tr19au a DEFENESTRATION High=35 Low--20 Cloudy, not so cold; chance of snow flurries Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturdov. January 31. 1970 Ten Cents mEh Ptn i- inc II '_ ca e SDS anti-imperialism' demonstration s continue Blacks to rekindle admission issue By LANIE LIPPINCOTT Associate Managing Editor Students for a Democratic Society continued its "anti- imperialism" campaign with1 sporadic disruptions yester- day. A core group of about 15 students conducted "guerrilla theatre'' in the Fishbowl, in a North Hall ROTC class, andE in scattered LSA classes. Late in the morning three dem- onstrators placed a stinkbomb in i a wastebasket next to the place- ment offices in West Engineering Bldg. where a recruiter from the DuPont Corp. interviewed stu-. dents.E The disruptions were termed minor by University security men. The stinkbomb was found within minutes after it was emptied into the wastebasket, and security men hustled it out of the building be- fore the bomb went off. At the same time, a scuffle broke out in the Fishbowl when an un- identified man repeatedly tore down a Viet Cong flag from above a display table. On the third try, he ripped it up, but Ann Arbor Det. Lt. Eugene Staudenmeier in- tervened and led the man away. By JIM NEUBACHER and W. E. SCHROCK Daily News Aflaiysis The University's minority group stu- dents, dissatisfied with the progress being made on increasing minority group ad- missions, are going to attempt to re- kindle the issue. The disclosure Thursday of an "es- calated drive" for increased minority ad- missions "which will culminate at the February Regents meeting," seemingly in- dicates that a set of goals or demands will be presented by these students to the Regents sometime between now and that meeting. What the final position of these stu- dents will be, and what tactics they wil). take to achieve their goal are unanswered questions at this point. One thing is cer- tain-affirmative action will definitely bring life back into an issue which, after coming to the forefront at the end of last semester, had begun to bog down. In late November and early Decembe last year, minority admissions was a topic of concern all across the Univer- sity. The education school endorsed a program in principle which sees a 20 per cent black enrollment and an' equal per- centage of black faculty members as its goal. Then Student Government Council de- manded in late November that the ad- ministration allocate significantly in- creased amounts of money for a recruiting program and financial and academic aic programs. The Black Law Students' K !iance demanded much the same thing in the Law School. In response to the actions throughout the community, President Robben . ing delivered in a speech before the Uni- versity Senate, which consists of the en- tire faculty. He said he felt progress was definitely being made. "The question of race is a real cancer in our society," Fleming said. "We all wish to resolve it but there are- no over- night solutions. We are taking major steps in the process however." This semester, however, the drive for increased minority admissions has waned among deans of the schools and colleges, administrators and the student govern- ment leaders. The controversy ofve: the selection of a new vice president for stu- dent services and the subsequent bylaws dispute have preoccupied the energies of SGC and the administration. But the issue is very much alive among the University's black students and the apparent lack of commitment by SGC has not been taken lightly by them. SGC member Walter Lewis, also a member of the Black Students Union (BSU), questioned these priorities before the SGC meeting Thursday, saying that if white students believe the bylaw issue has priority over the admissions issue, "then why should black students trust white students more than we trust ad- ministrators?" Lewis' words proved relevant Thurs- day night as SGC took action on the by- law question, but delayed consideration of a motion by Lewis that would have given the minority admissions issue prior- ity over the bylaw dispute. SGC members said they wanted to assess the potential strength of a student movement center- ing on the bylaw issue. SGC President Marty McLaughlin says he believes "racism takes precedent as an issue over student-University issues be- cause of its national status." Still, Mc- Laughlin feels SGC cannot assume a leadership role in the problem. "0 u r position on minority admissions can only be supportive," he says, explaining that the leadership "has to come from the minority groups themselves." SGC attempted to take such a sup- portive role by allocating $100 dollars to the BSU last term for financing a re- cruitment program in some of the pre- dominantely black high schools. And support still remains the basic is- sue. Acting Vice President for Student Af- fairs Barbara Newell says that one prob- lem in increasing group admissions is the decreasing financial support available to the blacks through the University. The position ,developed by the black students between now and the February Regents meeting will likely be of import- ance in both determining the amount of leadership the blacks are going to take on the issue, and the extent to which the available resources, both financial and bureaucratic, will be directed to the issue of minority-group admissions. 