal set See Four Pages ion their intellectual efforts nce of fixed requirements." ee suggested that Flint ral use of pass-fail grading e also suggested the crea- studies program, a project other community service- ms. of the faculty, the com- ed that the college pay n to development in the ial sciences areas. student housing, the com- hat 90 per cent of, Flint presently live in Genesee commuting distance, and presently only 100 spaces wned apartments 'around FLINT, Page 3 TENANTS CONSPIRACY CASE: SGC volunteers Federal judge nominated as, co-defendant to head Supreme Court By LORNA CHEROT Student Government Council last night volunteered to stand as a Nr co-defendant in the conspiracy case against the Tenants' Union. Four voting members were pres- ent and approved the resolution. OneĀ° vote was cast by proxy and four other members were reached by phone to secure their approval. Seven votes are needed to pass an -4 SGC resolution. Three members could not be reached last night. The. Tenants' Union has been charged by seven city landlords with conspiring to violate existing and future leases and to obtain libelous articles in The Daily. "The rationale for having SGC act as a co-defendant was to thwart the concept of conspiracy," explained SGC Executive Vice President Marc Van Der Hout. "SGC's role as a co-defendant House bill P' shes aid cut to rotesters By MARTIN HIRSCHMAN The House of Representatives yesterday wrote into a federal appropriations bill a provision designed to spur college administrators to take firm action against student demon- strators. The amendment, proposed by Rep. William Scherle (R-Iowa) and passed by a 329 to 61 roll call vote, would prohibit the use of federal interest subsidies to higher education institutions which do not comply with a 1968 law aimed at student demonstrators. The 1968 law basically requires that if a student is found, fol- lowing a hearing-by school authorities, to have been convicted of a crime or to have seriously violated a sclhool regulation or to have pre- vented other students from engaging in studies, the student should be ineligible for federal student loans. However, there is no known case in which college officials have reported student demonstrators to the federal government with a request to cut aid. r Scherle called the amendment a move to "put a little starch in the backbone of weak-kneed administrators." The bill in which it was included would provide $3.9 million for federal subsidies of interest rates which universities pay on construc- tion loans taken from banks and private companies. The Scherle amendment threatens to cut only such federal interest subsidies. 'Vice .President and Chief Financial Officer Wilbur K. Pierpont last night said the University does not presently receive any such subsidies and that none are being negotiated. He noted that this type of subsidy was relatively new and said he did not know of any schools which were receiving money under the arrangement. Pierpont noted that the University does have a federal loan for construction of the Harlan Hatcher Graduate Library. But, in its present form at least, the Scherle amendment would not affect such loans. Scherle told the House some colleges apparently do not believe compliance with the 1968 law is mandatory. demonstrates that the rent strike is broad based and has the student body's support." A Tenants' Union spokesman at the meeting last night explained that the decision to allow SGC to act as-a co-defendant is wholly up to the presiding judge.. The spokesman indicated that the judge would most likely not allow SGC to serve as co-defend- ant on grounds of convenience, claiming that SGC's entrance into the case would complicate and delay litigation procedures. If SGC was admitted as a co- defendant, SGC could be held liable for part of the $300,000 in punitive damages sought by the landlords. Individual members of SGC could also be held liable on an individual basis. However, the landlords could not sue SGC directly. SGC has no legal existence and the Regents might be held liable for the dam- ages. SGC funds, for example al- ways reside in University accounts. In other action, Council decided to study a controversial provision in the proposed regental bylaws on student discipline. The provision, which allows pro- fessional schools to set conduct! standards for students consistent with requirements for licensing in the field, has drawn heavy oppo- sition from some SGC members. Mike Davis, a member of the ad hoc committee drafting the by- laws, told Council that deletion of the controversial provision would probably cause the faculty of the Medical School to withdraw sup-: port for the bylaws. Without this support, Davis said, the bylaws could not pass Senate Assembly. Architects of the bylaws say the proposal will not go to the Regents until it has the support of both SGC and Senate Assembly. Davis also asked SGC not to act on the bylaws until after the June 16 Assembly meeting. But Van Der Hout said SGC action would probably come before then so it would test faculty reaction to dropping the controversial provi- sion. Burgeradvocate" of 'law and order' WASHINGTON (M) - President Nixon reached into the federal judiciary last night and nominated Warren Earl Bur- ger, a relatively obscure federal appeals court judge, to be 15th chief justice of the United States. The white-haired, 61-year-old Minnesotan, who has sat for 13 years on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, is considered a "hardliner" on criminals and a staunch advocate of "law and order." If the Senate confirms the nomination after what may prove to, be the closest scrutiny ever given a Supreme Court Appointee, Burger will succeed Earl Warren in the highest judicial seat in the land. Warren is retiring next month at age 78 after 16 turbu- lent years as chief justice - -Associated Press PRESIDENT NIXON introduces U.S. Court of Appeals Judge Warren Earl Burger, the President's nominee for chief justice of the United States, and the judge's wife Elvera. Burger is known for; his "hardline" handling of criminals and his advocacy of "law and order." GUARD REMAINS: UCLA, Santa Cruz, San Diego; students back Berkeley protest and at a time when the court itself has become a center of controversy. But the' timing of the appoint- ment of a new chief justice - when Nixon could