Homecoming: Utop ia is do your own thing """ -Da ily'-Eric Perkeaux Pageantry: Queen Nancy Sebold .. . --Daily---Eric Pergeaux ,11 sic itih fDion te. . Daily--Eric Pergeaux Social Justice NOTHING TO LOSE BUT. OUR 'CHANGE See editorial page Y Sw 43UU ~I~it6; RADIANT High-55; Low-45 Sunny and cool little chance of rain Vol. LXXIX, No. 50 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday,'October 26, 1968 Teri Cents WIDER CONCERNS: ? :s ;; ... Twelve Pages Rudd: 'Student power' not issue at Columbia ADC protesters By STEVE ANZALONE Mark Rudd lashed out last night at the assumption that' the' Co- lumbia uprising last s p r i n g' resulted from a lack of communi- cation with the administration and a growth of student "desires to exercise control over their own! lives." Rudd, whose leadership figured prominently in the' rebellion at Columbia, said that "student pow- I swing .wit SW1 9Wth er is totally irrelevant to where shut-down of the university aimed we are at." to strike at larger issues concern- Speaking to a packed house in ing the corporate, exploitative the Union Ballroom, Rudd dis- make-up of the university, missed the ideas that the revolt The building of the gymnasium was staged to change an archaic in a Harlem neighborhood and administration and to advance Columbia's ties to the Institute for student power in university af- Defense 'Analysis (IDA) were only fairs. symbols and not the substantive The former Columbia student issues, Rudd said. said that the people taking part Before Rudd's address, a film in the rebellion that led to the was shown to the audience about - thsiege at Columbia. The film was produced by "drop-outs from the commercial film industry" and en H 10e l' ;showed events from the inside of buildings that the students had' seized. 1 Rudd said jokingly of the film, It is biased, it is propaganda, and is is completely true." declared guilty *Juryc nowvicsseven u sIU ents attempt to disqualify Elden fails By GEOFFREY STEVENS In the continuation of a trial halted on Monday by a de- fense attorney's walkout, Ann Arbor Municipal Court con- victed seven University students arrested in the September welfare sit-ins of criminal trespass. John B. Collins, attorney for the defense who walked out of Municipal Court charging that the trial was."a mockery of justice," was denied a motion that Municipal Judge Samuel J. Elden remove himself from the trial for reasons of bias. Collins said after the trial that he "had asked twice for Judge Edlen to be removed --- 'I The president of General Motors er's dollar that comes from in said yesterday, that the automo- and outside the industry., tive industry offers more oppor- Cole reviewed a number of tunity for creative, self-expression vances in automotive safety than ever before. pollution abatement to illust GM president Edward N. Cole, the success General Motors speaking at the Centennial Con- ineers have achieved th vocation of the University's Me- He pointed out that GM a chanical Engineering department, I mobile price increases have said a shift in emphasis from corn- mained minimal, despite the p petitive items to environmental j sure of rising operating costs problems had. instilled new vigor Cole asserted, that maintena and importance in automotive en- of this momentum in serving gneering. satisfying the customer "will He urged student engineers to quire further acceleration of equip themselves to meet the de- pace of technological and mana mands of today's changing; times. ment innovations" in order to pr If they hope to succeed profes- vide greater product value; sionally and personally in our in- contribute to the solution of creasingly complex society, he said, nations environmental ands they should familiarize themselves ial problems. with a wide range of technical and non-technical subjects. ' The speech department h Cole contended that work on the announced dates 'for electio environmental problems of traffic of students to department safety and air and water pollution faculty committees. An electi made automobile engineering more meeting for graduate studen challenging than ever. will be held at 5 p.m., Tue Oct. 29, in Rm. 2528, Frie Tdhnroughout nis address. Rudd stressed the idea of building a ad- "mass democratic and revolution- and ary movement." He said that the' gate movement should do things all eI the way from leafletting to at- ese.n- 'ta n g Police. is. Rudd urged participation in the -Daily---Jay Cassidy from this case. Once in circuit court on Wednesday, and once before the trial." His motions were 'denied both times. In the first session of the trial on Monday, Collins refused to continue with the afternoon ses- sioW Rudd pontificates before a packed house AfTRA(CT FACULTY: He subsequently walked out of the trial in the face of a threaten- 71 T I1 IF 1I1I1, ed contempt charge from Elden. Engineers are also critically in- volved in the industry's continuing attempts to maintain a satisfac- tory cost-price-profit balance and in the competition for the consum-, vv N , a awa. N w , K Bldg. A similar meeting f