PEOPLE ARE NOT POLITICAL IDEOLOGIES See Editorial Page Y Lilt~ta~ A& 14]att]g 4pmmmqqpp"- BORING High-70 Low-50 Partly cloudy, little change Vol. LXXX, No. 22-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, June 5, 1970 Ten Cents Four Pages 1embers of scholarship group challenge veto By CARLA RAPOPORT Several members of the Martin Luther King Scholarship committee will meet to- day with Allan Smith, vice president for academic affairs, to discuss his veto of their decision to allocate $5,000 to the Black Tutorial project. Smith said he vetoed the committee's proposal to allocate the funds because the "specific purpose of the scholarship fund is the University's development," and the tutorial project is primarily a service to community residents. After vetoing the committee's recom- mendation, however, Smith, who is a voting member of the committee,, obtained a $5,000 for the project from another Uni- versity account. The Martin Luther King Scholarship committee, composed of students and ad- ministrators, was set up shortly after Dr. King's assassination in 1968 in order to administer the monies of the King schol- arship fund which was also established at that time. The committee was given the power to approve all allocations of the scholarship fund. Members claim Smith's veto sets a "harmful precedent" by challenging the group's powers. "Nothing can be spent from the fund without the committee's approval," said Jerry De Grieck, executive vice president of Student Government Council, which ap- points the committee's student members. "Now the dispute is whether the group can spend money without Smith's ap- proval," he added. Although Smith as a committee mem- ber has no actual veto power over the committee's decisions, as a University vice president he must give the final authori- zation to its expenditures. "I lean over backwards in order to de- cide what a donor's intent is for his gift," Smith said last night, "and I feel it is an implied understanding that a person who donates to this fund is donating for Uni- versity purposes." "It was never the understanding that the committee had uncontrolled say over the funds use," he continued. "They hold responsibility to me." Smith said he was unable to attend the meeting at which the committee's alloca- tion to the tutorial project was approved. The scholarship fund has four categories of funds, three for specific aid and the fourth for 'undesignated' purposes. Com- mittee member Cynthia Stevens, '72, said that the undesignated category contained enough funds for the tutorial project and that the committee felt the project merited the fund's support.-, "Smith's veto sets a precedent which may, change the whole power of the committee in all its future proceedings," Miss Stevens said yesterday. The establishment of the Martin Luther King Fund followed a lock-in by black students at the old Administration build- ing which took place the day of King's funeral in 1968. One of the black students' demands at that time was the establish- ment of the scholarship fund. Subsequently, the Regents allocated $10,000 to the scholarship fund. Since then, major contributors to the fund have been businessmen from the Ann Arbor area. Last term, the Black Action Movement (BAM) made one of its demands a manda- tory $3 assessment of all students to be contributed to the King fund. The ques- tion of self-assessment was placed as a referendum on the March ballot of Student Government Council elections. Students voted 2 to 1 in favor of the assessment. The administration, however, said they would not accept the results of the refer- endum as binding. The Regents, in adopting a majority of the BAM demands, specifically rejected the mandatory assessment. They also denied permission for the Uni- versity to collect voluntary contributions from students. Explaining their rejection of the BAM proposal, the Regents said that they did not "believe that student fees or compul- sory assessments can be established on the basis of student referenda." While not questioning the "propriety" of the King fund, the Regents stated they did not approve of the University acting as a "collection agency." They added that the solicitation and collection of contributions should be a matter for the organization to handle. Ruins of Peru -AssuciateuPress Nixon tries to modify war bill WASHINGTON {Ai) - President Nixon signaled yesterday an all- out administration effort to loos- en proposed curbs on U.S. opera- tions in Cambodia by throwing his support behind an amend- ment by Sen. Robert Byrd (D- W. Va.). The Byrd amendment, which would be added to the proposed curb spon- sored by Sens. John Sherman Cooper (R-Ky), and Frank Church (D- Idaho), would authorize the Presi- dent to take "such action as may be necessary to protect the lives of United States forces in South Viet- nam or to facilitate the withdrawal of United States forces from South Vietnam." News of the President's new effort followed Senate Democrats' threat to let the