ROCKY VERSUS LBJ: A SAD CHOICE See editorial page Y L 54 -A6F :43 a t t COOLER Hi igh-4 Low-43 Cloudy and Mild Chance of Light Rain Vol. LXXVIII, No.. 142 Ann Arbor, Michigan, Wednesday, March 20, 1968 Seven Cents Ten Pages FALL COMPLETION: U' Students Housing Board Approves File Suit Mosher-Jordan Switch By ROB BEATTIE The decision to convert Mosher- Jordan Hall to a coed living unit was given final approval yester-' day by the Board of Governors of Residence Halls. The women of Mosher-Jordan who had been protesting the planned conversion accepted the decision for the most part. The Board voted to go ahead with the project after discussing problems of conversion with resi- dents of the hall and touring the building to study the changes which would have to be made to complete the change. The con- version will be completed by next fall. The motion for approval of the change contained an amendment which 'stipulated that an addi- tional stairway be built at the Jordan end of the building. The stairway would allow women resi- dents to reach all. parts of the building without passing through a public area. Fire Escape The new staircase will actually be an enclosed fire escape, which will be attached to the building. John Feldkamp, director of Uni- versity housing, said that such a stairway would be necessary any- way for fire protection. An additional amendment stat- ed that the residents of the hall be consulted on all matters per- taining to the conversion. Additional structural changes will include construction of metal doors to separate Mosher from Jordan and modification of the basement passageway to allow women to reach library and lan- guage facilities to be housed onj the Mosher side of the complex. After the tour of the building Feldkamp pointed out that there and an explanation of the is an increasing surplus of women's changes which would be nm ade, housing in the residence hall sys- the women who were reoresent- tem. The surplus has occurred in ing the present residents of the the past few years as upperclass hall indicated that the modifia- women have been allowed to live tions which had been proposed off campus. would satisfy their complaints. "We do not anticipate any great "The character of the hall will increase in the number of women not be the same next year," Feld- in dormitories." he added. "The kamp pointed out. "We will, how- number may actually decrease as ever, try to keep the atmosphere the residence hall system moves as similar as possible to the wayh it has been to accommodate the toward its goal of being completely women who are returning." voluntary." Over Vote Request Court Order Forcing City Clerk To Let Students Vote By MARTIN HIRSCHMAN In what may prove to be a land- mark decision, eight students yes- terday filed suit against the Ann Arbor city clerk for refusing to register them to vote in the April 1 election. The complaint filed by the stu- s deints says that city clerk John P. ' Bentley refused to register the students "on the grounds that each of them was a student at the University" and thus not a resi- dent of Ann Arbor. A hearing was set before the three circuit court judges for Fri- day at 4 p.m. Requests Writ The complaint requests the is- suance of a writ of mandamus which would compel Bentley to register the students. The complaint includes a quo- tation from section 6.1011 of the M i c h i g a n Statutes Annotated which says the enrollment of a person in a university shall not in itself signify that the individual I is not a resident of the city. State law requires an individual to be a resident of the city for 30 days and a resident of the state for six months before he is allowed to register to vote. The- legal action is being spon- sored by the Ann Arbor-Wash- tenaw County chapter of the Am- erican Civil Liberties Union (AC- t LU), said chairman Lawrence Ber- lin. Berlin pointed out that the courtd action protests the way in which{ the city clerk carried out stateg laws, not the laws themselves. StudenthGovernmentA Council may aid the court fight. A motion supporting the eight students and allocating $50 to defray legal feest will appear on the agenda ofc Daily-Bernie Baker Teach-In Pamphleteering in the Fishbowl Coffin Says American slociety NEW GARG EDITORS What appear to be refugees from the famed Barrow gang are not that at all but rather the new editors of Gargoyle. Standing left to right are Ted Kubick, associate editor, Dan Berman, assistant editor, Carl Daehler, business manager, Allen Milgrom, art editor, Sue Mintz, personnel director and staff cherub, and Bill Neuser, editor. Reclining horizontally is former editor Rick aralyzedin By DAN SHARE oroach of students to the moral 'The American protest move- questions that comprise the Viet- T nam dilemma, he said. "At Yale ment is the most patriotic thing the attitude of draft resisters, going." The Rev. William Sloane which has been totally devoid of Coffin, chaplain of Yale Univer- self-righteousness, has brought sity said yesterday home the seriousness, and emi- nently personal qualities of the Rev. Coffin charged the audience «!moral questions the Vietnam war to "be scared to life and not to raises." death. To reach intelligent ra- Rev. Coffin describes his dis- tional confrontations, not the kind agreements with US policy as a of ideologically paralyzed confron- "lovers quarrel" He said he feels tation embodied in the present ad- like Nelson Aldin, the Chicago ministration poet, "who fell in love with a girl 'hought, Action Room Shortage Bohn. 