ONE DUMB COP See editorial page Y Sitr iiau &titI& NO SUMMER YET Low--58 Variable cloudiness, warmer; but not enough Vol. LXXIX, No. 33-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, June 24, 1969 Ten Cents Six Pages r . Six Paoes Draft By JUDY SARASOHN Although from 16,000 to 25,000 graduate students in the nation have received draft induction no- tices, the University's graduate division has not been hit hard- yet. The biggest losses hive been in engineering, where the lure of draft-deferred positions in indus- try is drawing many students away from graduate studies in addition to those who are actually drafted. As a result, incoming en- rollment in graduate engineering is down approximately 20 per cent for the fall. But in the many schools - es- pecially law and business admin- istration - there are fears that the draft will finally reach large ntmbers of graduate students this summer. fails to depopulate U, graduate school However, few administrators be- lieve that any significant number of draft-eligible graduate students will be drafted, although official fall enrollment predictions h a v e not been made yet. Byron Groesbeck, associate dedn of the graduate school, explains that enrollment dropped only 26 students more than usual during the winter term although a drop of 161 more than average had been predicted. Winter enrollment was expected to drop to 8000 from 8337 in the fall, but the actual decrease was only 176-mostly draft casualties. "There was no real decrease in the winter term,". Groesbeck says, "and there are no signs that there will be an unexpected decrease in enrollment in the fall term." The July draft call is 22,300- some 3600 below the June call. Groesbeck believes that the de- cline in the draft will relieve pres- sure on the graduate school, and that there is now no indication that draft calls will increase in size. Veterans are starting to re-ap- ply in greater numbers than in the past, which Groesbeck considers a healthy sign, although there has been. no significant rise in their enrollment. Groesbeck admits that some ad- ditional qualified applicants are being admitted for the fall to pre- vent any under-enrollment. He adds that without the draft pressure the graduate schools would have been' forced to raise selection standards this year to compensate for increased num- bers of eligible students. B u t standards have stayed the same because of the draft and the num- ber of students who simply do not enter graduate school due to draft pressure, But other administrators d i s- agree with Groesbeck. Assistant Dean Matthew McCauley of t h e Law School believes the school will be hit hard in the fall, b u t does not yet have any enrollment figures to indicate this.J "We may lost five or 50," he says. "It's anyone's guess." The Law School has taken a survey of' first and second year students to determine how many thought the draft would hit them over the summer. And 25 per cent of the students wrote they thought they would not be coming back in the fall, ,ex- plains Dean Roy Proffitt. However, although two-thirds of the students returned the survey, the results are inconclusive, he says, because many men do not actually know whether they will return to school. "Some men just thought their number was up," Proffitt says. Last year the school was affect- ed by the draft at the beginning of the term, but for the moment enrollment has not decreased. Summer enrollment is up from 210 to 245. Proffitt explains that some of the law students think that their draft boards will leave them alone if they maintain their status in school. Still. Proffitt says, "No enroll- ment has gone by that a student does not write or call at the last minute to say he won't be back. We will not know how many re- ceived their draft induction not- ices until they don't show up." There is also the fear in busi- ness administration that the school will not know until the fall how many students have b e e n drafted. "Our experience has been that the men weren't notified until July or August," says L. Lynn- wood Aris, director of admissions and assistant to the dean of the school. "The future looks bright now, but the draft could turn on us." In engineering,. more and more students are dropping out f o r draft-deferred jobs. "Almost every boy with a bach- elor of science can get a protect- ed job in industry, so why should they go to graduate school?" ex- plains Dean Gordon Van Wylen of the engineering college. Under present federal law, only medical and third-year students are deferred. Van Wyler also says engineering is hurt because the school is es- sentially all male on the grad- uate level and cannot increase the number of women enrolled. However, Groesbeck says that this replacement is not happen- ing even in schools which have a large number of female graduate students. "The statistics say that women have a better chance to get into graduate schools now, but they are not taking advantage of the situa- tion," Groesbeck says. .v= i I I I I PROBE COMPLAINTS: Ha rris olice Senate sets Assembly up lasses draft stud By TOBE LEV amended 'U bylaw Mayor Robert Harris an- nounced the formation of a two-man committee to inves- tigate complaints of citizens against police at last night's City Council meeting. The two members-still to be named-will represent the Ann Arbor Police Department and the Human Relations Commission. *Both will have full authority to examine police records. The mayor also denied reports of a split between him and Police Chief Walter Krasny over the use of police on South University Thursday night. When he created the investi- gating committee, Harris said po- lice are "under the law like every- one else and if policemen com- mitted crimes, they are subject to criminal indictment like everyone else." Harris maintained Ann Arbor is "not a police state, although som'e practices need improvement." The niayor indicated, however, that during the clashes on South Uni- versity last week, many officers "kept their heads." He specifically expressed his "personal thanks and gratitude to Chief Krasny." 