POLICE VIOLENCE See Editorial Page Y Sfrhqau ii WASHED OUT High-54 Low-4O Windy with scattered showers Vol. LXXXII, No. 156 LOCA 'TAP Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, April 22, 1972 Ten Cents L R PROTESTERS TRASH ROTC Twelve Pages BLDG., TRAFFC; 4 ':' u ' i ,'; , , r:. A ""' c 'fir RCHES HELD CROSS U.S. * * * COLLEGES 40 blacks disrupt STAGE WAR - Regents 'meeti-ng; PROTESTS From Wire Service Repor I ts t uit i o By TONY SCHWARTZ Forty black students dis- rupted the Regent's public meeting yesterday and. charged them with "racism" in regard to their rejection of the Afro-American and Afri- can Culture Living Units last month. After shouts of "stop the meet- ing" forced a short adjournment, the Regents stayed seated as Lee x Gill, president of the South Quad Minority Council, read a statement of grievances' and demands. Following the presentation, the protestors left without incident and the Regents reconvened the meeting without comment. As expected, the Regents subse- quently approved a five per cent increase in tuition for next year, "in order to meet the gap antici- pated between anticipated state appropriations and University needs." The new undergraduate tuition level will be $696 for in-state stu- dents, $36 more than the present { level. Out of state tuition will in- crease from $2,140 to $2,260. LE The confrontation by black stu- as dents came as a result of last Cu month's regental rejection of the Ge controversial living units which would have provided housing for--- those with a sincere interest inCR Afro-American and African Cul- t4 ture. hike set A n t i - w a r demonstrators around the country yesterday boycotted classes, picketed de- fense faciilties, marched and rallied to protest the renewed U.S. bombing of North Viet- nam. There were reports of demon- strations on about 100 college cam- puses, with the number of protes- ters ranging from only a handful to several thousand. In California over 150 Stanford University students were arrested and many others were struck by police when a crowd of 900 anti- war demonstrators blocked a four- lane highway in Palo Alto. Earlier in the day, over 1000 Stanford students rallied in front of the university's administration building and broke a glass door there. Police arrested 10 students for "illegal obstruction." The re- maining protesters left the admin- istration building and marched to the university's war research lab- oratory where four more students were arrested for trespassing. Riot-equipped police using tear gas and billy clubs turned back over 1,000 University of Texas stu- dents who marched into the down- town area of Austin after a campus demonstration. At least five per- sons were arrested. In a demonstration scheduled for today, thousands of people are ex- pected in New York and Los An- geles for another protest march. The non-violent demonstrations are being organized by the Student Mobilization Committee (SMC), who also planned last year'shmassive April 24 marches in Washington and Los Angeles. In New England yesterday, 95 persons were arrested in Chicop- pee, Mass., when a crowd of 250 blocked the gates leading to the Westover Air Force base near Bos- ton. Over 8,000 students converged on the Boston Commons yesterday for an afternoon rally, and blocked one of the busy streets in the area. Demonstrators read off a list of MARCHERS DISPERSED BY POLICE By ROBERT BARKIN, JONATHAN MILLER and TED STEIN Dozens of club-wielding po- lice waded into a crowd of some 500 anti-war demonstra- tors grouped on a highway overpass yesterday, dispersing the city's most militant war protest in recent years. The police intervention came too late, however, to prevent an esti- mated $5,000 worth of damage to tha Reserve Officer Training Corp headquarters in North Hall, miles of snarled traffic, and smashed windows in the office of two downtown military recruiters. City, state and county officers- many of them brandishing rifles and shotguns - advanced on the crowd of activists as they gath- erod to block traffic ,on the U.S. 23 overpass at Washtenaw Avenue. The troops then chased the demontrators back toward the city in disarray, arresting at least one man and clubbing dozens more. One plainclothes officer was in- jured when a uniformed patrol- man mistook him for a protester, eyewitnesses said. The police effectively ended the day of anti-war activity, which had climaxed in the trashing of the ROTC building and a three mile march from campus to the Toledo-Flint expressway. Astonished