IMPROVING CITY TRANSPORTATION See Editorial Page 4qjzr ~Iad4j DANK High-73 Low-50 Occasional showers, gradually clearing Vol. LXXXII, No. 37 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, October 22, 1971 Ten Cents Ten Pages The Loomis shooting: Nixon nominates A 'bad' boy's sad end By JONATHAN MILLER YPSILANTI TWP. - Darrell Loomis, 16, was released from the maximum security center at the W.J. Maxey Boys' Training School last spring-with hopes of his counselors that he could begin to lead a relatively normal life. Despite a six-year history of delinquency, Darrell had impressed school officials with his new sense of responsibility, giving them suf- ficient confidence to authorize his discharge. But Darrell's apparent resolve was not enough. Despite the hopes of his patents, his counselors, and Washtenaw County social service workers, Darrell didn't return to a normal life. Two weeks ago, Darrell's criminal career was finally ended-with a single shot from an Ypsi- lanti state police trooper's gun. Darrell was killed as he fled from a stolen car he had driven at speeds near 120 m.p.h. in a frantic police chase over eight miles of free- ways in eastern Washtenaw County. The shooting occurred less than a mile from his parents' small home, near the woods where he had played as a child-and hid from his teachers. This time he lay there-as blood slowly stained his new green cotton pants and metallic shirt. The hot-wired '68 Ford, stolen shortly before from the house of one of his neighbors. sat near by-its engine still running and its headlights shining into the trees. According to the police report, Darrell lived long enough to admit he had driven the stolen car. - He was taken to University Hospital early that morning and pronounced dead on arrival. There were holes in both his lungs where the .38 caliber special bullet had passed through his body. A companion of Darrell's slipped safely into DARRELL LOOMIS is pictured above in a photograph provided by his girl friend. the woods. The police have yet to find or identify him. * * * Darrell Loomis was never society's favor- ite son. Born Oct. 3, 1954 to Everett Loomis, an Ypsilanti truck driver, and his wife Doris, Darrell grew up in a world where the police weren't thought of as friends. His two older brothers regularly were in trouble with the law and as his sister Janice Kelley recalls, "the neighbors were always ac- cusing us of stealing something." David Loomis, 18, now serving two and one- half to five years at Ionia State Prison on a breaking and entering conviction, and Jimmy, See DARRELL'S, Page 7 IRehnquist President halts prior ABA exam By The Associated Press President Nixon will no# longer allow the American Bar Association (ABA) to rule on presidential S u p r e m e Court nominations before< they are sent to the Senate. Atty. Gen. John Mitchell made the announcement in a letter to the ABA, released moments after Nixon announced his choice of> Lewis Powell Jr. and William Rehnquist for the court. Mitchell cited "premature publication of information" on a list of possible nominees as the reason for the action. The Washington Post reported yesterday that the ABA panel had found nominees Herschel Friday. and Mildred Lillie "unqualified." Friday was disapproved by a ?7 to 5 vote and Lillie, ii to 1, it was reported. However, Lawrence Walsh, head. of the ABA committee that evalu- ates the nominees, said last night he thought advance examination of candidates ' qualifica- tions should continue. Walsh said persons tend to give more candid opinions of the nom- ineeswhen"questionedbefore the names are made public. Mitchell noted he had agreed in PRESIDENT NIXON (left) an July, 1970 to furnish the ABA's Powell (right, above) and Will standing committee on the federal vacancies on the U.S. Supreme judiciary with the names of per- vanceanteUSSurm sons he had recommended to the tion and Rehnquist has, in eff President for the nominations. - --- - "However, the events of the NOV ELECTON- past week have made it clear, that *ET the confidentiality of my com-1 munications have been breached,"' Mitchell said. But Walsh, a former U.S. Dis- SG C p trict Court judge and former de- puty attorney general, said he had told Mitchell "a year ago that we could not question 100 attorneys" without the chance of one of them 5 leaking names. Mitchell also said, "Premature publication of information can cause a number of unfortunate By LINDSAY CHANEY side-effects. It can be particular- Student Government Council ly unfair to a person whose name last night voted to place a pro- may have been referred to the posal for increased funding on committee but who may not be the ballot in the all-campus nominated to the court." election next month. He said the process would al- The referendum issue will ask ways lead to speculation that fel- students to allocate 85 cents per low lawyers would find something student per semester for the all- negative in the nominee's char- campus government. SGC pres- acter or qualifications, and he ently r e c e i v e s 25 cents per would be unable to counteract it. student per semester-the funds ---- to Higi ANTI-WAR OFFENSIVE: