OLD REALITIES, NEW SOLUTIONS See editorial page Y gutn A& 444PP71 at CLOUDY Hlgh--6 Low-0S Intermittent showers today and tonight Vol. LXXVIII, No. 18-8SAnn Arbor, Michigan, Friday, May 24, 1968 Ten Cents Six Pages pock trial: Continued z 7 I1 A1L 0At1 7 vivieiit De ense scores Fane leIII Prof. Joseph Sax of the Law School is currently in Boston observing the Spock conspiracy trial. His analyses of the courtroom situation will be pub- fished in The Daily until the end of the trial. By JOSEP# SAX Special To The Daily The mood of the Spock trial has shifted dis- cernibly during the last 24 hours. Yesterday's session was a bitterly ironic one for the de- fendants. At the very moment the government was showing films of defendant William Sloane Coffin, saying "Churches at their best have al- ways been a sanctuary for conscience . . . now if there are going to be arrests let these arrests be made in the churches," U. S. marshals and Boston police were storming the Arlington Street Church to apprehend a young draft resisterwho had taken refuge there. Today for the first time the prosecution's tactic of forthrightness in showing and reading defendant's speeches may have begun to back- fire. Thursday's session began with the prosecu- tor reading "a time to say no," the speech given S b3( 23-year-old defendant Michael Ferber at the Arlington Street Church last October. Restrained but powerful, Ferber's speech argued that it was time to say no tp the war and in so doing to say yes to that moral commitment which every man of conscience must at some time confront. With each sentence read by the government at- torney, Ferber grew in stature. This was followed by a film of the October 20 draft card turn-in at the Justice Department in Washington. Largely composed of Coffin's re- mearks outside the building, the film showed him to considerable advantage. Coffin told the group that "Military victory spells moral defeat." Sym.- pathizing with the soldiers abroad and with those parents and wives who had loved ones in Viet- nam, he told them that "sacrifice alone, however great, wash the blood off their hands." To those' about to engage in civil disobedience, he said, "You all, like Luther, who said 'here I stand, I can do no other, God help me'." The last witness of the day, John McDonough, assistant deputy attorney general, described his meeting with the defendants and others at the Justice Department. Precisely, and without refer- ence to any notes, McDonough detailed the com- ments of each of the ten persons who had come into the Justice Department building to partici- pate in the ceremony of returning 992 draft cards collected from young men across the nation. As he spoke, it was with difficulty that one remem- bered he was a witness for the prosecution. What came across was the participants' deep concern for the misguided direction they saw our society taking in the war, the difficulty with which they faced the dilemma of-a war which moved them to seemingly illegal actions and the compulsion which those of the older generation felt to sup- port the conscientious decision of young men constrained not to cooperate with the war effort. For the first time, the accumulation of evi- dence seemed to lean in favor of the defendants. The prosecution itself had humanized them. The image of abrasive and militant radicalism began to fade. No one here is ready to suggest that the defendants have a substantial chance of ac- quittal, but for the first time it has begun to look like something more than the inexorable march toward the jailhouse. DeGaulle meets with cabinet; i announce policy PARIS (.0-Pres~dent Charles de Gaulle met with his cabinet yesterday for nearly four hours in an effort to solverthe nation's crippling domestic crisis. De Gaulle, whose 10-year regime repulsed attempts in parliament Wednesday to overthrow his ca- binet, is scheduled to address the nation on television tonight. The strike-bound nation waited impatiently for word from the 77- year old Da Gaulle on how he pns to deal with the upheaval o{millions of workers. MORE RIOTING Rioting students and police turned Paris' Latin Quarter into a bloody battlefield early today In ominous prelude to a massive new confrontation between the angry left and De Gaulle. The nightlopg conflict sent more than 50 persons to hospitals as brickbats, molotov cocktails and teargas grenades flew through the air and barricades flamed.. The farmers want higher prices for their products, the workers higher wages. The students, whose drive for academic reforms ori- ginally touched off France's grav- est crisis since World War II, now are protesting the exile of one of their leaders, Daniel Cohn- Bendit. The leftist student idol, known as Danny the Red, arrived in Frankfurt from Amsterdam yes- terday determined to reenter France despite the ban. In the overnight rioting, stu- dents chopped down ancient trees to