Racism: By LINDA DREEBEN and GAYLE POLLARD Racial trouble which has flared up in the city's secondary schools in recent weeks is not viewed as an isolated oc- curence by many observers, but rather as a symptom of a chronic problem of racism deeply ingrained in the school system. - In the past weeks, a white student at Pioneer High School was stabbed and eight blacks, including a counselor, were arrested during one of many incidents. At Huron High School eight students were arrested following fights between blacks and whites. A release issued by the Human Rela- tions Office (HRO), a liaison office be- tween the administration and the black community, states that the unrest is "the blasting out of years of accumulated Root oft frustration and hostility toward the in- effectiveness of the schools to educate all students, all races and classes of stu- dents." These r e c e n t disturbances between black and white students led to a school strike by black students last Friday, the formation of demands and recommenda- tions by both blacks and whites, and a recommitment by school officials to work toward a "quality school system." Members of the black community have cited a "double standard" discipline policy which "suspends blacks and often ignores the disruptive activities of whites." They have also denounced channeling of black students into non-college prepa- ratory courses, teachers' low academic expectations for black students and "racist curriculum and textbooks," as 0o city schoo examples of continual oppression of black students in the school system. Charging that black students were unjustly blamed for the disturbances and expressing concern for their safety, black parents and students called the school boycott. School authorities reported that over 80 per cent of black secondary school students either remained at home or attended alternative classes at the Ann Arbor Community Center. Despite the classes at the Community Center, and an agreement by negotiators and school authorities to allow students to make up missed time, some parents and students feared that they would not be allowed to make up missed classes. This was one reason, some black par- ents said, that students returned to school the following Monday. 1 unrest? Wednesday night, the Ann Arbor Board, of Education approved a modified form of four demands presented by a black negotiating committee. The demands, formulated during the boycott, are: -The employment of 12 groundsmen to assure the safety of all students, to be approved by a bi-racial committee with a black majority. -The creation of a core of black studies programs in all secondary schools with course content and teachers determined by black students, parents and staff. -The expansion and revision of coun- seling, including the option to select and change counselors without repercussions. Also counselors hired must have aca- demic preparation in counseling as well as human relations. See SCHOOL, Page 7 -Daily-Rolfe Tessen SCHOOL BOARD member led Heusel, board President Cecil Warner and Superintendent of Schools Bruce McPherson listen while black demands are read at Wednesday's school board meeting. CLASSIFIED RESEARCH See Editorial Page ZVI Sir iAa a4atti4 GO BLUE! High-37 Low-32 Colder, chance of snow Vol. LXXXI I, No. 62 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, November 20, 1971 Ten Cents Ten Pag FIRST HURDLE: LSA selec Lit college ad board passes student parity By HOWARD BRICK The literary college Admin- istrative Board yesterday ap- proved by a 4-1, vote a motion for student parity in its mem- bership and sent the proposal to the college's executive com- mittee for consideration. LSA Student Government lead- ers are optimistic that the execu- tive committee will agree to the plan and hope that the winter term will begin with an adminis- trative board composed equally of four students and four faculty members. The student members will be named by the LSA Student Gov- ernment.: The Administrative Board, the body that enforces college policy and handles disciplinary action, is presently composed of six faculty members. Six students, two representing the LSA Student Government, twoX from the Student Counseling Of- fice (SCO), and two from the Coalition for the Use of Learning Skills (CULS) sit on the board but have no vote. The parity proposal provides for eight ex-officio members without vote, including student representa- tives from the Association for Course Evaluation (ACE), CULS, SCO, and the Student Govern- ment. O t h e r representatives wouldI come from the freshman-sopho- more counseling office, the junior- REGENT WILLIAM C senior c o u n s e l i n g office, the meeting yesterday whil junior-senior counseling office, the associate vice presiden honors counseling office, and the college Dean Frank Rh Residential College faculty. The plan also states that thef associate deand ofLSA will chairG r case of a tie.th I ua 54 The issue of student parity on the Administrative Board has been a controversial one ever since it was first proposed in the fall of 1969. This fall, the board has insti-P tuted parity on the hearing boards it appoints to judge individual By.SARA FITZGERA Itases. Each hearing board con- I The pass - fail grading sists of three students and three apparently has not hurt faculty members. ,1.,,,,,,. ir... ~ in-t hi41~A f~i dmi iOn~L t dean to heac counseling1 By LINDSAY CHANEY The Regents approved yesterday the appointment of psi chology Prof. Charles "Tony" Morris as associate dean f student academic affairs in the literary college. The appointment of Morris, who will be responsible f counseling services in the college, represents the openir gun in a massive effort by LSA Dean Frank Rhodes to ir prove counseling and curriculum within the college. "We've identified the counseling area as one of the mai concerns of the college," Rhodes said. "For that reason we' upgraded the head of counseling to the status of associa dean." Previously, the head of counseling has been an assistal -Daily-Jim wallace FACULTY MEMBERS and non-voting students on the literary college administrative board discuss a proposal to give students equal representation on the board. The proposal passed in a 4-1 vote and must now go to the executive committee for final ap- proval. NEW HAVEN CASES: Judge suspends tw/o Panther sentences, -Daily-Jim Judkis CUDLIP (R-Detroit), lower right, dramatizes a point during the Regents open e Regent Gerald Dunn (D-Flushing), above left, concentrates. William Hays, t for academic affairs, lower left, reported on pass-fail grading, and literary bodes announced a new associate dean appointment. admissions not hurt ass-fal, study says dean. A new associate dean for cur- riculum development is expected to be named in the near future. "There's a whole new dimen- sion to counseling that previously has not been recognized," Rhodes said. "The old