FINANCIAL SQUEEZE See Editorial Page .do I 4.it i an D~Ait POLARIZED High-3 Low-23 See Today for details Eighty-Four Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXV, No. 104 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, February 4, 1975 Ten Cents Ten Pages COBB UPROAR CONTINUES tCfYOU SEE M M CALXrDNY Timely matter The state Legislature is expected to wind up its deliberations this week on a bill to put Michigan on Daylight Saving Time (DST) Feb. 23. The State Affairs Committee is expected to report on the issue today and the full House will air the find- ings tomorrow. The Senate has already approved the bill, DST is not scheduled to start in Michigan until April 27 according to tradition, but the date- change measure was introduced as an energy- saving device. 0 Bring on spring The fabled Punxsutawney groundhog failed to see his shadow for the first Groundhog Day in 15 years, and his devotees say that means spring is on the way. The weather was clear and frosty atop Gobbler's Knob at the 7:31 a.m. sunrise as several hundred onlookers watched the groundhog inter- rupt his hibernation and emerge from his tree- stump burrow. The idea of "weatherhogs" was brought to the U. S. by the Pennsylvania Dutch who thought hedgehogs could forecast weather. Since there are no hedgehogs here, the ground- hog serves as a substitute. Happenings..-. . . are wide-ranging today. Beginning bright and early this morning, the Institute for the Study of Mental Retardation is planning a Career Infor- mation Day from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. at 130 S. First St. . . . or if planning a community studies lecture series suits your fancy, bring your lunch to rm. 2204 in the Union at noon . . . the Women's intercollegiate tennis team is having its tryouts at S p.m. at the Tennis and Track Building. Bring along some spare tennis balls . . . the Residential College lecture series is featuring History Prof. James Vann at the E. Quad Greene Lounge. He will speak on "History as art and as science." . . . the Women's Community Center requests all wo- men interested in helping to plan "International Women's Day" to come to the Anderson Rm. at the Union at 7.30 . . . Frederick Wiseman's docu- mentary "Hospital" will be presented by the Ann Arbor Health Collective-Medical Collective for Hu- man Rights at 7:30 in the Kuenzel rm. of the Union. A discussion on health issues will follow . .. Hillel is sponsoring a part of the series, "Liv ing Jewish Catalog," a discussion on "Keeping Kosher, How and Why" at 8 p.m. at Hillel. Cotton tale London's Playboy Club employes proved they were unbugged Bunnies when they voted, along with other employes of the Playboy organization against joining the Teamsters Union. Before the 422-192 vote Sunday night, the Bunnies picketed the Club carrying banners urging "Vote no union." Playboy chief, Victor Lownes, threatened to be hopping mad if the staff voted to unionize and promised to end the fringe benefits which include free meals, free staff parties, and free beauty treatments. He got his way, and the Bunnies kept their fringes. Ethereal birth control? Pope Paul VI said Sunday that celibacy and vir- ginity of Roman Catholic priests and nuns are "happy and easy sacrifices" when coupled with religious devotion. The Pope spoke these gripping words during a mass in St. Peter's Basilica in which hundreds of priests and nuns living in Rome renewed their vows of poverty, chastity, and obe- dience. " Change of heart Woman police officer Tanya Haveluck was ap- parently without luck when she was forced to re- sign from the police force in Bedford, England after falling in love with a man she arrested. Haveluck charged her lover, Raffale Silvestri, with causing a breach of peace during a street disturb- ance. When the romance blossomed, the police de- partment said the relationship was undesirable and told her to give up Raffalle or give up the police. Tanya opted for unemployment. On the inside.. . Edit page features Paul O'Donnell's look at governmental repression in Spain . . . Dave Bur- henn reviews the Tokyo String Quartet for Arts Page . . . and Bill Crane and Al Hrapsky report on the basketball game in Indiana for Sports Page. On the outside. .. Changes are in the wind. A front coming in from Flemin By JUDY RUSKIN, DAN BIDDLE and SARA RIMER In an apparent contradiction of earlier admin- istration statements, President Robben Fleming yesterday told the literary college (LSA) faculty that the University could not reach "mutual sat- isfactory terms" with LSA deanship nominee Jewell Cobb because an unnamed department refused to grant her'tenure. Fleming said, "You'll