VOTER REGISTRATION : OUT OF CONTROL See editorial page Y L 111k iAa :4Iati CLEAR Nligh--40 Low-18 Blue skies will soon clash with clouds ' Vol. LXX IX, No. 1 25 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, February 27, 1 969 Ten Cents Eight Pages Voter 'registration. The students' dilemma By ROBERT KRAFTOWITZ It is becoming increasingly common to see a student walking out of City Hall a little surprised and somewhat confused over not being allowed to vote. .The campaign by Student Government Council and other student groups to get more students registered to vote in local elections apparently has resulted in more bewildered students than registered voters. However, the reason for the general dis- enfranchisement of students can be traced to state statutes which legally deny most students the right to vote in their college towns. The State Constitution requires that a prospective voter be 21 years old by the time of the election, a resident of Michigan for six months, and "meet the requirements of local residence provided by law." However, the problem for students has centered around a statute which states that "no elector shall be deemed to have gained or lost, a residence by reason of being (a student) .:. nor while 'a student at any in- stitution of higher learning." The statute has come under attack by more people than students, who have a vested interest in it. State Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley has called for a change in the elec- tion law to permit students to vote where "they habitually sleep, keep their personal effects and have their place of lodging." However, Kelley's opinion is not legally binding and legislative action is needed to implement the ruling. In Ann Arbor, City Clerk John Bentley has used the present election laws to make students give additional proof that they are legal residents. Bentley maintains that a student must show he is free from parental control and intends to make Ann Arbor his home for a reasonably long time after he graduates. But students say the questions Bentley's assistants use are inconsistent and ir'- relevant. These include: -Are you self-supporting? -Do you live in private housing? -- -Where did, you spend your last vaca- tion?, When a prospective registrant arrives at City Hall, he talks to one of several women in the clerk's office. Invariably, the first question is "Are you a student?" The case of Janice Shelberg, '70. is typical. Last January. when she tried to register, after living in Ann Arbor the past several years, the clerk asked her how much fi- nancial support was coming from her parents. "I indicated that 50 per cent of my expenses were being paid for by my par- ents," Miss Shelberg says. "She then told me I would have to register in my home town, because students who receive that mnuch from home are considered under parental authority."' Miss Shelberg tried again to register this month. When the clerk-a different one---questioned her about self-support, she refused to answer because "I didn't see how this had any bearing on whether I can vote." The clerk then !told hei' to see Assistant City Attorney Fred Stein- gold, "He said my period of residency could not be fulfilled as a student, atnd my being under parental authority indicated I was here as a student." Miss Shelberg says she gave him a note from her father saying she was not under parental authority. "but he said that since I was receiving 50 per cent financial sup- port from home, I was considered under parental control, according to the inter- pretation of the laws made by the city clerk's office." Vie Adamo, Voter Registration Chair- man for SGC recently questioned Stein- gold on this interpretation. "Steingold said that if they were being unfair, they were being equally unfair to everyone" State elections director Bernard Apol told Adaino he would be glad to accept calls from the city clerk's office for clari- fications of the election laws. According to Miss Shelberg, however. when she asked Steingold to have Bentley call Apol, Bentley refused, maintaining that Apol had indicated he did not want to decide matters of residency. Currently, John Bowers, '71L, is asking the Washtenow County Circuit Court to hold that seven questions, including the ones cited, which the clerk uses to de- termine eligibility are "irrelevant" and should not be asked during registration.. If the court finds these questions rele- vant to determining eligibility for registra- tion, Bowers will ask the court to hold that the clerk cannot keep a student from registering because of circumstances such as: -not being more than 50 per cent self~- supporting; -being absent during University vaca- tions; °-not having fixed intent to settle here permanently. Currently, both the state elections divi- sion and the Attorney General's office have taken steps toward enfranchising more students. See UNIVERSITY STUDENTS, Page 8 1 00 MARCH ON NORTH HALL: R adi c als stage D i ag rall to demand, end of ROTC About 100 students protested * the presence of the Reserve x .'Officer Trainin Corps (ROTC) on campus yesterday - "- with' a guerrilla :theatre po- duction and a speech on the . >...gram, sponsored by the Students 4 for a Democratic Society, against "militarism" on campus. The pro- gram is being carried out concur- ' rently with similar SDS chapters "V *at other campuses across the nation. Steve Fitch, the SDS speaker at r 4 . } the Diag rally, questioned the role of the military and the "increasing militarization of this country." '<' . "he army is not only suppress- g' ing people in Vietnam, but it will} " also, be used to put people- dow~n here," he said. After£ the, rally the protesters ' ' }V marched to North Hall-the build- ... ing where ROTC classes are held -and continued the demonstra- tion there... At North Hall, one protester called for the blocking