RIGHT DIRECTION, WRONG STEP See editorial page Y 5k4 g Dait WINDY High-50 Low--(-) 5 C'loudyand occasional light snow flurries Seventy-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXVIII, No. 83 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, JANUARY 6, 1968 EIGHT PAGES Language 'In Rackham G rand 'Rules Set C Jury Cites Coffin in Business, EducationOI Psychology, 5 Others End All Requirements By MARCY ABRAMSON - FUN AND GAMES As far as Union Ballroom dances go, there was nothing unusual last night. The boys came. The girls c girls danced. The sponsors-Chi Omega sorority and Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity-made a lot of money f And-by absolutely no surprise-almost everybody else stood around. A good time was had by all. AFRICAN HIISTORY COURSE: Graduate divisions are ending or revising doctoral language re- quirements following a decision by the Executive Board of the grad- uate school to let each department determine its own language pro- gram. The language requirement has been eliminated by the depart- ments of business administration, economics, education, education and psychology, psychology, med- icl care organization, pharma- cology and public health admin- istration. Current doctoral students may still choose the old program. How- ever, until fall term 1968, a doc- toral student must be recommend- -Daily-Robert Sheffield ed for permission to use the new requirements by his department chairman. Flexibility came. Some boys danced. Some Permission arrangements for fall or the American Cancer Society. should have been completed al- ready, a graduate school notice said, but some flexibility will bel allowed. Under their new options, geo- graphy, physiology and biological chemistry require basic knowledge of oine foreign language. Grad- uates in anatomy, epidemiology and microbiology may choose be- tween advanced proficiency in one, terest in Africa was the result language or basic knowledge of of his experiences there as a two. Zoology requires two basic1 Peace Corps volunteer. While languages, and American culture working for his master's degree advanced proficiency in one. at MSU, he was one of the first The graduate school previously to apply for work in the then required reading knowledge of two newly-conceived Peace Corps. His foreign languages in all divisions. l7J L !L Wayne By RON LANDSMAN The product of the quickly- changing face of modern Africa, a two-part course in African his- tory has caught the fancy of stu- dents - particularly Negroes in- terested in their cultural heritage - at Detroit's Wayne State Uni- versity. Now in its second-year at Wayne, the course is taught by Prof. Ken- neth Wylie, a faculty member termed by his department ?chair- man - Prof. Alfred Kelly - as '"a historian, not a propagandist." In the past, many criticisms of "old-style" Africa courses have centered around their unrealistic nature and overly academic dry- ness. In the past, plans by the WSU history department to offer an African history course were sty- mied by the inability to find a qualified person to teach it. Kelly pointed out that a good professor Views 'Dark Car would be reluctant to go to WSU to teach African history because he would be isolated from other Africa experts. By the spring of 1966 pressure from Negro organ- izations had become "severe" he said, although pressure of that type from ethnic groups was nothing new. Partly in response to the pressure, and partly be- cause they had found someone they considered qualified, the de- partment was able to offer the course the following academic year, 1966-67. Kelly emphasized that he would! not have allowed the creation of a mere propaganda course in the department. "I would resign first," he said. The demands from the Negro! community had been for courses either on African or U.S. Negro history. But both Kelly and Prof. C. Norman Guice, also of the history department, emphasized that -they would not take such1 an ethnic approach to American history, as the latter possiblity, demanded. They also feared that a bad precedent would be set, thus putting more pressure on them to meet the demands of Rev. Coffin a other ethnic groups that wanted their language or literature- or history taught at the university. Wylie mentioned that the pro- gram now offered did not satisfy the more radical Negroes, some of whom had wanted a course on Negro history only. The pressureI has completely disappeared, how- ever, and it appears that most students are satisfied. Wylie, a Peace Corps veteran, received his doctorate from Mich- igan