CONGRESSIONAL STAGNATION See editorial page :Y Lwrria Ia itij WARMING High--33 Los--22 Cloudy and windy; snow flurries Vol. LXXXI, No. 95 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, January 22, 1971 Ten Cents illow Run Labs may move to- orth By DAVE CHUDWIN of 150,000 square feet of floor- former University electrical en- million annual budget from the Wilson added that most WRL when McDonnell Douglas ordered The University is planning to space. gineering Prof. Keeve Siegel. Defense Department, WRL re- equipment is movable but that two the division transferred to St. move Willow Run Laboratories The previously undisclosed move A Conductron employe said last searchers are studying the prob- research aircraft used by WRL Louis. The bulk of the firm's 500 (WRL), home of most of the would bring the laboratories do- night that the land and buildings lems of radar, remote sensing and would have to stay at the airport. employes are gone, with only a University's classified military re- ing practically all of 'the Uni- ' are valued at $2-3 million. It is military surveillance and t a r g e t small housekeeping force remain- search, to a new site next to versity's $5.6 mililon in classified not clear whether the University acquisition. University o f f icii a 1s declined ing, an employe said last night. North Campus, the Daily has research to a single location cios- will lease the property or pur- "We would be very happy to get comment as to what they might Conductron was one of the most learned. er to campus. chase it outright. Willow Run closer to campus," when it is vacated. The University successful "spinoff" corporations During a secret session this "The Conductron property is be- "The buildings at Conductron said James Wilson, director of the rented the area from the U.S. gov- ever formed by University faculty morning the Regents will discuss ing vacated by McDonnel Doug- are much better than the build- Institute for Science and Tech- einent for one dollar in 1946. members. Since University re- purchasing or leasing a 62-acre las and we have been interested in ings where research is done at the nology (IST), last night. ere ir spe in . b .U s area on Plymouth Rd. which pre- what would happen to it," Vice (Willow Run) airport - the build- IST, which is already housed There Is speculation the Um- search laboratories are not in the viously housed Conductron Corp., President and Chief Financial Of- ings are much newer and are cios- on North Campus, is an adminis- versity could finance the move to production business, the opportu- a division of McDonnell Douglas er to campus," Pierpont said. trative unit which manages WRL North Campus by renting to pri- C o n of Moel o uficerWiuPeLsd1aWhile Pierpont claimed that no and other divisions of the Uni- vate industry the dilapidated nity arises for professors to profit Corp. which moved to St. Louis night. "We expect to discuss this d eiepont b lanmd at w anrster frt laboratory buildings at Willow Run by their research by setting up last year. Idecision had been made as to how versity's research effort. Besides WRL with its 367 em- with the Regents informally." the site might be used, he said "When the University does re- now occupied by WRL. private corporations. ployes, University officials are re- Pierpont said the University has the University "would hope to im- search, it ought to be part of the Wilson said any move by WRL In November, 1966 McDonnell portedly considering transfering already had discussions with the prove Central Campus and North educational experience to include would be "unrelated" to WRL's Douglas gained control of Con- elements of the electrical engi- unidentified owners of the pro- Campus space" by the acquisition. students, which is kind of hard research volume, which has drop- neering department including the perty. McDonnell Douglas spokes- WRL is now located 17 miles to do when you're so far away ped $4 million in the last three ductron and Siegel and other for- Radiation Laboratory and Cooley men said the site was leased from from the University on the edge of from campus," Wilson explained. years. Electronics Lab to the four build- private owners by Conductron, Willow Run Airport in Ypsilanti. He said that any transfer would The Conductron site has been who left with him to form the cor- ings on the site, which have a total which was founded in 1960 by Receiving $4.5 million of its $7 be over a "fairly long time scale." vacant since January of last year poration profited handsomely. Ten Pages tmpus VP Pierpont -Associated Press Defeat for Kennedy Senator Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.) leaves the Senate Demo- cratic caucus room yesterday after he was ousted as Majority Whip. See story, page 3. TRIBAL COUNCIL: Local police blasted or recent drug raids By ART LERNER The Ann Arbor Tribal Council and four other community prganizations yesterday sharply criticized local law enforce- ment agencies for their involvement in drug raids on three Ann Arbor houses Tuesday, in which five people were arrested. The council, a coalition of youth groups, released a state- ment in conjunction with Drug Help, Inc., the White Panther Party, Ozone House, Inc., and Free People's Clinic, Inc. The statement, released