Mostly cloudy today with showers, most likely during . morning, high near 74. Partly cloudy and cooler tonight and tomorrow. Low tonight near 50, high tomorrow near 68. Fair and mild Monday. The chance of rain is 80% today and 20% tonight and tomorrow. Vol. 70, No. 113 FlvinCl Nut! IT'S been LEGS and sun-reflectors all week for many * & II students as hot weather brings on the chance for an early gets grounded? tan. Where was spring? Senators seek meeting with President Nixon WASHINGTON (AP) Reacting in frustration against U.S. attacks into Cambodia, angry senators yesterday demanded a meeting with President Nixon, introduced a censure resolution against him and talked of eventually cut ting off Vietnam war funds. For the first time since debate over joining the League of Nations 51 years ago. the Senate's Foreign Relations Com mittee formally requested a face-to-face confrontation with the President. There was no immediate response. Chairman J. W. Fulbright. D-Ark., and other senators questioned the legal and constitutional power of the President—even as commander in chief—to send troops into a neutral nation. Victory Hallucination Sen. Stephen M. Young, D-Ohio. attacking the ‘'hallucination of victory in Vietnam,” introduced a resolution which—if passed—would censure the President and express the view of the Senate that he had no legal or constitutional power to act in Cambodia. Even some of those senators defending Nixon's action Said they believe the public would react negatively and that no one could foresee all the implications and consequences of the move. Senate Republican Leader Hugh Scott agreed with Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield that politics should be kept out of the debate on Cambodia. On the Losing Side "Lord knows I want to,” he said, "because I’m on the los ing side of this in public opinion as of now.” Sens. Frank Church, D-Idaho. and John Sherman Cooper, R-Ky., said they will offer legislation to bar introduction of U.S. combat troops into Cambodia and to prohibit the delivery of arms or the use of U.S. advisers in that nation. But it was unclear when the measures would be introduc ed or how much support they would muster. Five Drafts Considered Sources said that at least five different drafts of the amendment are currently under consideration, and that the matter will probably be discussed by the Foreign Relations Committee next week. That committee did act yesterday to report formally to the Senate the measure repealing the 1964 Gulf of Tonkin resolution, used by the Johnson administration to justify dispatch of U.S. ground troops to Vietnam. Last year Church and Cooper were successful in legislation barring the use of U.S. combat troops in Laos or Thailand. Too Much Blood "Too much blood has been lost, too much patience has gone unrewarded while the war continues to poison our whole society,” Church told the Senate. “Whether by negotiated compromise or by a phased, or derly but complete withdrawal, it is time to put an end to it." Church said. “If the executive branch will not take the initiative, then the Congress and the people must.” Fulbright said the last formal request of the committee he heads for a meeting with the chief executive was with Presi dent Woodrow Wilson. Meeting Not Unreasonable "That was in 1919." said Sen. George D. Aiken, of Ver mont, the committee's senior Republican, "And we felt a meeting with the president every 50 years was not unreasonable.” "The committee simply felt that this matter was of such grave importance we ought to seek a meeting with the Presi dent to discharge our own constitutional responsibilities,” Fulbright said. ■ Fulbright said telegrams received by the committee yesterday morning ran 15 to one against Nixon’s actions and produced the greatest volume of wires received in'so short a time in memory. The White House said phone calls it received strongly supported Nixon. Contrary to Spirit Fulbright said the President’s move was contrary to the spirit of the national commitments resolution passed last year and emphasized: "I don’t know of any legal authority for the President to take this action, not even as commander in chief does he have the. right to engage in undeclared war in a neutral country." "Apparently Cambodia is regarded not as a foreign coun try but as a no man’s land-free for all,” Aiken said. “Too many people have presented the Cambodian situation as a ’golden opportunity’ to save American lives and shorten the war,” Mansfield said in a Senate speech. “The step-up into Cambodia can do just the opposite. May Lengthen Couflict "It may well lengthen the conflict, widen it into an In dochinese war, increase U.S. costs by billions and increase U.S. casualties which now number almost 50.000 dead....” "There is nothing in past experience in Indochina to sug gest that casualties can be reduced by enlarging the area of military operations.” Throughout the day of debate, Nixon supporters were not silent: . “The strident cooing of the antiwar doves that this is Woodside Panel to try 39 student cases Jim Hardy, a member of the Legal Defense Commit tee, said last night he received a letter from th Adminis tration naming 39 students whose cases will be heard May 7, 8 and 9 by the Woodside Panel. The panel was appointed by University President Eric A. Walker to investigate campus disruptions which oc curred before April 23. Hardy would not release the names of the 39 students, but he said they included those charged with malicious mischief, those charged with violating the injunction' and those charged with violations of University rules. Hardy said the Legal Defense' Committee, an organiza tion formed to assist the arrested students in their defense, will hold a closed meeting at 9 a.m. Tuesday to discuss legal prodecdure for. the students scheduled to appear be fore the panel. . Members of the three.-member panel are Eobert E. Woodside, former Pennsylvania Supreme .Court justice; Genevieve Blatt, former secretary of Internal Affairs and a practicing attorney in Harrisburg, and William T. Cole man Jr., a Philadelphia attorney. Walker was-authorized to create the new disciplinary procedure by the Board of Trustees in a strongly worded statement by the board condemning disruptive activities.. Woodside said’ the accused students will be furnished with the charges the University is bringing against them. He said they will be informed of the process by which they will be tried. Woodside said information .about-judicial procedures will be released' after final plans have been formulated. Styp Batly (EoUfljt 4 Pages broadening of the war is pure bosh,” Sen. Edward J. Gurney, R-Fla., said. "A nation at war must talke all actions necessary to defeat the enemy." "This military action is necessary to consolidate and com plete the almost total destruction of the enemy’s capability that has already taken place in most of southern Vietnam,” Sen. Milton R. Young, R-N.D., said. “To do less than the President has done would be to destroy the credibility of the United States as the leader of the free world," Sen. John G. Tower, R-Texas, said. SmTrfS “ nvlc, “ n ll “ “* taking np position. s.v.rel blo“k, frra tte N,S Haven ill bring the war to an end sooner. Green where demonstrators rallied in support of the Sen. Howard M. Kennedy, D-Mass., said in a Boston ■ Black Panthers s Pf c „ h ‘ h ®i, N “ on has ‘' rall ? n f pre y f ° sa ™ illusions that Lt Theodore Dempsey of the National Guard infor u.poVroa!lnotilrrnpr