P , t [t Yi :43FCti1,3 Vol. LXXX1, No. 45-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, July 14, 1971 Ten Cents, Eight Pdges Vol. LXXXI, No. 45-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, July 14, 1971 Ten Cents Eight Pages Addresses conference Edward Pate, principal of College Hill, an ungraded high school in Evanston, Illinois, yesterday was the Keynote speaker at the Principals' Conference on Desegregation. SGC MEMBER: Taylor tells HISC a b ab ut leeC me ei GOG Minorities task force offers plans By P. E. BAUER In an effort to increase supportive services for the University's minority and especially black student popula- tion, a Task Force on Minority Supportive Services has submitted to the executive officers eight recommendations, including a request for strengthening the Opportunity Program for disadvantaged students. Three of these recommendations have already been adopted by the executive officers, amounting to a financial commitment of $31,500. And Charles Kidd, head of the task force and assistant 'to the vice president for student services, is hopeful that the Regents will accept the re-Residency maining task force recom- mendations at their meeting this Friday, issue faces The eight-point report was issued by the task force in June of this year, asking for a total of $120,000 for special services and projects for mi- nority students. By CHRIS PARKS The group was comprised of The ratification of the 26th three undergraduate students, amendment granting 18-year-olds one graduate student, one fac- the right to vote, has intensified ulty member and two adminis- the issue of where college stu- trators, all of whom are black. dents will be allowed to register The items approved by the and vote. executive officers include: This controversy has resulted in -An allotment of $16,500 to court tests in at least 11 states hire minority academic coun- and proposals for unified regis- selors, who will divide their tration standards by several U.S. working hours between a newly senators organized center for black stu- T dent activities, to be called the The basic conflict arises over William Monroe Trotter House, the opposing interests of the stu- and the counseling office; dents and the townspeople. -An allotment of $10,000 to Opponents of student registra- hire minority members who are tion claim since students outnum- either master's candidates or her townspeople in many areas, graduates to work as budget allowing them to vote in college counselors, giving students in- towns would turn local govern- formation about food and rent ment over to voters who pay no prices in Ann Arbor; and taxes and have no long term in- -An allomtent of $5,000 to terest in the community. hire minority student assistants Many students, on the other to work in the placement office. hand, point out that they, at See TASK, Page 6 present have no control over lo- r By LINDSAY CHANEY Special To The Daily WASHINGTON - Student Government C o u n c i1 (SGC) member Brad Taylor yesterday told the House Internal Securi- ties Committee (HISC) that participants in the youth and student conference on a People's Peace, held in Ann Arbor last February, were "people who de- sired a North Vietnamese vic- tory in Indochina." 0 RISC is holding hearings on the "radical nature" of groups of various speakers at the Feb. 5 plenary session of the confer- ence. In describing the Friday ple- nary session, Taylor identified Brian Spears (Ed '71), who was then an SGC member as- the person who placed a Viet Cong flag on the speaker's lecturn. Taylor also recounted a tele- phone message to the conference from Madame Binh, head of the Provisional Rpvolutionary Gov- ernment (PRG) of South Viet- nam. Several times during his tes- timony, Taylor cited leaflets anid booklets which indicated, he said, that demonstrations were planned for May prior to the conference vote on that sub- ject. "No one had any doubt,' Tay- lor said, "that the May demon- strations would occur regardless of whether the conference gave its stamp of approvaL". Taylor will continue his testi- monty today. The other witness at yester- day's hearing, Albert Forrester, an official of YAF, said that the National S t u d e n t Association (NSA) had become a "clearing house organization for the left in the United States." He called NSA "unrepresentative" of U.S. students. He c i t e d widespread mari- juana smoking at the 1970 NSA congress held at MacAlester College in St. Paul to illustrate his "unrepresentative" charge. "I didn't-feel that the massive use of marijuana at the con- gress was representative of all students," he said. "I don't use marijuana and they certainly didn't represent me." A resolution directing NSA to formulate a "People's Peace Treaty" in cooperation with representatives from North and South Vietnam was passed at the 1970 congress. Forrester, who attended the 1970 congress, testified that NSA members travelled to Hanoi in December and met with mem- bers of the South Vietnamese Student Liberation Front and North Vietnamese students to draft the People's Peace Treaty. At this point in the testimony, Rep. John Schmitz(It-Calif.) noted that the NSA delegates to Hanoi may have violated the Logan Act when they drafted- the treaty. The Logan Act forbids U.S. citizens f r o m communicating with foreign governments with the intention of influencing re- lations between the two coun- tries. Forrester said he did not know whether the NSA delegates had dealt with government agents because the North Vietnamese signatures were only identified as "representatives of students in North Vietnam." Brad Taylor which participated in the Wash- ington anti-war demottstrations last April and May. Taylor, a member of Young Americans for Freedom (YAF). testified on the individuals and groups which participated in the conference. He began by describ- ing organizations which were 4 distributing literature at the conference, including the Stu- dent Mobilization Committee, the Detroit Committee to End the War Now, the Ann Arbor Argus, and the Mayday Tribe. Taylor introduced as evidence a leaflet put out by the Mayday w- Tribe which showed, he testi- fied, "the Washington Monu- ment broken off at the top, in- dicating some type of violent activity." In the course of his testimony, he also introduced buttons,-other leaflets, a supple- ment to the Argus, an edition of The Daily, and photographs cal governments which make de- cisions directly affecting them. Voting in their home towns, they say, is meaningless as what is done there has little effect on them. A change in regulations for compiling the census has added new fuel to the ar'gument of stu- dents that they should be allowed to vote in their college towns. Under the new regulations, first employed in the 1970 census, stu- dents are counted as residents of their college town, not their home town. Census figures are used in many determinations relating to voting, such as the drawing up congressional districts on both the state and federal level. Stu- dents argue if they are to be counted as constituents of their college town districts, they should be allowed to vote in theta. These census figures are also used as a basis for determining the amount of financial aid a city receives from the state and fed- eral government. In Ann Arbor the conflict over where students can register goes back several years, with the charge often being made by stu- dent radicals that the city ad- ministration actively bars stu- dents from registering. Several years ago a group of University students filed a court challenge over what they call See STUDENT, Page 2 CBS victorious House Speaker Carl Albert (right) yesterday discusses procedures with Parliamentarian Lewis Deschler, just before the House voted to recommit for further study a recommendation by its Commerce Committee to cite CBS for contempt of Congress. The network had refused to submit subpoenaed raw material from its documentary, "The Selling of the Pentagon," (See News Briefs, Page 3.)