at a press conference yesterday tisted "recent police actions" that the council opposes, in- cluding: Blacks to boycott Nixon talk WASHINGTON (R) - All 12 black members of the House of Representatives announced yesterday that they plan to boycott President N i x o n 's State of the Union address to- night. "Your consistent refusal to hear the pleas and concerns of black Americans dictates our decision to be absent," they said in a letter. "Basic needs and obligations to our nation and our constituents h a v e been ignored by this admin- istration." The 12 cited specific fights they had waged with the 'administra- tion over the voting rights act, legal aid programs, and the Job Corps and aid to education. "Two years ago in your inau- gural address you promised to bring us together," they said. "However, your policies and poli- tics have divided this nation more than it ever has been divided. You have aroused and encouraged the fears and prejudices of many. "The divisive nature of this ac- tion has resulted in pitting the rural areas against the cities, the rich against the poor, black against white, and young against old. You have failed to give the, moral leadership necessary to guide and unify this nation in times of crisis." All 12 black representatives are Democrats. Sen. Edward Brooke, (R-Mass.), the only black member of the Senate, could not be reached immediately for comment on the boycott. His office said it was not known if he was aware of the letter. The congressmen's letter was released through the office of Rep. William Clay, (D-Mo). "You have shown by your com- ments on fair housing and school desegregation enforcement, that black Americans can look forward to more of the same from this administration, call it a 'punitive backlash' or 'pure racism'," the black congressmen said. They complained that the Presi- dent had refused to grant them an audience, and added, 'We now refuse to, be part of your audience when you deliver your 'State of the Union' address," which they added could have little import- ance for blacks. Among the blacks boycotting the speech is Rep. John Conyers (D-Mich) from Detroit. Conyers yesterday lost in his bid to de- feat Rep. Carl Albert (D-Okla) as Speaker of the House. ASC ends submits to fact-finding Union vote supports bargaining committee By SARA FITZGERALD and JOHN MITCHELL The membership of Local 1583 of the American Federa- tion of State, County, and Municipal Employes (AFSCME) accepted the recommendation of its bargaining committee yesterday to submit the union's contract dispute with the University to a fact-finder and return to work. The action ended a two-day strike by 2,600 service and maintenance employes as workers went back to their jobs throughout the afternoon. The vote, 713 in favor of the proposal and 293 in favor of continuing the strike, came at the most heavily attended walkout, meeting Union in the President union's history. Charles M c - -- -Associated Press Mayor's panel Members of the 15-member legislative committee of the U.S. Conference of Mayors meet news- men yesterday. The group criticized President Nixon's revenue-sharing proposals. See story, page 3. PLAN CRITICIZED: iass-fais system of grading discussed at Regents mreeting Cracken emphasized, however, that the union would still be able to reject or accept the recom- mendations of the fact-finder. Yesterday's action in effect sup- erceded the union's decision Sun- day night to continue the walkout until a new contract was rati- fied. Many workers returned to their jobs throughout the afternoon, but it was difficult to estimate ab- senteeism. At University Hospital, absen- teeism dropped from 71 per cent during the day shift yesterday to 15 per cent last night, according to hospital spokesman Lou Graff. Most of the janitorial workers returned to the classroom build- ings and food deliveries to t h e dorms resumed.' All dorms expect to be in full operation today. Absenteeism where it occurred was attributed to the late vote to return to work, which came in the middle of the day shift. Many workers did not feel it was worth coming in for just a few hours. Though other employes simply decided not to come to work, there was no apparent intention of wildcat striking. Negotiators for the union and the University met with fact- finder William Ellmann for the See AFSCME, Page 10 Army studies sheep deaths GARRISIN, Utah QP) - More than 1,000 sheep are dead or dy- ing of an undetermined cause on a remote ranch in western Utah, the Utah governor's office said yesterday. The area is about 150 miles southwest of Skull Valley, where 6,400 sheep died in 1968 in a se- cret nerve gas test at the Army's Dugway Proving Ground. The Army at first denied re- sponsibility for the 1968 sheep deaths, but~ later acknowledged that nerve gas sprayed from an airplane had been the cause. Of the latest incident, a spokes- man for the Deseret Test Center at Ft. Douglas in Salt Lake City said, "We are looking into the matter." Deseret Test Center operates Dugway, an Army testing area for chemical and germ warfare agents in the desert of western Utah. State Veterinarian J a m e s Schoenfield was dispatched to the site of the new sheep deaths via a Utah Highway Patrol plane. Two veterinarians from the