0 KIRK'S CRIME CRUSADE: FLORIDA'S DISNEYLAND See editorial page i [I r 5k 6 4Ia itij FAIR AND COOLER High--62 Low--34 Partly cloudy. chance of rain tomorrow Seventy-Six Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXVII, No. IOS ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, MAY 16, 1967 SEVEN CENTS SIX PAGES TERMED 'ENTRAPMENT': City Council Votes To Table Action on HRC Techniques By JILL CRABTREE The recommendation followed public revelation last Wednesday Ann Arbor City Council voted of techniques used by the city's 8-2 last night to table indefinitely Human Relations Commission action on a statement made to the (HRC) in investigating alledged Council by Mayor Wendell E. discriminatory practices at Ann Hulcher recommending a "reaf- Arbor High School firmation of city police to deal The HRC has been nvestigating1 with the public in an open manner the school's Cooperative Occupa- and not under false pretenses.' tional Training Program (COT). . In his recommendation Hulcher The program places students in specifically asked that City At- part-time jobs within the com- torney Jacob Fahrner and City munity as part of their formal Administrator Guy C. Larcom de- high school education. velop a policy statement on the During the past four months' matter: HRC personnel have twice called NEWS WIRE A MASSIVE MARCH to demonstrate Michigan backing of soldier fighting in Vietnam has been proposed by State Senator Basil Brown (D-Detroit). Brown asked all patriotic, fraternal, veterans and univer- sity groups to join in the march as part of the observation of Flag Day, on June 14. He urged parades be held in Detroit and other major Michigan cities. The Senator said he would invite Governor George Romney to join in the march. STUDENT LEADERS at the University of Illinois' Chicago Circle campus yesterday urged the school's Board of Trustees to ask the Legislature to abolish an act banning 'Un-American' campus speakers. Student leaders have collected 2500 names representing ten per cent of the student body at Illinois' Chicago and Urbana campuses urging the trustees to oppose the state's Clabaugh Act. The Chicago campus students met with the trustees' general policies committee behind closed doors in the first two meetings on what has become a free speech controversy. In February, Herbert Aptheker, Communist party theore- tician, spoke to some 603 students near the Chicago Circle Cam- pus, after Chancellor Norman Parker said he could not appear on campus. ALL FIRST-YEAR University law students will be required to participate in the moot court program beginning next fall. Dean Francis A. Allen said that alt student should have practice in preparing briefs and participating in appellate arguments. No letter grade or credit will be given, only a "satisfactory" or "unsatisfactory" rating. The students will be divided into groups of 15 or 16 and will get help from second and third-year students. Currently there are more than 1,100 students in the Michigan law school who participate in the moot court program. THE UNIVERSITY'S Dearborn Campus will officially dedi- cate the Fair Lane Conference Center as a National Historic Landmark Thursday. Fair Lane is the former home of Henry Ford. Harlan Hatcher, University president, will accept the offi- cial recognition from a representative of the United States In- terior Department. Roscoe Bonisteel, chairman of the Michigan Historical Commission, who was a Regent when the University/ received the home from the Ford Motor Co. in 1956, will also take part in the ceremonies., "MEETING SOCIAL WELFARE Manpower Needs" is the topic for a day-long conference to be held Thursday in the Rackham Building. Cosponsored by the University's School of Social Work and the school's alumni association, the conference will begin at 9 a.m and is open to the public. Noted authorities from social service agencies and social work'schools will be featured lecturers. the COT office under the guise of prospective employers. Both re- quested that no Negroes apply, and were told that no Negroes would be informed of the openings, according to HRC director David C. Cowley. The incidents led to a meeting on May 5 between HRC repre- sentatives, School Superintendent Jack Elzay. School Board Presi- dent Stephen B. Whitey and Nich- olas Schreiber, principal of Ann Arbor High School. At the school board meeting last Wednesday Trustee William C. Godfrey suggested that the board ask the City Council if it approved of the HRC's actions. Godfrey in- dicated that Schreiber had told him that he wanted a public air- ing of the complaints against the HRC. Cowley then called Hulcher and asked for support of the HRC'sE tactics. Hulcher then issued a statement saying, "I cannot con-, done any of our city employes pretending to be employers or any- thing else they are truly not. The most essential ingredient in gov- ernment activity is the confidenceE of the people. This confidence must be maintained by proper actions and behavior by all pub- lic servants and employes. The procedures used in this case de- stroy confidence and therefore, in my opinion, is not a proper ap- proach." Before Hulcher presented his statement to the City Council last night, communications in support of the HRC from Ezra Rowry, chairman of the Ann Arbor chap ter of the Congress on Racial Equality and Emma Wheeler,j president of the Ann Arbor chap- ter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, were read to the Council. A statement prepared by Robert J. Harris, professor of race