THE REVOLT OVER ED SCHOOL PROMOTION See Editorial Page (ZAP ilri 1 OA& la&V :43 a t I SCURRILOUS High-29 Low-12 Snow flurries this morning, remaining overcast and cold. w Vol. LXXX, No. 124 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, February 27, 1970 Ten Cents Eight Pages Violent protests continue in Santa Barbara ov.Reagan declares ~state of emergency SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (M - Roving bands of youths pelted police cars with rocks and bottlesfor a third straight night yesterday despite a curfew and a state of emergency declared by Gov. Ronald Reagan. However, except for one group of about 150 youths, the bands were small and there was no renewal of the violent rioting Wednesday during which a bank was burned to the gkound and numerous fires were set and windows broken. The 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. curfew was ordered by county super- visors after a meeting With Reagan. It forbids loitering and 'ssemblies of more than three persons in the one-quarter- * * * * * * Assembly hits moratorium, mile suburban community of Building 's mashed at Buffalo By The Associated Press Students invaded the adminis tration building of the State Uni- versity of New York at Buffal last night, continuing a destruc- tive spree which brought two con frontations with police earlier in the day.p The students later left the build Firebombs were tossed in three other buildings, but other students quickly extinguished the blazes. Witnesses said the students smashed windows, ripped out tele phones and started at least o n e ;rmall fire in the chief administra- 'tive building, Hayes Hall, ;which houses offices of the president and deans. Some 200 city police and sher iff's deputies, armed with tear gas, were called. The night disorders followed a ethree-hour lull in violence on the campus, which earlier in the day had seen students use cars as bat- tering rams, smashing vehicles in- to the outer walls of the campus police headquarters. The violence marked the second straight day of disorders on the O campus. About 200 students tore down a fence at a Navy-sponsored r e - search project and stoned a build- ing in which the ROTC had of- fices. The violence lasted for about three hours before the students drifted into dormitories. School administrators blamed the violence on "the radical left" and "their lust for destruction." Damage at the wood frame po- lice building was described as ex- tensive, but no injuries were re- ported. Yesterday's disorders followed a night or rock-throwing and win. dow-smashing on the campus Wed- See BUILDINGS, Page 8 CORRECTION Col. Antonio Cris c u o l o, commandant of the University Air Force ROTC Program, was incorrectly reported in T h e Daily yesterday as having spok- en at the Ann' Arbor Board of Education meetingrsaying he had a daughter in school, and saying he believed that A n n Arbor is a prejudiced town. Col. Criscuolo was not at the board meeting, he does not have a daughter,and he does n o t believe that Ann Arbor is a prejudiced community. Isla Vista, near the University of California campus here. The area was heavily patrolled by sheriff's deputies Thursday night but they had difficulty coping with the hit-and-run tac- tics of the demonstrators, who were apparently protesting on a wide range of issues. The group of 150 youths started a bonfire on a street in the busi- ness section. They began drifting away when a voice from a police helicopter ordered them to dis- perse. Reagan ordered the attorney general to investigate the leader- ship of the throngs involved in - the melee Tuesday and Wednes- day nights. He also asked the at- torney general to ascertain if .Wil- liam M. Kunstler, an attorney in - the Chicago riot conspiracy trial who spoke on campus shortly be- fore Wednesday's demonstration, crossed state lines to incite a riot. In an interview from his Mama- s roneck, N.Y., home, a New York - radio station, WNEW, quoted Kunstler as saying, "I didn't see anyone rushing out of that sta- dium ... It was a quiet, responsive I audience. They sat patiently list- ening to me." Asked to comment on the vio- lence, Kunstler said. "I think probably the same thing would have happened if I had never been ein California:" He said it was a product of bit- terness and frustration. But he noted, even to call it violence, is 'misleading. "It is minor maraud- ing, growing out of this bitterness of Vietnam. It is nothing com- pared to what happened daily in Vietnam." The governor accounted his moves after a closed session with Santa Barbara County supervisors, university officials, the sheriff and a National Guard official. "The Board of Supervisors has requested and I've agreed to a declaration of extreme emergency, K he said. "We will make highway patrolman available to prohibit the formation of mobs." Earlier, he told newsmen in an emotional voice: "So help me God, we will provide everything that needs providing even if it means a declaration of martial law. . This cannot be allowed to continue and will not be allowed." The National Guard will be mobilized, he said, if the sheriff1 and highway patrol request it. The Wednesday night demon- stration by about 1,000 young people was broken up by a massed force of police after the bank branch was gutted, a squad car burned and real estate offices raided. The bank estimated damage to its branch at $400,00 and said it is offering $25,000 for information leading to conviction of the arson- ists. Civil "John Doe" suits will be filed against all participants, the bank said. In a letter to Reagan, the bank See CURFEW, Page 8 backs By ROB-BIER The Senate Assembly last night unanimously opposed a moratorium of classes to allow a