PARSONS' SUSPENSION: A TEMPORARY VICTORY See Editorial Page Y Sira &titIbp NO1 CHANGE High-35 Low--I7 Cloudy, chance of light snow oft. . . . - - -- - . - - - - Vol. LXXX, No. 132 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, March 13, 1970 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Te.Cnt Twelve- Paaes- One arrested P job protest of LRSO HILE S SUSPEI ) sit-i s1 RE OKED BLDG. recruiter 301 T LS By AL SHACKELFORD An oil-and-feathers "trash" directed at Atlantic Rich- field recruiters resulted yesterday morning in the arrest of a AJniversity student. Engineering Placement Director Prof. John Young de- scribed what happened as follows: "I was in the outer office of the placement office at approximately 11:20 when I heard my secretary, who was going out, holler. I went out of the office and saw the oil and feathers poured on steps and floor, and caught a glimpse of at least one girl. Immediately she *an out in the direction of the Diag." Tova Klein, '71 RC, was arrested yesterday by Ann Arbor policein connection with the incident, and was charged with " malicious destruction, a low misdemeanor. She pled not , oo 1e "guilty to the charge, and was Rm areleased on personal recog- nizance. Miss Klein's trial is l' , set for April 20 at 2:30 p.m. in District Court before Judge Pieter Thomassen. The steps to the west entrance stage ost to the basement placement office were, saturated with a coat of old oil covered with a topping of By CARLA RAPOPORT fluffy white feathers. A slick of Governor William Milliken yes- oil about five feet in diameter terday announced the resignation spread over the floor, also covered of Louis Rome as executive direc- by feathers; a sack of feathers for of the State Commission on proclaiming "Save at Ulrich's" qc- Law Enforcement and Criminal cupied a position in the center of a$ustice. the slick. Rome, who owns six apartment Young called the disruption "ex- Rome wh ows sx aartenttremely objectionable" and add- buildings in Ann Arbor, has been em;y o'tinbit andopdd-e the bjet o may atios tkened, "I don't think it accomplishes the object of.many actions taken any useful purpose." by the Ann Arbor Tenants Union He was unable to estimate the in the last two months. amount of damage caused by the Milliken said Rome "has made oil-and-feathers attack but said, an important contribution in the "We'll never be- able to get it establishment of the Commission completely clean; there will al- and has been very helpful regard- ways be a stain." ing the administration of the Asked if Atlantic-Richfield will Crime Control Program in Michi- continue their recruiting gan." Young answered, "Yes." Rome yesterday pleaded guilty The action was similar in na- to two charges of building code ture to SDS action last January, violations in #City Court. Judge when protesters painted a Naval *ieter Thomassen levied a $70 recruiter black and dumped a fine for the two violations. The dead fish on the desk of a repre- incident will be listed on Rome's sentative of Allied Chemical. record as a criminal misdemeanor. Yesterday's disruption was an- The Tenants Union travelled to other part of SDS' present cam- Lansing last Jan. 22 to picket paign against on-campus recruit- Rome's office, protesting the con- ing which began at the beginning Roe's offie, prtetngthe cdn of the winter term. itionsof his apartment buildings The r e c r u i t I n g controversy nAnn Arbor. reached its most violent and mili- Union members spoke with tant stage on Feb. 18 when an SDS Governor Milliken at that time, lock-in of General Electric re- presenting their statistics on cruiters resulted in a skirmish be- Rome's buildings and maintenance tween protesters and police. The procedures. level of militance achieved by Milliken said at that time, "I SDS at this disruption was unpre- *Vill certainly be looking into this cedented in University history; it matter as soon as possible." was the first time protesters at- Asistant Press Secretary to the tempted to forcefully free 3- governor, Dale Arnold said yes- : arrested by police. terday, "The Ann Arbor building The most recent stage in the charges may have been a factor recruiting controversy took place for Rome's resignation. Certainly on March 3 when radicals con- a public official (Milliken) takes fronted three representatives from apublic oficialm hM~en taks ,,the Dow Chemical Co. in a heated debate before more than 750 peo- Tom Higgenson of the Tenants ple in the