undergraduates will be held 4 p.m., Thurs., Oct. 31. also 2528 Frieze. ut-student strike that the Ann Arborde hnrd re- SDS chapter is planning for No- £ ed and returned to the courtroom res- vember 4 and 5. Jim Mellen of the saying "no one will make a mock- Ann Arbor chapter said that the ery of my court." ince strike will protest the fraudulence By RICHARD WINTER version will be the literary col- free the present building, located and of the election, the continuance The University hopes that the lege, and more specifically, the at Glen' and Ann streets, to be Also, in the first session of the' re- of the war in Vi'etnam and the much-needed wet laboratory and psychology department. The de- converted during the summer for trial Collins was granted the right the University's complicity with the research facilities being planned partment was hit hard this year occupancy sometime next fall. to seek a ruling from. the circuit ige- war. outliningfor the conversimon of the Food by senior faculty losses, largely at- Smith indicated t h a t the re- court on a procedural point In- ro- In outlining the events that Services building will aid in at- tributed to poor laboratory facili- maining unassigned space might volving the seating and identif- and ended in the confrontation at Co- tract ig nefacurty. tie i the artment. be used as initial facilities for an cation of defendants. the 'lumbia. Rudd mentioned a March of. aes aorf dhescto 2ad0 r saie eets abty inter-college program in psycho- PROCEDURAL POINT soc- coup in the SDS chapter there of space allocation in the psycho- 20g000 square feet of the facility biology. This program, now under; The procedural point involved that led to a take-over by younger ment is initiating a recruitment ButSmith would not be so defi- study, would combine much of the the seating of defendants during -people like himself.,identification.ino 11rionsssclaims He sid hatse . program aimed at filling senior nite a b o u t any estimates. "We:dsidentification. Collins claim- las He said that the younger people staff positions vacated last year. promised that the literary college and departments of the University, ed that the defendants should be ns had grown tired of the "overly He hopes the new labs, which Vice would be given a share of t h e in biological psychology, neuro- able to sit in the audience and be al verbal approach" to politicizing President for Academic Affairs space in the building, but .the ex- logy, neuro-physics, and so . identified. Elden wanted the de- on students. Allan Smith called "very attrac- act amount has not been decided Even if the psychology depart- fendants lined up, seated in front its . Rudd made a reference to a sin- tive facilities" will help attract yet." ment gets its hoped-for allocation, of the jury in assigned seats. The; s. filar split in SDS here that many quality staff to the department. Smith said he plans to "develop its research and physiological fa- Circuit Court upheld Elden's deci- rze believe was caused by the same However, decisions concerning a wet laboratory with only a por- cilities will still be "very tight," Sion on Wednesday. or kind of disagreement over the ap- 'the allocation among the various tion of the building assigned" to Papsdorf says. -Dy at i proach to building a radical move- schools and departments of the specific purposes. These facilities will serve "pri- the circuit court denied, Collins' in ment. almost 40,000 square feet in the Smith said plans call for a new marily as replacement" of inade- obheciona the dendCnts r The split eventually led to the building are yet to be made. Food Services building to be com- quate facilities now in use, such idetin, by the destng o er. walk-out of the Radical Caucus. A major beneficiary of the con- pleted by next summer. This will as the labs in the basement of 'dentified bythe arrest oers. _ --. Mason Hall and the Argus build- The defendants were seated in as- ing. signed seats. ' PROGRAM REVISION Smith said the new facilities for-: During the testimony, however,: psychology "willnot be a substi- several officers said that if the tute for laboratory facilities in the ! defendants had been seated in the new psychology building." Plans audience, they would not have 'for this building are currently be- been able to identify the defen- 'robs hetto develop-ment -P-sofsi ht h e asgah fore the state legislature. dants without the aid. of a photo-, Papsdorf said that .tche new labs graph. students a descrip- sign professionals ... help establish the enter the University of Michigan can will be used mostly for research, The prosecution's identification' needs and attitudes goals and means of achieving a desirable spend two years at another college or and little space will be allocated procedures have been the subject man-made environment." But this is only junior college and transfer into the four- for teaching. However, the labs' of much criticism by defense at evopoulos, , "students one facet of that enormous achievement. year professional program.. now used for research on the third