'The conversion of the Mosher - section of the complex to a men's " ? Thursday's Council meeting. unit is being made to alleviate a The City Attorney's Office will shortage in the number of men's rdefend Bentley at the hearings units in the residence hall system. Friday. Chief Assistant City At- This shortage will be made more torney Fred Steingold declined to critical next fall when a portion _~F"hd-~ comment on the case. of West Quad is converted to fac- Representation ulty office space. In discussion concerning the BTy JIM HEC the individual's . The students will be represented change, the women expressed a «uetbuies by Arthur E. Carpenter of Dou- desire to have dormitories which Dean Stephen Spurr of the Each applicant is reviewed, on van, Tammer, Harrington and would be for women only. They Rackham Graduate School said his merits; none are barred only Carpenter. Carpenter refused to felt that the change in Mosher- yesterday Rackham'k policies for because of a criminal record.' make any official statement on Jordan, coupled with the conver- readmitting students who were Dean William Hubbard of the the prospects of the case. sion of Alice Lloyd Hall to a coed convicted for refusing induction Medical School said criminal ; rec- The eight plaintiffs are Sally facility, did not leave sufficinet are "similar" to the policies issued ords "do not even enter into the Wilkins, '68: Jeanne D'Haem; spaces for those women who did recently by Yale and Princeton consideration of a student." Timothy A. Schultz, '69 Ed; Jac- not want to live in a coed dorm. universities. Hubbarfd echoed Spurr in say- ob Eichenbaum, Grad; Carol Feldkamp responded by saying The deans of Yale and Prince- ing, "Each student is evaluated Shalita, '69; Neil Hollenshead, that studies of preferences given ton's graduate and professional individually on his merits." '71L; Kenneth Jendryka, '69E; on housing applications indicated schools said last week students Both Hubbard and Spurr ex- and Kathleen McDonnell Jones. a desire for more coed units. He who are convicted for refusing pressed the feeling there was no --~--_ also pointed out that the proposed induction on moral grounds will need to issue any formal state- r state- j changes would provide students not be denied readmittance into ment, and both questioned the 44 000 M en with a greater variety of housing the universities. meanings of the Yale and Prince- units to choose from. They will be Spurr explained, "Our policies ton statements. To e Called able to choose either a large or remain the same. The non-acade- Prof. Robert Knauss of the Law l . s o ic av fh ae sa small coed residence. mic off-camipus behavior of the School said. "In the past the fact - that someone has been convicted in of a crime is not reason in itself aea ers ose for denying him entrance into the WASHINGTON () - The Pen-- Law School." tagon called yesterday for the Regents' Driving Oppose However, Dean Francis Allen of ding May dafting of 44,000 men in May. the Law School refused to explain It was the third straight month D riving ecision the school's position. "I'm not pre that the manpower summons has pared to make a statement as of exceeded 40,000. The April call By RICHARD WINTER obstruct the operation" of the now," Allen said. was for 48,000 men, one cf the The Regents' decision to retain proposed commission. Dean John Peery Miller of Yale's highest of the Vietnam war. ste rgs s re in Last Thursday, the Regents graduate school told The Daily, The Pentagon said all 44,000 student driving regulations is en- heard arguments both favoring "We believe a student who receives inductees for May will go to the dentleers pand attacking the abolition of a criminal conviction for non-com- Army. A statement signed by Student driving regulations. Most of the pliance with the induction order, So far this year, draft calls are Government Council President speakers agreed that removal of and if that non-compliance is averaging slightly above 40,000 a Mike Koeneke, Executive Vice- restrictions would not bring many demonstrably rooted in conscience, month, compared with less than President Bob Neff, and Ken Mo- more cars into Ann Arbor, but he should be considered for read- 20,000 a month for 1967. The peak Peid chairan o f Joint udiiary-that the traffic situation is al- mission on the same basis as those monthly request in 1967 was 29,- gnll cand th Student Driinr ready serious. who withdraw for service." 