Mammoth Blue Wave smashes iini See story, Page 9. SUNDAY DAILY See Editorial Page Y Lw iwfl1~ :43 a t t]y HOPELESS High-mid 50's Low-upper 30's Turning cloudy, rain tomorrow Vol. LXXXI, No. 58 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Sunday, November 8, 1970 Ten Cents Ten Pages US. government games: H iding the censor WASHINGTON (DNS)-A Colum- bia Broadcasting System lobbyist whose identity is classified as a de- fense secret by the federal govern- ment is serving as the nation's secret standby censor. The man who would oversee a plan to keep defense secrets out of print and off the air if the President de- clared a national emergency is Theo- dore F. Koop, a veteran newspaper and radio executive who was the na- tion's deputy director of censorship - during World War II. The existence of the secret censor was disclosed recently in a letter to Nixon by Samuel J. Archibald, Wash- ington representative of the Univer- sity of Missouri's Freedom of Infor- mation center. Though the identity of the nation's standby director of censorship had been public information during the Truman, Eisenhower and Kennedy administrations, President Johnson without explanation made the identi- ty of the censor a defense secret. The policy has been continued in the Nixon administration despite the recommendation of Herbert Klein, the President's director of communi- cations, that Koop's identity be made public. Klein himself is confident that Nixon ultimately will act favor- ably on his recommendation. "Herb has recommended on paper that it be declassified," says a Klein spokesman. "It just takes a while to go through the system." The'recommendation was formally made to the President in mid-August, the spokesman said. No one in the federal government seems precisely sure why the censor was classified as a defense secret in the first place. However, Archibald was told that the reluctance to declassify the cen- sor's identity stemmed from concern that it would publicize the adminis- tration's "censorship plan" and in- vite criticism from news media. The censorship plan, last revised in 1963, would go into effect when- ever the President declares a national emergency. It calls for 26 adminis- trators, designated "executive reserv- ists,' to report to a secret Maryland headquarters near Washington, D.C. These executive reservists, who in- clude newsexecutives, businessmen, professors and government officials, would be in charge of administering the "stand-by voluntary censorship code" that has been drawn up in consultation with news media. Under the code, media would be instructed not to publish information of value to an enemy unless it had been clear- ed with a censor. President Kennedy considered in- voking the code during the Cuban Missile crisis of 1963 and President Johnson considered the same action during the Dominican criss of 1965. But the code was never invoked. Archibald became concerned with the issue of the stand-by censor last May, when he asked George A. Lin- coln, director of the U.S. office of emergency preparedness, s e v e r a 1 questions about federal plans for cen- sorship of news, media during a na- tional emergency. Lincoln answered all of the ques- tions except one about the identity of the director of censorship, which Lincoln said carried a "security clas- sification." In his letter to Nixon, Archibald made no attack on the censorship plan. But he pointed out that the identity of the censorship chief had always been a matter of public record. "If any emergency justifies the im- position of government censorship in a democratic society, the members of that society have a right to know the identity of the censors," Archi- bald wrote. "This concept is basic to the democratic process." The concept was honored, Archi- bald contended, during both world wars. Archibald's letter did not name the censor, whom it identified as "a lob- byist for one of the giant corpora- tions." The letter, however, closely described the commercial activities of CBS and sources within the gov- ernment conceded that the censor was Koop. "It just doesn't make sense not to name him," conceded one official. "The names of the 26 persons who would administer the system have been made public." But the office of emergency plan- ning has steadfastly refused to iden- tify the censor, although the officials take pains to point out that the clas- sification was originally imposed by President Johnson. Archibald, who maintains that See SECRET, Page 10 Herbert Klein Jury acquits 7 defendants of bank arson SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (1P)- A Super- ior Court jury yesterday acquitted seven persons accused of arson at the Isla Vista branch of the Bank of America, which was burned to the ground by a later fire in the riot-tori college community. The jurors reached no verdict in four other arson cases, but convicted four de- fendants of misdemeanor charges. The $250,000 bank, considered by many students to be a symbol of the Establish- ment, was set ablaze shortly after mid- night on Feb. 26. Gov. Ronald Reagan sent in National Guard troops at the end of an explosive week of protests, fires, and mass