REGENT ACCOUNTS See Editorial Page Y *iiI ritga ilk IMPROVING High-34 Low-13 See Today for details Eighty-Four Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXV, No. 117 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, February 19, 1975 Ten Cents Eight Pages ~c R #F1G.+ E f. APPKAMCALL WDNLY Burglars clean up Ann Arbor police are looking for a team of burglars who virtually cleaned out the Loma Linda Restaurant located at 990 Broadway, fleeing with a bag containing $5,000 in cash and property valued at over $10,000. Police said the intruders also carried out 12 cases of liquor worth $800, and an electric guitar and amplifier worth a total of $9,475. Officers said there was no evidence of forced entry into the business place. Oficers said the safe, pried open and looted, was found later abandoned near Westal and in Wayne County. e Happenings ... are coming on strong today. Cinema Guild is sponsoring a lecture by P. Adams Sitney, co- director of the anthology film archives in New York City and editor of Film Culture, on "The Idea of the Self in Avant-Guard cinema" from 4-6 p.m. at the old Architecture and Design auditorium . . . the Wounded Knee Legal Defense/Offense Support Committee will hold a meeting for those interested at 7:30 p.m. in the Walker Rm. at the Union . . the Martin Sostre Defense Committee will present a film "The Frame-up" at 9, 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. in Rm. 126 in East Quad . . . Donald Michele will speak on "The Club of Rome: Perspectives and some Implications for Resource Policy and Management" at 1040 Nat. Resources Bldg. His speech is sponsored by the resource and policy management program . . . Anthro. 362 students can hear tapes of recent lectures today at 2 p.m. in Rm. 66 in the Residential College, courtesy of GEO . . . LSA counseling is sponsoring an in- formational meeting for potential English majors at Cook Rm. at the Law Quad at 7:30 as well as a meeting for potential economics majors at 4 p.m. in 1035 Angell, and a meeting for potential sociology concentrators in the sociology lounge on third floor of the LSA Bldg. at 4 p.m. e Old crackers After munching on a 13-year-old cracker, Rep. William Lehman (D-Fla.) has decided that $500,000 worth of food stored in fallout shelters in 1962 is fit for the elderly poor. "It tastes good when you're hungry," Lehman said Monday, after con- ceeding that the crackers were hard, tasteless and difficult to swallow. Lehman has asked Dade County officials to "order the distribution of this food to the county's elderly poor," in conjunction with the county's hot meal program. The supplies were stockpiled in 1962 by the Civil Defense offi- cials to support 123,000 people for 14 days. e Late birthday The Procrastinator's Club of America was an- gered by the early celebration of George Washing- ton's birthday, so the club picked Monday to cele- brate the birthday of Millard Fillmore, the nation's 13th president, who was born Jan. 7, 1800. "We wouldn't mind if Lincoln's birthday were celebrated Feb. 17 since he was born on Feb. 12, but we resent the idea of celebrating Washington's birthday ahead of time," said Chapter President Les Waas. On the inside * .. .. .Edit Page features a story by Steve Hersh who reveals his own part in the great snowball conspiracy . . . Sports Page introduces a new regular feature, the "Wolverine of the Week" and Arts Page includes the weekly food column by Robin Hergott. On the outside... A nice recovery. As the storm that brought us heavy snow last night moves away from us, the snow will taper off to flurries during the morning. There will be a chance of flurries this afternoon as skies remain mostly cloudy with slightly colder temperatures. As a large fair weather system moves in from the southwest tonight, fair skies and colder temperatures are in store. Highs will be 29-34, lows will plunge to 13-18. Chances of snow will decrease steadily to near zero at night. Thursday will be partly cloudy and slightly colder. ' to estroy som e student files By MARY HARRIS The literary college (LSA) plans to de- stroy portions of student counseling re- cords, according to Charles Morris, asso- ciate dean of LSA. The material to be re- moved consists of letters of recommenda- tion written mainly by high school coun- selors, which have been forwarded from the admissions office to the LSA counseling office. Morris reported that Vice President for Academic Affairs Frank Rhodes told him last week that the letters of recommenda- tion could not be made available to stu- dents. HOWEVER, because the LSA Adminis- trative Board, which has final decision- making authority over LSA counseling of- fices, had