000, for August. t; 0 alysis of thought and action" America has imposed a fixed pat- tern on the world. "Our problem," he says, "is that we know who are the children of light and who are the children of dark." Rev. Coffin claims that the United States isn't really interest- ed in fighting for freedom in Viet- nam. "We are actually paralyzed by a fear that we might lose the benefits of the status quo. If we were really interested in freedom in our foreign policy why wasn't there an outcry over Batista, Tru- jillo, or the inhuman treatment of our fellow humans in Rhodesia and South Africa?" Our mistake in South Vietnam, he said, is that "we nailed Old IGlory to the masthead of South 1Vietnam."~ ! He charged that we have made# mistakes which State Department officials have acknowledge in public and private. Specifically, he cited our aid to France in the early fifties and our not allowing the elections agreed upon by the Geneva Convention which* would have elected Ho Chi Minh. This election would have "led to a nationalism which would have resisted an expanding China better than the divided Vietnam is able to do now." By supporting the wrong people we find ourselves supporting South Vietnam-a country which, boasts an army which "clear'ly doesn't meet the Egyptian mini- mum. The military, according to Rev. Coffin, is guilty of violating its own statutes by burning villages See COFFIN, page 6 Rev. Coffin, who was indicted on January 29 for "aiding and abetting draft resisters, spoke to about 3,000 people in Hill Audito- rium to kick-off last nights draft teach-in , entitled "Vietnam and the Draft: Crisis of Conscience.", Rev. Coffin said that draft re- sistance does not infringe on the civil liberties of non-participantsI (in draft resistance) and if the resisters "accept the legal conse- quences of acts of resistance it is in no way destructive to the so- cial fabric of our society." He said that those people who with a broken nose. She may not be the most beautiful girl in the world but"she is the most"real. With my girl with the broken nose plastic surgery is always a possi- bility." Rev. Coffin traces our continued involvement in Vietnam to a "par- I i f Panel Agrees Individuals Must Decide on Morality of Dissent have turned in their draft cards Speakers in last night's panel already had a profound effect for the draft teach-in agreed that on both our world image and dom- each American must decide for' estic involvement in dissent. himself whether the evils of the According to Rev. Coffin "over Vietnam war are sufficient to jus- 80 per cent of all Europeans feel tify civil disobedience. that withdrawal from our present The panel dealt with the moral position is the only decent thing issues surrounding civil disobed-c we could do" He further said that irence, the war in Vietnam, and1 the action of protesting Americans the draft. have provided for many Europeans The panelists were Prof. Her- "the only thing that keeps a bert C. Kelman of the psychology flicker of hope alive that the department. Rev. Coffin, the American traditions have not been chaplain of Yale University, the rendered meaningless." Rev. Spencer Parsons, Dean of? "The people who go to jail," he Rockefeller Chapel, University of said, "bring home the price of the Chicago and rofsd Robert Har- (war. When boys are dying in Khe I ris and Terrence Sandalow, both k A 4 7 1 society's law. He pointed especial- and significantly different from ly to the white middle class in- World War II. tellectuals who he claimed cam- He said however that "I don't prised the vast majority of the take the Samsonian view of our audience. troubles. By which I mean I don't He did say however that groups stand at the courthouse and put such as the Negroes who don't re- my arms around the pillar and ceive a full share of society's bring the whole damn house benefits don't have the same mor- dof." al obligation to follow the law. Rev. Coffin spoke of a law higher He said that a decision to dis- than the statute book, saying that rupt is a personal one. The in- lawbreaking if one accepts the dividual must make the choice consequences is neither revolu- as to whether or not the evil he tionary nor bad. "While men must sees in society justified the vio- respect what is legal, they must lation of his obligation. do what is right," he said. He also consoled the "neurot- Harris disagreed somewhat. ics," those prone to make hasty While he felt that the individual decisions or who suffer from a does have a right to dissent. "I "need- to justify themselves in don't feel that the legal system some kind of romanticism or blind is a cafeteria where every offense following of student fads" to post- is up for grabs - some at two pone their decision as long as