ANOTHER TRAVESTY ANOTHER DAY, See Editorial Page Y 4 41or .Aitr t A, an :4Iait4 THINK SNOW High-32 Low-15 Variably cloudy, colder, chance of more snow Vol. LXXX, No. 67 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, November 20, 1969 Ten Cents Ten Pages MILE-LoNG; TREK: Apollo crew Senate pa instituting S walks ses bill lottery draft moon SPACE CENTER, Houston i. - America's newest explor- ers --- veterans of nearly four hours of moonwalking struck out again yesterday on a mile-long trek across rugged and dangerous lunar country far from the safety of their moonship, Intrepid. Before they left, Charles Conrad Jr. apologized, "I'm sure sorry the television didn't work. It's a beautiful sight to see Intrepid and Surveyor sitting here on this crater." Surveyor, a dead U.S. moon probe that landed there 212 years ago, was one of the prime, but last, targets of the second moonwalk of the day. On the second excursion Conrad hit the surface first, at :system WASHINGTON (R-The Sen- ate yesterday passed President Nixon's draft lottery bill with only one opposing vote, and sent it to the White House. The administration hopes to be- gin a gradual phase-in of the new draft lottery by January, when the next nationwide draft call goes into effect. for 11:01 p.m., EST, more than 1 Black Maiiesto cxplamne( I By HANNAH MORRISON Charles Thomas, local advocate of a Black Manifesto demand- ing financial epa ration for black people from white religious con- gregations, spoke yesterday to a Sociology 100 lecture class in the Natural Science And. "The black people of this coun- try are burning from racism and their economic plight,"' Thomas said. The solution for such anger put forth by the manifesto, he ad- ded, is to "separate (black peo- ple' from the wihite and the black capitalists." Thomas, who has already col- lected more than $700 from local churches to help welfare mothers, said the authors of the manifesto do not shrink from the thought of violence to accomplish their goal of black supremacy. If other means fail, the only way to achieve such a goal is "bringing down the colonizer through force - guns," Thomas said, Thomas excluded all white peo- ple from taking part in such a revolution - even sympathetic whites. "Blacks must assume lead- ership of the revolution, because they best understand suffering." He maintained this quality of the black man makes him "sensi- tive to our brothers in Vietnam. Asia, Latin America, Santo Do- mingo.' Thomas' manifesto includes a nine-point program for the use of money gained f r o mn reparations from whites. It includes the es- tablishment of a southern land bank, printing offices, broadcast networks, a job-training center and a labor fund. The manifesto advocates sit-ins and seizure of selected churches as means of gaining support. The sit-ins would not b- non- violent if self-defense were nec- essary. The manifesto also advises' whites to "practice patience, non- violence, Christian charity and all those other things they have told us about," for their own good. Emphasizing the blacks' minor- ity position, Thomas warned that blacks "are no longer shuffling' our feet and scratching our heads. We are tall, black and proud." i hours earlier than planned. Crewmate Alan J. Bean fol- lowed him 10 minutes later. Back on the exciting lunar sur- face again, Conrad began talking about the cables and devices be- low. "They are constantly u n d e r foot,"he said. At this sun angle, Conrad said, the moon dirt around Intrepid has a brownish' tone, like a well- ploughed field. Elsewhere is was an expanse of light ashen gray. Their orders were to collect dirt samples from six craters, the farthest 1,500 feet away and to cut off pieces of equipment from Sur-i veyor for return to earth. They cuf away their own tele- vision camera from return home and then set out for the north- west., their first stop at the in- struments they had installed ear- lier i' Earlier in the day, the two astro- nauts acted like two giddy child- ren as they began their first moon walk in the Ocean of Storms. Both kept up a constant comic commentary as they went through the serious business of exploring the moon and setting up instru-; ments.t "We're not going to sit he:e," Conrad said, "so we'll give you aa holler whenever we get up and we're going to start clipping right then and there, and be ready to go over the sill as soon as possi-V ble and not cut ourselves at thef end."' It was that mixture of hard- - headed thinking and gleeful ex-s ploration that was the pattern of1 these two men on the moon. "Hey," Conrad exclaimed with boyish wonder. "I just threwN something and it bounced up and must have gone '300 feet. T hi e s'tuff discoverie: are made of." -Associat ed Press lit-i at NASA facility simutlate space' walk ( 'I "WRISTMAS- "CATION: MObe p anti-wa i By RUSS GARLAND Pleased with the success of last n c e k e n d's demonstrations in Washigton, the steering commit- te of Ann Arbor New Mobilization met last night and decided to con- centrate its immediate efforts on a statewide petition drive during Christmas vacat 7ion. Dfinite plasior the petition, whichwilldemand iimediate wvithdrawalo4alli American troops from Vitam. will be formulated at a statewide New Mobe meeting this weekend. A mass meeting is scheduled for Monday for all peo- ple interested in working on the drive. The