government go broke if ad- ministration forces continue to block a vote on the Cooper-Church amend- ment. Senate Majority Leader Mike Mansfield of Montana told newsmen he has no intention of allowing an administration request for an in- crease in the debt ceiling to reach the floor until there is a vote on the Cooper-Church proposal to bar spending for fighting in Cambodia. "If it interferes with time limits- too bad," Mansfield told newsmen. "I want to get on with the pending business." The administration has asked for an $18-billion increase in the cur- rent $377 billion limit on the national debt. It needs the additional credit by July 1 to pay its bills. The house approved the increase 236 to 127 Wednesday despite argu- ments of antiwar congressmen that widening the Indochina conflict caused deficits. Mansfield took his stand in the wake of President Nixon's report to the nation Wednesday in which he said the Cambodian operation had been so successful half the 31,000 American troops involved already have been withdrawn from Cam- bodia and the rest will be out by June 30. Youngsters in the port city of Chimbote, look over the ruins of homes left by Sunday's massive earthquake which struck Peru, leaving widespread destruction and death toll estimated at 30,000. Secondary quakes and earth tremors continued yesterday as aid began to pour in from 11 nations and a variety of international organizations. ARRIVES IN SAIGON U.S. fact-finding team to begin appraising Cambodian operation --ssociated Press Another IuJ aeked plane-Ascet1Pes Tires on the TWA 727 hijacked plane were flattened by police bullets when the plane returned to Dulles Inter- national Airport. The plane was hijacked after it took off from Phoenix, Ariz., yesterday. Arthur Barkley was apprehended by authorities and has been charged with air piracy for the hijacking. The alleged hijacker had de- manded $100 million in ransom. UNION PLANNED 'U' hospital interns seek By The Associated Press A 13-man fact-finding party of U.S. congressmen and officials ar- rived in Saigon yesterday to assess the effectiveness of the U.S. opera- tion in Cambodia. Meanwhile, North Vietnamese and Viet Cong troops overran a govern- ment military post 10 miles southeast of Phnom Penh and then lost it to a Cambodian counterattack in the closest major fighting to the Cam- bodian capital so far. The inspection team intends to re- view the effect of U.S. and South Vietnamese operations to clear out U group on political action meets today A newly established ad hoc com- mittee of Senate Assembly will hold an open meeting this afternoon to solicit ideas on ways the University can promote the use of existing in- stitutions in efforts to effect political change. The ad hoc committee on political activity, set up by Senate Assembly two weeks ago, is investigating such possibilities as the rearrangement of the University calendar to allow time for students and faculty to lobby for legislative change, the establishment of workshops to study means for ef- fective political change, and the cre- ation of a clearing house for the dis- semination of information and chan- neling of efforts. The committee is composed of one member from the Academic Affairs Committee, one from the Student Relations Committee, one from the J - w m t __ e _, _T- - + L ne inr enemy border sanctuaries in Cam- bodia. It will also examine U.S. ef- forts to shift the major burden of the war to the South Vietnamese. Most of the congressmen and the three governors have supported the President's policies in Indochina. An exception, however, is Sen. Thomas J. McIntyre (D-NH), an antiwar member of the group, who said is making the trip convinced "we must get out of Southeast Asia as soon as possible," and that he in- tends to ask officials in Saigon if the Cambodian operation aided such a withdrawal or widened the war. The group will be accompanied on their tour by the U.S. military com- mander in Vietnam, Gen. Creighton W. Abrams, and U.S. Ambassador Elssworth Bunker. The North Vietnamese and Viet Cong attack took place near Phnom Penh before dawn yesterday as they captured the government military post at Set Bo, seizing all arms and ammunitions. Cambodian army of- ficers who regained the base said the North Vietnamese and Viet Cong were evidently looking for fresh sup- plies since the massive allied offen- sive against their Cambodian sanc- tuaries to the east had obstructed their supply lines. In other action the Cambodian high command said North Vietnam- ese and Viet Cong forces launched a major attack on Kompong and push- ed part way into that provincial capital 80 miles north of Phnom Penh. The thrust represented the farthest North Vietnamese and Viet Cong penetration on the northern front. Meanwhile North Vietnam and the Viet Cong used the 69th weekly ses- sion of the Vietnam Paris peace talks yesterlay to denounce Wednesday night's nsueh hv President Nixnn They declared that the U.S. inter- vention in Cambodia had suffered serious setbacks, and repeated earlier assertions that Nixon is deliberately expanding and prolonging the war and using South Vietnamese and Thai troops in an attempt to impose military domination on the whole Indochina peninsula. American negotiator Philip C. Habib read parts of Nixon's speech into the conference record and again stressed American readiness to open genuine negotiations. Hanoi's acting negotiator, Nguyen Minh Vy and his Viet Cong colleague, Nguyen Van Thien, both accused Nixon of resorting to threats. 