The parade: Freaks, frats, and football -Daily-Larry Robbins EVERYBODY DOES love a parade, and yesterday's version of the annual Homecoming procession proved it. For the first time this year Ann Arbor's community of freaks, street people-or what- ever else you want to call them-joined the parade. Pat the Hippy Strippy stole the show as she declared herself queen in a flurry of pink tissue paper. MORE THAN HALF the floats this year were direct attacks showed the graphic destriction of a village; in another, a giant black cannister. -Daily-Sara Krulwich on the Vietnam War and appeals for peace. One anti-war protester was doused with Mace from a -Daily--Sara Krulwich BUT IT WAS still a football parade, with bands playing "The Victors," the inevitable paper mache wolverines and badgers and a huge stork delivering a bundle of roses. ORDER IN THE COURT S~ee Editorial Page C, 4c 4ik~ga :4Iaiii DRIPPY HLigh-53 Low--46 Rainy, chance of showers Vol. LXXX, No. 51 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, November 1, 1969 Ten Cents Ten Pages Protesters confront recruiter Students talk to representative of Hughes Aircraft By CARLA RAPOPORT About 25 students sat-in peacefully at the West Engi- neering Bldg. for two hours yesterday to protest recruiting for Hughes Aircraft Co., one of the 25 largest defense de- partment contractors. After the demonstrators left, Prof. John Young, director of En- gineering Placemnent, said their protest was very orderly. "The students did not physically pre- vent people in the offices from moving," he said. "We had no quarrel with their actions this morning," The demonstrators were part of a loose coalition of two newly- formed groups, the Markley and Lloyd Collectives. Members of the collectives, who live in Markley Hall and Alice Lloyd Hall, say their philosophy is "anti-imper- ialistic, anti-capitalistic," While the recruiter, I. H. Hart, was interviewing a student, the group walked into his office and began to question the interviewer and the student. The protesters later said they, asked Hart and the student whether they were aware that the' company was doing research on "how to kill people." A few minutes alter they en- tered, Young asked the demon- strators to leave the office, and they promptly complied. They then moved into the office wait- ing area and discussed their views with engineering students there. The protesters said that at 11:30 a.m. Young's secretary told them Hart had left and would not re- turn that day. The protesters then left the building. They explained they had told Young they would leave when the recruiter left. However, Young's secretary later said she never spoke with the stu- dents. Hart returned at 1 p.m. and finished all his scheduled in- terviews, she added. DROPOUT RATE DOWN Over-enrollment plagues LSA By MARTIN HIRSCHMAN First of two parts While the Selective Service System is holding graduate school enrollment steady, it appears to be having just the opposite effect in the undergraduate division. At least this is how, in part, literary college officials are trying to explain - or explain away - the fact that the college is over-enrolled by 450 students this fall. An increase of 216 students in the freshman class was approved by the LSA faculty last winter, and was to be ac- companied by a corresponding cut in transfer and out-of- state admissions. But instead of holding to the long-standing undergrad- uate enrollment ceiling of 11,800, enrollment this term jumped to 12,252, thus straining everything from class enrollments to the already tight Ann Arbor apartment market. LSA officials attribute the increase in undergraduate en- rollment to an unexpected rise in the rate at which students return to the University - a comparison of the sizes of last year's freshman, sophomore, and junior classes to this year's sophomore, junior and senior classes. This excludes the effect of transfer students on enrollment. In the past, the rate of return has been close to 86 per cent. "But this year the numbers ended up being a bit chaotic," says chemistry Prof. Adon Gordus, a member of the LSA admissions committee. In a surprising break from the past, the rate of return this year soared to slightly over 90 per cent. This accounts for almost all of the 450 additional students. And'strikingly, although this year's senior class includes no new transfer students, it is still two per cent larger than last year's junior class. Although they admit they are spec- ulating, LSA officials suspect that the threat of being draft- ed has kept students in school an extra semester. And as Gordus points out, the number of students who plan to grad- uate this December is up 150 over last year. Psychology Prof. John Milholland, chairman of the ad- missions committee, suggests that other students who would have- transferred to the education school to avoid the lang- uage requirement decided instead to go after LSA's new Bachelor of General Studies degree. In addition, Gordus suggests that, with grades generally going up across the campus and with the institution of more pass-fail options, fewer students are leaving school for aca- demic reasons. But regardless of the reasons for this year's over-enroll- ment, the problem, as most officials now see it, is how to keep the numbers down for next year. And at the LSA faculty meeting this Monday, Milholland will recommend cutting back admissions for both new freshmen and transfer stu- dents. See OVER-ENROLLMENT, Page 6 -Associated Press Clifton Wharton spends his first homecoming at Michig University, where he was recently appointed president. the parade with his father is 10-year-old Bruce. Lw School Ivorks on BLSA demand By RUSS GARLAND The Law School is apparently taking some ste easing the controversy generated by demands of 1 Law Students Alliance (BLSA), but BLSA is still Definite action by the faculty. The faculty did not discu'ss the