Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Harrison trial begins on July 24, T. R. Harrison, '73, was or- dered yesterday to stand trial on charges of assault with intent to commit great bodily harm short of murder. The charge was in connection with an alleged incident which occurred on March 19, when students clash-i ed briefly with police following the Regents' meeting on thel Black Action Movement de- mands. The case will be heard in Cir- cuit Court by Judge Pieter Thomassen. Preliminary hear- ings in the trial will begin July 24 at 8:30 a.m. on the sixth floor of City Hall. During yesterday's p r e t r i a l hearing, Harrison's lawyer, Mor- ton Leitsen, attempted to have defense witnesses called, but' Thomassen, citing the fact that testimony had previously been closed, refused to allow the wit- nesses to be called. He said he believed that the prosecution had established the fact that aj crime had been committed withI the possibility t h a t Harrison had committed it. Audio-Visual Ed. Center Films - Deep Sea Trawler -- The Japanese &. Miners of Bolivia: Multipurpose Room, UGLI, 7 p.m. Comm. on Institutional Cooperation (CIC) & Center for So. & Southeast Asian Studies - Lect. on Change & Persistence of Tradition in India - J. D. M. Derrett, of London, "Tradition in Modern India: The Evidence of Indian' Law": Rackham Amph., 8 p.m. Dept. of Speech: Michigan Repertory '70 - Merchant of Venice: Lydia Men- delssohn Theater, S p.m. Degree Recital -- C. Veazey, oboe: Sch. of Music Recital Hail, 8 p.m. Ecology Film Festival - America: A New Synthesis - Pandora's Easy Open Flip Top Box (HEW) - Above the Tim- berline (NFBC) - Cosmic Zoom (NF- BC) - You Are On Indian Land (NF- BC) - The Ravaged Earth (NBC) - The Rat Problem (HEW) and Beyond ± Conception (rated X Pop Dyn): Archi-' (Continued on Page 7) 4- 4' 1 1 Thursday, July 16, 1970 Fleming speaks to campus unrest panel Thursday, July 16, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY 0 Negotiation at Generali (Continued from Page 1) explained that due to Michigan's unique trimester, no makeup time could be budgeted and thus, students could not be given time off for political cam- paigning in the fall. In addition to a change in party images, Fleming also call- ed for "An unwavering, com- pletely credible, and rapidly- im- plemented commitment tc end the presence of our troops in Vietnam, and, a major yoGmmit- ment of state and federal. funds to assist minority group stu- dents. Fleming also said he was en- couraged by signs that univer- sity disciplinary codes are being revised-this is happerng at the University-and that ad- ministrators are bec)ming "more sophisticated" in dealing with unacceptable conduct. Faculties which are, he said, "notoriously toleran;," are com- ing to see the more destructive youth as "totalitarians w h o think they are possessed of a new truth from which deviation is not permitted." The commission, named by Aixon last month in the wake of student deaths at Kent State University and Jackson State College, is charged with making recommendations by Oct 1 for easing campus tensions. -Associated Press Chains for plants? They're chaining down the plants in New York's Central Park. It's not that the plants are walking away, but plenty of people have been, and taking the plants with them. The plan is to attach a chain to a shrub or tree before it's planted and then shackle it to a stake, which is sunk underground.. LAST DAYS! DON'T MISS IT! j1 "'AIR PORT' is a great film all the way!" - Chicago Daily Newt A ROSS HUNTER Production Akl R 1 R i,...BURT LANCASTER -DEAN MARTIN JEAN SEBERG - JACQUELINE BISSET - GEORGE KENNEDY HELEN HAYES - VAN HEFLIN - MAUREEN STAPLETON BARRY NELSON - LLOYD NOLAN A" '; . DANA W YNTER - BARBARA HALE [: - 3 :45 5-6290 6:30-9:05 -Associated Press UAW PRESIDENT LEONARD WOODCOCK, left, reaches across the bargaining table and shakes hands with Earl Bramblett, GM's head negotiator, in the tra- ditional ceremony at the start of negotiations in Detroit yesterday. Will Smith talks about 'U' ,change (Continued from Page 3) "The concept of experienced- based learning is foreign to many people outside the Univer- sity," said Smith. "The public is in dire need of being educated to the posi- tive things that are happening on campuses today. There is a need for far more effective ways of making the public aware of what's happening on campuses today. "When people learn through the media of isolated incidences of disruption on campus," he continued, "they get a distort- ed picture of the true situation because the incident is viewed out of context,. Smith emphasized that if people outside the University were aware of everything that was happening, the people with- in the University could spend more time on their jobs and less time explaining their ac- tions. The administration is defend- ing itself to the public," he ex- plained. After tomorrow, Smith will go to the University of Cali- fornia at San Diego where he will become the Dean of Stu- dents. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan, News phone: 764-0552. Second1 Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sIty year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier, $10 by mail. summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $5. by carrier, $5 by mail. BACH CLUB -the place to meet INTERESTING people presents PETER DEWITT teaching fellow, doctoral student in Organ performance speaking on Italian contemporaries of Bach refreshments & FUN afterwards CANTERBURY HOUSE 330 MAYNARD EVERYONE WELCOME! (No musical knowledge necessary) Further info: 663-2827, 769-2003 Daily Official Bulletin Day Calendar Thursday, July 16 Art Conference & Exhibition: E. Ja- como, Alma College, "Ham and Eggs of Art;" W. E. Tall, painter and art critic, Detroit Free Press, "Where Dil Art Go, Anyway?" Rackham Lect. Hall, 10:00 a. m. Walter Chapman, watercolorist, author & art director, Phillrpps Asso- ciates, "Portrait Demonstration" Guy Palazzola, Professor of Art, "Still Life Demonstration" & Lois McBride, paint- er, designer and teacher, Grand Rap- ids, "Nature Through the Eye of the Needle" (art stitchery): Physics-As- tronomy Bldg., 2 p.m. Music for the Disadvantaged Student Lect.: W. Pritchett, Philadelphia, Choir, lecturer: 2043 Sch. of Music, 3:30 p.m. NGC THEATRE CORPORATION A NATIONAL GENERAL COMPANY Maying FOX VILL GE 375 No. MAPLE RD.--769-1300 MON.-FRI. 8:15 Only SAT.-SUN. 1 :45-5:00-8:30 POPUL 'A war movie for people who hate war movies!" -Rex Reed, Holiday Magazine *4 '~ , FRI and SAT. JULY 17 and 18 its 1 .A 0 ..... NME Ui Rege nts to By ROB BIER Studer The Regents will be in town this present afternoon and tomorrow for their which, i. monthly meeting with the major item ally esta on the agenda being final approval dent Se of the 1970-71 budget and fee seed- and SG nearly a wle. t "We will ask that there be no new whether fee increase," Vice President for board si Academic Affairs Allan Smith said. ions whi "As for the budget, the Regents may vice pre want to take it home and look it over The R for a week or so before giving final ed such approval." by-law Tomorrow, the Regents are also ex- merely s pected to give final approval for the policy bo center for Afro-American Studies and, the two at their closed morning session, will itself ou be discussing The Daily, possible tak- final by ing some action in connection with At ton it. will rece At the open hearing this afternoon posal tl at 3 in the Regents' meeting room, Mosher-, four student groups are expected to year and make presentations. Gay Liberation sot up a Front (GLF) is hoping to address the Regents for the first time to explain TheR their aims to them. nounce Fauri, dE The Board of the Martin Luther Fthe d King Scholarship Fund is expected state re to question the role of Vice President the deat Smith on the board and ask for a take ove definition of how it may use its money. PROBE, a group of female graduate Annou students, plans to present a statement the liter asking that the new vice president for Presently student services, when chosen, be a school,I woman. the dean meet, DfUi''t nt Government Council will a proposed temporary by-law, f passed tomorrow, could fin- ablish the new Office of Stu- rvices (OSS). The Regents C have been deadlocked for a year over the question of the proposed OSS policy hould be able to make decis- ch are binding upon the OSS sident. egents have steadfastly oppos- a move, and the temporary would avoid that issue by etting up a vice president and ard. The relationship between would be allowed to work At and the result put into- a '-law a year from now. morrow's meeting, the Regents eive for consideration a pro- ;hat the co-ed corridor at Jordan Hall be continued next 3that another such corridor be t Alice Lloyd Hall. egents will also formally an- the appointment of Fedele ean of the social work school, position of vice president for lations, the post vacated by h of Arthur Ross. Fauri will r the new office on Aug. 1. ncement of an acting dean for rary college is also expected. Y, associate dean of the Alfred Sussman, is handling 's duties on an informal basis. DETROIT (AP - The United A u t o Workers, opening contract bargaining with General Motors yesterday, said an unlimited cost-of-living allowance for UAW members would be a top demand at GM and the other Big Three auto- makers. Leonard Woodcock, UAW president, said wage hikes based on increases in the cost-of-living would have the effect of "braking" constant escalation of straight wage rates. GM called on the union to get down to serious bargaining right away, and the UAW replied it was agreeable to a speed- up time table in negotiating sessions. The UAW opens bargaining at Ford to- day and Chrysler tomorrow. Current three-yeai contracts covering about 730,- 000 workers at the Big Three automakers expires at midnight, Sept. 14. In addition to a return to the unlimit- ed cost of living allowance ineffect from 1948 to 190~7, the UAW's demands in- clude a substantial wage increase, early retirement with $500 monthly pension after 30 years of service and additional money for Supplementary Unemploy- ment Benefit (SUB) funds. Woodcock did not, put a price tag on the UAW's demands in his hour and 15- minute session with the GM bargaining team, led by Earl Bramblett, vice presi- dent for personnel. The union has said, however, it ex- pects to get more