State University and was in Africa doing field work for MSU when Wayne telegraphed him to offer the postition in early 1966. which he accepted immediately. He explained that his own in- assignment to and subsequ terest in Africa was com accidental. The two courses cover the history of Africa, with the ters divided by the Berlin ference of 1885, a partit Africa by the colonialX ent in- pletely e entire semes- n Con- ion of powers. Modern and Classic English language and literature now requires advanced proficiency both in a modern language and either Greek, Latin, Old English or another classical language. Slavic language and literature re- quires basic knowledge of two lan- S WITCH DAYS: Exam I Local McCarthy Democrats. "Organize To Push Campaign Wylie emphasizes that Africa was guages. behind the West only in their One basic modern language is scientific and sophistication of the requirment for a doctor of ed- political life. Africans did develop ucation degree in English language administrative bureaucracies, na- and literature. tion-states, and integrated polit- Any doctoral committee may ico-economic systems. recommend individual study above Swahili is another treasure that the minimum, depending on the he feels has been neglected too individual case. Assistant Dean of long. According to a recent article the graduate school Ralph Lewis in the New York Times, Swahili is coordinating the revisions. is as rich grammatically as Latin. Also included in the new rules Wylie added that both Swahili is a provision that foreign students and the other major African lan- may no longer use English as a guage, Hausa, are both "old and foreign language. English language literate," having a not incon- proficiency is required of all doc- siderable collection of literature. toral students. Both are written in the Arabic More Changes script, and often transliterated Lewis said he expects additional into Roman script. revisions to be approved soon. Wylie noted that it was neces- "The thing I like best about the sary, because of the mood of new policy is that students and students now, to deal with race faculty will see language more as problems. The student interest is a part of the program than an ex- part of a growing concern with ternal," Lewis said. w By GRIEG ZIEREN Carr described his organization . as a "cross-section of Ann Arbor group promoting t presi- and Washtenaw County" and add- dential candidacy of Senator Eu- ed that it was "not at all a Uni- gene McCarthy (D-Minn), has etatit d "no a formed in Ann Arbor. The group v ou is called Washtenaw Democrats The aims of the organization, for McCarthy. Carr said, wlil be "to give as much At their meeting on Dec. 14, the publicity and personal contact as' regular Ann Arbor Democratic possible to the McCarthy candi- Party passed a resolution welcom- dacy and his policies on Vietnam ing the McCarthy candidacy as an and domestic issues." ;: alternative for de-escalating of the "We want to establish that this: Vietnam war yet did not name him man (McCarthy) is a viable alter- ? specifically. The amendment, native to either Johnson or : which was almost unanimously Nixon," Carr added.Y approved, states that "the Ann Washtenaw Democrats for Mc- Arbor Democratic Party goes on Carthy has no relation to any na- . record as strongly supporting the tional group supporting the Min-: Democratic leaders in their en- nesota senator, nor do its leaders deavors to provide Democrats an considers it an outgrowth of the opportunity to choose national regular Democratic party. leadership in 1968 committed to leaersipin 96 comitedto The group is currently soliciting de-escalation of the Vietnam war." The resolution, sponsored by funds and workers for the local __ Thomas J. Murray, a faculty mem- attempt to win over delegates to, ber at Eastern Michigan Univer- the convention. Senator Mc( city, supports those Democrats -- - around the country in favor of a' candidate "committed to a re- direction of national efforts to the achievement of justice in Amer- ican life." An amendment to the resolu - Bretton of the political science de- partment, named McCarthy speci- By DAVID STEIN fically but was ruled out of order Prof. Edgar Z. Friedenberg of the State University by City Democratic Chairmen Mrs. of New York (Buffalo) will keynote a Drug Teach-In to- Rosemarion Blake. Mrs. Blake said morrow in Hill Aud, at 2:30 p.m. that party bylaws call for distribu- Also featured in the afternoon's events will be a special tion of proposed resolutions by informal meeting of the state House of Representatives' mail