0 a S!bargaining un itr R T 1R1R HR1re By HESTER PULLING qualifies as an appropriate bargain- In an effort to form a union, an ing unit. organization of interns and residents According to Bruce Brink, presi- at the University Medical Center is dent of the association, the group's attempting to gain recognition from primary goal is higher salaries. "An he University as a collective bar- intern's salary, which is $8,000, falls gaining unit. way behind the national average- The group, which calls itself the and we hope to do something about Residents and Interns Association, that," Brink says. will appear before the Michigan Em- ployment R e 1 a t io n s Commission (MERC) today in a hearing to de- termine whether the association The association, which has a total membership of over 500 people, was formed in 1966 but only began its drive to unionize this past winter. a Citizens pack railroad hearings By ROB BIER Over 70 local citizens testified yesterday in opposition to the proposed discontinuance of six of the seven Penn Central passenger trains serv- ing Ann Arbor. Hearings were held, in the morning and evening, before Lyle Farmer, an examiner for the Interstate Commerce Commis- sion (ICC) which must approve all such closings. About 70 people attended the morning session and over 100 showed up at night, packing the small hearing room at the Commercial Fisheries Bldg. on Green Road, forcing some to stand in the hallway while about 20 others watched and listened through the windows from outside. Yesterday's hearings were part of a series being held across the midwest on Penn Central's request to discontinue passenger service on all 34 of its lines west of Buffalo, N.Y., and Harrisburg, Pa. They were the second part of the hearing process which began three weeks ago in Wash- ington with testimony by Penn Central on the economic side of the issue. Local hearings are held for the purpose of giving people in the affected areas a chance to tell the ICC how the closing would affect them. Many witnesses admitted that they often used modes of transportation other than the rail- road, but explained that they did so mainly due to the difficulties of rail travel, which they actually preferred. Jeanne Halpern, housewife, told of a trip she had planned to Chicago, with her children last Thanksgiving. She said that the cars were dirty and overcrowded, due to Penn Central's failure to add any extra cars for the holiday traffic. She added that "after that, we would like to take the train more, but we can't under those circumstances." Several witnesses told of extreme difficulty not only in getting reservations, but even in getting someone to answer the phone at the railway station. "I called five minutes of every waking hour for two days and no one answered," said Elenor Wasserman, another housewife. She said her family was forced to take a plane to New York that Christmas. The ICC hearings will continue throughout June and a decision on the proposed closing is due by Oct. 1. Mark Van Note, state assistant cogni ion Talk about the possibility of form- ing a union began to get serious this past February, Bucholtz says, when "it became obvious that only through a union could we negotiate with the University." In March and April petitions call- ing for the formation of a union were passed around to association members and "over 70 per cent of our people signed them," Brink says. According to state law, only 30 per cent of the employes which a pro- posed union would represent must sign the petition. In addition to gaining higher salaries, the association hopes to im- prove the quality of patient care and teaching at the Medical Center. "We would like better facilities for the patients and also work on hos- pital reorganization for more ef- ficiency," Brink says. But Bucholtz emphasizes that wages, hours and working conditions "will be our first concentration." At the hearing before MERC, which will be held this morning in the Michigan Union, the interns and res- idents group will have to show that it meets the provisions of the Public Employes Relations Act. "The University will probably ques- tion our right to exist-saying we're not employes but students," Bucholtz says. "But the Internal Revenue Service doesn't recognize us as stu- dents. "We have been forced into dealing with the state because the University will not negotiate with its employes unless the state recognizes us as a legitimate bargaining unit," he adds. Claiming that the University might : MLIM