PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY -Daily-Don Campbell COEDS TURNABOUT TO INVADE SOUTH QUAD DURING EARLY, HAPPIER STAGES OF MELEE Press Ass'n. Meets Today With Regents By CRAWFORD YOUNG Representatives of the Michigan Press Association- will lunch with the Regents at 12:15 p.m. today in the Union for informal discussions of the closed meeting problem. The whole dispute has simmered down since last moth's meeting, when the MPA crusade began for open meetings of the Board of Regents and Michigan State Col- lege State Board of Agriculture. * * * AT THAT TIME, the Regents indicated they would be glad to meet with the MPA. Last week, official luncheon invitations were sent out to the 11-man MPA Com- mittee on Information. Four of the members were unable to ac- cept the invitations. After the luncheon, the Board will hold its March meeting. The chronic problem of open meetings has occasionally flared into the news, and been brought before the Regents, but has re- mained for the most part in the background between election cam- paigns. * , * THE POLICY is not, according to University spokesmen, embodied in any written by-law, but is a tradition of the Board. However, University officials point out that the Regents have always stood ready to hold a press conference if requested. Although most similar boards do have closed meetings, the gov- erning bodies of the Universities of Illinois and Wisconsin do hold open meetings. However, Univer- sity officials point out that most of the business is conducted in executive session. Road Decision To Affect 'U' (Continued from Page 1) Speculation that the inclusion of the eastern bypass to serve North Campus might lead to de- mands that the University help finance the route drew troubled silence from the Administration. But a University source noted last night that the Administra- tion would measure such propos- als against a yardstick"of three questions. 1-Would University assistance be in the public interest? 2-Would University contribu- tion of funds to a federal-state highway project be legal? 3-Can the University, already hard-pressed for monies, afford the extra drain on its resources? Another touchy angle in the financing of the vast scheme was raised by Ziegler in the Wednes-. day announcement. This was the current CIO drive to secure a public referendum designed to re- scind a recent gasoline tax in- crease. Ziegler said that his de- partment was depending heavily on the hike for its program funds. -Daily-Jack Bergstrom Ev menHATCHER SPEAKS-In a sol- --Daily-Jack Bergstrom emn effort to quiet rioters, Presi- MARTHA COOK FALLS-Embattled custodian vainly tries to dent Harlan Hatcher speaks to hold door during 10 p.m. assault on Marthei Cook Building. crowd in front of his home. BULLETIN WASHINGTON --(A)- The CIO United Steelworkers' Exe- cutive Board voted late last night to appove the government recommended settlement in the tseel wage dispute but a decision on whether to postpone a threat- ened strike was left up to the Union's policy committee. WASHINGTON-({)-The Gov- ernment recommended last night a three-installment pay raise to- taling 17/2 cents an hour for CIO steel-workers, plus othercontract improvements worth at least 5 cents an hour. Hatcher Speech BroadcastToday Two Ann Arbor radio stations will carry a rebroadcast today of President Harlan Hatcher's ad- dress before the Michigan Legis- lature Wednesday. WUOM, the FM station of the University Broadcasting Service, and WPAG will go on the air at 2:30 p.m. with a tape recording of the address. The pay raise was voted by the public and labor members of the Wage Stabilization Board with in- dustry members vigorously dis- senting. The same public-labor minority also outvoted industry members to approve the union shop ar- rangement-which would compel all workers to belong to the union. The board, after days and nights of struggling with the complex dispute, made public the recom- mended settlement-described in advance by chairman Nathan P. Feinsinger as "a darn good" one -through which it hopes to avert a nation-wide steel strike. Rogers To Give EducationTall Virgil M. Rogers will address a University School of Education convocation at 2:15 p.m. today in Rackham Lecture Hall. Rogers, superintendent of Schools at Battle Creek and presi- dent of the American Association of School Administrators, will speak on "The Role of the Teach- er in School-Community Under- standing." Marvin L. 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