steering committee also voted to urge local churches to initiate fasts or other activities in support of the anti-war move- ment, to send three representa- lans statewide petition drive Lives to a third ward Democratic party meeting tonight and to ex- plore the possibilities of entering local and state politics, and to, form an executive committee to "be spokesman for the organization and to implement proposals of the steering committee." New Mobe has also tentatively sched- uled a concert in Hill Aud. on Dec. 11. The steering committee is com- posed of anyone who is interesteda enough to attend its meetings. Last night's meeting was attended by about 30 people. The first portion of the meetingt was spent discussing the mass march and rally in Washington. "The thing that people gained in Washington was mainly a feel- ing of unity," said Barry Cohen, local New Mobe coordinator. "But Professor di~scuss,-,es adaptation in first lecture on environment the content of what was said left something to be desired. The at-; mosphere was half way between Woodstock and a political rally." "It's an astronomical leap from any demonstration we've seen int the past few years," said Gene Gladstone, a member of the Na- tional Steering Committee of New Mobe. But the steering committee found it difficult to relate the ac- tivities in Washington to the Ann Arbor movement. "I don't think the people in Ann Arbor are the same as the people in Washing- ton," said one person. "I think the people in Ann Arbor have a seri- ousness that was generally lacking in Washington. One of the major discussions re- garding local organizing was over broadening the base of New Mobe. "We've got to stick together," said committee member Jake Evans. "I think that local N e w Mobe has excluded many people whom they don't agree with. The only way we can win now is to all stick together." "We have conceived of New Mobe as an organization, not a coalition," replied Gladstone. "Be- cause we conceived of the local Mobe as an organization we were able to develop a movement that has not been'equalled in the en- tire country. This is an organiza- tion of people, not of groups." "You have to choose your goals and pick your tactics and go ahead on those terms," said another per- son. "Those that can join you will join you." Discussion over the petition cen- tered mainly on the length of the petition's statement and to whom it should be addressed. A repre- sentative from the Petition f o r Peace, an organization which had previously been circulating a pe- tition demanding withdrawal from Vietnam within a specified time. was also present to ask that the two groups now join in a pe- tition drive, the wording of which did not particularly concern him. Cohen promised that something could be worked out. Based on a national drawing of birthdays and designed ultimately to concentrate the draft on 19- year-olds, the measure will sup- s plant induction rules under which the oldest eligible men are the first summoned to military serv- ice. Sen. Mike Mansfield (D-Mont) cast the only opposing vote, after- a scant hour of sparsely attended debate. Mansfield said the meas- ure does not adequately deal with the inequities of selective service. Sen. John Stennis (D-Miss), chairman of the Armed Services Committee, promised his panel will open comprehensive draft hearings by Feb. 15 in an effort to fashion a general reform bill. Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird said the next draft call will come in January, and the admin- istration will try to have the sys- tem in operation by then. When the new system is fully effective, it will mean a single yeai' of draft liability for most -Assochi Americans, instead of the sevenDefense Secretary Melvin Eaird uncertain years they now face. Nixon already has announced he will designate young men in their STUDENT DECISION-MAKING: 19th year as the prime group for induction. While the program is being eligible men up to 26 years of age will face equal liability to selection by lottery. Under present law, the Presi- dent is empowered to designate the prime age group, but once he does so, the oldest men in that group By MARTIN HIRSCHMAN must be summoned fi'st. In a special closed session yesterday, the Reg The bill the Senate passed re- peals that requirement, opening cussed possible amendments to the current student. the way for the lottery. approved draft of chapter seven of the Regents bylaw The lottery itself amounts to a deals with student power in decision-making. scrambling of birth dates. Administration officials said the day-long mee The day of the yea will be r ea ays eoc te asswie abcalled to allow time for consideration of proposed re 'number. the bylaws, which would clarify and institutionali "If No. 1 is Nov. 15, all those student influence in certain areas of UniversityC born on Nov. 15 would be in the making. -- highest priority for call," Stennis Officials said portions of the explained. "If Nov. 20 were to re- bylaws redrafted by the Regents ceive No. 365, all those boi'n O1 would eventually be ciueatedB See SENATE, Page 10 among members of the Senate is ents dis- -faculty- xs, which Ming was vision of ize some decision- -et ted Press By PAT MAhONEY "The power mower is basically a relic sheep." zoology Prof. Mars- ton Bates declared last night in the first in a series