n In tomorrow's Sunday magazkiRe: War behind I Federal agencies y groups spa for the s. The lea! lot should e evsiij) at tl;ro respective oioun apictures should h gating of or the takinr niostis eisii-- ~ y I Birdy hits the stratosphere 'U' Cellar counters fight Freedom of Information Act, and more. . . . I a HEALTH CARE See editorial page r t ii ; aiIQ COLD SHOWERS High-50 Low-40s See Today for details Eight -Nine Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXIX, No. 138 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, March 24, 1979 Ten Cents Ten Pages Teach-in 'The teach-in is an experimen it was be fore-an innoration h ing people get together and about serious mriatters, and yel spect one anot her in the process 0 anniversary By JULIE ENGEBRECHT On the evening of March 24, 1965, and into the nex about 3,000 University faculty members, administrators and others gathered for the first teach-in to protest th it as War. The widely-heralded event, which sparked student activ st the Vietnam War on campuses across the country, pr talk base for a national teach-in in Washington, D.C. less tha ths later. t re- ALAN HABER, a founder of the Students for a D Society (SDS), which was a major catalyst for studente the 1960s, was one of the students involved in organizing in. "There were a lot of people that were very a felt quite betrayed by the government," Haber said yes brings activist back honme eve of the fourteenth anniversary of the teach-in. Haber explained t morning, that at the time a debate broiled within the'University as to whether s, students, it was appropriate to suspend the normal function of the University ie Vietnam to protest the war. "There was a desire of the faculty to take some kind of action, 'Somehow peple hart> learned to vism again- which looked like a faculty strike," Haber continued. "And there rovided the was a desire from the administration to head that off. t> 'bothim ore suhtl(, and operatt at n two mon- BOTH STUDENTS and faculty accepted the idea of a discussiona higher lerel and in more dire~rseI about the war, and planned an all-night teach-in to last from 8 p.m. Democratic March 24 until8 a.m. the next day, ending with a rally on the Diag. tra vs than allot'ing a situation to activism in The major political discussion of the teach-in eventually wound g the teach- up in 429 Mason Hall, also the site. of tonight's 'teach-in com-go to com hat in the stretts. ngry-they terday, the memorating the original event. "Part of this is to say we have essentially the same foreign policy See TEACH-IN, Page 8, Restraining order voided By MITCH CANTOR Visiting Washtenaw County Circuit Court Judge George Kent yesterday terminated a temporary restraining order which allowed the University Regents to meet March 16 behind closed doors following two days of disrupted meetings. Since Kent did not rule on the con- stitutionality of such an order being issued in the case, it is unclear whether another order could be issued to bar demonstrators from future meetings.. THE GROUP named in the suit, the Washtenaw County Coalition Against Apartheid (WCCAA), expects more supporters at the Regents' April meetings than were at the March sessions, according to Jemadari Kamara, spokesman for the WCCAA. More than 200 demonstrators forced the Board to recess three times during the two March sessions, demanding that the Regents reconsider their stan- ce on University holdings in firms doing business in South Africa. The WCCAA advocates University divestment from such holdings: At yesterday's hearing, attorney Thomas O'Brien, representing the WC CAA, charged that the ex-parte restraining order - issued by visiting Judge Harold Van Domelen March 16 after he heard testimony from the University - violated the 1977 Open Meetings Act. O'BRIEN STATED that there is "nothing in the Act to allow private meetings." He also blasted the restraining order, saying that "it's not restraint; it's allowing them (the Regents) to break the law." Peter-Davis, the attorney hired by the University, rebutted that "we are talking about a disruption. The Con- stitution does not protect the right to disruption; it is a misdemeanor." See JUDGE, Page 8 February prices Clash in)P A police officer attempts to defend himself from two demonstrators trying to club hidn during the first clash between uncontrolled demonstrators and police at the Place de la Republique in Paris. Tens of thousands of steelworkers marched SHAPIRO SPEAKS AT GUILD HOUSE: Student tenure b AP Photo 'aris street through the streets yesterday to protest the French government's policy over steel industry troubles. By JOHN SINKEVICS University Vice-President for Academic Affairs Harold Shapiro said yesterday students should have input in tenure decision-making processes, but should not participate in actual tenure votes. Shapiro made the comments during an informal talk with some 20 students and professors at