THE POLITICS OF HUMOR See Editorial Page Y Sir iAa &titA MILD High-55 Low-33 Partly sunny, milder Vol. LXXXII, No. 56 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, November 13, 1971 Ten Cents Eight Pages Strike hits city school system Classes held for black students at comnunty unit By GAYLE POLLARD and DAVE BURHENN Black absenteeism in Ann Arbor's public schools was high yesterday, according to school officials, as some 300 '4 students attended classes at the Community Center while others stayed home in sup- port of a boycott against the city school system. A coalition of black students and parents called for the strike in a mass meeting Thursday night. The meeting resulted from recent ra- cial incidents in the city's senior and junior high schools. Meanwhile, classes were held as regularly planned at all Ann Arbor schools. Both white and black at- tendance were affected yesterday by the recent incidents and the strike. Principal Paul Meyers at Huron High School said, "We have very few black students in school today. I don't think we have a half a dozen." Normally about 140 black students attend Huron. At Pioneer High School, Prin- cipal Joseph Pollack said between 25 and 50 per cent of the school's black dstudents - usually totalling 145-came yesterday. However, black students report- ed that less than five attended. According to Pollack, Absten- teeism ran between 25 and 30 per cent of the total student body." Forsythe Junior High School re- ported almost four times the nor- mal amount of absences. Close to 150 blacks and 230 whites failed to report for classes, according to school officials. Attendance at other Ann Arbor junior high schools was almost normal, while black attendance dropped off as much as 60 per cent. Figures were not available for elementary s c h o o 1 attendance. Over all the junior and senior high schools, at least 450 ot70 black students boycotted their classes.. Meanwhile, students began :r-; riving at the Community Center before 8 a.m., as directed by par- ents. In an orientation session, Bill Jones, director of the Model Cities; Community Skills Center, talked with students about the strike and its purpose. Two members of the Michigan Civil Rights Commission, District' Executive Director Melvin Harris from Jackson and Rita Scott from Detroit, attended the morning ses- sion. They listened to student re- ports of physical harassment, and their grievances about teachers with uncaring attitudes, and their, preferential tendencies towgrds whites. Scott said that the representa- tives of the commission were there at the request of a black commnu- See CITY, Page 8 U.s. sets Phase 2 wage WASHINGTON (R--Service- men, federal employes and the working poor were exempted from post-freeze wage controls yesterday by the Cost of Liv- ing Council. Life insurance rates also will be allowed to rise without fed- eral controls after the freeze period ends at 12:01 a.m. to- morrow. The council further said the auto industry may, without ad- vance approval, begin paying a scheduled wage increase and raise prices to match. However, both increases could be subject to pos- sible rollback. Meanwhile the President's Pay Board and Price Commission is- sued their first legally binding regulations. Publication of the regulations in today's Federal Register means the wage and price freeze ends on schedule tomorrow, allowing de- ferred raises to go into effect for billions of workers and setting rules aimed at holding price in- creases to 2.5 per cent a year on average. At a news conference yesterday, President Nixon said the pay and price guidelines are very sound -Daily--Sara Krulwtch and very realistic. He conceded that there might be a slight jump in prices at first after rigid freeze irection of the Detroit Women's rules are relaxed. enc. The President said the Pay - Board's general rule that no wage agreements may contain raises of more than 5.5 per cent a year is an achieveable goal. He said some businessmen had urged a three or '. fnuu rinr nr p± I n timi $JUU 1ar exemptions Women's night Women take part in a circle dancing session last night at St. Andrews Episcopal Church under the d Street Theater. The activities were in conjunction with a teach-in on abortion being held here this week -Associated Press PRESIDENT NIXON confers with Defense Secretary Melvin Laird after yesterday's press conference. Combat role ended in Vietnam, Ixon says SIGN OF THE TIMES SGC cmpaign plasters campus aByROSE SUE BERSTEIN On one front the candidates pre- ..........VOTE!. VOTE! VOTE! With a sent a unified offense against stu- profusion of political propaganda dent passers-by. The sheer volume1 flying about, this was the theme of leaflets spewed forth makes it t h a t echoed and echoed and well-nigh impossible to ignore the echoed throughout the University issues at hand. 