A CASE FOR THE INDIAN See Editorial Page C 1'. I 4c 5k 43U 42Iatt FROGGY High--64 Low-37 Partly sunny chance of frost Vol. LXXXI1, No. 24 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, October 7, 1971 Ten Cents Ten Pages -Associated Press Pedaling for peace Marco Antonio Navis of Colombia pedals on his second trip around the world. He came into Detroit yesterday for the cause of "peace and international good will." Most people are friendly, he says, but he takes no chances. Whenever he leaves his bicycle, he removes the front wheel. Relocated Canterbury now leads quieter life By HOWARD BRICK "This seems to be a time for contemplation-a time for get- ting yourself together," says Rev. Mark Harris, co-director of Canterbury House, the campus Episcopal Chaplaincy. In line with this view and the realities of limited space in their new offices, Canterbury no longer sponsors the mass entertainment activities it has in the past and now serves as a meeting place for small groups 'and a semi-counselling center. Canterbury House closed its popular weekend coffeehouse last fall, moving from 330 Maynard St., to 603 East William St., in the spring. The house abandoned .its- nterainmeni programsa-nd. its Maynard St. location "partially because of financial difficulties, but partially because we were simply tired of it," Harris explains. "Besides being prohibitively expensive, the coffeehouse program didn't allow us time to talk to people," he says. The House offers its space to small groups with political, social, or religious aims. A drug help and rehabilitation service now uses the offices on Mondays, while a gay liberation group uses the space for Friday evening meetings. In addition, a yoga class may begin there soon. The House continues to conduct contemporary worship services every Sunday morning at its old location on Maynard St. The services, rather thaw being explicitly religious, deal more with per- sonal development, Harris says, and cut across denominational lines. The services will involve some experimentations in the future, including a special Halloween service this month. Though there have been disagreements between the house's directors and the Episcopal Diocese over controversial house poli- cies and activities, the Diocese has continued its support of Can- terbury. CSJ not to try movie fraud case Controversial issue instead given to SGC By TONY SCHWARTZ \ Charges brought against the Orson Welles Film Society w e r e transferred yesterday from the jurisdiction of Cen- tral Student Judiciary (CSJ) to Student Government Coun- cil (SGC) in order to facilitate a more thorough investigation. A letter from Vic Gutman, di- rector of student organizations, to the chairman of CSJ, asked that his complaint, made last month, be withdrawn. Gutman explained that the jur- isdiction of CSJ-which is limited only to direct violations of SGC regulations-had limited his case severely. SGC, on the other hand, may deal with violations of a more general nature. They may act, therefore, on Gutman's complaint, which labels Orson Welles an "un- desirable influence on campus." Gutman originally charged Or- son Welles with signing for an auditorium under an a s s u m e d name, obtaining a film without the distributor's consent and ad- vertising without identifying the sponsoring organization. He explained his decision to seek a forum for expanded charges by saying "I honestly believe that the Orson Welles Film Society is the biggest campus rip-off this uni- versity has ever known." Members of Orson Welles Film Society were unavailable for com- ment last night. Gutman claims that Arthur Mau- rello, former president of Orson Welles, stole university film pro- jectors. Maurello faces a similar charge in civil court. Gutmn claims that Orson Welles members stole films and harassed other campus film groups. He plans to present as evidence, a letter from Frank Pedi, repre- sentative of Films Inc., detailing a series of complaints against Or- son Welles. -Finally, Gutman hopes to show that Orson Welles has been con- sistently uncooperative in arrang- ing scheduling with other campus film groups. If Gutman's motion is read and seconded by SGC, a special meet- ing will be called to consider the charges. The Orson Welles Film Society; case is part of a controversy over what has been brewing for months among different campus groups offering movies at reduced prices to students. Judge orders dock employes to stop strike WASHINGTON UN---A federal judge agreed last night to issue the order President Nixon asked to temporarily halt the 98-day West Coast longshoremen's strike. U.S. Dist. Court Judge Spencer Williams in San Francisco acted only two hours after the Justice Department, on Nixon's orders, had filed suits seeking injunctions against the West Coast strike and a shipping tieup in Chicago. Williams, as expected, ordered an immediate end to the longshoremen's walkout and sent the 15,000 West Coast strikers back to work for an 80-day cooling-off