earlier declared that all mater- ial in students' files should be made avail- able to the students, Morris said there is no option now available to the board except removal of the files in question. Morris stated that "the feeling of the board is that if the material is not acces- sible to the student, it should not be acces- sible to anyone." He stressed that the de- cision to destroy the material was some- thing that they had been forced to do, not something of which he personally approved. Nevertheless, Rhodes had stated last term that he would be "appalled" by destruction of files, and that the administration strong- lv onnossed such a move. Rhodes was un- available for comment last night. HOWEVER, Edward Dougherty, assistant to Rhodes, contends that "the statement last term (opposing destruction of the re- cords) was not made for ever and ever." Ernest Zimmerman, another assistant to Rhodes, stated that "we did not ask the Administrative Board to do that (destroy files). They are at liberty to remove them; it's their decision at this point." The move to destroy student records was prompted by a new federal law that allows students to see almost all the ma- terial in their counseling files. However. letters of recommendation to admissions offices written prior to January 1, 1974 (with the understanding that the contents were to remain in confidence), may remain secret. ZIMMERMAN argued that "the law pro- vides that those letters submitted prior to January 1 are confidential and should re- main as such." However, another clause in the law, the Family Education Rights and Privacy Act of 1974, also states that recommendations used for purposes other than their original See 'U', Page 2 *BIdg.; Os are Rhodes I oritiles remain until dE Ad to ,wrm Tranq uil moo pervades takeo ver By GORDON ATCHESON The place is strewn with sleeping bags, knapsacks, and the remnants of a cold-cut buf- fet for 200 hungry students. Cigarette butts, newspapers, and human bodies cover the once spotless orange carpeting. SOMEHOW it's a surrealis- tic show-demonstrators camp- ing-in on the usually library- quiet, neat-as-a-pin second floor of the Administration Building. But the feverish, volatile at- mosphere that surrounded the confrontations of the late six- ties -- the titantic battle at Co- lumbia and the South Univer- sity riots here - has now been replaced by the smell of mari- juana and the stuffiness of a packed lecture hall. "We're here because we want to turn the University upside down," said one protester, sit- ting on an imitation mahogany desk usually occupied by Rob- ben Fleming's personal secre- tary. BUT THE energy just wasn't there, and most of the demon- strators just began settling in for the night. A foursome played bridge in the center of the brightly-deco- rated reception area, as a few kibitzers munched on sand- wiches and listened to the bid- ding. The majority of the people directed their attention toward one of the three portable tele- vision sets and the innocuous prime-time viewings. See DEMONSTRATORS, Page 8 'The University posi- tion was t It a t making the files a v a i 1 a b 1 e would be a violation of the high school coun- elors' ri g hts;' how- ever, 'the feeling of the boa rd is t ha t if the material is not accessi- ble to the student, it should not be accessi- ble to anyone.' -Charles Morris vow $ met 250 ask VU to meet DAM goals By ROB MEACHUM and DAVID WEINBERG As of late last night, nearly 250 minority stu- dents remained camped out in the Administration Building vowing to esca- late their "efforts to dis- rupt the stability of this institution," unless their demands are met. The protest began early yesterday morning when about 300 minority stu- dents, many of t h e m black, entered the building and demanded meetings with top University offic- ials. At 4:00 p.m. nearly 500 members and support- ers of the Graduate Em- p l o y e s' Organization (GEO) held a rally on Re- gents' Plaza in support of the students. They will mass again this morning at 10:00 a.m. THE THIRD World Coalition Council, representing black, Chicano, Asian - American and Native - American student groups, presented University President Robben Fleming with a set of six demands to be met before they would vacate the building. They are: * Recognition of the Third World Coalition Council as the official negotiating team for minority students; " I m m e d i a t e 1 y re- instate Cleopatra Lyons, a black nursing student for allegedly administering insulin to a pa- tient without prior consent of a doctor; * Establishment of a full See AD, Page 8 Dailv Photo by STEVE KAGAN UNIVERSITY President Robben Fleming talks with several of the minority