F or TUNING IN TO NIXON, See Editorial Page Daily s cbscri tions, phone 764-0558 A& 40P 411 t an 471. 40 a t," CLASSY High-85 Low--60 Cloudy, chance of thundershowers Vol. LXXXI, No. 2AAnn Arbor, Michigan - Thursday, September 3, 1970 Free Issue Sixteen Pages CHURCH LEADERS MEET: FBI charges Wel fare sit-ins go on at two churches By TAMMY JACOBS Sit-ins continued at two Ann Arbor churches yesterday while church leaders consid- ered the demands of two wel- fare groups fpr immediate funds totalling $170,000. During a three-hour meeting last night, the Administrative a : ;lwBoard of the First Methodist Church committed the church to a7 ' x , raising $25,000 for the "poor and disenfranchised" people of the County within three months, but r$failed to specifically designate an }. agent fog administering the funds. However, the two groups are demanding $50,000 from the First ' Methodist Church immediately and .recognition as agents of the county's poor. The two groups are the Wash- tenaw County Black Educational D e iv e l o p m e n t League, Inc. (BEDL) and the Washtenaw County Welfare Rights Organiza- tion (WRO). Members of t h e groups have been sitting in at the First Presbyterian Church since Aug. 19 to press their demands. They moved into the First Metho- dist Church Tuesday. The protesters say they will stay r e 'at both churches until they are" Dily-Richard Lee. forced to leave. In addition to the money from relax on Dtag- the First Methodist Church, the welfare groups are demanding immediate sums of $100,000. from )n 1iag to the First Presbyterian Church and $20,000 from St. Francis of Assisi' ' Catholic Church, according to Mrs. Kate Emerson of WRO. The o-7sin 1 S funds would be used to clothe the school children whose par- ents are on welfare. SCHROCK The payments which the groups' ily received a tour of central are demanding would be the first 1the registration line, but had installments in reparations pay-; the rgistrtihoning bujts aments which would eventuallyt in student housing projects: total $60 million dollars f r o m nt, village in the northeast county churches, These f u n d s would provide clothes, housing,r a, were first pitched Monday daycare centers, cooperative food for those who were unable to stores, a medical and dental cen-f arkets wter, training programs and drug - abuse centers.s has told TU representatives The demands stem originallyI )bject to the tents as long as from the "Black Manifesto," aE and the tent housing does not document which calls for nation- develop, " We will step in and . wide reparations of $500,000,000 to blacks from churches and pro- c Fleming said at a meeting poses programs to utilize the 1 Tuesday with Steve Burghardt funds. However the present sit- and Lynn Listor of the Ten- See WELFARE, Page '7' ants Union, and Marty Scott, - president of Student Govern- | ment Council.e four in' blast at Wisconsin WASHINGTON (R) J. Edgar Hoover, director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, yesterday ordered a nation- wide search for four men sought in connection. with the bombing of the Army Mathematics Research 'enter at the Madison campus of the University of Wisconsin. The FBI identified the fugitives as Karleton Lewis Arm- strong, 22, Dwight Alan Armstrong, 19, his brother; David Sylvan Fine, ,18, and Leo Frederick Burt, 22, a summer stu- dent at the University of Wisconsin. A 33-year-old physicist, Robert E. Fassnacht, was killed, and three other persons were injured in the blast, which -Daily-Richard Lee Charles Thomas addresses sit-in supporters. Tent villagers JOB DISCRIMINATION? TU tents ByW. . Fall term students not on campus while winding through a good view of the, newest1 the Tenant's Union small te Diag area. The tents, -now about ten night as emergency housing f find units in the local housing T President Robben Fleming that the University will not o no sanitation problems develop spread. Should such problems remove it (the tent housing), 'Police, clash.,,. with myo n SBAM case bias to By IIESTI PULLING An nvrstigation into charges; that the University discriminates against women will resume thisI week as officials of the Depart- ment of Health, Education andI Welfare plan to probe Universityj files and personnel. The complaint against the Uni- versity was filed with the U.S. Department of Labor last May by, a local group-the Ann Arbor FO- CUS on Equal Employment for; Wonien (FOCUS) Two weeks ago an HEW investigating team began looking into the charges. "So far, we +r on't have any veri- fiable evidence of overt discrimi- On 11R~s probe on sex resume a~t TU, nation on the basis of sex," says of women by the University is Clifford Minton, head of the HEW discriminatory," a spokesman for By BOB SCIIREINER Mayor Robert Harris and the union representing the city's po- lice officers clashed over a state- ment made by the mayor urging a that a police officer be prosecut- ed immediately for his actions during the Black Action Move- hent class strike. The statement by Harris; made before City Council Monday night, referred to allegations that the police