Minnesota ....14 Michigan State 32 Wisconsin ..... 21 Illinois Iowa.......... 3 Ohio State ... 7 Northwestern.. 7 Indiana 34 Arkansas .., 13 Texas ...... ... 27 Southern Cal ..14 ...24|Stanford ...... 0 T ennessee ..... Alabama...... 7 Calif. St. (Pa.) 14 7 Slippery Rock 12 I II 11 .1 LE ROI JONES: PORTRAIT OF TENSIONS See Editorial Page Sir43zn A6F :43 kly FAIR High--7 2 Low-42 Sunny, windy, clouding by night Seventy-Five Years of Editorial Freedom VOL. LXXVI, No. 43 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY OCTOBER 17, 1965 SEVEN CENTS ArrestedStudentDescribes Jail xer EDITOR'S NOTE: JeffreyGood- ped the nearest civil disobedien It was the incidents with the right by pounding on the cell denmaier, who was standing right four more if one of us hadn't ITEM: One of us who had to faculty who were arrested Friday on the collar, dragging him from county police that annoyed us. Not door was put in solitary confine- behind him at the!rraignment, to yelled that we weren't guilty yet. take a pill every four hours fori evening for sitting-in at the Ann the truck. The rest of us began that any of it sapped our morale ment. see to it that our glasses were ITEM: 'When we were taken an ulcer had his pills confiscatedc Arbor Selective Service Office. These to move out on our own volition. -we sang freedom and other When asked by a Daily reporter, returned. We never saw Stauden- from he County jail to Municipal during the booking. He complain- are his personal impressions of his I got a swift paw on the back of songs, laughed, told dirty jokes, Sheriff Douglas Harvey said he maier again, but while we were Court for arraignment, there were ed, but it wasn't until late Satur-c my neck while walking into. the shared some smuggled cigarettes, would answer no questions about being filed back into the, County two police dogs, barking harshly day morning, when he began feel- i By JEFFREY GOODMAN jailhouse. . pounded on, our beds, yelled whether we had been allowed to Jail for the night we told our One was immediately next to the ing sick, that he got his pills. t Editorial Director The man was right. The county "Freedom" when we heard our make phone calls. guard of O'Brien's directive. door to the paddy wagon, the Wh h l la police were considerably rougher. I compatriots outside, and got to,. other off in a corner. ITEM: There was some pound-c en thelastlad of sit-iners know new people. ITEM: Among the posses- "We run this jail. The judge ITEM: The cell in which we 32 ing on the door at one point, and arrived at the Washtenaw Coun- The An Arbor police had been sions which were taken away from doesn't run this jail. No glasses," men were kept for the great ma- one of us-arbitrarily-was put in ty Jail after being carried out of relatively good about carrying us They didn't hurt us that way, us at the booking ceremonies in he yelled. (The glasses were re- jority of our stay in County jail solitary confinement. He was later the Ann Arbor Selective Service out of the draft office. There were but then they didn't make it the County Jail were glasses. That turned when we were released on was only about 18 feet square and joined by two others who hadt Office Friday evening, some of us knees in our backs with each step overly comfortable: crippled about one quarter of us, bond.) "bugged." It had six hard-wooden made some rather derogatoryt in ,the paddy wagon decided we as they carried us downstairs, but ITEM: We were not allowed to and at least one person complain- ITEM: When we were taken "beds," virtually no ventilation, comments about County police- ought to be carried out of the we weren't with them for long, make phone calls to our lawyer ed to Municipal Court Judge back from Municipal Court to the one sink and one toilet (without a men.,i wagon, too. And they did tell at least half of until after we were arraigned, Francis O'Brien, when we were County Jail, a deputy packed 23 seat or toilet paper, though we In the morning, two of thef us to keep our heads down when though we asked the deputies con- arraigned, that not having his of us into a paddy wagon no stole some of that from the city three said they wanted food andt "Come on, now, we aren't the they threw us into the back of the tinually. The law is that prisoners glasses caused a painful head- larger than the average panel jail before and after arraign- were placed in a different cell. Sheriff's deputy barked. paddy wagpn (though some peo- are allowed to make calls im- ache. truck and built to hold about 10 ment). At two to a bed, there were They heard one deputy tell an-8 ple still hit their heads on the mediately after being arrested. O'Brien instructed Ann Arbor (another wagon held 17). He 20 men who had to sleep on the other that if they didn't eat thet We demurred a bit, and he