'yesterday. Amidst tomes of liter- So sights such as this are not ature-left; right and transcendent rare-a freshman meaning to go -it was clear that students were to class, but never before con- expected to go out and vote about fronted by SGC campaign propa- something sometime soon. ganda, sets forth valiantly from A walk through the campus area the dorm room, hoping to reach found that candidates for next class just in time. week's Student Government Coun- But traveling down the dorm *cil elections were as faithful as dogs-striking every pole, every tree. the eamp s The poster-splattered campus, t 'p R and mounds of litter belie a strug- 4 e e tiol S gle of war-like proportions-the fabulous, frenzied, frantic battle for paper power. corridor leads to posters-GROUP. Critics have often charged that RAP. People's Coalition. Recall SGC is a paper organization, but Taylor. Stop Taylor Recall. it is only during election cam- These posters puzzle our stu- paigns that this charge is sub- dent, who loses a good two minutes stantially verified. Printed paper reading them. But then comes the leaflets attain pre-eminence as crunch-trying to wade through sources of communication and as the Fishbowl traffic without be- sophisticated weaponry on the coming politically entangled. And~ two-flanked sovereignty struggle- the odds are all against this per- a wishbone offense of sorts. son, because the Fishbowl is a I ' . t }}, _ 'I 1 1 1 i l I _i s e h d a lour per cent wage limit out calied this "totally unrealistic." WASHINGTON (R)-President Nixon maintained yester- The Cost of Living C o u n c i1, day that America's offensive combat role in Vietnam has which outranks both the pay and ended and announced that he will increase the U.S. troop price panels, issued a last minute withdrawal rate by more than one-third in December and ruling exempting federal employes January. and servicemen from general post- Holding an unannounced news conference in the White freeze wage control. This means that an average 15 =Hue press center, Nixon disclosed that during the next two per cent military pay raise may go months the authorized ceiling for American forces in South into effect on schedule tomorrow Vietnam will be cut by 45,000 to 139,000. for American's 2.6 million men and More than half the forces will be brought home before women in uniform. Christmas. The delays that Nixon imposed 1 However, the President said that on general federal pay increases ate group the United States would continue remain in effect, putting back ;air strikes ag 1nst infiltration white collar pay increases to next 1 routes into Vietnam. He added July 1 and delaying all blue col- that if the flow of Hanoi forces lar adjustments six months- southward is increased in the However, within - grade, merit weeks and months ahead, Ameri- and longevity increases for federal IAT fg can air activity will be stepped workers will resume Sunday. . l .p o e tup corresppndingly. The c o u n c i 1 also said fees The chief executive discussed charged for all new life insurance By STEVE BRUMMEL the present role of remaining and annuities, with the exception Three hundred Michigan resi- troops in Vietnam in responsA to of credit-life insurance, will be ex- Wh a question by -a reporter who empt from price control. d House gates Monday to drama- wondered when the combat role However, prices for auto insur- tize thegday's toll of Indochinese there would end. ance, health insurance,tproperty d d dead in the "wound down" war Nixon disclosed that offensive insurance, casualty insurance and in So-utheast Asia. operations already have ended other types of coverage will be Ttand said, "American troops are controlled. he demonstration is part of a now in a defensive position." nationwide protest effort against Thewin efexecivepstokofic Also exempt from wage controls the expanded air war and in- aTheactifecuhensoek540,000 are all workers who receive less creased killing and maiming of amer iamerviceen sere40st0- than the federal minimum wage, Vietnamese, Laotians and Cambo- med i se vceen eeta which currently is $1.6 an hour. dians-a fact often ignored with He said his latest withdrawal Donald Rumsfeld, the council's ( a reduced American death rate. announcement was confined to a executive director, said these wages C I e r g y and Laity Concerned two-month period because, with "seldom contribute to the factors (CLC) and the Fellowship for Re- fewer Americans remaining in the responsible for inflation." conciliation are the national spon- war zone, it is important to main- The Pay Board's regulations sors for the series of demonstra- tain maximum leverage in pos- added little to the previously an- tions called the Daily Death Toll sibly fruitful negotiations. nounced policy of limiting new Project. They do not believe the Nixon said he would make an- wage increases to 5.5 per cent per nation can de-escalate the ground other withdrawal announcement year and allowing scheduled in- war while increasing the bombing, before Feb. 1. And, altering his creases in existing contracts to go in effect substituting Asian lives past phraseology, he said its scope into effect unless challenged and for American, according to their and duration would depend in found "unreasonably inconsistent" local news release. part on prospects for the release with that guide. I Since Nov. 8, different regions of American prisoners of war and In an other economic develop- of the country have sent 300 per- obtaining a cease-fire throughout ment yesterday, the Senate voted sons each day to Washington in- all of Southeast Asia. 40-37 to raise the personal income cluding delegations from Philadel- The