form barricades and set alight piles of uncollected garbage in their desperate bid to halt the steady advance of the police through the student quarter. Some student monitors rode frantically around the area on motorbikes trying to calm the si- tuations. But their efforts were in vain. Authorities said they sus- pected there were professional agi- i 4Y - 4 T t f {4 4 '$x V' yg 4 : 18 demonstrators ailed In capital Congressman intervenes to calmn Poor Peoples' Campaign protesters WASHINGTON (M? - A welfare protest on Capitol Hill produced the first arrests of' the Poor People's Campaign yesterday. Eighteen demonstrators singing outside a House office building were jailed on charges of unlawful assembly, a misdemeanor. Only the intervention of a congressman and a promise by the Rev. Jesse Jackson, a leader of the campaign, that other demonstrators would leave quietly prevented the arrest of perhaps 50 more. The arrests andi a hint by Jackson that Negro leaders are looking beyond the current campaign to an economic boycott in the nation's major The church proved no sanctuary PROTESTS CONTINUE: Students win three conce at San Francisco State C4 tators in the throng. KAMAKAZE Shortly after 12 a.m. today several demonstrators drove an automobile headlong toward a group of police. They missed the police and the car crashed into another. The occupants were taken to a hospital. Several French and foreign photographers were injured by flying missiles. The Communist-led General Confederation of Labor last night ordered its branches throughout France to start mass demonstra- tions today. The week-old strike wave ap- peared to have reached a plateau with employes of a few more com- Janiesjoining the movement and those of a few small ones going back to work. The exact number of strikers was difficult to determine. Esti- mates ranged up to 10 million. 3ssIons However a compilation of the number reported by each of France's three main trade union federations put the total at half of the national work force of 16 oliege million. Business and financial sources supported the eight mil- Academic Senate, a -lion estimate. This figure included osed of the entire fac- many workers who refused to cross move tokeepth~picket lines. moved to keep the , The big enigma was what de contract by a 30 vote Gaulle will tell the nation. Infor- mation Minister Georges Gorse ontinued at the 18,000 told newsmen the president had hool despite the pro- filled in his ministers on the broad exams begin in two lines of his speech. Under the circumstances, Gorse 't in San Francisco said, "you will understand that I ROTC is 29 students, cannot reply to your questions." -Associated Press cities marked a' day of ten- sion in the drive by the poor Product of the strike fojbstndincme , or jobs and" ncome. "This campaign, has got to bring the problems of the poor to INTERIM CHOICES: the"attention of everyone in the country," said George A. Wiley, another campaign leader, after the arrests. "And everyone should Congressional leaders announced 1 1 0"the formation of an unofficial bi- partisan group of 30 senators and representatives to provide "a line of communication" between Con- By iLESLIE WAYNE gress and the Poor People's Cam- Prof. Albert Wheeler of the Medical School yesterday filed a paign. brief in Washtenaw County Circuit Court asking Mayor Wenidell E. The committee is headed by Hulcher to make interim appointments to the county board of super- Sen. Edward W. Brooke R-Mass). visors until its members are elected. Brooke said the committee will In the past, members of the county board were appointed by People's encampment in West Po- the mayor. However, the circuit court ruled May 11, that members on tomac Park, and try'to provide a. the board must be elected on a one-man-one-vote basis. forum to discuss "realistic legis- When issuing the ruling, the court delayed action on a contro- lative and administrative proops- versial section dealing with the mayor's power of appointment until als" to help solve some of the the city and Dr. Wheeler submit- I problems and national needs of ted their position briefs. the poor. The city, which filed its brief f f Od VISIT MILLS last Monday, contends the mayor A ut W/ 1k I .EWiley sparked the confrontation should not be required to make that resulted in the arrests when any appointments, thus endors- he led, about 200 demonstrators ing action taken by the mayor to Iuc ao 3 from the campaign's shantytowna extend present board member' headquarters near Lincoln Me- terms. 