WARREN BURGER: 'LAW AND ORDER' MAN See editorial page Y A6r tr t .IaitJ PHOOEY Iligh-59-63 Low-40 Partly cloudy and cool; rain maybe tonight Vol. LXXIX, No. 13-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, May 23, 1969 Ten Cents Four Pages Student killed in Greensboro clash Police patrol campus at No. Carolina A&T GREENSBORO, N.C. (R)-A state of emergency was de- Glared ' in Greensboro yesterday and North Carolina A&T University was ordered closed after a night of violence during which a black student was killed as police and snipers ex- changed fire. The victim was Willie James Grimes, 20, of nearby Winterville. Guilford County coroner, Dr. Allen R. Coggeshall, said Grimes was struck in the back of the head by a small-caliber bullet while le was in Scott Dormitory at the predominantly black university. Dr. Lewis C. Dowdy, president of the university, an- nounced the indefinite suspension of all classes. ----- Dowdy said dormitories and dining halls would be closed effec- Sheriff hires H arvey )atrolmanl in HRC incident 'S)S loses bid to meet "it EPMI T 1L X.L~iT .RJ Ten members representing Stu- dents for a Democratic Society yesterday were denied permission to use the Eastern MichiganUni- versity field house for an SDS con- vention by the Eastern Board of Regents. The 'board issued the denial un- animously and without debate. EMU president Harold Sponberg and Lewis Profit, vice president for business and finance indicated that granting permission would be a violation of rules adopted pre- viously by the regents. No group whose "aims and ob- jectives" are not the same as Eastern's is allowed to hold con- ferences or conventions on the campus. Profit said he .asked SDS stu- dents who approached him prior to the meeting if their aims and ob- jectives coincided with Eastern's. Peter Vurdock, an SDS mem- ber, said at the meeting the an- swer was no. "I have no argument with this asthere iare obviously basic political differences between o r philosophies," he said. "But the only'reason our request. is being denied is because ofdif- ferent ideologies," he added. "The facilities are available and the convention could easily be ar- ranged. This is another example of repression of the new left and the black movement," Murdock said. Later yesterday Murdock said he did not expect the convention to be held in Ypsilanti. He in- dicated that other SDS members in other cities ' are working on finding a convention site. The convention for an estimated' 2,500 SDS members previously has been held at the University and at Michigan State University. Eastern SDS members have been meeting with Vice President for Student Affairs Robert Zum- winkle and other faculty members ever since the regerts agreed to review a;list of demands presented to them at their April board meet- ing. These demands include open ad- mission for "black and third world" students, elimination of ROTC and, establishment of a birth control clinic by EMU of- ficials. "I think the ptudents learned a few things about what we are al- ready doing to identify disad- vantaged students," Zumnwinkle said. However, Murdock has in- dicated he is dissatisfied with the meetings. tive at 6 p.m. today and he urged all students to make immediate preparations to leave the cahnpus. He said all school activities are being suspended except the bacca- laureate-commencement convoca- tion which will be held as sched- uled June 1. The shootings at the university began Wednesday night after po- lice had used tear gas to disperse unruly crowds of pupils at pre- dominantly black James B. Dud- ley High School. Dudley pupils had protested conduct of a recent class election. About 200 National Guardsmen were in the city yesterday along with local and county officers and state highway patrolmen. Some guardsmen were at the university, some at Dudley and others remained on standby at the armory. Major Jack Elam ordered cur- few hours from 8 p.m. yesterday to 5 a.m. today. He said the cur- few would be extended on a day- -to-day basis if needed.- Elam ordered that no demon- strations be held and no alcoholic beverages or guns or ammunition be sold as long as the curfew is in effect. Police Col. Walter A. Burch, head of the police detail near the A&T campus, said his men fired only when fired upon and did not enter the campus. \ Police and firemen went to the A&T campus yesterday when a truck was reported on fire, but of- ficers said they were driven away by rock-throwing students. Ce --Associated Press NATIONAL GUARDSMEN with bayoneted rifles and police held nearly 250 persons in the corner of a downtown Berkeley parking lot. All were arrested. Berkeley police arrest I0 250M BERKELEY, Calif. (I') -Riot-ready Na Guardsmen surrounded and arrested abou people's park" demonstrators yesterday in town Berkeley. There were no injuries as authorities mop on a crowd of about 800. Most of the demo tors fled, but others stood or sat down in an and were arrested, police said. The arrests, for unlawful assembly and f to disperse, brought the week's total in this University of California community to nearl The prisoners were booked on "field a cards and herded into Alameda County sh vans which ferried them to Santa Rita Prisoi county jail. park protest tional The arrests were made after guardsmen warned t 250 the demonstrators they were violating dov. Ron- down- ald Reagan's emergency order banning marches and assemblies in Berkeley. ved in About 300 troops trapped the protesters in an nstra- alley as they were marching arournd, reportedly alley looking for another "people's park" site. Earlier yesterday, University of California ailure President Charles