news conference was domi- tax exemption to $800 starting in phia, New York, Boston, and Ken- nated by discussion and questions 1972 instead of the $750 allowed by tucky. Each day's delegation rep- on Vietnam and Nixon's revised the House. resents that day's death toll in withdrawal schedule. This vote, adding $1.9 billion of South Vietnam. CLC expects the But the President talked about benefits for individuals to the $15.51 Project to continue at least until the economy, too. He said in ans- billion tax cut bill, was a victory Thanksgiving. wer to a question that "it's pos- for Democrats who have contended The Michigan chapter of the sible there will be an inflationary the measure is lopsided in favor CLC, under the coordination of bulge after the wage-price freeze of business. See WAR, Page 8 ends this weekend." STUDENT WORKERS , U' shows cautious reaction to TEA By ANDY FEENEY As organizers try to build the fledgling Temporary Employees Association (TEA) into a bar- gaining unit for part-time work- ers on campus, the reaction of ,U n i v e r s i t y administrators is guarded. Administrators a r ereluctant to speculate on possible future negotiation with TEA because its status, they claim, is not estab- lished. They predict, however, that employe demands, for better grievance procedures have a bet- ter chance of being met by the University than demands for higher wages and tighter job descriptions. TEA is currently organizing part-time University employes around demands for better work- ing conditions, higher wages, more job s e c u r it y, improved grievance procedures and tight- er jcb descriptions. Despite funding by Student Government Council and several organizational meetings, the As- sociation has found difficulties in developing into a mass organiza- tion. Organizers say that TEA's present small size arises partly from the difficulty they have had in finding all the temporary em- ployes who work in different de- partments of the University. They claim the University will not release the information t3 the Association. Apparently the Administration just does not know what to make of the new Association. "I'm not very sure that I know precisely what it (the TEA) is," said James Thiry, manager of em- ploye and union relations. It is unclear what position the Administration will take with re- spect to the legitimacy of such an organization. Thiry said "+hie University considers the decision of any employe to organize or affiliate or become a member of an organization that employe's business." Thiry said, however. that he wasn't sure the law in Michigan providing for colle'_tive bargain- ing by employes, covered student employes. He noted the case of Wayne 1State TUniversity stuident. workers interns' union was an appropri- ate size for a bargaining unit, recognition of both unions is held up in the courts because Lhe Uni- versity claims they represent students who are receiving pro- fessional training through their jobs and therefore do not strict- ly qualify as "employes" to or- ganize under law. Although administrators hesi- tate to predict how the Univer- sity will react to the demands of the Association, they agree See "U", Page 8 sea of sentiments. The other front in the wish- bone offense of proaganda is more insidious, involving candidates of opposing political persuasions who rip off each, other's posters. These wily folks emerge in the dead of night to purge the campus of beliefs they find distasteful. The primary brunt of this effort ap- pears to be the campaign to recall Brad Taylor. Posters advocating both sides of this issue adorn the floors and garbage bins as a result of nightly rip-off forays by mem- bers of the two camps. Next Thursday, when the elec- tion results will have been an- nounced, the only remains of this fierce power struggle will be heaps of useless leaflets, mounds of meaningless messages to be incin- erated and returned to us in another incarnation as smokey pollution. Authorities quell prison disturbance in Green Bay Report unearths grave tale buried in med school past GREEN BAY, Wis. (P)-Green B a y Reformatory authorities fired tear gas at prisoners and discharged shotguns as warning shots late yesterday in quelling what Warden Don Quatsoe called "a full scale riot." Quatsoe said five or six mem- bers of the prison staff were hos- and were trying to cut through prison bars from a central ro- tunda area. "We had a small staff on duty at the time," Quatsoe said. "They got to some shotguns and fired them through the bars up in the area to warn the pris- oners to disperse. Then the pris- By PAT BAUER The year is 1875. Two stooping figures steal between the tombstones of a misty grave- yard. Striking the earth with their shovels, they uncover- a newly-buried coffin. And the body-snatchers run off to sell their prize-to the University medical school. A century later, University doctors have by history Prof. Leslie Hanawalt of Wayne State University and Martin Kaufman of Westfield State College. The report, included in a recent edition of Michigan History mag- azine, documented "Body Snatching in the Midwest." Body snatchers usually worked in three- man teams, driving together in a wagon to a rv arii . 4- Aa.rk o-f rnirrht (OnP mn IMMENNIMEMEEM