Arson oreates anxiety; dorm security tightened By GENE ROBINSON The recent rash of deliberately set fires at the University has cre- ated an atmosphere of paranoia on c a, m p u s, especially among dormitory residents. Arson - not politics, sports, or even advance classification - has become the main topic of conversation. Unsubstantiated rumors about the fires have run rampant across the campus over the past few days. Totally false, for instance, is the rumor that the University will close down early for spring break. The more than 60 fires which have hit the campus since late January have baffled police and fire officials. According to Police Chief Walter Krasny, the police department has set up a special telephone number-761-5595-to be called by anyone who has any in- formation on the arsons. Other than that, Krasny reports, the police are working with fire officials and University personnel in an attempt to solve the arson cases. Krasny has declined to comment on whether the department was working on any specific leads. In addition, rewards of $10,000 from the Detroit News and $500 from Student Government Council has been offered for any informa- tion leading to the arrest of a possible arsonist. Frederick Da vids, director of University safety, said yesterday that his office would not "buy in- formation" per se, but that he was "very interested in any in- formation about the fires." Davids said that persons "should not let monetary reasons" stop them from giviig any information. Student.s are understandably wor- ried about the fires. "Christ, of course I'm scared," said one South Quad resident ad- visor. "I live on the fifth floor. If there's a fire, I can't get out." In Alice Lloyd Hall Monday night, over half of the dorm's res- idents met to discuss the fires. Lloyd was hit by two fires early Monday morning. Officials are also very worried about the blazes. John Feldkamp, director of University housing, calls the fires "as serious a prob- lem as I can recall." "This is a matter of life and death," he says. "There is not a single fireproof building on cam- pus." "It's just a good fortune that we haven't had any deaths be- cause of the fires yet," he adds. "Students have to appreciate how serious the problem is." Security measures have been tightened in the libraries where the first fires were started, and the stacks are now regularly pa- trolled. In addition, the libraries now, close at midnight instead of the previous 2 a.m. Most dormitories have been closed except to residents and their guests. Late Monday night, however, some 35 residents of West Quad's Chicago House presented President Robben Fleming with a. petition calling for the easing of some of the security restrictions. The residents protested the lock- ing of a gate leading into the house. Fleming at that time or- dered the gate unlocked and West Quad Building Director Leon West subsequently ordered the removal of all security precautions from the dorm, including guards sta- tioned at the dorm's main en- trance. West Quad Council, the dorm's representative body, however pe- titioned and received permission to reinstate the security precau- tions with its own funds. West reported, however, that yesterday morning Fleming order- ed the precautions reinstated and the gate once again locked at the University's expense. The rash of fires began on Jan. 27 with a fire at the General Li- brary. The fire did only minor damage, but seemed to trigger the wave of deliberate blazes. The fires, however, have been set in different ways, with no ap- parent pattern. They have ranged from minor waste basket fires to full-fledged blazes in the libraries See WAVE, Page 7 -Daily-Tom Gottlieb A FIRE INSPECTOR examines a room in the Alphia Xi Delta sorority house, which, was extensively damaged by fire yesterday. MAKING THE CITY'S DECISIONS See Editorial Page Y S4i i!3tau ~Iaitjr WET AND WILD High-60 Low-30 Showers or thundershowers, changing to snow Vol. LXXXII, No. 119 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, March 1, 1972 Ten Cents Ten Pages Groups reach "agreement on Senate o Griffin ai proposal, verturns nti-busing 50-47 research plan By ROBERT BARKIN University officials, faculty members and student repre- sentatives last night reached tentative agreement on a compromise policy on University classified research that they will present to the Regents. Details of the proposal were not made public last night. A draft of the proposal will be sent to each Regent today, however. The proposed policy would not affect research activities at the University's Willow Run Laboratories-which perform about 90 per cent of the University's classified research projects. University officials have i - Oulu1 board hit Stenants By ANDY DETWILER A group of tenants of the Maple Square public housing development met last night to plan actions against the city's public housing commission. Earlier yesterday, 15 of the res- idents, mostly Aid to Dependent Children mothers, who