Ann Arbor ,nS turaJ n 9,191 enCe tl ve Pae Vnl I XXXI No. 33-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, June 19, 1971 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Vol. COURT BARS PUBLICATION OF WASH. POST WAR STUDY By ROBERT KRAFTOWITZ Special To The Daily WASHINGTON - A federal Court of Appeals early this morning ordered the'Washington Post to suspend publication of a series of articles in the same secret Pentagon study that the New York Times was ordered to stop publishing Tuesday. At 1:15 a.m. EDT the three-member panel of judges overturned the federal district court judge's earlier decision to refuse the federal government's request for a temporary restraining order against the Post. The Appellate court's ruling, coming after the Post had already printed 150,000 copies of today's issue, said the restraining order would not apply to the remainder of the 500,000 press run. The court clarified its ruling for the Post shortly after 2 a.m. to- day. Following the initial appellate court ruling, managing editor Eugene Patterson had ordered the presses stopped and the article removed from the paper's fourth edition. Top Post officials had said earlier yesterday that they would follow the lead of the Times in obeying any court order on halting publication of the controversial Pentagon study. Meanwhile, in New York City yesterday, a federal district judge heard arguments on whether he should uphold the government's request that the Times be perisanently barred from publishing the remainder of its story. Federal District Judge Murray Gurfein issued a four-day restrain- ing order Tuesday forbidding the Times from further publication of the three articles that appeared. Gurfein has given himself until 1 p.m. today to decide whether to permit the Times series to resume. Whichever side loses is ex- pected to appeal. Judge Gerhard Gesell, who had earlier denied the injunction against the Post, said his decision was based on "a raw question of preserving the freedom of the press." Differing with Judge Gerfein's decision in New York City, Judge Gersell ruled that the first Amendment barred the courts from exercising prior restraint over publications of materials the govern- ment feels would endanger the national security. The information (i nthe Post's series) unquestionably will be embarrassing to the United States but there is no possible way.. that a court would be able to determine the implications of publica- tion on the concept of government affairs, or to weigh the implications against the effects of withholding information from the public," Gesell said. The controversial study, ordered by former Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara, is an extensive analysis of the origin of U.S. in- volvement in Indochina based largely on secret documents in govern- ment files. The Times articles published prior to the restraining order indi- cated that in 1964 and 1965, the administration of President Lyndon Johnson put into effect a plan for escalating American involvement in the war while saying publicly it was doing the opposite. The Post's first article reported that the administration of President Dwight Eisenhower attempted to reduce the possibility that the 1964 Geneva conference would call for free elections throughout North and South Vietnam. According to the Post, the Pentagon study said that American opposition to the elections arose from their fear of a Communist victory. However, the Post added, in 1955 it was South Vietnamese Presi- See GOVT., Page 10 THE WASHINGTON POST yesterday began publication of an account of a Pentagon study of the ori- gins of the Vietnam war, based on the same material as a similar study by the New York Times. An injunction by the U.S. government to halt publication of the report was denied by District Judge Murray Gesell. agrees to further action on bias charge By GERI SPRUNG firmative action program." women's commission has asked Responding to criticism of a The affirmative action pro- for "an alternative procedure University decision not to pay gram is an agreement reached for the review of back cases". higher salary and back pay in a this winter between the Univer- Although there was a mem- case of alleged sex discrimina- sity a n d t h e Department of ber of the women's commission 4 tion, President Robben Fleming Health, Education and Welfare, on the review committee, her said yesterday that "further pro- which ordered a plant to elimi- role, the letter states, "is ex- cedures for hearing that case nate sex discrimination from tremely ambiguous." "The wo- will be provided.' t h e University's employment men's commission representa- While agreeing with charges practices. -tive was not included in all from the University's Commis- Objecting to the procedures on meetings and did not have a sion on Women that the pro- the grounds of partiality, the See 'U', Page 10 cedures to hear the case were 4 unfair, Fleming defended the reasoning behind that decision. Cheryl Clark, a research as- sistant with the Highway Safety Research Institute (H SRI) filed a complaint, with the Uni- versity last January charging that a male employed in the # same job classification with the same duties receives a higher salary. The University c o m m i t t ee which heard the case-composed of two management people and one representative from the wo- men's commission-rejected the allegations of sex discrimination on the basis of differences in the two employes' educational back- grounds, experience at HRSI, and specific job functions. The vote was 2-1 with the women's commission member dissenting. In a letter written Wednesday to the University's executive of- ficers, the women's commission replied to the Clark decision, saying "the procedures and con- cepts on which the decision in the greivance case of Cheryl Clark were based are in basic conflict with the guidelines enu- merated in the University's af- Fleming : By ROBERT SCHREINER He might not spend all day playing fris- bee on the Diag, but President Robben Fleming still finds summer to be a welcome change from the regular academic year. Lounging on a brown leather sofa in his spacious office at the Administration Bldg. yesterday, Fleming explained the presi- dent's job is much less demanding in the summer months, at least when compared to the fall and winter. "It's much quieter around here in most respects, since most of the students are on vacation," Fleming says, "and it seems the causes that interest students during the fall and winter go on vacation, too." "Ann Arbor is a nice place to be in the summer," he continues. "I have far fewer commitments now, and that probably makes it even more attractive." Fleming explains that although the winter, Taking things term ends in April, there is only a slight decrease in his workload until just about now, when other colleges and universities let out for the summer. "A lot of my schedule gets organized in connection with other schools throughout the state and country, so up to now, things are not much different." "But from now until about the first of September, it's definitely a different kind of business," Fleming says. Although he just finished delivering five commencement speeches at other institu- tions, Fleming says he will deliver only a few more speeches throughout the sum- mer, compared to the enormous number of talks he gives during the regular academic year. Also, Fleming meets with fewer students and faculty members during the summer months, simply because there are not as See FLEMING, Page 7 easier Pres. Fleming