University-wide forum on job recruiting. However, the faculty's h i g h e s t decision- making body did call on the newly-created Committee on Communications to "conduct a series of forums" on the issue. Student Government Council, at its meeting last night, refused to participate in the Committee on Communications until the Regents pass bylaws concerning student decision-making, however. This renders that committee virtually helpless to deal with the recruit- ing forum. forum -Associated Press IGNITED BY A BARREL OF GASOLINE SOAKED RAGS hurled by demonstrators Wednesday night, a Bank of America branch blazes out of control. Police advised firemen not to fight the fire because of the size of the rampaging crowd protesting on a variety of grievances with U.S. society. OBSCENITY CASE: Ju dge hac o Am By JANE BARTMAN "It was A temporary injunction pro- judgment," hibiting the showing of the film Delhey's "I Am Curious (Yellow)" was is- film shows sued by Circuit Court Judge Wil- aal interco liam F. Ager yesterday afternoon. indecency.' Defense attorneys plans to appeal said that th the order as a test to the con- ing social stitutionality of the state ob- to appealt scenity law. of persons The film, which opened two Ellmann' nights ago at the Fifth Forum, the injunc was called obscene by a group of main point city officers who viewed the film the uncons at a Wayne County theater Tues- plication o day night. The group included law. Assistant Prosecutor John Huss, Elimana Deputy Police Chief Harold Olsen, should not and Prosecutor's Investigator Ray junction w A. Tanner. film obsce: County Prosecutor William Del- not be up hey filed the petition for the in-pioeta junction on the basis ofrtheir re-prove that port. ot be ser port. cutors to p' Ager ordered the Fifth Forum to appear before the court yes- terday morning to show cause why the injunction should not be is- sued. After hearing statements by SG Attorney E. H. Ellmann of De-: troit, who represented the theatre, the Judge determined that they oi had not shown cause and issued ohreprr esriigodr the temporary restraining order. Ellmann said he will issue an, By CA appeal with the Michigan State Student Court of Appeals on the grounds last night d that neither Delhey nor Ager had ing student determined that the film was in Committee fact obscene thus, the order of until the R restraint would be unwarranted. cerning st Both Delhey and Ager indicated which are in court yesterday that they had cil. not seen the film. _ _- - Council's Assembly's action in a special session last night was in response to a proposal by its Student Rela- i shwntions Committee (SRC). The com- mittee's recommendation called " suspension ofrecruiting"to per- 1N mit widespread involvement and ur o u s a conducive atmosphere" for a day-long debate on job recruiting. At the same meeting, Assembly a question of blind that there was cause for the ob- also elected its representatives to Ellman said. scenity charges. the new University Council and complaint said that the' The state law says that any Committee on Communications, Dean Van Wylen scenes of nudity, sex- local executive officer can file an urse, and "acts of gross obscenity complaint and an in- " The statement further junction immediately issued pre- he film "has no redeem- venting the sale, distribution, ac- grace and is designed quisition, or possession of any to the purient interest "obscene, lewd, lascivious, filthy, Barry Bluestone viewing the film. I s arguments against tion consisted of four ts. His first point was titutionality of the ap- f the state's obscenity argued that the judge be able to issue an in- ithout first proving the ne. He said it should to the defendant to the injunction should ved, but for the prose- prove that it should - indecent or disgusting" material. Accompany that argument was Ellman's second point - that the restraining order would violate the theatre's constitutional rights. He claimed it violated the first amendment by not allowing the theatre to show the film before it was actually decided that the film is obscene. Again he stressed the question of the constitutional validity of putting the defendant on the de- fensive and forcing him to prove See JUDGE, Page 8 set up a week ago when the Re- gents passed sections 7.01 and 7.02 of the bylaws. Before taking action on the issue, Assembly was addressed by SRC's c h airman, architecture Prof. Joseph Wehrer, who ex- plained SRC's proposal. "We feel a failure to discuss; the whole issue with all of its ramifications can only lead to fur- ther violence," Wehrer said. Het added that the issues involvedr went beyond recruiting to include civil rights, the relation of the University to the community att large, the role of minorities andf the University's priorities.- Several Assembly members re-; sponded to Wehrer's remarks, ad- dressing themselves almost solelyf See ASSEMBLY, Page 8 t Conference on commerce bars radical fcut By W. E. SCHROCK Two members of the Radical College were turned away by administrators from the business school when they at- tempted to enter a University-sponsored Seminar on Inter- national Licensing and Joint Ventures yesterday. Sponsored by the Institute for International Commerce, the seminar was attended by businessmen who paid a $100 fee to learn methods of increasing "business growth and profitability overseas." The twb college members turned away yesterday were anthropology Prof. Marshal Sahlins and Barry Bluestone, a research assistant in the In-1 tI 0 f stitute of Labor and Industrial Relations. G refuses to participate on nimittee on Comnmunicatioiis ARLA RAPOPORT Government Council decided against appoint- t representatives to the on Communications egents pass