find no college in which there is a dean without a tenured professorship in that college. This is the accepted course of action." HOWEVER, in a letter last Wednesday to the women's commission, Vice President for Aca- demic Affairs Frank Rhodes said: "In view of some recent public comments I should perhaps explain that it is not unusual for those appointed to University administrative positions from out- side institutions to accept these appointments Facult) hedges without having simultaneous offers of tenured faculty appointments." Cobb, currently dean of Connecticut College, was unanimously chosen by the Board of Regents over two weeks ago to fill the deanship post. While Fleming said he was presenting the fa:ulty with "the facts as far as they are known on tenure issue -confirmed reports to The Daily that the zool- ogy department voted January 24 to refuse tenure for Cobb. The department, according to the earlier press release, had been charged with reaching a quick tenure decision by Rhodes after Cobb ques- tioned the University's original two-year, no- 'You'll find no college in which there is a dean without a tenured pro- fessorship in that college. This is the accepted course of action.' -Fleming granting of tenure for any professorship ordinar- ily takes several weeks or even months. Some sources expressed shock that Cobb's tenure de- cision had come quickly in the course of the dean- ship negotiations. Nursing School Dean Carolyne Davis, who was appointed in June 1973, said she - like Cobb - had requested tenure at the time she was offered the deanship. But, Davis continued, she was told by the administration that tenure would have to come through the normal lengthy process within the nursing school. She stressed that she took the post on "good faith" that the school would later seriously con- sider granting her tenure. ZOOLOGY Chairman Gans has refused to com- ment on the tenure issue. He has also refused to confirm or deny reports that his department re- fused Cobb's tenure to protect "its own man - See FLEMING, Page 2 credit to us" of the ongoing deanship controversy, at no time in his 20-minute address did he name either Cobb or the department which refused to grant her tenure. BUT A PRESS release prepared earlier in the day - and then retracted before publication tenure-guarantee offer. The statement said the Zoology department reached its decision in 36 hours, but chairman Carl Gans assured Rhodes that the vote to re- fuse Cobb was "impartial and uninfluenced by recent publicity." OFFICIALS IN LSA have confirmed that the ROTC LSA ousts program proposal by an overwhelming majority By SARA RIMER The literary col- lege (LSA) faculty yester- day overwhelmingly voted down a proposal that would grant academic credit to some Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) classes. In thrashing out the broader principles of ROTC's presence on cam- pus, the faculty ignored University President Rob- ben Fleming's urging that the debate focus on ques- tions of academic merit. ASSOCIATE Dean of Curric- ulum Jean Carduner asserted, "The faculty didn't vote on the report. They voted on how they felt about ROTC. The great ma- jority is still strongly opposed to the idea of ROTC." The LSA Curriculum Com- mittee appointed a sub-commit- tee last October to examine the academic quality of Army, Air Force,and Navy ROTC courses in order to determine whether some courses merit the aca- demic credit which was elimi- nated by the LSA faculty in 1970. After the sub-committee's re- port garnered support from both the Curriculum Commit- tee and the Executive Commit- tee, most reliable observers predicted that the faculty would recommend some kind of change in the faculty code. HOWEVER, SOME students and professors criticized the Curriculum and Executive Com- mittees' purely academic re- view charging the two bodies with evading the broader politi- cal and moral implications of supporting the military on campus. Zoology Prof. and Curriculum Committee member David Shappirio observed last night, "An awful lot of people came in there with their minds made up." He labeled ROTC "to some extent a symbol," adding, "That's what's objected to." DURING THE hour's debate attended by a record 400 faculty members and concerned stu- dents, virtually no one adopted a firm pro-ROTC stance. Economics Prof. W: H. An- derson, origirator of a highly respected 1969 recommendation that the LSA faculty eliminate credit for ROTC courses, de- clared y esterday, "We chose to fight ROTC on the wrong grounds the last time - fortun- ately we wan. If we continue to fight it on the wrong gro'inds, we'll eventually lose." He