arrests. County officials prosecuted the 11 indicted persons, most of them University of Cali- fornia students, not for the fire that de- stroyed the bank, but for a blaze four hours earlier that was quickly extinguished. Though the jury convicted nobody of arson, it convicted four defendants of mis- demeanor rioting. One of those four was also convicted of inciting to riot and another of malicious mischief. The trial involved a total of 45 charges against the 11. The jury had deliberated 15 days follow- ing an 18-week trial, the longest in Santa Barbara history. A final touch of drama in the trial was added after the eight-woman, four-man panel announced that two defendants, Wil- liam Hoiland, 22, and Richard E. Fisk, 21, had been found guilty of arson. Defense at- torneys challenged the verdict, and one juror, Joseph Keefe, a university librarian, rose and said he disagreed with the guilty decree. Judge John A. Westwich then changed it to "no verdict." While the arson charges pertained to the earlier fire, no-one was ever charged with the actual burning of the bank be- cause law officers were unable to link any- one to the act. Some people attributed the February dis- ruptions that led to the burning of the bank to the Vietnam war, others to outside speak- ers and Isla Vista's large transient popula- tion. But students blamed crowded conditions, high rents and poor services in the off- campus community of 13,000 and a univer- sity administration they felt had slapped them in the face by firing a popular an- thropology instructor. 'One in a billion' frog to visit 'U' A small plane will take off tomorrow morning from Oxford, Ohio heading for the University with one VIP passenger aboard. A Miami University biologist will go along on the charter flight as an escort, because the star passenger is the "Guttman saddle frog," named after Miami biologist Sheldon ' Guttman, who found it in a pond. The frog is a type of albino with a saddle shaped marking on his back formed by pig- marl+ T+ I.T +is a th ,anrla *i a+ inprpctc+, TTi -Associated Press Funeral rites for Cardinal Cushing Mourners crowd the Cathedral of the Holy Cross yesterday in Boston, as Cardinals of the Roman Catholic Church attired in white vestments-a departure from the tra- ditional black or purple-march down the aisle for the funeral services of Richard Cardinal Cushing. Fleming defends legality of closed Regents -meetings Nixon lowers estimate of welfare cost WASHINGTON (P)-The Nixon adminis- tration has told Congress his family-as- sistance welfare reform proposal would en- roll 4.6 million fewer persons and cost $300 million less a year than originally estimated, it was learned yesterday. Administration officials who disclosed the sharply-revised estimates conceded their motive was winning over Senate opponents who argue that family assistance would vastly increase welfare roles. The new estimates are based not on eligi- ble participants, as was done before, but rather on the number of persons believed likely to apply for family-assistance bene- fits. The reform measure, now stalled in the Senate Finance Committee, would national- ize the disparate welfare system and provide a minimum cash floor of $1,600 a year to a needy urban family of four. It would also bolster job training pro- grams and create a network of child-care centers so welfare mothers could work. The administration presented its revised estimates to the Senate Finance panel in October, saying the earlier figures "clearly overstate likely numbers of program partici- pants." Under the new calculations, family as- sistance would enroll 16 million persons in 1971 and increase the present $8.7-billion federal welfare cost by $3.9 billion. The pre- vious estimates were 20.6 million partici- pants and a $4.2 billion increase. The initial estimates assumed all eligible persons would apply and made no provision for a progressive reduction in case load "as a result of the strengthened work require- ments, employment and child-care pro- grams," according to the documents. The presentation cites the case in New York state where only 25 per cent of those eligible are drawing benefits from a welfare program for the working poor. The administration also indicated last week it would be willing to abolish the food-stamp program and apply the savings toward a $2,200 income minimum, if Con- gress wishes. Officials emphasized, however, they still prefer the $1,600 minimum plus eligibility for an additional $860 in food stamps. -Daily-Jim Judkis Mammoth Blue ballet Defensive end Pete Newell (82) smashes into Illinois quarterback Mike Wells (12) and causes his pass to go errant. Newell led Michigan's harassment of the 111ini offense in the Wolverines' 42-0 shutout yesterday. UM9NEWS, RECORD Probe claims 'U' distorts news on HEW bias report By DAVE CHUDWIN Amid indications that student leaders may take legal action to prohibit closed sessions at Regents meetings, President Rob- ben Fleming has defended the sessions on the grounds that they conform to state law. Fleming, in an Oct. 28 letter to Student Government Council President Marty Scott, said private discussions involve either oc- casions