'HE RIGHTS OF T HE HUNGRY :Y itW &tit VAPID Hligh--42 Low--2S See Today for details See Editorial Page Eighty-Four Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXIV, No. 143 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, March 30, 1974 Ten Cents Ten Pages d. T FYCUEE N EHAPPECAU. ) Y Candidates' page Today is Saturday, and that leaves only two more days before Monday's city elections. As an aid to voters in deciding their choices in the five City Council races, The Daily's election bureau has compiled responses from all the Council candidates on a slew of key local issues, and the information appears on Page 5 of today's paper. It's an insert page, so you can pull it out and take it to tdie polls with you. And by the way, be sure to vote. e Women in media Today marks the beginning of a two-day regional con- ference entitled "Progress Report: Women in Media." Located in Rackham, the conference provides an oppor- tunity for professional journalists to meet with students and exchange information and experiences about the advertising, broadcasting and print media professions. Speaking this morning are: Colleen Dishon, founder and president of Features & News, Inc. and editor of the new national magazine Woman News; Dorothy Jurney, assistant managing editor of Philadelphia Inquirer; Mar- jorie Hunter of the New York Times' Washington Bu- reau; Laura Jackson, director of Creative Package in Detroit; and Beverly Payne, reporter for WJBK in De- troit. This afternoon hosts several seminars and the day ends with Jo Ann Albers, Cincinnati Inquirer reporter, speaking at the dinner. For more information call 761- 084 or 761-6085. Housing office appeal The Staff Selection Appeals Committee in the Uni- versity Housing Office yesterday reached a decision on the seven Baits Housing staffers whose requests for renewed employment were denied by Ed Salowitz, North Campus area housing director. However, accord- ing to Archie Andrews, housing program director and chairman of the appeals committee, the decision will not be made public until all affected persons are notified in writing. Salowitz has admitted violating Housing Of- fice rules when he made Baits staff selections for next year. e A winner! Thursday's Michigan lottery drew a local mini-win- ner, Bruce Kingsbury, a second year grad student in so- cial work. Bruce won $25 for holding number 603, but he says, "Even though I won the lottery, I'll remember all my friends. I won't let fame interfere with my friendships." Happenings.. . e . are as scarce as tulips . . . They begin with the conference on Women in the Media at 10 a.m. in Rack- ham . . . then the Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity per- forms its initiation rites at 1 p.m. at 611% E. William . . or perhaps you prefer a more relaxing environ- ment. Try the Uptown poetry reading at 2 p.m. at the Del Rio, 122 W. Washington where Georgia poet Coleman Barks and local poet Fred Wolven will do their thing and finally, at 8:30 p.m. in Hill Aud. the Men's Glee Club will present their "Spring Concert" totally oblivious to the actual weather conditions of the day. U.S. spy missions? North Vietnam has accused the United States of send- ing new reconnaissance missions over its territory, the North Vietnam news agency reported yesterday. The agency said an American SR 71 spy plane on two oc- casions Thursday "intruded into the airspace of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam to reconnoitre many areas, including the capital of Hanoi and Haiphong port city . . ." The agency quoted the North Vietnamese foreign ministry as having "sternly condemned this ac- tion taken by the United States in violation of the Paris agreement." 0 Fugitive makes TV Dutch police yesterday began a hunt in Amsterdam for Kenneth Littlejohn, the fugitive bank robber and self-styled British spy, but held out little hope of catch- ing him. Police thought it more likely that Littlejohn, who escaped from Dublin's Mountjoy prison 18 days ago, had headed either for Brussels or Paris since disclosing his presence here in a clandestine television interview Thursday. In an interview with the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC), the 32-year-old Englishman said he intended to make an appeal to the European Human Rights Commission in Strasbourg against his 20-year sen- tence for Ireland's biggest bank robbery. He also pro- mised to reveal more details about his alleged work for the British Secret Service. Han bites man "Crunch" went the customs officer's arm as Lynn Crewswell bit him in order to prevent what Crewswell felt was an unlawful search at Blaine, Wash. The re- sult of this unusual behavior netted Crewswell 50 hours of mandatory public service in a hospital or nationaj forest and a year's probation. According to the rules, customs officers have the authority to search persons entering the country, including asking them to strip. Searchees are not authorized to bite back. On the insde . . . sports columnist Marc Feldman