torneys. Both Collins, and Joel' - grasp such funda- Department chairman Robert Metcalf The four professional years are designed floor of Mason Hall will become Feldman, defense attorney for a the need for com- explains, "In the next 40 years we will with flexibility in mind. Should the stu- teaching facilities, group tried on Oct. 10, have nd involvem'ent in probably build the equivalent' of all our dent choose to leave school after the first William Hays, dean of the Lit- charged that the arre'ting officers ms, perhaps by the existing structures to meet the needs of two years of concentrated basic study, erary College, labeled the p o o r have needed briefings-includingI students can become an expanding population, increasing he will receive a Bachelor of Science laboratory facilities available to photographs with the defendant's h in npsychology"aeacrisis situation." names on them-to identify peo- 'Berkeley disorder I subsdes From Wire service Reports BERKELEY, Calif.-At a noon rally on the campus of the Uni- versity of California At Berkeley yesterday radical student leaders junked a plan to reseize Sproul Hall. In the wake of several days of violent confrontations between demonstrators and police, about 500- people appeared at the rally. Scarcely 30, however, responded to the suggestion that another building be barricaded. Discour- aged SDS, leaders decided against the plan. The crowd did, however, march en masse to the Alameda County courthouse', where 76 protesters were being arraigned for the sei- zure of Moses, Hall Wednesday night. Bail had been set at $1,650 for each of them. Only four had their bail reduced to $750. Berkeley administrators also took action against the Moses Hall protesters, pla'cing all of them on interim suspension until a meeting BULLETIN LONDON ), -, Eugene Mc- Carthy was quoted in a dispatch to the London Times ag saying he will announce his support for the candidacy of vice pres- ident Hubert Humphrey Wed- nesday in California. The Times received the story from its Washington corre- spondent, Louis Herefi. A&Dseminar p By SUSAN ROTHSTEIN One night a week, 20 University stu- ' dents and several urban black leaders have been meeting until well into the night for an out-spoken, no-nonsense discussion of the gap between "white academia" and the urban ghetto. But this is no extra-curricular gather- ing. It is 'a meeting of a new architecture graduate seminar, on 'urban development and it is only one of the many curriculum changes that 'department is making td meet the needs of the times. Prof. Stephen Paraskevopoulos of the college of architecture, co-creator of the course along with William Barth of the Center for Research," on Conflict Resolu- tion, explains that' "there are two phi- losophies of a un$versity. One is that it and urban planning tion of the special of urban citizens. "If," says Parask in the first term can mental concepts as munity influence a development progran second term severals involved with specific munity development troit. area." A related program University participat Larson's Infant Care Program. This inter involving seven Unit hopes to design pilot Fiint and Ann Arbor w ers can csafel iOnxO projects in the De- whicht has attracted ion is Prof. C. T. and Training Center disciplinary project. versity departments, t centers in Detroit, where working moth- thpi , .hildrim in L flLjtlj, pL aLl. e UPIa,-ek1.L U0 obsolete and deteriorated structures. After 12 years of study, the department has significantly revised its five-year program. The basic changes are fairly simple. Whereas the old program consisted of one year of liberal arts studies plus four years of professional education leading to a Bachelor of Architecture degree, the new vi Pr- x n n. ,' t-fx -n v-.1,. 4'., nran. aegree wicn qualifes mim or a variety. of occupations within the building indus- try. The last two years offer a much less rigid program in which the student selects / 27 hours of electives and his own thesis topic and tutor. Completion qualifies him for either a Master of Architecture degree or a combined Master and B.A. degree. The six year graduate is prepared for r-r f, cin - t-nnfr ,t-t-hn ri.r. .. These poor facilities "show a p failure at the University, not the INADEQUATE PROOF nnlPr d rlr t m rt tsl " 't i E cnege oartea nment eve ne . said. TIME CHANGE Yes folks, tonight is that, time of annual confusion, the night we go back on standard Feldman has also charged that movies and pictures taken at the buses used to transport arrestees from the County Bldg. to the Jail are not adequate proof that the defendants were, in fact, inside the County Bldg. after closing hours. ?e i E i t 1 r i . next week, when a joint student- faculty committee will vote on their expulsion. Berkeley campus Chancellor Roger Heyns recommended yes- terday that all of those students who took part in the barricading of Moses Hall be dismissed or ex- pelled. They are currently under interim suspension. A classroom boycott called Thursday by student body presi- hours. ient Charles Palmer failed to