Michigan Union ball- Union sees Rome's resignation as room. a politically significant event. An SDS l e a f 1 e t distributed "Rome was a timebomb in Mil- around campus yesterday stated liken's hip pocket. If Rome had that the oil-and-feathers incident gone to trial yesterday instead of was intended "to demonstrate pleading guilty, newsmen would what Atlantic-Richfield (ARCO) rhave publicized Rome's negligence. stands for-oil and a destroyed This would have been absurd for ecology." Milliken-a criminal in the Crime The SDS charges stem from Commission." ARCO's plans to lay an 800-mile Tenants Union lawyer Jonathan pipeline in Alaska, an act which Rose said last night, "Although I the SDS leaflet claims will "scar agree with the Union's , position Alaska's tundra and permentently that Mr. Rome has breached his destroy the ecolological balance of bresponsibility as a landlord, I a massive region of Alaska." feel that he has unusually humane ARCO representatives deny the and progressive ideas pertaining to SDS charges. criminal law." SDS has planned a noon rally Bernard Winckoski, who has for today on the Diag to demon- been the commission program strate against Atlantic-Richfield manager for Community Relations as part of their continuing cam.- and Crime Prevention, was named paign against on-campus recruit- acting director in Rome's place. ing. v 18ear vote passes Senate WASHINGTON ()-Overrid- ing objections that it might throw the next presidential election into confusion, the Senate voted 64 to 17 yester- day to lower the voting age to 18 in all elections starting Jan. 1, 1971. The Senate turned a deaf ear to protests by some members that the Supreme Court might rule the 18-year-old vote amendment in- valid after millions of young peo- ple had cast ballots in the 1972 presidential election. "What sort of confusion would reign?" asked Sen. James B. Allen (D-Ala). "Who would be presi- dent?" Allen tried vainly to defer the effective date of the legislation until after 1972. His amendment was defeated 72 to 15. The move to lower the voting age was pushed by Senate Demo- cratic Leader Mike Mansfield of Montana, who made it a part of a proposed five-year extension of the 1965 Voting Rights Act. It still must be approved by the House and, assuming the President signs it, it is sure to be chal- lenged in the courts on constitu- tional grounds. Allen and some other senators contended that Congress has no power under the Constitution to lower the voting age, that it can be done only by constitutional amendment. They argued that the Constitution specifically gives the power of determining voters' qual- ifications to the states. Georgia; Kentucky, Alaska and Hawaii now permit persons under 21 to vote. Under Mansfield's proposal, the right to vote in federal, state and local elections would be extended to all persons 18 and older. This would give the ballot starting next year to an estimated 10 million to 11 million young people. Backing Allen's unsuccessful ef- fort to delay the effective date un- til Jan. 1, 1973, Sen. John C. Sten- nis (D-Miss), said an adverse court ruling after the 1972 election could throw the presidential con- test into the House of Representa- tives. -Daily-S DEAN WILLIAM HAYS of the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, standings the right, speaks with the 300 demonstrators who came to protest the suspension of BobP Hays reinstated Parsons who is charged with allegedly striking John Young, Director of cering School Placement Service. EYEWITNESS TELLS HAYS 'PARSONS IS INNOCENT' By JIM McFERSON Literary college Dean William Hays yesterday told a crowd of about 300 demonstrators gathered in the LSA Bldg. that he will lift the suspension 'of Robert Parsons, '70, and order it removed from Parsons' record. The protesters had planned a sit-in in Hays' offices to protest the suspension, which the dean had ordered pending a hearing on charges that Parsons struck a faculty member during a protest against recruiters from General Electric Co. on Feb. 18. They left after Hays' announcement. Addressing the group at 12:30 p.m. yesterday, shortly after they arrived, Hays said, "I am willing to lift the suspension because I don't think Bob Par- sons did it." In a later interview, Hays ex- y plained that he was approached at about 11:30 a.m. by Paul Siano, an assistant director of student organizations, who said he had witnessed the alleged striking of the faculty member, and main- tained