Hitch said the responsibility for tense tactics in the week-long "people's park war" lay y 600. with the sheriff. rrest" "I deeply regret that those in authority de- eriffs' cided that certain tactics were necessary to protect n, the persons and property," the president of the state- wide nine-campus system said in a statement. w-Hitch made a pointed effort to take the heat off Roger Heyns, chancellor of the Berkeley cam- pus, whose home was besieged for several hours yesterday by some 1,000 chanting, singing demon- fece 'strators. By JUDY SARASOHN County Sheriff Douglas Har- vey yesterday 'confirmed re- ports that he has hired as a county deputy the former city patrolman who was accused by the Human Relations Com- mission of beating a staff member arrested on assign- ment. Harvey defended the actions of Wade Wagner, who subsequently waived his right to a hearing and resigned from the city police after a report by the city administrator and the city attorney confirmed that he struck HRC staff member Ray Chauncey twice after his ar- rest, causing Chauncey to require medical treatment. "Anyone of my men including myself would have struck the per- son if they were attacked," Har- vey said. "Wagner has, been a patsy. He did not strike' Chauncey when Chauncey had handcuffs off, and Chauncey was not beaten up," he added. The city attorney's report said there is disagreement as to what Chauncey's actions were imme- diately before he was struck. How- ever, HRC director David Cowley maintains that Chauncey in no way acted in disorderly manner. Harvey's hiring of Wagner brought strong reactions from the HRC and members of the* com- munity, including local black lead- ers. As a county deputy, Wagner will continue to patrol the area with similar powers to that of a city policeman. Dr. Albert Wheeler, state NAACP chairman, claimed that Harvey has also hired a few other former Ann Arbor-and Ypsilanti police who had been accused of using "harassing tactics." "We must assume that Harvey has become a haven for this type of policeman," Wheeler said. Wheeler said research is being done in Lansing to find legal grounds for possible action against Harvey's hiring policies. He said he will also seek a ruling from local district judges if necessary, although he is not certain what the court could do. "There has been no ruling or law against hiring Wagner," Har- vey said yesterday. "I'm an elected official and I have the right to hire or fire whomever I want." HRC director Cowley said yes- terday that he will contact the state civil rights commission about registering a complaint against Harvey. Cowley has maintained that what happened to Chauncey at the police station is symbolic of treat- ment received by other blacks. The civil rights commission is empow- ered to impose correctionary meas- ures in cases of racial discrimina- tion. 0. Herbert Ellis, a member of the county board of supervisors, who have budgetary control over Harvey, said yesterday that Har- vey's action seemed irregular at this point. He said he would check See HARVEY, Page 2 -Daily-Jay Cassidy Sheriff Harvey RESUME JUNE 6: Tenants' Union $2000 A YEAR: Burger admits receiving~ from Mayo Clinic found ration WASHINGTON (Y')-Judge War- ren E. Burger, nominated by Presi- dent Nixon to be chief justice, has been paid $2,000 annually as a trustee of the foundation which runs the famed Mayo Clinic in Minnesota, an official said yester- day. Former President Lyndon B. Johnson is also a member of the board at the same salary. Burger, in a statement issued from his home, confirmed last night he had been paid a total of $7,500. Earlier he had estimated a figure of $3,500. He{said he did not know whether he would remain on the board in view of his nomination. Meanwhile last night a panel of 11 federal judges announced they will meet at the Supreme Court tomorrow at the request of Chief Justice Earl Warren to consider setting up conduct and disclosure rules for judges. Among the.items up for discus- sion are bills pending in Congress that would require judges to dis- close their income and invest- ments. Justice William 0. Douglas has draw'n criticism in Congress over his $12,000-plus annual salary as president of another foundation which has had ownership ties with Las Vegas gambling casinos. Justice Abe Fortas resigned from the Supreme Court under fire last week over a $20,000 check from the family foundation of convicted financier Louis E. Wolf- son. Burger has been on the board of the Mayo Foundation since 1959. The foundation owns the Mayo Clinic at Rochester; Minn. The clinic administrator, Mark G. Brataas, said the $2,000 honor- arium is paid to each of the six public members of the board. The members attend four meet- ings a year, he said. Each meeting lasts one day. Brataas said Burger and other board members also receive ex- penses for travel and for lodging in Rochester during the meetings. The foundation, with assets ex- ceeding $100 million, owns the! facilities of the Mayo Clinic, he said, and also finances graduate studies at the hospital complex. Brataas said six 'members of the board are chosen from the public and the other seven are on the staff of the clinic. The public members, in addi- tion to Burger and Johnson, were listed by him as: Atherton Bean, head of Inter- national Milling in Minneapolis; Samuel O Johnson, president of S. C. Johnson & Son, Racine Wis., which makes Johnson's wax; W. Clark Wescoe, chancellor of the I University of Kansas; and Dwight L. Wilbur, San Francisco, Calif., president of the American Medical Association. Brataas said former President Johnson was named to the board in February