CHICAGO POLICE: GUILTY AS CHARGED See editorial page Y 411 i C tgaYt D a itomomul. CHILLY RAIN high-43 Low-30 Mostly cloudy, windy chance of drizzle VOL LXXIX, No. 78 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday,.December 3, 1968 - Ten Cents Twelve ,Pages U S. study CHICAGO () - Daniel Walker, author of a report criti- cizing Chicago police for their handling of bloody street vio- lence during the Democratic National convention yesterday called for "prompt and severe" action against offending mem- bers of the force. In a 345 page report to a presidential commission investi- gating the August disorders, Walker described the nights of melees as a "police riot." "The suspension or dismissal of a handful of policemen will not be enough," Walker said, to prevent a recurrence. "This community should not settle for less than prompt and severe action against these offenders." He told a news conference he understands 8 or 10 policement have been suspended or dismissed. "More than a handful were involved," he observed. "Their lieutenants and sergeants know who they are." Walker admitted that demonstrators who massed on Chicago during the convention period provoked police. But "the weight of violence was overwhelming on the side of the police," Walker added. He said there was no avail- able estimate of how many policemen may have participated in violence. In the summary of the report, Walker identifies some of the provocation and the ensuing reaction. The provoca- tion, the report says, "took the form of obscene epithets, and . of rocks, sticks, bathroom tiles and even human feces hurled at police by demonstrators. Some of these acts had been planned; others were spontaneous or were themselves pro- voked by police action. Furthermore, the police had been put on edge by widely published threats of attempts to dis- rupt both the city and the convention." Walker explains that was "the nature" of the provocation. The response, however, "was unrestrained and indiscrimin- ;ate police violence on many occasions, particularly at night. "That violence was made all the more shocking by the fact that it was often inflicted upon persons who had broken no law, disobeyed no order, made no threat. These included peaceful demonstrators, onlookers, and large numbers ofT residents who were simply passing through, or happened to live in the areas where confrontations were occurring." Mayor Richard Daley termed the over-all report excellent ! but criticized the summary as misleading. "If used alone the summary would mislead the public and be a disservice to those who prepared the report," the mayor said. He noted the report criticized a minority of the police- , men and added the majority of policemen "did act respon-1 sibly." "I am proud of them and so, I am sure are the peopleI of Chicago," he said. Walker disagreed with Daley's view of the summary, how- ' ever. He said the entire report was his opinion and "I stand 3 unequivocally on the entire report."P Walker further declared in the summary the police "have not been properly trained. They are trained for a one-on-one. situation and they do not function as a unit as the National p scores Chicago police -Daily-Thomas R. Copi - Daly - Daniel Okrent The Mayor of Chicago (Chicago's finest: On the defensive HUAC shuns commission report FORM UNION: Student renters plan to organize P C By DAN SHARE A meeting to organize a rent strike to force Ann Arbor landlords to bargain collectively with a proposed student union will be held tonight at 8:00 p.m. in the Union. The meeting has been organized by an ad hoc committee which hopes to establish a renters' union to bargain collec- Otively with the Ann Arbor Property Managements Association. The proposed union would, it is hoped, be able to measur- From wire Service Report WASHINGTON - The House Un-American Activities Committee yesterday refused to accept into its record the report on the Chi- cago riots by the President's Com- mission on Violence. Tom Hayden, co-ordinator of the National Mobilization Commit- tee's activities in Chicago and former Daily editor 1960-61 at- tempted to introduce the report as part of his testimony for the corn- mittee yesterday. However, Rep. Richard Ichord (D-Mo.), said he considers the report, made public Sunday night, to be only collateral to the pur- pose of the hearing. During yesterday's hearings, Hayden testified that p o 1 i c e charged into the crowds and hit people in a disciplined way. -ably aid student tenants by Guard does." . a h iarn i o~iio nai __ Clash its 'S. F. State " reo ening W SAN FRANCISCO (0) - Classes resumed yesterday at long-troub- led San Francisco State College despite a scuffle involving its new president and an abortive inva- sion of the administration build- ing. The invasion was accompanied *by a flurry of rock throwing that shattered two of the building's windows. Two students and one nonstu- dent were arrested as police con- fronted but made no physical con- tact with a handful of Negro and white demonstrators. Dr. S. I. Iayakawa, newly nam- ed acting president, fulfilled his promised 8 a.m. opening of the college, which had been disrupt- ed by violence and vandalism since the Black Student's Union strike Nov. 6. Hayakawa climbed onto a sound struck operated by the Students for a Democratic Society, a n d; jerked .the wires from one of its loudspeakers. About 150 students pulled and shoved at him and snatched his hat. Police arrested Ernest Brill, 23,. a student, and Juan Rivera, 24, a nonstudent who were operating the truck. Police drove the truck away. Meanwhile most of the college's 18,000 students and 1,100 faculty members resumed classes quietly. 