RECRUITING AND THE T' See Editorial Page. C, - r t i~ an~ ~~iAit GUSTY High--47 Low--24 Cloudy with chance of showers dal. LXXX, No. 120 / Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, February 22, 1970 Ten Cents Eight Pages Stink bombs hit S. Quad, UGLI, Union By JIM BEATTIE and HESTER PULLING At least four incidents of "stink bombing" occurred yesterday on campus. Two of the incidents were reported in the Michigan Union, and one each in the Undergraduate Library and South Quad. All of the bombs contained butyric acid, an organic solution which produces a per- sistent, extremely unpleasant odor which spreads rapidly over large areas. Butyric acid is "deleterious to health when breathed in or exposed to the skin," according to chemistry Prof. Danial Longone. No group was identified as having been involved in any of the "stink-bombings." However, rumors circulated that Black Stu- dents Union (BSU) members were follow- ing up their Thursaay and Friday Under- graduate Library "protests for increased black admissions with new tactics. BSU President Ron Harris could not be reached for comment last night, but BSU member Dave Lewis scoffed at the rumors and disclaimed knowledge of the incidents. "It's just not the sort of tactic employed by BSU," Lewis said. The first reported incident occurred early yesterday morning in the Union, where A butyric acid was found on the building's third floor. Head engineer Lonnie O'Brien said the entire building was quickly affected because the smell entered the building's air circulation system. The smell of butyric acid was also re- ported to be very strong in South Quad V yesterday morning. "It smells like somebody's thrown up," South Quad resident Susie Boschan said. "It was set off in the elevator where anybody could have done it." Yesterday afternoon at about 1 P.M., butyric acid was splashed on the third floor of the Undergraduate Library. The smell spread ,through most of the building but was "particularly obnoxious" in the lobby, a staff member said. "We saw an individual leaving, and then the smell came. He was carrying a paper bag," said a third floor librarian. "But that's all we know." Police were on duty in the building at the time, but no suspect was apprehended. According to the head librarian on duty, there was no plan to close the building as a result of the incident, and desk workers on all floors indicated that most students re- mained in the building despite the odor. Another "stink bomb" incident occurred in the Union about the same time as the smell appeared in the UGLL The smell re- mained in the Union all afternoon as work- ers. were unable to locate the remains of the bomb. The bombs were dropped in the Union's k vending machine room as well as the guest wing. A Union clerk estimated 90 per cent of the Union was affected. "We opened all the windows in the build- ing, but you can still smell the acid," the clerk added, Local police are not investigating the in- cidents, Ann Arbor Sgt. D. Murray said yes- terday. 5,000 protest Chicago trial, in --Daily-Dave Schindel After the ball is over Special To The Daily Major demonstrations occurred yesterday in Washington, Chicago, and Detroit in protest against the verdicts in the Chicago conspiracy trial. In Chicago, about 5,000 people assembled at the Chiacgo Federal Bldg. and later re- assembled at the Cook County Jail, where the conspiracy trial defendants are cur- rently being held. At least six persons were arrested there for disorderly conduct. In Washington, thousands of marchers coursed through the streets moving from a gathering point across from the Justice Dept. Bldg. to the grounds of the Washington Monument, across from the White House. A heavily reinforced contingent of helm- eted riot police blocked the marchers from crossing Constitution Ave. toward the White House. More than a dozen persons were arrested as police tried to break up the crowd. The Chicago demonstration began at noon, with protesters massing on the plaza in front of the Federal Bldg. Nancy Rubin, wife of defendant Jerry Rubin, spoke to the crowd, accusing the government of attempt- ing to divide the people and turn them against one another. She told the crowd that unity was necessary before the "peo- ple" could win their battle. She urged the crowd to protest the trial, saying, "When there is no justice in the courtroom, the only justice is in the streets." Douglas Dowd, a Student Mobilization Committee (SMC) officer who was intro- duced as the person who will take over leadership of the "movement", stressed that frustration and rage were not constructive emotions. He warned that if rage is the dominant force governing the action of the movement, then the protesters would be playing into the strength of the govern- ment and would be 'destroyed. A collection for the Chicago 7 defense fund was taken in the crowd. Dollar bills were passed hand to hand to the front of the crowd, and shopping bags full of money were collected. The crowd then broke up, and traveled by bus, subway, and car to the Cook- County Jail nearly six miles away, causing a tem- porary traffic jam in the area. There they were met by 150 county and city police lining the steps of the Cook County Criminal Courthouse and both sides of the street. The demonstrators milled around a n d chanted slogans, occasionally throwing snow- balls at the buildings and police cars. It was here that the six persons were arrested for disorderly conduct. Chanting "Free Bobby Seale" and "Con- spiracy Eight, we're with you", the crowd remained in the area until about 5 p.m. and then gradually dispersed without further incident. In Detroit, about 200 demonstrators pick- eted the Federal Bldg. They spattered red paint on the building, and disrupted traffic and shopping in the area. The group then moved up to Kennedy Square, and up Woodward Ave. to the J. L. Hudson department store, where a plate glass display window was broken. Police arrested 13 persons as a result of the protests, including one black youth who was selling an underground newspaper on the corner across from Hudson's. When the youth was handcuffed and placed in a police cruiser, the vehicle was pelted with bottles. The arrested persons will face charges ranging from malicious destruction of pro- perty to assaulting an officer to disorderly conduct. Under police surveillance, an ROTC cadet and his date leave the Military Ball last night while a group of picketers protests against ROTC in front of the Sheraton-Ann Arbor hotel. The protesterswho were peaceful, chanted slogans and taunted the cadets, calling them "killers." See story on Page 3. OPEN LETTER TO COHEN Ed school students hit -Associated Press ST. LOUIS PROTESTERS cross into Illinois and shout "riot," to mock fed- eral anti-riot law under which five of the Chicago 7 were convicted., New vofaculty group takes. radical stand By ERIKA HOFF Some 70 professors