idea of counsel- ing was that you needed people to sit around and interpret the rules of the university for the stu- dents." "Now," he continued, "we would like to make the counselor an academic advisor who helps the student in identifying and formulating his goals and then helps put together a program to reach those goals." "We have a tremendous range of resources at Michigan," Rhodes added, "and the counselor should work with the student to make full use of them." In specific terms, it is hard to say at present what alterations will be made in the counseling system, although Rhodes said they would probably involve "adminis- trative and personnel changes." Morris, who will officially as- sume his new post next January, yesterday asked the literary col- lege administrative board to un- dertake a complete study of the, school's counseling system. "No matter what you think the counseling system should be do- ing, it's not doing it," Morris said. "But before we make any changes, we have to decide what it is that we want to do." Almost all the academic coun- selors are faculty members who counsel part-time. Morris noted that the only specified duty of the faculty counselors, according to the literary college faculty code, is "to approve election re- sults." "I think there. is an assumption that counselors should also com- a See PROP, Page '7 ALD only the pass-fail system, while1 g system large undergraduate units such as students' the literary college grant some graduate pass-fail options. cnances for a ussu t Political science Prof. William NEW HAVEN, Conn. (N) - The last two Black Panthers Zimmerman, the sole dissenter, charged in the slaying of fellow Panther Alex Rackley received noted that "the tone of this meet- suspended sentences in Superior Court yesterday. acrimony that has characterized Landon Williams, 27, and Rory Hithe, 20, both of Oak- previous meetings on the subject." land, California had originally been charged with kidnaping He said he was not opposed to resulting in death and aiding and abetting murder in con- the idea of voting student mem- nection with Rackley's death in May, 1969. Both pleaded bers on the board, but felt the guilty to charges of conspiracy to murder last month. srod tionof re esentatio State's Attorney Arnold Markle had charged that the ulty to four students rather than two took part, as national Black Panther emissaries, in a plot See LSA, Page 7 or professional schools, the Re-f gents were told in a report at their monthly open meeting yesterday. The report. prepared by Asso- ciate Vice President William Hays, surveyed present pass-fail options at the University and provided some evidence to indicate the ac- ceptability of pass-fail grades by post-graduate programs. Presently, the medical school and the Residential College use Involving 14 persons, includ-1 ing Bobby Seale, party chair- man. Hithe was given a suspended sentence of one to three years, while Williams received a suspend- ed sentence of two and a half to five years, with one year on pro- bation. Both were also sentenced to suspended threemonth terms, after pleading guilty to assault charges in connection with a fight with prison guards last spring. Judge Otto LaMacchia noted William's "excellent record" before he imposed his sentence. Seale and Panther organizer Er- icka Huggins also were charged with capital crimes in the case, but their charges were dismissed after their triale nded in a hung COMPANIES BATTLE Students in law, music, and ar- chitecture are allowed to take courses in other units pass-fail, but the business administration, nurs- ing, dental, natural resources, so- cial work and library science schools have no pass-fail options at this time. The report says that Residential College graduates "have a pattern of acceptance into law, medical and graduate schools fully com- parable to, if not superior to, the normal pattern of LSA gradautes." While only about 2 per cent of graduatenschool applicantsehave had pass-fail grades on their tyan- scripts, according to the report, those which included faculty evalu- ations "carried a great deal of weight." "Students from the better known, 'quality' schools take less of a risk with pass-fail," the report says, "than do students from schools of lesser reputation." However, students seeking grad- uate fellowships may be penalized, Hays' study warns, because de- partments "wish to be cautious" and usually "bet on the students who are clearly achievers." "We're getting so damn permis- sive," Regent William Cudlip (D- Detroit) said yesterday. "First they did away with compulsory at- tendance and now they're going into pass-fail." "But when I was in law school here," Cudlip continued, "if you missed one course, you lost a quarter of a credit hour. And that's why the University has a good law school." "I don't think that follows," Re- gent Gerald Dunn (D-Lansing) commented wryly. High Court vetoes Kent trial delay WASHINGTON (R) - The 6 preme Court declined 6-1 yesl day to delay trial of a group. 25 persons on charges stemm from the 1970 Kent State Univ sity disorders. The 25, including students, foi er students, and faculty memb are charged with rioting dur the campus protest May 4, 1i Ohio National Guardsmen ope; fire and killed four students wounded nine. The trial was scheduled to be Monday in Ravenna, Ohio. I Monday Justice Potter Ste temporarily acted to hold up trial until the full court could cide on whether it should ahead. See KENT, Page 7 Write-On claims 'sabotage' By JOHN MITCHELL The manager of Write-On Term Papers Inc. yesterday accused a former employe-now manager of a rival paper-writing company here - of "deliberate sabotage" in the sale of identical English papers to two University stu- dents in the same class. The accusation, by Write-On a. andmannan r Ai .nra really happened, I believe it was not an internal blunder but a de- liberate sabotage by a former employe turned competitor, John Stevens, for the purpose of cre- ating an unfair business advant- age." The dispute follows revelation in The Daily Thursday that Write-On Inc., an East Lansing- based outfit with a branch office the month to form Creative Re- search, allegedly taking with him papers, records and pocketing money belonging to Write-On. Responding to Harger's charges, Stevens said the accu- sations were totally false. "I ex- pected a foul-up," Stevens said, citing what he called "shoddy" business practices on the part of Write-On. Women assemble in capital for march protesting abortion laws By ROSE SUE BERSTEIN and GLORIA JANE SMITH ,:- Special to The Daily WASHINGTON - Hundreds of women fro all parts of the country trickled into the natior capital last night in preparation for today's mar and rally for abortion law repeal. The demonstrations today are sponsored by t Women's National Abortion Action. Coaliti .WONAAC), which has affiliates in 22 cities i ,,dne Detroit.