rela- tions law, on the legality of the HRC's testing tactics was also presented at the meeting. The statement said that the conduct of the commission could not be construed as "entrapment" be- cause "there was only a request made to a suspected discrimina- tory source and no cajoling or pressure to engage in the unlaw- ful act." Group Calls ft Vietnam zFall By LISSA MATROSS Special To The Daily THIS TWO AND ONE-H istration to photograph ment charged Sunday. S leading to the camerai grill in the center of the been removed, but its im 'OUTREACH': Vie n --Photo by Chuck Larson HALF foot square hole was used by the Wayne State University Admin- a men's room with a secret camera, members of the Wayne Student Move- tudent Leader Chuck Larson said the door to an adjacent air-raid shelter is usually kept locked. The individual stalls are clearly visible through a hole, located six inches above the floor. Larson explained. The camera has mpression is still visible on a foam-rubber pad. allocations. Larson said three university employes had informed students about the camera and other acti- vities during the past week. WSM pr esented S-FC with the affidavit of an unnamed university employe who stated that political meetings and men's restrooms had been under surveillance for the past four years and that keeping stu- dent files has been "official" uni- versity policy. 'No Camera Now' Conirf At Wi Inters By ROBS The Wiscon is still emboile Edward Cushman, university contest with t: vice-president, said Sunday that Community A "there is no such camera now." May 3 approv Another WSU spokesman said dum. they believed a concealed camera The referen ) g07 used about three years ago has 2200 vote marg not been employed by the Keast dent control o administration. However, Larson's affairs, thereby informant stated the camera was away from its Hidden Camera Found at WSU Students Charge Admintrationf With Monitoring Men's Washroom By MARCY ABRAMSON The Wayne Student Movement, a student power group which developed from recent demonstrations over the discovery of secret personal files, charged Wayne State University Sunday with using a hidden camera to observe a men's room. Charles Larson, chairman of the university's Student-Faculty Council and a WSM leader, called a special S-FC meeting to ask the council to ensure discontinuation of the practice. Reports also indicated that the Daily Collegian, the WSU student newspaper, is planning to run a story later this week dealing with details of possible presidential expense account irregularities. Sources indicate that the story would raise questions about WSU President William R. Keast's use of certain<-;----___ overS SCOUS11 ifies SALTZSTEIN sin Student Senate d in a hot political ;he minority United ction Party over a ed student referen- dum, passed by a in, provides for stu- f all non-academic y taking this power present holders- d administration. versy at Wisconsin what time the ap- referendum should ed. The Wisconsin ation (WSA) presi- Fullwood, a key referendum, wishes amSm Aims atA nxi'o us Masse By WALTER SHAPIRO called Vietnam Summer, "an ef- kely Carmichael, Robert Scheer,' "Outreach" is the key word for fort to, build a powerful and well- Julian Bond and Carl Oglesby. the recently organized, rapidly informed peace bloc to stimulate Vietnam Summer was officially growing Vietnam Summer 1967. greater activity to end the war." unve" d at a massive Boston press "Our goal is to reach out to those Another goal of Vietnam Sum- conference on April 23. people who are anxious about -the mer is to unify the divergent anti- In Ann Arbor Vietnam Summer war, but wno have not been reach- war forces by stressing local au- is under the temporary direction ed by the traditional peace or lib- tonomy and allowing participat- of the recently formed Peace Co- eral groups," Project Director Lee ing organizations to chose the ac- Ordinating Council. The council Webb said yesterday, tivities most in keeping with their came into being about six weeks Webb elaborated, "the peace specific goals and tactics, accord- ago as an effort to achieve some movement is in a bag. We're just ing to Webb. cohesion and unity among the reaching people with the same be- In light of this decentralized various local anti-war groups. liefs. We don't want projects. in- structure, Webb described the pro- Among the participating organi- volving the same old people." ject's national and regional of- zations are the Interfaith Com- Martin Luther King at an fices as a "central clearinghouse." mittee for a Conference on Reli- April 23 news conference announc- "Our tasks will be mostly admin- gion and Peace, Committee for ing the formation of the project, istrative and we will help local New Politics, Council for Demo- --------- groups with their projects in such cratic Directions, and Students efforts as fund-raising and pub- for a Democratic Society. r INationw ide licty," he explained. The Co-ordinating Council held Webb described the projected a meeting last night to discuss nature of Vietnam Summer: "We possible local projects for Viet- ewouldlike to have about 10,000 nam Summer. A list of possible volunteers, half of whom would projects was taken under advise- be working fulltime, and working ment and from the suggested list * Coordinated sit-ins at draft largely on their own money. There five or six projects will be chosen boards across the country this will be some subsistence money which will constitute Ann Arbor's summer. from both local and national Vietnam