examines Michi- gan's high school basketball tournament structure . . . on page three today, the Arts page features Beth Nissen's review of MUSKET's original mutsical, "Counterpoint" -and nn the Editorial nape. letteres.Manv letters. Tenure By BOB SEIDENSTEIN Second of \Two Parts Departmental strife within the literary college (LSA) over tenure refusal for five English professors has focused new attention on the procedure by which LSA grants or denies tenure. LSA Dean Frank Rhodes calls the process "fair and scrupulously careful," but a number, of English pro- fessors agree that the college's tightened salary budget, the drop in department enrollees, and the proliferation of qualified, unemployed professors may have eroded the element of fairness. WHEN LSA departments choose a list of tenure candidates to submit to LSA for promotion, the college receives the list in December on standardized pro- motion forms which cover the three basic tenure criteria: teaching ability, scholarship, and service to process in LSA English professors dispute crit the department and the University. The forms go to the LSA Executive Committee, which consists of six elected faculty members, and three five-person subcommittees to handle each of three general areas-Humanities, Natural Sciences and Social Sciences. Officially, the "teaching criterion" takes importance, equal to that of the other two. But while the subcommittees can scan "scholarly" efforts in the form of tangible research and published works, in the words of Rhodes' assistant Edward Dougherty, it is "harder to make an objective evalua- tion of teaching." RAYMOND GREW, a History professor who served on the LSA Executive Committee from reasons that if economics have had a s on the granting of tenure, then the C( do an even better job of reviewing ca dards might rise but the process stays According to Grew there is no inte LSA administrators on tenure decisiot the Executive Committee meets admi duct a general discussion on the needs Current LSA Executive Committee Wilbert McKeachie says, "When consid for tenure we ask, 'Is this the best field for the particular role he is filling? McKeachie says that with a great supl individuals in the national market simply becomes a tougher one to mee questione BUT ARE THE higher standards, the nation's huge _ri number of graduates capable of becoming first-rate professors, and current economic tightness in higher education leading to the de facto establishment of n 1970 to 1973, limits on the granting of tenure? ubtle influence )mmittee must LSA officials and Executive Committee members ndidates. Stan- vehemently deny the existence of such limits. fair. But the College is heading toward an almost totally rference from tenured faculty, according to a 1973 study. And another ns, but before study maintains that the only factor which can ef- nistrators con- fectively be manipulated to keepthepercentage of of the college. tenured faculty down is the refusal to grantmore member Prof. tenure. ering a person Also, while the English department has three pro- person in his fessors currently in their terminal year, only two new professors will be hired to replace them, leading at leastsone English professor to speculate that LSA ply of qualified sought to limit tenure and save money by not re the "criterion filling a teaching position. t." See TEACHERS, Page 10 FOUR YEARS AFTER MASSACRE Jury rndicts Kent St. ::.:.: .:.. V. : :::: ":::"::":":"} ti :" y'..".".} "Jr. guards men Eight charged with civil rights violations By AP and Reuter CLEVELAND-A federal grand jury reopened a painful episode of the Vietnam war era yesterday by lodging criminal charges against eight Ohio National Guardsmen who fired into a crowd of college students during a 1970 anti-war demon- stration. Nearly four years after the students were gunned down during a springtime antiwar demonstration, the grand jury completed its 39-day investigation and three days of secret deliberations by turning over to a federal judge the 590-word indictment against one present and seven former guardsmen. THE DEFENDANTS were charged with willfully assaulting and intimidating demonstrators on the Kent State campus by firing in their Daily Photo by KAREN KASMAUSKI Let me be the first to shake your . .. hand? Two visitors who later said they came from the planet "Spongae Dilecti" shake their third "hands" as they await the start of yesterday's Future Worlds 2000 A.D. costume contest on the Diag. The odd-limbed visiors, who numbered five in all, were saddened when the contest failed to get off the ground, but they did enjoy a quick visit to the graduate library. The library; otherwise known for its love of scientific advance- ment in the "Research Center of the Midwest," promptly ejected the aliens., JAWORSKI GETS MATERIALS:f direction and violating their con- stitutional rights. The 13-second burst of gunfire on May 4, 1970, from guardsmen perched atop a grassy knoll on the campus during the noon hour left four students