1* morial to the office of Rep. Wil- The mayor extended the terms m strike bur D. Mills (D-Ark), chairman of present board members April of the House Ways and MeansE 10 rather than appoint new mem- By NADINE COHOIAS Committee. J. ers. Members of the Ann Arbor Wiley told the group Mills is. bers.Memer ofWleycheled"on ofthemos DENY VOTETeaching Association (AATA) responsible for a new welfare law By extending the appointments, voted Wednesday not to report Wiley called "one of the most Wheeler claimed the mayor was for work next ifall unless a con- vicious, racist laws in the history "denying a people their own ef- tract settlement' with the Board of the country." fective voice." Specifically, Wheel- of Education has' been reached The demonstrators intended to er objected to the re-appointment and ratified by that time demand that Mills call hearings of Cecil O. Creal, Herbert Ellis At a system-wide meeting the so they could testify for repeal of and Bent Nielson to the board. AATA passed a "no agreement-no the law, which limits the number Wheeler, state chairman of the work" resolution along with three of dependent children eligible fork NAACP and local members of other resolutions. Two of the reso- Welfare benefits. CORE had previously criticized lutions detailed fatification pro- At Mills' office they were met these men as being "unrepresen- cedures for any pact with the by police guarding a closed door. tative of the black community." Board of Education and establish- About half the demonstrators' The mayor later claimed he ex- ed the authority of an AATA ne- settled down in the halls to waitJ tended the appointments because gotiating team to meet with and the others remained on thes he was not able to receive the Board representatives. sidewalk outside. necessary six votes in council to Th hersouinctand A the start of a round of free- approve his slate of nominees. His a formal statement of the teach- dom/ songs .by the group outside, proposed slate included two of the ers' "strong disapproval" of the police informed Wiley it is against' three board members opposed by Board's latest salary proposal, the law to sing or kneel on the the NAACP and CORE. AATA executive secretary James Capitol grounds, and that anyone Wheeler and the city disagree Scheu said the most recent offer, doing so .would be arrested. on a section of the city charter esented to AATA represen SERENADE granting the mayor power to ex-tveTusa eengws - tend the termsofcappointedoffi-rs v tie B dy p fWileywho is executive director terntle teirsucapoeoff-hsvtingf"the National Welfare Rights ben leed or app e The Board proposal offers near- anizth an ly a ,2 per cent increase over the Organi zik n, said anyone whoi DISPUTED AREA I present salary schedule. The felt.lik sinn amind In his brief, Wheeler states starting salary for teachers with going to jail was free to do so. = = = ==== :20e-re -m$dent the-grup d. this provision does not apply to a'/bachelor's degree would beBufishemdtegrpd- the board of supervisor appoint- raised to $6,300 a year, ra $300 vide itself into those who intend-, ments. In addition he claims a raise over the present starting ed to sing and those who did not. section that forces .the mayor to salary. Teachers with a master's Capitol Police Chief J. M. Pow- fill any vacant appointed office degree, presently earning $11,070 eliannouhedotovers albllhornio within 30 days does apply, a year, would receive a, $240 in- that the r pitas'clarlyin o The city's brief claims that ex- crease. . lation of the Capitol laws. tending the terms during the in- The teachers, however, are re- "In spite of this 'we have not terim period is both proper and questing considerably more. In a made arrests," he said, andshe legal. March 2'7 proposal,' the AATA des- gave them three minutes to stop Ann Arbor City Attorney Peter ignated what it termed a "mini- singing. Ever louder swelled the Forsyth noted that new members mum package" of salary and strains of "We Shall Overcome." will be elected to the board in fringe benefit increases. The police started loading thes the November election, but Wheel- The AATA proposal requests unresisting demonstrators into pa-t er claims delays resulting from salaries from $6,500 to $11,050 a trol wagons lined up at the curb suits that might challenge the new year for teachers with a bache- and .had dispatched two wagon-r apportionment plan could post- lor's degree, and salaries from loads to the Jail when Jacksont pone the election for up to two $7,150 to $12,350 a year for teach- arrived from Resurrection City years. ers with a master's degree. and conferred with the police.