bylaws con- udent decision-making acceptable to the coun- action is expected to have control of the policy of the housing units, -A three-option proposal on the academic calendar, including 1) Maintaining the present tri-mester system; 2) Initiating a quarter system, the academic year being three quarters; or, 3) initiating a two semester academic years with a summer session. Students would vote for one of the three calendar proposals. Also last night, SGC urged all airlines to stop flights to any Arab country which refused to guarantee the safety of passeng- ers of any flight. Council declined to take a posi- tion on the recruitment issue for the second week in a row. Two re- solutions proposed by Joan Mar- tin, council member, were not tak- en up due to lack of quorum. The first resolution would have condemned Fleming for his "blatant repression of the truth on this campus," because he refused to finance an SGC drafted "f a c t sheet" written as a rebuttal to a similar leaflet passed out by Flem- ing after last week's GE recruiter protest. Miss Martin's second proposal called for a complete halt to all job recruiting on campus, stating that "SGC takes a firm, unyield- ing position against the govern- ment's imperialistic policy . .."' Sahlins and Bluestone decided to seek admission to the conference yesterday morning because of concern in the college over the nature of the closed seminar. But when Bluestone and Sahlins sought admission yesterday mor- ning, Robert Adams, Director and Professor of International Busi- nes refused them admission, ex- plaining, "This is a private con- ference for the businessmen who have come here." According to Business School Dean Floyd Bond, "the conference is to improve the economy of Michigan and to improve the bal- ance of payments." In seeking entrance, the radical faculty members pointed to an earlier invitation for two of their number to attend the Seminar. But Adams replied that the in- See CONFERENCE, Page 8 REFORM MOVES BACKED Abortion controversy heats up By HESTER PULLING The state controversy over abortion law re- form is heading toward a climax as a state senate hearing, a court suit, and a number of citizens' group actions have all been announced with the same thing in mind-liberalizing the current state law. In addition, Ann Arbor's Republican Sen. Gilbert Bursley introduced a bill Wednesday which, if adopted, would make Michigan's abor- tion laws among the most liberal in the nation. The state's present abortion law prohibits abortion except when necessary to save the mother's life. Services.Committee, headed by Sen. N. Lorraine Beebe, (R-Dearborn). Sen. Beebe's committee has been holding 'a series of state-wide hearings on the bills, the last of which is scheduled for Detroit this morn- ing. The hearing, which will start at 10 a.ni and will continue throughout the day at the City-County Building, will be attended by a number of local groups interested in abortion reform. Deanne Warren, a spokesman for the. Ann Arbor Committee for the Control of Abortion, said she believes the turnout at the hearings, especially the last one, will be an important factor in getting support for a reform measure. totally prevent the committee, a student - faculty - administration panel created by the Regents last week, from dealing with the prob- lem of on-campus job recruitment. The current controversy on job recruitment was referred to the committee by University President Fleming last Tuesday, and by Sen- ate Assembly last night. "This whole thing is a typical Fleming move," said Bob Hirshon. "We must continue our year-and- a-half policy of non-participationI * with the Regents and Fleming un- til all the bylaws are passed." In other action by the Council, three referenda to appear on the March ballot of SGC elections were approved. Students will be voting on these three issues: -A three dollar per student assessment for the Martin Luther King Scholarship fund. The fund Engine ers f unit backis recruiting- By JIM McFERSON Responding to recent protests against recruiting by large com- panies on campus, Engineering Council last night called for con- tinued recruiting with no suspen- sions-however short. The motion, introduced by the Executive Board of the council, contended that "any discontinu- ation, no matter how temporary, of the activities of the Placement Service would be a serious break- age of faith on the part of the University." The motion states that these demonstrations utilized "force and repression" to acconplish their objective and asks the University to "reject the use of violence at this early stage." Deleted from the original mo- tion. was a passage which. read, "In the events of the past few weeks, the students of the Engi- neering College have exhibited considerable tolerance and re- straint in their response to the forces of violence and repression on this campus." An amendment to the motion stating that "the vast majority of Coalition plans Tuesday forums to discuss recruiting on campus By LARRY LEMPERT Representatives of a number of local groups formed a coalition last night to call for a discussion- moratorium next Tuesday on cam- pus recruiting. The groups charge that Uni- versity rveruitfinff Dnliripsinictate The discussions will also be aimed at encouraging a continuing' dialog on recruiting beyond the forum Tuesday. An SDS representative men- tioned the possibility of action' against recruiters from Dow Chemical Co. on Tuesday. The be part of an educational cam- paign for the University commun- ity. The coalition is preparing a pamphlet on recruiting to be dis- tributed Tuesday. The represent- atives of Radical College, ENACT, and SDS reported that their: groups have already compiled a i