when "the subject would be pre- jpdiced by premature disclosure" or when the Regents simply wish to discuss some matter informally and without any action resulting." The letter was a response to an SGC re- quest for information on when and under what procedures the Regents have met secretly, Scotts said yesterday. The Regents typically spend about 14 hours in their monthly meetings here, only four of which are usually public. State Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley ruled in August, 1969 that any action taken by the Regents in accordance with their rules must be done in public session. In the letter, Fleming said the Regents have long believed that they are not re- quired to discuss publicly actions which they feel must be "momentarily confidential." Fleming said the Regents act privately on: -"Local property purchases within fixed monetary guidelines which are not made known to the purchaser; -"Negotiations with one or more candi- diates for a particular position without mak- ing this information public until later;" -Nominations of "architects for appoint- ment by the State Budget Director without mvAinrknrmtan nomc iintil thorv n,'o named items a g r e e d upon in secret. Similarly, public minutes of Regents meet- ings often refer to approval of numbered exhibits which are never described. During closed sessions in the past the Regents have taken private action on staff and faculty salaries, general fund budget figures and the establishment of a policy that "students who were arrested and have forfeited bond would not be allowed to re- register until the criminal case was disposed of." Scott said SGC is investigating these al- legations to see if they are true and can be proved." See REGENTS', Page 10 By MARK DILLEN A women's group fighting alleged dis- crimination in University employment prac- tices yesterday accused University adminis- tration publications of "news manipula- tion." Probe, a group of women University staff members and students whose avowed pur- pose is to "upgrade the position of women in the University," charged that many Uni- versity information releases suppressed and distorted news of the recent investigation by the Department of Health, Education and Welfare. HEW recently blocked federal grants to UNION CALLS REPRESENTATIVES the University and 11 other schools because of sex bias in hiring and employment prac- tices. President Fleming is scheduled to meet with HEW officials in Chicago Tuesday to discuss plans to end the discriminatory policies. In a statement yesterday, Probe gave ex- amples of news coverage they believed was distorted. Probe said an Oct. 6 University press re- lease indicated the University on its own initiative provided HEW investigators with extensive statistical informaton. "The Unversity as a federal contractor is required by law to provide whatever in- formation HEW asks for," the statement said. "They had no choice in the matter." The women also said the release tried to justify low positions of many women em- ployes by inferring that all employes who are wives of students are "temporary" workers. More importantly, the women asserted, apparent increases in female employment in top level University jobs and decreases in lower positions are not the result of fairer practices as they claim the University sug- gests. A story in the Oct. 15 UM News said "sig- nificant increases in top employment clas- sifications are evident, while corresponding- ly significant decreases in the lowest cate- gory" had been achieved for women." Probe claimed lay-offs and automation are responsible for the apparent decrease, while the increase in women in top level positions is caused by "manipulation of job titles not nonmotinne " GM, UA Wintensify bargaining DETROIT (AP)-It became increasingly apparent yester- day that General Motors and the United Auto Workers are engaged in make-or-break negotiations to halt a strike now in its eighth week. Some indication of whether a settlement or continuing stalemate will result from the current talks is expected by Wednesday. Hopes for a settlement have been raised because a special subcommittee of negotiators has been operating under a news blackout for the past nine days, and top-level sources have indicated there has been progress toward possible settle- ment in the past three days. News blackouts usually are called only when settlements are near. The TUAW has summoned its General Motors Connnil. At-the-plant working agreements, which always supple- ment the national contract, are the likely key to whether there wil be a settlement this week and a return to production this month by General Motors. Thus far there have been 79 local-level settlements out of 152 separate UAW-GM bargaining units. Of these, 34 have been in so-called key plants vital to GM's return to production. The tempo in local-level settlements involving such things as working conditions has picked up in recent days. There were seven reported Thursday and Friday and four additional settlements were reached Friday night. At the General Motors Building, where the central nego- tiations are conducted an extra elevatnr was nnerating Aver