at least 10 days before a Special Committee on Narcotics. Chaired by Rep. Dale meeting. W ' nWarner (R-Eaton Rapids), the committee will observe Robert W. Carr, one of the i founders of the Washtenaw Dem- the teach-in and also listen to comments and questions ocrats for McCarthy, 'explained on the drug subject from interested individuals. that the Ann Arbor Democratic Sociologist Friedenberg is a student of American youth pnrm P~lifln AA"little Pffpet" ?cultuire and the author of The Vanishing Adolescent and Disrupi By DAVID SPURR Rescheduling of final exams at' the University's 1600-student Flint campus has put students and fac- ulty there in a state of utter con- fusion. The situation results from Associate Dean Robert Glenn'sj shifting all tests originally plann- ed for the final day of exam week to the first day, resulting in 21 exams scheduled for Jan. 15. Previously, there were to be 12 exams on that day. Faculty members first blamed Flint's Student Government Coun- cil (FSGC) for arranging the new schedule, but then discovered that the plan was Glenn's, who last month had agreed to execute a different plan submitted to him by SGC. Because final exams scheduled for as late as Jan. 22 made it impossible for Flint students to receive their grades before regis- tering for the next semester, FSGC provided a plan whereby exams from Jan. 22 were sched- uled throughout the preceding week, shortening exam week by three days. Thursday, however, Glenn told FSGC he would adopt his own plan, and scheduled all Jan. 22 exams for Jan. 15. He will publish his official exam schedule early next week, but admits there will be some conflicts in it. At the moment, in fact, no student knows exactly when his exams will be. FSGC president Michael Gia- calone said that Glenn was leav- ing schedule conflicts up to fac- ulty members to iron out. "The By WALTER SHAPIRO A Federal grand jury in Boston 2 yesterday indicted Dr. Benjamin Spock, Yale University Chaplain William Sloahe Coffin Jr.. Marcus Raskin, co-director of the Insti- tute for Policy Studies (IPS), and two other anti-war leaders on charges of promoting nation-wide resistance to the operation of the Selective Service System.' In a 15 minute news conference in his New York City apartment last night, Spock charged, "If they're trying to intimidate people opposed to the war, they're sadly mstaken. "I have no qualms about going to jail. This trial will better dram- atize the illegal and immoral war in Vietnam and if this trial will further my efforts to stop it, so rsmuch the better," he added. Slt Meetings Cited The indictments listed the Oct. ndDr. Spoek 16 meeting in Boston's Arlington -- - - iStreet Church and the Oct. 20 Sdemonstration which featured an 'attempt to return several hun- dred draft cards to the Justice Department in Washington as the prime bases of the charges. anneeCoffin, in Washington for a conference at IPS, an independent social science research group, said e last night. "While I didn't know of this specific indictment, I had a remonition that somethig lik ths eascoing. Cithoghd sc an indictment was likely since we were violating Section 12 of the plan (Glenn's) is certainly not draft law." the students', but as far as the Section 12 (a) of the Military faculty knows, it is the students'," Selective Service Act of 1967 reads Giacalone said, since Glenn in- in part, ". . . Any person . . . who dicated to no one that his plan knowingly counsels, aids or abets was to be any different from the another to refuse or evade regis- FSGC-proposed plan he had ac- tration or service in the armed cepted earlier, forces . . . shall upon conviction Glenn, however, said that his. . be punished by Imprison- schedule was intended to be fment for not more than five years exactly the same as the one sub- or a fine of $10,000 or both .. ." w etherhe hd s yshift I ACLUi Offers Aid a Coffin also revealed. "The ex ams d o Jnuarin toainuay American Civil Liberties Union , hte sa thankd ,,th (ACLU) 'has offered to take the welulty b w t esd. -__ case and we have accepted their offer. This will be sort of a test 1 D 1case because the ones who were YsGselected were only a few of the people they might have indicted." .The indictment. In nine counts which was returned to Judge Arthur Garrity also lists as de- fendants Michael Ferber, a 23 year old graduate student at Harvard midr Sw , a University, and Mitchell Good- man, a New York City author and The Faculty Assembly has ex- brother of social critic Paul Good- pressed opposition to a key fea- man. ture of the 1967 Military