4 About 200 strikers picketed' building entrances but most stu- dents ignored them. At lunchtime the Black Students Union organized a rally on the' campus, opposite the administra- tion building. One speaker asked for a show *f hands for support of the strike. About 150 in a crowd of 1,000 re- sponded. A broadcast from the building ordered the crowd to disperse. rncta th a-rt- - - --ar 2ar n -acniev~ing ignnncantL1l reduc- In the report Walker adds, "Fundamental police training tions in rent,gi was ignored; .and officers when on the scene, were unable -establishing the right of the ' to control their men." leasee to determine the length of T of the lease, The report cites a study made by an inspector from the -eliminating damage deposits. Los Angeles Police Department, present as an official observ- -getting all complaints to be er, who says: "There is no question but that many officers handled promptly and efficiently, acted without restraint and exerted force beyond that neces- --gaining free parking for each sary under he circumstances. The leadership at the point of apartment. conflict did little to prevent such conduct and the direct con- The ad hoc group recognizes trol of officers by first line supervisors was virtually non- certain difficulties in establishing existent." a renters' union as a recogzed Reviewing a Wednesday evening confrontation (August bargain agent. Members of the 28), Walker's report relates the following remarks from group hope to use the rent strike 'nte bevr as a lever to force landlords to another observer. recognize the union. It seems.to me that only a saint could have swallowed the I think they were ordered into action by Mayor Richard Daley to get the yippies off the streets," he added. Hayden testified on the first day of a renewed series of hear- ings on the street riots that ac-1 companied the Democratic con- vention in Chicago last August. The hearings, which started be- fore Congress adjourned, are in-' tended to determine whether sub- versive influences were present in organization of the anti-war pro- tests which sparked the rioting. ' Daley made an anti-Semitic re- mark to Sen. Abraham Ribicoff, (D-Conn.), at the convention. Hayden claimed, "and used all the language to him that we are accused of using and he's still mayor of Chicago." Hayden said his group did not want a violent demonstration at the convention. However, he said the situation became violent "be- cause of the Chicago police de- partment, of which this committee is an extension." The Chicago police were part of overly-elaborate preparations for security at the convention thats would have caused a disruption no1 matter what the demonstrators had done, he maintained.- Hayden also revealed he once "xc as a dupe of the Central-Intel- legence Agency. "I was hired to go to the Youthf Festival at Helsinki, Finland toj carry Old Glory into the heart- land of Communism." He said he learned later that het was part of a CIA plan in which students were unknowingly used to spread the message of democ-; racy among international youtht leaders. Hayden said he later changed! his mind, after having been hired.; He said the plan had been for him to "publish a little news-r paper" for distribution at the . The CIA had no comment on Hayden's assertions. Hayden, the only witness most of the first .day, said he and other youth leaders visited North Viet- nam in 1965. Under questioning" by subcommittee counsel Frank Conley, he said the trip was to "learn the North Vietnamese view-; point on the war and prospects of urine than by mace," he re- for peace." Capitol police stood guard both plied. Mace is a chemical some- inside and outside the hearing times used by police. room but no demonstrations oc- Hayden said he considers he curred in contrast to earlier hear- likely will be jailed for carrying ings wheome ersotes appere out his views. He is being prose- ejected from the room. cuted in Chicago on charges grow- "Since when. is obscenity a rea- ing out of the disorders. Lit faculty ostones requireet ebat By DAVID SPURR The literary college faculty yesterday made the discussion of language and other course requirements a special order of business for its next meeting. At the same time, the faculty sent back to its Curriculum Committee petitions signed by 3,500 students to abolish var- ious course requirements. Included with the petitions is a letter from Student Gov- ernment Council President Michael Koeneke, '69, urging the faculty to consider ending the college's language requirement. Professor James Gindin of the &-- '- 0 son for policemen to hit you on the head," Hayden asked in an ex- change with Rep. Albert W. Wat- son, (R-S.C.). Watson asked Hayden about bags of urine and other objects thrown during the demonstra- tions. "I would rather be hit by a bag Spokesmen said that the rents would be placed in an escrow fund, the details of which have not yet been worked out, until the unior gains recognition from the Prop- ertp Management Association. The strike will originally focus on some of the major managemeni companies within the Associatior said Mark Schreiber, a spokes- man for the ground and Student Association chairman. Schreiber did hint, however, that there was a possibility that if the renters' union gains strengtL it might unite with similar move- ments within the Ann Arbor com- munity. Spokesmen we re optimistic about the meeting citing the fact that about 35 people attended or- ganizational meetings during the Thanksgiving recess and that ten pledges to withhold rent have al- ready been received. Peter Denton, another group spokesman, said last night the rent strike would not begin until 2,000 pledgesdto withhold rent had been received. SU.S. accepts holiday truce SAIGON (AP - The U.S. Com- mand and the South Vietnamese government have announced that the allies will observe a 24-hour cease-fire in Vietnam for Christ- mas. The U.S. announcement came this morning, hours after Presi- dent Nguyen Van Thieu said last night that his forces would ob- serve a cease-fire from 6 n m vile remarks to the officers. However, they went to extremes in clubbing the Yippies. I saw them move into the park, ' swatting away with clubs at girls and boys lying on the grass. More than once I witnessed two officers pulling at the arms of a Yippie until the arms almost left their sockets. Then, as the