ae thre £ KALLARE High-74 Low-47 Cloudy and colder, slight chance of rain Wednesday, August 4, 1971 Ann Arbor, Michigan News Phone: 764-0552 Senate approves bill IIE on subversive control 7 WASHINGTON AR - De- r spite a charge that new %F powers granted the Subver- sive Activities C o n t r o l Board "reflect the spirit of McCarthyism," the Senate last night narrowly approv- ,'ed an appropriations bill fi- t " s nancing the agency without curbing its authority. The $4.1-billion appropriation for the departments of State, Jus- tice and Commerce, including the / board, was sent to the White House. The vote was 46 to 44. Sen. Sam Ervin, rD-N.C.), asked the Senate to reject the compromise bill and force new negotiations with the House on his amendment to forbid use of the SACB $45,000 appropriation to implement a controversial ex- ecutive order issued by Presi- dent Nixon July 2. '1 The executive order would broaden authority of the board created 21 years ago to identify and publicize Communist groups and frins Associated Press Under the Nixon order, the W t ie -board-which had been stripped Despite the lack of a draft law, the date capsules for the draft of virtually all authority by Su- preme Court decisions-can use lottery August 5are sealed into drums yesterday hv Jeph MeCoid new and broader standards to and David Chase of the selective service system. seek out and list publicly organi- zations it considers subversive. REVERSES DECISION: "it is alien to the American system of government, Ervin said of that authority. "It re- p er m it flects the spirit of Me-Carthy- ty ermits liquor ore . ..thi "You can have under, this ex- tog a t /c u into every demonstration, prying into every group whose views this boards considers to be By JIM IRWIN and Safety Engineering Depart- intellectually disturbing to the # City Council voted unanimous- ment, the Health Department, government," Ervin said. ly Monday night to grant a and the Fire Department. "This is a situation where the club liquor license to the Uni- Representatives of the various courts are going to have to de- versity Club, resolving with ap- departments informally i n - cide this issue," said Sen. John parent smoothness one facet of spected the club facilities lo- L. McClellan, D-Ark. He said a long-stand dispute over whe- cated in the Michigan Union Senate rejection of the compro- ther the city or state has juris- and reached agreement w i t h mise bill would delay an appro- diction over University affairs. club officials that as long as priation that should be passed be- In June, Council had unani- the club remained solely a Uni- fore Congress recesses Friday. mously denied a request for a versity operation it would be club liquor license based on governed by University rules The Nixon also revives the at- grounds that the city was not and inspected by University torney general's list of organza- permitted by state law to in- health officials in the future. tions considered subversive. spect the facilities because of Final approval for issuance of Another contested feature of their location on University- the license must be given by the appropriations bill involved owned property, the State Liquor Control Com- funds for the U.S. contribution According to the club's presi- mission before the University to the International Labor Or- dent, law Prof. Samuel Estep, Club can obtain the license. ganization, dropped at House in- an arrangement satisfactory to The University Club closed sistence. all concerned parties was work- last September due to lack of The Senate refused a plea by ed out at a meeting held be- support and the addition of li- Secretary of State William P. tween club officials and repre- quor has been seen as an "add- Rogers to reinstate the $7.8 mil- sentatives of the city Building ed boost" to revive it. lion. House votes to wihod$118m The new dental building Three new buildings to open at 'U' this fall By JIM IRWIN Although the campus looks no different at first glance, three new University structures are scheduled to open during the coining aca- demic year. For one accustomed to living in Ann Arbor's run-down rental housing. the University's new dental building on North University St, with its rows of fluorescent-lit offices and sparkling corridors, seems like a reminder of the modern world that surrounds the campus. The $18 million building, freshly painted and polished in antici- pation of its full use fall term, has retained one touch of the old-the familiar sounds of piped-in dentist's office music. foreign aid payment WASHINGTON { -- The House voted to hold back $118 million U.S..foreign aid from the Greek m i li t a r y government last night after a heated debate with op- ponents saying America should not dictate Greece's politics. The House Foreign Affairs Committee's suspension of the Greek aid was upheld by the House 122 to 57 in a $3.4 bil- lion U.S. Foreign Aid authori- zation bill. A fight over the committee's decision to curb $225 million for Pakistan until it settles its East Pakistani turmoil was waiting in the wings. The loud debate over with- holding aid to Greece to try to force the military govern- ment back toward Democratic rule was dominated by a shout- ing exchange between R e p . Wayne Hays, D-Ohio, and Rep. James A. Burke, D-Mass., who tried to restore the Greek money. Hays accused Burke of mak- ing a "patent plea for dictator- ship." Burke accused H a y s and his followers of making "ri- diculous proposals" to tell oth- er countries how to run their business. Opponents of the Greek aid curb contended the G r e e k government is trying to restore Democratic rule and is essential to the Atlantic defense organ- ization. Burke said it also gov- erns a crime free society t h a t America cannot match. House Republican L e a d e r Gerald R. Ford of Michigan said he believes President Nixon to Greece, will restore the aid to Greece by using the escape clause in t he legislation under which the $118 million can be released if the President declares in writing that the aid is in America's overriding national security in- terests. U.S. Ambassador to Greece Henry J. -Tasca had told a clos- ed-door House hearing earlier in the day that opposition in Greece to the military junta is growing in intensity, sources said. Assistant Secretary of State Martin J. Hillenbrand told the subcommittee a "power va- cuum" could be created along NATO's southern flank if the, United States hedges in i t s support for the Gieek govern- ment. Classrooms in the building have been used for two years, but this fall, the entire facility will come into use. According to Robert Door, as- sociate dean of the dental school, the building will supply modern teaching and research facilities, while being flexible enough to meet changes in curriculum over the years. The new facility boasts a large closed-circuit color television sys- tem, the only computer system on campus devoted exclusively for teaching uses and a lecture hall with acoustics so perfect that electronic sound systems are not needed. Two other large University structures will be used for the first time in upcoming months. The Power Center for the Per- forming Arts will. be dedicated Oct. 5, while the Modern Lan- guages Building will be ready for use during the winter term. The Power Center, built with a $3 million contribution from former Regent Eugene Power and $500,000 from community do- nations, has been hailed for its versatility for drama, opera and musical productions. The auditorium will have a ca- pacity of 1.490 persons - twice as many as nearby Mendelssohn theater. The new Modern Language Building, to be completed by late fall, will consolidate many of the University's language and communications facilities and will include a large language lab and two auditoriums. Cohabitation law elarified by officials Members of the University's Housing Policy Board yester- day drew up a draft of a letter to be sent to all incoming fresh- men, stating that the Univer- sity does not condone cohabita- tion, premarital sex, and over- night visiting in the dorm. The move comes in the wake of recent controversy during which many University alumni and members of the public have railed indignantly against the University's dropping of this wording from the housing code. University administrators have hastened to assure the public that the change in the housing code represented only an editing of the wording of the rules, not a change in University policy to- ward premarital sex. "Our biggest mistake," says housing director John Feldkamp, "was in including the wording concerning cohabitation in the housing rules to begin with. This area is adequately covered by state law, and our treatment of it was really unnecessary. But now that we are trying to elimi- nate all the extra wordage, the general public gets the wrong idea."