't During a stormy session of audience time after thesregular meeting several students and Ann Arbor residents addressed council. The majority of the speakers attacked local police! agencies although three Ann Ar- bor residents defended the police action. One speaker claimed "The cru- cial part in the South University affair took place on Tuesday af- ternoon. Apparently in a secret! meeting of police and city officials. the decision was made to use a show of force to suppress or con- front people if Monday night's situation recurred." "Police raided as a matter of course without any reason, con- tended Howard Wachtel, Grad. It was an irrational reaction to the students' manner of dress and general deportment." "Some better means is needed' to distinguish officers. No one can see their microscopic badges to identify them," he added. Harry Bullard, a member of the American Civil Liberties Union, recommended the establishment See MAYOR, Page 2 "Drops controversial discipline provis1in By MARTIN HIRSCHMAN Senate Assembly yesterday approved the current draft of proposed Regents bylaws on the role of students in de- cision-making after deleting two controversial sections and making other smaller changes. In a key move, Assembly deleted Section 7.07 (2), which would give professional schools the power to discipline stu- dents on the basis of non-academic standards relating to licensing requirements. Students involved in drafting the bylaws, as well as members of Student Government Council, had'expressed strong opposition to the provision.. Assembly also narrowly voted to delete a provision which would place two non-voting student members on the board of Regents and give them dull>- -'--' -Daily-Jay Cassidy Skip Taube addresses City Council Acquit girl in -Associated Press Charleston protest continues A demonstrator argues with police officers after being arrested for participating in a march through downtown Charleston, S.C. The demonstration was staged in support of striking hospital workers at Charleston County hospital and the Medical College of South Carolina. About 40 demonstrators were arrested. (See related story, Page 3.) MORE STATE AID: House members back 'U' budget 'restoration speaking privileges during all Regental deliberations. Acting Assembly Chairman Prof. Robert Knauss,. a key participant in the deliberations which pro- duced' the bylaw draft, said the bylaws would be transmitted in- tact to the Regents along with the ammendments suggested by the Assembly. SGC is also expected to report to the Regents on the bylaw pro- posal, but it is still unclear whether Council will also approve the entire draft and .then state reservations. Instead, SGC could present an amended version of the bylaws to the Regents. Some observers at yesterday's Assembly meeting said they be- lieved the faculty action to delete the section on discipline in pro- fessional schools would be a sg si-nificant factor in convincing SGC to take predominantly' favorable action on the draft.', . Council members have voiced objections to a number of other passages inhthe bylaw draft, in- cluding the composition and powers which would be assigned to the policy board of the Office of Student Affairs. Action to eliminate the contro- versial section on professional school discipline came after As- sembly representatives from the Medical School indicated they were withdrawing their objection to deletion of the passage. , These faculty members said they believed the substance of sec- See SENATE, Page 2 South U. Trial By SCOTT MIXER A verdict of not guilty was returned by a six-man jury yesterday in the second trial stemming from the arrests made on South University last Tuesday night. Linda J. Storr, 18, of 812 E. Kingsley, was acquitted of a charge of "unlawfully making a disturbance or contention in a public place," a misdemeanor -punishable by $100 and/or 90 days in jail. The jury returned the verdict after nearty two hours of deliberation. Miss Storr was arrested by Washtenaw County Detective Joseph Fitzgerald because "she looked like one of the leaders" By SHARON WEINER i The State House of Representa- tives may restore a $2 million cut by the Senate from the Governor's recommended allocation for the University, Rep. George F. Mont- gomery (D-Detroit), chairman of the House appropriations sub- committee on higher education, said vesterdav mnittee was favorable to the Uni-; the subcommittee is bound to be versity even before Fleming nd given full debate on the House other University officials