commuters watched from their automobiles as first a crowd of activists and then the force of police swarmed onto, the highway near the Arborland Cen- ter. At least one demonstrator was pushed off the bridge onto the roadway 15 feet below in the police charge. Another youth was arrested by sheriff's deputies, and others fled as the force of officers marched down the highway, clearing pro- testers with their clubs. The police were drawn from al- most a dozen agencies and were commanded by county Sheriff Douglas Harvey. The day of activity had begun at noon when over 1,000 students and young people gathered on the Diag to hear anti-war speakers. The crowd reacted in anger when a University security man, George Staunch, tore an American flag from a burning effigy of a U.S. bomber on the steps to the general library. Moving away from central cam- pus, the activists marched down- town chanting slogans such as "One-two-three-four-we don't want your fucking war," and "Stop the bombing, end the war." Arriving at the offices of the Navy and Air Force recruiters, which are adjacent to each other on Washington Street, about a dozen protesters threw rocks at the offices' windows, breaking sev- eral of them. After a brief debate on tactics, the crowd marched back to cam-' pus, across the Diag, where they mustered more support, and to the ROTC building, where they arrived shortly after 2 p.m. See WAR PROTESTERS, Page 8 -Daily-Terry McCarthy E GILL, president of the South Quad Minority Council, reads slate of demands to the Regents yesterday as Regent William dlip (R-Detroit) stands up to avoid confronting Gill. Regent rtrude Huebner (R-Bloomfield Hills) looks on. ISIS CENTER: Vomen s agency to reo pen doors soon Goodbye With this issue, The Daily1 stops publication for the winter term. The summer Daily will start publication on the first day of classes for the spring term and will published throughout the summer. Be free. Nearly 30 per cent of those who had been provisionally accepted prior to the Regental action were white. Yesterday's statement called it "flagrantly discriminatory to re- quest a guarantee of occupation of the proposed units by non- blacks and not to request the same kind of guarantee from white lan- guage houses." A list of demands included the immediate establishment of: -The Afro-American and Afri- can Cultural Living Units; -A minority affairs division to coordinate all supportive services and programs for black students and -Full implementation of BAM demands of 1970. See BLACKS, Page 8 I 1 -Daily-Tom Gottlieb and David Margolick COUNTY RIOT POLICE march down Washtenaw yesterday to keep anti-war demonstrators from regaining the streets. Below (left), protesters camp on a U.S. 23 overpass to block traffic before police arrive. Earlier (right), scores of protesters stream into the ROTC building after smashing several windows. By MERYL GORDON Offering peer counseling for problems unique to women, t h e Women's Crisis Center (WCC) willt reopen this Monday as a telephone, service based in St. Andrewst Church. Trained volunteers will answer the phone - 769-7586 (769-WISE) - from 6 p.m. to 2 a.m. seven! Jays a week. Jackie Wiersma, one of the WCC's founders, says "We're pre- pared to counsel women who've been raped, women with problem pregnancies, welfare women witht problems, and any women with crises - economic or social. We' want to reach women throughout! the community." The fifty-five member staff hast had empathy and suicide training,! training in the legal aspects ofl rape, and some training in drugs.I The WCC also plans to serve a a referral service for women with brnla gtnff b Eahr'.il~a prowems.z ) adi mem er ieen Sheff says, "We're willing to listen all Boston universities on strike. to women's problems until t h e y The crowd then split up, half go- know what they want to do, and ing on to demonstrate at the Mas- then we'll refer them to specific sachusetts Institute of Technology, services which can help them. and the other half reurning to We've checked the various agen cies in Ann Arbor and we know which agencies are helpful to women." Wiersma adds, "Besides refer- rals, we're trying to compie lists of women willing to help other women with emergency housing, transportation and babysitr4ng.' She says WCC is also rying to find women who are willing to share their experiences in crisis situations such as rape, abortion. breast surgery and emotional dif ficulties. The present location and hours of the Center are temporary. A,. See CRISIS, Page 