Summer. * Demonstrations at napalm headquarters. We would also like The projects include the circu- tsAAe-1to have 'aot 200 or 300 fieldlation of anti-ar petitions;a J fl I ' > , i1 i s in use a year to a year and a half1 ago. Keast's spokesman, George E.1 Gullen, vice-president for uni- versity relations, said, "We are in the process of trying to find out} what it's all about. The hole in the wall seems a normal ventila- tion grill." ,,I the faculty an The controv centers around proved student be implemente Student Associ dent Michael sponsor of the i 3 i G CHICAGO - An estimated 600 students from 100 high schools and colleges across the nation overwhelmingly approved a reso- lution here Sunday calling for a nationwide Vietnam referendum on campuses next fall. The students took part in a two- day Student Mobilization Commit- tee meeting at the University of Chicago'last weekend. Represent- ed were organizations as diverse as the YMCA, the Young Socialist Alliance, SDS, and the Communist Party, In other action Sunday students approved the following resolu- tions: t At a rally of 250 students yes- terday Larson said, "The very fact that the university was using hid- den cameras to take photographs of alleged homosexual activities is indicative of the kinds of things that can happen without student and faculty access to information and decision-making. We cannot be sure that it is not continuing or will not be renewed." Answers Demands Keast attempted to answer six WSM demands for more student power at a discussion Friday at- tended by several hundred stu- dents. WSM has asked for student voting members on all presidential advisory committees, a student seat on the Board of Governors, binding referenda on student is- sues and student election of ad- ministrators. Larson said WSM was "unsatis- fied" with Keast's responses. The president said students could only function on student interest com- mittees such as the Athletic Ad- visory Committee. Keast doubted the possibility of constitutional amendment to permit a student member of the Board of Gover- nors, and said he did not under- stand the referendum proposal. The president also said, "I do not believe a system of direct elec- tion of administrative officers would be either acceptable or de- sirable." WSM plans to continue rallies' and protests until the demands are more acceptably answered. WSM candidates will challenge incumbent members in an election this week for SFC seats and of- fices. I to see a gradual transfer of the power into student hands. UCA Opposition Fullwood is opposed by the UCA which wishes to see an immediate transfer of power. UCA has called for a censure moton against Full- wood, who has responded by call- ing for a special Senate meeting this evening. UCA cites a May 8 "deadline" in the referendum for its imple- mentation and charges that Full- wood is not using his responsi- bility as a student leader to carry out the decision of the students. The referendum measure provid- ed for complete transfer of con- trol on May 8 unless the Student Senate voted that faculty reaction was favorable enough to permit gradual implementation. The Sen- ate did this by a large majority, but with UCA dissenting. Accuse Fullwood On May 9, Michael Kirby, an UCA member, charged that Full- wood "consistently ignored and undermined the effectiveness" of the recently passed referendum and "thereby abducted his proper place of leadership." Fullwood dismissed this accu- sation by stating: "I do not be- lieve threats and ultimatu'ns are the way to get things done, and I have been mandated by the students to do just that." According to Peter Abbott, Daily Cardinal assistant managing edi- tor, Wisconsin Chancellor at the Madison campus, Robben Fleming, has remained "aloof" of the de- veloping situation. The real struggle here is one of tactics: Fullwood supports the view that policy may be changed but not by fiat or ultimatum. The - UCA vehemently disagrees. plants and defense factories this summer. * Support of GIs opposed to the war and distribution of anti- war literature to members of the armed services in support of Vets for Peace. * Telegrams backing Pfc. Ho- ward Petrick, a soldier stationed at Fort Hood, Texas, who has been threatened with court-mar- tial for expressing his anti-war and socialist opinions to fellow soldiers. * Movements to put anti-war referendums (similar to the Dear- born one of last year) on ballots in communities. 0 Organizing a m on g high school students.1 The resolutions approved Sun- day were prepared as proposals in workshops held all day Satur- day. The mass meeting Sunday was chaired by Clark Kissinger of Chi- cago's Citizens' Committee for In- dependent Political Action (CIPA). Kissinger who was defeated as an anti-war candidate for alder- man of the 49th Ward last year, was..,inc- cmef o~rorgan,,-;r.of secretaries. The national office will do some funding, mostly for the most important and most ex- perimental. projects." Vietnam Summer is an out- grwoth of house-to-house can-{ vassing in Cambridge, Mass., in mid-March which discovered a great deal of hidden, and pre-I viously unreached opposition to the war. The idea for Vietnam Summer, suggested by the 1963 Mississippi Summer Project, grew out of discussions focusing on ways to mobilize this latent war op- position. During the Spring Mobilization Against the War in New York and San Francisco on April 15, the idea of Vietnam Summer was first mentioned publicly with declara- tions of support from King, Sto- Peace Fair; a Peace Strike