officer attempted to strike a black youth with his nightstick while the youth was pinned to the ground by another officer 'The incident allegedly took place dur- ing a confrontation last March, See MAYOR, Page 7 t I j v'! F. . ;.i ," ! : c ,! , The University appears to have cooperated with the Tenants Un- ion by temporarily halting the water sprinklers and other main- tenance operations in the Diag area. "This fall, as usual, most stu- dents have been unable to f i n d suitab*e' housing in Ann Arbor at prices which are reasonable by any stretch of the imagina- tion," said a Tenants Union leaf- let. "In fact, this year, hundreds of students cannot find any place to live at all." John Feldkamp, director of university housing, yesterday dis- agreed with the Tenants Union, saying that "this is a smooth year in finding students housing and if there is an absolute shortage, I am unaware of it." Y or the Titual for rep team. Minton adds that he and his assobiates have found "adminis- trative and procedural deficiencies in personnel administration which appear to operate to the disad- vantage of women." Members of FOCUS and other local- groups backing'the discrimi- nation charges claim that there are "more stones to turn over" in the investigation. "The HEW team is concentrat- ing on individual cases while our complaint was that the whole pat- tern of admission and employment comm'- * ) 1istrat10R dents, who had no opportunity to pre-register, were particularly up- set with thY inconvenience of the long lines. One transfer student, Bob Ap- plebaum, Grad, criticized t h e closing of Waterman from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. as "indefensible." No answer was typical as stu- dents explained why they had not pre-registered. 't One graduate student said that his department's courses a r e changed around so much, pre-re- gistration would be pointless. the group said yesterday. Another member of FOCUS, Kathy Shortridge, said it was dif- ficult to come up with individual' cases. "Women are rightly hesi- tant about coming to HEW-they are very vulnerable," she said. "We don't necessarily, think the talks will be recriminatin~g, but women are still in a difficult, posi tion," Mrs. Shortridge added. "If women) are afraid and have something to report, they should call me." The basis for the complaint is an executive order by former Pres- ident Lyndon Johnson' forbidding job discrimination on the basis of sex by federal contractgrs. FOCUS said the charges against the University stem from several incidents. "Nearly all clerical workers in the University are women, yet any complaints in reference to their work goes to a board of six men," a spokesman said. She also pointed out that only 6.6 per cent of the entire faculty are women and only 4.8 per cent of all full professors are women. Only 10.8 per cent of all associate professors are women and 7.2 per cent of the assistant professors are women. Today, the HEW team will re- sume interviewing people, going through University files, and hold random spot checks. A report will be filed when the investigation is completed. occurred on Aug. 24. The four people being sought are charged with sabotage, destruc- tion of government property rand conspiracy in connection with the bombing. Fugitive warrants for the four were issued after what Hoover described as "a very extensive in- vestigation." Fine was described by the FBI as night editor of the Wisconsin student newspaper, the D a i 1y Cardinal. The FBI said the elder Arm- strong brother had formerly at- tended the university and describ- ed his younger brother as a high school dropout._ Fine was identified by the FBI as a former staff member of the Heterodoxical Voice, a publication of the radical Students for a Democratic Society at the Uni- versity of Delaware. The FBI announcement said that the research center "for sev- eral years has been the target for demonstration activity by radical groups led by the :Stu- dents for a Democratic Society. The radicals protest it's exist- ence as a liason between the Uni- versity of Wisconsin, and the fed- eral government. "The Students for a Democratic Society vowed to use 1 means at their disposal t'd fort the Army CLARIFICATION There is a change in the football ticket information that appears on the first page of today's sports section. Group number four prioritynincludes those students whose ID num- ber bears the imprints F, G, P, A, J, K and Q or the number 7 or less to the right of your name. For further information, see page one of the second .section. Mathematics Research Center off the campus," the FBI said. Hoover said he has ordered a nationwide manhunt for the four, who he said should be considered armed and dangerous. ,The FBI announcement made no mention of the group calling' itself the "New Years Gang," which claimed responsibility for the bombing in a letter to the Daily Cardinal. George Baxtrum Jr., an FBI agent investigating the bombing, said in an affidavit that the 'two brothers told a family friend they had a large cache of explosives and planned a series of