of the en- '(,uerri l trance of the building, but only nine others were willing to take, Sthis action. M I X T 'E T v Don Rotkin, '70, objected to tak -"'MSU-INCIDENT ing any action at the time. "You! ,,A have to have some idea of what you are doing and where you ar e c l f going to," he said. /( + After the protest, Capt. W. R. Sisley, head of the naval scienceM department said, "They didn't felonemuhirobl. cause uch truble. -Daily-Sara KrlI ch~ "They could have caused trouble Faculty unita EMU critic izes, administration By SAM DAMRIEN The faculty council at Eastern Michigan University severely criticized yesterday the administration's handling of the recent student disorders and also urged the administra- 'tion to drop charges against 14 students arrested last week. The proposed amnesty was part of the faculty council resolution which also: * Condemned the administration's use of police in stu- dent disorders without prior ~---- consultation with the faculty; - S!Pushed for the acknowl- Ntb edgmen b th adinstrtin srEEEE- ofed emndby othe aminstraet i E 9J .4 ofic the emands ofablack studt were, not unreasonable. Ji J M5O JJ'U J{EMU President Harold Sponberg 5/WEANEEt -Daily--Peter Dreyfuiss h1a theatre' protests ROTC on campus dical Ayers arrested ~ous assault charges said he couldn't tell if the univer- sity would defend the students who were arrested, but added that the university would "seek a fair and favorable disposition.'' sponberg said the decision to call for law enforcement agencies was essential to.,provide protection for university records and build- ings. Black students caused a disrup- tion at the student library yester- day by checking out over 3,000 books. They also discussed plans to hold more boycotts of classes. Preliminary hearings began yes- terday in Ypsilanti District Court for Robert L. Smith, '72 Eastern, who is charged with inciting a riot during last week's disturb- ances. 'the examinations of the other 13 individuals arrested, of which 11 are students,\ have been ad- journed until March 26. The resolution of the faculty council, which is composed of all departmental chairmen, was ap- proved during anr open meeting between students and faculty. The resolution will be presented to the entire faculty on March 5 for a vote. During the faculty council meeting, many professors stressed that student-faculty communi- cations must be rebuilt and re- generated. A report presented to the coun- ,Ml showed that only 17 blacks were presently employed at the University in administrative or faculty positions. JERUSALEM(W) -_The Ideathi of Prime Minister Levi Eshkol has thrown Israel into an internal power struggle at one of the most crucial times in the 20-year his- tory of the state. Some Arabs fear the passing of Eshkol will turn loose the hawks, As border incidents have re- cently escalated to alarming pro- portions, Eshkol's death was ex- pected to open the floodgates to a tide of political infighting. Esh- kol was 73. For the time being -- until the; official period of mourning ends after at least seven days-Depu- ty Prime Minister Yigal Allon, an Oxford-educated former major general, Is in charge, But the Kniesset, Israel's parlia- ment, must elect a new govern- ment to run the country until the national elections in November. Obviously, whoever holds the pre- miership over these months w ill1 be heavily favored to stay in pow- er for a full term of four years. There are three main candi- dates: Allon, Defense Minister Moshe Dayan and former Foreign Minister Golda Meir, once a Mil- Waukee teacher, Israel's ambassa-. dor to the United States, Yitzhak Rabin, is probably on outsider, be- lieved to be unpopular with t h e army high command. Allon, 50, and Dayan, 53, were comrades in arms during Israel's war of independence. For s o m e months now they have been bitter rivals for the top job. See ESHKOL, Page 8 *S'n. PackwOo' Senator I .ashs volun By DAVE CHUDWIN Oregon's Republican Senator Robert W. Packwood visited the University yesterday to seek stu- dent support for a voluntary army. 1 "We have to convince public ' opinion that a volunteer army is desirable and would work," Pack- wood told about 300 students at a noon, rally on the Diag. "We are having problems and need your, help." Packwood and nine other sena- Stors are sponsoring a bill that would abolish the draft and set up a professional, volunteer army in its place. "Studies indicate that a volun- teer army would cost $5-$7 bil- lion more than the present sys- tem," Packwood told the crowd. SHe asserted that the abolition of the draft and its inequities would be worth the extra expenses., Packwood said fears of a pro- fessional miliary becoming t o o powerful were exaggerated. "Un- til 1940, except for the Civil War and World War I, this country al- *ways had a professional army, and the military never took over," he explained. Packwood closed the ten-minute r'ally by urging students to get involved in politics. "You may not be able to vote but you can J at Diag rally if they wanted," he added, "but By MARTIN IRSCHMAN of the Paper, an established tin-, there, takinig pictures as they had b they know that it is against Uni- Prominent Ann Arbor radical derground newspaper at Michigan to sit in the middle of the street," versity rules and they are smart Bill Ayers was airrested yesterday State. Greene said. a koo i enough not to cause any." on charges of felonious assault An official in the Ingham Colill- LPric was arraigned yesterday in2 a k v A leaflet distributed last week with a dangerous weapon. tyPrsct'sofeysedaLnigMucpl Court and re- by SDS said, "ROTC on this cam- The charges stem from Ayers' said further arrests were expected; leased on $2,500 bond. Preliminary pu not easewitmaitisholowbeaca-e participation in a demonstration i in connection with the Feb. 10 in-, examination was set for March 6. ntbcueimananlo c Feb"Tiisacmlt *oiia nerort'tdeic standards, but becausehe the . 