are two months or more behind in rent payments, appeared in District Court to answer charges brought against them by the housing com- mission. Tenants in cases of this nature are commonly ordered to make satisfactory rent payment ar- rangements within 60 days after their case is heard, or face evic- tiorn. At their meeting residents cited poor conditions and health haz- artis in the recently-built housing units as reasons for their refisal to pay rent. ' Tenants also report they receive little or no response when they re- quest maintenance. Tenants said the garbage is col- lected on an average of once a month. In addition, residents said there are* no fire escapes for up- stairs rooms. The residents last night dis-. cussed picketing action and pos- sible approaches to a lawsuit against the housing commission. They said they did not want to work through existing tenants unions because "they were con- trolled by the senior citizens." ndicated that Willow Run will shortly be transfered to the control of a non - profit cor- poration or state - controlled agency. Earlier this month, the Regents rejected a proposal by Senate As- sembly - the faculty representa- tive body - that would have greatly restricted federally-spon- sored classified and industrially- sponsored proprietary research at the University. The Assembly proposal called for the University to reject any research contract that would pro- hibit publication of results beyond one year. The. Regents, however, rejected that proposal, and instead, issued a resolution requesting changes in the proposal. Their resolution asked that the present classified research policy- which has resulted in the rejection of few contracts - be continued under a new simplified enforce- ment procedure. In addition, the Regents asked' that the University proceed with plans to~ divest itself of the Wil- low Run Laboratories, and asked that any new proposal concern itself only with restriction on class- ified research. Attending last night's meeting were: President Robben Fleming, Vice President for Academic Af- fairs Allan Smith, engineering col- lege Dean Gordon Van Wylen, and representatives of Student Govern- ment Council, Senate Assembly, the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs, and Assembly's Research Policies Committee. Senate Assembly Chairman War- ren Norman called the proposal "something the faculty can live with," while SGC member Marty Scott termed the policy "a rea- sonable approximation of the fac- ulty proposal." -Associated Press While the cat's away . While their competitors sped back to Washington to overturn a proposal to limit court-ordered busing, Democratic presidential aspirants Henry Jackson of Washington and Vance Hartke of In- diana grab a few hours of campaigning for the upcoming New Hampshire and Florida primaries. Jackson (above) rides with his wife in a Florida strawberry festival parade, while Hartke (below in suit) watches a lunch-break card game between employes at a New Hampshire factory, THREATENS FUND CUTS: Senate proposal hits WASHINGTON (R) - The Senate, with most of its pres- idential aspirants back in town, reversed itself yester- day and rejected the Griffin proposal to strip federal courts of their power to issue busing orders in school desegregation cases. Instead, the Senate voted to once again adopt the compromise plan offered by Senate leaders Mike Mansfield (D-Mont.), and Hugh Scott (R-Pa.),, which con- tains some mild restrictions on busing, but does not challenge the power of federal courts to con- tinue issuing busing orders. The vote against the proposal authored by Sen. Robert Griffin (R-Mich.), was 50 to 47, compared to the 43-40 tally last Friday which adopted the amendment to the higher education-school de- segregation bill. Three of the five Democratic presidential contenders who had been absent Friday returned for the vote, furnishing the margin of victory for civil rights advocates to reject the proposal. Still absent, however, were Sens. Vance Hartke (D-Ind.), and Henry Jackson (D- Wash.). The victory was not final, how-' ever, as the Senate will continue to debate the bill up to 2 pm. to- day. Another version of the Grif- fin rider or other anti-busing amendments could still be added. The Mansfield-Scottbamend- ment stipulates that federal funds cannot be used for busing except on the written request of local school officials. But no funds could be used "when the time or distance of travel is so great as to risk the health of the children or signifi- cantly impinge on the educational process." Under the amendment, federal officials would be prohibited from inducing local officials to use bus- ing where students will be moved to schools which are "substantial- ly inferior to those opportunities offeredat the school to which such students would otherwise be assigned." Meanwhile, the House Judiciary Committee has opened hearings on proposed constitutional amend- ments against busing. -Associated Press