slap- roof of the truck). One of us who insisted on this Detective Lieutenant Eugene Stau- would have packed in three or floor. Like sardines. food they should be given no moret EIGHT PAGES ience for the rest of their stay-which the first deputy estimated at 10 days. ITEM: Saturday morning, when one man was still in solitary, news- men were told by Sheriff Harvey that no one was left in solitary. When Harvey noticed the release of one of the other students, who could clearly tell reporters a dif- ferent story, he approached the person in solitary and attempted to appease him. Perhaps he hoped to avoid being contradicted. ITEM: After bond was posted, it took the Sheriffs' deputies over four and a half hours to release the 33 people still in jail yester- day afternoon. The releases actu- ally ceased as others in the pro- test group gathered for a rally in the jail parking lot.. void Strife IL urmg Protests OTHER ACTIONS: Response to Viet Rallies Hold Services, Rally By GAIL JORGENSON Aside from the march on the jail, student protestors against the war in Viet Nam sponsored yes- terday a memorial service to the dead after the football game, and a late evening rally. Rev. Daniel Burke of St. An-. drew's Episcopal Church, stressed that the memorial service was not mourning only the Ameircan dead, but the "human dead" in Viet Nam. He read a passage from the book of Isaiah which ended with the words, "We are all thy people." Ralph Kerman of the Ann Ar- bor Friends Meeting led the crow in a series of meditations. He pointed out that "we all suffe when one man dies" because of man's sacred nature, and that the war was "ripping communities apart," not only in Viet Nam but also in the U.S. Refugees. Kerman also spoke of rehabili- tating the refugees in Viet Nam and "sharing our abundance and affluence." He paused after each of his points to let the crowd si- lently consider it. "I speak to memoralize the pass- ing of God and human values once honored," Rev. H. Hauert of What's* New at 764-18171 6"i; d the Office of Religious Affairs N ationw ide edeclared. "We must turn about, She explained, when in these Unit- f ed States a national creed and a Most Demonstrations e closed society can say: It is not Meet Counter-Pickets S wrong to kill or attack as long as t you name the enemy Communist." Supporting U.S. Policy Approximately 25 policemen sur- NEW YORK (P -Thousands of: rounded the night rally in NWYR k}Tosnso the Daily parking lot, and several persons protested U.S. involve-1 students began speaking about the ment in Viet Nam in demonstra- Incidents of police brutal- tons Friday in more than a score reen of American cities... : Speeches More demonstrations were plan- However, Al Haber, first presi- ned for yesterday in an organized . dent of the National Students for weekend of protest. S a Democratic Society, said in his Berkeley speech "Cops aren't important Balked by a wall of police in now. We must talk to people about two attempts to march on Oak- Viet Nam." Several members of land Army Terminal 3000 Viet :. the crowd cheered. Nam Day Committee demonstra- "It does little good to sit here tors dispersed late Saturday after- and reinforce one another about noon but claimed victory. The Reverend Daniel Burke addressing a group of students protesting the war in Viet Nam at a what happened during the day," The two-day protest of Amen- memorial service for the dead held near Alumni Hall yesterday afternoon. he went on. . can involvement in Viet Nam was Larry Caroline, Grad, felt that peaceful except for a scuffle be- the use of civil disobedience in tween police and California Hell's WASHINGTON CONFERENCE: this protest was a mistake. "The Angel motorcyclists and the hur- public still doesn't thing it's wrong lings of a tear gas bomb by an to wage war," he said, adding unidentified person. that c i v i 1 disobedience only The marchers said they would r Aims strengthened the radical right. try again today.Y War Psychology' A force of 10,000 demonstrators} Caroline also felt that the pro- protesting U.S. policy in Viet Nam Special To The Daily are we in Viet Nam?" Sen. Dodd Nam would be so catastrophic that testors should have been attack- marched eight abreast down New -Esaid: "We are in Viet Nam be- we simply cannot permit ourselves ing not only the war in Viet Nam York's Fifth Avenue Saturday. WASHINGTON - Reacting tos- but alote"a;scooyte te eosrtosto lc the International Days of Protest cause our security and the secur- to think of It. Whether we de- but also the "war psychology the Other demonstrations took place r0 tdts supporting h ity of the entire free world de- cide to abandon Southeast Asia U.S. is developing." in major cities from coast to adm trati's policies outh- mands that a firm line be drawn or try to draw another line out- Barry