- (Sheriff demotes sergeant By PHILIP BLOCK / Washtenaw C o u n t y Sheriff Douglas J. Harvey, lashing out at members of the Washtenaw Coun- - ty DeputiesdAssociation (WDA), last night demolted its president," William H. Stander, from sergeant to deputy. Earlier in the day, Stadbr, and former deputy Fred J. PostillI secretary of WCDA, brought charges against Harvey accusing him of violating the states Hutchinson ;Act which forbids public employers from discrimi- nating against workers because of labor union activities. Harvey demoted >Stander in front of the entire force which was gathered for its regularly scheduled departmental meeting, calling the members of the asso- ciation '"tro iblemakers." PAY DECREASE The demoti n constitutes an annual decease in pay qf abo $2500. .Postill said "Harvey was very disturbed when he saw our charges printed in the Ann Arbor News." Harvey read the charges in front of the meeting and said that the deputies were trying to "ruin" him. Harvey has fired Postill twice and Stander once allegedly Je- cause of their unionizing activities. In February a State Labor Med- iation .Board examiner found Harvey guilty of violating the Htthinson Act because of' his firing of Stander, Postill, and two other deputies who sought col- lective bargaining rights with the CountyBoad of Supervisors. PRESSURE Harvey, who is up for re-election in November unless someone cha lenges him in the Democratic jri- mary in August, has been piutting pressure on the deputies associa- tion for the past six months, About six iweeks ago 'Harvey formed a new deputies group called the Deputies Bargaining Organization. Postill says that about half of the 65 man' force has gone ovpr to the6new organi- zation largely because of threats of demotions and firings frm Harvey. In addition, ";Informed sources indicate that Harvey has promoted the six command offi- cers (officebrsabove deputy rank) who, have "been organizing the new 'group. CHARGES Stander's and Postill's case against Harvey includes charges that the sheriff discriminated against the two when they were reinstated to the force following the February ruling by the SLM. Stander was a shift sergeant before he was firhed but was 'put on road patrol under a corporaE when he returned to' the force., Postill was fired again byH'a"rvey less than two months after h was reinstated, to the =force in March. He is pushing for a sec-" and reinstatement to the Mrce and is charging Harvey with duty discrimination from the perio4 Qf M~arch 18 to 0May t. - Postill said he is "very certain" a fourth set of charges will be made against Harvey in regard to Stander's demotion, Senate passes . crime' ControlS WASHINGTON (A)-The en- By MARTIN HIRSCHMAN Administrators at San Francis- co State College yesterday gave in on three of four student de- mands as over 400 students con- tinued to sit-in in the school's administration building. The concessions came after day-long consultations with stu- dent leaders who had threatened to "close down the school" if de- mands were not let yesterday. Students have been given signed statements on the three Issues, # Bus line hints fare increase Although drivers for theCity Bus Company agreed to a new wage package yesterday, continu- ation of bus service still depends' on a fare increase. The drivers went on a sick call strike Tuesday after City Coun- cil delayed action on a proposed fare increase. The drivers settled on a $27 per day wage increase yesterday. However, unless City Council ap. said student leader John Levin. The concessions were: -The admission of 428 students' from minority groups under spe- cial admissions requirements; -The formation of an "ethnic studies department," which would offer such courses as black his-# tory, and the appointment ofi nine professors from minority groups to this department; -The rehiring of Juan Martin-' ez, an instructor of Latin Ameri- can history who has supported the students ,demands and had helped organize the campus' Third World Liberation Front. Protests continue with students still, demanding the termination of the college's contract with the Air Force Reserve Officer's Train- ing Corps. Levin said "Tremendous com- munity and student support" for the demands were responsible for the success of the demonstrations. The protests are being led by the student government, the local Students for a Democratic Society and -the Third World Liberation Front, with the support of other groups. The sit-in in the administration i AN INTERESTING FELLOW Joi n The .Daily and meet Slimy Stevie Special To The Daily Because No One Else Would Print it Steve Nissen is a man with a message: "Shaft 'em," Steve says. He is known as Slimy Stevie to his enemies. If he had friends, he would be known as Slimy Stevie to them, too. He's slimy, In his function as Daily ace reporter and thief, Slimy oozes into some of the strangest "Why did you join The Daily?" we queried. "Before," he countered, "when I wanted to shaft some-' body I could only spread ru- mors around. Now I can print them."' "Besides," he c o n t i n u e d knowledgeably as he slid our address book into his shirt, "The Daily offers a unique op-. portunity to meet interesting people and express thought to cause I can get Cokes for a nickel here and be in on top- level decision making and know the first names of all the Re- gents." "Hooey. "Well, uhhhhhh, it was because I wanted to steal things and shaft administrators," Slime contended with a fiendish grin. "Aha," we thought. Now, his fervor was begin- C 4 V 0 Q I .x .,