in which people will take a day off from work to do anti-poverty work; a war referendum in 1968; and urging Congressman Marvin Esch to hold local hearings on the war. Other plans might be a ser- ies of educational forums on Viet- nam; making available draft in- formation stressing the legal al- ternatives to fighting; a radio series; a march to Lansing to pre- sent a petition to Governor Rom- ney stressing support of a candi- date who would oppose the war; and a series of peace vigils. The council will sponsor a pub- lic meeting on June 7 to announce these projects and has an interim address for all Vietnam Summer activities at 2235 Parkwood, Ann Arbor. STRONG SUPPORT: Protest Restrictions Trigger rClass Boycott at Howard 'U' Northwestern Protest Movement Dissolves Following Critical Student Senate Motion By DAVID S. HOORNSTRA Five demands for more student freedom triggered a mass boycott of classes at Howard University last week. The boycott came to the 8500 student campus in Washington, D.C., as a reaction to new restric- tions on student demonstrations and protest movements. Carolyn Carter, editor of How- ard's student weekly, estimated that 80 per cent of Howard's 85001 plus students participated in last Wednesday's boycott and rally. Among the "guidelines" handed down by Howard's edministration were prohibitions on press confer- ences not officially cleared by the3 university and on demonstrations? in other than assigned areas and ti r'1 students who protested at a speechj by William Hershey tion at two different times the namn *fpAq tf4. dC11U tL II b11 1 i t i i i 1 I 3 +TT1iG3 1G l j, T c Ies 01 s uaen s ausent from 3) A guarantee that neither stu- classes on the day of the boycott, dents nor faculty members would "Some teachers did give exam- be disciplined for political activity, inations," he said, "to the two or 4) Abolition of the "redundant" three students who were in class." senior comprehensive examination, Hare protested against "peace and misrepresentation" and claimed 5) Repeal of the restrictions on that "terrorism" was used against protests and press conferences. faculty members who promoted A committee of nine students "different" ideas. He cited "spies" and nine faculty.members is nego- pointed in classrooms and the Stiating with the administration threats of contract cancellation. Hare also said he anticipated Topics of discussion in future no major breakthroughs towards meetings will include not only onI freedom at Howard but warned student freedom but also student that there would be "more action government. V around here if they don't come Miss Carter reported that the through soon." student government was almost Ronald Ross, one of the leaders helpless with most of its recom- in the boycott and the negotiating mendations for the school year groups, explained last night, "We twas the chief SDS organizer o Dy DAVID DUBOFF the National March on Washing- The student power movement at ton in April, 1955. Northwestern University has of- Disagreement arose during the ficially dissolved in the wake of Sunday meeting after students a resolution passed by the school's, I voted 255-88 to oppose student Student Senate divorcing itself |draft referments. Those in the from the movement. |minority felt that SMC should an- The resolution, passed earlIer ! nounce that it was anti-draft in- this month, claimed that the ?stead of anti-deferment. movement's methods are not rep- A proposal to ask students who l resentative of the student body. voted for the draft resolution to It was initiated in a statement by send their draft cards back to the David Azrefsky, a junior, who ac- Selective Service local boards was cused the movement of using "ir- defeated. responsible means to achieve its . In the debate on this motion ends." : delegates said they felt such ac- Student power was given a boost - . ._i - _ n-i -Ta r a -wPat',Prnn when The movement's decision to dis- Tribune attacked the incident and Direct or of Admissions, as Vice- band officially was made by its recommended that the university President for Student Affairs. steering committee on May 9, dinsmiss protesters who did not Hinz, well-liked by the students, three days after the Student Sen- uphold the "rules of proper con- has been responsible for the "new- ate's resolution. Pines, who an- duct and the standards of decency found diversity" within the stu- nounced the decision, said that he and patrotism." dent body according to a staff was sympathetic with the move- , The editorial compared the member of the Daily Northwest- ment, but no longer its leader. bitch-in with the Free Speech ern. "To be sure that there is no con- Movement at the University of Hinz' appointment was an- flict of interest, I am no longer California at Berkeley and warned nounced at an open forum held connected with the movement di- Northwestern "not to make the last Friday between students and rectly though I am firmly com- mistake of viewing student dis- administrators, the first such mitted to its ideas," he said. sidence as some sort of harmless meeting during Miller's tenure as Among the incidents to which prank which can be justified and president. Pines said that he was senat members objected was a condoned as a form of 'academic "imprssed" by Hinz' appointment, "bitch-in" organized by the stu- freedom' or an exercise in free claiming that it was the "best dent power advocates. The bitch- speech." break" Northwestern students in resulted from charges that Rus- However, the advocates of stu- have ever had.