the Guild House. Shapiro emphasized that the barring of students from that final decisive role is a personal opinion which could change as the nature and significance of tenure changes. "A MORE important issue than student involvement in the tenure process, in my opinion, is whether tenure is a viable idea altogether," said Shapiro. Saturday " Wilma Rudolph, who won three gold medals in track during the 1960 Olympics, spoke to a crowd of some 200 at the Business School about motivation. See story, Page 7. " Columbia University's trustees voted yesterday to divest the school's holdings in some corporations that are currently doing business in South Africa. See story, Page 8. The Economics professor said i the role of tenure in academia today has changed som'ewhat from its original in- ception, and that because it has become a complex matter, it may no longer preserve the full "flow of intellectual freedom." However, Shapiro stressed that student involvement is still an impor- tant issue in today's tenure processes. "IN SOME parts of the University, student input in the tenure process is very organized and in some parts it is not," stated Shapiro. "Evaluation of teaching is the most important part of this participation, and student opinion has a more important role (in tenure decisions) than I think many people currently know." Shapiro said that while some depar- tments choose not to use course input possi~b evaluations, it is "hard to articulate a are problems in thet policy which covers all units of the are bureaucratic in University in a reasonable and effec- to improve the amou tive way." quality - of inform; He s'aid departments should be en- teaching," he explai couraged to use student course When questioned a evaluations, but they should not be "dissidents" among required. tenured faculty, Sha "MY CURRENT view is students the "University does ought not to participate in the actual See TENUR voting process," continued Shapiro. "Promotion to tenure is a permanent . decision. It takes a good deal of ex- posure and experience to make that le tenure process that nature. "We have runt - quantity and nation available on ned. about the number of g the University's apiro jokingly said s not have a count of E, Page 8 h/ 11t4 year From AP and Reuter "THERE IS Led by sharply higher food, fuel and that can be s housing costs, consumer prices in- level," said creased 1.2 per cent in February, the Secretary Jody worst one-month rise in inflation in 411 the economic years, the government said yesterday. them built up o The increase dealt the Carter ad- it will take a ministration's anti-inflation program about them." another blow. The February figures Lyle Gram showed inflation increasing at an an- President Cart nual rate of 15A4 per cent, more than Advisers, caller double the administration's goal of 7.4 discouraging. per cent. But Gramle Food prices increased 1.6 per cent, chief inflation led by a 4.9 per cent rise in meat costs, told a news c while housing was up 1.3 per cent, due concern at the partly to a 3.1 per cent rise in mortgage See FEB interest costs. 3obviously nothing good bid about figures at this White House Press y Powell. He added that conditions that created over several years, "and while to do something nley, a member of er's Council of Economic d the February rise very ey and the President's adviser, Alfred Kahn, onference that, despite faster pace of inflation, RUARY, Page 7 im chief kind of permanent decision and it is not a question of intelligence. "I do think students ought to act as pressure groups on all kinds of issues," Shapiro said. Shapiro, who said he would not discuss specific cases, admitted there Housing task force proposes dorm board By PATRICIA IIAGEN during the second week of Fall term. Th in T k k Flrnni Smith keeps low profile By LEONARD BERNSTEIN Amid the political squabbling and speculation over who will be the University's next per- manent president, often forgotten is the man currently guiding the University. That man is Interim President Allan Smith, a tall, soft-spoken former University Vice- President for Academic Affairs, and former law professor here and at Hastings College in California. SMITH LOOKED comfortable as he settled in- to a chair in the office he inherited three months ago when Robben Fleming left the University for a job as head of the Public Broadcasting Service in Washington, D.C. And Smith sounded equally 'at home describing the style he has brought to gd A Housing task force last Thursday endorsed a new route for dorm residen- ts to express their ideas and concerns to the University Housing Office by ap- proving the draft of a constitution estahlishing the Residenee Hall Ad- S e mousingi asx orce, composes of interested volunteer dorm residents and building directors, was organized last September to set up a council of student representatives to the Housing Office. "WP nadcd an mehanim f 4tdnant