Bluestone, '66, remarked coast. Most of the participants adsiAstatinWisnty- against further advances of Com- side Viet Nam, the loss of Viet that the international days of were students and young people. east Asia met in Washington yes- munist imperialism. We are in Nam will result in a dozen more protest "just may cause a new Almost everywhere they were met terday for a conference on the Viet Nam not merely to help the Viet Nams in different parts of world to rise out of the ashes of by counter-demonstrations. war in Viet Nam, according to 14 million South Vietnamese de- the world. If we cannot cope with the old, out of the lies so many Other Cities'; fend themselves against Commu- this type of warfare in Viet Nam, of us believe." He advocated the: In Washington, D.C., 75 persons Sponsored by the Student Ad nism, but because what is at stake the Communists will be encour- formation of a "strong, permanent paraded in front of a 'downtown Hoc Committee for Freedom in is the independence and freedom aged in the belief that we cannot organization to help build this armed forces recruiting office. Viet Nam, the conference fea- of 240 million people in Southeast cope with it anywhere else." new world." They c a r r i e d signs reading tured a speech by Sen. Thomas J. Asia and the future of freedom His speech was followed by a Display Wrecked "Yankee Come Home" and "Stop Dodd (D-Conn) which was deliv- throughout the West Pacific." variety of remarks by Tran van In other incidents revolving the Draft, Let Johnson Do the ered by the senator's son and ad- Dodd's Speech Chung, former Viet Nam ambas- around the weekend protest in- Fighting." Police k e p t them ministrative assistant because of He concluded by saying that sador to the United States and cidents. a lawn display against squeezed into a narrow lane be- his illness. "in my opinion, the consequence brother of the current Vietnamese the Viet Nam war at the Friends See VIET Page 3 In reply to the question "Why of an American defeat in Viet foreign minister. Included in his Center was vandalized by five un- -. --- ---- ----- speech was sharp criticism of dem- identified males yesterday. Alan onstrations throughout the coun- Blood, one of a group' of Ann 1 /JU T LAST' VEEK. try. Hot Line The Homecoming Float Award was won this year by the co- operative effort of Kappa Sigma and Alpha Xi Delta. Lambda Chi Alpha won thelaward for display. Richard J. Leite of the High Altitude Laboratory yesterday described the University experiment aboard a satellite launched Thursday as "working perfectly." The instrument aboard measures the composition of neutral and electrically charged gas particles at high altitudes. The Ann Arbor-built device was launched into polar orbit from Vandenburg Air Force Base, California, and turned on by a Johannesburg, South Africa, tracking station. Long Distance Fraternities and sororities on the University of California's Riverside campus have been forbidden to affiliate with national organizations, it was disclosed recently. Riverside Chancellor Ivan Hinderaker said he will actively encourage purely local fraterni- ties, but that there is reason to doubt that national organizations leave their branches free to choose members without discrimina- tion. An Arizona judge has issued an injunction banning further civil rights demonstrations , on the campus of Arizona State University. Demonstrators had been protesting alleged discrim- ination in off-campus housing. Pima County Superior Court Judge William Frey said in his decision, "Civil disobedience and disregard or disrespect for the law are wrong and must not be condoned." The injunction had been requested by university officials. An attorney representing the NAACP said that an immediate appeal of Judge Frey's decision is planned. * * * * University of Coiorado regents voted two weeks ago to refuse to lift a new-member ban against the campus charter of Sigma Chi fraternity, which has been in effect since May. The CU chapter was denied pledging or initiating privileges because the national fraternity, with which the CU chapter is affiliated, compels local chapters to discriminate against minorities. There is a strong chance that Eli Katz, the "activist" profes- sor fired by the University of California at Berkeley in 1963, will be rehired at a higher position than he formerly held, members of a professors committee at Berkeley intimated to Katz in a recent telephone conversation with him. Katz was told that if rehired his salary would probably be less than-his present salary as on asistant nofessr of German it Western Reserve. IU' Students Held in Jail By Sheriff Group, Changes Route To Avoid Possibility Of Additional Violence By JOHN CRUMB, JR. Violence failed to flare in Ann Arbor yesterday as students