after he left the White House. He said Johnson is due tore- ceive. his $2,000 later this year. Burger, a native of Minnesota, was named to the Mayo board three years later after he was ap- pointed a federal judge by Presi- dent Dwight, D. Eisenhower. If confirmed as chief justice, Burger will get a salary boost to $62,500 a year. He now receives $42,500 as a federal judge. The Mayo Foundation, formed in 1919, not only owns the facili- ties for the world-reknown clinic in Rochester, Minn., but also fi- nances graduate studies at the huge medical complex. It has assets of more than $100 million. Sen. Roman L. Hruska (R-Neb.) said there did not appear to be any impropriety in Burger's role in the Mayo Foundation. Heyns on May 15 called police who forcibly recovered a univer- sity-owned lot outside the cam- pus, which Telegraph Ave. resi- dents and others had appropriated as a "people's park." In the battle that followed, James Rector of San Jose, was fatally shot and 127 other persons, including 60 peacedofficers, were injured or wounded. University students made com- mon cause with the park people, the National Guard was called in, and the campus*has been in an uproar ever since. It was not Chancellor Heyns who called in 2,260 National Guards- men or activated the state's mu- tual aid program to bring in outside police, Hitch said. In protest of tactics used against the demonstrators, 375 students continued a two-day sit-in at the administration building at the University of California at Los Angeles with UCLA administra- tion permission. ease,,delayed By HAROLD ROSENTHAL Action in the' conspiracy suit brought against the Ten- ants' Union by seven landlords was delayed once again yes- terday. In a pre-trial hearing, Circuit Judge William Ager decided to set June 6 as the date when he will rule on motions by at- torneys from both sides. The landlords are asking for temporary and permanent injunc- tions against the rent strike. Besides the injunctions, they are asking for $10,000 in individual damages, $300,000 in exemplary damages, and recovery of more than $100,000 rent being held in escrow. Included in the permanent injunction case is a conspiracy suit which charges that the rent strike is an attacle on the concept of pri- vate property. The landlords claim that the strike involves conspir- acy to violate existing and future leases and to obtain libelous articles in The Daily. Included in the proposals to be heard June 6 are motions for dis- missal of the entire case and for summary judgment by Ager. The motion for a summary judgment, which is being entered by William Barense, attorney for the landlords, asks that Ager imme- diately grant the demands of the landlords. The motion for dismiis- sal, entered by the Tenants' Union, asks that the entire suit be dis- missed, Barense asked for the summary judgment on the basis that the. case is "a matter of law" and can be decided without hearing testi- mony. John Lafferty, an attorney for the Tenants' Union, questioned this and argued that the case is also a matter of facts which had yet to be heard by the court. After the motion for dismissal was entered, Ager said the mo- tion could only be entered by an attorney if that attorney believed a See STRIKE, Page 2 State group considers effect of student vote bill on tuition 'SNOOPY,' APPOLLO 10 DOCK Astronauts complete module test II By SHARON WEINER The state senate appropria- tions committee yesterday heard proponents of the student voter bill argue that the measure would not affect out-of-state student tuition rates. The bill was referred to the committee because some legis- lators feared a change in the voting residence requirement would enable out-of-state stu- dents to claim eligibility for lower in-state rates. However, it was not clear if the proposal would win the five votes it needs to be reported out of the eight-man committee, even though backers of the bill on the writing of the bill, Levin and Senator Anthony Stamm (R-Kalamazoo) tried to per- suade the committee to pass the bill onto the floor of the Senate instead of keeping it bottled up in committee. Proponents of the bill ex- plained to the committee that anywhere from 15 to 5 differ- ent standards of residency cur- rently exist under state law. One example given was the out- of-state student who pays Mich- igan income tax in certain cases, but it still denied the right to vote. They argued that a change in the voting law would therefore tions committee. At the time, several legislators said the move meant death for the pro- posal, because it could prevent the measure from coming to a vote on the Senate floor. The deadline for reporting bills out of committee is Mon- day. Levin said there "is a fight- ing chance the bill will get out of committee." If we do succeed in bringing it to the floor, there will be another hard fight to pass the. bill," he added. John Bentley, Ann Arbor City Clerk, was present at the hear- SPACE CENTER, Houston (R) - Two Apollo 10 astronauts returned safely to their command ship yesterday after twice flying a fragile spacecraft within 9.4 miles of the lunar surface in man's closest ap- proach to the moon. Air Force Col. Thomas P. Stafford and Navy Cmdr. Eugene A. Cernan guided their lunar lander module through a complex series of rocket firings that brought it to a rendezvous in moon orbit with the com- mand ship. Navy Cmdr. John W. Young, the com- mand ship pilot who remained in a 69- mile-high orbit of the moon, closed the final few feet separating the craft. He guided a probe on the nose of his ship into a hard docking of the two craft. A shout of happiness came down from r : ammen