that Parsons was not in- volved.ru "The eyewitness' account makes the case against Parsons unten- By ROBERT KRAFTOWITZ able," said Hays. "There is cer- Literary college Dean William taintly enough evidence to cast Hays said yesterday he believes sufficient doubt on the validity of that job recruiting "should not be the suspension, so it's being with- hponsrerbyt ing sity of~ sara Krulwich drawn. sponsored by the University of Michigan." second from The dean ordered the suspen- The dean added however, that Parsons, '70. sion after he and the LSA execu- recruiters should be able to hold the Engin- ticve committee studied three af- interviews with students at some fidavits which claimed that Par- accessible site, preferably off- sons had struck engineering Prof. campus. John Young, director of the En- Hays presented his views on the gineering Placement Service, dur- current controversy over on- ing the protest against G.E. The campus job recruiting during a dis- affidavits were submitted by cussion with about 00 students Young and two engineering stu- protesting his summary suspension dents. of Robert Parsons, '70. Suspension of a student by the In a later interview, the dean ,oe d dean is allowed under the Fac- indicated he had discussed his ulty Code of the literary college poition on the recruiter issue in extreme circumstances. with President Robbert Fleming. Hays said he will request Cen- He said he did not recall when the tral Student Judiciary (CSJ) to discussion took place. hold a fact-finding hearing to de- Two weeks ago, Fleming turned termine what actually occurred down proposals for a suspension of during the time Young was alleged recruiting and a one-day morator- te Rep. Ray- to have been struck. ium of classes for a campus-wide ed that taxes On Tuesday, CSJ "ordered" Hays debate on University ties with the g might have to lift the suspension, maintain- military and with corporations. s ten per cent ing that The proposals were submitted by oney to com- t oed b ony rig Senate Assembly's Student Rela- ione to om-to due process before any disci iestioned whe- pline is imposed. In addition CSJ tions Committee, and the Radical uld be willing maintained that it had sole juris- College, following several attempts diction over -the case since it in- by protesters to prevent inter- ead of the De- iove n -caemic e it views between students and re- ado E t n D volved anon-academic offense al- cruiters from taking place. z, Education legedly committed by a student. In denying the requests, Flem- ithat public The power of CSJ to enjoin a ing said he was turning the issue thas public disciplinary action taken by dean over to the newly-created Commit- has no power or faculty board has never been tee on Communications - a stu- ditives, other recognized by the Regents. dent-faculty-administration b o d y duce cancer. Hays said yesterday that his designed to help resolve conflicts a certai decision to remove the suspension in the University community. for our pub- was not related to the CSJ "or- However, it remains uncertain t too much" der," or to the sit-in, but to the whether the committee, will be Eddie Albert eyewitness account presented by able to discuss the issue, since program. "j Siano Student Government Council has prm. hIs However, leaders of the protest declined to appoint the three stu- with this mat- attributed Hays' decision to the dent members of the committee. ould." pressure of the impending sit-in. SGC President Marty McLaugh- impassioned Parsons said he believed the lin indicated yesterday that t h e d the U.S. De- suspension was lifted "not because boycott of the committee w o u I d ture of taking of the administration's generosity continue "in order to prevent the in failing to or the realization of a mistake, administration from bottling up the pesticide but because we took power into the recruiter issue until f I n a1 s our hands by acting." week." S, Page 8 Reached by telephone last night, He said that by the time the com- See SUSPENSION, Page 8 See RECRUITING, Page 8 TOWN MEETING: Wide s upport ask for pollution By DAVE CHUDWIN Warning that saving the en- vironment will cost billions of dol- lars, government officials at an ENACT-sponsored town meeting last night called for political ac- tion by the public to force ade- quate anti-pollution legislation and funding. "If you want to enlist in an en- vironmental war, you're got to lobby, you've got to elect your friends and