emphasized the "funda- mental incompatibility between the Defense Department and the college." ANDERSON branded the De- fense Department as at "its best a totalitarian institution in the technical sense whose sin- gle, overriding mission is the containment of Communism." See LSA, Page 7 AP Photo PRESIDENT FORD signs his 1976 Budget message yesterday as out going Director of the Office of Management and Budget, Roy Ash (right) watches. The message was delivered to Congress receiving negative responses from Congressional Democrats. Ford proposes budget; Congress protests cuts Daily Photo by STUART HOLLANDER About 75 students marched around the Diag yesterday to protest possible reinstatement of ROTC course credit. Later, the LSA faculty overwhelming voted down the measure. 75 protest credit for ROTIC classes WASHINGTON (Reuter) - President Ford yesterday un- veiled a budget containing a record peacetime deficit despite proposed drastic curbs on gov- ernment spending - and he warned the Democratic-con- trolled Congress it must coop- erate to achieve economic sta- bility. -But Congress reacted coldly, particularly to requested spend- ing cuts in such popular, vote- winning areas as social and medical programs, and Ford faced a bruising fight that will have a bearing on the 1976 presidential election. WHILE defending his $349 billion budget as "a compas- sionate one," Ford said reces- sion, inflation and unemploy- ment would continue in the months ahead. This grim forecast cut right across the President's earlier optimistic prediction that inf a- tion would be whipped by the middle of 1976-America's bi- centennial year. "If we are to achieve long- range economic stability in this country, free from ever-rising inflation, we must put into ef- fect nermanent redUctions in a reporter. Another prominent Democrat, Senator Hubert Humphrey of Minnesota, indicated Congress would not go along with cuts recommended by President Ford. SENATOR Humphrey said he expected the deficit to be bigger than the $52 billion Ford an- nounced, but he gave no figure. It would be "unthinkable" for Congress to limit social security increases to the five per cent figure requested by the Presi- dent, he added. Republican Senator Jacob Javits of New York said he was upset by the budget request for $1.3 billion for public service jobs, saying at least $7.8 billion was needed and a freeze should be put on defense spending. THE FORD proposal included part of a $16 billion rebate of 1974 taxes for individuals and corporations. Congress is al- See PRESIDENT, Page'7 Tunneling declines as cracks down on explorers By SUANNE TIBERIO have been doing it for quite some time. With the days of phone booth stuffing and No one knows when it started, but most goldfish swallowing behind us, University stu- tunnelers agree that like any tradition, it is dents are intent on creating still different passed down from older students. forms of entertainment. However, tunneling, THE FASCINATION behind tunneling is ob- one of the more popular crazes in recent vious; at any time of day or night, someone years, also appears headed for extinction be- could be creeping along the invisible tunnels cause of a prohibitory University policy, from building to building. There are hundreds Th cnw of Avn rn h-Tnyrit ra if: mm-- s-s a nh-sa n- a s---n - -rn- nm a '__2 By STEPHEN HERSH About 75 students marched yesterday in the crisp, wintry air of the Diag, carrying bright yellow placards proclaiming, "No credit for ROTC," and loudly chanting such slogans as "One, two, three, four; no more ROTC, no more war." After rallying outdoors for a half hour, the group gathered in Angell Auditorium A, to at- tend the faculty meeting where the issue of reinstating literary college (LSA) credit for ROTC (Reserve Officers Training Corps) was debated and voted down. THE DEMONSTRATION was planned almost a week ago by the Committee to Stop ROTC (CSROTC). The group, which formulated its strategies last Wednesday, also set up a drive to contact professors expected to be against ROTC urging them to attend the faculty meet- ing. The Diag rally began at 3:30 . ... .: .. , we oppose ROTC being a part of this University. ROTC helps the military carry on efforts like the war in Indochina, so we want to reduce its efficiency however we can." THE demonstrators occupied a sizeable portion of the audi- torium which housed the facul- ty meeting. University Presi- See ROTC, Page 7 Residency re oulations challenged By DAVID BLOMQUIST Two University students have filed a class action suit against the Regents in an effort to over- turn the present residency regu- lations. The suit, which was filed last