period as provided by the Taft-Hartley Law. Nixon has not, however, sought to invoke this law to end the week-old strike of 45,000 dock workers against East and Gulf Coast ports. Instead he a sent federal officials to New York in an urgent effort to get negotiations off dead cen-Ru ter. At the same time, shipping sources reported yesterday that longshoremen were flocking back to work along the Gulf and South Atlantic coasts as many believedpost on e a Taft-Hartley injunction immi- nent. A strike by the AFL-CIO Inter- By ROBERT SCHREINER national Longshoremen's Associa- tion appeared to be faltering in A seven-hour arbitration hearing its sixth day. yielded no decision yesterday as --Associated Press Who okays wars? Sen. John C. Stennis (D-Miss), left, testified yesterday before the Senate Foreign Relations Com- mittee calling for reassertion of congressional war - making authority. He s t a t e d that the United States should never go to war again without the moral sanction of the American people. Arthur J. Goldberg, former Supreme Court justice, is seated on right. OCTOBER 13th: Senate Assembly encourages war moratorium participation r i As it did in 1969, Senate Assembly, the faculty represent- ative body, has again urged fac- ulty and students to feel free to participate in this year's Na- tional Moratorium Day which calls for an immediate end to the Indochina War. Senate Assembly's resolution, passed late Monday night im- mediately after approving sug- gested new University restric- tions on classified research, was " presented by psychology Prof. Dick Mann. It passed by voice vote with only one audible dissenting vote. unlike the1969 approval of 36 to 10 which came after lengthy debate and numerous amend- ments to the original proposal, presented by geology Prof. Henry Pollack. The resolution this year, which containssthe same wording as the 1969 resolution, reads: "The members of the Senate Assembly encourage faculty and students to feel free to partici- pate in the activities of Oct. 13, 1971 which have as their purpose to focus the attention of the nation, and especially its poli- tical and military leaders, on the need for an end to the Vietnam War. "The Assembly further urges all members of the University community to devote their in- tellectual energies, through the special opportunities provided on that day, to consider ways in which to focus the resources of the University on the problem if war cessation. "If such participation by a faculty member leads to an ab- sence from his usual responsi- bilities, the Assembly urges that each faculty member so affected take the appropriate steps to reschedule his responsibilities to the University for teaching, re- search, or service." Ann Arbor will host a teach-:n Oct. 13 in conjunction with 'he national moratorium.eOrganiz- ing the day's activities is the Ann Arbor Coalition to End the War. The featured speaker will be Noam Chomsky, well-known linguist and long time anti-war activist, while the day's other activities will be highlighted by a march from the Diag to City Hall to promote student voter registration. The resolution hardly yielded the controversial debate it did in 1969. After long debate on the classified research issue at Mon- day night's special meeting. As- sembly gave Mann an easy mar- gin over the two-thirds vote needed for a non-Assembly per- son to address the group, and Invoking the Taft-Hartley Act1 for the first time since he tookj office, Nixon acted after a four- man board of inquiry told him the West Coast and Chicago ne- goitations were deadlocked and( that there was little hope forC quick settlement. In the San Francisco suit, the administration raised the possibil- ity of the permanent loss of U.S.; export revenue because of the strike. In an affidavit signed by Agri-, culture Secretary Clifford M. Har- din, the government said Japan, for one, is questioning the de-1 pendability of the United States{ as a supplier of agricultural com-1 modities. 'In recent bilateral discussions with the Japanese, 'we learned that they are sending missions to o t h e r supply countries of the world to urge that they increase their output especially of grains so as to reduce Japan's dependence1 on the United States," the affi-~ davit stated. The Taft-Hartley Labor Man- agement Relations Act entered' the books when the Senate, by a [68-25 vote, overriding Presidentj IHarry Truman's veto. Sen. Robert A. Taft (R-Ohio)1 and Rep. Fred A Hartley Jr. (R- N.J.) called the measure a reas- onable reform of labor law, basic- ally the 1935 Wagner Act which created the National Lebor Rela- tions Board. Truman told a nationwide radio' audience the bill was "shocking bad for labor, bad for manage- ment and bad for the country." Meanwhile the strike that has idled about 80,000 soft-coal miners in 20 states continued with no indications of any early break in1 the stalemate over the United1 Mine Workers' demand for an in- crease in the top daily wage from $37 to $50. Negotiations were interrupted1 Wednesday afternoon because thej UMW president W. A. "Tony" Boyle had to go to federal court to another matter. They are to be1 resumed Thursday. to whether Robert Hunter, the fired assistant director of the city's Human Rights Department (HRD), legally belongs on or off the city payroll-a dispute stemming from his controversial dismissal last Feb. 1. After hearing lengthy testimony from witnesses on behalf of either Hunter or the city, Gabriel Alex- ander of the American Arbitration Association ordered a continuance of the proceedings until Oct. 27 at 9 a.m. Although Alexander, along with attorneys for both sides, declined to comment last night on the pro- ceedings so far, all expressed con- fidence that a decision would defi- nitely be made at the upcoming hearing. City attorney Jerold Lax said last month that in effect, if the arbitrator rules in favor of the city, Hunter's firing would be up- held, and if the decision comes out in Hunter's favor, Hunter would be placed back on the city payroll. Hunter, for almost five years a center of controversy at City Hall due to his radical views concern- ing the human rights field, was fired by his superior, HRD Direc- tor James Slaughter, for allegedly "no longer performing the duties of his position in an effective and responsible manner." Hunter has contended, however, that his firing was discriminatory and resulted because city officials could not condone the "aggressive manner" in which he pursued the responsibilities of his position. The city succeeded in -lismissing Hunter until April 7, when Judge John Feikens of the Eighth U.S. District Court found that Hunter had been denied "due process" in his firing and ordered that he be reinstated to his post. Meanwhile, the city filed a no- tice of appeal asking that Hunter be required to post a $10,000 bond to cover costs to the city in the event that it should succeed in overruling the decision to place him back on the payroll. See HUNTER, Page 10 Prof. Mann in less than five minutes passed the up-dated resolution present- ed by Mann. In 1969, even some advowedly liberal professors questioned the University faculty, or the Uni- versity itself, taking a stand on a political issue. "Basically, I think the Uni- versity should be politically neu- tral," said law Prof. L. Hart Wright before the Oct. 13, 1969 Moratorium, "and t h e r e f o r e shouldn't as an entity take a po- sition on any question that has significant political relevance." "I believe we should get out of Vietnam," said Wright, but I am going to class to preserve the neutrality of my professor- ship although I have strong feelings against the war." HELP FOR COLLEGES College finance bill faces debate -Daily-Rolfe Tessemr By HESTER PULLING Most anybody can find somewhere to spend a few extra bucks these days-the problem comes in getting it. But colleges and universities, as eager for money as anyone, might soon have part of that prob- lem licked. In a measure recently adopted by the House Education and Labor Committee, every institution of higher education around the country would be granted federal aid-- with no strings attached. Although colleges have received federal funds for years for constructions, research, student aid and other specific purposes, there have never before been grants that could be spent at a school's discretion. However, the bill would prohibit schools private higher education institutions could qualify for bankruptcy within ten years if the deficits they are now operating under continue. Extending over a five-year period, the bill authorizes about $1 billion in both emer- gency and longer term general aid to higher education institutions. Approved by the House committee last Thursday, would base federal grants to colleges partly on the total number of stu- dents in each college and partly on the number of students at each school receiv- ing direct federal loans and scholarships. But the proposed legislation still has to stand the test of floor debate, where it could be substantially altered. According to a spokesman for the House committee contacted by The Daily, the amount of mn- - r - -r -,o A f - ---mn avc i lirn- Harvest reaps benefits for garden group By BETH OBERFELDER Organic gardening became a way of life this summer for 500- 600 people who applied scien- tific techniques to the Organic versity donated seven acres at Beale St. and Glacier Way. A second grant was awarded by HEW last July to promote further research, which is to be for the creation of satalite gar- dens throughout the community are being studied by staff at the Ecology Center. "Everything that could be annum in Arinh an n" wn z,,mu u ty girl scouts, and foreign visitors. One worker commented, "Ev- ery day I'd go out there, and see how things had grown. It .rpnll.,h,.nra n mart nof min , Vice President Smith smaller sum. Where the University would put these new monies, says Vice President for Aca- Anmin Affairq Alnnm1 mmith.wnul h e den,.