Selec- The idictment charges that te tive Service Act concerning the pcgedm ofue g defenan At its Decee g men, th abetting Selective Service regis- A sl Dendoeb teeng h trants to resist the draft, counsel- aN e satin ing registrants to surrender draft issued i October by the classifications and .registration wide Council of Graduate Schools,atesdenterruHarvnrd calling for changes in the law cherict, and Micterptiond- which would subject draft-age thinduieonr roegts th uo- men to induction by lottery with- e tinctethrgh t the out regard to their field of study r.' The statement proposes that 'Tskogam o mtaSenrpritse Hn draft-age men be made subject Radedking o e hnnied Adou toa inDuctinmteryeeonly,"theaiedinglethverennedyAdi- tual dctie'oftnsition suh istration, said last night in Wash- a gimofraduationnmsasooi ington, "I am totally surprised at or ollgeor po copleionofthe indictment. But their clear callngord upo completioneofitention to prosecute us means an avancd deree.a lot of people will follow us." The Selective Service law has Ferber, in Boston, was not avail- prmn ovokedufct yoposyitio hb- ab o cment. ogou h cuit requ oireled o tdtr yJsieDprmetofcassi dTeaementpatpth e sd fthethecaeTouldbertrised'yJug prnat caemftriicyaforngrauhiFratin i J asW.nFordin Fdal ate students, except those i edi- Court in Boston at an unspecified cine, dentistry and certain tech- date. And the FBI in New York nical fields. said that Spock and the others The Assembly also formally ap- would not be arrested before the proved a proposal which would trial. open membership in the Faculty The overt actions noted in the Senate to non-teaching research indictment were as follows: and library personnel who have * The distribution by Spock doctorates and who have demon- last August of a statement "The strated "excellence" in their fields. Time to Resist;" The proposal cannot take effect without approval of the Board of * The press conference of Regnts.poSpock, Raskin, Coffin and Good- Regents.b nran at the Hilton Hotel in New he proposahas br oug htuop -York City last Oct. 2; Africa, "a tremendous burst" ac- cording to him. He noted that he had inadvertently become a re- source on Africa affairs for the community, called upon to supply bibliographies and to lecture. AndI he was hired by the education school at Wayne to direct a work- shop program this summer for Detroit area high school teachers on the history of the U.S. Negroes. The prospects of expanding the offerings in this field aren't too bad. Kelly noted that the "course was so successful that we wouldn't mind doing more." Money, need- less to 'say, is the problem. He} said that more offerings in Afri- can history have a "high, though not top, priority." Such expansion depends on the availability of good men to teach the courses. Individual departments have been preparing changes since the Executive Board delegated the language program to them in May last year. This action followed a survey -and position paper by Graduate Assembly which Lewis called "influential" in the Board's decision. Departments may require any of four methods for completing the requirement: t h e Educational Testing Service Foreign Language Test for French and German, completion of courses at the Uni- versity, the graduate school read- ing examination of a departmental examination. A student who has a degree from a college abroad will be con- sidered exempt from the language requirement. earthly n ALL DAY TOMORROW: To Explore Drug World people use drugs, and what social changes are taking place." UAC Contemporary Affairs Chairman, Dan McCreath, '69, expressed his desire to present as much information as possible for a fair treatment of the subject, which would include enough people having different opinions. UAC and SGC are co-sponsors of the Teach-In. The reactor panel which will speak after Frieden- berg's address will be moderated by Prof. Morton Shaevitz of the Psychology Department. Included on the panel are psychiatry Prof. John Pol- poetry, and the graphic arts while under the influence of marijuana or LSD. "I don't know what the government has to do with it. I have had no bad experiences with drug use," he added. Sinclair also said that with drug use "a lot more heads will open-up and things will get better." Accompanying Sinclair at his seminar and workshop will be Wayne Kramer and Robin Tyner of the MC-5 band and artist Gary Grimshaw. The group on "Drugs and the Law" Dill be headed by Michigan State Senator Roger Craig (D-Dearborn), whoj has introduced a bill liberalizing marijuana laws' in the