demands at it, nonthly meeting yesterday, but agreed to hold ;ession Monday to discuss the issues. "The black student discussion did not come t Everyone agreed that it was such an important iss arge block of time should be devoted to it," said Pr( chambers. Following the meeting, which ,vas closed as are all faculty meet- ngs, Dean Francis Allen said, 'The matter is very much under consideration and as soon as we :nake a decision on any part of it the will cer'tainly mnake it public."Wd BLSA ha deanded that t h eS W S Law School admit 100 black fresh- men next fail, hire five black fa- By M culty members and seat three Students in the soc black law students on the school's dtl less than univers Special Admissions Committee. which handles the admission of of student represent minority group students who do ary. not meet normal standards. The new structure At present, the school has 38 dents a greater voice black students and no black school, but many st faculty members, and complain that Although no ofiial action has role in policy-making been taken on these( demands, the The' ne 50-50o p' Law School is apparently acting students and faculty on another demand - the posi- on most school comni tion of assistant dean, left vacant by the death of Kenneth Yourd man who votes in cas H allowe en part-v Costumed youngsters from neighboring schools frolic at a Halloween party given by students of the Residential College. Last night the Residential College capped off Halloween festivities with a masquerade ball, $215,000 COLLECTED: Mtartin Luther King fund seeks increased studeiit contrit ions By CAROL HILDEBRAND With $215,000 already collected, the Martin Luther King Jr. Me- morial Fund is picking up steam. The Fifth Dimension concert' two weeks ago kicked-off a stu- dent fund raising campaign. Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity and the Uni- versity Activities Center, the spon- sors of the concert, contributed the $10,000 proceeds to the fund., "This is the most idealistic cam- STUDENT REPRESENTATION U charges 'buy-off' paign I have ever worked on,' says Don Miller, the fund's cam- paign director. "The students are really committed to the project," he explains. Other student organizations on campus are being contacted for contributions. Student Govern- ment Council has already pledged $2,500 which will be paid over the next five years and Panhellenic Association has pledged $1,000. The King Memorial Fund, in- itiated after the Rev. King was assassinated last year, is intended to help expand the pool of trained business, scientific, and educa- tional leaders among the non- white and disadvantaged, The Martin Luther King Scho- larship Committee determines how money is used. According to Mike Henry, the committee chairman, six of the nine voting members on the 11-man committee are students. Money from the fund is pres- ently being used for scholarships and fellowships. Future plans call: for a visiting professorship which would allow a professor from a black college to teach at the Uni- versity. If sufficient funding can be found, an Afro-American Stud- ies Center will also be established. In addition to contacting stu- dent orgaxnizations. the c'ommrittee ,! t. l t Landlords, tenants disagree over study of profit figures He adds that alumni pay 95 per cent of their pledges and that there is no reason to expect that students will not do as well. Although the University faculty and staff have donated over $50,000 and black alumni in the Detroit area have raised over $25,000, the original goal of $750,-j 000 has now been lowered to! $500,000 according to Henry. IKE CIEPLY cial work school are a great sally satisfied with the type ation they won last Febru- was supposed to give stu- in making decisions in the ,dents label it a "buy-off" they still have no direct f7 plus one" structure allows an equal number of seats ittees, with a faculty chair- se of a tie. Faculty members There are no students on the governing board, which makes final decisions in the school. Ruth Ryan, a social work student, charges, "These are do-nothing committees. I've worked on them and I know." Many students fear the new structure will tend to disarm student power by dissipating stu- dent energy through "legitimate channels." At the- Oct. 22 SWSU meeting Bernie Hoef- gen, acting president, cited 50-50 plus one as "a major reason that the union is having diffi- culties this year" and added that the structure has "co-opted students and problems which would have caused the students to unify them- By STEVE KOPPMAN structed by Dave DeBoer, current- remainder of which was borrowed. Are Ann Arbor landlords really ly Apartments Limited manager, Both DeBoer and Summit Asso- raking it in? show a profit of 23 per cent on a ciates manager Jay Gampel say In response to tenant requests 10-unit building. The second model the figures used in the studies were for information on profits earned shows a profit or 38 per cent for completely unrealistic. by Ann Arbor landlords, the Ten- a 72-unit high rise. Gampel says his buildings are ants Union is publicizing a sum- The third study was done in making less than the percentage mary of profit studies based on 1967 by an economics' graduate which the summary claims as the theoretical models which indicate student. According to the sum- national average. While substan- landlord return on original invest- mary, the study was done with tially higher profits than this were ment is 20-45 per cent a year in the assistance of University and earned in Ann Arbor five to seven the cases studied. city officials and local realtors. It years ago, he says, figures like 44 But management company spok- focused on costs and profits in- per cent were far too high even for esmen are quick to respond that volved in the construction of one the earlier period. the models cited in the summary four-man unit. Gampel cites high interests