dead and nine wounded. Parents of three of the four dead . students expressed relief that the grand jury had taken action against the guardsmen. The maximum penalty upon conviction is one-year imprison- ment and 'a $1,000 fine and, when death results from the action, as it did in four of the cases, any number of years in prison up to life. A Justice Department official said the eight men would' not be arrested, but would be summoned to an arraignment at a later date. THE KENT STATE incident touched off protest actions on doz- ens of college campuses, causing some to close down prematurely that year. It also prompted reappraisal of how state militia should be armed and trained for responding to civil disorders. The shooting occurred when John Mitchell was Attorney Gen- eral. After a lengthy investigation by the FBI, Mitchell said there was no evidence of a conspiracy among the National Guardsmen to shoot the students and that there was no point in attempting to charge them with federal crimes. Accordingly, no federal grand jury was convened at that time. The jury that began work last See FEDERAL, Page 2. Nixon won't volunteer tax returns, sources sa WASHINGTON {P) - President Nixon's tax lawyers have rejected suggestions that he voluntarily amend his questioned tax returns and pay additional tax, and have asked to arguetheir case before an investigating congressional com- mittee, sources close to the inquiry said yesterday. The sources said the Joint Com- mittee on Internal Revenue Taxa- tion will receive from its staff within a week a report concluding that Nixon owes substantially more than the $78,651 tax he paid on income totaling more than $1 mil- lion received in the years 1969 through 1972. The committee will meet in executive session on the staff re- port and, if the Nixon counsel press their request, will give them a chance to argue against the con- clusions, sources said. Whether the committee calls witnesses and holds public hearings on questions of fact will depend on develop- ments, they said. See NIXON, Page 2 ixon answers sidesteps court subpoena, showdown WASHINGTON (Reuter)-Presi- dent Nixon relented at the last minute yesterday and agreed to hand over to the Special Watergate Prosecutor further White House material believed to relate to elec- tion campaign contributions. Prosecutor Leon Jaworski had subpoenaed the material, consist- ing of 27 tapes and an undisclosed number of documents, on March 15 with a deadline originally set for. last Monday. However, the dead- line was extended until yesterday. But the President and the con- gressional committee studying the basis for his possible impeachment remained at loggerheads over tapes of 42 conversations which the com- mittee believes it needs in its work. THE PRESIDENT'S agreement yesterday to hand over the ma- terial sought by Jaworski was an- nounced by his press secretary, Ronald Ziegler, who did not elab- orate on the contents. However, informed sources said the material relates to campaign contributions by the dairy industry and the In- ternational Telephone and Tele- graph Corporation (ITT). Prior to Ziegler's announcement, Jaworski's staff had set up a meet- ing at the White House this even- ing with presidential lawyer James St. Clair on the subpoena. A Ja- worski spokesperson said later the session had been cancelled in view of the President's action. Z i e g le r's announcement was made hurriedly as the President was leaving the White House to address a Vietnam Veterans Day ceremony at nearby Fort McNair and then go on for a weekend stay at his Key Biscayne home. He did not say when the material would be transferred to Jaworski. THE WHITE HOUSE, while bow- ing to Jaworski's subpoena, showed no sign of acceding to the House Judiciary Committee's bid to ob- tain the tapes it wants. But all these conversations might not have been recorded, officials have implied. Pressrreports have speculated at least 10 of the con- versations were not taped. The committee, which earlier this week received a secret Water- gate grand jury report focusing on Nixon, has said the tapes are necessary for its inquiry. The White House position is that the panel should first assess 19 tapes and 700 White House docu- ments it has received or is getting before asking for any more ma- terial. BUT THERE were indications a compromise might be reached. House Republican Leader John Rhnde aid Thursdav he exneted SEC ex-boss Cook testifies he lied to Mitchell grand jury NEW YORK (A)-A former Securities and Exchange Commission chairman testified yesterday at the Mit- chell-Stans trial that he had lied under oath on at least five occasions. The witness, Bradford Cook, already had admitted that he lied twice to the grand jury that indicted the redrafting of a pargraph in the complaint in order to cover up Vesco's secret $200,000 contribution to President Nixon's re-election campaign. Cook changed his testimony to say only that a top SEC investigator agreed independently of Stans that I t OR,~ i i~ -~