1 -Daily-Thomas R. Copi 'Guerrilla theatre' parodies General Motors IT-IN TRIALS: Second of et siffer By TAMM Students with previous sit sentences yesterday than othe sit-in cases. Close to 20 persons were Pieter Thomassen for their pa *' the sentences were stayed,1 and March on requests for'new ,rials are denied, many of th heir convictions. Most of the sentences were iven to convicted LSA sit-in p 200 in court costs, and a $ e've 45 days in jail instead of aying the $240. However, SGC President Marty cLaughlin, Richard Reich '70, nd Julia Wrigley '70, who had een convicted last year in the. elfare mothers' sit-in of Septem- , 1968, received stiffer sen- - ces of 14 days In jail, $200 in urt costs, and a $75 fine. Among those sentenced were cLaughlin, Joel Block '70, Mar-' Begun '72, Mary Brugh, Thorn- Corbett '70, Chris Connolly '70, ul Dostie '72, Michael Ehnan Kathy Fotopoulos '73, Russ rland '72, Carol Hildebrand '72, ichael Hooker '71, Harris Huber- n '73, Elliot Lefkovitz, grad, ic Lerner '70, James McFerson , Reich, Peter Selten '71, and ss Wrigley. cFerson, who had pleaded to contendre, was given the en day sentence and the $40 e, but only $100 in court costs. began serving his sentence m- diately. lock, Lefkovitz, Hooker, and berman had not filed the per papers for a new trial re- est, and were detained by the rt, but later released on $250 peal bond each. ; There were no injuries and no arrests in connection with yester- day's incidents. However, Univer- sity Security Chief Rolland J. Gainsley said. that University sec- fen d ers urity has been successful in iden- tifying some demonstrators in con- nection with yesterday's stink- bomb incident and Thursday's en R t#"block-in" of a DuPont recruiter. p n yAll - placement interviews - con- tinued .normally yesterday. One Y JACOBS student who was blocked from in- -in convictions received stiffer terviewing theDuPontrecruiter r defendants in the LSA Bldg. yerday held hisiterview to- .Yesterday's Incidents were part sentenced by District Judge of continuing SDS "educational rt in. the:Sept. 25 protest. Most campaign." pending iearings in February tOn Thursday SDS led from 25 pedn.erng nFbur to up to 150 students to West En- v trials. If the requests for new gineering Placement 0 f f i c e s, lose sentenced plan to appeal blocking a DuPont recruiter in his office and barring applicants from- e the same as those previously entering. One window was smash- rticipants: seven days in jail,,. ae but there were no injuries or 40 fine: The defendants maY Last week SDS sponsored con- I.frontations with an Allied Chem- ical recruiter and Marine and Navy Or MOC G , recruiters. About 15 demonstrators dumped dead fish on the Allied, Q& B ' ygg Chemical recruiter's desk and sprayed his office with pesticide * A strike by workers at the protesting the company's distribu- Schnectedy N.Y., General tion of DDT.' Later that day another group Electric plant is settled for of the same size confronted mili- all practical purposes as un- tary recruiters, destroying papers ion representatives recom- and drenching the Navy recruiter mend acceptance of a con- with black paint, protesting the war in Vietnam. tract. There has been no report from * City Council considers the I University officials of - what their first Ann Arbor air pollu- response will .be to either today's Lion ordinance amid Critb- incidents or the other related con- tionrdinancehamidnriti-n frontations. cisms that its enforcement Administrators have indicated,; provisions are not strong however, they intend to press enough. charges once identifications can! * Walter Shervington, medi- be made. I It is not yet clear whether cases cal school instructor and .will be prosecuted within the Uni- candidate for vice president versity through the Central Stu-r for student services, meets dent Judiciary or through the civill with six SGC members to courts. Recruiters have declined, discuss his views of the job to comment on what organizations might take., and 1 i s t s the conditions Engineering College Dean Gor- that will have to be met be- don Van Wylen said he hopes for identification of protesters and a1 fore he'll take it. See SDS, Page 8t Nixon $200. U. S. I billion Budget asks WASHINGTON ( iP-President Nixon last night called his forthcoming $200.8 billion budget "a major blow in stopping the inflationary psychology," and forecast success in the effort to curb rising prices. But Nixon told the country to expect a slow economy, with some risk of a rise in unemployment, for the next few months and promised to seek a pickup of activity in the last half of 1970. In the major surprise of a White House news conference, the President announced he has decided to seek a major expansion of the bitterly disputed Safeguard antiballistic missile system. He said he wants the systems to defend American cities as well as offensive missile sites in order to defend against possible "nuclear blackmail" -Associated Press President Nixon responds to a reporter's question R UBIN TO TA LK: peakers, wors1ops set for re ression 'conference toniht By CARLA RAPOPORT A two-day Conference on Re- pression which is the first of its kind will begin tonight at Hill Auditorium. The conference is sponsored by the two-month old Ann Arbor Committee on Repres- sion. - Featured speakers for tonight's teach-in are Jerry Rubin, Chicago Conspiracy Defendant, and Emery Douglass, the minister of culture On Sunday, Kenneth Cockrel, a for the Black Panther Party. I militant black Detroit lawyer, will Following the speakers, work- address a general meeting in the shops on a variety of topics deal- Natural Science Aud. At the meet- ing with repression in America