have waited un- til summer to choose Warren's successor - promised to over- shadow to some degree the temp- est created when Justice Abe For- tas resigned last week under crit- icism for his off-the-court finan- cial dealings. Citizens I BERKELEY (P)-Police used a' mild dispersal gas yesterday to break up groups of supporters of the "people's park" yesterday. There were no new clashes be- tween demonstrators and police and National Guardsmen who have been patrolling the campus since Thursday, when one man was killed and 128 injured. At the same time, students at other campuses of the University of California began organizing in TWO-DAY LUNAR ORBIT SPACE CENTER, Houston (P)-Apollo 10 astronauts rocketed yesterday into a perilous 2 -day orbit of the moon. They saw the lunar surface as a place of strange lights and volcanoes but easily found landmarks other space men will use to land there in July. "The color looks like a brownish gray to us," radioed Navy Cmdr. John W. Young minutes after Apollo 10 reappeared from its first pass behind the moon. "We can pick out a couple of good little volcanoes," said Air Force Col. Thomas P. Stafford. As the spacecraft passed into the lunar night, Cernan said it was orbiting "right down the Apollo trench"-the term for a series of landmarks leading up to the land- in zone picked for the moon touchdown in .TJilv 10 meets the moon support of the Berkeley demon- strators At the Los. Angeles campus, nearly 1200 chantingdemonstra- tors moved into the administra- tion building for a peaceful protest of the death of non-student James Rector at Berkeley. No offices were entered and UCLA officials said the protesters could stay. Some 80 miles to the south, at the Santa Cruz campus, about 500 students voted to call a two-day strike on Monday and Tuesday at all nine UC campuses. They demanded -removal of the Guard and police from Berkeley, amnesty for all persons arrested, payment for injuries, and called for two days of mourning for Rector. At the San Diego campus,' 60 students voted to go on strike. Classes were reported to have continued normally. Meanwhile 26 Berkeley faculty members went to Sacramento to meet with Gov. Ronald Reagan. Led by Nobel prize winning physicist Owen Chamberlain, they told Reagan that 177 faculty members have already signed a petition saying they are not will- ing to teach until the police and troops are removed. Reagan, however, said yesterday that he has no plans for, immed- iate removal of the 2,260 Guards- men at Berkeley. Reagan and the faculty mem- bers engaged in a shouting debate in his office. The governor banged nnhi a a adr -A Prnf.P rnn an estimated 1,000 demonstrators sang and yelled outside. Police sprayed a mild dispersal gas-less acrid than tear gas-to scatter a group of about 2,000 that made a serpentine march around campus buildings. There are about 27,000 students on the Berkeley campus. Some marchers picked up rocks along the way, but others made them drop the missiles. About 30 faculty members led .the parade amid handclapping and shouts of "we want the park." Levin to plead case for student vote bill Fortas' was nominated to t ha e top judicial post by former Presi- dent Lyndon B. Johnson last sum- mer. Senate Republicans 1 e d a fight to defeat t h e nomination, however, citing his continuing close ties to Johnson and his ac- ceptance of outside fees while sit- ting on the court. The Democratic majority in the Senate will have this in mind -- and all senators will h a v e the more recent aspects of the Fortas case in m i n d - when Burger's nomination comes before the Sen- ate Judiciary Committee. Initial comment from members of the Senate was favorable.- Sen. John Tower (R-Tex.), said the selection carries out Nixon's campaign pledge "to appoint a See--BURGER, Page 3 ask police' review By JUDY SARASOHN A group of some 56 con- cerned citizens last nighty called for civilian review of city police in the wake of the arrest and striking of Human Relations Commission staff worker Ray Chauncey while on assignment. The group elected a five-mem- ber steering committee to setup a public hearing with Mayor Robert Harris in order to begin establish- ing a civilian police review board. "We have a situation where the police are investigating the police with only the police knowing the results of that investigation," said Dennis Sinclair, organizer of the meeting. "We want to change the structure." Most of the members of the ad hoc group came from the com- munity in general. Some faculty members -were, present, along with several students.f Additional suggestions for re- view -of police were also consider- ed. HRC director David Cowley explained that civilian boards have not been altogether successful. "Many black communities have not been satisifed with them," he said. Cowley suggested the possibility of better techniques of police re- view, such -as hiring attorneys on a 24-hour basis to be at the police station to review immediately any charges of mistreatment. Other suggestions were a public defender, laws restricting possible police abuse, and a'larger number of HRC investigators. "No policeman could be sure if he had a Ray Chauncey," one woman explained. The group's proposal calls for a review board with powers to in- By SHARON WEINER Hearings on the proposed state student voting bill will be held today by the State Senate Ap- propriations Committee. Co-sponsor of the bill, Senate Minority Leader Sander Levin (D- Berkley) will testify before the committee in behalf of the bill. Levin will present testimony from both election officials and college students: Ann Arbor City Clerk John Bentley will be present at the hearings. "I'm basically in favor of the bill," he said, "but I have some reservations about the word- ;"" 1 The bill was sent to the ap- propriations committee last week because some legislators claimed "it could affect out-of-state tuition payments because of residency/re- quirements." However, Levin argued that it has no fiscal implications and should not be bottled up in the ap- propriations committee. The measure was referred to committee by a narrow 16-14 vote. "This bill concerns voter reg- istration laws-not tuition laws," Levin argued. "If we do not fairly and promptly open up the political channels to students who meet age qualfications, we must share some , 1a h. -Ann rn.. n,. . r, nf