THE ALGIERS JUDGE See editorial page Y Sir A I43aiij EDEN4SH 4igh--82 Low-56 Sunny and warmer, south-easterly breezes. Vol. LXXViII, No. 42-S Ann Arbor, Michigan, Thursday, July 11, 1968 Ten Cents emporaryuicial plans Wildin the sti By HENRY GRIX ready to swing into immediate op- When the whole thing is over, will have his case reviewed by a or graduation, fine, notation in dent, and by the executive corn- ulty Daily News Analysis eration. only you, your parents (if you are judiciary council composed of at your files, deprivation of school mittee if he is not. dea Although specific, University- For example, if you are an LSA under 21) and the complainant least one student and at least one facilities, warning, or even sus- The engineering and medical wan wide guidelines for student con- student and decide to riot this will know the results. If you were faculty member, all of whom meet pension schools both operate with "long- only duct are lacking this summer, no- summer, a complaint may be expelled or suspended, you may student and faculty acceptance. Then again you could receive standing" student elected honor here body seems to be going wild in placed against you by a University appeal to the dean who may have If you were the law student, you restitution. councils whose academic prov- I the streets of Ann Arbor. faculty or staff, member or a his faculty executive board hear could be represented at your open And if you want an appeal, the inces will be extended to include Ind In fact, most of the deans of registered fellow student. the case. hearing by a counsel and could dean is listening. He may reduce non-academic disciplineso the 15 schools and colleges on If the chairman of the literary Trial by the graduate school confront and cross-examine, wit- your sanction. to campus are reluctant to institute college administrative board de- runs roughly the same way. How- nesses hil prsein wn The School of Public Health ae fank nt aicing pin clear-cut interim rules to disci- termines your case should proceed ever, the Graduate Board of In- evidence. judiciary will operate similarly: units are frankly nt anticipatinplin pline students errant. further, the charges will be pro- quiry has three faculty and two the dean and the elected student any trouble th s summer. even Upon regental insistence, Uni- vided for you and you may request students, appointed by the dean's To be sanctioned you would have president of the Public Health Dean Floyd A. Bond of the busi- the versity President Robben W. Flem- immediate arbitration, executive faculty committee. violated a well-publicized rule. Club would determine if a com- ness administration school (which dici ing charged individual units with Otherwise, you will receive a Your hearing may be open or The results of your trial may also plaint should proceed to the five does have an interim committee) Rho producing policies and procedures closed hearing with the 11-mem- closed, upon request, and you be well-publicized, upon request member hearing board, was admittedly reluctant to "ham- plan to handle disruptive conduct un- ber board, which includes two could have an attorney, a friend of the council The board would be composed mer out a complete judicial sys- W til a community judiciary is es- students. or relative present. If censured, your grades could of two faculty members from the tem, since it is only interim ac- of t tablished in the fall. Prior to the hearing, you may If your case demands review, not be reduced, but they might dean's executive committee, two tion." However, only the literary col- receive counsel and during the the Regents will take the second be refused: You would also face members of the elected student Although the School of Social Desi lege and the graduate, medical, proceedings you may offer wit- look. probation, expulsion or dismissal club and a fifth member desig- Work has outlined the organiza- out law, engineering and public health nesses and evidence on your be- Law School policy is more de- from a course or the school, re- natd by the students if the per- tion of a five member discipline do t schools have judicial machinery half. tailed. A law student in trouble duction of credit, denial of credit son complained against is a stu- committee (two students, two fac- mer Six Pages eets? and a representative of the n) Dean Fidele F. Fauri didn't .t to formalize anything with one-quarter of the students i the music, education, natural urces, pharmacy, and dentistry ols, deans have had meetings locate faculty-student disci- e committees, and some have 1 considered sending cases to present University Joint Ju- ary Council. Dean of nursing da R. Russell is keeping her s under wraps. rilliam A. Lewis, associate dean he School of Architecture and gn sighed, "If you ever find why the Regents asked