bonmbings. Research may be cu at colle',ges, r WASHINGTON (/P) - Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird expressed doubt yesterday about the future of military research on three col- lege campuses experiencing major disorders. Speaking to newsmen in his of- fice, Laird reflected on the recent bombing at the University of Wis- consin, which killed one man and caused several millions of dollars in damage to a government re- search building. "The pqint is that if these fd- eral research facilities on campus are causing administrators trou- ble there are other locations where they can be built;" Laird said. Laird said such locations might be a campus or perhaps under such an arrangement as at Stan- ford' University where a research institute has been incorporated outside the school's control. Laird said independent research institutes such nas the one at Stanford may be the answer, but "the whole natter needs to be looked at carefully and closely." In his brief tilk, Itaird also spoke of the movement of Soviet missile. ships toward the Carib- bean a'nd classified it as "signifi- cant." He avoided the word crisis or any similar term in referring to the. latest,; projected Soviet naval presence off the southeast- ern U.S. coast. The incident is notable because, he said, "the Soviet Union does not normally operate in the Carib- bean area with a task force of this makeup. The Soviet task force still is roughly three days out, sailing a southwesternly course from the Azores. It would be the third time since the summer of 1969 that a Soviet task force has entered the area. The latest Soviet task force in- cludes a landing ship, submarine tender, and a tanker, in addition to a guided-missile light cruiser and guided-missile destroyer. The earlier forces included missile-fir- ing surface ships and missile-fir- ing submarines as well. By ART LERNER There they stood . and stood and stood, waiting in line to register. At times, over, 1500 students were lined up single file attempting. to enter Waterman Gymnasium, the . registration center. r On Tuesday, the first day of registration, the line of students who had not pre-registered in the spring grew slowly at first and then quickly. By 10 a.m. it stretched from; Waterman past the Natural Re-j sources Bldg., through the En-' gineering Arch, bending around the corner of East University and .South University Aven~ues, and finally ending just past the flow-' er stand on East University. The wait to ger into the gym-. nasium averaged about three-and- a-half hours. And, if a student ran into trouble inside, he might have to start all over again. Ernest R. Zimmerman, assist- ant to the vice-president for aca- demic affairs, said yesterday that 8,000 to 10,000 students went through the registrations lines on Tuesday and Wednesday. If spread out over both days, this number of students can be accommodated without undue delay, Zimmerman said. However, when the doors were first opened for registration Tues- day, long lines had'already form- ed. Students registering Wednesday did not have to face 'such long lines. Their battles came inside as thley found many of the sec- tions in which they hoped to en- roll closed out. While some students vehement- ly objected to the long delay on Tuesday, most students were quietly resigned to the wait in line. One student camped out on the Diag overnight and trium- phantly entered Waterman within five minutes of its opening, only to discover that he owed the Uni- versity $35. Hp had to start fronm CRITICIZE 'U' PROGRAM Blacks hold special orientation 3 , By PAT MAHONEY Calling the University's orientation pro- gram ' irrelevant" to the needs of black freshmen, a group of black students has organized a separate orientation program focusing on the role of blacks at this campus and in the community. The program, entitled "Our Black Thing," began with a get acquainted meet- ing on Monday and will end on Saturday, with a "Stoned Soul Picnic" in Dearborn. The program is being sponsored by the Coalition for Use of Learning Skills work Prof. Madison Forster, who stressed that back to Africa movements w e r e impractical solutions to the problems of black people. 'Arthur Thomas, the co-chairman of the Model Cities Program in Dayton, Ohio, discussed black unity, and methods of achieving this in public schools. On Monday, the participants were ad- dressed by several black administrators at the University - Clyde Briggs, the per- sonnel manager for non-academic staff, Willy Brown, a financial aid counselor, adds that regular orientation program in- cludes presentations from Student Gov- ernment Council, Students for A Demo- cratic Society, and the Gay Liberation iFront, "but does not go into the purpose Socially, the program included a dance of black organizations" at the University. Tuesday night and a cultural presentation in which poetry was' read and a black band performed. According to Short, the program is emphasizing "getting the education and the knowledge to deal with the system," ciiy ta . n lu U a i ii scratch. Many of the students settled l