Evict NiXOn' protests to start today with Grand Jury in D.C. Powell, Court Va. lawyer, U.S. aide a surprise ...::. ..::e WASHINGTON () - Lewis Powell, a former president of the American Bar Association (ABA), and William Rehn- quist, an assistant attorney general, were President Nix- on's surprise nominations last night for the Supreme Court. Nixon announced his choices to the nation by television and radio as the Justice Department's un- easy alliance with the ABA on court nominee review was coming to an explosive end. The President described both Powell, 64, and Rehnquist, 47, as judicial conservatives, like himself, and said "they will be names to be remembered." If confirmed by the S e n a t e, Powell and Rehnquist would take the seats vacated last month by Justices Hugo Black and John Harlan. Hearings are expected to begin in about 10 days. The selections were largely un- expected - neither nominee w a s mentioned in a list of six possi- bilities Nixon had submitted to the ABA. Herschel Friday, a Little Rock attorney, and Mildred Lillie, a California appeals court judge, had been considered the favorites as lawyer Lewis late as yesterday by some sources. , to the two However, the ABA's Committee Bar Associa- on the Federal Judiciary, which had been asked by Atty. Gen. John Mitchell for an assessment of Fri- day, Lillie and four' other pros- pects, concluded late Wednesday that neither was worthy of the top court. Nixon said that the two men he nominated will earn the nation's respect on the High Court, if ap- proved by the Senate. "It may be charged that they are conservatives," N i x o n said. "This is true, but only in a judic- ial, not a political sense." Powell supports the conserva- tive wing of Virginia Democrats and served on the campaign steer- ative store; ing committee that helped re-elect est law firm; his friend Harry Byrd, Jr. to the r a teaching Senate as an independent in 1970. Rehnquist counts a m o n g his r a Women's closest friends conservative Sen. Barry Goldwater (R-Ariz.) and is udent housing known as a protege of Deputy and Atty. Gen. Richard Kleindeinst, niversity-com- one of the toughest law-and-order center. exponents in the administration. referendum is- In his speech, the President lengthy debate quoted Walter Lippman as saying funding which last year that the balance of power has turned against the peace for- ot next month ces. "I share that view," Nixon im item asking said. He added that some judicial esent 25 cent decisions had gone too far in minated com- weakening peace forces against criminal forces. 1 to eliminate He said that aside from world was secured peace, there probably is no greater n drive which legacy a president can leave than 00 signatures. his appointments to the Supreme eaded by SGC Court. Brad Taylor. "Presidents come and go, but funding of the the Supreme Court," the Presi- udent govern- dent said, "goes on forever." ly to be on the P o w e 11, considered a. distin- -. guished lawyer and a racial mod- would allocate erate, is hailed by fellow Virginians ent per semes- as a "fair minded realist" in deal- nt college gov- ing with problems of racial de- Loney would be segregation. portion to en- Powell handles corporation cases college. for the prestigious law firm of te on the col- Hunton, Williams, Gay, Powell and week. See NIXON, Page 10 BY GENE ROBINSON Special To The Daily WASHINGTON - On the eve of the first day of the "Evict Nixon" demonstrations here, few people had arrived but organizers were optimistic - expecting more than 3,000 persons to appear over the weekend. The action, planned by the Peo- ple's Coalition for Peace and Jus- tice (PCPJ), is designed as the first step in a continuing program against the war. The activities include a People's Grand Jury to indict Presidentj Nixon for "war crimes," exhibi- tions of symbols of the Vietnamese war and life in 'America, and "massive civil disobedience" in front of the White House Tuesday. Speakers expected to appear in- clude Rennie Davis, David Del- linger, Bobby Seale, Dick Gregory, and William Kunstler. The organizers have received permits from the government for most of the actions, with the not- able exception of the rally Tuesday in front of the White House. nounces yesterday the surprise nominations of Virginia iam Rehnquist, assistant attorney general (right below) Court. Powell is a former president of the Americanl ect, been serving as the President's lawyer. uts funding I rat onZ fallba collected as part of University tuition monies. On the ballot with the funding proposal will. be an item listing possible projects to be under- taken by SGC with the increased revenues. Voters will be asked to approve or reject each sug- gested project. Although the fi- nal list to appear on the ballot has not been approved, items under, consideration are: - - - -- - - - - William Kunstler Rennie Davis MEETING SET: EcI se" 001 The mood at PCPJ headquarters p " " here last night was sober as or- acx bnss sut on ;gis =t-- ce e rati said, "The whole thing just hasn't ily elled.'' jelled." By CHARLES STEIN Housing for the participants is one main source of worry for the The education school's Golden organizers. So far, few people have Anniversary Celebration begins By ROSE SUE BERSTEIN arrived, but housing coordinators tonight, honoring the school's estimate that planned housing for fifty years of service to the Uni- An ad-hoc group attempting to fight sex discrimination about 2,000 persons will not be suf- versity community. The festivities, at The Daily last night decided to postpone a possible class ficient. I including both open seminars on They are currently trying to ar- topics in education and tradition- range housing in private homes, al social events, will last through Instead, the group decided to meet with Daily women and on Sunday several local Monday evening. 