us to his in the middle of the sum- let me know." 413 'U' schools adopt SGC's interim rules By JOEL BLOCK Thirteen of the fifteen campus schools and colleges of the Uni- versity have now decided to in- corporate Student Government Council's rules on student disrup- tion in their interim regulations. The rules were requested by Pres- ident Robben W. Fleming pending formation of a University Council. The Business Administration and Dental schools yesterday com- pleted faculty committee meet- ings which adopted the SGC rules with minor changes. The graduate school released a statement, "Student Conduct in the Graduate School", which list- ed the SGC rules as the main regulations on non-academic stu- dent conduct. ARCHITECTURE SCHOOL The Architecture and Design school applied the SGC rules to the conduct of all segments of the school, including the faculty. The Medical school was the only school which did not submit a version of the SGC rules to Pres- ident Fleming. The school stated that the honor code, signed by all students entering the unit. would be sufficient to cover st- st-dent conduct relating to the school. I Dean Rhoda Russell of the nurs- ing school refused to discuss a statement of interim rules for! nursing students until Fleming releases it himself. The nursing statement was sent to Fleminga -Daily-Bernie Baker School Director Bill Ayers {a -Daily-Andy Saks "To speak out is patriotic; to keep silent is un-American" Kids' school fights U.S. aid restrictions SGoANcEk suporters startigepra By STUART GANNES mothers and a few older men, I came back to their starting pooint I~ By MARCIA ABRAMSON The Ch ild r e n's Community School's hard-won grant from the U.S. Office of Education is caus- ing more problems. Members of the school staff will meet with a grant negotiator to- morrow to clarify some unexpect- ed provisions included in the $11,250 award. The funds were supposed to provide a pilot project for 15 five year olds who have never attend- ed school. Half of the group was to have participated in Head Start or similar pre-school programs. Half of the students were also to be from poverty-level families. However, the contract for the grant was discovered to include the specifications that all 15 stu- dents be poor and that the group be half white and half Negro, ex- plained Skip Taube, a school staff member. HARD TO COMPLY S"These provisions would be very hard to fill and not desir- able," Taube said. "We don't want to enroll stu- dents on only a poverty basis," he ,explained. "We want parents to send us their children because they agree with our educational *philosophy." The group would also upset the age balance of students among the four grades of the school. En-' rollment for next year had been projected at 30 students, and 15 would have to be in kindergarten. "We'll have to see if we can' reduce the number of students: provided for in the grant or else recruit more first, second and third graders," Taube said. FUND LOSS School staff members do not know if the number of students can be cut without the loss of Sfunds. Tauha said he imagrined richment services, reduced class size, social services for the chil- dren and their families, medical and dental examinations and hot lunches. The grant was o r i g i n a l ly thought lost by the school when the Washtenaw County Citizens' Committee for Economic Oppor- tunity refused to act as legal transfer for the funds. Economic Opportunity programs must be transferred to private schools through local community action agencies such as the CEO. At the time of the CEO refusal last month, the restriction was believed to hold for all federal programs.. However, this was discovered not to extend to programs of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, which includes the education office. I Tuesday. Led by young children singing SGC RULES "We Shall Overcome," a group of The rules which SGC passed in:about 200 people marched through Spteme ruanswhich GCresudb-the streets of Ann Arbor yester- September and which were sub- day to demonstrate support for mitted in modified form to Flem- dyt eosrt upr o ing consisted of the following two Dr. Spock and his fellow defend- points:s hants who have been sentenced to Idivdao.two years in prison for conspiring --Individual or mass acts that ; against the draft. destroy University property or significantly interfere with the The parade, which began at the free movement of persons or intersection of Packard and South things, on the campus, are pro- Division, continued into downtown hibited. Ann Arbor and back through cen- -Intentional disruption of Uni- tral campus. versity functions by depriving As the parade moved on, stu- others of needed quiet, light, heat, dents acknowledging the shouts work, is prohibited. of "Walk a block for Spock" and The SGC rules will be enforced "Walk a block for peace" swelled by the judiciary bodies in the the parade to about 275 people. schools and colleges which tor- Led by an old converted van, mally adjudicate cases involving which has come to be known as conduct in the classroom, such as the "peace and freedom mobile" cheating and plagiarism. around campus, the children, their joined the students and their at Packard and South Division, floats as the march wound and disbanded into small groups through Main Street past bland! to go to West Park for the sched- shoppers. uled rally. 