of University lectures on environment. Bates was citing man's use of the lawn mower, and especially a local city law which requires lawns to be cut, as examples of modern man's maladaptation to his natu- ral environment. The speech was sponsored by Environmental Action for Survival EnAct as part of a buildup for a March 11 teach-in on environ- llent. Other maladaptations to the en- vironment have caused serious problems, Bates said. Chief among these is Ihe popu- lation problem, which\Bates claim- ed, "seems to underlie everything that goes on.' World population increases by 50 million annually, In the United States. a new Chicago is born every month, Bates said. Bates said he was unsure what could be done to improve the sit- uation aside from planned parent- hood. Bates cited pollution as another example of man's maladaptation to his environment. Man's meth- ods of disposing of his solid waste show he has some of the instincts of a monkey left in him, Bates said. Before the automobile, horses produced large amounts of manure which stayed in the atmosphere a relatively short time. Today, ac- cording to Bates, we have sub- stituted long-lasting exhaust gases for horse manure. Although the United States has six per cent of the world's popu- lation, it now consumes 49 per cent. of the planet's non-renewable resources, Bates said. Part of the trouble may come from man's ideas, which Bates called the conceptual environment.' People live with ideas and cannot escape from them. A person today, for example, cannot think in terms of the year 1975. The environment itself, however. consists of more than ideas. Bates divided it into two areas-percep- tual and operational. T h e perceptual environment consists of information gained through the senses. "For every an- imal species the perceptual world is a little different," Bates ex- plained. Moving from one animal to another, Bates added, is like moving to another world. Viruses, radiation, poisons and' other things that influence man but which he does not perceive, are included in what Bates tem- ed, operational environment. Living on spaceship earth. man Ott today'sI Page Three ! Norman E. Isaacs president of the American Society of Newspaper Editors, blasts the Nixon administration and Vice President S p i r o Agnew for what he calls at- tempts to "intimidate and control" the major n e w s media. * Backers of Clement F. Haynsworth, Jr.'s nomina- tion to the Supreme Court gain support as the c o n - firmation vote nears. ! U.S. combat deaths in Viet- nam rise for the s e c o n d straight week, but with- drawal efforts are not halt- ed. Assembly and Student Govern- ment Council, the two groups which, with some differences, ap- proved the bylaw draft last sum- mer. Acting Vice President for Stu- dent Affairs Barbara Newell said the bulk of yesterday's discussion centered around the proposed creation of a Committee on Com- munications and a Universitv Black Beret Capt. Gary Wilson was freed from Washtenaw Coun- ty Jail last night when Circuit Court Judge William F. Ager re- instated Wilson's probation. Since his arrest Aug. 31 in a deputies' raid on the Black Beret office, Wilson has been detained I Coluncailand released from the county jail Council. TCommunica-more than once. The Committee on CWilson faces charges of resist- tions would be a student-faculty ing arrest during the raid, in group charged with helping to re- which the deputies were looking solve campus conflicts. University for Black Beret member David Council would be composed Of Hunter, charged with violation of equal numbers of students, fac-probation ulty members and administrators pWilson was brought before Ager and would make conduct rules forI yesterday for a probationary hear- all members of the University ing, since the August arrest was community subject to ratification considered a probation of proba- by SGC and Senate Assembly. tion terms that were set against Administration o f f i c i a 1s de- him for a previous conviction. clined to detail the objections In the 15 minute proceedings, raised by the Regents to the stu- Ager said that he was reinstating Wilson's probation on the basis of dent - faculty - approved bylaw a promise made by Wilson's attor- draft. ney that Wilson live at home. ACADEMIC CONSIDERATIONS 'U' faculty: Putting ROTC to bed BV JANIE BARTMAN The overwhelming 52-2 -vote by Senate Assembly Monday proposing drastic changes in the relationship of ROTC to the University was a vote borne not of passion but of convenience and-of academic interest rather then ROTC be reduced to an extracurricular activity. "The faculty voted out of con- cern for the structure and phil- osophy of the University," says Prof. Richard Beardsley of the anthropology department. "We are experts on the needs of the University - we are not all au- "The report says that ROTC has its place and it is not an academic one," explains P r o f. Horace Davenport, co-chairman of the committee. "The n e x t thing we should do," he adds, "is abolish the football team. It be over-estimated," Buttrey says. "We weren't at each other's throats. It was just a matter of preference or inclination." "We took a straw vote for the heck of it and it just happened to split down the middle," he adds. The issue followed the same just serves for of the alumni the greater glory so that they can wm r I