8 Harvard University. At Harvard, demonstrators ral- lied in sympathy with the 40 black students occupying the university's administration building. The blacks are protesting the university's3 re- fusal to sell its Gulf Oil corporate stock. They contend that Gulf is responsible for the repression of African blacks. At Boston University, students, took over the office of the dean of students. After three days of violence on the University of Maryland cam- pus, demonstrations there dwin- dled to a 30-person peaceful pro- test rally held yesterday. The See WAR, Page 7 U.S. ph1 .N.0 Viet, SAIGON (/)-Waves of U.S. war- planes struck within 80 miles of Hanoi yesterday, hammering at North Vietnamese targets in effort to blunt the Communists' spring offensive. But North Vietnamese s gain the U.S. Command said an Air Force Phantom jet was shot down by anti-aircraft fire. Two crewmen bailed out into the Gulf of Tonkin and were fished from the waters by a rescue helicopter. atnes hit North; n South Vinh, 145 miles inside North iVet-; nam. In the northern quarter of South Vietnam, senior U.S. officers re- ported that the district town of Hiep Duc, 35 miles southwest of Da Nang, apparently was under North Vietnamese control after several government outposts fell. In Cambodia, Cambodian rein- forcements were rushed up to de- fend what is still in their hands on Highway 1, where the enemy seized a 50-mile str~etch of the road Thursday. At the nearest point the enemy was about 40' miles west of Saigon. groundforces continiueduto scored A North Vietnamese broadcast! gains in the South. reported three American planes! The raids were the deepest pene- were shot down over Than Hoa tration into the North since the' when "waves of B52 bombers and heavy attacks last Sunday against fighter-bombers barbarously and targets in Hanoi and Haiphong. criminally attacked civilian popu- In announcing yesterday's raids, lated areas, causing many innocent - --------------- -,deaths and injuries." On the ground, field reports said a battalion of 500 South Vietna- mese paratroopers had been maul- ed near An Loc, with about ,100 rb -,/a dy db rin men killed or wounded. ELECTION APPROVED CSJ By DAN BIDDLE After nearly eight hours o tions, the Central Student Judie voted early yesterday morning the charge of "gross fraud month's all-campus elections. The unanimous ruling, which weeks of dispute over the elect and results, states that plainti verstein of SGC "did not carry of proof necessary to his chE gave final approval of the M voting results. Silverstein and co-plaintiffs M mann of the Responsible Altern dismisses vote of SGC's election rules, and I'm extreniely SGC f delibera- disappointed with my government." said y iary (CSJ) SGC members Marty Scott, Curt Stein- would g to reject hauer, and Bob Nelson, all of GROUP, get do' " in last acted as defense counsel throughout the Thet lengthy proceedings for SGC and Elec- pert w ends four tions Director David Schaper, who vas of che ion process named in Silverstein's charge as "de- analysi iff Joel Sil- frauding or allowing the defrauding" of the ba the burden large numbers of ballots. Gord arge," and All three expressed their "extreme sat- of "at Larch 21-22 isfaction with the unanimous verdict" and "could described the plaintiff's case as "a fish- that so ing expedition based on groundless sus- ark Ruess- picions. favor ative Party C. n vs v f 1 How fraud 4-h L uLjurZU President Bill Jacobs of GROUP yesterday he hoped the plaintiffs "get back together with us and awn to the business of SGC." defense had presented several "ex- itnesses" to counter the testimony mistry Prof. A. A. Gordus, whose is of some 500 sample ballots was sis of Silverstein's case. us had maintained that a pattern berrant markings" in the sample only. lead one to the conclusion ome 350-450 ballots were stuffed in of GROUP." ever psychology and statistics Prof. The battalion was lifted by heli- copters to the rear base at Lai Khe, 35 miles to the south, for re- I placements and retraining. At dusk, the North Vietnamese continued to besiege the provin- cial capital with rockets and art'il- lery shells and infantrymen as- saulted another airborne unit on the southwestern flanks of the Icity. After being repulsed in earlier attacks, the North Vietnamese re- newed the attack on An Loc yes- terday, hoping to make it the first provincial capital captured in the offensive. Also in the Saigon area, heavy fighting was reported at the dis- . game e n llllllll% i:::*6i:i:l* "11M I