7C 7C F' When the marchers reached State Street the atmosphere changed a little. The sound of "We Shall Overcome" and Pete Seeger's "This Land is Your Land" drowned out the acid rock blar- ing from the door of Discount Records. Drawing their support from many groups in the community, the marchers blended together forming a colorful contrast to the greys of downtown and the greens of the University campus. Sympathetic groups who joined the marchers included the Catho- lic Peace Fellowship, Women for Peace, Resist, and Citizens for New Politics (CNP). Around 4 p.m. the paraders Eventually the speakers program began. Rev. Gaede of Interfaith Council began by saying that those who had come to the rally had "affirmed their support of the four convicted in Boston and of all those in this country who speak out." Bert Garskof, a CNP candidate for Congress in the Ann Arbor district, said the "white liberal democrats" who are always sym- pathetic with liberal causes should realize that they are also in a struggle for their own freedom. Garskof said that while every- one recognizes Negroesare op- pressed, the whites should realize that they are controlled also. "All See STAGE, Page 2 Spock receiive~s two-year sentence BOSTON (A) - Dr. Benjamin Spock was sentenced to two years in prison and was fined $5,000 yesterday for antidraft activities, but shortly afterward promised to continue active opposition to the Vietnam War. The 65-year-old pediatrician-j author was convicted with three other men June 14 on federal charges of conspiring to counsel, aid and abet young men to avoid the draft. 1200 SOUTH U. SCENE Rings on their fingers, bells on their toes... Two-year prison sentences also were imposed on Yale University Chaplain William Sloane Coffin Jr., 43; author Mitchell Goodman, 44, of Temple, Maine; and Har- vard- graduate student Michael Ferber, 23. Coffin and Goodman were fined $5,000 and Ferber was fined $1,000. U.S. District Judge Francis J. W. Ford stayed the sentences and continued the defendants' $1,000 bonds pending their appeals to the 1U.S. Circuit Court. The maximum sentence allowed was five years in prison and $10,- 000 fines. Beforepassing. sentence, Judge Ford told the crowded courtroom : "Where law and order stops, ob- viously anarchy begins." "Almost every week in this court," the 85-year-old judge said in angry tones, "young men are sentenced to three years in prison for evading the draft. It is rea- sonable to conclude that these de- fendants were instrumental in in- citing some of these men to flout the law." "Be they'. high or low, intellec- tuals as well as others must be deterred from violating the law. These defendants should not es- cape under the guise of free speech," Ford said. Addressing a news conference after the sentencing, Spock re- peated his contention that the Vietnam War is illegal, an argu- By NADINE COHODAS LA's Sunset Strip ain't the only hotspot around. Right here in Ann Arbor in the 1200 block of South U. any curious observer or anxious-to- be participant can find the ex- otic atmosphere native to the California street. Flanked by Church and Hill Streets the north side of South U. - especially The Wheel,' PJ's, Millers, and Satellite Bur- gerteria --- are the new haven for Ann Arbor's "hip" residents. T 4--1 - r - - - tirr v . ini dals tramp up and down the block. Blue jeans of varying shades paired with inscribed T-shirts, old army jackets or rawhide vests partially covering tanned, hairy chests are the men's con- stant uniform. The women, too, usually wear jeans but add gaily colored blouses. Or sometimes they even wear a dress. Most of the boys have either moustaches or beards and fair- ly long, frantic hair. Most of the girls just have long hair. Many of them are "sort of" dents since most of them have anywhere from all four to just one or two years of high school left. Blending right in with their older cronies; they migrate into the various restaurants, and move around from booth to booth playing "Rach out in the Darkness" or "Jumpin' Jack Flash", while they find out where tonight's events will take place. Still others of the crowd are "just passing through." One boy in the accepted costume said he was from San Francisco. He said his father "doesn't s 1E