C14r tr4 t n ti l STICKY High-70 Low-48 Partly sunny, chance of showers VoILXXXII, No. 28-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, June 1,1972 Ten Cents Twelve Pages CAN'T SUE 'U': SGC fun ingd plan restricted By PAUL TRAVIS The Regents yesterday approved an increase in student fees for Student Government Council. The regental statement stipulated that none of the money could be used to sue the University An asaessment at 511 cents an all students ta fund school and college governments, and a plan wherehy students could voluntarily cantribute one dollar towards the proposed SGC grocery coope ative were also approved. The Regents' action increased the tuition assessment for SGC from 25 cents to one dollar per term. Students approved this plan by a narrow margin in last March's SGC election. oman eans to head law admissions By JAN BENEDETTI Jane Waterson yesterday be- came the first woman to attain a high ranking position in the University Law School. Waterson's appointment as assistant dean and admissions director was approved by the Regents at yesterday's meeting. She will oversee student re- cruitment and admissions, fi- nancial aids for first year stu- dents and relations with under- graduate institutions. "We can encourage more women and minority students to apply to law school," she said. The assessment also provided for 30 cents on each dollar to go to a legal advocate for SGC. The Regents had objected to the advocate proposal, saying it could be using University money to fund suits against the Uni- versity. Therefore, the proposal w a s' amended to prohibit use of the funds to finance legal action against the University. Regent Paul Brown (D-Peto- sky) who proposed the -amend- ment explained that he feared "we could only have gotten two votes for the motion (to ap- prove the assessment) if we had not included the amendment." SGC President Bill Jacobs, an- gry over the decision, told the Regents they passed the amend- ment because they "are afraid we will sue them" "There is some dirty laundry or skeletons in the closet isoe- where in the University ."Ja- cobs warned. "If it takes a lal- yer or even a private detective we'll find that dirty laundryan- spread it across the front pages of every newspaper." "There is no dirty laundy here," President Robben Flem- ing responded. "I have not the slightest fear of a lawsuit and that is why I supported toe mc- tien without the amendment -' Jacobs agreed to another com- promise on the proposed grccery cooperative. Rather than ap- proving funding from the gen- eral assessment, the Rgesnts established a voluntary paymcsnt system for the project. Under its terms, students not wishing to support the grocery could tad- cate their opposition to it dur- tag registration. "The students approved a one dollar increase with the under- standing that 25 cents of that dollar would go to forming a grocery co-op," said Jacobs. "Our constitution forbids us from spending that 25 cents on See SGC, Page 7 -Associated Press DESTROYED North Vietnamese T-34 tanks clutter a street in An Loc yesterday as South Vietnamese troops eye the situation from their rooftop position. U.S. planes omb North; siege stiillgrips An Loc SAIGON (P)-U.S. warplanes raked North Vietnam's southern section yesterday after a record 350 air strikes hit three MIG air bases, a naval base and an army barracks, military sources said. For the second successive day, the U.S. fighter-bombers stayed away from the Hanoi area as a precaution against any incidents while Soviet President Nikolai Podgorny is visiting the North Vietnamese capital. Details of the latest raids were withheld. A communique from the U.S. Command reported that the northernmost strike yesterday was against the Ninh Binh rail- road and highway bridge, about 60 miles south of Hanoi. Meanwhile, reports from An Loc indicated that the seige of that provincial capital may yet be far from over. Although South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu has called for the siege to be lifted by Armed Forces Day, Monday, experts now doubt this will be possible. Although the South Viet- namese army claimed progress yesterday, strong pockets of resistance remained four to six miles south of the city blocking a Saigon government relief force. North Vietnamese en- trenched there kept up a steady rain of shells on the beleagured city. Fire from the communists also halted South Vietnamese at- tempts to evacuate soldiers from the city. Helicopter pilots re- fused to land and instead hov- ered above the pick-up point. Wounded soldiers crawled and hobbled out to the landing area and attempted to jump to the hovering craft. Few were suc- cessful. According to American Broad- Dean Waterson According to Waterson, there are no set goals for increased admissions of women to law school. However, the "increase in women will become very natural as more apply," she says. Waterson graduated this year from the law school. New crater dig oni tody casting Company reporter How- ard Tuckner at least 800 wounded soldiers and 300 wounded civilians remain trap- ped in the city. Communist-led forces early this morning shelled two big U.S. installations in the north- ern part of South Vietnam from which American forces are being redeployed, wounding nine ser- vicemen and killing four Viet- namese civilians and wounding three. A half dozen Soviet-built 122 mm rockets hit the Da Nang area, which has been under shelling attack the week long. The U.S. Command said one American was wounded and two buildings were damaged at the U.S. airbase which is being turned over to the Vietnamese. Saigon headquarters reported four Vietnamese civilians were killed and three were wounded when one of the rockets landed in a populated area. In Paris, North Vietnamese delegates to the peace talks charged that the U.S. is syste- matically bombing its flood pro- tection vstem of dikes. The charge came iii the form of a statr ment from North Viet- nacs's minister of irrigation, dis- tribited ia Paris by the peace taltk dele'stes. "The lives of thousands of persons," would be lost and "hundr-ds of thousands of hec- tares of land would be sub- meerted" if damaged sections of the dikes broke during the forthcomisg rairy season, the minister said. In Saigon, 'meanwhile, the U S. command revealed that falsified seports of supposed "protective reaction" strikes- later found to be unauthorized offensive strikes-- were provided to the upper command by Maj. Gen. Alton Slay of the Air Force. A U.S. command spokesman said Slay was the previously unnamed officer referred to in a letter to Sen. Harold Hughes (D-Iowa) which revealed the unauthorized strikes. By DIANE LEVICK An anti-war group has planned to re-enact the digging of simu- lated bomb craters on the Diag today. Leading the digging rod accompanying celebration wItll be four persons arrested followi an earlier digging May 19. City police have warned that diggere, will be arrested at the craer sites. The "Bomb Crater Four"- Genie Plamondon of Raiabo's' People's Party, Jay Hack, Jin Goldman, and Richard Englaosd -were charged with malicious destruction of property for al- legedly digging at sites unauth- orized by the University. The University had approved one site between Hill Aud. ansi the Michigan League. Judge Sandorf Elden released the four on personal recogni- zance to stand trial July 20. They entered not guilty pleas. Crater dig supporters will gather on the Diag today at noon. Bands including the Up, Backside, Wild Bys, Stash, the Knock Down Party Band, acid the Cruisonic Jazz Ensemble will lead off the activities Speakers from local antiwr 's groups which support thw 0 - tions will address the crowd be fore the digging begins. Vietnam Veterans A.,nstAthe War and Brain Mistr's't h- planned workshops. Too other workshops will focus on tals re- sistance and student action. A poetry reading will be 'sien in the evening. The first crater dig iast omuai was staged as a protest of Pres- ident Nixon's bombing escata- tion and the mining of North Vietnam's harbor. See NEW, Page 7 Dig-in on the Diag