months, some more." possible. The teach-in divided into four Parsons said 'that he was not separate panel discussions 'later in absolute pacifist. He called for the the evening for in-depth explora- government to provide the coun- tion of the implications of the try with a form of selective con- draft on the University, the ghet- scientious objection. He said that toes, foreign policy and national the war in Vietnam is "unjust" militarism. , ti >> . t Court condemns the establish- ment of a joint University-City commission to study traffic prob- lems. The statement calls the move "a failure to confront the proper issue and an Attempt to serve an illegal purpose." The statement also charges that the commission is "operat- ing on the premise that students do not have all the rights enjoyed by other citizens." The statement gave the reasons for this sentiment as: -regulating student driving for the purpose of controlling traffic is, as "admitted by the Regents" illegal and unauthorized: -the City of Ann Arbor has no "authority to legally prohibit properly licensed students from operating motor vehicles ' on its public streets"; -"Students are citizens with, all those rights enjoyed by other Ann Arbor citizens," and to de- prive them of these rights is illegal; HIGHEST IN PEACETIME HISTORY British Laborites Ask N LONDON A') - 'The Labor government yesterday handed the British people their high- est tax bill in peacetime his- tory and announced wage price dividend controls to balance the economy and help preserve the Western world's money. Presenting the annual budget to a packed House of Commons, Chancellor of the Exchequer Roy Jenkins in effect tossed the ball to President Johnson to rein in the U.S. economy as America's contribution to solv- ing the international monetary crisis that erupted last week. He said the best the British could do was to get their own dollar and the pound - which is the necessary foundation on which the international trading community must build." The pound shot up 20 points in London. The dollar and the pound also moved upward on European exchange markets. In the newly established free nmar- ket for gold in Europe, the price sank closer to the $35 an ounce official price. Trading was rel- atively light compared to last week's gold buying rush. Debate on the budget in the House of Commons will begin tomorrow. Defeat of any major part of the budget could bring the fall of the Labor govern- April 1 with his program of in- creasing taxes about nine per cent This will prevent Britons from buying costly foreign im- ports or domestic goods that should be exported to earn for- eign exchange for Britain. Among the tax increases were doubling the tax on betting to five per cent, and raising the duty on football pools from 25 per cent to 33%/. Casino li- censes were raised 50 per cent. The taxes on cigarettes, to- bacco, liquor and wine were mt creased, and the sliding scale of the sales tax, which hits nearly all goods except food, was in- creased drastically. Sanh and the jails are filling upI of the Law school i with young men who won't fight, Kelman said that civil disobed- the public begins to understand ience becomes a legitimate meth- the actual cost of the war," he od of dissent under two circum-J continued, stances: Draft resistance has also gen- "When the government con-1 Drated a new honesty in the ap- dones action inconsistent with the n i- values upon which the society is based (he included the Negro problem in this category) ," andt * "When there is no adequate procedure for people to avoidt complicity with that action." it~ 7 a.1Kelman said that government w a xpolicy in Vietnam meets both these conditions and has "caused would work out details, but he alternatives like Canada and jail first wanted a vote on the idea to become live options for large by the House. On this proposal numbers of young men." alone, Laborites. can vote ac- Largely in agreement with Rev. cording to conscience and will Coffin's speech earlier yesterday not be subject to party disci- afternoon, Kelman said that civil pline. disobedience derives legitimacy Along with the tax increases, from pointing at specific laws Jenkins said wages, prices and within the system and is "more dividends would be limited to a committed to the system than the 3% ' per cent increase this year. system's blind followers." Kelman Since enforcement may be characterized civil disobedience as difficult, the main burden of an attempt to "revitalize values." the squeeze will rest on taxes. Sandalow chose to discuss civil Politically the wage .uros will disobedience from the govern- be bitter for the Labor party, ment's point of view rather than having already been rejected in its moral obligations. advance by the unions and * Sandalow said dissent can be many of the Labor members of divided into two categories: the house representing them. speech and conduct. Speech is