I +I ; I I B Siriti an ait NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764.0554 I Ann Arbor, Michigan Poge Three .. Protesters sue Harvey over hair cuts Eight protesters arrested Feb. 18 have filed suit against Washtenaw County Sheriff Douglas Harvey and two of his deputies for cutting their hair while they were in jail. The $200,000 suit, filed Monday in Detroit Federal District Court, alleges that the protesters were "compelled to have the hair on their heads totally clipped or shaved to the scalp." Ernest Goodman, attorney for the eight said in an eight-page complaint that the shearings violated his clients' constitutional rights under the first, fifth, eight, ninth and 14th amend- ments. The five University students and three former students were charged with mis- demeanors during a demonstration against a recruiter from General Electric on campus. They were given the hair- cuts "against their will and in spite of their objections" while waiting to be released on bond, Goodman charged. Paul Wilson, '72 LSA, Robert Parsons, '70 LSA, suspended Monday by LSA Dean William Hays, Fred Miller, '70 LSA, Glenn Mitchell, Mark Moss, and former students James Forrester, James Kirk and Mark Wellman, are seeking $15,000 actual damages and $10,000 punitive damages each. Sheriff Harvey could not be reached for comment yesterday. However, he said Monday the suit "is ridiculous. The hair will gi-ow back in three days." "The fellow who did the cutting was an inmate and he's out of jail now," Harvey added. "All I know is he was supposed to treat everybody the same." Miller said yesterday the inmate was not alone when he cut the protesters' hair. "There were three deputies stand- ing- around," Miller said. "I assume it was not the inmate's decision to cut it as short as it was. He didn't seem very excited about cutting it." Forrester, who had his hair cut Feb. 19 said an officer pointed to his license and said, "'See that. That's how your hair's going to look.'" Although Forrester said his head was not completely shaved, he said "I was unlucky that I got a haircut at all. It wasn't necessary. There was no justifi- cation for it other than that they don't like protesters." Goodman said the right of prisoners to keep their hair has not yet been tested in the courts. "We've had a number of cases deal- ing with the right of college students to wear their hair long," he said. "In most of them, the courts ruled in favor of the kids. But it's hard to tell how they'll rule on people who are under arrest. "I'm sure the sheriff will argue that the cutting was necessary because of the danger of lice. But why don't they cut women's hair the same way? Don't women get lice?" Goodman added. The case will be heard at 11 a.m. March 23 by Federal District Judge Lawrence Gubow. a r II the SEA withdraws 11- P!TM P ri HACKMAN CAMILLA SPARV DOWNHILL RACER Irc ..n..s 'UM STARTS WEDNESDAY At 7:10 and 9:00 LAST TIMES TONIGHT! "THE SECRET *OF SANTA VITTOR IA" SHOWS AT: Program Information 662-6264 1:15-3:45-6:20 & 9 P.M. STARTS TOMORROW! news today by The Associated Press and College Press Service THE SENATE rejected an amendment to the 1965 Voting Rights Act that would have removed most of the Southern states from automatic coverage but would have brought in other parts of the country. The 60-26 vote was the latest in a series of turned down amend- ments by Sen. Sam Ervin (D-NC) to soften the law's impact on the South. Ervin has been losing despite administration support for broader legislation that would treat all states alike. Opponents of the amendment said it would leave only Georgia and South Carolina completely covered among the Southern states. "That is not the question," Ervin said. "A question of principle is involved." The 1965 Act provided for automatic coverage of any state or county using a voter literacy test on Nov. 1, 1964, if less than 50 per cent of its voting age population was registered to vote or voted in the presidential election that year. THE ARMY filed new charges of murder, assault and rape in connection with the alleged massacre at My Lai and added five more soldiers to the list of men accused in the incident. Among those charged yesterday is Capt. Ernest Medina, a former commanding officer of Lt. William Calley, who goes to trial May 18 on charges of premeditated murder in the deaths of 102 Vietnamese civilians at My Lai. The Army charged Medina with three counts, one of maiming and murder, one of murder, and one of assault with a'deadly weapon. The Army released the names and charges of the others accused but would not release further details because public disclosure might prejudice the rights of the accused, an army spokesman said. The five charged yesterday now face investigations to determine whether they will be brought before a court-martial for prosecution. THE NIXON ADMINISTRATION overrode the governor of Mississippi's veto of $4.2 million in federal funds for three Head Start programs. The action was a victory within the administration for James Farmer, assistant secretary of welfare in charge of Head Start and one-time civil rights activist as head of the Congress on Radical Equality. Farmer has been challenged in recent weeks by leaders of such groups as the NAACP to prove his civil rights credentials by forcing the administration to override the Mississippi veto. Secretary of Welfare Robert Finch brushed aside the objections of Mississippi Gov. John Bell Williamsand started new money flowing to pre-school projects that enroll 2,819 children, most of whom are black, in that state. * * a* FARMERS DEMONSTRATING for higher prices for their crops burned three million pounds of potatoes. The potatoes were dumped in a field near American Falls, Idaho, saturated with 300 gallons of diesel fuel, and then set on fire. The bonfire was the biggest demonstration so far in a 2;12-week campaign by the National Farmer Organization. Last week, one-million-pound batches of spuds were burned by farmers in two cities in Idaho, the nation's largest potato producer. LAMAR PUBLIC SCHOOLS, closed a week ago after angry whites attacked buses carrying black pupils, reopened as Na- tional guardsmen and state police stood guard.. . Only 76 of the approximately 1000 enrolled showed up. 52 of those were black. The school area was heavily patrolled by guardsmen and police armed with rifles and tear gas launchers. Two National Guard helicopters and a spotter plane flew overhead. proposal to fund' blacK admissions Students for Effective Action (SEA) is withdrawing the proposal it made early last month to fund increased black and minority admissions through student fees. Andy Weissman, '71, said