SEN. ROBERT GRIFFIN (R-MICH.), speaks last Friday with Sen. Howard Baker (R-Tenn.), after the Senate first approved his proposal to restrict the powers of federal courts to order busing to desegregate schools. The Senate yesterday reversed their earlier stand, voting down Griffin's amendment, 50 to 47. COURT RULING: CPHA management, sex bias at colleges By SARA FITZGERALD Managing Editor The Senate has voted to cut off federal funds to public colleges which discriminate on the basis of sex in admissions, hiring, promo- tions, pay and scholarship grants. The proposal, which passed the Senate Monday as an amendment to the $24 billion higher education bill, would provide one more in a long list of federal mechanisms to promote equity in hiring. But, if approved, it would mark the first time federal legislation has barred sex discrimination in un- dergraduate admissions and the awarding of scholarships. The bill will now go to a House- S e n a t e conference committee where a compromise with a bill passed by the House last year will be worked out. Congressional ob- servers, however, feel the House will approve the stronger Senate version, which added the provision on undergraduate admissions. The University would be under the authority of the bill, which only exempts military academies, private undergraduate institutions and church schools. If approved, the bill could have a major impact here, as women have not only cri- ticized the University's hiring practices, but its admission poli- cies as sell. ThesUniversity has already had federal funds cut off once, when an investigation by the Depart- ment of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW) more than a year, ago led to the withholding of some $2 million in federal contracts un- til the University drafted an ac- ceptable affirmative action plan for the equal hiring of women. HEW demanded the plans under the authority of an executive order which prohibits federal contractors' from discriminating in employ- ment practices. But, a provision for increased admissions of wo- men graduate students was in- cluded by HEW, by tying the de- mand to the need for increased hiring of women teaching fellows and research assistants, who are male and 45 per cent female. This, FOCUS said in its complaint to HEW, occurs despite the fact that statistics show that women per- form better at college and that a greater percentages remain in school to graduate than do their male counterparts. James Bower, the associate director of admissions, acknowl- edged yesterday that this year's freshman class has a 54-46 per cent ratio in favor of males. How- ever, he said that 70 per cent of women who applied to the Uni- versity were accepted, while 69 per cent of male applicants were approved this year. "The balance goes in favor of See SEX, Page 10 employes By TED STEIN Washtenaw County Circuit Court Judge William Ager yes- terday ordered representatives of the Commission on Profes- sional Hospital A c t i v i t i e s (CPHA) management and its striking keypunch operators and clerical workers, to meet with him to discuss the walk-out of CPHA employes which began last Wednesday. CPHA - a non-profit group providing computer analysis services to about 1600 hospitals -yesterday asked the court to make permanent a temporary injunction preventing any of the 170 members of Local 157 of to meet the United Auto Workers, from blocking access to and from CPHA property. In their bid for the injunc- tion, CPHA officials requested the number of pickets be limited to five at any time, saying that alleged bomb threats and inci- dents of "violence" - includ- ing alleged window-breaking and scattering of nails on thor- . oughfares - prompted the ac- tion: An attorney for the striking union members rebutted this contention, requesting the court not to become a "policeman." "Thus far, the police have been See JUDGE, Page 7 B " Boo gies and buses: Cit steps *up drive to regis ter new voters By DAN BIDDLE Politics sometimes makes strange bedfellows. h.Locally, the latest unexpected joining of forces has taken place over the matter of voter regis- r tration. Student Government Council and the Ann Ar- bor Human Rights Party (HRP), working in co- operation with the city clerk's office, the Rain- bow People's Party, the Ann Arbor Tribal Council ,and ati the ,eitv'v Dmnrstie Pav,, a i n,. y a. IRKSOME INTER VIEWS Firms shun female law graduates By MIKE SLAUGHTER Second of Two Parts Who would think that when consideringua Law School grad- uate for employment, an em- ployer would be worried about bathrooms or Christmas parties? Yet job interviewing for wo- men law school graduates today can more often than not be a women's bathroom, while anoth- er interviewer speculated seri- ously that he hated to think of the consequences of such an at- tractive woman in the firm's library, distracting other asso- ciates. Another horror cited by inter- viewers, Phillips adds was that she couldn't play golf with the ;. ' ::. ,