10 at Michigan StateUn-cdt.,Tiisa omle ltcl Jloiiiasieefnsadrh n versity and an incident there in The maximum sentence 1n-: as- frameup," said Price. "Cops are terests it serves are fundamentally which a WJBK (channel 2) news; sault with a dangerous weapon is out to get the key organizers in can't handle bombers or missiles: wrong." camera was damaged, five years in prison, the Movement any way they can." witin he tmsphre. OnFe. 1, te crrculm cm- The demonstration was staged WJBK news commentator Ttom The Movement is the ad hoc Packwood said he did not favor mittee recommended that the fac-1 to protest MSU President John Greene said an "expensive lens" group of students who, have led Sen. Edward Kennedy's plan for ulty take steps to abolish all aca- Hannah's State of the University; was broken in the alleged ;cuffle demonstrations in support of p,)p- a lottery system of military selec- demic credit for ROTC. address. between students and the . epQ;Hers Iular Prof. Bertram Garsiroff. tion., "The lottery is fair to 80% As alternatives to the present! Ayers was arraigned in Ingham' which touched off the arrests. Hei Garskoff was recently refused ten- of the people but grossly unfair to ROTC program, the committee County Circuit Court. Bond was said the damages could run 8 cove ure by the MSU psychology die- the 2V/; who will have to serve," recommended that the needs of set at $2,500 but he was unable $1,000.; partment. he explained, cadets for background in history, ! to raise this sum and spent lastE An official in the Ingham Coun-! The department's action pre- On the subject of Vietnam, politics, and science could be sat-j night in Ingham County Jail. Noa ty Prosecutor's office said th'e cipitated a series of demnonstra- Packwood urged pressure on the isfied by a program of electives' date was set for his preliminary{ demonstrators swung clubs, 4hhh tions and involved the student South Vietnamese government to from courses taught by regular ' examination, he described as "two by fours," atS newspaper, the State News, in institute reforms. "Saigon is not 'University faculty members. Ayers' arrest is the second to the camera and damaged it. minor crisis when the paper pub- responsive to the people. There's Action against ROTC programs emerge from investigations of the Greene claimed they swung at fished an alleged obscenity while a great need for reforms, espec-- has been taken by the faculties of- incident. Mike Price, a member of the cameraman and threatened to quoting one demonstrator. Tally land reform." 1he said. several universities, including Har-1 East Lansing's SDS chapter was swing at another member of his The demonstrator quoted in the He quoted a U.S. government y ard, Yale, Dartmouth and Stan- arrested Tuesday on the same crew. papei', Anthony S. Ladiner, was See PACKWOOD, Page 8 ford, charges. Price is a former editor "We had as much right being convicted of "indecent and ooscene' !The council reiterated a state- ment approved by the entire fa- culty last week asserting that all University departments should atmpt to become integrated. Black prob . EX PERIMEN TA pa al ax m el Langua'ge cang By TOBE LEV language progranis also agree The Romance languages de- that the new courses don't go artment has reacted to the far e n o u g h.- They differed ressure for reform in the ele- among themselves about t h e nentary languages program, changes needed, but there was lthough sonic teaching fellows a, consensus on the need for' nd professors in the depart- fui'ther reform. nent think it hasn't reacted The two new Spanish sec- nough. tions, in Spanish 232, center on The department's move to love themes in Spanish liter- / + conduct" earlier this week. 1-(e re- cevda suspended sentence af-a L PRO RAMSter pleading guilty to the charge. Ayers is a regional organizer for SDS and was an unsuccessful college Press Service candidate for Ann Arbor School Tension mounted at Rutgers Board last summer. Ayers, for- University yesterday as bomb DS l c li n te nitythe founder of the now defunct fires occurred following a con- elementary program should be Spanish program, would like toi Children's Community School -an frontation between the black or- reorganized to include cultural see drastic changes made in the. experiment in the progressive edu- ganization of students (BOS)~ and courses taught- in English -- program, cation of young children. university President Mason Gross. Spanish 101 and 102. He says "Although improved experi- The demonstrations in support! Trouble continued at the Rut- this would supply more incen- mental courses could well inter-I of Garskoff have been going on gers branch in Newark, and there tive for students to proceed est those people who put in los- for over three weeks now, and were indications of difficulties at withthelthe agelanguageg ffoitself. an in,"geeffortsge frinro101rowandte102," Camhe.1 haven Krangedeteafromsayrock-throwingi istoothe ThCamdensue Campus. re MareneKurz, he eacing say "i soe csesit s to lte melees to counter-move, a 10,000-soTh e ain kssedenft orbethe fellow in the 232 section on by 232. The damage is already name petition presented to out- sle r lc ead o h Spanish love themes says "the done." going MSU President John Han- firing of the university's admis- .4.- cn-- - -,',,,.In' A nn r f }t~ic i ~ c-ti4n ests mount Unaiversity Cam's were vandalized indis,- 'crimninately, and antennas ripped 'off some. At the Douglass Campus, black students locked off the women's bathrooms in some dorms. At the Newaik Campus, the sit- 'Iin at Conklin Hall, a classroom rbuilding, continued into its. third day, with 30-50 students still In- side. A rally scheduled for 10 a.m. yesterday went off with no trouble. Following the rally, some wite students from Essex College, grab-