officers put the Yippie in a police van, a third jabbed a riot stick into the groin of the youth being arrested. It was evi- dent that the Yippie was not resisting arrest." A Federal legal official reports in the study that while walking with several officers, he watched them confront a stumbling derelict: - See U.S. COMMISSION, Page 9 English Department, chairman of the committee, had passed the petitions on to the faculty from his committee without recommen- dation. Referring to the commit- tee literary college Dean William Hays said, "It's their essential job to look at these things. The fac- ulty is not dodging the issue." The Curriculum Committee is not expected to make a recom- mendation concerning distribution tU gradls introduce 555 suit festival, held in 1962, which was described by subcommittee coun- sel as communist controlled. Daniel Walker SECOND HEART OPERATION doci By JIM NEUBACHER A 15-man. surgical team at University Hospital sucessfully completed the state's second heart transplant operation last night-one year to the day after the world's first human heart transfer. The recipient in yesterday's operation was Donald Kamin- ski, a 38-year-old Alpena man who had been awaiting a trans- plant in University Hospital since Sept. 27. Kaminski had been slowly dying of cardio my- opathy, a degeneration of the muscle fiber of the heart. Without the operation, Kan- inski's heart muscle would have lost its resiliency, eventually be- coming too weak to keep him alive. Kaminski's condition was sim - ilar to that of the University's first heart traon.nlant noant tors complete tranR splant requirements until next March. By RICK PERLOFF "Even though we're not ready Four second-year University law with our report yet, we wanted to students filed suit yesterday in a give the faculty the opportunity Detroit federal district court to discuss requirements in gen-aantSlcieSrieDrco eral," Gindin said. against Selective Service Director The motion to send the peti- Gen. Lewis B. Hershey.asking that m wascertain graduate students be de- made by Prof. Jacob Price ofrth duntil thepen of the t- history department and passed demic year. unanimously. A pre-trial hearing-.will be held Prof. George Piranian of the Dec. 10. mathematics department made thel The suit also asks the court stay motion to discuss course require-I the induction of plaintiff Timothy ments at the January meeting. Sisson for at least 30 days pending In the course of discussion, Prof. the outcome of the case. Sisson, William Cressey of the romance a second-year law student, who languages department suggested was denied a I-S deferment, has a special committee should be been ordered to report for duty in formed to study the language re- January. quirement. The suggestion, how- The students maintain that old Robert Pushman. Pushman, a senior at Central Michigan University, was fatally injured in an automobile accident in Flint early Sunday morning. A Flint doctor learned of Pushman's condition Sunday morning and called officials at University Hospital, notifying them of the potential donor. Pushman was unconscious, the Flint doctor said, however, Push- man's parents indicated their son had always desired to "help someone else." Pushman's parents gave tenta- tive permission for the trans- plant operation Sunday, and .University Hospital doctors pro- ceeded with tissue and blood typing tests to determine if Pushman's heart would be com- patible with Kaminski's system. The use of a "trauma case" victim for a transnlant donor operation, Nelson said the 15- man team performing yester- day's operation was adequate. He explained that the difference was due to use of only one heart pump machine, instead of the two used in the last operation. He also said it was possible to trim the team because the pro- cedure was better known and more expectable the second time around. Five men removed the donor's heart, while ten worked on the recipient. Doctors took one hour and fifteen minutes to sew the new organ into place in Kaminski's chest. The recipient was "on the heart pump for a span of two hours and twenty minutes" al- lowing doctors to cut off the operation of the diseased organ. Following the final link-up of the new heart, Kaminski was However, anti-rejection drugs have at times proved to be "too successful," inhibiting all of the body's self-defense mechanisms and leaving the patient prone to simple infections and diseases he would normally be able to resist. One newly developed anti-re- jection drug, named anti-lymph- ocyte globulin, (ALG), has been found to work successfully in preventing rejection of the new organ while reducing the pos- sibility of infection to a mini- mum. University Hospital doctors refrained using ALG in Bar- num's case, relying on Immur- an and steriods completely. Barnum has experienced no symptoms of rejection during his ten-week recovery. He did, however, fall victim to -a short- lived lun infection. ever, was not put to a motion. Prof. Gerhard Weinberg of the history department suggested the college should offer a different diploma to those students unable to fulfill the language require- ment. Prof. Irving Copi of the Congress provided an absolute statutory right to a I-S deferment for graduate students as long as they did not have an undergrad- uate II-S since June 30, 1967. Col. Arthur Holmes, State Se- lective Service Director, Chester philosophy department, however, J. Chastek, Washington State Se- argued that such an arrangement lective Service Director and Local might diminish the value of a Board No. 48 in Adrian were nam- University diploma. ed as defendants, in addition to Regarding language require- Hershey. ments in general, Hays said, "I Washington is the home state of think it's likely some sort of plaintiff Stephen C. Ellis while change will be made." panifSehnC li hl The Curriculum Com ittee is Adrian is Sisson's local board. cTet conserinm nmber fI The other two plaintiffs named curently considering a number of '- -, .. ' -- - _ 0,...,,