SEA decided in conjunction with leaders of the Black Action Movement (BAM) to with- draw the proposal because "We feel that the responsibility for meeting the black demands should be entirely on the Univer- sity at this point." The proposal had called for a student referendum on a $15 tuition increase to be ear-marked for funding minority admissions. The proposal also -Associated Press 'Uncle Ho' A statue of North Vietnam's late president, Ho Chi Minh, stands in the People's Army Exhibit in Hanoi. Behind it is the star of the North Vietnamese army and the hammer and sickle emblem of communism. COMMIT TEE PROPOSAL: History dept. may changegradprogram asked that the faculty vote to assess themselves $25 a year. According to Weissman, SEA and BAM now feel the University can find the funding necessary to increase black and minority ad- missions by reallocating its pres- ent funds. "Existing programs which de- serve a lower priority must have their level of funding cut, a nd some programs which do not' be- long at the University at all must be eliminated entirely," Weiss- man said.- However, Weissman added SEA may reintroduce its proposal at some later date, once BAM's in- itial list of absolute minimum de- mands has been met by the Uni- versity. Weissman said this would be done "only to provide funds for increasing the number of black and other minority students on campus over and above what BAM has initially called for." BAM demands include the ad- mission of at least 900 new black students next fall, including 450 freshmen, 150 transfers, and 300 graduate students; an increase in the proportion of blacks in the university to ten per cent by 1973- 74 and additional annual increas- es until the proportion of blacks "shall approach, if not exceed" the proportion of blacks in the to- tal state population. Weissman said SEA believes that funding for a minority ad- missions program will eventually have to be partially supported by student fees. By ,HESTER PULLING The history department's cur- riculum committee has issued a proposal recommending t h a t "graduate students have a greater part in designing their overall program" within the department. "The primary aim of the pro- posal as I see it, is for the stu- dent to be able to arrange for himself a more individualized area of specialization," history Prof. Arthur Mendel said yesterday. "Each student would choose a ma- jor area of concentration for the first year. Thereafter, he would continue to work in that area while pursuing studies in three or more other subjects." "These subjects, in contrast to the present system, would not be limited to the usual chronological and national divisions," Mendel added. If the proposal is put into ef- fect all history majors will discuss their programs with' a committee of three professors. This commitaee will t h e n judge the proposal "in light of its rigor, integration, and general ap- propriateness to the student's abilities and interests," the pro- posal states. "Thereafter the com-f mittee will guide the student's1 study." A forum to discuss the commit- tee's proposal will be held tonight in Rackham Amphitheater at 8:00 p.m. "The plan does involve a rather radical change in the present de- gree requirements," department chairman Prof. Sidney Fine said. "The forum will present an op- portunlty for all interested persons to discuss the plan and voice their objections." The forum can not make any decisions. "Degree requirements must be de'cided by the entire de- partment which will have its meet- ing in April," Fine said. Both professors declined to speculate on the proposal's chance for success. "It would be unfor- tunate to load the meeting in ad- vance," Fine said. BelAir blombing kills two BEL AIR, Md. (A)-Two black men, one identified as an asso- iate of militant H. Rap Brown and the other still unidentified, were killed when an explosive de- stroyed their car as it traveled on U.S. 1 south of here. Whether the second man was Brown, who is on trial here on arson and riot charges, has not been positively determined al- though a state medical examiner announced a tentative finding, based on photographs, that it was not Brown. Brown's whereabouts remained a mystery. His attorney for the trial here, William M. Kunstler, the second victim but added that he did not know where Brown was. Kunstler said that in the past Brown never let him know until the last minute what his plans were. He said he thought Brown is "laying low" but that he has not reached, him yet. "I don't think he is even in Maryland," said Kunstler. Proceedings in Brown's trial were put off until next Monday. Arguments on motions by the de- fense started Monday and are in- complete. A jury will then have to be selected. Brown had been scheduled to go" on trial this week on three charges: arson, inciting others to riot and inciting others to com- mit arson. Kunstler said today he would propose an indefinite delay in the trial. When asked whether it was be- cause of the explosion and deaths, Kungstler replied, "The atmos- phere here is so bad that nothing can make any difference." He said he would renew his mo- tion that Judge Dyer vacate the order which had transferred Brown's trial from Cambridge across Chesapeake Bay to Bel Air. Brown's indictment was based on a speech he made in Cambridge in July. 1967, after which blacks set fireswhich burned out two blocks. Teaching fellows to receive merit awards Ten teaching fellows have been named as recipients of the 1970 Distinguished Teaching Fellows Awards. They will be honored at a lunch- eon today, when they will receive the awards from President Robben W. Fleming. The awards carry $500 stipends. Teaching fellows, who teach some sections of undergraduate courses while working on graduate de- grees, are nominated for the awards by students and faculty members. Selections are made on the basis of teachingexcellence. Associate Dean James H. Rob- ertson, chairman of the selection committee, said that special em- phasis was placed on imaginative and resourceful teaching, special interest in students and student concerns, and interest in educa- tional issues as well as factual in- formation. The selection committee includ- ed students as well as 'faculty members. This year's recipients are Max Apple, of the English department, Lynn Fichter, geology, Douglas Gill, zoology, Arthur Hanson, na- tural resources, William Horwath, English, Tamerra Moeller, psy- chology, Lawrence Lippitt, educa- tion. Robert Petters, music, Steven Schwartz, psychology, and Robert Wozniak, psychology. I NOW: NOM DIAL 8-6416 NOMINATED FOR 5 ACADEMY AWARDS INCLUDING Best Picture ISA STUDENT GOVERNMENT i U