'and the entire staff next Sunday to consider a series of pro- churches will be converted into Various discussion programs posals to insure that more women attain top Daily leadership housing units. run by University graduates will posts. The activities will begin today cover such topics as teaching in preedwith the opening of the People's urban schools, bargaining power A prime factor behind the group's decision to delay court 1 Grand Jury, set up to hear "testi- for teachers, student perspectives action was a meeting yesterday between history lecturer, See EVICT, Page 10 in the classroom, and education Kitty Sklar, the group's initi- ator, Daily Editor Robert PLAYERS SIGN PETITION Kraftowitz, Associate Manag- ing Editor Lynn Weiner, and 4law Prof. L. Hart Wright, ~chairman ofthe Board for Atm a a s o AG ERMAn ti-war halftime shou Student Publications. It was reportd'y agred that the purpose of such a suit would By MARCIA ZOSLAW is "Let's Work Together," the be as a catalyst and that if the The football team added its theme of the Oct. 29 afternoon K: impetus to alleviate sexism could weight and prestige to the anti- Homecoming parade has been be created and ma'ntained inter- war movement this week when extended to "Let's Work To- 1 nally at The Daily, no suit would 49 members, over half of the gether to Bring the Troops Home be necessary, team, signed a petition asking Now." Proposals set forth last night for an anti-war halftime show on Asking that the anti-war theme included the review of such Daily Homecoming weekend. be utilized during halftime, >< marKs tu years wit ion starting toight -A food cooper -A public inter -Assistance fo fellows union; -Assistance fo Crisis Center; -Low - cost sti with federal aid;2 -A 24-hour u munity child care Passage of thei sue came after a1 over the level ofJ should be sought. Also on the ball will be a referendu that Council's pr allocation be eli pletely. The pro posa Council funding through a petitio collected over 1,0 The drive was h member-at-large A proposal forJ various college st ments is also like] ballot next month The proposal 50 cents per stud ter to the differei ernments. The m distributed in prc rollment in eachc Council will vo lege proposal next J of the young child. Some of the The other phase of the celebra- discussions will be led by visitors tion is primarily social and in- from Canada, England and Unit- cludes several dinners and par- ed Nations offices. ties for the school's alumni. By Education school planners hope bringing alumni into the pro- the seminars will result in the for- grams, the school's administrators mulation of specific proposals for hope to involve them in future future action. policy - making decisions. Discussing the celebration, "The presence of the alumni on Paula Leidich, editor of educa- our policy committee will give tion school publications, says, us antadditional input of ideas," "We asfacltymemers wat aeducation school Dean Wilbur Co- "We, as faculty members, want a hnepan Teriesae chance to share ideas with other hen explains- "Their ideas are people in the field as well as lay- valuable because they have been men who are interested in educa- shaped by years of teaching ex- tion." perience," he continues. - - -"We are trying to make our curriculum relate more closely to real educational situations and the alumni can help us accom- plish this goal," Cohen says. I COver the course of . the cele- bration, the alumni will hear ad- so uh t dresses by President Robben Flem- ing, Cohen, and celebration chair- man Prof. Claude Eggersten. Prof. Eggersten and his wife are the authors of the dramatiz- ation "Son et Lumiere" which r: will be presented tonight in the school's courtyard. The perform- ance takes a dramatic look at the important developments of the school's fifty year history and will feature members of the univers- Enrollment here dips slightly from last year r Although total University en- rollment is up 325 students over last year, the Ann Arbor cam- pus total this fall is down 178. Total enrollment including the Flint and Dearborn campuses this fall is 39,986. Of the total, 24,694 are under- graduates, 10,950 graduate stu- "and this year's drop is essen- tially a leveling out of that bulge." The current enrollment fig- ures for Ann Arbor campus col- leges and sc ho o ls (with last year's figures in brackets) are: College of Architecture. and Design, 907 (957); School of Business Administration, 1,302