par- ticipating in the International Days of Protest altered some of their plans for demonstrations in order to avoid friction. According to Peter DiLorenzi, a spokesman for the protestors, there was fear yesterday there would be more incidents similar to Friday's attack on the demon- strators' float in the Homecoming parade. The fear of inciting violence was among the prime factors in changing the demonstrators' plans to march on the stadium to hand out leaflets, DiLorenzi said. Violence During the International Days of Protest, DiLorenzi pointed out, there has been scattered incidents of violence across the country. The group planned to march together to the stadium to dis- tribute pamphlets for the Ann Ar- bor Women Strike for Peace and to arouse the sympathy of the Homecoming crowd for their cause and for the students jailed for Friday's sit-in demonstration, DiLorenzi said. They had further planned to march to Wines Field after the game to participate in a memor- ial service for the dead in Viet Nam, he said. However, the Ath- letic Department did not grant permission for the use of the field, according to DiLorenzi. In addition, the Ann Arbor po- lice department said that protec- tion of the demonstrators was im- possible, DiLorenzi said. One of the policemen said that there would be too many people present and that violence comparable to the destruction of the' Viet Nam Day Committee's float Friday could easily recur. Pamphlets The demonstrators were asked instead to distribute their pam- phlets in the stadium without the preceding march. They decided to disband before going to the sta- dium and to regroup for their memorial service on the steps of Alumni Hall at 4 p.m. After the memorial service the demonstrators marched as sched- uled to the County Jail at 5 p.m. As bonds had been posted before noon, the release of the remain- ing jailed protestors was antici- pated by the- demonstrators to concur with their arrival at the jail, DiLorenzi said. At the jail, however, Sheriff Harvey refused to release the jail- i Arbor High School students who had built the display, was present at the time the incident occured .1 17l According to him, he and the stu- Sa stadium with the slogan "Peace is the big game in '65" and had By JUDITH WARREN received permission from the Assistant Managing Editor Friends Center to display it onA their lawn at 1416 Hill. In a week that seemed to be At about 4:30 p.m. Blood and overshadowed by demonstrations, another student, Bob Hunt, also events, other than the Interna- of Ann Arbor High, were stand- tional Days of Protest, occurred ing near the display talking with which may have great significance a passerby when four persons, ap- for the course of the University. parently returning from the foot- Sen. Garland Lane (D-Flint), ball game, proceded to tear down chairman of the Senate Appro- the goal posts of the model. priatiins Committee, indicated that When Hunt protested, one of the funds for the University's pro- the assailants pushed a piece of posed residential college will not the post in his midriff and then be made available until the 1967-8 struck Hunt in the face with his budget year. fist. The stranger to whom the 3 The residential college, conceiv- Student Panel The formal program concluded awith a student panel comprised of four students who have spent time in Viet Nam. The speakers scheduled for construction on gents' ruling which, in effect, pro- included Collingworth, John Cap- North Campus. hibits a University bookstore. po, Michigan State University; Executive Vice-President Marv- But student campaigns have Donald Emerson. Yale, andJay vin Niehuss, however, said that the not entirely gone without com- Pardwlled oohns cssons ofhst- University had informed the Leg- ment or action. The United States dent attitudes in Viet Nam and islature of the preliminary plans District Court in Grand Rapids this country toward the war ef- for the college last year. Since ruled Thursday that Michigan fort then, he maintained, the Univer- State University had acted un-f.. sity has turned in a more nearly lawfully in denying readmission "The formal program being complete description of the resi- to Paul Schiff without a hearing. concluded, 500 enthusiastic shout-, dential college. The court considered two mo- ing and singing students marched Niehus- tions. The first, in which MSU 10 blocks to the South Viet Nam embassloated neartDupont cir According to Niehuss the Uni- ; asked for dismissal of the case, baring with them a large I versity requested money for pre- was denied.iAmericanflag,' according to Col- liminary plans about a year ago. Schiff's Demand lingworthi ' At the moment, the Legislature The second, Schiff's demand for her oi.-.A - t- - a temporarv injunction for his re- The students presented Deputy