students yesterday who took over the Administration Building calling for acceptance of six demands. At a press con ference yesterday, Fleming stated he would neither recognize their council as a negotiating team nor offer amnesty to the protesters. ECONOMICS STILL UNRESOLVED: U' GEO set(tie two Letter carriers predict nationwide 'postal strike By JIM TOBIN The University and the Grad- uate Employes' Organization (GEO) have reached tentative agreement on the GEO demands for recognition and consultation. With these important agree- ments, the two sides have cut the number of hard-core dis- putes to three - economics, agency shop and class size. THE CONSULTATION clause was essentially settled several days ago. Under the settled pro- vision, departments must confer with the union's departmental stewards on matters which con- cern the work assignments and responsibility of Graduate Stu- dent Assistants (GSAs), funding available to departments for the hiring of GSAs and the regula- tion of the average number of hours GSAs work. The issue of recognition has held the attention of the bar- gaining teams for the greater part of over fifteen hours of closed negotiations during the past two days. It provides for GSAs to be identified in the contract by the description of their job, rather than simply by the title of "Graduate Student Assistant." "We're happy," said GEO spokesman Dave Gordon. "That was one of the major issues di- viding the two sides." rV,, QV nxx_ _ ra_ ln,- - -n vote of the GEO must take place before union members will return to classrooms and laboratories. The GEO leadership was plunged into confusion yester- day with the sudden advent of the Black United Front's de- mands. WHEN THE Front leaders reaffirmed their support of the GEO walkout, the union re- sponded that they would rally at the Administration Building to support the Front's demand for negotiations with the Uni- Democrats allegedly sabotage Shoichet By STEPHEN HERSH A Second Ward Democratic party member declared yester- day that the Democratic chair- man of his ward, Greg Hebert, asked him Monday to help Democratic incumbent C i t y Councilwoman Carol Jones in her Anril re-election camnaien versity. However, they were noncommital on the actual de- mands of the group. The GEO Stewards' Council will decide its position on the demands at a meeting this morning. When questioned onthe GEO position, Dave Gordon would only say, "The BAM demands (of the 1970 BAM strike) were clearly broken. Unfortunately the only way to get this Uni- versity to keep promises is to put pressure on them." GORDON would not make an issues official comment on the Front's goals. On the subject of the linger- ing strike, Gordon said, "As far as we know we have at least as many people on strike as we did a week ago. None of our people are going back." The GEO has flopped back and forth in the last few days on its commitment to open ne- gotiations. It was planned until yesterday morning that open ne- gotiations would resume in the afternoon, after more than a week of closed-door sessions. By CHERYL PILATE Local letter carriers are predicting a nationwide postal strike unless the federal government scraps a plan to "computer- ize" the mail delivery process. The proposal, which the United States Postal Service (USPS) has introduced in Kokomo, Indiana as part of a pilot pro- gram, will regulate both route length and delivery time. LETTER carriers protest that such a sys- tem will eliminate jobs and increase the it will increase efficiency by equalizing the workload. UNDER THE Kokomo plan, every ele- ment of a letter carrier's route would be fed into a computer-including the dis- tance from the sidewalk to the house, the terrain, and the type of mailboxes. NALC members protest that because no -two routes and no two carriers are alike, their workload cannot be determined by computers. "This whole plan is ridiculous," con- tended a local NALC member. "And fro.m 'U' decision to save Pilot thrills students By MARGARET YAO Pilot students yesterday celebrated acting literary college (LSA) dean Billy Frye's assurance that the experimental living- and-learning program would not be eliminated in response to budget cuts. "I'm thrilled," declared Jane Levine. "Pilot's a good program. It tends to decentralize the huge university." A HIGH University official told the Daily last month there was "a distinct possibility" that Pilot would be abolished in view of the expected four per cent cut in state appropriations to the Uni- versity for next year. However, Frye indicated to Pilot staffers last week that LSA ..._-A ,, - - _,,. A to t - 4,o f ca n ,-... .- r.. t nl ~. thil. m1111amiliannilaunals