throw out your enem- ies," Mayor Robert Harris told the crowd of about 1,000 people at Pioneer High School. He said that politicians would not vote higher taxes to pay for cleaning up the environment or legislation that might hurt power- ful economic interests unless there is strong public pressure. The session, attended mainly by elementary and high school stu- dents, remained placid and uncon- troversial, in contrast with t h e verbal brawls and heckling t h a t marked Wednesday's kick-off rally. Pursuing the theme of a d e- fg quate funding, Sta mond Smit estimat and the cost of livin to rise by as much a to provide enough m bat pollution. He qu ther the public wo to pay the price. C. C. Johnson, he partment of Health, and Welfare's e health service, said apathy is one of th federal government1 to regulate food ad than those that pro "We should have amount of compassio lic leaders, but not commented actor1 who moderated the don't think the gov been locking horns w ter in the way it sh In an articulate, speech Albert accuse partment of Agriculi a "criminal attitude take action against DDT. See OFFICIAL: EN4CT-sponsored workshops cover many ecological issues (The following reports were writ- ten by W. E. Schrock, Robert Jerro, Lynn Weiner, Jim Beattie and Han- nah Morrison. The Environmental A c t i o n (ENACT) Teach-In continued in- to its third day yesterday. A wide variety of workshops were held last night and yesterday afternoon on subjects ranging from population control to pollution of the Great organized through the business school, three representatives of big industries reputed to be big pol- luters presented their side of the case last night to a crowd of over 80 people in the Business Admin- istration Bldg. The speakers were Dr. John Reynolds of the air and water control division of Consumers Pow- er, Jack Quick, assistant comp- Le akes. troller of General Motors, and In the only ENACT workshop Eastern Airlines vice-president for facilities, design, and construction, Mark Cheever. Two students on the speakers' platform were Larry Stevens, pres- ident of the business administra- tion school student council, and Paul Cheever, a student in the business school. Although there was anticipated radical disruption according to some sources, nothing of this na- ture happened. However, two po- liceman were in the lobby of the school prior to the start of the presentation. After each man had explained his comany's anti-pollution ef- forts, which they documented at great length, they answered ques- tions from the audience. Although some of the questions attempted to challenge the speak- ers, the audience accepted the an- swers of the speakers for the most part. The formal program was ended after about two ,hours, and those wishing to discuss further ques- tions with the speakers retired to the business administration school lounge. * * *M At a symposium yesterday on "The Future of the Great Lakes," the three keynote speakers agreed SGC asks new discipline codes, backs mass action to support BAM, blasts 'U' policies on recruiting By CARLA RAPOPORT Student Government Council last night called on the faculty in each school and college to re- write its own code of academic conduct in committees of equal student-faculty membership. The call was a direct response to LSA Dean Hays' recent suspen- sion of Robert Parsons, '70. A second major resolution pass- ed unanimously by SGC last night requested the Regents to pass the Black Action Movement's (BAM) demands in their entirety at. the -that college faculty agree that no student will be disciplined for personal or nonacademic. conduct under any faculty code. In their request for acceptance of BAM's demands, SGC itself vigorously endorse the demands, specifically increased black enroll- ment with adequate financial aid, and urged all student to show their support of BAM by attending the, Regents' meeting and expressing their feelings in "a way that won't be ignored," T'hionrnnnal fnholf anrif The entire proposal, passed after considerable debate, based its call for a recruitment halt on the pre- mise that U.S. government en- gages in a policy of oppressing peoples around the world in forms of genocidal wars, and supressions of popular reform and revolution- ary movements. The proposal then followed that the University of Michigan sup- ports this denial of a human's right to life by allowing recruiters on campus from companies that promote the U.S. policies. }