will ing's conclusion, the group w il11 be held in Angell Hall. again split up for workshop study. Topics range from "Repression Frank Joyce from the Chicago in the Military," which will be led Conspiracy staff will lead one of by a member of the American Ser- the work shops on "Political Or- viceman's Union, to "Mass Me- ganizing and Political Trials,, dia and Repression." gaiigan'oiialTil. a and R press n."The conference's final m eeting will be at 4 p.m. Sunday, again in the Natural Science Aud. The workshop leaders will head a dis- cussion on "Responses to Repres- T- sioin-What can we do?" by a nation like Red China. The ABM announcement - with details to be disclosed within 30 days - is certain to stir another angry debate in the Senate, which battled for weeks before narrowly approving the first installment of the system. . The remarks came in Nixon's first economic message, released in advance of its delivery to Con- gress scheduled for Monday. The White House had said in advance Nixon would not discuss the budget and economic messages at his news conference. a- But the President chose to men- tion the budget himself, saying that the nation is now in "a cri- tical position" in the effort to curb inflation. ". . . The decisions made in the next month or two will determine whether we can win this battle," he said. He said the new budget, the first which he has shaped from the start, will be a major blow against the thinking which sends prices upward. It envisions a $1.3 billion federal surplus in the 12 months beginning next July 1. Nixon declared irreversible his policy of supplanting American combat forces in Vietnam with South Vietnamese troops-but said if the Communists step up the conflict the United States will re- taliate. "Wte have the means, and I will 'be prepared to use the means, strongly . .more strongly than in the past," Nixon said. CRC d elay , The Michigan Civil R i g h t s Commission (CRC) has postponed its decision in the case of LaVerne Hill vs. The University so that Mrs. Hill may make a further presentation of her complaint of racial discrimination. Mrs. Hill charged in July, 1965, that hospital administrators dis criminated against her in refusing r to accept the withdrawal of her resignation. A referee's report based on testi- The literary college adminis- trative board deferred action yes- terday on an LSA Student ,A-s - sembly proposal to grant students parity on the board and all its academic hearing boards, and to remove non-academic cases from administrative board jurisdiction. The board voted to consider the proposal at its next meeting, the date of which was left undeter- mined. The assembly proposal would add six voting student members to the board, which currently con- sists of six voting faculty mem- bers. It would give students three voting seats and faculty three vot- ing seats on academic h e a r i n g boards. Currently, two students, two faculty members and two ad- ministrators sit on these boards. .The proposal specifies that cnly academic matters fall within the jurisdiction of the disciplinary hearing board. It proposes that all non-academic cases be brought before an LSA student judiciary, for which a proposed constitution has been presented. Assembly vice chairman Bob Grobe '70, predicted yesterday that the board will approve the pro- posal. The assembly proposal has re- placed an earlier proposal, pre- pared by a board member and a student, which would have given students four of 10 voting seats on the Board and did not specify that non-academic cases would be outside board juri'sdiction. The assembly originally accepted that proposal, but later rejected it and replaced it with the current pro- posal. The final decision on recogni- INCENSE, ART AND FOOD World's Fair '70 invades T Union By ERIKA HOFF If you crossed an international department store with a restaurant on Fourth Street, and added just a touch of the annual 4-H Club fair, you would probably end up with something very similar to World's Fair 1970. Twenty-three different nationality clubs took over the second and third floors of the Michigan Union yesterday to display their countries' products, arts, and cuisine. Closing your eyes, the foreign languages, smells, and traffic made each room seem like a marketplace. The only problem with atmosphere occurred when the thick incense of India filled the Scandinavian area and clashed with merrimekko. The World's Fair program also included a variety show. A the afternoon show the Turkish Students Association and the Latin American Students Association presented dances of the' country in native costume. The most enthusiastically received parst f the production. however, appeared to be the Karate demonstration sponsored br- this conference is the first . activity sponsored by the Ann Ar- bor Committee on Repression. However, the committee members plan further action against repres- } sion after the teach-in. One committee member, Brian Spears, outlined the purposes of the group. "We plan to keep the ; var pus educated as to. the repres- sion occurring across the country and in Ann Arbor. We also plan to support those who need our help ; by offering to give financial aid. and political support." j "If repression continues, wte must ' meet its challenge," he added. i The committee received none- tary dotations for their conference from the Lawyers Club, Student' Government Council, and G"ad-, uate Assembly. The Office of - Religious Affairs also cooperated wilh the s'oup in th^ p -"ine o '' ;;; : n _ .. U f