than the 15 per cent pay hike it gave its own staff workers over a two-year period. The Big Three estimate they spend about $4.02 in wages and another $1.75 in fringe benefits per hour on the aver- age autoworker. A 15 per cent increase over $5.77 would cost the Big Three about $1.26 billion. After meeting with Bramblett, Wood- cock said, "We agreed t h e settlement should be noninflationary." But he indicated the definition of "non- inflationary" would be subject to debate. The union president, who took over May 22 replacing the late Walter Reu- ther, said military spending and the Viet- nam war were the prime causes of in- flation, "not the relation between the UAW and General Motors." "We can reach a noninflationary, equitable settlement and we can do it without a strike," said Woodcock. "It would bekthe greatest contribution we could make to our sorely troubled coun- try." "We want to return to basic Wilsonian principles - C. E. Wilsonian principles," Woodcock quipped in emphasizing the union's demand for complete cost of liv- ing protection in new contracts. It was the late Wilson as head of GM who first negotiated cost-of-living for hourly rated workers in 1948, and full protection was included in UAW con- tracts with the Big Three until 1967, when the union agreed to an eight-cent hourly maximum limit annually. Woodcock said no dollar or percentage figures were discussed with GM officials, but he said several high wage settlements in the con brought to GM offi proposals : them in al ed to disc: include. Immedia ing; Brami eration in demands w Toward the parties can get do work out a fair to eve After th talks "seer .,.abett Irving Woodstock said he ex proposals 1 days. earli dei of1 BERKEL Panther R FBI Direct that the sponsible R in America year. "What H defense," Hoover's to June 30 a "record continue to inent whit in a statemr the most r support frc York." "I think toward wh toward the Bard will b of making Nixon diir last Nov. 15 CharlesdC thers, said impossiblef a fair trial. He said with the sta Black Pan in New Ha "Everythi by design," Hoover a the Black be the most of all extre A FRANK McCARTHY- FRANKLIN ). SCHAFFNER PRODUCTION LOWEST RECORD PRICES ANN ARBOR S.I. STORE Normal Prices $3.29 $3.99 $4.99 $6.99 for Records at List Price of $4.98 $5.98 $6.98 $9.96 -READ AND USE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS- "A HAYLOFT SEDUCTION... p THAT MUST STAND AS ONE « OF THE MORE AROUSING SEX SCENES IN RECENT PERMISSIVE YEARS." -Variety "THE SEXUAL PASSAGES... ARE CLEARLY THE POINT." -N. Y. Times "ARLENE TIGER... A WELLrENDOWED BODY WHICH SHE KEEPS ON THROBBING DISPLAY ~ THROUGHOUT." N'. Y. Past PERSONS UNDER 18 NOT ADMITTED JERRY GROSS Presents. Totally female! Totally animal! STARRING ARLENE TIGER PANAVISION AND COLOR From the Company that brought You"INGA"and"FANNY HILL" FIFTHForum THQR.7:15 ad 9:00 v IRFORMATION 761-8400 I WILL SMITH 'The people affected should be in, PLUS STREET FAIR SPECIALS ROCK, BLUES, FOLK & JAZZ St STUDENTS INTERNATIONAL STORE By LINDSAY CHANEY As he prepares to leave the University, Acting Director of the Office of Student Organizations and Assistant to the Act- ing Vice President for Student Affairs Will Smith explained how he felt the University could be improved. "I feel there is a tremendous need for organizational changes in the Univer- sity," said Smith. "The structure of the University makes it impossible for the administration and students to develop the trust needed to solve the problems of this campus." Smith specifically attacked the r i g i d structure of the University administra- tion by which decisions are made from the top down. "There should be more involvement by people who are directly connected with the problems in articulating answers," declared Smith. He explained that any area that has problems should look to the people directly involved for the solu- tions. Smith commented that "one of the major obstacles to involving the people directly concerned with the problems is that the procedure for doing so has not yet been formulated." "Not enough time is being spent form- ulating ways by which the people who are affected by problems can be involved in solving them," said Smith. Smith also attacked as futile the at- tempts by numerous reform committees to specify new procedures and organiza- tional channels.. "Changes may look fine on paper, but they'll never work unless you involve the people who are going to make the system work-the clerical workers, staff, and students-in the decision-making pro- cess," he said. "The University Council is an example of positive change," he said, "if they can realize that their answers are ex- perimental and final answers on paper are not possible. Smith also commented on questions related to how much the University could be influenced by outside interests such as alumni, the state Legislature, the Re- gents, and the public. "The Gay Lib movement brings out the question of to what extent the Uni- versity shou of interests posed to stt Smith ex way as a c the Univers mine how should be m to what exi dice of ou howaeducat available to Smith str word "how" He explaine people outs as "disrupti) educational See 330 Maynacrd 769-5436 /