and teaching fellows have organized the Radical College with the announced intention of providing "an alternative faculty and staff voice other than the Senate Assembly." The College, which held its first full meet- ing last Sunday, has demanded that Presi- dent Robben Fleming suspend all job re- cruiting on campus, and has called for a one-day class moratorium in which the University community would attempt to formulate a policy on the University's in- volvement with corporations and the mili- tary. Psychology Prof. Richard Mann, one of the founders of the Radical College, says Assembly and its executive body, the Senate Advisory Commitee on University Affairs (SACUA) don't adequately represent faculty views. "There remains .an unorganized con- stituency of radical faculty that had no where to go to take concerted action," he said. History Prof. Arthur Mendel says the College will act as a center "for galvanizing and propogating" radical views among mem- bers of the University community. "It will present a segment of the community that is not currently being seen and should coun- ter-balance the pressure to the Regents from SACUA," Mendel said. Mendel and Mann assert the Assembly is inadequate as a faculty voice. "Because of the undemocratic way in which Assembly members are chosen, the Assembly con- sists mainly of those professors who have the greatest seniority," Mann says. Assembly members are chosen as delegates by their de- partments and colleges. Because of its membership, Mendel says, See RADICAL, Page 3 commItt By PAT MAHONEY Expressing s h a r p criticism of recent education school executive committee faculty promotion decisions, education school stu- dent leaders are demanding that "a team of impartial evaluators- from outside the Uni- versity" review the decisions. The demand was expressed Friday in an open letter from the executive committee -of Students for Educational Innovation (SEI), the education school student group, to Education Dean Wilbur Cohen. 'he letter claims that, in several recent promotion decisions, the school executive committee has not "objectively applied" criteria it agreed to in December for the evaluation of faculty. These criteria, which were accepted by the committee and two fectiveness, research and scholarly writing, public service and service to the education school and the University. The letter especially condemns the execu- tive committee's decision last week to deny promotion to Associate Prof. Byron Mas- siales, who, the letter claims, was amply qualified by all these criteria. The letter ex- pressed "shock and dismay" at what it called "this lamentable action," and con- tinued, "%re . . . pledge ourselves to take whatever action necessary to assure" the review of the decision by an impartial group from outside the University. Dean Cohen was unavailable for comment on the letter last night. , Executive committee member Prof. Finley Carpenter said yesterday he was- "hopeful that an outside review committee will be invited and that we will take advantage of, their evaluation' on the case of Prof. Mas- sialas. "I'm hoping the decision is not final," said Carpenter. "I suspect the - executive committee will agree to a review." Carpenter said the Massialas case was a "sensitive case" about which the committee had had difficulty assessing objectively. He said that Massialas, though a productive scholar and a hard worker was not a "politic" man, and tended to arouse strong feelings of like or dislike. SEI President Michael Vander Velde said Cohen told him the executive committee's on promotions vative, and most of those denied promotion recently have been very liberal," said Van- der Velde. "It seems that faculty members who have strongly supported students serv- ing on committees have been penalized by being denied promotion." On Monday at noon, SEI plans to hold a inass meeting at University High School to plan future strategy, said SEI member Nancy Sprague. The SEI letter presented evidence indi- cating Massialas' ability by each of the es- tablished criteria. In teaching effectiveness, "student evalu- ations of Dr. Massialas' courses during the past year place him in the top quartile of all School of Education faculty" said the letter. In research, the SEI letter said Massialis has published seven books in the past five years. "Several of these are landmark treat- ises," it added. The letter noted that Massialis was elect- ed last year to the steering committee of the College and University Professors of the National Council for Social Studies. Also, the letter said, Massialas was a founder of the American-German Pedagogical Society and is currently on the editorial board of Education and Social Science. And, the letter states that Massialas has "worked literally day and night with several SEI members to develop an experimental teacher education program in inquiry teach- ing." As chairman of the personnel committees of the department of behavioral sciences, the SEI letter said Massialas has "pushed for a set of procedures for directly involving the Black Caucus in the recruiting and hir- ing of black professors." The executive committee's decisions on promotions, if not changed by the commit- tee itself, could be appealed to Senate As- sembly's Review Committee and to Vice President Smith. HARLEM STRIKE ORGANIZER Gray highlights tenant c By BOB SCHREINER A provocative speech by Harlem rent strike leader Jesse Gray and the heated discussion which followed, highlighted the second day of the International Conference on "Students and the Tenants' Rights Movement," yesterday at the Michigan Union. . Workshops were held throughout the after- noon covering many facets of tenant unions. . After dinner, over 200 persons, representa- tives of tenants unions from Berkeley to Boston, gathered in the Assembly Hall to hear Gray, board chairman of the National Tenant Organi- zation (NTO) who is challenging Adam Clayton Powell for his Harlem congressional seat. "The Nixon administration has decided that the poor are no special class in the country," said Gray. "The government at this stage is saying to them 'we don't give a damn about n ference ants are difficult to organize because they don't believe the average person can solve their prob- lems. But organization is the only answer to build the kind of movement needed to deal with the system." "Organized tenants can make slumlords obey the law," he said. Gray warned those students present that the organization is a time consuming affair. "Most of us don't want to hear 'time' as related to struggle," he said. "Revolutions aren't from eight to five; revolution is every minute of every day. He called rent strikes "just the glamour of the struggle-a struggle that requires a revolution- ary patience." Regarding the future Gray said that "in- stead of Nixon putting a brake on the econ- omy-we ought to." W~+'~, *" -' - -