U. S. --"Unnecessary searches of a highly questionable nature," one of which "illegally removed Ann Ar- bor Argus (a local underground newspaper) bu s in e s s records, oney, and equipment;" -"Excessively high bail;" -"Illegal confiscation of Mich- igan Daily films of the arrests" outside the Argus house, and sub- sequent "ruin" of the film; -"The illegal cutting of the hair of two males prior to release" ,nd; --The "issuance of public state- ments by the police" suggesting that arrest for hard drug charges had been made, "although no war- rant contained such information." Council members said that a substance confiscated by police as uspected heroin was actually or- ganic sea salt. Yesterday's statement charges that the raids severely threaten See GROUPS, Page 10 Board backs anti-bias plan By ALAN LENHOFF The Ann Arbor Board of Educa- tion voted Wednesday night to commit the school system to a program designed to combat al- leged racism in the schools, but declined to appropriate sufficient funds for implementing the plan. Included in the program were plans for an increase in the num- ber of black employes in the schools, the formation of a black curriculum committee, and the de- velopment of procedures by which employes considered racist may be dismissed. Only $2,500 was committed by the board. These funds will be See SCHOOL, Page 10 By BOB SCHREINER "I wonder what he's going to do," Regent Lawrence Lindemer said yesterday, "when he wants to get into graduate school, or when he gets out in the world and finds it's. all there in dollars and cents." The "he" to which Lindemer (R-Stockbridge) referred at yes- terday afternoon's regental open hearing was any student who might graduate from the Univer- sity with written evaluations and passes or fails to show for h i s coursework instead of the tradi- tional letter grades. The merits of the pass-fail grad- ing system was the prime topic of discussion during the hour-long meeting attended by seven of the eight Regents and many top Uni- versity administrators. The hearing marked the first official regental function for new-C ly elected James Waters (D-Mus- kegon) and Paul Brown (D-Pe- tosky) and Regent Gerald Dunn (D-Lansing). The Regents expressed a great deal of interest in the workings and implications of a pass-fail grading system, and listened in- tently as Residential College his- tory lecturer Kathryn Sklar and Scott Bass, '71, of the Student Counseling Office explained it. A few of the Regents were skep- tical about the practical value of any graduing system which does not compare students against some standard norm and other students. "After all, we are in a com- petitive world," Lindemer said. The Regents expressed parti- cular concern over how graduate and professional schools, which generally admit applicants on a highly competitive basis, regard non-graded course-credits in mak- ing their decisions. "The pass-fail system poses something of a problem for us because grades are most helpful in picking qualified applicants," said law school Assistant D e a n Matthew McCauley. "We are ac- tually anxious about pass-fail. I don't want to stand in the way of educational innovation, but I have and evaluations accompany the students' transcripts. The Regents' interest in the pass-fail question was kindled by their visit to the RC last t e r m . Several RC students expressed concern that having a primarily non-graded transcript might jeop- ardize their chances of being ad- mitted to graduate school, ac- cording to Regent Robert Brown (R-Kalamazoo). See REGENTS, Page 10 Radicalparty to hold convention " Bureau of Land Management also were en route. Spokesmen at both the Deseret Test Center at Ft. Douglas in Salt Lake City and at the Pentagon said officials were looking into reports of the dead sheep. A spokesman for the Deseret Test Center said only: "We are looking into the reports. Dugway Proving Ground has not tested toxic agents of any type in the open air since the ban was im- posed by Public Law 91-121 in No- vember 1969." In the 1969 defense appropria- tions bill, there was a section banning testing of nerve gas or other toxic agents without 30-day - prior notification to Congress. In Washington, Sen. Wallace F. Bennett, (R-Utah), said the Army told him no request had been made and no tests had taken place. By ANDY ZACK Ann Arbor's new radical party will begin tonight to formulate a platform, create a functioning structure, and nominate can- didates for the April city elections, as its three-day convention opens. The new party hopes to create a political force in Ann Arbor capable of "functioning Workshops to formulate the party's plat- form proposals will be held all day tomor- row at the Union. Among the topics con- sidered will be housing, sexism, community services, university-city relations, youth cul- ture, taxes, and the party structure. The adoption of platform planks is scheduled for tomorrow. in which particular races candidates will be entered. State law currently requires that to quali- fy for a place on the ballot, new parties must gather a number of signatures of registered voters equal to one percent of the votes cast statewide for the winner in the most recent Secretary of State election. r .n..a 4 .n ...,is. rrntl, -.l nrnnncinlfl- n