spoke.", floor because of members who Rep. Thomas Ford (R-Grand feel the University should be "pun- Rapids) agreed the House sub- ished" for the actions taken by committee is "extremely sympa-' some of its students "ast week," he thetic to the University's pleas for said. restorations of some cuts," but "Assuming we might be success- added that "any attempt to srttle ful in overcoming these attempts," on dollars at this point is sbeer Ford added, "the final figure will speculation." be different from that of the "Any figure which comes ou: of See HOUSE, Page 2 National, te In factions CHICAGO (WP) - Students for a Democratic Society ended a. cha- otic five-day convention yesterday with two different groups of of- ficers -- each of them claiming to be "the real SDS." A so-called regular faction, the Revolutionary Youth Movement which include most of the former officers, elected Mark Rudd, 22, of New York City, as national 'secretary to succeed Michael Klonsky. Rudd was one of the leaders of the Columbia University takeover last year. Meanwhile, the rival pro-Peking Progressive Labor' party named John Pennington of Boston, a Harvard alumnus, as its national secretary. The convention began last Wed- nesday in the Coliseum on the city's South Side, but Klonsky led his faction out of the hall Satur- day to a West Side church for a rump convention session. The split apparently centered on the RYM's Insistence on an alliance with black nationalists and its defense of North Viet- nam's Ho Chi Minh. The PLP criticized the black nationalists for lacking class con- sciousness, preferred an' alliance with the working class rather than strictly with students, and called 'Ho a "bourgeois revisionist." Before walking out of the Coli- seum, Klonsky's group 'attempted to expel the Progressive Labor faction from the organization and claimed they were "objective rac- ist, anti-communist and reaction- ary." ;However, after the "RYM" left, the PL faction stayed and elected its own slate of officers. Besides electing Pennington as national secretary, the group se- '1,^a 136 .ri .in r a f n' and because she was in street after the police ordered it cleared. Miss Storr claimed she wa the street enroute to the c side to join her friends in a taurant. Peter Steinberger, an atto from the Washtenaw County gal Aid Society, was counsel the defense. Thomas E. Shea the prosecuting attorney. S h e a ' s argument cent around convincing the jury police gave the crowd ample to disperse and that the ci was aggravating the police throwing rocks and bottles. The prosecutor maintained obscenities uttered by Miss s ,nnn n.rpf m a',. an in'linn +n the had M na Mayor naj is in - other res- to Study f irney Mayor Robert Harris last night' r Le- named a three-man committee to 1 for study the creation of a South Uni- was versity mall and "the larger ques- tion of activities and facilities ered for younger people at night." that Councilman Robert Faber (D- time Second Ward) will serve as com- rowd mittee chairman. Nicholas Kazar- by inoff (D-Third Ward) and John Edward (R-Third Ward), both that' councilmen, are the other mem- Storr hers. n of f - - _. - - - - He also said the subcommittee may add an additional $2.4 million a es g ro uto'the University budget. "We feel President Fleming made a good case against a lot rtTEI lurill Mof obstacles," Montgomery said. "The University's only other al- ternative would be an increase in tuition, already raised twice in Harrip added, "The present rule the last three years." on the use of the streets are not F fixed forever.' We are open to ra- leming warned the subommit- tional change. The feasibility of havtlast ek te Utniversity mightp the idea of creating a mall on hent ike tuition by ehh er, South University Avenue must be cent if 'funds deleted by the Sen-, determined regardless of the ate in the higher education ap-' wrong approach in which it was propriations bill aren't restored' presented. by the House. University officials predicted a OSA POLICY BOARD Feldkamp ,.censured The student affairs policy board last night upheld a recommendation of the Student Ad- visory Committee on Housing and censured housing director John Feldkamp for failing to endorse the SACH recommendation. SACH had recommended no increase' in the monthly rent of married students. But Feld- kamp, in a letter to Acting Vice President for Student Affairs Barbara Newell, voiced strong opposition to SACH's findings and urged the policy board to support his recommendation for disagreement and in the. future such business might be conducted in secret. The $5 raised asked by Feldkamp would have been used for the residence halls reserve, the profit made by the University from dorm fees. Last year the reserve was $433,000; this year $600,000 is expected. The housing office has designated $200,000 for dorm renovation, and another $500,000 for building of a 1000-unit single student apartment complex. rv. _ _ .Si n n r.. .. aL ....._ ... . .. , . .. ... "And at the creation of a to be unwise w to be coerced.' I Q -an.+A r e same time if the mall is determined 'e must be unwilling The committee has mrni.mA fimim. _ tt substantial tuition increase for 1969-70 when the Senate author- ized $65.3 million for the Univer-' sity last month, $2.0 million less than the Governor's recommenda-'